The Spiraling Homestead

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Freeganism

Where I first heard about Freeganism:
One Man's Trash Is Another Man's... Dinner? Sep. 13, 2007
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/story?id=4008966&page=1

All following taken from the Freegan.info site:

Freegans are people who employ alternative strategies for living based on limited participation in the conventional economy and minimal consumption of resources. Freegans embrace community, generosity, social concern, freedom, cooperation, and sharing in opposition to a society based on materialism, moral apathy, competition, conformity, and greed.

Perhaps the most notorious freegan strategy is what is commonly called "urban foraging" or "dumpster diving". This technique involves rummaging through the garbage of retailers, residences, offices, and other facilities for useful goods. Despite our society's sterotypes about garbage, the goods recovered by freegans are safe, useable, clean, and in perfect or near-perfect condition, a symptom of a throwaway culture that encourages us to constantly replace our older goods with newer ones, and where retailers plan high-volume product disposal as part of their economic model. Some urban foragers go at it alone, others dive in groups, but we always share the discoveries openly with one another and with anyone along the way who wants them. Groups like Food Not Bombs recover foods that would otherwise go to waste and use them to prepare meals to share in public places with anyone who wishes to partake.

Lots of used items can also be found for free or shared with others on websites like Freecycle and in the free section of your local Craigslist. To dispose of useful materials check out the EPA's Materials and Waste Exchanges directory. In communities around the country, people are holding events like "Really, Really, Free Markets" and "Freemeets". These events are akin to flea markets with free items. People bring items to share with others. They give and take but not a dollar is exchanged. When freegans do need to buy, we buy second-hand goods which reduces production and supports reusing and reducing what would have been wasted without providing any additional funds for new production.

We live in a society where the foods that we eat are often grown a world away, over processed, and then transported long distances to be stored for too long, all at a high ecological cost. Because of this process, we've lost appreciation for the changes in season and the cycles of life but some of us are reconnecting to the Earth through gardening and wild foraging.

The freegan spirit of cooperative empowerment can be extended into the workplace as part of worker-led unions like the Industrial Workers of the World.

Urban foraging locales

Online Freegan Groups

A group I learned of through my hurricane relief efforts who have been employing the Freegan lifestyle for far longer than it has had a name...

The Rainbows
http://www.welcomehome.org/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainbow_Family
http://rainbowguide.info/index.php
The Rainbows at work in Hurricane Relief - the New Waveland Cafe - they brought all of their equipment they use for their gatherings to keep several thousand people in healthful food for months following Katrina:
http://ashevillecommunity.org/hawker/katrina/
(the blog - Arjay's using it for other comments at this time - so ignore the first link on this page)

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Friday, December 21, 2007

green christmas

Obviously a work in progress...
12/21 - Recycling Your Fresh-cut Tree
http://www.realchristmastrees.org/
Make your Christmas Tree Last Longer
2 parts water
1 part uncaffienated soft drink (or corn syrup/vinegar mix)
1 penny
The acid in the soft drink/vinegar helps both the Christmas tree and cut flowers pull in more water. The sugar feeds the tree/flowers. The water - well - waters the tree/flowers. The penny?! - the penny's copper acts as an antifungal/bacterial/algal.

12/20 - from the Grist
"The Story of Stuff." Another reason to procrastinate Christmas shopping.by Katy Balatero

LED lights:
This site has the best selection
http://www.offthedeepend.com/c-23-led-string-lights.aspx
You can also find these at local stores - all are selling them now at very similar prices.

A Positive Note on LED's From TheGrist.org
The Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree will be lit tomorrow, and then we can no longer deny that The Holiday Season is in full swing. We can, however, feel a little greener while we ogle it, as the towering evergreen will be lit by energy-efficient LED bulbs and powered in part by solar energy.
see also, in Grist: Times Square New Year's Eve ball goes green


11/28
Big-Boxing Day
new in Grist: A gift guide for eco-minded shoppers headed to big-box stores
A gift guide for eco-minded shoppers headed to big-box stores Sure, it would be nice if you could buy everyone on your holiday shopping list a biodegradable, organic, hemp trivet whose proceeds support fair-trade farmers in the developing world. But let's get real -- we don't all have the time or money or inclination to track down gifts of that ilk (and Uncle Hal's never been such a fan of hemp, anyway). That's why Grist hit three big-box stores this year -- Target, Wal-Mart, and Kmart -- to see what kind of green-leaning gifts they offer. Follow expert shoppers Sarah K. Burkhalter and Sarah van Schagen as they prowl the aisles in search of bargains that are good for the planet and good for your wallet. (And if you wouldn't be caught dead in a big-box store, don't start writing that angry letter to the editor yet -- we'll soon be offering unimpeachably green suggestions for a stuff-free holiday.)

Green Christmas Tree (From The Grist.org)
Is there such a thing as an organic Christmas tree? How chemical-intensive is conventional Christmas-tree farming? If I want a Christmas tree, what's the most eco-friendly way to go?
Your fan,Lisa
Seattle, Wash.

Dearest Lisa,
Since you are not only a fan but also my senior editor, who told me you are considering purchasing your own Christmas tree for the very first time this winter, the "Christmas spirit" has suddenly come upon me.

Lisa, there is such a thing as an organic Christmas tree, and there are also Christmas-tree farms that use Integrated Pest Management (IPM). Most Christmas trees, however, are grown using conventional agricultural methods, and the growers regularly spray pesticides for various tree pests, and apply fertilizer to the plots. Why, why do they do this? It's the way they were taught, it's the way the industry works, and switching to organic involves a learning curve, potential product loss, and perhaps little financial reward if you can't find the right market for your trees.
North Carolina Extension measured the amount of active pesticide ingredient applied per tree (1/4 oz. over the tree's lifetime), while other sources point out the real damage organophosphates used on tree farms do to workers and the environment. IPM is a great system of pest management, and may be spreading as an industry practice, but it's usually hard to know if the sidewalk tree sale includes IPM trees.
A few years back I examined the artificial vs. real tree question (that column contains tidbits I will not repeat here), and came down on the side of real trees. Most artificial trees are vinyl Chinese imports (No On Vinyl!), and quite a few contain lead. Christmas party conversation fodder: Christmas décor is apparently one of the largest categories of Chinese imports.

The Rest of her answer
http://grist.org/advice/ask/2007/11/19/?source=weekly


Not finding cheap recycled gift wrap paper. WOW $5 for a 2x3 piece? Plus S&H?! Nope. I don't want to know the energy involved in making it just to say it's out of recycled.
I'd rather use gift bags - which I'll look for tomorrow. Too late now.

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

Good News Articles

10/30 More Information on Energy Bills - Conservation - activism
12/20 - updated Energy Bill 2007 Needs Your Help - Conservation - activism
9/30 Binghamton NY Getting Greener - Conservation
9/30 Trash Talk - Recycling
9/15 Top 15 Environmental Religious Leaders - Conservation
9/15 More Top 15 Environmental Lists - Conservation

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International News Articles

12/19 The Grist Weekly News
12/12 NIOSH Science Blog
Black Balloon Video
10/30 Green Cars
10/26 Live Earth Carbon Foot Print Report
Updated 12/20- Greentech E News
12/12 Alliance For Climate Protection News
12/20 - updated UN Summit Notes
Updated 12/20 Wilderness Society Newsletter
7/6 Live Earth Concerts, Project and Pledge

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Articles and Ideas To Use

Canticle of The Sun by St. Francis of Assissi
12/20 Focus The Nation
12/20 The Grist Weekly News
12/20 Green Christmas Ideas
12/12 NIOSH Science Blog
11/9 Electronic Vampires Electric
10/30 Green Cars
12/20 - updated Energy Bill
9/26 Drywall For Soil Amendment Gardening
8/15 Lead Test Kits - Child Protection
8/4 Indoor Air Quality
8/4 Harvesting Seeds - Gardening
8/2 - Becoming Carbon Neutral - Conservation
Updated 10/19 Eating For The Environment - Conservation
Change The World One Lightbulb At A Time - Conservation
7/13 Protect The Pollinators - Gardening

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Ideas For Conserving At Home

12/20 Green Christmas Ideas - Collective
12/20 Focus The Nation - Education
11/9 Electronic Vampires - Electric
10/30 Green Cars - Gasoline
10/30 A Green Halloween - Misc
10/2 Be a "HyperMiler" - Gasoline
10/30 - Green Car Information - Gasoline
9/20 LED Solar Chandalier Project - Electric
10/24 Storm Window Solar Panel - Heat
9/10 Greywater Use - will be expanded upon - Water
9/4Fuel Oil - Heat
9/3 Gardening and Community Gardening - Food
8/30 Steps To Save NG - Natural Gas
This Old House - Dozens of Articles - Misc
8/29 Why You Insulate - HVAC
8/18 Processing Your Own Food - Food
8/14 The Kyoto Protocol - Misc
7.13 Irrigation Conservation - Water
Reduce Your Home's Electric Use - Electric
WSJ Article on Energy Star Appliances - Electric
Updated 10/19 Don't Buy Bottled Water - Water and Petrolium
Bio Fuel and Other Information
Indoor Water Conservation - Water
Choose The Right Toilet - Water

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Energy Bill 2007

http://ga3.org/campaign/blog_energy_alert
12/20 - from The Grist

Pass/Fail Senate OKs fuel-economy increase, but drops more ambitious parts of energy bill
The Senate on Thursday overwhelmingly passed an energy bill that would raise auto fuel-economy standards to 35 miles per gallon by 2020 -- but only after a more ambitious version of the bill ran into a roadblock. The more ambitious version, which the House passed last week, got a thumbs-up from 59 senators -- a handful of Republicans as well as all of the Democrats except Mary Landrieu from oil-friendly Louisiana -- but that was still one vote shy of the 60 needed to get it past a threatened filibuster. To push the bill through, Democratic leaders in the Senate dropped provisions that would have required utilities to get 15 percent of their energy from renewables by 2020 and would have cut tax breaks and subsidies for oil companies. The revised bill now goes back to the House for approval; the White House says President Bush will sign it.

11/28/07
Last week, the price of oil hit a near record high $99 per barrel, and with it, gasoline rose to an average of $3.09 per gallon. With winter coming, heating prices could rise too. This is a real threat to us all.
Congress needs to act now to pass a comprehensive energy bill to reduce these threats.
Senate and House leaders are now debating how to increase fuel economy and reduce oil use. If Congress crafts a final energy bill with the best provisions from earlier measures, it would reduce U.S. oil use by at least 2.5 million barrels per day by 2016. That's a good thing.
But big oil and other special interests are conniving to block these measures. That's a bad thing.
So write Congress today and tell them to pass a good energy bill that:
Includes more efficient motor vehicle fuel economy (CAFE) standards to reduce oil use by 1.2 million barrels per day by 2020, which is slightly less than the amount of oil the U.S. currently imports from Venezuela
Includes the House renewable fuels provision, which would stop oil companies from making it difficult it sell cleaner flex fuels such as E-85 and create incentives for service stations to add flex fuels to their other gasoline offerings
Includes the House renewable electricity provision, which would save consumers more than $200 billion in reduced energy costs
Includes energy efficiency provisions from both bills that could reduce electricity used for lighting by 65 percent and energy used for buildings by 50 percent by 2020
Congress needs to hear from you, loud and clear. You can send the email we have written for you or, better still, personalize it for more impact.
Thanks for you help,
Alan and the CAPAF advocacy team

The Center for American Progress Action Fund is the sister advocacy organization of the Center for American Progress. The Action Fund transforms progressive ideas into policy through rapid response communications, legislative action, grassroots organizing and advocacy, and partnerships with other progressive leaders throughout the country and the world. The Action Fund is also the home of the Progress Report and Think Progress, the blog that pushes back daily.

Urge Congress to Pass a Strong Clean Energy Bill!

This summer we achieved two major victories. In June the Senate passed an Energy Bill requiring automobiles go farther on a tank of gas and in August the House passed an Energy Bill requiring electric utilities to obtain more power from clean, renewable sources-such as the wind and sun. This is truly an exciting time. This fall we have the opportunity to help pass the strongest energy bill to date.

However, while Congress was on August recess, the auto industry was working hard to undermine these important victories. Now we need to counter their voice in Congress with our own!

Fill out the form on the site to remind your members of Congress that you support a Clean Energy Bill with strong standards for fuel economy and renewable energy!

Tell me more

Help this organization fight for safe energy:
https://secure.ga3.org/03/soe_donate

http://www.saveourenvironment.org/

10/30 More Information on Energy Bills

From Chris of EnergyBill2007.org
I wanted to give you a heads-up on what we're doing to reach out to members of Congress. So far, we have placed full-page print ads in papers in Pennsylvania for Representative Platts, http://smnr.us/platts/; Illinois for Representative Kirk, http://smnr.us/kirk/; New Mexico for Representative Udall, http://smnr.us/udallnm/; and Colorado for Representative Udall, http://smnr.us/udallco/.

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Updates From Leslie

If folks haven't noticed, I try to keep my blogs (I have several, but this is the only active one at the moment) more like an information site. I try to site my sources. I try to maintain a professional tone. I try not to let myself become an Op Ed writer, but it will and does come out if I'm outraged enough. Mostly, I try to offer solutions, rather than just cry and bemoan all of the problems in the world.

12/20 - I'm seriously considering starting a series called "save the world". So many things, so little effort!
Save the world - stop taking Prilosec! (or other H2 inhibitor)
That sort of thing.
comments? Ideas? Bring 'em on!
12/15
I don't think I can take much more holiday cheer. LOL With a storm barreling toward us, I shampooed the livingroom carpet. Seemed like the thing to do. By shampooing it, it lasts longer, staying out of the landfill longer, and I transfer yet more of the bad chemicals from inside my home to the sewage treatment plant, and thus the river. Such is life.

My absence here means my efforts were turned yet again toward Katrina Survivors. It's been 2 1/2 years and still hardship, turmoil, disaster remains. I have several sites established to assist both individuals and agencies during the recovery efforts, which are supposed to be finished in another 8 years.

Since Thanksgiving, I have sent down (with the help of several family members and friends), 21 boxes of Christmas to families who have slipped through the cracks/chasms of organized relief efforts. 1 has a son who was lost 22 days after the storm, still suffering from severe PTSD. His psych bills keep them below poverty levels. Another has a daughter dying in need of a kidney transplant, due to some unknown viral infection afflicting others in the region. Yet another was shafted by a roofer, only to find out in recent rains all of their rebuilding efforts were ruined by a bad roof. Each is heartbreaking. But each is inspiring as well. They've made it so far on so little and ask only that their children have Christmas for the first time since The Storm.

So - I help as I am able.

This year was far less than last. I wasn't able to get out and hang posters. My vertigo just too substantial. Most churches ignore the plea for assisting one family, even with my promise of postage. I've not heard back from a single church that I mailed letters to in the last week of November. BUT:
family and friends have come through in ways I never thought possible. Our efforst are listed on my main blog - http://www.katrinanetworking.blogspot.com/

The efforts haven't been so green. I've been able to utilize reused items (clothes) to a large extent, have spread magazines (which are in VERY short supply, give something to look forward to every month of the year, increase the childrens grades substantially and are good for the entire family) far and wide to large families. But, because cost of living, the stress of shopping, and travel time being so prohibitive, much was shipped. I was able to buy more and still ship than send gift cards to the families. Sad, but true. So, much petrol was used.

To me, I guess there are just times when green must take a side seat to the emotions of children. I tried to supply few games, NO electronics, simple but needed items to help. Electronics just end up costing the families more, so I won't do that. They can barely pay utility bills. Why add to their burden?

There is still time to help if you want. Yes, I'm pushing! Gift cards can be sent online - so the families get them before Christmas. Groceries for a Christmas dinner would be wonderful! Winn-Dixie, Wal-Mart, Kroger are all quite common. If you would like to help, even at this late time, please email me at KatrinaCoalition@aol.com. I will direct you as best I am able.

So, please accept my apologies for being so delinquent here. I'm dead on my feet for many reasons, with the weather adding to the burden. I will post as soon as I am able.
Leslie

11/11 - Wow - who knew I'd keep up as well as I have so far? Life remains insane.
I just finished the second of 3 curtains for the quilt shed. These are different for a few reasons:
I'm using/reusing upholstery fabric to make them, making them fairly heavy.
Am sewing a solar curtain into each one, between the lining and the actual curtain. They're very crinkly, but I think they'll really help with keeping temps constant in the shed.
I pieced them together so each fabric is a diamond shape. I'll get pictures up soon to explain better.

I ordered another 500 sq' roll of bubble/foil insulation. Now that we've had a real test of the work I've done insulating the house thus far, it's time to do some more. I am completely amazed. I still don't know how much we're saving. Am hoping to know that this bill. But we can keep the heat turned lower and it's both warmer and warmer feeling. Mom's in a T-shirt, I'm in shorts, and Dad has only 1 sweatshirt on. LOL - AND, I've barely used the woodstove.
When I first moved back, I had a hot fire going any time the weather was 40 or lower. Today, it didn't reach 40 until 2PM, and yet no fire. The house is actually heating up with the sun shining.

So, once I finish the solar panel for the quilt shed, I'll be doing 3 major insulating jobs on the house. One in the office - that'll be a bear. Drop ceiling with maybe an R3. Adding the foil will triple the R value plus re-radiate the heat back into the house. Then, get into another crawl space and foil that. And finally get into the mother of the crawl spaces and hopefully spread the fiberglass more equitably as well as foil over the entire roofline. I'll definitely take pictures of that. It's not going to be fun.

But to me, if you have are R6 or more behind current standards and you have the room, it'll more than pay for itself to insulate. I know right now the thinking is R8 or more. But the way prices are now for heating, R6.

I also bought some programmable stats to put in. We have a 2-zone house. But, I want to see what the savings will be with just this much insulation prior to putting the stats in. Just because.

So - let me know what you've done to make your house more efficient.

11/1 It's only been a week! You can tell I'm on vacation. LOL I have time to think AND write.
Here's a theory I may expand at some later date...
Anyone who has studied physiology knows that mammals produce carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is actually a byproduct of acid reduction at the cellular level. You breathe it out. But, if you produce too much, your kidneys kick in and you pee it out. They have to because the blood becomes too acidic for anything (like oxygen) to flow through the blood the way it's supposed.
If you think of the world as living organism similar to a human, you start to understand how the earth is coping with the carbon dioxide that is being produced at record levels.
Now, with reports of the oceans being saturated with as much carbon dioxide as they can absorb, levels will begin to rise in the atmosphere.
And with the earth having no where else to "put" this carbon dioxide, we'll either see a new kind of acid rain, where the CO2 comes down with the H2O, or levels continuing to rise in the atmosphere.
And - when someone suffocates - it isn't from lack of oxygen. We use very little of it with every respiration. It's from the acidosis of too much CO2 being breathed in over and over.
So - it's time to turn off all of those combustion engines.
Just like the town that ran out of water in TN and only has enough for 3 hours a day, we need to stop using all CO2 producing products. Combustion engines (cars, mowers, power plants).
We saw a difference in air quality and temperature just by the halting of air traffic after 9/11 - a matter of a few days with just 1 parameter removed. Imagine what we could change if we removed something else every day.

10/24
Wow - didn't know it had been a full month. Woof. Nothing like life to distract!
The building project is complete! Woo - go to http://www.fullcirclequilting.blogspot.com/ for pictures. I still have to finish putting pics up there, but you get the idea...

Our electric consumption has gone way down in the last few months. I'm not quite sure why.
Our AC use has actually gone up for health reasons. And nothing else has really changed. So I am truly befuddled.

The only thing I can think is that we might use the AC more frequently, but for less time per day. I bought some "solar curtains" and put them on all of our south facing windows. I've also added radiant barrier insulation to key areas of the roof line. So rather than turning the AC on at 11 AM, which we did last year (a cooler year), we could wait until 1 PM. and turn it off earlier in the evening, rather than keeping it on until we went to bed.

I've also changed the way laundry is done, but it's been that way for about 7 months now, so I would think I would have seen this drastic of a change far sooner. But, we don't do laundry every Monday, whether they are full loads or not. We wait until there is a full load of darks, a full load of whites, etc. That makes laundry occur 3 days in a row, but no one load has to be run for 8-10 days. And yes, our dryer is electric.

I'm getting ready to buy a new dryer - this one is probably 20 years old. I'm also going to put a shunt on it so that in the winter, we can throw the heat and humidity used and paid for from the dryer into the house. And by doing laundry the way I am now, this will add a nice slug of moisture and heat to an area of the house that is at the end of the furnace's run, being the coolest.

Have also found out that the entire roofline was never insulated. Talk about shock, disappointment and amazement! Crap.

So, right now, about 40% of the roof line is as insulated as I can get it without ripping ceilings out. That's next summer. After my mini vacation next week, I plan on getting another 10-30% insulated, depending on access.

And with heating bills going up 10-50% this winter (depending on how you heat), it's going to be incredibly important to get this insulating done.

Have been building a solar heater for the construction job in the back yard. I'm still not finished with that and keep hoping "tomorrow" is the day I can focus on it. I only have about 1 more day of work and it's complete. Wish me luck!
Leslie

9/24
Well, almost done with our current building project. I am quite tickled with the whole thing.
We bought the building prefab - 12x24. Bought used windows at an auction for $50 ea, will be selling the "left overs" at another auction in a week.
Bought scrap carpeting at another auction, only have to piece a wee bit to make it wall to wall.
Bought the radiant barrier as seconds online for less than half the price of "new" from same company and less than 1/4 at Lowes or HD. Plus, 4X as much in one package as HD or Lowes.
Used up some styrofoam insulation left over from having the house sided.
Am going to use the rest of the fiberglass insulation in odd spots in the house.
Bought used railroad ties on the cheap for around the building and my cousin is using up scrap wood we've had around to finish out the trim around the windows inside.
The electrician is using up left overs from other builds to wire the shed (work shop).
I've recycled and/or reused every bit of 90% of the waste from the project, so that all of our efforts of tricking it out add up to less than 4 1-gallon paint cans of trash.
I have found that drywall is just calcium and magnesium - which, when burned with wood, will pulverize very easily. This makes adding it to the calcium depleted soil of acid-rain saturated NYS far easier than it otherwise would have been. I'm in no hurry, so will merely add it to our wood stove when we burn it this winter.
Am using 1 of the left over windows, cat food cans and scrap wood to make a solar heater for the shed - will lessen any costs we might incur for heating with whatever heat source we decide on.
Am also going to make some "solar shades" out of some weedblock I refuse to use that my dad refuses to take back to the store. 2 windows are southerly enough to gain a good amount of heat from them, to lessen heat costs out there even more.
So - life is good!
Hard work, a little patience and ingenuity make for a very minimal waste stream, for those willing to take 10 minutes to bother.
L

8/25 Just got our utility bill. I'm astounded. We used half the electricity of the same period last year. Last year was, on average, 1 degree warmer, BUT - this year we used AC much more.

First, Mom can no longer tolerate the heat due to her heart attack in March. Dad hasn't been able to tolerate it for a couple of years. So the downstairs window unit was set 2 degrees lower, and both of their rooms have window units and have been used quite a bit.

The only thing different in the way of energy saving measures was the addition of "solar curtains". They're in just about every junk catalog out there - 1 has different sizes, 1 sells them singularly, but all identical in construction. Mylar-type stuff. You can see through them some, but they reflect heat both out and in. So, winter they reflect heat back in, summer, heat back out.

The reflective barrior I put in just one of 3 crawl spaces (haven't gotten to the others yet) was only put in 2 weeks ago, so I doubt highly it had this much impact.

And yes, it was an actual reading, not estimated.

I am totally amazed. Those things cost me $5 each. I have them on only 4 of 17 windows.

http://www.shoppicketfence.com/product.asp?pn=512038
Picket Fence has them in pairs - but only one size.
http://www.carolwrightgifts.com/cwg_v2/cwg_layout_base2.cfm?mid_sec_page=cwg_prod_detail&seq_no=2&min_seq_no=402&SingleItem=29017
Carol Wright Gifts have them singularly and in a multitude of sizes.
I've ordered more for winter. They work to reflect heat BACK into the home in the winter as well as the reflect heat out in the summer.



8/20 I have found different information that I find incredibly interesting - like the amount of energy saved by processing your own vegetables for use over the year.

My family has always done this, coming from a quasi-farming background. I had left this practice behind during my gyspy days - moving every 14 months for about 10 years. Now that I'm back in a less mobile situation, I'm getting back into preserving our own food.

I researched this and found you use at least 2/3 less energy by either growing or buying your own produce locally and processing it yourself. WOW. http://kermitsteam.blogspot.com/2007/08/process-your-own-food.html

I have made 5 batches of jam so far - only 1 more batch to go. My mother and I canned about 1/3 of a bushel of peaches (the rest of the 1/2 bushel were used for pies and jam) yesterday. And today we froze corn.

Get this - $12 for 5 dozen ears. Less than 2 hours to husk, blanch, cut off the cobs and put into containers. Even if cold water and the gas stove cost $5, consider the savings. We got 28 pints (a pint a pound, the world around) out of the deal. Just a smidge over 2 ears per pint. $.61 per pint.

How much does it cost in the stores? How chalky and pasty does it taste? How much true nutrition do you get? It was picked this morning, processed within 3 hours of it being picked, tastes INCREDIBLE (NYS corn is the bomb!), is far more nutritious than anything in the stores (they add stuff to keep it from clumping when frozen) and price - you can't beat the price.

So - read the article. Think about it. Farmer's Markets are stocked to the gills right now. Many stores carry GOOD corn as a lost leader, and you can also do string beans, tomatoes (your own spaghetti sauce!) summer squash, beets, greens and any other veggie you consider a favorite.

And I may be some sort of garden nerd, but it's a lot of fun doing.

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Monday, December 17, 2007

UN Summit Notes

For more details go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news
To listen to news and in-depth programmes from UN Radio go to: http://radio.un.org/
12/17/07
NEW REPORT TRACES UN GLOBAL COMPACT ACTIVITIES IN NEARLY 90 COUNTRIESNew York, Dec 17 2007 7:00PMThe United Nations http://www.unglobalcompact.org/NewsAndEvents/news_archives/2007_12_17.html
Global Compact, the world’s largest voluntary corporate citizenship initiative, today launched its first-ever report on its country-level activities in nearly 90 nations.

The “Local Network Report” provides an overview of the activities of Global Compact Local Networks (GCLNs), which further the progress of companies engaged in the Compact and help them implement its principles.

For example, the study highlighted a series of lunch meetings in Trinidad and Tobago to provide a forum for business leaders to meet regularly to discuss corporate citizenship.

Meanwhile, in Bulgaria, a directory profiling 70 national and international companies which are part of the GCLN has been created to provide the public with information on these organizations’ activities.

In the past two years alone, the number of GCLNs has doubled and now there are initiatives emerging or already in existence in nearly 90 countries. Recent launches have occurred in the Republic of Korea, Côte d’Ivoire, Viet Nam, the Dominican Republic, Turkey and the United States, among others.

The Global Compact was launched in 2000 with 47 companies, and as of this month, has grown to more than 5,000 participants – among them trade unions, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and some 3,600 businesses – in over 100 countries. They have all pledged to observe 10 universal principles pertaining to human rights, labour rights, the environment and combating corruption.
2007-12-17 00:00:00.000 ___________________


PRIVATE SECTOR SHOULD LEAD FIGHT ON CLIMATE CHANGE, BAN KI-MOON SAYS
New York, Oct 11 2007 5:00PM
The private sector should take the lead on tackling the challenges posed by climate change, from investing in clean new technologies to encouraging countries and industries to make the necessary adaptations to change, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told business leaders in Washington today.

Speaking to the United States Chamber of Commerce this afternoon, Mr. Ban said the role played by US businesses would prove particularly vital given their financial resources and historic leadership in technological innovation.

“We can promote economic growth, spur development and respond to climate change – this is not an either/or proposition,” he said. “Your ability to determine investment flows gives you great influence over the pace of innovation, technological change and adaptation.”

The Secretary-General called on business leaders to develop “innovative market mechanisms” as a means of combating climate change, particularly the perils raised by greenhouse gas emissions.

“I hope you will approach the carbon market as a major economic opening, one that has tripled in size $30 billion in just the past year alone. An expanded and improved carbon market is an essential part of the solution.” The carbon market is a mechanism allowing companies to trade emissions credits in order to ensure that mandated caps are met.

Climate change is also the focus of two other speeches that Mr. Ban is giving during his two-day visit to Washington that ends tomorrow.

Tonight he is expected to tell the National Association of Evangelicals that tackling climate change and global warming is a “moral imperative and a defining issue of our era.”

Mr. Ban will warn that the lives of hundreds of millions of people worldwide are in jeopardy from climate change.

“Without a strong global effort against global warming, we will fail in achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the implicit human right to economic justice and development,” he said, referring to a set of antipoverty targets which leaders at a 2000 UN summit said should be reached by 2015.

The Secretary-General is also due to address the staff of the US Peace Corps tomorrow before returning to UN Headquarters in New York.
2007-10-11 00:00:00.000

CLIMATE CHANGE THE FOCUS OF SECRETARY-GENERAL’S TRIP TO WASHINGTON
New York, Oct 10 2007 5:00PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will head tomorrow to Washington for meetings that will focus on the perils of climate change and the importance of achieving the anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development Goals http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/

United Nations spokesperson Michele Montas told reporters that the Secretary-General will meet with chief executive officers at the United States Chamber of Commerce to discuss climate change issues.

The same subject will be on the agenda when Mr. Ban gives the keynote address later tomorrow to an event organized by the National Association of Evangelicals.

He is also expected to discuss the need to meet the MDGs, which world leaders agreed at a UN summit in 2000 to strive to achieve by 2015.

Ms. Montas said that on Friday the Secretary-General will meet with members of the US Peace Corps before returning to UN Headquarters in New York.
2007-10-10 00:00:00.000

DEVELOPING COUNTRIES NEED HELP TO FIGHT CLIMATE CHANGE, OFFICIALS TELL UN
New York, Oct 3 2007 3:00PM
Senior officials from a number of developing countries today called for greater international cooperation to help the world’s poor and vulnerable States respond to climate change – the central focus of this year’s annual high-level debate of the General Assembly.

Marco Hausiku, the Foreign Minister of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/namibia-en.pdf Namibia, said climate change is a global issue with serious implications for economic growth, sustainable development and the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of global anti-poverty targets toward the year 2015.

“The international community has to live up to its commitment to provide resources to developing countries to adapt to the effect of climate change,” he told the Assembly. “By the same token, compulsory targets must be set for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions.”

He called for a greater sense of urgency and international action. “Namibia is not happy with the rate at which investments are made in the development of renewable and clean energy sources,” he said. “I would like to call upon the private sector to join hands with governments to develop and apply technologies that can mitigate climate change.”

Seyoum Mesfin, the Minister for Foreign Affairs of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/ethiopia-en.pdf Ethiopia, said Africa is “exceptionally” vulnerable to the effects of climate change. “So many of us live on the margins that the smallest difference in climate can mean the difference between sufficiency and famine, survival and death,” he said.

While acknowledging that this global challenge requires a global response, he cautioned that “the need for speedy economic development in countries such as Ethiopia, and in Africa, as a whole should not be compromised in the interest of reversing a dangerous climatic situation for the creation of which we have no responsibility.”

Through effective international cooperation, it should be possible to ensure that the development process in countries such as Ethiopia will be environmentally friendly. Toward that end, he welcomed a proposal put forward by Brazil to convene in 2012 a new UN conference on environment and development.

Also urging a global partnership against climate change, the Foreign Minister of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/suriname-eng.pdf Suriname, Lygia Kraag-Keteldijk, pointed out that the countries least able to respond will be the hardest-hit. “The effects of climate change will be felt in all parts of the world,” she said, “however the impact will be worse in small and vulnerable States.”

For Suriname, a low-lying coastal country, sea-level rise could be “catastrophic,” she said. In response, the Government has designated a large part of its land mass as a World Heritage Site monitored by the UN Educational Cultural and Scientific Organization (UNESCO), she added.

She said all countries must work for a common solution. “We call on the international community and development partners to increase their efforts and to continue their technical and financial support to developing countries to safeguard the world environment for current and future generations.”

Philip Sealy, Permanent Representative of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/trinidadandtobago-eng.pdf Trinidad and Tobago, said it was important that any decisions or timetable for emission reductions be implemented as soon as practicable.

“The world is already committed to an increase 1.14 degrees Celsius by the end of the next two decades” as a result of emissions from fossil fuel use and deforestation, Mr. Sealy said, adding that a strategy is needed to ensure that the long-term temperature increase is no more than 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Concerns about climate change were also taken up by representatives of industrialized countries during the high-level debate today, with http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/newzealand-eng.pdf New Zealand’s Permanent Representative Rosemary Banks calling for a “road map” to emerge during the global summit on the issue in Bali, Indonesia, in December.

“The road map will need to include all relevant pieces of the climate change puzzle,” Ms. Banks said, calling for all economies to be placed on “low-carbon pathways over time. Market mechanisms will have a significant role to play. Individual countries will face different challenges. Different national circumstances must be taken into account.”
2007-10-03 00:00:00.000

PACIFIC ISLAND NATIONS SPOTLIGHT PERILS OF CLIMATE CHANGE DURING ADDRESSES TO UN
New York, Oct 1 2007 10:00PM
Developing countries must be allowed to make voluntary commitments to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions under any new global agreement to deal with the effects of climate change, the Deputy Prime Minister of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/tuvalu-eng.pdf Tuvalu told the General Assembly today.

Tavau Teii, who is also his country’s Natural Resources and Environment Minister, said the international summit being held in Bali, Indonesia, in December, “will be very important” in determining how and whether the world can respond successfully to the impact of global warming.

Any agreement emerging from the Bali summit should reconfirm the importance of the Kyoto Protocol concerning greenhouse gas emissions and encourage States Parties to make new and substantial emissions reductions, he said at the annual high-level debate of the General Assembly.

Mr. Teii said newly industrialized countries and States with economies in transition should be encouraged to take on pledges to reduce their emissions.

A new negotiation process under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) should also be agreed, he said, to set up a legal agreement allowing developing countries to make voluntary commitments to reduce their emissions.

“Under this arrangement we envisage that developing countries will be able to take voluntary commitments to reduce emissions from the energy, transport and forest sectors. These commitments would be linked to appropriate incentive mechanisms.”

Mr. Teii also said it was important that any reductions in emissions from deforestation should not come at the expense of the rights of indigenous peoples and local communities.

http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/vanuatu-eng.pdf Vanuatu’s Foreign Minister George Andre Wells said a rapid reduction in gas emissions must take place within the next 10 to 15 years.

“It is a reality that, if it is not addressed urgently, will have irreversible effects on the agriculture and tourism sectors which constitute the core pillars of development of many of our island economies.”

Mr. Wells said the effect of climate change – such as rising sea levels – on agriculture production, water quality and infrastructure development was of critical importance to his nation.

“For many small island States and least developed countries (LDCs) meeting the challenges of climate change will only add additional stress to their financial, human and institutional capacities.”

http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/mongolia-en.pdf Mongolia’s Foreign Minister Enkhbold Nyamaa told the high-level debate that climate change was already having an impact on nations large and small, coastal and landlocked – like his own.

Desertification has become rampant in Mongolia, he said, with pastures supporting the semi-nomadic lifestyle of many locals dwindling and becoming more fragile.

Extreme weather conditions have also become more common in recent years, particularly droughts and the phenomenon known as “dzud,” a cold winter with heavy snowfalls.

Any agreements that succeeds or supplants the Kyoto Protocol “should be flexible and diverse, taking into consideration circumstances in each country,” Mr. Nyamaa stressed.

“It must include all the major emitters and achieve compatibility between environmental protection and economic growth by utilizing advances in technologies to the greatest extent possible.”
2007-10-01 00:00:00.000

ISLAND NATIONS TELL UN POWERFUL STATES MUST SHOW LEADERSHIP ON CLIMATE CHANGE
New York, Sep 28 2007 4:00PM
The greatest burden in the global fight against climate change should be borne by the world’s powerful countries, which are also often the leading producers of greenhouse gas emissions, the leaders of several island nations told the General Assembly today.

Addressing the Assembly’s annual high-level debate, the representatives also called on affluent nations to increase their level of spending towards an adaptation fund to help the most vulnerable States adjust their economies and infrastructure to cope with the impact of global warming.

“Obviously we have failed badly as custodians of the planet and its future,” http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/samoa-eng.pdf Samoa’s Prime Minister Tuila’epa Sailele Malielegaoi said, adding it was imperative that a successor pact to the Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions be devised “that is effective, binding, capable of swift implementation and universally owned and respected by the 192 UN Member States.”

Mr. Malielegaoi called on “those Member States of our Organization in position of world leadership to lead the charge in finding and implementing solutions.”

Winston Baldwin Spencer, Prime Minister of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/barbuda-en.pdf Antigua and Barbuda, said the collective response to climate change “represents a monumental test of the political will and courage of humanity in general, but especially of the political leaders of the most powerful countries.”

He also urged greater spending on the adaptation fund, noting that small island States were among the most vulnerable in the world – to natural disasters as much as climate change.

“Because of our size and the nature of our primary economic activity, the infrastructure of an entire country can be destroyed by, for example, the passage of a single hurricane,” he said.

http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/marshallislands-en.pdf Marshall Islands’ President Kessai H. Note echoed the call for increased spending to help small and poor nations adapt.

“While we are committed to playing our part, strong leadership is required by the major industrialized countries,” the President of the Pacific island nation said.

Mr. Note called on the world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases to ratify the Kyoto Protocol immediately, warning that his country faced dire consequences unless urgent action was taken.

“I find no pride in having coined the term ‘ecological refugee’ – it is my deepest hope that no one – and certainly no one in the Marshall Islands, will have to bear that title,” he added.

Stephenson King, Prime Minister of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/saintlucia-en.pdf Saint Lucia, said it was important to work within the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) when devising solutions.

Mr. King stressed “that the large producers of greenhouse gases must bear the responsibility for the damage being caused to the global environment, and in particular to the vulnerable countries whose sustainability and very existence are increasingly threatened by their actions.”
2007-09-28 00:00:00.000

PACIFIC NATIONS SPOTLIGHT IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE DURING UN ASSEMBLY DEBATE
New York, Sep 27 2007 8:00PM
The representatives of four Pacific Ocean nations today used their addresses to the General Assembly to warn the world’s affluent countries to make sure they do not shirk their responsibilities in the global fight against climate change.

Speakers from Papua New Guinea, the Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru and Palau told the Assembly’s annual high-level debate that their landscapes – with long coastlines exposed to rising sea levels – leave them in the front line of the global warming battle.

Sir Michael Somare, Prime Minister of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/papuanewguinea-en.pdf Papua New Guinea, said “we are very concerned to see certain industrialized nations attempting to avoid responsibility for their own carbon emissions and shifting the focus to developing nations.

“Only after industrialized nations take responsibility for the consequences of their own actions will the pathway become clear for lasting solutions. However, as developing countries we are willing to contribute equitably towards a sustainable future.”

The Prime Minister outlined a series of measures he said must be in place in the successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions, which is due to expire in 2012.

Those measures include a new global framework dedicated to reducing emissions from deforestation and land degradation, the scaling up of funding for developing countries as they adapt their industries to the impact of climate change, and commitments by wealthy nations to more aggressively cut their emissions.

Micronesia’s President Emanuel Mori said any global response to the various threats posed by climate change should feature the “provision of adequate and additional financing by the developed countries to the most vulnerable to assist us in coping with our adaptation and mitigation requirements.”

Small island developing States such as http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/micronesia-en.pdf Micronesia have a pressing need for greater access to renewable sources of energy so they can move away from a dependence on fossil fuels, Mr. Mori said.

He stressed that a response to climate change will not be effective unless it is pursued “within the frameworks of the United Nations.”

Ludwig Scotty, President of Nauru, said it was unfair that small island developing States were among the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change when they collectively contributed so little to the emission of greenhouse gases.

Although he joined the call for developed nations to do more to help poor nations to adapt, Mr. Scotty also said non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and the rest of civil society in poor countries can cooperate more to build up capacity in the fight against climate change.

“Capital investments alone are not sufficient,” he said. “The need is to respond to the climate challenge with technology, skills and knowledge which are required to guide us.”

http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/palau-en.pdf Palau’s Vice-President Elias Camsek Chin said the proposed reductions under a successor pact to the Kyoto Protocol must be ambitious and quantifiable, rather than a set of general intentions.

Mr. Chin warned of the dire consequences if the world’s countries do not agree soon on an urgent programme of emission reduction.

“We are no longer in total control of our own destinies. When temperatures increase, our corals bleach, the seas rise, and the oceans acidify, threatening to demolish our marine biodiversity, jeopardizing our livelihood, and eventually destroying our identity,” he said.
2007-09-27 00:00:00.000

DEVELOPING STATES NEED HELP COMBATING CLIMATE CHANGE, MOZAMBICAN LEADER TELLS UN
New York, Sep 26 2007 6:00PM
Developing countries bear the brunt of climate change and need international assistance to help them mitigate its effects, the President of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/mozambique-en.pdf Mozambique told the United Nations General Assembly today.

Addressing the Assembly’s annual high-level debate, Armando Emí Guebuza said increases in extreme weather patterns, rising sea levels and other effects of climate change are “felt more harshly in developing countries” which lack the capacity to properly respond.

“More than ever, and in the face of recurrent and more and more devastating tragedies, there is a need for involvement of all members of the international community in the implementation of global actions enshrined in [international] commitments,” he said.

The Mozambican President praised Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for having convened an unprecedented global gathering on the issue earlier this week, which he said “opens up new prospects for the renewed momentum required so that substantial progress can be made during the Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) to be held this December in Bali, Indonesia.”

That meeting will be tasked with hammering out a successor to the Convention’s Kyoto Protocol, which contains legally binding targets for reducing greenhouse gas emissions but is set to expire in 2012.

The President of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/zambia-eng.pdf Zambia, Levy Patrick Mwanawasa, said his country needs assistance in such areas as scientific research, early warning and rapid response to address the effects of climate change.

“Zambia calls for speedy development and transfer of appropriate technologies to help us cope with the negative impacts of climate change as well as put us on a low-carbon economic growth path,” he said.

For its part, Zambia pledged to reduce emissions from industry and other sources, he said. “We call upon industrialized countries, who have a history of producing these emissions, to take serious steps to reduce them,” he said.

“We believe the situation is now serious and narrow national interests in this matter must be discarded.”

King Mswati III of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/swaziland-en.pdf Swaziland said that while countries like his own had developed “pro-green” policies, there was still a need for access to and transfer of environmentally-friendly technologies, particularly from developed to developing countries.

He called for measures to promote technology cooperation which would not only enable the transfer of crucial technological know-how but also help build up local capacity for the efficient use and further development of the transferred technology.

The Swazi leader also encouraged the private sector, particularly multinational corporations, “to be responsible enough to practice in the developing world the same environmental and waste management principles that they practice in the developed world,” including by not dumping harmful waste materials in developing countries.

Micheline Calmy-Rey, President of <"http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/switzerland-fr-eng.pdf">Switzerland, said her country has also felt the effects of climate change. “Glaciers are receding and floods are on the increase,” she said. “As far as my country is concerned, the cost of efforts to save the planet affordable, considering the technology that already exists.”

She pointed out that the international community has come together to address poverty and to promote peace and respect for human rights, but added, “our efforts in relation to environmental challenges have not gone far enough.”

Treaties and other mechanisms to deal with the question are fragmented, she said. “We need therefore to unite in order to identify and implement these objectives so that we may make more economical use of the available resources and energy, and protect the biosphere.”

Toward that end, she called for a significant reduction in the greenhouse gas emissions responsible for climate change. “We also need to help the countries most affected by these changes, the least developed among them in particular, to develop and implement strategies that will enable them to adapt to the changes, and alleviate the adverse effects on them as much as possible.”
2007-09-26 00:00:00.000


AT UN, MADAGASCAR CALLS FOR ‘ECOLOGICAL PARTNERSHIP’ BETWEEN AFRICA, RICH STATES
New York, Sep 26 2007 7:00PM
Africa and the industrialized world should form an “ecological partnership” in which African States supply clean energy and other natural products and wealthy countries increase their investment in the continent, Madagascar’s President told national leaders gathered at the General Assembly today.

“There is an urgent need for the globalization of responsibility,” Marc Ravalomanana said as he called for new strategies that utilize the international community to help African economies advance more quickly and yet still protect their environment.

During previous addresses to the Assembly’s annual high-level debate, Mr. Ravalomanana has called for a Marshall Plan for Africa to match the economic assistance programme that the United States brought to Europe after World War II.

Reiterating the need for such a plan, he said today that the ecological partnership would form a crucial element.

“Such a partnership could contribute substantially to finding real solutions to some of the climate problems, through a programme of investment. Other important features would be nature conservation, and the preservation of our biodiversity.

“I am convinced that Africa could be the supplier of clean energy, medicinal and industrial plants, as well as other natural products in the future. The world is bound to need more and more of these.”

The Malagasy President said the possibilities in Africa for producing new, clean forms of energy and reducing the output of carbon dioxide were enormous.

http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/madagascar-eng.pdf Madagascar could provide some of the energy needs through the development of hydro energy. And half of Madagascar could be reforested. Our island, called the red island, could once again, be known as the green island.”

International help would be vital to this process, he said, stressing “there is a strong link between the quality of the environment and poverty.”

But he voiced concern at what he said was “the lack of seriousness” at forums such as the General Assembly annual high-level debate.

“A lot of promises are made, but not a lot of promises are kept,” the President said, adding that many donor nations are not even close to meeting their vow of doubling aid to Africa.

“Aid to Africa is as weak as ever. Africa can absorb so much more. And all countries would benefit from this.”
2007-09-26 00:00:00.000


GENERAL ASSEMBLY MECHANISM NEEDED TO DEVISE CLIMATE CHANGE RESPONSE – MALTA
New York, Sep 26 2007 9:00PM
The General Assembly should set up a mechanism to devise a global strategy to deal with climate change that avoids the current fragmentation and pays particularly attention to the needs of small island States, Maltese Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi said today.

Dr. Gonzi told the Assembly’s annual high-level debate that international institutions and organizations such as the United Nations should tackle the issue of global warming and its repercussions “in a more cohesive and concerted manner,” or future generations would pay the price.

“It is imperative that all actors involved in climate risk reduction take a unified stand on a strategy and action to strengthen the resilience of affected countries in building their ability to face and adapt to the adverse impact of climate change,” he said.

Dr. Gonzi said the General Assembly mechanism should also report on all the activities in the field of climate change over the past 20 years to help in proposing its strategy to deal with the problem.

The Prime Minister also welcomed the efforts of Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to build momentum – including by holding a high-level meeting at UN Headquarters in New York on Monday – on the issue.

“<"http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/malta-en.pdf">Malta looks forward to decisions at the Bali summit next December that will orient and accelerate action within the United Nations framework to obtain agreement on a comprehensive, effective, fair and urgent global strategy to limit climate change and adapt to its impacts.”

The negotiations in Bali, Indonesia, are aimed at hammering out a successor pact to the legally binding Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions, which is set to expire in 2012.

http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/poland-eng.pdf - PolandPresident Lech Kaczynski told the Assembly that “the growth of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is one of the greatest challenges facing mankind in the years to come,” although he added that “to be objective, it should be noted at this point that many scientists represent dissenting views” about climate change and recent weather extremes.

Development does not have to be coupled with increased greenhouse gas emissions, he said, calling on wealthy nations to ensure that poorer States can take greater advantage of effective technologies and renewable energy sources.

“There is no doubt that deforestation in the developing countries increases the emissions of greenhouse gases and destroys biodiversity. We must counteract that. We cannot demand slower development of those countries at their expense. We must therefore help them in realistic and tangible ways.”
2007-09-26 00:00:00.000

CLIMATE CHANGE SOLUTIONS MUST ALSO TACKLE POVERTY, INDONESIAN LEADER TELLS UN
New York, Sep 25 2007 8:00PM
The solution to the problems posed by climate change must be linked to sustainable development so that the world’s least affluent countries can conquer poverty, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono told the United Nations General Assembly today.

Speaking at the annual high-level debate at UN Headquarters in New York, the President said it was important to not lose sight of the fight against poverty when trying to combat climate change.

He said the global summit to be held in Bali, http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/indonesia-en.pdf Indonesia, this December “must yield a new roadmap” that spells out what both the developed and developing world must do “to save humankind and its planet from the looming tragedy of climate change.”

The Bali summit seeks to determine future action on mitigation, adaptation, the global carbon market and financing responses to climate change for the period after the expiration of the Kyoto Protocol – the current global framework for reducing greenhouse gas emissions – in 2012.

Mr. Yudhoyono said the summit “must produce an outcome and timeline that will be more comprehensive and more ambitious in achieving its practical objectives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

“We developing countries must protect our natural resources while using them wisely for development,” he added.

He said he was optimistic that there is now a window of opportunity to strike a global consensus to deal with global warming.

Indonesia also launched a Special Leaders’ Meeting of Tropical Rainforest Countries yesterday and the President said that the participating nations have agreed to strengthen their cooperation so that the forests can be better conserved.

“We also believe that countries that seek to enhance their carbon sinks – through forestation, afforestation, avoided deforestation – should be given incentive and rewarded fairly for doing so.”
2007-09-25 00:00:00.000

CHILE’S PRESIDENT CALLS FOR UN MEMBER STATES TO ACT TO STEM CLIMATE CHANGE
New York, Sep 25 2007 6:00PM
The President of http://www.un.org/webcast/ga/62/2007/pdfs/chile-eng.pdf Chile called for a new global political consensus to deal with climate change, based on a shared but differentiated set of responsibilities and within the framework of the United Nations, during an address to the General Assembly today.

Michelle Bachelet described the impact of climate change on her country, where “the speed with which the glaciers are melting has doubled in the past 10 years.” At the same time, Chile’s southern zones are experiencing a “dangerous depletion of the ozone layer, jeopardizing the health of our citizens.”

The Government has taken steps to mitigate the effects of global warming, she said, calling for stepped-up international action. “There is no time to lose. The effort of consensus that we must make, the effort to enlist the greatest possible support, is comparable only to the effort for peace made on the occasion of the adoption of the San Francisco [UN] Charter six decades ago,” she told the annual high-level debate.

“If we do not act now, the future of all humanity will be endangered,” she warned, arguing for a new “global political consensus to generate collective action capable of solving the problem in accordance with the principle of shared but differentiated responsibility and within the framework of the United Nations.”

While acknowledging that all countries must contribute to this effort, she emphasized that those who “have already polluted and achieved their development” have special responsibilities.

“We ask the developed countries to promise technical and financial assistance to the developing countries that most need help with their efforts to combat climate change.”

She voiced hope for the success of negotiations planned for Bali, Indonesia this December aimed at hammering out a successor pact to the legally binding Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions, which is set to expire in 2012. “We also hope that the developed countries will make greater commitments regarding mitigation, adaptation, technology transfer and financing.”

In addition, she added, developing countries must undertake “additional emissions reduction actions in the framework of a global effort.”
2007-09-25 00:00:00.000

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Sunday, December 16, 2007

Air Fresheners

From AOL Body

They Smell Pretty, But Are They Safe?
Some people have the bouquet of a garden drift in in their windows. Most of us don't: An estimated 75 percent of households use air fresheners to the tune of $1.72 billion annually. But while they smell good, you may be exposing yourself to toxic air contaminants

How Do You Pronounce That?
According to a 2007 study, the majority of household air fresheners contain industrial chemicals called phthalates (pronounced thal-ates). The use of air fresheners cause phthalates to be released into the air, where they can be inhaled or absorbed.

Watch Out for Hidden Ingredients
There is evidence that phthalate exposure can cause hormonal abnormalities and it has been linked to birth defects and reproductive issues health issues )http://body.aol.com/condition-center/pregnancy), particularly in males. Phthalates are rarely listed on labels, although they are a main ingredient for fragrance.

Allergies In the Air
According to the American Academy of Dermatology, fragrance is the number-one cause of allergic cosmetic reactions (http://body.aol.com/condition-center/allergies). Exposure to phthalates has also been associated with asthma and upper airway irritation (http://body.aol.com/condition-center/asthma). There's more.

Gee, Your Home Smells Dangerous
The aroma of citrus and pine oil in many products, including air fresheners, is refreshing, thanks in part to chemicals called terpenes. Although terpenes are not toxic, they have been found to react with ozone to produce a variety of toxic compounds, including formaldehyde.

Did You Say Formaldehyde?
Formaldehyde and benzene have been detected in some air fresheners. Formaldehyde has been linked to cancers of the upper airways (http://body.aol.com/condition-center/respiratory-health) and benzene is known to cause leukemiain humans. Let's turn to what products you should stay clear of.

First, the Bad News
As part of a 2007 study, Natural Resources Defense Council researchers found that these four air fresheners contain highest level of phthalates: Ozium Glycol-ized Air Sanitizer and Walgreens' Air Freshener Spray, Scented Bouquet Air Freshener and Solid Air Freshener.

Moderate chemical levels were found in Air Wick Scented Oil, Febreze NOTICEables Scented Oil, Glade Air Infusions, Glade PlugIn Scented Oil and Oust Air Sanitizer Spray. Citrus Magic, Lysol Brand II Disinfectant and Oust Fan Liquid Refills were found to have trace levels of phthalates.

And those in the clear...
The Envelope Please
Just two air fresheners came up smelling like roses:
Febreze Air Effects Air Refresher
Renuzit Subtle Effects

Does that mean you should spray away to your heart's content?

Keep It Simple
The take away is to be cautious about (over)use of air fresheners. They are not a solution for poor air quality and cannot substitute for good ventilation. The best solution is the simplest: Open the windows or use fans to maintain air circulation.

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Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Create Your Own Eco PSA

Grand Prize Winner
The Alliance for Climate Protection and Current TV are proud to announce that the grand prize winner of our ":60 Seconds to Save the Earth" Ecospot Contest is Dave Schlafman for his video entitled Sky is Falling.
Watch it now at:
http://current.com/items/87610321_ecospot_grand_prize_winner_sky_is_falling
Those elephants are pretty great messengers, eh? Forward this email to friends, family, co-workers, and neighbors so they, too, can step into Dave's streetscape.
You can watch all of the winners and runners-up at: http://www.current.com/ecospot
The winners will be featured on Current TV and MySpace, and featured in the Alliance for Climate Protection's upcoming campaign. Be sure to tell your friends about these exciting videos!
Thanks to everybody who submitted their videos and to everybody who voted. It's through the efforts of people like you that we can spread the word about solving the climate crisis.
Congratulations again to Dave Schlafman for Sky is Falling: http://current.com/items/87610321_ecospot_grand_prize_winner_sky_is_falling
Sincerely,
Cathy Zoi CEO Alliance for Climate Protection www.climateprotect.org

Have you ever wanted to make a video that could change the world?
Imagine your message about the climate crisis being judged by Academy Award winners and an exec from one of the hottest ad agencies in the world, played on international TV, and inspiring millions of people around the globe. The chance is yours! Building on the momentum of Live Earth, the Alliance for Climate Protection has teamed up with Current TV to give your talent a worldwide audience on the most important issue facing the planet. And oh yeah, we're also giving away a hybrid car.
The premise is simple: create the best 15, 30, or 60-second Ecospot ad showcasing how you or someone you know is taking action to solve the climate crisis -- or create an original, persuasive message that will open eyes, inspire change and empower your audience.
Get the details and create your ad by visiting:http://whatcounts.com/t?r=1502&c=984813&l=42058&ctl=185BEAE:0EFF5D065C06C3C8F9DA8675B204E8C7FDF24EE4C9629B8B
See example ads and Alliance for Climate Protection solutions at: http://www.climateprotect.org/ac2

After you submit your ad, our panel of celebrity judges will narrow the field to 20 finalists. I am proud to be among the judges, who include actors George Clooney, Orlando Bloom, and Cameron Diaz, Oscar winning director Sam Mendes, and ad agency exec Alex Bogusky. Once the field is narrowed, you, your friends and thousands of others will pick the winner through an online vote. The top ads will be aired internationally on Current TV, featured in the Alliance's national campaign, and showcased on MySpace's Impact channel.
The grand-prize winner will receive a Toyota hybrid car, while three finalists will win Sony electronic products, and 16 semi-finalists will receive T-Mobile Sidekicks.
The Alliance for Climate Protection was formed with you in mind. Individuals have the power to make the difference and it begins with your story. We want your ad to be part of the Alliance's global campaign to solve the climate crisis.
We look forward to watching your Ecospot!
Best,
Cathy ZoiCEO, Alliance for Climate Protection
P.S. Pass the message on to your friends and check out climateprotect.org for more ways to make the difference in solving the climate crisis.

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Alliance For Climate Protection News


12/11 Dear Friend,

In less than forty-eight hours, I will step on stage at the UN Climate Conference in Bali. With me I will bring hundreds of thousands of messages demanding a visionary global treaty be completed and brought into effect by 2010.

If we want to solve the climate crisis, we need to demonstrate the broad public support for action together. That's why it is vital you sign our petition right now by visiting:
http://www.climateprotect.org/standwithal

Over the past few months we've taken many positive steps towards uniting governments worldwide around the goal of solving the climate crisis. Just over a week ago on December 3rd, Australia's new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd was sworn in. His first formal act in office was to ratify the Kyoto Treaty. This was a clear demonstration of Australia’s priorities.

Yet this progress has not swayed the Bush Administration. With thousands of delegates gathered in Bali for the UN Climate Conference, this is our last chance in 2007 to show the world how serious the American people are about ending the climate crisis. That's why it is so vital all of us join together and demonstrate the political will of our country.

Only two days remain before I deliver your messages to the delegates meeting in Bali. Over the past few days more than 174,612 people have added their voices. Don't miss this incredible opportunity to demonstrate your support for a visionary global treaty to end the climate crisis.
Sign our petition, then reach out to everyone you know and ask them to sign today by visiting:
http://www.climateprotect.org/standwithal

Your activism and enthusiasm for this cause inspires me every day.
Thank you,
Al Gore

10/07
Last week, our founder and chairman Al Gore was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his tireless efforts to help solve the global climate crisis. But he's not working alone -- millions of people across the country and around the world know that climate change is a critical issue that we need to act on, and now.

You can do your part today by urging your friends and family to join the movement. By joining with the Alliance for Climate Protection and its founder Al Gore, we strengthen the global commitment to harnessing solutions to the climate crisis. Our increasing numbers will demonstrate to leaders in every time zone and on every continent that halting climate change is a top priority.

Mr Gore said it best: "We face a true planetary emergency. The climate crisis is not a political issue, it is a moral and spiritual challenge to all of humanity. It is also our greatest opportunity to lift global consciousness to a higher level."

Please help today by clicking here to tell your friends to get involved and join the campaign to solve the climate crisis..

The solutions are within reach. Together, we can solve this.

Sincerely,

Cathy Zoi
CEO

P.S. Please donate to the Alliance for Climate Protection . We will be launching an international campaign to engage people from all walks of life on the urgency of the climate crisis and the solutions available. By donating to the Alliance, you are helping us reach more people and alert leaders across the world that action on climate change is a top priority. Please donate today.

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