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Simon

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Everything posted by Simon

  1. Hello Ethan and welcome to green blog!
  2. Hello fasthaulsocial, welcome to Green Blog! :)

  3. Hello blainjohnson11, welcome to Green Blog! :)

  4. Happy Easter Everyone! :)

  5. I can imagine that, just like me, you read a lot of news and reports regarding our climate and environment. And lets not kid ourself. For the most part, the news are bad. To be honest, sometimes I just have enough of all the doom and gloom. So I try to repress it, because what's the point? We're never going to reach a global climate consensus and get our asses moving in the right direction...    That's my thinking sometimes. I am sure you have felt the same thing at least once.    So how can we refrain from getting depressed? How can we manage to stay positive in light of all the never-ending bad news about our climate, the increasing deterioration of our environment and the destruction of our precious and unique wildlife and ecosystems?    Or maybe you have already given up?
  6. Hello K.S. Sudhi, welcome to Green Blog! :)

  7. Bloomberg has some more information about Japan's decision to embrace coal: Post-Fukushima Japan Chooses Coal Over Renewable Energy   "A new energy plan approved by Japan’s cabinet on April 11 designates coal an important long-term electricity source while falling short of setting specific targets for cleaner energy from wind, solar and geothermal. The policy also gives nuclear power the same prominence as coal in Japan’s energy strategy."   Greenpeace has issued several reports on potential energy scenarios for various regions and countries over the years. Check out this website if you are interested in learning more about the energy scenario for Japan.   Here are two reports from 2011 respectively 2012: The Energy Revolution Scenario for Japan (PDF in English) Greenpeace's Energy Revolution scenario for Japan (PDF in Japanese) The potential for renewable energy production, such as offshore wind farms, in Japan is huge. But Japan unfortunately has a conservative government and we all know conservative's dinosaur-like attitude towards renewables...   Did you know that the Japanese wind farms were left unscathed by the massive Japanese earthquake disaster in 2011? That's pretty amazing, and it says a lot about the advantages of renewables over dangerous energy sources such as nuclear or climate-killing coal.
  8. So do I. Ah yes, I have started to re-organize some of the forums. You are more than welcome to come with suggestions on how the forum categories can be improved upon.
  9. Hello Sally Smith, welcome to Green Blog! :)

  10. While out fishing in Norway, this man caught a codfish with a dildo inside its stomach (Source: Expressen).     Seabirds and other animals often mistake plastics with food. These plastic objects slowly fills their stomachs over time until they are unable to ingest any real food. A slow death by starvation then follows for these poor seabirds.   It's amazingly sad how much trash we throw out in nature which animals mistake for food. Here are some photos on birds with their guts filled with different plastic objects.
  11. Simon

    torskdildo

    From the album: Random images

    This man caught a codfish with a dildo inside its stomach (Source: Expressen/Twitter).
  12. I agree, Mark. We need a new green deal and solidarity for all of Europe. The current political direction, with austerity measures and other conservative/liberal policies, clearly doesn't work and only creates a dangerous climate of hate.
  13. As you can see, we have yet another new website design. Due to some severe bugs in the previous design I had to do some drastic changes. The old design might come back once these site-breaking bugs have been fixed. But this design isn't so bad if I may say so myself. Besides the new looks, we also got two new article layouts. For example: Here is the standard article layout and here is an article layout for longer articles or articles with amazing photos. Let me know what you think! Good? Bad? Awful?
  14. IPCC, the UN’s expert panel on climate change, released part three of their new global warming study yesterday. The new report says that the world’s current efforts to combat global warming are not sufficient if we want to avoid catastrophic climate change. If we are to keep global warming below the 2 degrees Celsius cap recommended by scientists, emissions from CO2 and other greenhouse gases must drop by 40 to 70 percent by 2050 – and drop even further to near-zero by the end of the century. To accomplish this, the world needs to urgently switch to clean and renewable energy. Clean energy sources will need to triple and completely dominate world energy by 2050, the IPCC report concludes. But the direct opposite is currently happening. World emissions of various greenhouse gases are increasing. Between 2000 and 2010, average global emissions rose by 2.2 percent every year – reaching “unprecedented levels” of carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere. Increasing carbon emissions are largely due to an increasing demand for energy and a rising coal use in countries such as China. “There is a clear message from science: To avoid dangerous interference with the climate system, we need to move away from business as usual,” said Ottmar Edenhofer, one of three co-chairs of the IPCC working group. We need to end the current dominance of coal, oil and gas and replace them with cleaner and more renewable energy sources. But this is a daunting – and unprecedented – task when fossil fuels currently provide more than 80 percent of the world’s total energy production. “We can only avoid catastrophic climate change if we reduce our dependency on fossil fuels – we're already on track for four degrees warming, which will be impossible for human society to adapt to,” said Friends of the Earth's executive director Andy Atkins in a response to the new IPCC report. “We have the technology to prevent dangerous climate change. What we lack is the political will of our leaders to strongly champion renewable power and energy efficiency.” So-called CCS technologies, which capture and bury carbon emissions is one way to produce low-carbon energy. But the IPCC experts notes that this technology is not feasible as it “has not yet been applied at a large, commercial scale.” Gas could be important in the “short-term”, during the transition, but only if it replaces coal. One low-carbon energy option is nuclear power. But the IPCC report notes that nuclear “has been declining since 1993” and voices concern about potential safety risks, “nuclear weapon proliferation risks, waste management security as well as financial and regulatory risks.” The big emphasis in the IPCC report is on renewable energy sources and technologies, such as solar and wind power, but also energy efficiency and conservation. The IPCC report acknowledges how much renewable energy technologies have advanced since 2007. Since the last major IPCC study, “many [renewable energy] technologies have demonstrated substantial performance improvements and cost reductions, and a growing number of [renewable energy] technologies have achieved a level of maturity to enable deployment at significant scale,” the report says. “Regarding electricity generation alone, [renewable energy] accounted for just over half of the new electricity generating capacity added globally in 2012, led by growth in wind, hydro and solar power.” But renewable energy and various implementations against energy waste requires substantial long-term investments. And here’s the good news from the new IPCC report: a global roll-out of clean and renewable energy is remarkably cheap – but only if we act now. The investment required to green our global energy system would only result in a 0.06% reduction of off expected annual economic growth rates of 1.3%-3%, the IPCC report concludes. Read that again. It would only cost us 0.06% of annual economic growth to save the climate and make sure there will be a livable planet for future generations as well. That’s nothing. But only if we act now. “We cannot afford to lose another decade,” warned German economist Ottmar Edenhofer, a co-chair of the IPCC committee. “If we lose another decade, it becomes extremely costly to achieve climate stabilization.” Considering that the world spends over half a trillion dollars every year to subsidize fossil fuels – about six times more than the global investment into renewable energy – there is clearly room to divest and divert money from fossil fuels into renewable energy. And a transition towards clean and renewable energy would also result in health benefits, as professor Nicholas Stern notes. “The transition to sustainable low-carbon economic development and growth is an opportunity not just to avoid potentially catastrophic climate risks, but also to reap other benefits from cleaner and more efficient technologies, such as reductions in local air pollution,” Stern said. “There is only plan A: collective action to reduce emissions now,” EU commissioner Connie Hedegaard said. “The more you wait, the more it will cost. The more you wait, the more difficult it will become.” And US Secretary of State John Kerry agrees with that sentiment: “Unless we act dramatically and quickly, science tells us our climate and our way of life are literally in jeopardy. […] Waiting is truly unaffordable. The costs of inaction are catastrophic,” he said. “We stand at a fork in road,” said Li Shuo, Greenpeace East Asia's climate and energy campaigner. “One way leads to more dependence on dwindling fossil fuels that are wrecking our climate and damaging our health; the other to a world powered by a booming clean energy sector that is already driving growth and creating jobs. The sooner we act, the cheaper it will be.” The IPCC study, titled Mitigation of climate change, is the last report of three IPCC working groups. The previous reports have looked at the current state of climate science and the impacts of unchecked climate change. This report was produced by 1250 international experts and has been approved by 194 governments.
  15. Hello hiracave.com, welcome to Green Blog! :)

  16. Yes, we have a new website design. Again. ;) I will post more about it tomorrow. :)

  17. From the album: Random images

    This biodegradable urn contains a tree seed that gets it nutrients from your ashes.
  18. From the album: Random images

    This biodegradable urn contains a tree seed that gets it nutrients from your ashes.
  19. We might get a sequel to the highly successful documentary An Inconvenient Truth with Al Gore from 2006.   "We have had conversations," producer Lawrence Bender tells THR. "We've met; we've discussed. If we are going to make a movie, we want it to have an impact."   "God, do we need one," environmental activist Laurie David said. "Everything in that movie has come to pass. At the time we did the movie, there was Hurricane Katrina; now we have extreme weather events every other week. The update has to be incredible and shocking."   What do you think, would you watch An Inconvenient Truth 2?
  20. Simon

    Airborne Wind Turbine

    The world’s first airborne wind turbine will be tested for 18 months in harsh weather conditions just south of the city of Fairbanks in Alaska, USA. The big helium-filled wind turbine will generate electricity for more than a dozen families living off the grid.
  21. From the album: Airborne Wind Turbine

    Read the article: World's first airborne wind turbine will be tested in Alaska

    © Altaeros Energies

  22. From the album: Airborne Wind Turbine

    Read the article: World's first airborne wind turbine will be tested in Alaska

    © Altaeros Energies

  23. From the album: Airborne Wind Turbine

    Read the article: World's first airborne wind turbine will be tested in Alaska

    © Altaeros Energies

  24. From the album: Airborne Wind Turbine

    Read the article: World's first airborne wind turbine will be tested in Alaska

    © Altaeros Energies

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