Wednesday, May 2, 2007
Monday, April 30, 2007
Can plankton help save the planet?
Global warming is a problem that needs to be fought now - not later. And ocean sequestration is one of few strategies that can correct for our dirty past on a large scale. Even if iron fertilisation fails to lower carbon dioxide concentrations, having that information is invaluable. Someone needs to figure out what CO2 mitigation strategies are going to work, and we can't wait for a hundred different studies to be conducted before going into the oceans.
We're taking our chances on this one, hoping "save the planet, and make a little money of the side"(as our CEO likes to say). If things go as planned, we'll have taken millions of pounds of carbon out of the atmophere and begun to restore ocean ecosystems by the end of the year. The upswing is, even if things fail completely, then we'll still have obtained priceless information about our oceans, and our fight against global warming. And we're going to do it without burning a single tax dollar.
The New York Times raises some important questions, but in some ways misses the point. What really matters is that we're doing something, and that's a lot more than most people can say.
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Carbon Bartering
On the way back to the aiport after the festival, Russ told his taxi driver about the trip. Moved by our company's mission, the taxi driver accepted payment of the cab fare in the form of carbon offsets for the taxi.
I find this wonderfully hilarious. And good for the jolly green cabbie.
Monday, April 23, 2007
Buy one pound, get one free!
This doesn't surprise me. In my birth-given rights as a wealthy American, I deserve to consume any piece of food I feel like consuming at any given point in time, even if this requires shipping the piece of food halfway around the world for my personal self enjoyment. Obviously.
So, how much CO2 is produced by shipping grapes around the world? Let’s find out.
Some rough estimates:
The middle of Chile is about 5270mi from the middle of the US.
A 747 cargo plane uses about 6.8 gal/mi. Yikes.
At full capacity, a 747 can carry an impressive 450,000 pounds of cargo.
So, we use a little math magic and we get
(6.8 gal/mi x 19.4 lbs of CO2/gal gasoline x 5270 miles) / 450,000 lbs cargo =
1.5 pounds CO2 per pound of fruit
This is actually much less than I had expected. To put this number into perspective, the average American produces a whopping 122 pounds of CO2 daily. Although, eating grapes in April is rather unnecessary, and every pound I can keep out of the atmosphere makes a difference.
I’ll make up for myself at the farmer’s market this weekend, to free myself of liberal guilt.
Friday, April 20, 2007
Carbon Credit Card?
One day, your wallet might hold not just your credit, debit and department store loyalty cards. It might also hold a carbon card. One day, you might be worrying not just about how much money is in your bank account, but also how much is in your carbon account.
Every time you fill up at a petrol station, every time you pay your electricity bill, you will be grumbling not just about the price of fuel or power, but about the price of carbon.
In this future world carbon will be the currency you need to pay for your contribution to greenhouse gas pollution.
You will be allotted a "free" amount of carbon to spend on electricity, petrol or air travel. If you exceed your account you will have to buy carbon from someone else or go without.
Radical though it might sound, it is a concept being taken seriously in Britain by both the Labour Government and the Tory Opposition as they try to outbid each other in the climate change stakes.
The British Secretary of State for the Environment, David Miliband - tipped by some to be the country's next prime minister - wants to test a scheme under which all British citizens would be issued an identical annual carbon allowance, stored as points on an electronic card. Points would be deducted at the point of sale for every purchase of non-renewable energy, according to reports in the British media.
If holders do not use their full carbon allotment - say, because they used public transport instead of a car or took domestic holidays instead of flying overseas - they would be able to sell their leftover points.
The idea of individuals being held directly responsible for their greenhouse gas emissions is being taken so seriously in Britain that the Conservative Opposition wants to apply it to the airline industry. It has proposed a series of taxes on flights, including a fuel duty.
Read more...Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Green is good in any shade
The reason I say this is because recently, I have witnessed environmentally conscious people criticizing one another for the way they practice their beliefs. I heard a bicyclist talk down to a carpooler. I saw a vegetarian sneer at a meat-eater… in an organic restaurant. Even Al Gore is being criticized for using too much electricity, as if his impact as a public speaker does not do enough for the planet.
This phenomenon is especially confusing to me. I’m sure Snoop Dogg uses just as much energy as Al, and he’s not getting criticized for it. Even President Bush gets by without having his energy bill scrutinized. If Al is a bad person for heating his swimming pool, then I am a better person than my vegan friend, because she once killed a mosquito while we were camping. (Even though I was eating a hamburger.)
When it comes down to it, we are fighting a difficult battle, and we are going to have moments of frustration. Let us channel that frustration into warmth and encouragement, instead of separating into Yankees and Dodgers. With a little love, we can inspire a Hummer-driver to stop at the local farmer’s market. And that is a good first step.
(And while we’re at it, let’s make sure Snoop Dogg keeps his tires properly inflated.)
Friday, April 13, 2007
Watt's your problem?
When you drive your car, fuel gets burned and a lot of heat is produced. In order to keep your engine cool, this heat gets sent through the radiator, where it gets released into the atmosphere. This warms the air around your car and keeps your car cool.
Despite this, the amount of heat released into the atmosphere while driving is very small when compared to the amount of heat trapped by carbon dioxide. Let’s look at some numbers to make sure.
World-wide, we are using somewhere around 6 x10^12 (6 million million) watts of energy at any point in time. That’s a whole lot of light bulbs. Since burning fuel usually makes more heat than useful energy (about 3 times as much), we’ll estimate that 18 million million watts of heat are being produced at a time. Yikes!
Now let’s compare that to the amount of heat being trapped by greenhouse gases. According to the most recent IPCC report, the atmosphere captures 1.6 watts/square meter more heat than it did before the industrial revolution. That means for every square meter of space on our planet, 1.6 extra watts of sunlight are warming the atmosphere. How much heat does that produce? Well,
1.6 watts/sq meter x 510 trillion square meters on our planet =
816 million million watts of heat trapped by greenhouse gases
That’s a whole lot more than we calculated for burning fuels.
Maybe heat produced by a car engine or a power plant is enough to warm the earth, but I am pretty sure that greenhouse gases are responsible for our hyper-speed climate change. At this very moment, greenhouse gases are warming our planet 45 times more than the burning of fuels.