The environment in the news thursday, 20 October, 2016 unep and the Executive Director in the News


Party for the Planet and GreenMarket Place



Download 363.46 Kb.
Page3/5
Date20.10.2016
Size363.46 Kb.
#6181
1   2   3   4   5
Party for the Planet and GreenMarket Place, hosted by PPG Industries, Pennsylvania Resources Council and Conservation Consultants.

April 30: ARBOR DAY

Tree Planting, hosted by Friends of the Pittsburgh Urban Forest.

May 3-4:

Pennsylvania Marcellus Shale Policy Conference, hosted by Pennsylvania Environmental Council and Duquesne University.

May 7-8:

Eco Home & Garden Festival, a sustainability-focused garden festival merging gardeners and the eco-conscious, hosted by Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens.

May 21:

National Bike to Work Day.
Tireless Friday, hosted by Tireless Project and Allegheny CleanWays.

May 27:

Annual Rachel Carson Legacy Event, which honors the environmentalist at her Springdale homestead.

June 3:

First Global Water Conference at David L. Lawrence Convention Center, organized by the Pittsburgh World Environment Day Partnership. Conference organizers expect outcomes that will foster greater opportunities for the region’s burgeoning water-focused businesses to join forces with local universities and researchers in solving global water problems.

June 4:

Kick-off of the Three Rivers Arts Festival, which has embraced the green movement throughout the past few years.

June 5: WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY

River Opus “Choreographed” Gathering
Opening of Earth House, Pittsburgh’s first zero-energy dwelling.
Millvale CleanSweep II, hosted by Millvale Borough, Millvale Development Corp. and Millvale Focus Group.

For a complete list of activities and events, visit the official World Environment Day 2010 Pittsburgh Web site at pittsburghwed.com.

 



Women Help Mother Earth

The 13th annual Women’s Health & The Environment Conference will take place in Pittsburgh on April 21. The theme is “Healthy Places—Healthy Lives.” As a salute to the role women have played and continue to fulfill in protecting Mother Earth, here are profiles of three of the many remarkable eco-conscious women in this region, past and present.



Teresa Heinz: A philanthropic innovator and an environmental visionary, Teresa Heinz continues to sponsor the annual Women’s Health & The Environment Conference, which she founded in 1995. This conference, which is open to the public, brings women together with health, policy and environmental experts.

Heinz believes that the conventional concept of the environment—involving only the traditional green issues such as air and water quality—is no longer adequate to the lives that people (and especially women) live today. “The more questions we ask, the more we can make informed choices and live healthier lives,” says Heinz, who is the wife of Sen. John Kerry, of Massachusetts, and the widow of the late Sen. John Heinz, formerly of Pittsburgh. “Here’s why,” she continues: “Ignorance kills, and knowledge saves lives and helps us live healthier ones. What I have taken away from conference after conference is that there is no one single way through which to look at health care, and that is the position we start from at the Women's Health & Environment events.”

Attendance is free and lunch is provided, but registration for previous years’ events has closed quickly. (Info: womenshealthpittsburgh.org)

Rachel Carson: With the 1962 publication of Silent Spring, writer, scientist and ecologist Rachel Carson gave rise to the modern environmental movement. She developed her love of nature growing up along the banks of the Allegheny River just upstream from Pittsburgh in Springdale, where her homestead is preserved as homage to one of the most important environmental voices of the 20th century.

Trained as a marine biologist at what is now Chatham University, Carson obtained a master’s degree in zoology from Johns Hopkins University and worked for many years for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In addition to Silent Spring, she penned three volumes on marine life, all of which became bestsellers. (Info: rachelcarsonhomestead.org)



Cordelia S. May: Through the years, Pittsburgh native and philanthropist Cordelia S. May was known for her sensitivity to humanity’s ecological footprint. This found expression in her charitable donations to land conservation, watershed protection, environmental education and population causes.

In 1996, May established the Colcom Foundation, whose mission continues since her death in 2005. The foundation fosters a sustainable environment by addressing causes and consequences of overpopulation and its adverse effects on natural resources. Regionally, the foundation supports conservation, environmental projects and cultural assets. (Info: colcomfdn.org)





Check Out Some Cool, New Green Things:

1. Try an All-Organic Cupcake from Dozen bake shop: It’s a vanilla cupcake infused with local, organic basil and topped with organic lemon buttercream. This treat uses organic flour and sugar and hormone-free milk from Turner Dairy Farms. It is the first all-organic, all-local cupcake on Dozen’s seasonal menu.  Dozen sources its ingredients locally through Penn’s Corner Farm Alliance, Mildred’s Daughter’s Farm, Grow Pittsburgh and Turner Dairy Farms. What’s more is that Dozen will embark on some cool green initiatives this year, including composting all of its organic kitchen waste, planting a small vegetable garden at a farm in Butler County and acquiring nearly a dozen chickens to supply eggs exclusively for its shops. (Info: dozenbakeshop.com)

2. Consider a Green Treat for Your Hands and Feet: When you get “The Pittsburgh Organicure,” Tina-Lisa Agresta, of Jeffrey Smith Salon, will pamper you with her all-organic hand and nail treatments. She has been whipping up her all-natural products for decades, using ingredients that are as local as possible. From mint sugar scrubs to custom-blended essential oil lotions, your hands and feet will thank you—and so will the environment. (Info: 412/683-8153)

3. Save Money by Spending Your Dollars Locally: It’s easier for us to choose eco-friendly alternatives to products and services that we use every day. EcoCents: Your Local Guide to Green Living is a brand-new guide that offers hundreds of dollars in coupons. Developed by Megan Cook and other like-minded entrepreneurs, it’s a one-stop guide to cafés serving locally farmed, organic grub as well as alternative-health clinics, yoga studios and socially responsible nonprofits and businesses. (Info: ecocentspgh.com)

4. What do Diana Krall, Perry Como, Frank Sinatra and the Allegheny County Courthouse Have in Common? The old song “Just a Garden in the Rain.” Visitors will find a teaching rain garden in the Allegheny County Courthouse courtyard on Grant Street. The Three Rivers Rain Garden Alliance, 3 Rivers Wet Weather and Penn State Center-Pittsburgh are working with the county to educate residents and businesses on how to develop rain gardens.
These gardens can be planted in yards and other green spaces to help offset storm water rushing into our region’s poorly combined sewer systems. Developing a rain garden is an affordable way to provide increased value to homes and businesses. Now that’s something to really sing about.

5. Who Knew Retro Mod Furniture Is So Green: Retro Mod Décor surely knows. Not only is retro furniture a current craze in décor in today’s interior-design market, it also is a great way to green your home. Owners Roger Levine and Jeff Gordon are hip, mod, green advocates who encourage folks to consider vintage pieces when furnishing their residences.
When you choose retro, you eliminate the need to cut down more trees and reduce pollution associated with manufacturing new products. Retro furnishings are economical. Often, the cost is less than buying newer items, and the quality can be much better. (Info: who-new.com)

6. Here’s a Real “Green” Giant Idea: Bryan Ward, founder of Giant Ideas, a full-service creative agency, approached his new downtown office building from a sustainable, renewable and energy-efficient standpoint.
The company took full advantage of natural daylight, low-flow water management and other technologies to work together with eco-friendly materials, including recycled aluminum kitchen tiles and wall panels made from sunflower seeds. A cool green environment is a very cool giant idea. (Info: giantideas.com)

7. Local Water With a Kick: Kick back, relax and raise a glass to Earth Day and Pittsburgh’s global green excellence with local favorites, such as The Blushing Blair Martini or the Black & Gold Martini. Boyd & Blair vodka is a local, sustainable and foodie-friendly libation made from Pennsylvania potatoes. In just two years, this hometown vodka is well on its way to world domination. It is already available statewide and in New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, Washington, D.C., and Illinois. (Info: boydandblair.com)

8. Trusts in the Land—Save Our Environment: In land conservation, timing is critical. Western Pennsylvania Conservancy’s new Colcom Revolving Fund for Local Land Trusts offers access to funds for purchasing projects that involve the conservation of land.
This $1 million initiative is the latest program from WPC, which has been enriching our relationship with the natural world since 1932 by conserving water, protecting the region’s natural places and founding six state parks. The fund has even helped to preserve Fallingwater, the Frank Lloyd Wright masterpiece. (Info: paconserve.org)

9. Exclusive Green Plate Special: Not many people know that one of the largest high-end chinaware companies is not only green but also local. Steelite International, based in New Castle, takes fine dining and the environment very seriously. It is the only chinaware company in the world to be ISO-certified green since the certificate’s introduction in 1996.
As a result, clay is recycled, and fewer chemicals are required to separate manufacturing waste, resulting in cleaner water discharge. So, the next time you dine at Lidia’s Pittsburgh or El Bulli in Catalonia, Spain, know that your gastronomic delights are being served with eco-friendly tableware. (Info: steelite.com)

10. Enjoy a Massage That’s Healthy for You and the Environment: We all know massage therapy is about health and healing. Now you can relax and enjoy eco-conscious massage therapy without leaving the comfort of your home.
Environmentally conscious American Massage Therapy Association (AMTA) practitioner Erica Wessell provides Swedish, deep-tissue and sports-massage therapy sessions to her dedicated followers. By going to clients’ homes, her services save energy that would have been used to keep an office in operation. Wessell uses certified organic oils, creams and botanical extracts, and she will blend organic aromatherapy oils of your choice into your treatment. She brings her own luxurious organic-cotton linens, which are pure eco-bliss; they’re laundered with biodegradable, vegetable-based detergent. (Info: 412/448-7688)

11. Hang out on the Porch of OUR First Urban Eco-Village: The Hamnett Homestead Sustainable Living Center is a turn-of-the-century Victorian house that will resurrect “front porch culture” in Wilkinsburg. When complete, it will serve as a community gathering and education place. The project is an important example of eco-villages, a sustainable-living practice already found in the Pacific Northwest, and it also demonstrates the viability of reusing the region’s valuable housing stock.
John Folan, Carnegie Mellon University’s T. David Fitz-Gibbon visiting professor of architecture, linked two fifth-year CMU urban-design courses to create this soon-to-be completed sustainable and forward-thinking community. (Info: cmu.edu/architecture)

12. Flower Power Made from Recycled Art: Pittsburgh-based design company Art Energy Design uses sustainable-energy technology in its artistic designs. Power Flower’s sculptures are just one example of its integration of socially responsible technologies into designs. The sculptures integrate wind, solar and recycling technologies into the urban landscape by creating installations for the public to enjoy and showcasing them around the region. (Info: artenergydesign.com)



Meet Some Cool Green People:

John Fetterman: How could we ignore the Mayor of Cool, His Honor John Fetterman, the mayor of Braddock? Sure, he’s been on the cover of the Atlantic, but never mind that: He’s the greenest tattooed dude this side of the Mississippi. Fetterman helped to start an organic urban farm on vacant lots adjacent to a local steel mill and saved tens of thousands of feral honeybees infesting a vacant building from the exterminator and sent them to form apiary colonies all around the region.

Thinking beyond his borough, Fetterman has supported a project to make inexpensive water filters from clay and sawdust to provide safe drinking water for people in developing countries and victims of natural disasters. He has played a national role in the quest to curb climate change by advocating the Cap and Trade Bill as spokesman for several environmental organizations and by testifying in Washington, D.C. Thanks to funding from the Heinz Endowments, Braddock begins constructing the first and only “green roof” building in the Mon Valley this spring. (Info: 15104.cc)



Greg Boulos: Eco-Renaissance man Greg Boulos is actively involved in a number of sustainable local economic-development initiatives—from food and fuel to energy efficiency. He is the Mid-Atlantic regional governor for Slow Food USA, CEO of Homesteaders Consulting LLC, co-owner of Blackberry Meadows Farm and an organic farmer.

With a master’s degree in sustainable systems from Slippery Rock University, he’s bringing together like-minded leaders to find sustainable solutions to correct our region’s water- and sewage-system problems. Boulos is developing a more holistic approach that reduces investment in new pipes by making a major investment in cisterns and rain barrels. When he’s not bringing together water-management experts and engineers to develop the idea, he’s the on-the-farm handyman. (Info: blackberrymeadows.com)



Janice Donatelli: Born and raised on a farm in Kentucky, Janice Donatelli has always been interested in nature. Combining that with her passion for design, she co-founded Artemis Environmental Building Materials in Lawrenceville five years ago.

As the first business in the tri-state area catering to sustainable design and building, Donatelli provides services that are in high demand. “At our first national convention [of green building suppliers], there were 11 of us around the table. Now there are 111,” she says of the bourgeoning interest in the field. She adds that the people most affected in the building arts are chemically sensitive people, self-described “canaries in the coal mine” because they experience various health problems related to untested chemicals found in many common building products.

Green products are the solution, she says. Young people and people with families are quickly learning about the health benefits of green building and design techniques as developers and contractors learn about the cost benefits. (Info: artemisenvironmental.com)

Court Gould: One of the region’s go-to leaders in sustainable development is Court Gould. He is executive director of Sustainable Pittsburgh and serves on local, state and national advisory committees dealing with sustainability and public policy.
Gould was a German Marshall Fund delegate in the study of regional economies in Europe and a featured speaker at an international conference on sustainable development in Hiroshima, Japan. He is active in community organizations, including the Greater Pittsburgh Nonprofit Partnership and the Local Government Academy. (Info: sustainablepittsburgh.org)

Bill Peduto: Pittsburgh City Councilman Bill Peduto has sponsored a number of bills and initiatives aimed at saving the environment and also saving taxpayers’ money. Most recently, Peduto is leading an effort to begin the transition from old-style street lighting to new LED technology, which will save millions of dollars by reducing electricity use and cutting carbon dioxide emissions released into the atmosphere.

Other recent green legislation introduced by Peduto includes the following: replacing gas-guzzlers with hybrids in the city’s motor pool; encouraging residences and businesses to build living green roofs of plants; tightening the rules on recycling (no, it’s not optional—you can be fined if you don’t put out those blue plastic bags or bins bi-weekly); and mandating green policies and procedures in the mayor’s office. (Info: city.pittsburgh.pa.us/district8)



Jamie Moore: It’s no surprise that Jamie Moore is director of sourcing and sustainability for Eat’n Park Hospitality Group. Through his passionate commitment to eco-conscious eating, he has helped the group establish one of the most aggressive greening programs of any restaurant company in the country. Moore promotes EcoSteps, an education plan that communicates Eat’n Park’s actions on protecting the environment, supporting local communities and expanding its role as a socially responsible organization.

In 2010, Eat’n Park restaurants will increase their recycling and composting programs, and the group will open an LEED-certified (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) restaurant in May at the Waterworks Mall in Fox Chapel. When he’s not implementing sustainability initiatives that he develops for Eat’n Park, Moore volunteers his time developing funding strategies for the Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture and can be found where he is most comfortable—cooking in his home kitchen. (Follow the Eat’n Park blog for Moore’s sustainability and “EcoSteps” updates. (Info: blog.eatnpark.com)



Lissa Rosenthal returns to Pittsburgh Magazine this month to share her interest in all things green. Last April, she tackled the “Best of Green” feature for the magazine. Her home, featured in the January issue of the magazine, is one of the first and largest green renovations in the Pittsburgh region.(Info: greystonedrive.info) Lissa is the fundraising and PR muscle behind many of the area’s cultural, food and beverage campaigns.
Today Marks Start of Events for World Environment Day

Channel 4 Action News This Morning: WTAE-PIT (ABC) - Pittsburgh, PA

See: http://mms.tveyes.com/Transcript.asp?StationID=1815&DateTime=4%2F22%2F2010+5%3A17%3A03+AM&Term=%22United+Nations%22+%2BEnvironment&PlayClip=TRUE
General Environment News



  • Heritage Foundation/The Foundry: Climategate Investigation Only Fuels Controversy

  • ABC News: Many Television Weather Forecasters Doubt Global Warming

  • Reuters: Derivatives Bill Calls For U.S. Carbon Market Study

  • Reuters: Jackson Riles Business, Lawmakers With Carbon Rules

  • Reuters: World Bank Chief Urges Action To Save Wild Tigers

  • Reuters: Orcas Are More Than One Species, Gene Study Shows

  • Reuters: Film Fetes Small Steps To Address Climate Change

  • Reuters: Ocean Chemistry Changing At 'Unprecedented Rate'

  • Reuters: Senators Struggling Over Climate Compromise

  • Reuters: Green Auction nets $2 million for environment

  • Reuters: Like Sept.11, volcano plane ban may hold climate clue

  • Reuters: Obama unchanged on offshore drilling despite spill

  • Reuters: Energy sector poised for innovation -- with the right spark




Climategate Investigation Only Fuels Controversy

Heritage Foundation, Energy and Environment, April 22, 2010, Posted By Audrey Jones

If the University of East Anglia report set up to investigate the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit (CRU) was meant to put the Climategate controversy to rest in time for Earth Day, it failed [2] spectacularly.

The panel was led by Ernest Oxburg [2], who happens to be the honorary president of the Carbon Capture and Storage Association.  Carbon capture and storage is an industry that definitely wouldn’t suffer should CO2 limits be imposed.  Also, Oxburg’s involvement with the wind-energy industry raises further conflict of interest questions.  With this in mind, the lack of depth into which the investigation went and the complete acquittal the panel gave the CRU, is not at all surprising.

The supposed investigation lasted a mere three weeks and was only five pages in length.  Steve McIntyre, a leading critic of the IPCC report and editor of the Climate Audit blog, pointed out [3] that the panel thought it only regrettable—and in no way acknowledged any sort of cover-up– that key facts and figures were tucked away in obscure scientific journals and omitted from the IPCC report. This is significant because, as he put it, IPCC presentations—and not the journals– “are how the climate science community speaks to the world.”  Apparently, these scientists did not want the world to understand that their data did not support their theory.  At least according to the well-known “climate-gate” emails which show that the scientists involved saw that these facts would “dilute the message.”

McIntyre isn’t the only one who is not sold by this so-called investigation.  The Director of Energy and Global Warming Policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, Myron Ebel, said [2], “They don’t even make a minimal effort to rebut the obvious appearance of widespread data manipulation, suppression of dissenting research through improper means and intentional avoidance of complying with Freedom of Information requests.”  In the scientific community, where transparency and the ability to replicate results are everything, these charges are severe.  And unfortunately, the Obama administration is calling for harmful regulations based upon this faulty science.

The same week the panel gave the CRU a free pass, President Obama made the claim [4] to his Economic Recovery Advisory Board that pending climate legislation from the left is good for business.  The board would have been good to tell him otherwise. Spain [5] and other European countries that have tried regulating CO2 emissions have suffered drastic economic results.  Heritage experts have done the number-crunching [6] and their results show Obama’s statement to be blatantly false.  While the figures for the final bill would be slightly different than those calculated by Heritage experts for the Boxer-Kerry legislation, if CO2 emissions or renewable fuel standards legislation was enacted, you could count on trillions of dollars of losses in U.S. GDP, job losses in excess of a million, and trillions of dollars worth of higher energy costs.

If the American people are going to have to bear the consequences of this bill in a time of economic hardship, we should continue to demand a true investigation into the—shoddy at best, deceptive at worst—findings of the CRU.  Allowing those that stand to profit from CO2 regulation to be the ones to investigate the science is like having a polar bear guard the seals.


Many Television Weather Forecasters Doubt Global Warming

Climatologists and Meteorologists Divided on Science of Climate Change and Man's Role



ABC News, April 22, 2010, By DAVID WRIGHT and MAX CULHANE

When it comes to the weather forecast, climate change may be the biggest of them all -- and the stakes are much higher than whether to bring an umbrella.

While most climatologists agree that humans are driving global warming -- literally, in some respects, because of our reliance on fossil fuels -- some of the most trusted names in the weather business don't buy it.

John Coleman, the founder of "The Weather Channel" and the original weatherman on "Good Morning America," has spoken out with his belief that climate change is a myth.

"I love the Earth and I want to come up with alternative energy sources. I want to protect the water and air," Coleman said in a presentation posted on YouTube. "But I know that the Earth is going to be just fine with burning fossil fuels for as long as they last."

"There isn't any climate crisis," he said. "It's totally manufactured."

Other television weathermen tend to doubt that man has anything to do with it. "To think that we could affect weather all that much is pretty arrogant," said CNN weather anchor Chad Myers on a broadcast. "Mother Nature is so big. I think we're going to die from a lack of fresh water or ocean acidification before we die of global warming."

The view is surprisingly common among television meteorologists -- the folks trusted every day to bring you the five-day forecast.

One of three weather forecasters believe climate change is "caused mostly by human activities," according to a recent study from George Mason University and the University of Texas at Austin. Out of those surveyed, one in four agreed with the statement, "Global warming is a scam."

All told, barely half the forecasters surveyed actually believe in the science of climate change.

To find out why, "Nightline" turned to one of the most prominent doubters, AccuWeather's Joe Bastardi, who has been a frequent guest on "The O'Reilly Factor," weighing in on the highly-politicized climate change debate.

"Here's what I'm telling people," he said. "Let's see what happens over the next 20 to 30 years. To me, it's a big forecast and the forecast is based on the idea that there are things turning around now, we have the way now to actually measure it. The Earth is going to cool back to where it was in the late '70s by 2030. That's my forecast ..."




Download 363.46 Kb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page