Global Warming: More Inconvenient Truths
It’s not just the planet that’s hotting up, it’s the whole debate about global warming. Especially now that we can see and feel its effects every day. Yet you’ve probably noticed that when it comes to taking action, the focus always seems to be on what each of us can do personally. We the people must use energy-saving light bulbs, fly less, recycle, use green energy, take our appliances off standby, and so on. But perhaps, like me, these entreaties leave you feeling a bit ripped off. Perhaps you, too, are wondering what part business, industry and governments have to play? It’s certainly true that there are things individual citizens can and must do, but surely really significant reductions ultimately depend on tough, international legislative action. After all, if personal responsibility were all that has ever been necessary to solve problems, why were political systems and governments invented in the first place? Once we’ve taken individual action, is that it? Or is there more to be done? What really seems to be needed is a way of acting collectively to ensure that governments around the world start co-operating to solve global warming instead of talking more hot air while the planet burns.
In his film, An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore rightly points out that collective action depends on political will, but this, he says, is in short supply. Right again! The reasons for its scarcity, he suggests, are that it’s simply not in the short-term interests of the main polluting nations and their industries to take substantive action. So far so good, but the cartoon image he uses to hammer his point home is an unfortunate one: a pair of scales with gold bars on one side and the entire planet on the other. Gore uses this to demonstrate the absurdity of those who see economic prosperity and a healthy planet as an either/or choice: after all, what value could gold bars have if there’s no habitable planet in which to enjoy them? It’s plainly ridiculous, and so too, suggests Gore, is the reluctance of some to give up the gold bars.
But rather than ridicule those who fear for their short-term interests, shouldn’t we be trying to look at what may be their perfectly legitimate point, and trying to understand the forces that keep it relevant? Gore may have faced the inconvenient truth of global warming, but he is yet to face a second inconvenient truth: that stiff action on the part of the rich countries WILL have adverse economic effects, at least in the short term. And if global warming is dealt with in isolation, those costs WILL fall heaviest on the USA and on other big polluters. To deny the barrier to action that these short-term costs and disincentives represent, as Gore seems to, is to fall into the same trap as those who deny global warming itself.
I laughed along with everyone else when I saw the gold vs earth cartoon, but making fun of those who are wary of economic backlash is hardly likely to elicit the consensus Gore seeks. It also seems like a cheap shot when you keep in mind that had Gore actually become President in 2000, he would inescapably have joined the ranks of those he’s poking fun at. The president of the U.S. has only four years before facing another election, so Gore’s popularity and tenure in office would have been directly influenced by his corporate funders and their support for short-term gains to the US economy.
Today, there may only be few people who still cling to denying global warming. But knowledge and acceptance can’t effect change by themselves. What is urgently needed is a means to unlock the short-term barriers and disincentives that prevent decisive collective action – nationally and internationally. Make no mistake: in today’s globalised and largely borderless world, capital and jobs generally move to wherever in the world environmental and social costs are lowest and profits therefore highest. Any government moving first to significantly increase environmental costs or regulations in a bid to reduce emissions would definitely see investment and jobs moving elsewhere, thus making the nation uncompetitive. That’s why nothing changes except the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere just keeps on rising. Prime Minister Tony Blair at least seemed to recognise these realities when he pointed out that “The blunt truth about the politics of climate change is that no country will want to sacrifice its economy in order to meet this challenge”.i
Unlike Gore, Blair clearly recognises this second inconvenient truth and he should not be blamed for stating it. But his statement only holds true IF nations fail to act together. This is the barrier that keeps the gold bars firmly on one side of the scales. However, if all nations co-operated, the necessary regulations could be implemented without any nation fearing capital or employment flight because there would be no low-cost haven for them to run to. Corporations, too, would have nothing to fear because all corporations would be subject to the same additional costs, so maintaining their relative competitiveness and their relative profitability. Think about that for a minute.
But there is a further problem: the biggest polluter, the USA, would have the biggest adjustment cost, so it has the least incentive to sign up to any cooperative agreement. This is why the Kyoto Protocol is not supported by the USA and Australia, another big polluter. It is also why the provisions of the Kyoto agreement are so mild and relatively ineffectual. Because if the nations supporting Kyoto agreed to tougher, more significant curbs, the costs involved would make them uncompetitive with nations, such as the USA and Australia, who refuse to participate.
The net result is a recipe for missed targets and an intergovernmental dead-lock of a kind which raises the third, final and most important inconvenient truth; this time one that concerns not so much governments or businesses but each of us as individual citizens. It’s a truth which all citizens around the world must urgently take on board: that we can no longer abdicate responsibility for taking collective action to politicians and governments alone. If free-riding governments are to be compelled to co-operate, then it must be citizens who force them to do so. We have no choice but to take the initiative, and stop assuming that politicians are in the driving seat of the global economy. It’s time to grab hold of the steering wheel and find a way of driving our politicians and governments toward co-operation. What’s needed is a method of achieving cooperation which removes the barriers and objections, takes away the fears of being uncompetitive, and replaces those fears with an enthusiasm for shared problem-solving.
When Al Gore became fully aware of the dangers of global warming, he travelled far and wide to gain a deeper understanding of the science and its real-world effects, and justifiably so (although I do hope he planted plenty of trees to personally offset his carbon emissions). But Gore and the rest of us have so far failed to embark on another, far more urgent line of enquiry. If we genuinely wish to solve global warming and other global problems, we need to gain a deeper understanding of the barriers to collective government action under globalisation. For the deeper truth is that global warming and many other global “problems” are not the real problems at all. They are merely symptoms, albeit terrifying ones, of our failure as a global human society to co-operate. Until we understand the dynamics of co-operation and how to achieve it, and what we as citizens can do to unblock the barriers to it, international inaction, missed targets and deepening chaos will continue and global warming may well destroy human civilisation.
The Simultaneous Policy, a global citizen’s initiative, claims to have begun this vital journey and to offer a plausible and effective way that citizens can use their right to vote in a new way that drives the politicians of all parties and nations to collectively implement the measures we so desperately need. It seems that political representatives would find it a welcome relief to be freed from the restrictions that keep them beholden to big business interests and confined to wholly inadequate policies dictated by the need to keep their nations “internationally competitive”. This is reflected in the fact that already politicians from opposing sides of the spectrum – nationally and internationally – are pledging their support for the Simultaneous Policy as a result of voter pressure and/or enlightened social responsibility. Check it out for yourself at www.simpol.org – as Noam Chomsky commented, “Can it work? It’s certainly worth a serious try!”
UK Windfarms record output
Around five per cent of electricity provided to National Grid on Monday (6th Spetember 2010) came from wind farms
The UK’s wind farms reached record levels of output on Monday providing five per cent of all electricity to the grid over the course of the day.
National Grid confirmed that 40.5GWh out of a total 809.5GWh was provided by wind farms during the 24-hour period, with output peaking at 1,860MW at 8:30pm. At its peak the wind energy sector was providing electricity equivalent to that produced by three nuclear power stations.
A spokeswoman for the grid operator said that when so-called embedded wind generation from turbines that are not connected to the grid is taken into account it is estimated that on Monday around 10 per cent of the UK’s electricity was delivered by wind power.
“Overall about 10 per cent of total electricity demand would have been met by wind power,” she said. “It is a pretty big landmark for the industry.”
The record will be taken as further evidence that the grid can cope with growing inputs from intermittent energy sources such as wind farms. “Matching demand with supply is changing by its very nature because of the intermittency of wind energy,” said the National Grid spokeswoman. “But that does not mean it can not be done.”
However, the UK has a long way to go to match the performance of some of its European neighbours. For a period back in January this year, wind farms in Spain and Portugal consistently delivered 50 per cent of electricity demand for the Iberian peninsular.
In related news, the expansion of one of the UK’s largest onshore wind farms took a major step forward this week when French engineering giant Alstom announced it has secured an order worth over €200m from Scottish Power Renewables to build a 217MW extension to its Whitelee wind farm in Scotland.
Under the terms of deal, Alstom will install and maintain 69 ECO 100 wind turbines, each with an output of 3MW, and six ECO 74 wind turbines, each with an output of 1.67MW. The new turbines are scheduled to be fully operational by May 2012.
Romania launch Carbon trading Scheme
The Romanian government on Wednesday gave its go ahead to a carbon trading scheme to cut greenhouse gas emissions, hoping to earn up to 2.5 billion euros (3.3 billion dollars) until 2012
“Romania can trade about 300 million credits, divided into one-million-ton packages,” economy minister Adriean Videanu said during a press conference.
The money is set to go to environmental projects, including the closure of polluting companies and investments in renewable energy production.
Carbon dioxide is regarded as the principal greenhouse gas responsible for global warming.
Environment Minister Laszlo Borbely last week said Spain and Japan were interested in buying Romania’s permits, with negotiations due to start soon.
He added Romania was lagging behind in this field, as the trading should have started in 2008.
The carbon trading scheme was adopted under the Kyoto Protocol which sets binding targets for 37 industrialized countries and the European community for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
The reduction in emissions under the protocol should be around five percent over the five-year period 2008-2012 compared to the level in 1990.
Another One bites the dust
A skip firm has been banned from moving waste after flouting waste laws, the Environment Agency said today (August 19).
Easy Skips (NE) has banned from transporting any more rubbish, after its waste carriers licence was taken away.
Its permit to run a waste transfer station in Hartlepool has also been taken away and the company must clear all the rubbish from the site.
The Environment Agency has also told the company it has just two months to remove all waste from the site.
The decision comes after the firm was convicted in November 2007 of illegally depositing and keeping waste on its site, at Casebourne Road in the town, without a permit.
The company was sentenced in August 2009 – after an investigation to confiscate any profits it made from the crimes – when company directors Kevin Brough and Andrew Benson were ordered to hand over £234,393.
At the time, this was the second-highest Proceeds Of Crime award ever obtained by the Environment Agency.
Easy Skips (NE) was given the opportunity to explain how it would comply with waste laws in the future, but it failed to do so said a spokesman for the Environment Agency.
Environment Agency north east environment manager, Julian Carrington, said: “Over many months Easy Skips (NE) has been collecting waste from people and dumping it at its two sites, transforming them into unsightly mountains of rubbish.
“By revoking Easy Skips waste carriers licence and its permit, we have made it illegal for the company to continue operating in the waste industry.”
Responsibility of the Corporate
What ever one does for the good cause of the society it needed to look back and monitor the situation, weather it is actually fulfilling the intention or it is just lying on the papers. As a person who has given thought a shape for upliftment of the society and oneself, it is our up most duty to keep checking the same, in terms of progress of the desired changes if needed.
For the same purpose there was a visit of Mr. Bill Gates the founder and Chairman of Microsoft Corporation and Bill Gates Foundation in India very recently. Bill Gates foundation is actively involved in various activities related to upliftment of the society across the world and provides funds and the assistance to remote corner places of India too. He Visited city called Amethi in the state of Uttarpardesh. Amethi is very popular place in India as the political representatives of Amethi, mostly belongs to Gandhi family for the past many decades and the Gandhi families are the pillars of Indian politics in India. As the largest political party of the country, and they are the one who have carried Indian tradition legacy for past many years and will continue in future too.
Indian National Congress is most respected political party in India, as the congress party is known to many peoples in the developed countries of the world. The principles of the party’s are totally different from the others like BJP, Janata Dal or the communist party (In India). The National Congress Party of India takes complete responsibility of upliftment the society and its related concerns. As the leader of the reputed member of the political organization and traditional experienced person, Mr.Rahul Gandhi was with Mr. Bill Gates through out the Amethi tour. He was doing the best as a leader to support another leader from the corporate world to provide all the necessary assistance to help the corporate visitor and show him the gesture of Indian tradition heritage.
The heat and the dust of Uttarpardesh at the present climate in the month of May one can imagine as how Mr. Bill Gate have manage the tour, as he is not Asian ethics by birth or the experience of this type of climate. Respecting to the corporate leader and social responsible person it was Mr.Rahul Gandhi’s duty to give the traditional value, simultaneously to be present with him to the Amethi.
It was his gesture that he manages to take out time from his busy schedule and traveled with Mr. Bill Gates and provided the required necessary assistance. He even did the language translation for Mr. Bill Gate as the local people were asking the questions in Hindi or their native language.
We need to learn from our leaders of such, as how improve our behavior and our responsibility towards the society. The Best Part is to learn as, how to implement and manage such things, despite heaving busy schedule.
As a responsible person one shouldn’t leave the things after kickoff, but we need to keep monitoring the developments on time to time. It is not possible to do the same on a daily basis by the people who are attached with the corporate world, because their responsibilities are diverted in many directions, but it can be manageable to access the situation and further directions.
Saving Money, Conserving Energy and Lowering Your Carbon Footprint Too
5 ways to reduce your energy bills
Cover your hot water heater with a blanket. It helps to keep your water hotter. This really does help to keep the heat in the system. To save more energy lower the temperature on the hot water heater to 120 degrees before you cover it.
Wrap your hot water pipes. This also helps to keep the heat in your system and not escaping into the air. If you live where it gets consistently below freezing during the winter you should be wrapping your cold water pipes too.
Buy a programmable thermostat. I find myself not touching the thermostat anymore now that it’s programmable. It used to be too easy to turn up the heat before. So much so that I would hardly realize I was doing it. I would turn it up, get sidetracked and forget that I did it until I wondered why I was getting so warm. That was all wasted energy.
Lower your thermostat at night. The house does not have to be toasty warm when you are sleeping. As long as it’s comfortable when you’re falling asleep it doesn’t matter if the temperature drops a little while your sleeping. You can always throw on another blanket if you get cold during the night.
Now to address the fact that the windows are cold even if you have curtains. The cold windows do lower your room temperature. For those of you that have nice thick thermal curtains you are one step ahead of the game. I do not like to shrink wrap my windows even if it will help me to retain heat. I want to be able to open my windows on the nicer fall and winter days to let fresh air in. My answer to that was bubble wrap.
In the course of my research, I came across a few different sources that mentioned bubble wrap. I thought I would give it a try. You just cut it to the exact measurements of the glass. You lightly spritz the flat side of the wrap with water and place it on the glass. No caulk, no glue. no mess.
The heat in your room is not being canceled out by the cold air coming off of the windows.
These changes helped to make my home heating system more energy efficient because the heat was not escaping into thin air. It was helping to keep my hot water warmer and and to keep the heat available to my baseboard heating system. You don’t have to replace your old system to have your home be more energy efficient.
You don’t have to buy solar panels or a solar hot water system in order to make your home more energy efficient. There are a lot of things you can do to make the home heating system you currently have more energy efficient.
It’s a win win situation. You are saving money by conserving energy and lowering your carbon footprint at the same time. That’s good for you and good for the environment.
There are many things that you can do yourself. The most expensive part of this was the programmable thermostat. I bought all of my supplies a little bit at a time. Believe me, you’ll enjoy seeing those home heating costs going down with each and every delivery.
WEEE Recycling: Data Destruction is Essential
Your organissations data may no longer be of value to you once you have done what you need to do with it, but it is gold dust to your competitors. That is why any media, from paper to Flash memory cards, that contains business data must be thoroughly erased before disposal.
The risks of disposal of computers containing data that you may believe has been erased but has really just been lightly erased include putting yourself or your customers at risk for identity theft as well as making data available to unscrupulous competitors. Even recycling a computer to comply with WEEE recycling regulations does not include proper data destruction techniques.
These techniques include degaussing, in which magnetic patterns that conform to actual data are realigned so that the data is unreadable and unrecoverable, shredding, which entails shredding media into very fine bits that cannot be reassembled, and software wiping, in which all HEX values on the entire volume of a disk are overwritten using special software. In the United kingdom, such software must meet Data protection Act standards to be considered effective for data destruction.
Computers, including internal hard disk drives and other internal media storage devices, must be recycled according to WEEE regulations (EU). However, if data remains available on any part of the device before, during or after WEEE recycling procedures, it still poses a threat to your company security. Therefore, devices that hold data and are subject to WEEE recycling regulations must undergo a thorough process of data destruction before recycling should take place.
Hard drive destruction is absolutely imperative before WEEE recycling can start. This is because even when a disk drive is seemingly erased, the information on it can be recovered and made available without your knowledge. Ensuring that an expert with security cleared personnel destroys the hard drive by methods such as degaussing and shredding is the only way you can be sure that any data that was ever available on a drive that is slated for disposal can never be accessed again. Software wiping is recommended only for hard disk drives that will be reused after the data stored on them is fully destroyed.
Media tape drives are also easily accessible if they are not fully and professionally destroyed prior to disposal. Degaussing and shredding are the most recommended techniques for destruction of media tape drives.
Even CD’s and DVD’s which contain sensitive and confidential data should never be disposed of without making the data completely inaccessible. Complete physical destruction of the media through precision shredding that is offered by professional media disposal firms is the only way to ensure that data on a CD or DVD is fully inaccessible.
Flash memory cards, external memory sticks, and similar devices must also be subject to data destruction measures if they have ever held sensitive data. A specialist firm which handles data destruction should be consulted regarding such memory devices as their small size makes it very easy for them to end up in the wrong hands.
At Be Seen Go Green, we offer solutions for a variety of Environmental issues. Please click on the following link to contact us.
Are your Green Projects a sickly shade of Gray? It’s time to get back to basics
Green IT is getting a lot more publicity but what is it? Put simply it’s about using technology to enable greener business practices. That means deploying IT in smarter ways so it’s used to enable further reductions in the total carbon footprint of a company. I read some Forrester research recently and they cited an example where Tesco has found IT’s contribution to their carbon footprint is only 4% but that it has the enabling potential to reduce their total footprint by 20%, which regardless of the calculator you use equates to what could be huge cost savings.
Good news indeed, especially with regards to the other elephants in the room “ Climate Change and the ongoing Global Economic Crisis.
But what of Green IT projects themselves? Are they defined, organised, or delivered in a different way to any other project? And, how can these projects enable greener business practices not just to reduce a carbon footprint but to also increase business process efficiency?
Whether it’s green, blue or yellow-polka-dot a project requires definition, alignment and delivery against the overall strategy and direction of the organisation. Without this process improvement and efficiencies will not be realised and any reductions in carbon footprint could be countered by increased costs in other parts of the business.
So what do you do? Well, let’s start by looking at the 4 D’s of Effective Change projects
Distill the Strategy “ In other words you need clarity. Clear alignment with the overall strategy will ensure a project is heading in the correct direction at the start allowing progress to be made, costs to be understood and managed, and disruption and disappointment kept to a minimum. Determine the Needs “ Specify what the project must deliver and make sure those relate to the strategy. Be specific as the more descriptive you are the better. Be careful what you ask for as you will get it so make sure it’s what you actually wanted. Decide the Tactics Plan, Plan and Plan again. Know what the components are, how they relate to each other, who is responsible for the delivery of each piece, what the measurements for success are, and what you’ll do if a piece turns up unexpectedly or doesn’t eventuate at all. Deliver on the Requirements Take action and get on with it! As simple as this sounds this step is where the work really begins and these 4 Steps are repeated every step of the way. Keep referring to the strategy to ensure alignment continues. If the strategy changes the project must adjust accordingly otherwise the outcomes won’t meet the needs.
So how do you do all of this and still stay Green? With more and more projects consisting of teams of people and other resources spread across varying parts of a country, continent or the globe there are numerous ways to Green a project. Some companies still hold the if we can’t see them theyre not working view, which with today’s technology and reasons for Green IT projects is pretty antiquated.
Make use of the technology and other resources available. For example:
Teleconferencing and WebEX. These tools have been available for many years and the technology is now proven and their use widespread. They’re important for increased responsiveness, reducing timelines and costs particularly travel costs, and limiting individual as well as company carbon footprints. Add webcam or video conferencing facilities adding these into the mix reduces costs even further with the added advantage of actually being able to see the body language and reactions of others even if they’re in a different timezone. Non-company resources - whether on-site, remote or a combination of both you can augment an existing team when you need to without carrying the overheads. The experience you need can be located anywhere and potentially available at any time.
When considering your Green IT strategy and projects don’t stop with the technology, consider every aspect that will be required to deliver that project including the project itself.
The Carbon Footprint
Over recent years, society has been exposed to the idea of the carbon footprint. The carbon footprint is a measure of carbon dioxide emissions from an individual, family, or business over a daily, weekly, monthly or yearly time frame. People who lead very busy lifestyles tend to have a greater carbon footprint due to the transport and power consumption they require.
With global warming predicted to rise over the next century, some people are attempting to offset their carbon footprint in a bid to lead more environmentally friendly lifestyles. Some of the methods involved with reducing a carbon footprint are explained below.
Some famous and/or wealthy people decide to commission large plantations of new trees once a year according to their estimated carbon footprint. The idea behind this relates to the trees allowing the absorption of the same (or near enough) amount of carbon dioxide in the following year.
With hybrid cars becoming ever more popular, and city’s becoming increasingly congested, many more people are opting to purchase a hybrid car which is perfect for inner city areas.
Some of the most effective ways to reduce your carbon footprint start at home, and don’t cost a penny, in fact, some of these methods can save you money and are explained below.
Many households nowadays use too much energy in heating, and just turning your thermostat down by one or two degrees can not only reduce the amount of energy you consume, but reduce your heating bills quite considerably.
Another good example of the simple energy saving methods that start at home is the well known stand-by technique. All appliances when not in use should be turned off at the wall. This will save you money on your electricity bill and allow you to lower your carbon footprint in a very effective way.