News and Views – June 7, 2007

Airline Industry Calls for a ‘Zero-Emissions’ Future
Competitors Start Engines In $10M Race For Fuel Efficiency
Big Solar: Stirling Energy Systems
From Turkey Waste, a New Fuel and a New Fight
Environmentalist Dreams of New York Rooftop Farms

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(Posted by David Zaks in News and Views at 8:18 PM)

The Empire of Crime

We carry its marks, but the machine age is dead to us — oh, the assembly lines roll on in Mexico, the coal stacks still smoke in China, giant container ships still ply the seas bringing cars and appliances and laptops and clothes, but the ability to shock and disorient that the machine age once possessed is gone from the world of pretty much everyone with the hardware to read this. We feel no more historical vertigo considering the Machine than we do the Dawn of Agriculture, and few if any of us wake up in the morning with a sense of deep angst about the move from hunting and gathering to sowing and reaping. There may be, as Gary Snyder says, no such thing as a post-agricultural civilization, but we already live in societies that take agriculture so much for granted that we feel those who live by any other means to be nearly alien. The same will very soon be just as true for industrialization. To see this new reality, one need only look backwards. The other night it rained hard here in Seattle — in big warm drops that pinged off the skylight and drummed on the… (more)

(Posted by Alex Steffen in Features at 2:43 PM)

Defending Whales: You can watch a whale a thousand times, but you can only kill it once

Posted by Dave (in Anchorage, Alaska)

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Humpback whale with seabirds, off the coast of Alaska
© Greenpeace/Walsh

Well, the whale blog is coming to a hiatus – not a permanent end, just a hiatus. It’s been a crazy few months, with the expedition to the Southern Ocean, the launch of whales.greenpeace.org by our team in Argentina, and finally, the International Whaling Commission meeting in Anchorage, Alaska. There’ll be plenty more happening later this year on the issues of whales – stay tuned to www.greenpeace.org for developments.

Last weekend, after the IWC craziness had ebbed away, and the frustration of listening to national delegates talking the most shocking rubbish (don’t worry, most of those delegates were on the pro-whaling side), I hit the road to Homer, on the Kenai Peninsula. With me were Maarten, our Dutch cameraman video maestro (you may remember his dulcet tones from shows like “Ocean Defenders TV” and other video clips) and Junichi, the Greenpeace Japan whales campaigner.

Homer’s an interesting place – especially as half the town is built on what is essentially a sandbar, and contains a bar called the Salty Dawg (“A drinking town with a fishing problem” reads a sign inside). The Esperanza will be making an appearance in Homer in the near future, but we headed out with a boat from Rainbow Tours (no connection to the Rainbow Warrior that we know of) to see some whales.

Continue reading You can watch a whale a thousand times, but you can only kill it once…

Principle 21: Imagining the Future

Article PhotoAs Bruce Sterling says in Tomorrow Now, “The future is a process, not a theme park.” What that means for Worldchanging, is that we don’t practice imagining the future in order to be right, we imagine it in order to think more clearly about the systems in which we find ourselves embedded. We think about the future not in order to predict it — that’s essentially impossible in any meaningful sense — but in order to see more clearly the ways in which we can act today to influence it. By using tools and modes of thought which encourage our foresight, we can anticipate new threats and opportunities, and better apprehend the nature of the tools we have at our disposal for acting in the face of those threats and opportunities. Imagining the future, then, paradoxically makes us more innovative and effective in the present. But imagining the future helps us with another important task, as well: remembering our duty to the people who will come after us. Many of the best things about our society are the legacies of people who came before us and made the conscious choice to leave the world a better place. On the other… (more)

(Posted by WorldChanging Team in Imagining the Future at 2:04 PM)

“My dream is for my daugher to find her future in Africa”

Worldchanging board chair Ethan Zuckerman is in Africa, covering the TED Global conference. -ed Ory Okolloh asks, “what’s image got to do with it?” She tells us that our images of Africa focus on the negative stuff – the poverty, the corruption and the disease. People assume that as a Harvard-educated African, these aren’t issues that are personal for her. But she tells us, “I know what it is to grow up without money. The bellweather for whether our family was broke or not – when things were good, we had eggs and sausages, when they were bad, we had porridge.” It was difficult for the family to save, because her parents supported an extended family. But they made a decision to enroll her in a school they could barely afford, a private Catholic school. “I got kicked out pretty much every term,” when the family ran out of money. “Why don’t these guys just take me to a cheap school – it’s embarrasing.” Her dream high school was the Kenya school, a national school, but she missed the cut by a single point on the national exam. Her father suggested they go speak to the headmistress to see if… (more)

(Posted by Ethan Zuckerman in Empowering Women at 10:51 AM)

Believe, Begin, Become

Worldchanging board chair Ethan Zuckerman is in Africa, covering the TED Global conference. – ed Tanzanian President Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete took the stage with Dr. Larry Brilliant of Google.org and Bruce McNeighbor of Technoserve. Dr. Brilliant announces his support for “Believe, Begin, Become,” a national business plan competition, modeled on the successful experiment Google and Technoserve operated this past year in Ghana. He emphasizes the importance of job creation and business development as critical parts of economic development. Brilliant describes the program as “tried and tested” in Africa and Latin America, where it accompanies investment with intensive entrepreneurship training. He notes that Databank, a Ghanaian investment fund, has launched a $2 million “3B” venture fund to invest in these businesses over five years, investing between $50,000 and $150,000 in businesses that are recognized in the contest. Bruce McNeighbor outlines a timeframe for the project – it formally launces next week in Dar es Salaam and will start training entrepeneurs and helping them craft concepts into business plans over the next five months. At the graduation ceremony, 10 will be awarded capital, and 20 will be awarded certificates to allow entrepeneurs to purchase business services in Tanzania. President Kikwete acknowledges a… (more)

(Posted by Ethan Zuckerman in Social Entrepreneurship at 9:45 AM)

Weekend Review: A Slice of Organic Life

 

The new book A Slice of Organic Life might be better described as A Gigantic Slice of Organic Life. This is not your average-sized serving of tips on how to incorporate more green into your life; it is super-sized. While he book itself is not overly large (it will fit nicely on a bookshelf), it's the content that overflows.

Editor-in-chief Sheherazade Goldsmith packs A Slice of Organic Life full of tips and diy projects for living more naturally, or organically, if you will, whether you live in a tiny New York City apartment, a moderate abode with some outdoor space, a large suburban house with a big yard, or a big ol' farm with a few acres. There are a variety of different suggestions compelete with easy, step-by-step instructions and guidelines. Also rampant in this volume are beautiful, colorful photographs which make a simple flip through the book enjoyable, and give a hearty visual representation of each tip presented.

The book is sectioned off into three parts: 1) No Need for a Yard, 2) Roof Terrace, Patio or Tiny Yard, and 3) Yard, Community Garden, or Field. Within each section, however, are ideas for both small and large spaces: from making and freezing baby foods, to collecting rainwater, growing chili peppers, making summer fruit jam, using renewable energy, planting herbs indoors, keeping honey bees and raising your own chickens.

Weekend Grub: Curried Lentils & Quinoa With Veggies

I live on the Palouse (a region of eastern Washington and northern Idaho), which is famous for its rolling hills and crops such as wheat and lentils. When I think of eating locally-grown foods, lentils instantly come to mind. In fact, lentils are taken quite seriously here. In nearby Pullman, Washington, there is even an annual Lentil Festival celebrating the lovely legume. No, I'm not kidding.

The Palouse is known as the most important lentil growing region in the United States, producing about a third of all lentils grown nationally. So obviously, local lentils are easy to come by around here, and thankfully they don't have to travel far, which makes them a very sustainable option. There is a large lentil farm just a few miles east of me, and many varieties of local and organic lentils abound in the Co-op's bulk bins. Lentils are a great vegan source of protein, fiber, and other nutrients, so they are one of my favorite kitchen staples.

Euvin Naidoo on Bringing Light to Africa

Rokia Traoré welcomes the assembled crowd to the first session of TED Global 2007, “The Africa You Don’t Know,” with a beautiful Malian song. I’m thrilled to see Chris Anderson joined on stage by my friend Emeka Okafor, the remarkable Nigerian entrepreneur, thinker and blogger who’s put together this program. Emeka is clearly nervous to be on stage, co-hosting with Chris… but he deserves the honor given the amazing work he’s done. Euvin Naidoo, the VP of Standard Bank in South Africa, welcomes us home to Africa. He invites the crowd to shout out the worst we’ve heard about Africa: corruption, famine, AIDS, slave trade. “But this is about Africa, the story we’ve not heard.” Africa is on a turnaround, in terms of how it manages its public image and how it manages its destiny. Naidoo’s background is in turnarounds, beginning his work with McKinsey in South Africa. As a graduate student in the US, he wrote a case study on turnaround, focusing on Nelson Mandela – this became part of a book called “Confidence”, written by Rosabeth Moss Kanter. Naidoo has tremendous pride that an African story was used as an example of turnaround for US corporations. Naidoo uses… (more)

(Posted by Ethan Zuckerman in Energy at 8:50 PM)

Health Care Heroes

“Health and Heroism” is the theme of the second session this morning. Chris Anderson introduces the session by framing some of the difficult health issues, using maps from WorldMapper.com, cartograms that distort the world map to show statistical factors. Maps that show HIV prevalence and malaria prevalence inflate Africa to a huge size; maps that show public and private health spending and working physicians shrink Africa almost to invisibility. Lisa Goldman, in a three minute talk, reminds us that we’ve got tools that are effective against malaria: artemisinin, interior spraying with DDT and insecticide impregnated nets. The nets cost roughly $10 each and last 5 years – the problem is distribution, as they’re bulky and hard to transport. Ernest Chijioke Madu picks up an earlier theme: HIV and malaria are huge problems for Africa, but we need to address more “conventional” healthcare issues as well. More people in Africa die from heart disease and stroke than in the US. Cardiovascular disease kills 17 million people a year. 85% of global mortality is in developing nations, but 90% of medical spending and resources are in the North. “What will happen if you have a heart attack in your hospital room?”, Dr… (more)

(Posted by Ethan Zuckerman in Health at 8:33 PM)