Posts Tagged ‘climate change’

Thank you San Francisco Business Times

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Thank you Lindsay Riddell of the San Francisco Business Times for writing a fun piece on “I’m Tired of” (ITo). This is the kind of stuff that’s really helping to spread the word and help us make things happen!

Ms. Riddell specifically mentions the I’m Tired of Global Warming (benefiting Rainforest Action Network) and our brand new I’m Tired of Bogeys (benefiting Caddy For A Cure) bracelets.

Read the story! It’s short and entertaining.

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Global warming causing mass migration

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

We’re not sure you should pack up and move to the mountains, just yet, but we found this story published by UPI to be a good read.

Global warming will submerge island states, destroy farmland and force millions of people into migration by 2050, according to a report unveiled at climate negotiations in Bonn, Germany.

Worsening tropical storms, desert droughts and rising sea levels will displace 200 million people by 2050, according to estimates from the International Organization for Migration included in a report authored by the U.N. University, CARE International and Columbia University. Read more…

Source: UPI

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Prince Charles says delay on rainforests will have catastrophic consequences

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

prince-charles011Catastrophic climate change cannot be avoided unless the world’s tropical forests are saved, Prince Charles told 20 Nobel prizewinners, including Energy Secretary Steven Chu today.

In a passionate speech to the physics, chemistry, peace and literature laureates, Charles appealed to decision-makers to put a monetary value on forests and to act fast.

“The longer we all argue about minutiae and statistics, the more rainforest disappears. Solving climate change is the precondition to ensuring security and without adequately addressing tropical deforestation we cannot have an answer to climate change. It is that simple; saving the rainforests is not an option, it is an absolute necessity,” he said. Read more…

Source: Guardian.co.uk

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Deaths from global warming expected to rise as Earth changes

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Researchers think global warming already is responsible for about 150,000 deaths each year and fear that the number may double by 2030, even if we get serious about emissions reductions now.

A team of health and climate scientists from the World Health Organization and the University of Wisconsin at Madison published these findings last year in the science journal Nature. Besides killing people, global warming contributes to about 5 million human illnesses every year, the researchers found.

Some of the ways global warming hurts human health include speeding the spread of infectious diseases such as malaria and dengue fever; creating conditions that lead to potentially fatal malnutrition and diarrhea; and increasing the frequency and severity of heat waves, floods and other disasters.

Backing up WHO’s findings is a study by Stanford University civil and environmental engineer Mark Jacobson. It shows a link between rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and increased human mortality.

But global warming skeptics such as atmospheric physicist Fred Singer say cold-weather snaps are responsible for more deaths than warm weather and heat waves. Singer, the founder of the Science and Environmental Policy Project, says that because global warming would raise maximum summer temperatures modestly while raising winter minimum temperatures significantly, it “should help reduce human death rates.”

A team of Harvard researchers found otherwise.

Their July 2007 study, published in the Occupational and Environment Medicine journal, found that global warming is likely to cause more deaths in summer because of higher temperatures, but not fewer deaths in milder winters.

In analyzing weather data related to the deaths of 6.5 million people in 50 U.S. cities between 1989 and 2000, the researchers found that during two-day cold snaps there was a 1.59 percent increase in deaths because of the extreme temperatures. In similar periods of extremely hot weather, mortality rates increased 5.74 percent.

Source: The Olympian

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It’s Earth Day, but no stories today, just a goal…

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

global_warming_wrist_blgYou can read all about Earth Day elsewhere. Today, we’re totally focused on selling “I’m Tired of Global Warming” bracelets and donating a bunch of money to Laurie David’s, Stop Global Warming (SGW) organization. By donating to SGW, you’ll help them spread the word and get things done to make our “Earth” a better place to live.

Make everyday an “Earth Day.” All our best from everyone at ITo.

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Cool Globes is on the Road in L.A. for Earth Day

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

cool_globesCool Globes has gone on the road to encourage even more individuals, businesses and governments to adopt simple solutions to fight global warming.

A selection of original globes from the Chicago exhibit, as well as new globes designed by local artists and schoolchildren, will be on display. Cool Globes will open (tomorrow) in LA’s Exposition Park on Earth Day, April 22, 2009. The beautiful and temperate locale of Los Angeles will be home to over 50 Cool Globes. Not only will the globes beautify an already lovely city, but residents of and visitors to Los Angeles will benefit from the ideas and discussions inspired by the globes.

For more information go to www.CoolGlobes.com.

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Luxury Goods Makers Embrace Sustainability and the Environment

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Luxury_sustainability_environment

To many people, “sustainable luxury” is a term that might best be found in the dictionary under the entry for oxymoron, right alongside “postal service” and “military intelligence.”After all, luxury often carries with it connotations of excess and waste, and it is associated with fashion, an industry prone to fads that change at least as quickly as the seasons.

But leading industry executives say that they are trying to change the image of the luxury goods business by embracing new environmental and labor standards.

The motivation for this shift is not entirely altruistic.

Increasingly, consumers are demanding that the goods they buy be made in ways that do not harm the environment or the workers who make them. They are often willing to pay more for “green” products or “fair trade” goods. And in the current economic downturn, luxury brands are searching for new reasons to persuade consumers to pay for their high-priced products.

In essence, the sales pitch has gone from “treat yourself; you can afford it,” to “the planet can’t afford for you to spend less.” Read more…

Source: The New York Times

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Global Warming Ranks Last in Public Concern

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

global-warmingGlobal warming ranks dead last among U.S. voters’ priorities, according to a Pew Research Center Poll showing Americans are relatively unconcerned about global warming and are becoming less concerned each year.The Pew Research Center telephoned 1,503 American adults for the poll, whose results were released January 22. Respondents were presented with 20 issues and asked one by one whether they considered each issue a top priority.

Strengthening the economy ranked most important, with 85 percent of respondents saying it should be a top priority. Addressing global warming ranked dead last, with 30 percent assigning it a top priority.

Since 2007, when addressing global warming was added as one of the options in the organization’s annual poll, the perceived importance has declined each year. Addressing global warming was seen as a top priority by 38 percent of adults in 2007, 35 percent in 2008, and now 30 percent.
Analysts Not Surprised

Although global warming alarmists, including former Vice President Al Gore’s “WE” campaign, have spent vast amounts of public relations money on the issue, many analysts were unsurprised by the poll results.

“What struck me, apart from global warming ranking dead last, was that it was one of 20 concerns pre-selected for the poll by Pew,” said Jon Sanders, a policy analyst at the John Locke Foundation. “Would people have even thought to mention it were they not required to find a place to rank it?”

Lord Christopher Monckton, a prominent British global warming skeptic who served as a policy advisor to former U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, was not at all surprised by the results. “Americans are not buying the global warming hype for one reason, above all: It is not true,” Monckton said.

“There was no climate crisis; there is no climate crisis; there will be no climate crisis,” Monckton added. “The U.N. says global temperatures will rise by 7 degrees F this century, yet since 1980 global temperatures have been rising at little more than a third of this rate, and since late 2001 temperatures have been falling at a rate of 3.5 degrees F per century.

“A growing band of determined scientists and researchers are exposing the lies being profitably peddled by the surprisingly small clique that drives the scare,” Monckton explained. “The truth always prevails in the end.”

Caring for the Poor

Cal Beisner, national spokesman for the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation, thinks Americans are right to be more concerned about the problems affecting the poor than about a speculated single-digit increase in the world’s temperature.

“Most Americans have a great deal more common sense than to think a minute change in atmospheric chemistry could cause enough temperature increase to justify spending scores of trillions of dollars over the next century to fight it,” Beisner said.

“There are much more pressing problems facing Americans and, especially, the world’s poor,” Beisner explained.

Source: The Heartland Institute

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Jane Lubchenco Becomes First Women to Head NOAA

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

jane lubchencoJane Lubchenco, the newly confirmed head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, decided to dedicate her life to the sea 40 years ago when she became fascinated with a tiny species of mud-burrowing clam.

Lubchenco, then an undergraduate at Colorado College, was taking a summer course on invertebrates at Marine Biological Laboratories with a group of graduate students. She was given a chance to study why the Yoldia had a small, mysterious structure attached to the edge of its body.

“I was blown away by this world I didn’t know existed,” she said of studying invertebrates, adding that she was amazed “by the incredible diversity” of forms and functions among mollusks, arthropods and other small creatures.

Now, after devoting her career to academia, the former Oregon State University professor will become the first woman to lead the agency of roughly 12,500 employees that provides weather and climate forecasting, monitors atmospheric data, manages marine fisheries and mammals, and maps and charts all U.S. waters. Read more…

Source: The Washington Post

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Drought Threatens Amazon, Speeds Global Warming

Monday, March 9th, 2009

amazonIn a study published last Thursday, the drought in Brazil is killing off trees in the Amazon rain forest and depleting the region’s carbon reservoirs. Researchers said the total impact of the drought was an additional five billion tons of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which is more then combined annual emissions of Europe and Japan.

“For years, the Amazon forest has been helping to slow down climate change. But relying on this subsidy from nature is extremely dangerous,” said Professor Oliver Phillips of Britain’s University of Leeds, the lead author of the study.

“If the Earth’s carbon sinks slow or go into reverse, as our results show is possible, carbon dioxide levels will rise even faster. Deeper cuts in emissions will be required to stabilize our climate.”

The findings are sobering because climatologists predict the creation of a potentially devastating cycle in which the Amazon’s hotter and more intense future dry seasons will in turn lead to more greenhouse gas emissions and even more drought. Read more…

Posted by Susan Thompson

Source: AFP

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