2/3/2014 protest the Keystone XL pipeline

2/3/2014 protest the Keystone XL pipeline

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Give up plastic bags for Lent

Give up plastic bags for Lent (Shorter bulletin versions below)

Plastic Pollution

The Earth is one interconnected, living, breathing organism. What’s healthy for you is healthy for the environment and this includes reducing single-use plastics. Have you noticed how more and more plastic has crept into our lives? You can hardly buy anything that isn’t packaged in plastic. Most glass bottles and jars have been changed to plastic. Plastic items come wrapped in more plastic. Toothpaste, which used to come in a metal tube now comes in plastic tubes. Everything from grapes to furniture is wrapped I plastic. Yes, it’s convenient in the moment, but it’s polluting our earth and it never goes away. It goes to the landfill, but never decomposes. It’s made of petroleum and it’s full of chemicals, which leach into our soil and water, plus animals are eating it and dying. I am trying to make better consumer choices and looking for items that are not packaged in plastic. I have stopped buying liquid hand soap and now only buy bars of soap, a simple solution for one item, but not all are so easy. Reducing your use of single use plastic bags is the easiest place to start lessening your plastic consumption. I just counted 17 “free” reusable bags in my car. I have chosen to refuse plastic bags because they are a waste of our resources and they are generally used once (for an average of 12 minutes) and thrown away. Only about 3% get recycled and it actually costs more to make new bags out of recycled ones than to just make brand new bags. The EPA statistics state that over 95% of all HDPE plastic bags end up in our landfills or the environment. Every ocean has a plastic gyre that is killing birds, fish, turtles and other sea creatures. Dead sea creatures that have washed ashore, often are found to be full of plastic trash. Plastic bags float through the air and if they don’t get caught in brush or trees they end up in a waterway that leads to larger bodies of water, like the Gulf of Mexico. Our Earth, The Kingdom of God, is being polluted every day. I would like to encourage you to start refusing plastic bags, if you haven’t already. It’s a matter of training yourself and forming a new habit. I’m proof that it can be done. I try to always have a cloth bag with me and if I get caught without one I just carry my purchases without a bag. When you know how plastic is polluting our home, it’s time to be responsible and do the most you can. With the season of Lent upon us, think about giving up plastic bags for Lent. By the end of the season, you will have formed a new healthy habit!

Shorter bulletin version

Make a pledge for Lent to help the Earth – – – The Earth is one interconnected, living, breathing organism. What’s healthy for you is healthy for the environment and this includes reducing single-use plastics. Our earth, where we strive to honor Jesus’ vision of the realm of God, is being polluted every day. I would like to encourage you to start refusing plastic bags. It’s a matter of forming a new habit. When you know about plastic pollution, it’s time to be responsible and do what you can. With the season of Lent upon us, think about giving up plastic bags for Lent. By the end of the season, you will have formed a new healthy habit!

Even shorter

For your Lenten discipline: Refuse plastic bags. Carry your own fabric bag. “Grannies for a Livable Future” – 100grannies.org

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Miriam Kashia’s op ed Dec 10, 2013

Taking 7 million steps to ‘walk the talk’ on climate change

Why would anyone spend eight months walking 3,000 miles across this vast country enduring storms, heat, sore feet and who knows what else? Here are 10 reasons why:

No. 10: Heating of our atmosphere is on a fatal trajectory; climate chaos is producing devastating mega super-storms worldwide.

No. 9: Oceans are absorbing heat and slowing the atmospheric rise in temperature, but they are becoming acidic and unsustainable for marine life.

No. 8: Polar ice is melting and oceans are rising. Island nations and coastal cities will disappear under water. Glaciers, the only water source for millions, are rapidly disappearing.

No. 7: Terrible flooding and increased droughts and fires are devastating large areas and threatening our food supply.

No. 6: The planet is populated by more than 7 billion people — more than it can sustain — and will reach 10 billion by mid-century.

No. 5: One-hundred species are becoming extinct per day. Humanity could eventually show up on that list. Everything is connected.

No. 4: Tropical diseases are spreading. New viruses and bacteria for which we have no protection are appearing.

No. 3: Displaced populations of climate refugees are increasing social unrest, disruption of governments, and regional violence.

No. 2: Developing nations, which produce the least carbon, are most vulnerable to these disastrous effects; this is social injustice at it’s worst.

No. 1: We will persist, like lemmings, toward our own destruction, or we will wake up and use our personal and political will to do what must be done to convert our carbon-based energy systems to solar, wind, geothermal and other existing, sustainable resources.

Next year, I plan to walk the Great March for Climate Action (http://climatemarch.org) across America with a small army of passionate folks dedicated to a sustainable future for life on the planet. The goal is “to change the heart and mind of the American people, our elected leaders and people across the world into acting now to address the climate crisis.”

Historically, great marches have helped produce dramatic social and political change — Gandhi’s march to the sea; the Suffragettes march for women’s right to vote; the march on Selma led by Martin Luther King Jr.; the great anti-nuclear Peace March in 1986. But never has it been more critical to take immediate action.

Many other issues need our attention. But, as one climate scientist has said, “Attending to the many other problems on our planet without changing our direction is like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.” By putting our resources into helping victims of climate disasters without addressing the core issue — a lack of personal and political will — we are throwing a thimbleful of water onto a forest fire.

There is nothing more important I can do with my time, energy, resources and passion than to help bring grassroots awareness of our increasingly catastrophic climate crisis all across America by taking 7 million steps to “walk my talk.”

I will march to demonstrate the power of ordinary people to reclaim the democratic process and create the political will to do what must be done. I will march so I do not fall into despair. I will march so I can come to know all those other amazing marchers and make a difference.

I will carry a list of my supporters to remind me that I am not alone, and that there exists a great movement to do the right thing for ourselves, our grandchildren, for all life, and for our Earth.

Miriam Kashia is a North Liberty resident.

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Just 90 companies caused two-thirds of man-made global warming emissions (20 Nov 2013)

(Photo/Above) Oil, coal and gas companies are contributing to most carbon emissions, causing climate change and some are also funding denial campaigns. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

The climate crisis of the 21st century has been caused largely by just 90 companies, which between them produced nearly two-thirds of the greenhouse gas emissions generated since the dawning of the industrial age, new research suggests.

The companies range from investor-owned firms – household names such as Chevron, Exxon and BP – to state-owned and government-run firms.

The analysis, which was welcomed by the former vice-president Al Gore as a “crucial step forward” found that the vast majority of the firms were in the business of producing oil, gas or coal, found the analysis, which has been published in the journal Climatic Change.

“There are thousands of oil, gas and coal producers in the world,” climate researcher and author Richard Heede at the Climate Accountability Institute in Colorado said. “But the decision makers, the CEOs, or the ministers of coal and oil if you narrow it down to just one person, they could all fit on a Greyhound bus or two.”

Half of the estimated emissions were produced just in the past 25 years – well past the date when governments and corporations became aware that rising greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of coal and oil were causing dangerous climate change.

Many of the same companies are also sitting on substantial reserves of fossil fuel which – if they are burned – puts the world at even greater risk of dangerous climate change.

Climate change experts said the data set was the most ambitious effort so far to hold individual carbon producers, rather than governments, to account.

The United Nations climate change panel, the IPCC, warned in September that at current rates the world stood within 30 years of exhausting its “carbon budget” – the amount of carbon dioxide it could emit without going into the danger zone above 2C warming. The former US vice-president and environmental champion, Al Gore, said the new carbon accounting could re-set the debate about allocating blame for the climate crisis.

Leaders meeting in Warsaw for the UN climate talks this week clashed repeatedly over which countries bore the burden for solving the climate crisis – historic emitters such as America or Europe or the rising economies of India and China.

Gore in his comments said the analysis underlined that it should not fall to governments alone to act on climate change.

“This study is a crucial step forward in our understanding of the evolution of the climate crisis. The public and private sectors alike must do what is necessary to stop global warming,” Gore told the Guardian. “Those who are historically responsible for polluting our atmosphere have a clear obligation to be part of the solution.”

Between them, the 90 companies on the list of top emitters produced 63% of the cumulative global emissions of industrial carbon dioxide and methane between 1751 to 2010, amounting to about 914 gigatonne CO2 emissions, according to the research. All but seven of the 90 were energy companies producing oil, gas and coal. The remaining seven were cement manufacturers.

The list of 90 companies included 50 investor-owned firms – mainly oil companies with widely recognised names such as Chevron, Exxon, BP , and Royal Dutch Shell and coal producers such as British Coal Corp, Peabody Energy and BHP Billiton.

Some 31 of the companies that made the list were state-owned companies such as Saudi Arabia’s Saudi Aramco, Russia’s Gazprom and Norway’s Statoil.

Nine were government run industries, producing mainly coal in countries such as China, the former Soviet Union, North Korea and Poland, the host of this week’s talks.

Experts familiar with Heede’s research and the politics of climate change said they hoped the analysis could help break the deadlock in international climate talks.

“It seemed like maybe this could break the logjam,” said Naomi Oreskes, professor of the history of science at Harvard. “There are all kinds of countries that have produced a tremendous amount of historical emissions that we do not normally talk about. We do not normally talk about Mexico or Poland or Venezuela. So then it’s not just rich v poor, it is also producers v consumers, and resource rich v resource poor.”

Michael Mann, the climate scientist, said he hoped the list would bring greater scrutiny to oil and coal companies’ deployment of their remaining reserves. “What I think could be a game changer here is the potential for clearly fingerprinting the sources of those future emissions,” he said. “It increases the accountability for fossil fuel burning. You can’t burn fossil fuels without the rest of the world knowing about it.”

Others were less optimistic that a more comprehensive accounting of the sources of greenhouse gas emissions would make it easier to achieve the emissions reductions needed to avoid catastrophic climate change.

John Ashton, who served as UK’s chief climate change negotiator for six years, suggested that the findings reaffirmed the central role of fossil fuel producing entities in the economy.

“The challenge we face is to move in the space of not much more than a generation from a carbon-intensive energy system to a carbonneutral energy system. If we don’t do that we stand no chance of keeping climate change within the 2C threshold,” Ashton said.

“By highlighting the way in which a relatively small number of large companies are at the heart of the current carbon-intensive growth model, this report highlights that fundamental challenge.”

Meanwhile, Oreskes, who has written extensively about corporate-funded climate denial, noted that several of the top companies on the list had funded the climate denial movement.

“For me one of the most interesting things to think about was the overlap of large scale producers and the funding of disinformation campaigns, and how that has delayed action,” she said.

The data represents eight years of exhaustive research into carbon emissions over time, as well as the ownership history of the major emitters.

The companies’ operations spanned the globe, with company headquarters in 43 different countries. “These entities extract resources from every oil, natural gas and coal province in the world, and process the fuels into marketable products that are sold to consumers on every nation on Earth,” Heede writes in the paper.

The largest of the investor-owned companies were responsible for an outsized share of emissions. Nearly 30% of emissions were produced just by the top 20 companies, the research found.

By Heede’s calculation, government-run oil and coal companies in the former Soviet Union produced more greenhouse gas emissions than any other entity – just under 8.9% of the total produced over time. China came a close second with its government-run entities accounting for 8.6% of total global emissions.

ChevronTexaco was the leading emitter among investor-owned companies, causing 3.5% of greenhouse gas emissions to date, with Exxon not far behind at 3.2%. In third place, BP caused 2.5% of global emissions to date.

The historic emissions record was constructed using public records and data from the US department of energy’s Carbon Dioxide Information and Analysis Centre, and took account of emissions all along the supply chain.

The centre put global industrial emissions since 1751 at 1,450 gigatonnes.

[Source: The Guardian, Suzanne Goldenberg, 20 Nov 2013]

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Barbara Schlachter’s op ed Nov 15, 2013

A bipartisan strategy to reverse the changing climate

Written by Barabara Schlacter

Guest Opinion

November is Remembrance month: All Saints and All Souls and the Day of the Dead, then Veterans Day, known as Remembrance Day in Britain.

Now we are looking forward to Thanksgiving, which is a time of great feasting with many families traveling many miles to do this together and to remember the importance of being family. It seems as though it also ought to be a day of remembering farm families who labor to provide the food for this feasting as well as remembering the earth itself and her blessed bounty.

Harvest time used to be a great occasion for rejoicing because it wasn’t always a sure thing. Many things can go wrong with a year’s crops. Most of us are too far removed, even in Iowa, to appreciate how utterly miraculous and vulnerable our food supply is. But this year we have had some hard reminders: flood and then drought and a report from Iowa scientists that climate change is a rising threat to Iowa agriculture.

Estimates are that we will lose the ability to produce food by 2 percent a decade even as we know that world population still is on the increase.

The Iowa Farm and Rural Life Poll released earlier in November reported that fully 75 percent of farmers think climate change is occurring, up from 69 percent in 2011. Yet only 16 percent think human activity is the reason for this. Perhaps the poll was taken before the release of the International Panel on Climate Change’s conclusions that scientists around the world are 95 percent sure that human activity is responsible.

If you believe that climate change is real, but human activity doesn’t cause it, then you will most likely concentrate your efforts on adaptation. There has been a lot of talk lately about our need to prepare for the dire conditions that are coming, which to my mind takes us away from the most important prior question: what are we going to do to reverse them.

The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) funded by fossil fuel giants like Exxon Mobil and the Koch brothers now say that “Global climate change is inevitable.”

This is different from denying that it is happening, and perhaps we should at least be thankful for that. But they go on to suggest that reducing carbon emissions won’t matter because it isn’t caused by human activity. So they have introduced legislation in a dozen states to repeal renewable electricity standards passed by those states. Fortunately, no state that has passed an RES has ever repealed one.

Iowa leads the nation in wind energy, with nearly 30 percent of our energy coming from those beautiful wind turbines you see when you drive west on Interstate 80. This non-emitting form of energy will make a difference in climate change.

This is mitigation, not adaptation. Both will be necessary, but the most important thing in the long run is to do everything we can to slow and eventually cease our fossil fuel activity.

For this reason I support a fee and dividend program that would tax carbon at its point of origin and return the tax money to the American people. This would create a market-based solution to energy. As the true cost of fossil fuels becomes operative, wind and solar and geothermal would benefit from a more level playing field.

It is a bipartisan strategy that keeps us from putting all our resources into adaptation to what we can never finally ever adapt to, not only because of the trillions of dollars required but also because the earth’s systems that support our food could not finally endure.

Fossil fuel intensive farming might seem to be one of our biggest obstacles in the effort to reduce greenhouse gases. But a report from the UN Environment Program released on Nov. 12 says that there are many ways agriculture can cut its emissions drastically and contribute to environmental sustainability and higher yields.

This is a hopeful direction for all of us.

Barbara Schlachter is a founding member of 100 Grannies for a Livable Future, Iowa City Climate Advocates and Citizens Climate Lobby.

 

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Grannies off their rockers

Off their rockers 1 Off their rockers 2Off their rockers 3

 

 

(Click image to enlarge.) Demonstration in front of Gay & Chia Funeral Home

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Jim Hansen conference call

Sunday, October 20, 2013, 7 pm, Jim Hansen conference call

Sunday Oct. 20 at 7pm at the Unitarian Church, 10 S. Gilbert St. there will be a talk by Jim Hansen based on his book “Storms of My Grandchildren.”   This is a conference call format and will be followed by Q and A.  Even if you have not read the book, please consider coming just to hear him. Our website has a video by him at the bottom of the tab “Member Posts”
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Becky Ross Oct 19, 2013 letter to editor, PC

Have you noticed how more and more plastic has crept into our lives?  You can hardly buy anything that isn’t packaged in plastic.  Glass bottles and jars have been changed to plastic. Yes, it’s convenient, but it’s polluting our earth and it never goes away.  It goes to the landfill, but never decomposes.  It’s made of petroleum and it’s full of chemicals.  Reducing your use of single use plastic bags is the easiest place to start lessening your plastic consumption.  I just counted 17 “free” reusable bags in my car.  I have chosen to refuse plastic bags because they are a waste of our resources and they are generally used once and thrown away.  The EPA statistics state that over 95% of all HDPE plastic bags end up in our landfills or the environment.  Every ocean has a plastic gyre that is killing birds, fish, turtles and other sea creatures.  Plastic bags float through the air and if they don’t get caught in brush or trees they end up in a waterway that leads to larger bodies of water, like the Gulf of Mexico.

Our Mother Earth is sick and we need to start mothering her.  She has a temperature and needs our immediate attention.  Let’s do the right thing and start refusing plastic bags.  It’s a matter of training yourself and forming a new habit.  I’m proof that it can be done.  Even if you don’t believe in global warming, I’m sure you don’t want to pollute this beautiful place we call our home.  It was good to hear the candidates for IC City Council agree that this is a good idea. Please join me and “100 Grannies For a Livable Future” in this endeavor.  Becky Ross

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September 2013 Film Festival

Environmental Film Series & Discussions

A Free Senior Center Class Four Mondays in September

Sponsored by 100Grannies.org

Each Monday at 6:00 p.m.

September 9: Bag It – This documentary raises awareness of the many

issues concerning the ubiquity of plastic in our lives today. It is done in a

somewhat humorous way by a concerned couple expecting their first child in

Telluride, Colorado.

September 16: White Water, Black Gold- Follow David Lavalee’s three

year journey from the ice fields to the oil fields. He crosses western Canada

from pristine mountain ice fields to the Tar Sands tailing ponds.

September 23: Bidder 70- This documentary will inspire, educate and

motivate concerned citizens. It takes a courageous stand in support of our

environment. The film shows how one person can change the world!

September 30: Gaslands- Josh Fox has been following the fracking issue

since he was a young man. He has documented what he has seen including

the process, health effects and water quality.

Environmental Film Series & Discussions

A Free Senior Center Class Four Mondays in September

Sponsored by 100Grannies.org

Each Monday at 6:00 p.m.

September 9: Bag It – This documentary raises awareness of the many

issues concerning the ubiquity of plastic in our lives today. It is done in a

somewhat humorous way by a concerned couple expecting their first child in

Telluride, Colorado.

September 16: White Water, Black Gold- Follow David Lavalee’s three

year journey from the ice fields to the oil fields. He crosses western Canada

from pristine mountain ice fields to the Tar Sands tailing ponds.

September 23: Bidder 70- This documentary will inspire, educate and

motivate concerned citizens. It takes a courageous stand in support of our

environment. The film shows how one person can change the world!

September 30: Gaslands- Josh Fox has been following the fracking issue

since he was a young man. He has documented what he has seen including

the process, health effects and water quality.

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The Rights of Nature – Making Sustainability Legal (18 Sep 2013)

Thomas Linzey, speaking at MUM, Fairfield, Iowa on Wednesday 9/18/2013

Thomas Linzey, Executive Director of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, will present a new paradigm to protect nature — a paradigm based on rights. Today, communities across the country are finding they don’t have the right to make critical decisions for themselves — such as the right to say “no” to fracking, “no” to factory farming, “no” to smart meters, and the right to say “yes” to sustainable energy and food systems. Mr. Linzey has worked with the government of Ecuador to write a new constitution, which grants nature the inalienable rights necessary for its preservation and evolution.

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