Saturday, February 10, 2007

Dispatches from the Maine Climate Summit

Here I am - reporting from the Maine Climate Summit.

The Maine Geocluster of SustainUS is hosting the 3rd annual Maine Climate Summit at the College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor, Maine.

Current temperature - 19 degrees, but according to the weather website, it feels like 9 degrees.

There is a high energy level despite the cold. Over one hundred listeners appeared for the keynote speaker last night, Alison Drayton. A hundred people may not seem like a lot, but for a small town, on a Friday night, in the middle of the winter, not a bad accomplishment.

Alison Drayton is an international climate negotiations expert. She is a senior official of the United Nations Development Programme with an extensive history in international climate change negotiations. She is the former Counselor in the Permanent Mission of Guyana to the UN, where she coordinated the Group of G-77/China on climate and sustainable development issues during the formative years of the Framework on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol. According to COA President David Hales, "Her visionary leadership and her superior negotiating skills helped set the basis for international progress in addressing global warming."

Drayton addressed a number of key issues in her address last night. The disproportionate impacts of climate change on developing countries and the rising costs of action were two points that were emphasized.

The threats of rising famine and malnutrition are not limited to developing countries. Avoiding these crises requires changes at the fundamental level of many of these regions. Costs of action are still less expensive as the future costs of inaction.

She also pointed out that the developing world blames the industrialized world for their historical role in climate change, their lack of inaction and in some cases their refusal to acknowledge the threat.

She ended her talk with some practical, realistic changes we can make in our daily lives.

1) exercise voter power. Vote for the greener alternative, lobby your elected official
2) save energy, save the planet, save dollars. Wash in cold water, use long life lightbulbs,
3) exercise consumer power. Support green companies. 12 billion dollars are spent on plastic bags alone.
4) exercise ethical investment. The power of the individual share holder in the united states is very important
5) support clean tech
6) require public companies to report on their emissions
7) buy local

The question and answer period following her presentation provided a very candid look at the negotiations process within the UN.
Other issues raised included our current level of preparation for the worst case scenario, as well as the post-2012 question that has been plaguing Kyoto-watchers for quite some time.

The role of international negotiations in mitigating climate change raises a number of key points regarding states varying levels of commitment to solving the climate crisis. Issues of sovereignty, wealth and global influence all play a key role in how we will solve this problem.

Maine house Representative Ted Kauffman raised some interesting points regarding the role of US States acting as incubators for legislation. As more US states are entering into climate change policy, both locally and regionally, businesses are beginning to fear the changes required to comply with a number of different systems. This is prompting lobbying at the Federal level by companies who are not necessarily in support of climate policy. This is illustrative of the high level of adaptability individuals and businesses can have in the face of legislation and compliance. By implementing important policy at the State level, we can make a strong statement - to constituents, businesses and other governments, that the state of the climate is posing severe problems around the world. Governments need to implement policy, and individuals need to be enterprising.

Let's hope that $25 million dollar prize gets awarded soon!

-julia

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

news from the (water)front


Hello everyone -

we just received a note from our wonderful Dave who is bravely facing the cold in Norfolk, VA, checking on our wonderful Weatherbird.


We would also like to take this opportunity to announce the Planktos Weatherbird Blog




we'll be sending regular boat updates, bloom updates and hillarious open ocean stories (unlike the very educational, but rarely personal postings on this blog).


Check out pictures of the boat and keep up to date on Planktos EcoRestoration!

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Who said Plankton aren't beautiful?

I found this site while googling David Thomas - an associate professor of marine biogeochemistry at the University of Wales in Bangor, Wales. You can read the article about him here.


At Planktos, we're always looking at plankton in an appreciative way. A recent addition to our library is Plankton: A Critical Creation.






The image on the right is a plankton-inspired carving by Louise Hibbert.









Her partner, Sarah Parker-Eaton works in silver and gold to create her plankton creations, seen to left.








Sarah, Louise and David all collaborated on a plankton project and created some amazing work which can be seen here, or below.

Monday, February 5, 2007

Maine Climate Summit

BAR HARBOR - As frigid weather maintains its stranglehold on the state, the phenomenon of climate change isn’t immediately palpable in this tip of the United States.
But organizers of the third annual Maine Climate Change Summit, to be held next weekend in Bar Harbor, said global warming and its environmental impact reach everyone, and any chance to discuss the topic is a good one.

The summit, which begins Friday, Feb. 9, and runs through Sunday, Feb. 11, was organized by COA students and members of SustainUS, a youth environmental movement. It also is sponsored by the Sierra Student Coalition and a Planktos, a San Francisco-based ecosystem restoration company.

Saturday's mid-afternoon workshop focuses on a panel on science and technology with environmental engineer Robert Niven, who has been working on developing a cost-effective, environmentally-benign carbon capture and storage process, called CO2 Accelerated Concrete Curing. Also on the panel is transportation engineer and land use planner Jon Slason of Burlington, Vt., who has worked with organizations, municipalities and states to assess the impacts of development and land use changes while encouraging growth and economic stability. Additional panel members are solar engineer David Kaufman and COA 2006 alumna, Julia Clark who is representing Planktos, a company researching the role of plankton in carbon storage.

Read More here or here

Thursday, February 1, 2007

although the climate and oceans are inexorably intertwined, the critical role oceans play in climate change is seldom addressed

Oceans Report Card Gives U.S. Government an F for Funding

WASHINGTON, DC, January 30, 2007 (ENS) - The failure of Congress and the President to commit sufficient funding to oceans protection in 2006 earned the federal government a grade of F on the Joint Ocean Commission Initiative's U.S. Ocean Policy Report Card, issued today.


Admiral James D. Watkins, co-chair of the Joint Ocean Commission Initiative, told reporters on a conference call today that the oceans are in deep trouble, in part due to the effects of climate change.

Read more

UN Climate Change Report On Global Warming

The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is due to release a report in Paris on Friday entitled Climate Change 2007 in which 2,500 scientists from 130 countries unequivocally state that the current trend towards potentially catastrophic global warming has been induced by human activity, which began with the dramatic increase in fossil fuel use during the Industrial Revolution of the mid-19th century.
read the complete article here

Fudging the evidence

Tuesday, Rep. Henry Waxman (D., Calif.), held a hearing on “Political Interference with Science: Global Warming.”
Turns out (surprise surprise) that the Bush administration is muzzling federal scientists and suppressing or distorting their research on climate change.

Click here to read the full article online.