Archive for the ‘Environmental News’ Category

A home energy system that also fuels the car of the future, available now.

Saturday, July 3rd, 2010

I came across this neat little vision of the future that Honda has for replacing petrol powered cars with those powered by hydrogen fuel cell technology, and I just had to share :). Not only do Honda FCX Clarity’s look good, drive well, and emit only water from the exhaust, but they have come up with a home energy system that provides heat and electricity for the home whilst providing fuel for your car.

 http://automobiles.honda.com/fcx-clarity/home-energy-station.aspx

They’ve been testing this system since 2003, and it’s looking very good, as they’re improving the technology in leaps and bounds. All we need now is for hydrogen refuelling stations to open up around the world.

Sky News Leaders’ Debate Question from a Jedi

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

I’ve just submitted the following question to the Sky News Leaders’ TV Debate that is on tv later on tonight. Lol if my question gets selected I might be on tv later on.

“There are a few thousand large pipes around the coastline of the UK, which disgorge untreated sewage directly into river or sea whenever heavy rain affects the drainage and sewage systems. At the moment it’s either this or flood our streets with untreated sewage - not a pretty choice either way. Water sustains us, and it allows life. How can we keep on polluting on a world wide scale as we are. The green revolution should not only be about power. My question is which party will look at improving waste and effluence control in the UK, and abroad?”

May the Force be with You

 Jedi Richard Strange

Greenlands melting ice could increase the rise in global sea levels by 7 meters

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

The following post I received from the AndorProjex email list gives warning that the current forecast of the rise in sea level (by just a a meter or so) could be dangerous, especially to those in charge of bolstering coastal and river flood defences. With the way the arctic ice is melting - the arctic could be more or less ice free in another decade, and not 2050, or 2100, as thought just a year or 2 ago - then surely Greenlands vast sheets of ice could begin to melt just as fast.

I feel that they’d better add another 7 meters to that first estimate of 1.5 meters or so, for the global rise in sea levels.  This may happen in our lifetimes.

 May the Force be with Us

 Jedi Richard Strange

Sun Feb 14, 1:12 pm ET

PARIS (AFP) – Greenland’s continent-sized icesheet is being significantly eroded by winds and currents that drive warmer water into fjords, where it carves out the base of coastal glaciers, according to studies released Sunday.

The icy mass sitting atop Greenland holds enough water to boost global sea levels by seven metres (23 feet), potentially drowning low-lying coastal cities and deltas around the world.

At present, the ocean watermark is rising at around three millimetres (0.12 inches) per year, a figure that compares with 1.8mm (0.07 inches) annually in the early 1960s.

But Greenland’s contribution has more than doubled in the past decade, and scientists suspect climate change is largely to blame, although exactly how this is occurring is fiercely debated.

Some theories point to air temperatures, which are rising faster in far northern latitudes than the global average.

A rival idea is that shifting currents and subtropical ocean waters moving north are eroding the foundation of coastal glaciers, accelerating their slide into the sea, especially those inside Greenland’s many fjords.

Until now, however, these studies have been mainly based on mathematical models rather than observation.

A team of scientists led by Fiammetta Straneo of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts set out to help fill that data void.

Working off of a ship in July and September 2008, the researchers took detailed measurements of the water properties in the Sermilik Fjord connecting Helheim Glacier in eastern Greenland with the ocean.

They found deep water streaming into the fjord was 3.0-4.0 degrees Celsius (37.4-39.2 degrees Fahrenheit), warm enough to cut into the base of the glaciers and hasten their plunge into the sea.

Moored instruments left in the fjord for eight months showed that winds aligned with the coastline played a crucial role in the influx of these warmer waters.

“Our findings support increased submarine melting as a trigger for the glacier acceleration, but indicated a combination of atmospheric and oceanic changes as the likely driver,” the researchers say.

In a separate field study, Eric Rignot of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California and colleagues tried to calculate the relative share of the causes of glacier loss.

Investigating the western side of Greenland, they took ocean measurements in August 2008 in three fjords at the base of four glaciers breaking off into the sea, a process known as calving.

Ocean melting, they found, accounted for between 20 and 75 percent of ice loss from the glacier face, with calving from the part of the iceberg exposed to air accounting for the rest.

Meanwhile, a study also published in the journal Nature Geoscience warned that oceans could become more acidic faster than at any time over the last 65 million years.

Andy Ridgwell and Daniella Schmidt of the University of Bristol, western England compared past and future changes in ocean acidity using computer simulations.

They found that the surface of the ocean is set to acidify even faster than it did during a well-documented episode of greenhouse warming 55.5 million years ago.

Accelerating acidification has already begun to take a toll on numerous marine animals that play a vital role in ocean food chain and help draw off huge quantities of CO2 from the atmosphere.

The calcium carapace of microscopic animals called foraminifera living in the Southern Ocean, for example, have fallen in weight by a third.

AndorProjex - Environmental think tank - is simply the best

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

I’ve been a member of the AndorProjex email list since October 2009, and I have come to find that it is an environmental think tank par excellence. If you’re interested in the environment to any degree, then you may be staggered by what these guys know between them.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/andorprojex/

If you’re interested in setting up your own eco ark or celss (Closed/Controlled Ecological Life Support Systems), to live sustainably within, then this is the place to begin. In fact, one of the founding members, I believe, and a jedi friend of mine, Jedi Jade, knows most, if not all, of the players involved in the Biosphere 2 experiment involving celss, and has learned from their mistakes, whilst living in his own eco ark.

May the Force be with You

 Jedi Richard Strange

China passes new environmental law

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

I received the following bit of news further below, from the AndorProjex Email List, which has put China back in the fight to save the environment - which has got to be good news. Despite the political posturings at Copenhagen, China seems to have committed itself to a greener future, and I hope that they will continue through with this effort. I also wish that they would come out from behind their walls at long last and join the rest of the world with open hearts and minds.

May the Force Guide Them

Jedi Richard Strange

Sat Dec 26, 11:59 am ET

BEIJING (AFP) – China’s national assembly Saturday signaled the country’s commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by adopting a law supporting its renewable energy industry.

The new law, an amendment to one on renewable energy adopted by the National People’s Congress standing committee, obliges electricity grid companies to buy all the power produced by renewable sources.

It also empowers the State Council’s energy department, the electricity regulatory agency and its finance departments to determine the amount of renewable energy available in the country’s overall power generating capacity.

Power companies will be obliged to take up all of that capacity, and those refusing to do so will be fined an amount up to double that of the economic loss of the renewable energy company, Ni Yuefeng, vice-president of the assembly’s environmental affairs commission, told reporters.

The law was adopted after China was criticised for obstructing the adoption of a treaty on climate change during last week’s international summit in Copenhagen.

The new law in fact showed China’s commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, Ni said.

“The new law will help China reduce its emission of greenhouse gases in a voluntary manner,” Ni told a briefing.

Solar panel roads offer a safe alternative to coal and nuclear power

Friday, November 13th, 2009

My friend Jedi Alethea posted the following link at the Coelescere Enclave forum, which details the development of solar panel roads in the US. If this takes off and is adopted it could provide enough energy to replace all centralized power stations, including coal and nuclear power stations, in the US, and provide power to all homes and business in the US.

 http://www.gizmag.com/solar-panel-roads/12780/

 I just hope that this prototype road surface is adopted and the technology exported to all countries around the world.

This idea could save the planet.

May the Force be with You

Jedi Richard Strange

Warning - get ill or ecoli at a UK beach near you

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

I watched a panorama special the other night late on about the pollution from over flow pipes affecting the UK’s beaches, and the streams, rivers and seas they flow into. I was horrified to see video footage of one of these large pipes disgorging a torrent of refuse of all types (even sanitary products were found along the stream).

There are thousands of these pipes around the country, and every time we get heavy rain fall (what - heavy rain here?) these pipes release their dirty cargo into the streams and rivers that flow into the seas. It’s supposedly a bit of a grey area, as they have to balance human and environmental concerns with the sewage system currently as it is.

People may already have died here in the UK from such as ecoli after a visit to the beach - it’s hard to prove apparently, even though a new water testing method, involving pyrosequencing (have a look at the wiki entry for pyrosequencing below if you’re interested), has found minute traces of ecoli in sea water samples off some of our beaches. There is also marine life to consider. 

Effective control of effluent disposal and run off around the world is a big environmental problem that will have serious impact if not dealt with satisfactorily - the seas and oceans connect most of our lands, and even land locked lands will be affected eventually.

Surely there must be some way of improving the system so that untreated sewage is not released in such a manner. I may look into this when I’ve more time. I just hope someone is looking at this problem now.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrosequencing

May the Force be with You

Jedi Richard Strange

Why not everywhere? 100% Clean energy in the US within 10 years!

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

The WE Campaign in the United States is pushing for clean energy across the US within 10 years, a campaign which seems to be endorsed by the promises of US Presidential candidate Barack Obama, and rooted in the real world.

They are saying that it is possible to convert the US to clean energy within 10 years, which is remarkable, but if so, why is this not possible over here in the UK, and indeed, in any country of the world?

Have a look at this short advert, which is being run in response to the US coal and oil industry’s massive spending on ad campaigns to shore up their dirty industry.

http://www.wecansolveit.org/freeusad

May the Force be with You

Jedi Strange

UK withdraws backing for Sakhalin II - threat to Russian wildlife reduced

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

We did it! Thanks to a WWF-UK court action and WWF campaigners lobbying the UK government, a significant threat to the wildlife of Sakhalin Island in eastern Russia has been thwarted.

The Sakhalin II oil and gas pipeline project has already caused serious environmental damage and threatens the extinction of the western Pacific gray whale.

WWF’s court action played a significant role in convincing Sakhalin Energy to abandon its attempts to obtain financial support from the UK government’s Export Credits Guarantee Department. The WWF will continue to send signals to government that it is not acceptable to set ambitious climate change targets at home while investing in environmentally detrimental projects overseas.

May the Force be with You

Jedi Richard Strange

Bali UN Climate Change Conference Success!

Sunday, December 23rd, 2007

After a last minute turnabout by some delegates, including the US, the final word is that the Bali UN Climate change conference was a success for us all and the planet! We did it!

Groundbreaking decisions were made which form part of the Bali roadmap to a greener, more secure future for the environment and all it’s inhabitants. Have a look at the United Nations Bali climate change conference page to see just how well we’ve done.

Thankyou all for participating!

May the Force be with You

Jedi Richard Strange