Carbon Footprint

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Google this: Carbon emissions for your city or town

As we drive deeper into our Orwellian future ala Google, where you can practically peer into your uncle’s windows in Toledo via Google Earth, it makes complete sense that we earthlings can now track how we’re corrupting the atmosphere.

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Carbon-Counter-photo

Carbon expert reminds us that global change is happening now

This number shows Earth’s collective 3 trillion-plus metric tons of combined greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. You’ll notice that it is a BIG number. And it’s already outdated. The volume of greenhouse gases is constantly ticking upward. Much faster than a watch. As ominously as a time bomb

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Walmart plans to lower carbon emissions across its vendor network

Walmart CEO Mike Duke annoucing carbon reduction goals

Walmart CEO Mike Duke annoucing carbon reduction goals

By Barbara Kessler

Walmart announced a plan to reduce carbon emissions across its global supply chain today, saying it intends to shave 20 million metric tons off its greenhouse gas emissions   through 2015.

The reductions will come from Walmart’s own operations and  from “the life cycle of the products we sell,” said Walmart CEO Mike Duke, adding that the savings would be the equivalent of taking 3.8 million greenhouse gas-emitting cars off the road for a year.

“It’s a very sizable goal, as we often do here at Walmart,” he said.

Calculated another way, the reductions represent 150 percent of Walmart’s anticipated carbon growth over the next five years.

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Darden will roll out sustainable restaurant designs

From Green Right Now Reports

Darden Restaurants today announced that it has begun a system-wide sustainable restaurant design initiative involving the use of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards in its restaurant design process for all new restaurants and, where feasible, restaurant remodels.

The company, which operates 1,800 restaurants, said the initiative is part of its broader sustainability efforts aimed at limiting business impact on the environment while also enhancing the operational efficiency of its restaurants.

Darden’s three largest brands – Red Lobster, Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse – are designing eight restaurants to achieve LEED certification from the United States Green Building Council. The company said it plans to apply learnings from those eight restaurants to new restaurants and remodels in the future.

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Report says some of NYC’s most iconic buildings are big polluters

Flatiron_NYC

The Flatiron Building was identified as one of NYC's top polluters.

From Green Right Now Reports

About 9,000 large buildings in New York City are spewing out about 1,000 tons of toxic soot pollution every year because they burn the dirtiest heating oils available, according to a new report released today by Environmental Defense Fund.

Eighty-seven percent of NYC’s heating oil soot pollution is created by only one percent of all buildings in New York City, the report said. Soot pollution has been shown to aggravate asthma, increase the risk of cancer, exacerbate respiratory illnesses and cause premature death.

EDF’s study, “The Bottom of the Barrel: How the Dirtiest Heating Oil Pollutes Our Air and Harms Our Health,” shows that the city’s levels of nickel — a heavy metal that increases the risk of cardiovascular disease by thickening the walls of arteries — are nine times higher than other U.S. cities.

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Asking for a ‘Real Deal’ at Copenhagen

By Barbara Kessler

Student groups and environmental activists are not happy about the U.S. presenting what they see as weak emissions targets for consideration at the Copenhagen Climate Conference.

A "die in" by students from around the world. (Photo: Its Getting Hot in Here.)

A "die in" by students from around the world. (Photo: Its Getting Hot in Here.)

Instead of the 17 percent cut in carbon emissions proposed by the Obama Administration (by 2020), they want steeper reductions that scientists say are needed to escape the tipping points the earth faces if carbon pollution continues to build unabated.

Check out the blog Its Getting Hot in Here or 350.org or TckTckTck for more about how climate activists are trying to push the debate, which is, in the end, a discussion of their future. As TckTckTck notes, Copenhagen is “the most important meeting of our lives.”

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Copenhagen Notes: rich and poor

Monday, Dec. 14

The Copenhagen climate talks began with an uneasy feeling for many poor nations. Countries like the Maldives and Tuvalu, resting barely above sea level; Kenya, dealing under drought; Nepal, coping with melting glaciers, face perilous futures under climate change. Indeed, they suffer today.

These nations, and others, came to the table in Denmark wanting help from the developed world, because the developed world is largely responsible for the carbon emissions causing climate change. The U.S. and China together account for more than half of global greenhouse gases.

But the U.S. never signed onto any legally binding emissions via the 1997 Kyoto Treaty, and China, now building coal plants faster than one a week, has promised emissions cuts without verification.

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JC Penney dumps big book, saving money and forests

The 2009 Big Book - Collector's item?

The 2009 Big Book - Collector's item?

If anything makes as big a thud on your doorstep as the Yellow Pages books, it has been the JC Penney semi-annual “Big Book.”

But the retailer has decided that that thud has outlived its impressiveness and is taking a heavy toll on marketing costs and forests, announcing today that it will no long print the giant catalog. Instead, JC Penney will dedicate its resources to specialty catalogs and online services.

Explained the press release: “The discontinuation of “big book” catalogs aligns with JC Penney’s ongoing commitment to promote the sustainability of forests and other natural resources, and builds upon its legacy of operating in an ethical and socially responsible manner.”

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Palm oil industry’s big carbon impact

By Shermakaye Bass

It’s The Year of Living Dangerously all over again.

Orangutan (Photo: Tom Theodore/Dreamstime)

Orangutan (Photo: Tom Theodore/Dreamstime)

On Tuesday, two journalists were arrested in Sumatra while covering a politically sensitive topic – palm oil harvesting and the ensuing decimation of Southeast Asia’s old-growth, carbon-capturing rainforests, and the subsequent release of giant CO2 pockets that lie beneath the forests and their peat swamps.

More disturbing than the reporters’ deportation, though, is how little we consumers seem to realize that, not only are we what we eat, but when it comes to palm oil, we are eating our own lifeblood. We’re ‘eating’ our oxygen, we’re ‘eating’ our fellow species. We’re consuming our own future by driving up carbon emissions much faster than we can offset them. We are the snake eating its own tail.

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Second Nature launches website to help colleges build greener

By Ashley Phillips

Second Nature, a nonprofit organization promoting sustainability in higher education, launched the Advancing Green Building in Higher Education initiative earlier this year to help under-resourced higher education institutions with a $1.2 million grant from the Kresge Foundation.secondnature

Today, Second Nature launched the Campus Green Builder, a part of the initiative, to help all schools further their sustainability plans. The program recognizes that colleges and universities are in a unique position to influence the future, as they shape the minds of tomorrow, and also that they are large consumers of resources. While many institutions have already formed sustainable committees, there are still many more in the initial stages.

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Carbon expert reminds us that global change is happening now

By Barbara Kessler
CarbonCounter Today Sept.

This number shows Earth’s collective 3 trillion-plus metric tons of combined greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

You’ll notice that it is a BIG number. And it’s already outdated. Look at the counter today on the web, and the number will be bigger.

The volume of greenhouse gases is constantly ticking upward. Much faster than a watch. Steady as an oil derrick. As ominously as a time bomb.

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Sustainable palm oil? Not so fast…

By Ashley Phillips

Palm Oil, an ingredient found in most processed food, has been the subject of much environmental debate in recent years over its role in deforestation. It is commonly found in cooking oil and as an ingredient in cosmetics, soaps, detergents, and some plastics. Palm oil also has been considered for use in the production of biodiesel.

There have been many attempts to make palm oil sustainable. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) was even established in 2003 to do just that. Unfortunately, six years later, there is still no system that can effectively trace palm oil beyond the processor to the plantation level. Companies that manufacture products using palm oil have little way of knowing where the controversial substance originated — which leaves unanswered the question of whether and to what degree palm oil is sustainably farmed.

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