Tag Archives: environment

Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation Grants $15 Million for Conservation Efforts

Image Credit: ANDREW BURTON/GETTY IMAGES

In a continued effort to preserve and protect the future of the planet, the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation has provided $15 million in grants to organizations implementing innovative and impactful conservation projects around the globe.

This new round of grants furthers the foundation’s strategic approach to tackling some of today’s most pressing environmental issues, which include funding concrete and early-phase solutions to protect key species and threatened marine and terrestrial ecosystems and empowering indigenous communities to be the long-term stewards and protectors of their natural resources.

“The destruction of our planet continues at a pace we can no longer afford to ignore,” said Leonardo DiCaprio. “We have a responsibility to innovate a future where the habitability of our planet does not come at the expense of those who inhabit it. I am proud to support these organizations who are working to solve humankind’s greatest challenge.”

Since 2010, the foundation has funded more than 70 high-impact projects in more than 40 countries across the globe.

Read Full Article: Variety

Which States Are Searching for Ways to Save the World?

Image Credit: Jake Wyman/Getty Images

There’s a lot of talk about “renewable energy” and “being green,” but who’s actually putting their money where their mouth is?

The team at Save On Energy, a resource tool that lines up the best energy options for consumers, decided to dig into some data and see which states care the most about the environment, based on residents’ online searches.

Using Google Trends data, the team looked up search phrases such as “how to save energy,” “eco-friendly,” and “electric cars” to find out what residents were looking for in terms of ways to help the environment.

Not surprisingly, California ranked high on phrases like “electric cars,” “carpool,” and “eco-friendly,” but there were some surprises too, said Amanda Milligan, account manager at Save On Energy.

“Seeing Georgia in the top five for searching ‘how to reuse’ and ‘electric cars’ was unexpected,” Milligan said.

It was also unexpected how many states didn’t register on Google’s analytics at all, she said.

“You have to have a certain amount of searches of a certain phrase for Google to even track it, and some states didn’t have much eco-friendly Googling going on,” Milligan said. One such example was the phrase “how to install solar panels.” California was the only state that registered enough searches for Google to track it.

“It’s a way to present who’s looking for answers to environmental topics in an unbiased way,” Milligan said.

So, Why Should You Care? Avoiding catastrophic climate change requires that people switch from fossil fuels to carbon-free sources of energy and trade in their gasoline-powered vehicles for battery-powered ones.

Here are a few maps showing the top five states searching for topics including “how to reuse,” “wind power,” “solar power,” and “electric cars.” To see Save On Energy’s full results, click here.

“Reusing”

(Map: Courtesy SaveOnEnergy)

“Wind Power”

(Map: Courtesy SaveOnEnergy)

“Solar Power”

(Map: Courtesy SaveOnEnergy)

Read Full Article: Take Part

Why Lego Is Spending Millions To Ditch Oil-Based Plastic

Lego’s 57-year-old toy empire was built on plastic. But now the giant Danish toy company is investing millions into getting rid of it. By 2030, Lego bricks will no longer be made from ABS, the oil-based plastic in the 60 billion blocks the company makes each year.

“You could say that it’s a logical place for us to find a way of reducing our environmental footprint,” says Roar Trangbaek, press officer for Lego Group. “If you look at our CO2 footprint as a company, the majority of our impact comes from offscreen activities—basically what happens before we receive any raw materials in our factory.”

Around three-quarters of Lego’s carbon footprint comes from the extraction and refinement of oil used in its toys. So even though the company has other environmental projects—like investing in a wind farm to offset the energy used in factories, and using FSC-certified cardboard for toy boxes—it realized that it couldn’t make real progress without looking at plastic itself.

Three years ago, it set the goal of finding a sustainable alternative by 2030, and quickly realized that the project would be a major challenge. “If we want to reach our ambition by 2030, we need to invest a significant amount of money,” says Trangbaek.

The company is pouring 1 billion Danish krone, or around $150 million, into a new sustainable materials center that will open in 2016 and plans to add another 100 employees focused specifically on finding new materials for their toys and packaging. The classic bricks will likely still look and feel exactly the same when the company makes the shift; the material will still be plastic, just something that’s not made from oil.

“We’re looking at every opportunity out there that’s more sustainable than what we have today,” Trangbeak says. That might involve recycled plastics, though it’s probably more likely to be something bio-based, because of the challenges of recycling.

“Last year, we recycled the equivalent of around 70 million Lego bricks,” he says. “But we can do that within our factories because we can ensure the product is still in a pristine condition. We can’t compromise on the product quality or product safety—that means we know exactly what material we’re using and what’s inside of it. The challenge with recycled materials from outside is that we don’t know the ingredients.”

The company is working with nonprofits and universities around the world to quantify exactly how environmentally friendly any potential new materials are, from production to what happens when a family tosses out the toys. They’re also inviting other companies to join the research center, including those beyond the toy industry.

Read Full Article: Fast Coexist

When the Voice of ‘Planet Earth’ Comes to the White House, You Listen

David Attenborough has been to a great many places over his 50-year broadcasting career, and he’s lent his voice to describing even more.

But for his 89th birthday, the British naturalist found himself in an unfamiliar environment. In an interview that aired Sunday on BBC America, Attenborough was a guest at the White House, where President Obama turned the tables by taking the role of interviewer.

The topic of conversation was one of Attenborough’s favorites: Obama drew out the TV personality on climate change’s potential impacts on our planet’s future.

So, Why Should You Care? After reminiscing about watching Attenborough-narrated documentaries as a child growing up in Hawaii, Obama brought up the importance to climate action of reducing carbon pollution.

“We’re not moving as fast as we need to, and part of what I know from watching your programs, and all the great work you’ve done, is that these ecosystems are all interconnected,” Obama said. “If just one country is doing the right thing but other countries are not, then we’re not going to solve the problem. We’re going to have to have a global solution to this.”

His administration has rolled out a plan to cut U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 28 percentfrom 2005 levels in the next 10 years.

During the interview, Attenborough stressed that keeping a childlike fascination with the natural world can help maintain a conservation-oriented mind-set through life.

“The young people, they care, they know that this is the world that they’re going to grow up in. But I think it’s more idealistic than that. They actually believe that humanity—human species—has no right to destroy and despoil regardless,” Attenborough said.

“You and I, we’ve been blessed to be able to see it, and experience it, and be moved by it,” Obama said. “And I want to make sure that my daughters, their children, are experiencing that same thing.”

The conversation covered global solutions as well, with Attenborough surmising that the rise of renewable energy and storage technologies will solve the problem of carbon-emitting power sources.

Read Full Article: Take Part

Republicans push back against proposed dietary guidelines

Image Credit: AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, file

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional Republicans are pushing back against proposed dietary guidelines that urge Americans to consider the environment when deciding what foods to eat.

House and Senate spending bills say the guidelines must focus only on nutrition and diet. That’s a clear effort to thwart a recommendation by the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee that eating a diet higher in vegetables and other plant-based foods is better for the environment than eating a diet based more on foods from animals.

The advice from a government advisory panel of independent doctors and nutrition experts has raised the ire of the meat industry.

The dietary guidelines come out every five years, and the government advice informs everything from school lunches and food package labels to advice from your doctor. The departments of Agriculture and Health and Human Services are expected to issue a final version by year’s end based on the advisory committee’s February recommendations.

While the guidelines always have been subject to intense lobbying by food industries, this year’s version has set off unprecedented political debate, fueled by Republicans’ claims the Obama administration has gone too far in telling people what to eat.

The advisory panel also suggested a tax on sugary drinks and snacks as one way people could be coaxed into eating better. That idea angered beverage companies and conservatives in Congress.

Two spending bills in the House would set a new threshold for the science that can be used in setting the guidelines, saying the government only can make recommendations based on the strongest science. One of the bills was approved by a spending subcommittee last week, while the other was approved by the House Appropriations Committee Wednesday. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., offered an amendment to strike the dietary guidelines language from the bill but it was rejected.

The guidelines panel had used three grades to determine the strength of the science supporting its recommendations: Grade 1 is strong, Grade 2 is moderate and Grade 3 is limited.

The advisory committee sent a letter to lawmakers Tuesday strongly opposing the legislation.

“I don’t think public policy should be driven by the economic interests or the lobbyists,” panel chairman Barbara Millen said in an interview. “It needs to be driven by science, and good science.”

Millen said “strong” recommendations are unlikely to change over the years and are much harder to come by with limited research dollars.

The recommendation that a more plant-based diet is better for the environment is based on science rated “moderate” in the report. The moderate threshold means there’s a strong body of scientific evidence to support the recommendation, but it’s not as conclusive.

“Research evolves and we expect it to change,” Millen said. “That doesn’t negate the importance of a large body of consistent data that may have limitations of a certain kind.”

Rep. Robert Aderholt, the author of one of the House bills, said the goal “should not be to ‘dumb down’ the standards but instead increase the science certainty of each guideline.” Aderholt, R-Ala., also has pushed back against healthier school lunch rules, and his bill tries to delay federal menu labeling requirements.

Republican Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, the author of the other House spending bill, said the advisory committee had “enormously expanded” the scope of the guidelines.

The bill has frustrated groups such as the American Cancer Society, which says the legislation could strip the dietary guidelines of a recommendation that reducing consumption of red meat and processed meats can lower the risk of colon cancer. The cancer society’s own guidelines have long urged people to take the same step.

“We wouldn’t make that recommendation in our own guidelines if we didn’t feel that the evidence was convincing,” said Gregg Haifley of the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network.

Based on the Grade 1 parameters, the guidelines also may be prevented from making recommendations on physical activity, including advising increased exercise based on its benefits for heart health and other disease prevention. It could also prevent the panel’s recommendations on package labeling and health and wellness in the workplace.

A Senate bill overseeing spending for the Health and Human Services Department is vaguer, saying the guidelines must be “based only on a preponderance of nutritional and scientific evidence and not extraneous information.”

Read Full Article: AP

Top doctors’ prescription for feverish planet: Cut out coal

Image Credit: AP Photo/Martin Meissner, File

WASHINGTON (AP) — Some top international doctors and public health experts have issued an urgent prescription for a feverish planet Earth: Get off coal as soon as possible.

Substituting cleaner energy worldwide for coal will reduce air pollution and give Earth a better chance at avoiding dangerous climate change, recommended a global health commission organized by the prestigious British medical journal Lancet. The panel said hundreds of thousands of lives each year are at stake and global warming “threatens to undermine the last half century of gains in development and global health.”

It’s like a cigarette smoker with lung problems: Doctors can treat the disease, but the first thing that has to be done is to get the patient to stop smoking, or in this case get off coal in the next five years, commission officials said in interviews.

“The prescription for patient Earth is that we’ve got a limited amount of time to fix things,” said commission co-chairman Dr. Anthony Costello, a pediatrician and director of the Global Health Institute at the University College of London. “We’ve got a real challenge particularly with carbon pollution.”

He called it a “medical emergency” that could eventually dwarf the deadly toll of HIV in the 1980s. He and others said burning coal does more than warm the Earth, but causes even more deaths from other types of air pollution that hurt people’s breathing and hearts.

Unlike its earlier report in 2009, which laid out the health problems of climate change, this report was more about what can be done to improve the planet’s health. It calls for cutting air pollution, more walking and cycling and less driving, better urban design, putting a price on the cost of each ton of carbon being used, improved health care planning for extreme weather and every two year check-ups on how the world is doing to get healthier.

“Virtually everything that you want to do to tackle climate change has health benefits,” Costello said. “We’re going to cut heart attacks, strokes, diabetes.”

The Lancet commission report came out days after an impassioned plea to fight global warming by Pope Francis and hours after the President Barack Obama’s administration issued a report emphasizing the costs of inaction on climate change and the benefits of doing something now. The Obama administration said if nothing is done, at the turn of the next century about 57,000 Americans will die each year from polluted air and at least another 12,000 yearly from extreme temperatures.

“Obama is not a doctor; people trust doctors more,” Costello said.

In a companion posting in Lancet, World Health Organization director general Margaret Chan also compares fighting climate change to fighting smoking and saving lives. Both Chan and the Lancet commission quote WHO studies that say by 2030 climate change would “be likely to cause about 250,000 additional deaths per year” around the world.

Poverty is the main problem and burning coal to produce electricity helps fight that, said National Mining Association spokesman Luke Popovich. He said, “it makes far more sense to support the technologies that make coal cleaner to use than to support policies that would deny its use to those who rightfully want the comforts of civilization.”

Read Full Article: AP

Pope challenges world to clean up its filth

Image Credit: AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino, file

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis’ plea to make the state of the environment a central moral issue of our age has been greeted with applause from climate activists and a wide range of church, science and government leaders, but dismissive shrugs from those who doubt climate change.

In “Laudato Si,” Francis addressed “every living person on this planet,” urging them to hear “both the cry of the Earth and the cry of the poor” about the damage from “compulsive consumerism,” waste and a single-minded pursuit of profit.

The pope’s “marching orders for advocacy,” as the head of the U.S. conference of bishops calls it, comes as the world nears a critical time for international climate change negotiations that start late this year in Paris.

Francis said he hoped his paper would lead both ordinary people in their daily lives and decision-makers at the Paris U.N. climate meetings to a wholesale change of mind and heart.

The document, released Thursday, put care for the environment at the center of Catholic social teaching, and, in lyrical but stark terms, reframed the discussion about global warming from the dry language of science to a broad question of ethics.

“Never have we so hurt and mistreated our common home as we have in the last two hundred years,” Francis writes. “The earth, our home, is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile of filth.”

Many praised the encyclical: “It has the power to reshape the church and realign politics,” said Austen Ivereigh, author of “The Great Reformer: Francis and the Making of a Radical Pope.”

But some politically conservative Catholics criticized its economic analysis, and some U.S. Republican politicians said religion had no place in climate policy.

“No, I’m sorry, it’s a political issue,” said Rep. Rob Bishop of Utah, chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources. “Most people have their minds made up on this issue, so any more rhetoric about the issue doesn’t really add a heck of a lot more to it.”

Scientists who for more than 50 years have been talking about the dangers of global warming say the encyclical could break the inertia that has characterized climate negotiations. With their data and computer models, scientists appealed to logic; the pope sought to engage the soul.

“This is exactly what we need,” said Texas Tech climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe, an evangelical Christian who has talked about faith and warming. “We need leaders who speak to values, connecting the dots between values and climate change.”

At the heart of Francis’ theological argument is the concept of “integral ecology,” which gives the environment a more central role in longstanding Catholic social teaching by linking destruction of nature with injustices such as poverty, hunger, inequality and violations of human dignity.

Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville, Kentucky, the head of the U.S. bishops’ conference, called the encyclical “marching orders for advocacy.”

While encyclicals carry “substantial doctrinal authority,” Richard Gaillardetz, a Boston College theologian, said individuals can judge whether a specific policy recommendation best fulfills church teaching.

Francis called for a bold cultural revolution to correct what he said was a “structurally perverse” economic system in which the rich exploited the poor.

Citing the deforestation of the Amazon, the melting of Arctic glaciers and the deaths of coral reefs, Francis rebuked “obstructionist” climate doubters who “seem mostly to be concerned with masking the problems or concealing their symptoms.” And he accused politicians of listening more to oil industry interests than Scripture, common sense or the cries of the poor.

He praised a “less is more” lifestyle, one that shuns air conditioners and gated communities in favor of car pools, recycling and being in close touch with the marginalized.

The leading skeptic in the U.S. Congress, Republican Sen. James Inhofe, said he feared the encyclical will be used by “alarmists” to push policies that will lead to big tax increases. He said the poor would “carry the heaviest burden” of policies to phase out fossil fuels with renewable energy sources.

Read Full Article: AP

How Scott Walker Dismantled Wisconsin’s Environmental Legacy

Image Credit: Flickr

When Wisconsin’s new state treasurer Matt Adamczyk took office in January, his first act was to order a highly symbolic change in stationery. Adamczyk, a Republican and one of three members of the board that oversees a small public lands agency, “felt passionately” that Tia Nelson, the agency’s executive secretary, should be struck from the letterhead. As soon became clear, his principal objection to Nelson, daughter of former Wisconsin governor and environmentalist-hero Gaylord Nelson, was that in 2007–08 she had co-chaired a state task force on climate change at the then-governor’s request. Adamczyk insisted that climate change is not germane to the agency’s task of managing timber assets, and that Nelson’s activities thus constituted “time theft.” When he couldn’t convince the two other members of the agency’s board to remove Nelson from the letterhead, he tried to get her fired. When that motion failed, he moved to silence her. In April the board voted 2–1 to ban agency staff from working on or discussing climate change while on the clock. The climate censorship at the public lands agency made national headlines.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has kept his distance from Adamczyk. It is easy to see why: Walker is widely expected to announce a bid for the Republican presidential nomination. And his environmental legacy—which so far has gone largely unexamined in the national press—has reached much farther than anything the board of a tiny public lands agency could accomplish.

Since taking office in 2011 Walker has moved to reduce the role of science in environmental policymaking and to silence discussion of controversial subjects, including climate change, by state employees. And he has presided over a series of controversial rollbacks in environmental protection, including relaxing laws governing iron mining and building on wetlands, in both cases to help specific companies avoid regulatory roadblocks. Among other policy changes, he has also loosened restrictions on phosphorus pollution in state waterways, tried to restrict wind energy development and proposed ending funding for a major renewable energy research program housed at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Most recently Walker has targeted the science and educational corps at the state’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR), which has responsibility for protecting and managing forests and wildlife, along with air and water quality. In his 2015–17 budget, released in February, he proposed eliminating a third of the DNR’s 58 scientist positions and 60 percent of its 18 environmental educator positions. (The cuts were approved by the state legislature’s budget committee in May, and the budget is currently making its way through the legislature.) Walker also attempted to convert the citizen board that sets policy for the DNR to a purely advisory body and proposed a 13-year freeze on the state’s popular land conservation fund—both changes that lawmakers rejected in the face of intense public objections.

Walker’s office did not respond to repeated requests for comments for this article. But he and his allies in the Republican-controlled legislature have said that such policy shifts will streamline regulations that they say interfere with business development. Many scientists and environmental advocates as well as some conservative political and business leaders say Walker’s actions diminish the role of science in policy decisions and undermine key environmental protections that have long distinguished Wisconsin as a conservation leader.

“I just see a guy who’s afraid of the mob”
One of the biggest environmental controversies to mark Walker’s tenure came in 2013,when he signed a law paving the way for Gogebic Taconite, a mining company later revealed to be a major political donor, to build a 6.5-kilometer-long open-pit mine in the Penokee Hills region in the Lake Superior watershed. Citing a 2011 study funded by Gogebic, Walker argued the mine would bring thousands of jobs to the struggling region. Gogebic helped write the new law, which allows companies to dump mine waste into nearby wetlands, streams and lakes; doubles the area around a mine that a company can pollute; allows the DNR to exempt any company from any part of the law; and strips citizens of the right to sue mining companies for illegal environmental damage.

The new law also included a philosophical shift: Where the old law specified that mining should impact wetlands as little as possible, the new one says that significant adverse impacts on wetlands are presumed to be necessary.

Gogebic dropped the Wisconsin mining project after finding more wetlands than expected in the area, raising questions about the cost of meeting federal mitigation standards. The rewritten Wisconsin law, however, would govern any future projects.

Phosphorus pollution has been another flashpoint. In 2010 Wisconsin was the first state in the U.S. to adopt rules imposing numeric limits on phosphorus pollution, which impairs hundreds of Wisconsin waterways and can harm aquatic life and human health. When Walker took office in 2011, he argued that the rules would be too expensive for manufacturers and communities to follow and proposed to delay implementing them for two years. In 2014 he signed a law allowing polluters to postpone meeting the phosphorus restrictions if they could demonstrate that complying with the rules would pose a financial hardship. Environmental groups say that by diminishing polluters’ responsibility for reducing phosphorus discharges, the law is a step backward for water quality.

Walker has also resisted measures to reduce carbon emissions that contribute to climate change. Like many Republican governors and lawmakers, he has avoided making public remarks on climate change. But his actions paint a picture.

In 2008 before he was governor, he signed the Koch-backed “No Climate Tax Pledge,”vowing to oppose any climate legislation that increased government revenue. In 2014 he appointed a utility commissioner who said in a confirmation hearing that “the elimination of essentially every automobile would be offset by one volcano exploding,” a remark he later recanted. In February a child asked Walker what he would do about climate change if he were president. Walker’s reply: as a Boy Scout he believed in leaving his campsite cleaner than when he found it. Nevertheless, this spring Wisconsin joined 13 other states in a lawsuit challenging U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed Clean Power Plan, which would cut carbon emissions from Wisconsin power plants by 34 percent by 2030. (A federal court dismissed the suit on June 9.)

Walker has argued, based on a study funded by the coal company Peabody Energy, that the new rules are “unworkable” because they would be too expensive for manufacturers and residents and has implied that Wisconsin might not comply with them.

Although some conservatives in Wisconsin praise Walker’s actions, he’s attracted the ire of others, including former Republican state senator Dale Schultz, who retired from the senate last winter after 32 years in the legislature. “I think what’s going on is appalling,” Schultz says. “As somebody who thinks that should be the first thing conservatives ought to be doing is protecting our environment, it’s embarrassing. I’m a pretty pro-business Republican. But a clean environment is essential to business. This is just wholly unacceptable.”

Schultz attributes Walker and other far-right Republicans’ policy positions to the demands of wealthy benefactors, especially those connected to the energy industry. “Some days I look at Governor Walker and I just see a guy who’s afraid of the mob,” Schultz says. “He helped create it, he fosters it, but then he’s also fearful of it.”

“The term ‘climate change’ has become a red flag”
The Walker administration’s policy changes have been accompanied by efforts to weaken scientists’ role in policymaking. Even before taking office, Walker signaled his environmental agenda by appointing former Republican state senator and construction-company owner Cathy Stepp as DNR secretary, explaining that he wanted “someone with a chamber-of-commerce mentality” at the agency’s helm. Stepp, who does not have a background in science or natural resource management, had publicly derided DNR staff as “unelected bureaucrats who have only their cubicle walls to bounce ideas off of” and who thus “tend to come up with some pretty outrageous stuff that those of us in the real world have to contend with.”

Recently retired scientists spoke to a sharp shift under Stepp’s leadership. Adrian Wydeven, a wolf biologist who ran the DNR’s wolf management program from 1990 until 2013 and retired last year, points to the 2013 restructuring of all the DNR’s wildlife advisory committees. In that restructuring the agency removed university scientists and greatly reduced the number of DNR professional staff; it also gave special interest groups, such as politically influential pro-hunting groups, more slots. Wydeven says the DNR has also restricted scientists’ opportunities to speak directly with lawmakers about proposed regulations and has become deferential toward the legislature. “In the past, if the legislators were proposing anything that wasn’t scientifically sound, the DNR was much more forceful in disagreeing with the legislature and making recommendations to improve the legislation,” he says. “Now there’s much less of that.”

Although DNR researchers haven’t been explicitly forbidden from mentioning climate change (as Tia Nelson was at the public lands agency until the board yesterday amended its policy to ban staff only from engaging in advocacy on climate policy), they nonetheless describe a “chilling effect” on discussion about politically controversial subjects. In November 2010 the DNR’s main climate change Web page was a rich portal containing detailed information about climate trends, forecasted impacts of climate change and DNR programs aimed at addressing the problem. The page also acknowledged that “the most renowned group of scientists working on climate change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), stated that it is very likely [more than 90 percent probability] that human activity is responsible for rising temperatures.” Today, the page contains a single paragraph describing, in general terms, a partnership with the University of Wisconsin to study the impacts of climate change and a link to the university’s project Web site.

The chilling effect is also evident in internal discussions, DNR scientists say. Sally Kefer, a land use expert who retired from the DNR in 2014, says that she encountered increasing institutional resistance to discussing climate change in the course of helping communities prepare for a warmer and wetter future. “I was being told to quit contacting the communities to determine their level of interest in having a discussion about climate adaptation,” Kefer says. “I was told to wait until they called me. And can’t I figure out a way to call it something other than ‘climate adaptation’? Can’t we just call it ‘sustainability’?” A current DNR scientist, who requested anonymity, says that the term “climate change” has become a red flag in internal grant proposals. “It’s impossible to work on natural resources without incorporating climate change in some way,” the researcher says. But “we’re less likely to cause problems if we just call it something else. ‘Environmental variability’is sort of our code word.”

Kimberlee Wright, executive director of Midwest Environmental Advocates, an environmental law center, works closely with DNR engineers and scientists to review and comment on pollution permits for activities such as wastewater disposal and groundwater pumping under the Clean Water Act. In the past, Wright says, the process was typically straightforward, and she and colleagues were routinely able to hammer out permits that followed the technical requirements of the law. But since Gov. Walker took office, she says, “We have not been able to settle one permit—we’ve had to litigate every single challenge. We’re often told by [DNR] staff, ‘We know you’re right, but you’re going to have to sue us because the people above me won’t let me issue a technically sufficient permit.’ That’s a really big difference—the interference in science-based decision-making is pretty complete.”

The DNR Office of Communications did not permit agency scientists to be interviewed for this article and did not make Sec. Stepp or Bureau of Science Services Director Jack Sullivan available for comment on whether the agency restricts scientists’ freedom to communicate about areas of their expertise. The department’s spokesperson, William Cosh, said in an e-mail that “When it comes to making decisions the agency remains committed to doing so by using sound science, following the law and using common sense.”

But Walker’s 2015–17 budget proposal, which called for eliminating a third of all research scientist positions and more than half of environmental educator positions from the DNR, would dramatically decrease the influence of science on natural resources policy and public outreach.

Read Full Article: Scientific American

No joke: Emerson College in Boston to offer major in comedy

Image Credit: Emerson College

BOSTON (AP) — Emerson College in Boston will soon offer a degree in making people laugh.

The communications and arts school said Wednesday that starting in September 2016, it will become the first college to offer a four-year bachelor of fine arts in comedic arts degree. The degree will be grounded in the history and theory of comedy with practical learning and a focus on preparing students for careers in comedy performance, writing and production.

The degree is in response to what Emerson calls the “marked rise of comedy’s impact on American culture and its global influence.”

President Lee Pelton says “the new major will combine an academic focus with hands-on opportunities.”

Emerson’s alumni already famous in the comedy world include Jay Leno, Denis Leary, Steven Wright and producer Norman Lear.

Read Full Article: AP

Study: The greener a state’s legislator, the cleaner the air

Image Credit: CleanAir Transport Solutions

WASHINGTON (AP) — States where the congressional delegation votes greener tend to have air that’s cleaner, spewing less heat-trapping gas, a new study finds.

Researchers at Michigan State University studied decades of voting trends and greenhouse gas emissions state by state. They found a correlation between the voting records of a congressional delegation and carbon dioxide emissions, although one that’s nowhere near as big as population or a state’s economic health, according to a study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Study authors Thomas Dietz and Kenneth Frank used computer simulations to try to explain differences in state’s carbon dioxide emissions. After taking into account the larger factors of population, employment and affluence, they charted carbon pollution against “environmentalism” and found a fairly smooth line linking the two subjects. As a state’s environmentalism grew, greenhouse gases dropped.

The authors defined environmentalism as the ratings given a congressional delegation by the pro-environment advocacy group League of Conservation Voters — a definition that some outside experts didn’t think is quite proper.

“For each 1 percent higher a state scored in environmentalism, it’s about half a percent lower in greenhouse gas emissions,” Dietz said. “Overall, environmentalism matters.”

As an example, after controlling for population, affluence and economic factors, Utah has higher carbon dioxide emissions than Vermont, but the difference correlates with the congressional delegation voting record, said Frank. Similarly, Texas and Alabama have higher carbon pollution per person and per state domestic product than New York and California.

Frank acknowledged the study doesn’t show a direct connection between voting records and emissions, but he said it makes logical sense that there would be such a connection. A state that votes greener is more likely to have business and government agencies that act accordingly, and to be more careful about how it burns fossil fuels, he said.

Dana Fisher at the University of Maryland who wasn’t part of the study said the link between congressional voting record and carbon dioxide emissions in states “makes a lot of sense. It basically means that these pro-environmental elected officials are supporting state-level policies that are less greenhouse gas intensive.”

However, she said in an e-mail that how congressmen and women vote is not necessarily an accurate measure of environmentalism.

Read Full Article: AP

Why More Scientists are Speaking Out on Contentious Issues

Image Credit: PAUL NICKLEN, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE

For decades Ken Lertzman has studied the ecology of Canada’s Great Bear Rainforest. Wedged between British Columbia’s Coast Mountains and the Pacific Ocean, this rugged forest is home to thousand-year-old red cedars, salmon runs, millions of migratory birds, and the elusive white spirit bear.

On Wednesday, Lertzman and more than a hundred other North American scientists, including a Nobel laureate, signed a statement calling for a moratorium on development of Alberta’s vast oil sands.

Lertzman, a professor at Simon Fraser University, worries that transporting the oil through Great Bear would harm one of the world’s last remaining unspoiled temperate rain forests.

The declaration by a diverse group of ecologists, economists, climate researchers, and other academics is the most recent example of a tidal shift at universities across North America.

While their counterparts in Europe have long taken advocacy positions for using  science in setting public policy, academics in the U.S. and Canada traditionally have not. Many scientists, particularly in the United States, worry about being labeled as environmentalists or activists by politicians, business lobbyists, or interest groups and losing their scientific credibility.

But now many North American scientists are increasingly leveraging their knowledge to speak out in environmental debates.

A 2014 Pew survey of more than 3,700 U.S. scientists found that 87 percent agreed that “scientists should take an active role in public policy debates about issues related to science and technology.” Just 13 percent backed the opposite statement: “Scientists should focus on establishing sound scientific facts and stay out of public policy debates.”

Lertzman has seen this shift up close over the course of his 35-year career. As a young scientist in the 1980s, he thought the idea of academic scientists engaging in public policy seemed pretty radical, albeit exciting. Now, he says, “the idea of using science to make a difference in the world is becoming pretty pervasive and accepted.”

“We are advocating for society to make the best possible decisions based on the best possible knowledge. We shouldn’t feel bad about that,” Lertzman says.

Scientists Drawn Into Fractious Debates

This outspokenness may be fueled, in part, by the Canada’s firing of federal scientists who have talked openly about their findings on some environmental topics.

“There’s a sense among scientists that their collective expertise is under attack, and they want to do something about it, but they don’t know how,” says University of Michigan science historian Joy Rohde.

Over the past few years, under the leadership of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Canada has laid off some environmental researchers and closed federal environmental science institutes—cuts that some critics suggest were made in part to protect the oil and gas industry.

Near Fort McMurray, in Alberta, oil sands processing is under way. More than a hundred U.S. and Canadian scientists on Wednesday urged a moratorium on oil sands development due to environmental concerns. – PHOTOGRAPH BY PETER ESSICK, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

“Scientific expertise is not valued by the federal government in Canada,” says Peter Ross, a marine toxicologist whose federal research program in Canada was cut in 2012. Ross now studies ocean health at the non-profit Vancouver Aquarium.

In the United States, the political landscape of environmental issues is fractious because of the litigious and adversarial role of industry in many regulatory debates, says Sheila Jasanoff, a science policy and law expert at Harvard University. Scientists are often drawn into public controversies and quarrels over the validity of their research. Science squabbles—for instance, whether or not humans are causing climate change—are far less common in other parts of the world, Jasanoff says.

How to wean the economy off fossil fuels, dispose of nuclear waste, or regulate toxic chemicals—these are complex questions. Decisions about environmental health, such as whether to regulate flame retardants in consumer products, are particularly controversial because there are big financial stakes and the science is often rife with uncertainty about the health risks.

“Science alone will never resolve the values debate on how to manage these situations,” says Daniel Sarewitz, co-director of the Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes at Arizona State University. 

Although she worked for government, not academia, the most famous American scientist who crusaded for new environmental policies was biologist Rachel Carson. In her 1962 classic, Silent Spring, Carson warned about the hazards of pesticides. She was personally attacked by the farm and chemical  industries and their supporters as hysterical, unscientific, disloyal, and radical.  But her writings catalyzed the U.S. movement to ban the pesticide DDT and enact many new environmental laws.

Swedish Scientists Lead the Way

The separation between science and politics in the United States dates back to the Civil War—when an Act of Congress and Abraham Lincoln established the National Academy of Sciences, Rohde says.

But in Sweden, which has led the world in taking action on regulation of chemicals, scientists have a long history of public discourse.

For centuries, professors at Sweden’s universities were appointed by the monarchy. “Scientists were free to criticize the king [without retribution] in order to improve the society,” says Åke Bergman, an environmental chemist at Stockholm University and executive director of the Swedish academic research center Swetox.

Read Full Article: National Geographic

Republican pledges $175 million to push party on climate

Image Credit: iStock

A Republican entrepreneur is putting a whopping $175 million behind a campaign whose message will have some party stalwarts seeing red: The GOP needs to deal with climate change.

North Carolina businessman Jay Faison will launch a social media and online advertising blitz, backed by state and national digital advocacy efforts and a series of strategic grants, as part of a $165 million campaign run through the ClearPath Foundation. The aim is to get the Republican Party to shift its skeptical view of climate change and green energy, topics that usually fall to the bottom of its list of priorities when they don’t generate outright opposition among conservative voters.

In addition to his public education effort, Faison is putting an additional $10 million of his money into a separate political advocacy operation, using the same nonprofit tax status designation as groups like President Barack Obama’s Organizing for Action, Karl Rove’s Crossroads GPS and several tea party groups. He will also try to attract additional outside funds for that operation.

On Tuesday, Faison, who made a fortune from the sale of his Charlotte-based audio-visual equipment company SnapAV, will unveil the first stage of his ClearPath campaign, including spending $40 million through 2016 to persuade moderates and conservatives to join the fight against climate change — but relying on market-based principles rather than government mandates.

“I always felt a little alone out there as a Republican, and so I started ClearPath to create a dialogue around this in a way that hadn’t been done before and sort of be part of the solution,” Faison said in an interview, adding he’d like to see the party’s candidates debate the solutions to climate change, not the science. “We think that there are real Republican solutions to the problem.”

It’s not an issue that tends to sit well with Republican leaders. Among the GOP candidates for president, only long-shot Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina has been consistent in saying that he believed human activity was a cause of climate change. He has vowed to try to persuade Republicans to expand the party’s environmental platform, but he’s currently polling in the low single digits.

Green-minded Republicans may gravitate toward Jeb Bush, who will make his own candidacy official June 15 and has acknowledged climate change as a problem. But he has also echoed conservatives in decrying the “arrogance” of those who say climate science is settled.

The challenge for Faison will be finding a receptive audience inside the party that has focused on fighting Democrats’ climate change policies or rallying voters against what it calls President Barack Obama’s “war on coal.”

“What’s important to remember is that [climate change] doesn’t really register as an issue with many Republican primary voters,” said Eli Lehrer, who helped form the free-market think tank R Street Institute after bolting from the Heartland Institute over its public skepticism of climate science.

“It isn’t that they are denying anything. They just don’t care that much. I don’t care that much. It’s unlikely that I will vote primarily where someone stands on climate change,” he said.

Faison said he’s trying to change that perception — or at least not let Republican apathy about climate change stand in the way of getting the party to join the debate over solutions that has been dominated by Democrats. And that means focusing on solutions in the free market that will appeal to conservatives.

“I think everybody agrees that there’s [climate] risk. And if there is risk then I think we need to move on to solutions which are right in front of our nose,” he said.

A self-described Christian conservative from a prominent Charlotte Republican family, Faison also supports school choice, tort reform and small government, and he has disdain for Obamacare — all positions that put him solidly in the Republican camp and contradict claims that he’s a Republican In Name Only because of his climate outreach.

But as an avid hunter and fisherman, he had long followed climate change issues, and after the sale of his company, Faison decided to turn his attention to the effort.

Tuesday will mark the official rollout of ClearPath.org — a website featuring hundreds of pages of studies and other data including from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the corporate consulting firm McKinsey to educate Republicans about climate change. The ClearPath foundation also has an investment portfolio that includes a seven-figure solar energy investment.

There is a wealth of polling suggesting a lot of Republicans do see climate change as a problem that should be addressed through cleaner forms of energy, if not through Environmental Protection Agency and other regulations.

“There’s a lot of center-right Republicans that feel like they don’t have a voice in this issue, and surveys would say they’re eager to share this information to bring other people along with them,” Faison said. “Even in small percentages, that’s in the millions.”

Yet, conservatives remain an outlier. An Earth Day-timed Gallup poll found fewer than 4 in 10 self-identified conservative Republicans — 37 percent — think that climate change will occur in their lifetime, while 19 percent believe it will affect future generations. A plurality — 40 percent — responded that climate change will never happen.

North Carolina businessman Jay Faison will launch a social media and online advertising blitz. | SnapAV

Faison advocates preventing utility monopolies from standing in the way of rooftop solar and other green electricity sources, rather than relying on measures such as the Obama administration’s planned greenhouse gas controls for power plants. Rooftop solar has been championed by tea party groups in Georgia, but it’s an effort that will put Faison in conflict with megadonors like the Koch brothers.

Indeed, the trend among Faison and other green Republicans is to showcase ideas that are or should be pretty well established within the GOP policy framework.

“The problem with Republicans — a lot of Republicans, not all — they just don’t understand the issue,” said Andrew Sabin, owner of a New York-based precious-metal refining business and a longtime GOP donor. “If they saw some of the things they could do that wouldn’t affect the economy and in fact increases jobs and cleans the air, they’re all for it.”

Read Full Article: Politico