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Simon

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Everything posted by Simon

  1. I doubt it. Because this video is not really a commercial. It's just a video that the people from "PurchaseBrothers" did to show off their skills and knowledge for potential advertiser customers. Me thinks... If you have played Half-Life 2 you should enjoy their "Escape from City-17" flick. :)
  2. Sad news everyone! In a few days I will take down the Green Directory. All links will be removed and the site will not be accessible anymore. Why do I do this? Because I frankly don't have the time any longer to be able to manage all my websites (I've got quite a few!). But also because Green Blog and this environment forum is taking more and more of my time (Which is a good thing!). And I don't want to stand behind any half-finished or half-active websites. I wanna feel proud over my work and I want others to enjoy the sites as well. Thats why I think it's the best to close down my other websites so I can concentrate fully on making Green Blog and this forum more active and even better than before. I hope you'll understand. :hug: If you want to take over the Green Directory (along with domain name, directory script and website design) just send me a PM or an email at info@green-blog.org and maybe we can come to some sort of agreement. :)
  3. Good list! But you forgot to mention that one of the more eco-friendly things you can do in your everyday life is to eat less meat.
  4. CLICK HERE TO SEE THE IMAGE! The Bhopal disaster or Bhopal gas tragedy was an industrial disaster that took place at a Union Carbide pesticide plant in the Indian city of Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh. On 3 December 1984, the plant released 42 tonnes of toxic methyl isocyanate (MIC) gas, exposing more than 500,000 people to toxic gases. The first official immediate death toll was 2,259. A more generally accepted figure is that 8,000- 10,000 died within 72 hours, and it is estimated that 25,000 have since died from gas-related diseases. The Bhopal disaster is frequently cited as the world's worst industrial disaster. via Reddit
  5. hihi That reminds me about the Indians of the Concrete Jungle. They deflated the tyres of planet-wrecking SUVs and left a letter, where the action was explained, to the owner on the windscreen.
  6. Why not? :halo: You don't have to be a dictator to be selfish! Just look at the US of A and the rest of the West... :rolleyes:
  7. If the .eco domains doesn't cost any extreme amounts of cash I will probably buy green-blog.eco and enviro-space.eco. I won't replace the old URLs with these. I will just keep them redirecting to the .org and .com addresses, just like I've done with the green-blog.net URL.
  8. That shouldn't just be applied to people but cars in general too. Large and gas-guzzling cars and SUVs should pay some sort of tax.
  9. Yes, pretty much everything we do contributes to global warming these days. And I agree that the energy problems should be the main concern, not human population limits. You write on your blog post: "In addition, the ability to choose is less common there, with birth control availability patchy and information hard to get" I agree. But we shall not forget that the West is even blocking progress in developing countries, mainly with the help(?) from the Pope and his religious followers who bans, spread lies and misinformation about condoms, abortion and other birth prevention methods. Good then that, according to the article, "the world’s population is expected to peak at around 9 billion by 2060 and then to decline to around 8.5 billion by 2100". And that: “Just five countries are likely to produce most of the world’s population growth in the coming decades: India, China, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Ethiopia. The carbon emissions of one American today are equivalent to those of around four Chinese, 20 Indians, 30 Pakistanis, 40 Nigerians, or 250 Ethiopians.” “A woman in rural Ethiopia can have ten children and her family will still do less damage, and consume fewer resources, than the family of the average soccer mom in Minnesota or Munich. In the unlikely event that her ten children live to adulthood and have ten children of their own, the entire clan of more than a hundred will still be emitting less carbon dioxide than you or I.” When it comes to climate change overpopulation is NOT an major issue. No matter how you try to skew it. Overconsumption in the West is a much, MUCH larger problem.
  10. Hint: This is the sort of thing that would fit perfectly in the Calendar.
  11. Lots of good tips there. Thanks for posting. :)
  12. I just gave thumbs up to all of your posts! :thumbup:
  13. Simon

    Do you smoke?

    That's a weird way to see things... :thoughtful:
  14. What is your opinion about overpopulation versus overconsumption? Which is the biggest problem? Can it be solved?
  15. Welcome to the forum Mark. You posted in the wrong forum so I moved your topic. :)
  16. I often hear people saying that overpopulation is the main problem to our environmental and ecological problems. Some people even claim that it's responsible for global warming. I also agreed with this idea before. But after reading more about the subject over the years I have changed my mind. The rich countries in the "North", i.e. the West, have a "rapidly decreasing" population which is "expected to decline over the next forty years." Developing countries such as India, China and most of Africa on the other hand is where we will see future population numbers increasing. And yes. It seems so easy to blame countries with an overwhelming rising population for being responsible for wrecking our planet, climate and environment. Because surely more people must mean more pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. Right? Not really. The West is responsible for about 80% of the worlds CO2 increase. An average person living in Great Britain will in only 11 days emit as much CO2 as an average person in Bangladesh will during a whole year. And just a single power plant in West Yorkshire in Great Britain will produce more CO2 every year than all the 139 million people combined living in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia and Mozambique. As Fred Pearce from the Yale Environment 360 blog notes, only a small portion of the world's people are using most of the planets resources as well as producing the most of the greenhouse gases. And those are living in the West: "The world's population quadrupled to six billion people during the 20th century. It is still rising and may reach 9 billion by 2050. Yet for at least the past century, rising per-capita incomes have outstripped the rising head count several times over. And while incomes don't translate precisely into increased resource use and pollution, the correlation is distressingly strong. [...]By almost any measure, a small proportion of the world's people take the majority of the world's resources and produce the majority of its pollution. Take carbon dioxide emissions - a measure of our impact on climate but also a surrogate for fossil fuel consumption. Stephen Pacala, director of the Princeton Environment Institute, calculates that the world's richest half-billion people - that's about 7 percent of the global population - are responsible for 50 percent of the world's carbon dioxide emissions. Meanwhile the poorest 50 percent are responsible for just 7 percent of emissions." According to Pearce overpopulation in the developing countries is not the problem. Instead the increasing overconsumption among the planets 7% richest people and countries is to be blamed. And he is not alone in claiming this. George Monbiot, Europe's leading green commentator, also agrees with this viewpoint. As Monbiot notes in a recent published article on the Guardian: "As one the graphs King displayed demonstrated, and as the UN and independent scientists predict, the world's population is expected to peak at around 9 billion by 2060 and then to decline to around 8.5 billion by 2100. Of course the bisophere can ill-afford to carry these numbers, and they will load an extra 40 or 50% of pressure onto every environmental constraint. It's an issue, in other words. But the issue? Until the recession struck, the global rate of economic growth was 3.8%. The world's governments hope and pray that we'll be back on this track as soon as possible. Population, of course, is one of the components of economic growth, but the global population growth rate is currently 1.2%. It's responsible, in other words, for one-third of normal economic growth. The rest is supplied by rising consumption. Consumption, on this measure, bears twice as much responsibility for pressure on resources and ecosystems as population growth." Let's take a look at the ecological footprint between developing countries and developed countries in the West. An ecological footprint is the estimate on how much land is required to provide you and me with food and other resources as well as cleaning up our pollution. The global average ecological footprint is 2.7 hectares per person. Sweden, my own country, has an ecological footprint of 5.1 hectares. The UK is on 5.3. Australia has 7.8 and Canada has an average of 7.1 hectares. The United Arab Emirates and the United States of America are on the top spot with an ecological footprint of 9.5 and 9.4. Developing countries such as China only has an ecological footprint of 2.1 hectares while India is on 0.9. And most countries in Africa are around or below 1.0 hectares. Pearce gives even more examples of unfair consumption between the rich and poor countries: "Americans gobble up more than 120 kilograms of meat a year per person, compared to just 6 kilos in India, for instance." "Just five countries are likely to produce most of the world's population growth in the coming decades: India, China, Pakistan, Nigeria, and Ethiopia. The carbon emissions of one American today are equivalent to those of around four Chinese, 20 Indians, 30 Pakistanis, 40 Nigerians, or 250 Ethiopians." "A woman in rural Ethiopia can have ten children and her family will still do less damage, and consume fewer resources, than the family of the average soccer mom in Minnesota or Munich. In the unlikely event that her ten children live to adulthood and have ten children of their own, the entire clan of more than a hundred will still be emitting less carbon dioxide than you or I." Just like Monbiot and Pearce claims overpopulation is not the problem. Even if we were to get a zero population growth around the world it wouldn't help us against the climate crisis. Instead the overconsumption among the rich few in the world is the main problem which we must deal with. Climate Progress writes: "To avoid catastrophic global warming impacts, the rich countries need to cut greenhouse gas emissions 80% to 90% by mid-century. The developing countries (not including China) mostly must slow emissions growth, peak by mid-century, then decline - while ending the vast majority of deforestation by 2020. China must peak its emissions by 2020 and then reduce after that, first slowly, then quickly by mid-century." Overpopulation is only seen as a major problem because it's the only thing we in the West can blame the developing countries for.
  17. The Inter Press Service has an interesting interview with James Lovelock, known for proposing the Gaia hypothesis, about everything from the IPCC to geo-engineering and climate tipping points. Lovelock has earlier said that he believes that climate change is now irreversible. He predicts that the major part of the humans, more than six billion people, will get wiped out of the face of the earth due to wars, starvation, epidemics and chaos during the rest of the century due to the effects of a changing climate. Lovelock estimates that by year 2100 there will only be around 500 millions people left who struggles to survive on the few remaining liveable places on earth: Scandinavia, Canada and Iceland. In the IPS interview Lovelock says he hopes that once climate disaster strikes “we will stay civilised and those in the North will give refuge to the unimaginably large numbers of climate refugees”: “TIERRAMÉRICA: What will this new climate be like? JL: The tropical and subtropical zones of the Earth will be too hot and dry to grow food or support human life. People will be forced to migrate towards the poles to places like Canada. There will be less than one billion people by the end of the century. My hope is that we will stay civilised and those in the North will give refuge to the unimaginably large numbers of climate refugees.” “[…]TIERRAMÉRICA: How did we end up in such a difficult position, in which the human species is at risk? JL: It's like the pre-World War II calm in Britain when I was a young man. No one did anything until bombs began to fall. We really don't notice climate change; it seems theoretical to most of us. When the first great climate disaster strikes, I hope we will all pull together just as if our nation was being invaded.” Although I don’t agree with many of the viewpoints Lovelock holds, his nuclear stance being one, I always find his ideas and opinions interesting (and scary!). Lovelock’s latest book "The Vanishing Face of Gaia: A Final Warning" was released in April earlier this year, which is said to be “Lovelock's final word on the terrifying environmental problems we will confront in the twenty-first century.” I haven’t read it yet, the book is laying here on the table next to me, but I am sure it will be just as interesting as his former books. via Stephen Leahy
  18. During the G8 the world leaders failed to agree on specific targets for climate cuts. They only agreed on “substantially reduce” global emissions by 2050, without any legally binding targets or a roadmap. The United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon criticizes the G8 climate outcome and says it’s “not sufficient”, and that “much more needs to be done” if the world is to be able to agree on a new climate agreement during the climate talks in Copenhagen later this year. "The time for delays and half-measures is over. The personal leadership of every Head of State or Government is needed to seize this moment to protect people and the planet from one of the most serious challenges ever to confront humanity." Ban Ki-moon warned in a statement, issued shortly after the G8 climate meetings, that if the world’s leaders “fail to act this year, they will have squandered a unique historical opportunity that may not come again”. But the Secretary General did welcome the G8 long term goal to reduce emissions by 80% by 2050. But said that for it to be credible it requires “ambitious mid-term targets” and “clear baselines”. “In order to achieve such a global goal, developed countries must lead by example in making firm commitments to reduce their emissions by 2020 on the order of the 25 - 40 per cent below 1990 levels that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) tells us is required. It is disappointing to note that thus far, the mid-term emission targets announced by developed countries in the MEF are not in this range. Every country must do its part, based on the principle of equity. Developing countries also need to contribute by undertaking national efforts to mitigate emissions that are nationally appropriate, measurable, reportable and verifiable. Developing countries need funding and technology assistance. Funding is also needed to assist vulnerable developing countries adapt to the harmful effects of climate change. We stand at a historical crossroads. Business as usual is no longer viable.” Green Blog twittered during the G8 meetings and you can read all the "tweets" here.
  19. Do you care to explain that a bit further? :blink:
  20. In an earlier post here in this topic I wrote that one reason against nuclear energy was the increasing temperatures: "And as the planet is warming up, is nuclear really a smart move?: Thirsty Nukes Can't Take the Heat and Climate change puts nuclear energy into hot water " Now look at this: France imports UK electricity as plants shut France is being forced to import electricity from Britain to cope with a summer heatwave that has helped to put a third of its nuclear power stations out of action. READ IT: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/utilities/article6626811.ece
  21. Hi and welcome to the forum. Hopefully you will have a great time here. Good luck with your blog!
  22. So much is happening today in and around Italy as the G8 meeting is taking place. That is why we are trying out something new here on Green Blog. We will be reporting about all the climate-related news coming from the G8 camp with the help from Twitter. We will post the latest news on our Twitter channel. We will also display the Twitter updates on our front page as well as updating this blog post. Will the G8 leaders agree on a strong climate plan and a roadmap to the Copenhagen climate talks? Or will they fail once again? Stay tuned to find out! UPDATED WITH IMAGES AND VIDEOS FROM DAY 2! Latest updates displayed first: Day Two Watch: UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon criticises G8 climate efforts http://su.pr/6VoTAd Conclusion: The internet is mainly negative on the subject of g8, according to Google. http://su.pr/1iHfFv UN S-G : 'Much more needs to be done if governments are to seal the deal on a new climate agreement' http://su.pr/9VVJpz Sign our petition to hold @BarackObama and other #G8 leaders accountable on #climatechange http://bit.ly/g9Ybh VIDEO: climate campaigner Ben Stewart talks about why he's living on a coal smokestack during the #G8 http://su.pr/2gSvz5 " />" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"> Greenpeace: Five coal plants occupied by climate activists during G8 Summit http://su.pr/2RYC36 "Progress on #climatechange [at the #G8] was not enough." UN Sec General Ban Ki-moon Russia says 80% emissions reduction target by 2050 "unacceptable" http://su.pr/2L2L25 Take 2 painting STUPID on chimney at Brindisi, Italy's most greenhouse-polluting coal plant. http://twitpic.com/9s4f5 G8 leaders failing to stop climate change http://bit.ly/zjJqL G8: World leaders fail to agree specific target for climate cuts http://su.pr/2y1Aiz G8: World leaders fail to agree specific target for climate cuts http://bit.ly/4hTvfy RT @Greenpeace 35 hours occupying Brindisi. The sly has cleared over the mediterranean sea. We can see Albania from here! "Only the G8 can agree on absolutely nothing, ignore the most pressing subjects and then claim a major breakthrough" #G8 RT @V_R_ Greenpeace are occupying FIVE coal plants now during the #G8! http://su.pr/2ethbZ Blogs from activists on coal plants are posted here http://bit.ly/AEoq Take Action! Ask world leaders to personally attend climate conference: http://su.pr/1O0eWk This morning 5 climbers scaled Italy's newest coal power plant near Rome to paint "G8 STOP THIS" 30 hrs @ Brindisi pwr plant. Just chkd out massive greenhse pollution exhausts. http://twitpic.com/9rn0y #G8 #climateaction RT @Greenpeace Day One BBC: G8 set new global warming targets http://su.pr/1N41Wq Mount Rushmore banner: "America honors leaders. Not politicians. Stop Global warming." http://su.pr/4M5qQk The #G8 summit negotiations to halve global carbon emissions by 2050 have failed! Instead agree on a max 2C degree limit for climate change. More TreeHugger: Big Climate Change Fail: Major Nations Fail to Agree to 50% Emission Cuts by 2050 http://su.pr/AGRu33 TreeHugger reports: Greenpeace Drapes Poster Over Mount Rushmore to Call for Climate Action http://su.pr/1BIj59 100 Activists Climb Coal Chimneys To Demand G-8 Leaders Get Tough: http://su.pr/9akeBI Pictures from the G8 Coal Plant Action in Italy today: http://su.pr/6aFTjt Watch: G8 Coal Plant Action http://su.pr/1kLokl #G8 You-Turn the Earth, a global campaign to let leaders know that we want to stop runaway climate change http://su.pr/3ktrSx GP have actions going on in Italy with over 100 activists occupying coal power plants + a banner hanging on Mt. #Rushmore #climateaction #G8 Greenpeace is hanging a banner with a message to Obama on Mt Rushmore right now! http://su.pr/2rzliz The Guardian: Greenpeace activists hijack Italian power stations http://su.pr/1GYWQ4 "a new coal plant at kingsnorth would emit more than the one we're occupying near venice" http://su.pr/3OMa5o RT @greenpeaceuk Want to be part of a global community ready to take action to demand action? Become a climate activist: http://su.pr/1g2ld1 #Obama staff say #climate change not caused by fossil fuels. GP leaks doc to press http://su.pr/1NGool Obama then changed #G8 RT @Greenpeace Want 2 know how the #G8 countries score on #climate? see how #WWF scores them http://su.pr/1DBmjt “Its the same gridlock we had last year when Bush was president.” http://su.pr/2wZSjP G8 fails to get emerging powers to agree on climate change goals http://su.pr/2EVPMI Half of emissions in the atmosphere are from coal. And every g8 country is planning new coal plants RT @greenpeaceuk G8 emissions pledge is 'scientifically illiterate': http://su.pr/30qNfW Oh my! G8 strip mob from Avaaz: http://su.pr/31wNOM Watch: G8 Cooking Up the Planet and Spicing it with CO2 http://su.pr/1BLyO4 Greenpeace urges the G8 to 'heal the world' http://su.pr/A8rCHa Greenpeace currently occupying power stations in Italy for L'Aquila summit http://su.pr/2Z1QUf Greenpeace goes to the G8 http://su.pr/25r6zJ Take Action! Ask world leaders to personally attend climate conference: http://su.pr/1O0eWk Major nations have failed to agree to set a goal halving greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 http://su.pr/1NeVRY Watch and read about G8 #climateaction as it happens in Italy today http://su.pr/2ethbZ
  23. Less Plastic? No, not really. Take a look at this picture: From http://www.triplepun...lly-sandisk.php
  24. The nuclear ‘renaissance’? It’s never gonna happen... According to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology: [F]igures, say the authors of [a new Massachusetts Institute of Technology] report, an update on a similar report in 2003, mean that "even if all the announced plans for new nuclear power plant construction are realized, the total will be well behind that needed for reaching a thousand gigawatts of new capacity worldwide by 2050." One thousand gigawatts is the number the M.I.T. professors estimated would be needed to ensure that nuclear power provided 20 percent of global electricity needs as well as cut emissions of greenhouse gases from power plants. In the U.S., the number would be jumping from 100 to 300 gigawatts of nuclear-sourced electricity by 2050. Read the rest
  25. Vattenfall, Europe’s third-largest energy company which is wholly owned by the Swedish Government, has been announced as the winner in the Climate Greenwash Award 2009 at a ceremony in Copenhagen. “Vattenfall, which won with 39% of the vote (about 2000 votes cast), was nominated for “its mastery of spin on climate change, portraying itself as a climate champion while lobbying to continue business as usual, using coal, nuclear power, and pseudo-solutions such as agrofuels and carbon capture and storage (CCS).” The energy company also played a key role in setting up the World Business Summit on Climate Change through the Combat Climate Change - a lobby group established by Vattenfall to promote the “climate-friendly technologies” such as carbon capture and storage and nuclear power, which are the company’s preferred options for tackling climate change.” Climate Greenwash Awards Coordinator Kenneth Haar congratulated Vattenfall for their hard (read: dirty) work which resulted in their first place. Haar also gave a special mention the Danish Government for giving these dirty corporations easy access to the climate talks: “We would like to congratulate Vattenfall for their outrageous use of green spin to support their dirty business model. Vattenfall wants to build more coal plants in Europe, even though coal is the dirtiest source of energy - and it has successfully lobbied the EU for funds to develop carbon capture and storage technology. But even if this unproven technology works, it will not help reduce emissions quickly enough to help prevent the threat of climate change. “I would also like to give a special mention to the Danish Government which has provided these polluting industries which such easy access to the climate talks. Denmark says it wants companies to back a deal on climate change, but the reality is that they are giving big business the opportunity to completely undermine the effectiveness of any deal that is done.” Shell, Dong, ArcelorMittal, Repsol and BP was among the other energy companies nominated for the award. The Climate Greenwash Awards were organised by Corporate Europe Observatory, Attac Denmark, The Climate Movement, ClimaX and Friends of the Earth Denmark.
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