Thursday, May 29, 2008

Green Map in Hawaii Business Mag. May 2008


Green Map in Hawaii Business Magazine, May 2008

http://www.hawaiibusiness.com/Hawaii-Business/May-2008/The-Road-Less-Traveled/index.php?#comments
"The Road Less Traveled" By Scott Radway
Kauai

"When considering the difficult task of achieving economic, environmental and cultural sustainability on Kauai, the good people of the Garden Isle could probably use a road map. Well, thanks to Malama Kauai, they’ve got a start on one.

The Kilauea-based nonprofit has assembled the island’s first definitive Green Map, which highlights 50 businesses along with other organizations that utilize green practices and allows them to market their environmental bent. The reverse side of the map will highlight challenges on Kauai and discuss ways individuals can be more sustainable.

“I thought this was a cool way to bring the business sector, environmental organizations, even policy makers and consumers together,” says Andrea Brower, project manager at Malama Kauai.

Brower says the basic criteria for a green business are recycling programs for offices, which means recycling office waste such as paper, recycling computers and printers and installing energy-efficient light bulbs. For restaurants, it also means such things as providing environmentally friendly to-go containers and buying local produce. “Some of the businesses have not made all criteria, but they are making strides and we offer resources to get them there,” Brower says.

The program is also developing a network of businesses that can share best practices in addition to tapping Malama Kauai’s expertise, particularly for the businesses that have made a commitment to go green as part of the map project. The program has also identified barriers to companies going green, such as the availability of green products. Brower says as a result, Malama Kauai is building a chain of businesses to leverage big-box stores into carrying such products in bulk.

The Malama Kauai Green Map is part of an international initiative run by GreenMaps.org, which has helped more than 400 locations in 50 countries make similar maps. The group plans to print 10,000 maps by May, but will print more if the supply runs out. The map will also appear in Kauai Magazine, Kauai Real Estate Magazine, American Airlines’ Gift Edition and also online on at HawaiiHealthGuide.com. The map will be updated annually.

'After the first map is printed, we think the project will expand immensely,' Brower says."

Aloha, Brad

Community Gardens Starting on Kauai Northshore

Last night was the first of about 6 class meetings for a new community garden on the Northshore of Kauai at the Church of the Pacific in Princeville being taught and led by Joseph Dunsmoor who also teaches and leads the Community Garden program at Kauai Community College. Joseph is clearly a veritable wealth of knowledge about agriculture, gardening, and breaking ground into a new garden.

There were about 10 people at the first class. More people can still enter the program, and not have missed too much, with the second class next Wednesday June 4th, 6:30pm to about 9pm. Fee for all of the classes is $25 total. Ideally the class could be 20 or more people for when the gardening begins. The Church and garden participants will receive the benefits of the garden.

I am told there might also be another community garden on the Northshore at Malama Kauai led by others there. I also hear there are community gardens starting elsewhere on the island.

Aloha, Brad

Facinating Speaker on Kauai 5/27/08

First, I report on this, in this blog because it becomes clear in hearing the following speaker that the war in Iraq is about the oil in Iraq and either the privatization of that oil and the eventual breaking up of the country (which the Bush Admin. wants) or the government owning that oil and the country remaining intact (which the majority of Iraqi's want). The oil/energy aspect of it relates to this blog.

The Quaker organization, American Friends Service Committee, a Nobel Peace Prize winning organization, sponsors and co-hosted an interesting speaker on Kauai this past Tuesday, 5/27/08. He is Raed Jarrar, an Iraqi citizen displaced by the war in Iraq and now working for the AFSC in Washington, DC. Raed is an architect, well educated, and well spoken. During the day he spoke to 3 high school classes and then came to the event at KCC in the evening and spoke convincingly to about 150 people for another 3 to 4 hours.

Joan Conrow did a good blog entry on his KCC speech, here. Joan also provides a link to Raed's blog with all of his interesting links.

The thing I found interesting is that Raed's explanations are reasonable and much better developed and explained than anything we are getting in the mass media in the USA.

I spoke with Raed and his wife, Niki Jarrar, Ph.D. from Santa Cruz University, a couple of times during the evening. What I want to share is another site other than his blog where his published articles are in their full-text. These articles are what his speech draws from. So for those who have not heard Raed speak, you can read it in these articles:

http://www.alternet.org/search_advanced.php

The Iraqi Civil War Bush and the Media Don't Tell You About By Raed Jarrar, The Iraqi-Iraqi conflict is similar to the U.S. civil war: Iraqis who are want a centralized government are fighting against those favor secession. Posted on Mar 24, 2008
The Senate's 'Rebuke' to Bush's Iraq Policy Is a Blueprint for Ethnic CleansingBy Joshua Holland, Raed Jarrar, Let's call Joe Biden's Senate plan to split Iraq in three pieces for what it is: a blueprint for ethnic cleansing and possibly a full-blown civil war. Posted on Oct 15, 2007
Only a U.S. Withdrawal Will Stop Al Qaeda in IraqBy Raed Jarrar, Joshua Holland, The conventional wisdom has it all wrong. Posted on Oct 5, 2007
The Battle for Iraq is About Oil and Democracy, Not Religion!By Joshua Holland, Raed Jarrar, As Gen. Petraeus takes the D.C. stage, he and the media are only giving half of the story. Shockingly, the United States, Iran and al Qaeda have the same goals in Iraq. Posted on Sep 10, 2007
Bush Says We’ll Be in Iraq for 50 Years, But Reporters Don't Bother to Ask Iraqis to CommentBy Joshua Holland, Raed Jarrar, When George Bush announced that he favored keeping troops in Iraq for decades, the media apparently didn't think the opinion of Iraqis mattered. Posted on Jun 8, 2007
Iraqi Lawmakers Pass Resolution That May Force End to OccupationBy Raed Jarrar, Joshua Holland, While Washington lawmakers play procedural games with an out-of-control executive branch, Iraqi legislators are working to bring an end to the occupation of their country. Posted on Jun 5, 2007
U.S. Imperial Ambitions Thwart Iraqis' Peace PlansBy Joshua Holland, Raed Jarrar Iraq's resistance groups have offered a series of peace plans that might put an end to the country's sectarian violence, but they've been ignored by the U.S.-led coalition because they're opposed to foreign occupation and privatization of oil. Posted on May 21, 2007
Majority of Iraqi Lawmakers Now Reject OccupationBy Raed Jarrar, Joshua Holland, More than half of the members of Iraq's parliament rejected for the first time on Tuesday the continuing occupation of their country. The U.S. media ignored the story. Posted on May 9, 2007
Iraq's Sectarian Bloodshed 'Made in the USA'By Erik Leaver, Raed Jarrar, Iraq never had a history of sectarian conflicts. U.S. policy choices provided a perfect road map for starting one. Posted on Aug 10, 2006

Aloha, Brad

India GMO Revolt

ISIS Press Release 30/04/08
Mass Protests against GM Crops in India
Kavitha Kurunganti reports from Tarnaka, India

Nari Samaj rally in Bhubaneswar, Orissa
India-wide coalition against GM Brinjal in the wake of toxic GM cotton

As India edges closer to what is probably the last year of field trials for Bt Brinjal (eggplant, aubergine) before commercial approval may be granted, large scale resistance has been building up all over the country.

Bt Brinjal, if allowed in India, would be the first food crop in the world with the Bt gene inserted into it that is to be directly consumed by human beings. Indians feel that they are about to be made guinea pigs by USAID, and by Monsanto and Cornell University that have developed this crop.

For the past six years, Indian farmers have experienced the stark realities of GM crop cultivation in the country in the form of Bt cotton. Reports continue to pour in from various districts of Andhra Pradesh including Adilabad, Warangal and Nalgonda on animal illnesses and deaths after grazing on Bt cotton fields. Farmers and shepherds have been reporting the toxic effects of Bt cotton on livestock since 2003 (see Mass Deaths in Sheep Grazing on Bt Cotton, SiS 30). But the regulators continue to rubbish the reports. Farmers and workers experience allergic reactions during harvest of Bt cotton, with scores of victims in different states (see More Illnesses Linked to Bt Crops, SiS 30). However, the governments have not even begun to acknowledge that.

To make matters worse, the ecology of cotton pests has altered drastically and Bt cotton farmers are dealing with newer pests and diseases. Last season’s infestation of mealy bug, a sucking pest, has resulted in pesticides sales shooting up steeply in several states including Punjab.

For farmers who wish to remain GM-free or organic, they find it almost impossible to get non-GM seed. Hundreds of organic farmers are placing special orders directly with seed companies for non-transgenic seed, as it is not readily available from retailers.

It is at this juncture that farmers’ unions, consumer organizations, environmental groups, development organizations and concerned scientists have stepped up their protests against Bt Brinjal, realizing that the experience with Bt cotton cannot be allowed to be repeated, especially with a vegetable crop that is directly consumed by people.

A large informal network called “Coalition for GM Free India” was formed in 2006, representing organizations and individuals from more than 15 states of India. The Coalition has been active since then in raising awareness among civil society groups, media and the general public, and in creating an informed debate on GMOs. The Coalition also sees resistance to GM crops in a larger framework of democratization of policy-making in science and technology for the country.

Members believe that farmers’ science and knowledge, especially with regard to ecological farming, is the only sustainable way forward for farming in India.

Concerted countrywide day of action

On 8 April 2008, farmers’ organizations and other civil society groups in different states undertook concerted direct actions to highlight the dangers of GM crops in general and Bt Brinjal in particular. They targeted the state governments, which have a constitutional responsibility and authority with regard to agriculture-related issues. This is a prelude to a national level protest in Delhi on 6 May 2008 where hundreds of concerned citizens – farmers and consumers – will join the protest from around 15 states. The day of action included many events countrywide.

In Andhra Pradesh, more than 250 people took part in a protest meeting in Hyderabad organized by the Coalition for GM-Free Andhra Pradesh and around 15 mothers with their children put out a “NO GM IN OUR FOOD” message. Farmers and consumers from nine districts of Andhra Pradesh attended the meeting, including those who suffered losses with Bt cotton, those who have experienced allergies while working in Bt cotton fields and others who have lost their livestock that grazed on Bt cotton. Scores of farmers who practice ecological farming also joined in, urging the AP government to ban GM crop trials in the state.

Hyderabad moms say No GM in Our Food

In Chittoor, the APVVU (an agricultural workers’ union) organized a rally in the district headquarters against GM crops. Speaking to a delegation that presented him with a memorandum in the evening, the Minister for Agriculture in Andhra Pradesh, Mr Raghuveera Reddy, assured the delegation that “if there is even 0.001 % problem with Bt Brinjal as per the University scientists, the government will proceed very cautiously on the matter.”

In Madhya Pradesh, around one thousand farmers took out a “death procession” of Bt Brinjal in Jhabua. In this symbolic protest, four pall-bearers joined by hundreds of farmers carried a large GM brinjal in a solemn Hindu cremation ritual; the protest was organized by Beej Swaraj Abhiyan (Seed Freedom Movement).

Death procession of Bt Brinjal in Jhabua, Madhya Pradesh

In Kerala, during a seminar organized by Thana (an environmental organization), the state Agriculture Minister reiterated his stand against allowing any GM crop trials in the state of Kerala, which is a mega-biodiversity hotspot. He also signed an anti-GM banner to be displayed in Delhi on 6 May. The seminar noted that foods containing soy, canola, corn and cottonseed ingredients, imported from the US, were being sold in many supermarkets, posing health threats. Speakers in the seminar called upon the people to boycott soybeans, corn (maize) products and other GM foods.

In Orissa, the Coalition for GM-Free Orissa submitted a petition signed by more than 30,000 farmers, intellectuals and activists in the state to the Minister for Agriculture. And rallies were held at Kendrapara, Bargarh, Bolangir, Rayagada, Sundargarh, Ganjam, Nayagarh and Sambalpur districts. Letters from 50 sarpanches (elected heads of local governance councils at the village level) were also submitted to the Minister asking him to ensure that Orissa remains free from genetically modified seeds.

The largest protest took place in Bhubaneswar, the state capital of Orissa, organized by Orissa Nari Samaj, a tribal women’s collective. More than 5,000 tribal women from 54 blocks, along with hundreds of farmers from Dhenkanal and over 300 students from Bhubaneswar joined a large protest rally against GM crops. They exhibited 500 indigenous paddy varieties that they have collected in front of State Assembly to send their message to the state government that it will put the rich diversity of rice species at risk if GMOs entered the region.

They submitted a memorandum to the Chief Minister, urging him to declare Orissa a GE-Free, organic state.

In Maharashtra, district level anti-GMO meetings were organized by the Sashwat Sheti Kriti Parishad to build farmer- and consumer awareness. The districts covered were Buldana, Amravati, Akola, Washim and Wardha.

In Tamil Nadu, CREATE and FEDCOT, consumer rights groups, organized a consumer awareness meeting in Tirunelveli on “GM Food & Consumer Health”. The meeting called for a ban on all GM foods in India.

On 14 April 2008, the day of Baisakhi (the new year’s day in certain states), protest and awareness meetings were again organized in Tamil Nadu and Punjab.

Ecological farming is the answer and not GM

The various events on and around 8 April are an indication of the growing mass resistance against GM crops and foods in India, and it is high time that the central and state governments took note of the concerns of farmers and consumers with regard to this technology being thrust down their throats in an undemocratic fashion.

This comes at a crucial time when ecological farming is spreading rapidly all over India, supported by civil society groups including those in the Coalition for GM-Free India. It should convince the government that safer and much more sustainable alternatives do exist, and there is really no need for GM crops in the country.

Kavitha Kurunganti is with Consultant on Research and Campaigns working with Centre for Sustainable Agriculture, Tarnaka , Secunderabad, India

China Says No to Plastic Bags

China is ahead of Hawaii on this bit of environmentalism:

From Larry Geller at http://www.disappearednews.com:/

Monday, May 26, 2008
China goes green--bans plastic bags
by Larry Geller

Only in China could they do this:
Ban the use of thin plastic bags for shopping starting June 1. Yes, June 1, 2008.
(thanks to Ira Rohter for pointer to this story from the Scientific American website)

China Sacks Plastic Bags
Ban could save 37 million barrels of oil and alleviate "white pollution"
SHANGHAI—Thin plastic bags are used for everything in China and the Chinese use up to three billion of them a day--an environmentally costly habit picked up by shopkeepers and consumers in the late 1980s for convenience over traditional cloth bags. Fruit mongers weigh produce in them, tailors stuff shirts into them, even street food vendors plunk their piping hot wares directly into see-through plastic bags that do nothing to protect one's hands from being burned or coated in hot grease. They even have a special name for the plastic bags found blowing, hanging and floating everywhere from trees to rivers: bai si wu le, or "white pollution," for the bags' most common color.
They seem to understand the problem:
"Too many plastic bags is a great waste of natural resources," retired Communist Party cadre Liu Zhidong says through a translator. "When burnt, they produce poisoning smoke, and if buried underneath the ground they need more than 300 years to be degraded."
And it could work:
Yet, the ban enjoys enthusiastic support from many residents here, particularly students, who may not even recall the more traditional practice of cloth bags or baskets. "I will just carry the things by my hands," one young man told me on the campus of Shanghai International Studies University. "I will never use the plastic bags supplied in supermarkets and I'll ask my friends not to use them, too."

Aloha, Brad

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Regarding The Garden Island News 5/26/08

Wow, lots of interesting stuff. First, comments on the article "Power from water projects discussed" http://kauaiworld.com/articles/2008/05/26/news/news01.txt:

Surprised this report was 4 days after the meeting.

Also, it referred to 'projects' that have only been prospective projects in the past. The impression I got at the meeting is that none are active projects now.

The article totally left out mentioning the Kitano projects. I got the impression from the KIUC officers and industry experts in the audience is that the Kitano projects are the most realistic and timely ones that could be pursued.

The article quoted Rep. Morita regarding the upper Wainiha project only, but her most significant comments were not about any one project, but instead about costing of hydro projects. Her comments were much more insightful than what the paper quoted.

I also believe the article misquoted Randy Hee. He was talking about Lumahai being pristine and not having been diverted, but I did not get the impression that that was his "dream project." In fact I got the impression that because of the environmental aspects, that he thought it was one of the least likely projects.

The picture has a caption that mentions "hydropower projects at the Apollo Kauai meeting including the possibility of...Wailua River...Hanalei River...and upstream of the existing Wainiha plant..." This quote gives an incorrect impression. The quote gives the impression that the project ideas came from Apollo Kauai. These were past proposed projects by KIUC, and as was said by the KIUC reps the Wailua and Hanalei projects were unpopular environmentally with the public when presented years ago. These projects were only represented for historical context by KIUC at an Apollo Kauai meeting.

The article also gets some quotes from Ben Sullivan about "negotiating a price" but does not further explain that point which was maybe the most important point raised in the meeting.

The breakdown in communication from the productive meeting to the article's content is quite unfortunate, esp. as most of the public did not attend and relies upon the paper to hear about this important issue.

Also, great quotes from the lead AP article in the same Garden Island News, "Hawai'i gas prices set records; Lana'i may see $5 gallon":

"Oil industry experts believe the challenge is to find ways to extend the life of the U.S. economy until alternative energy can be developed on a large scale, a process that could take decades."

Not stated is that it's unlikely that can be accomplished as stated.

and

"As the supply of oil decreases, communities shouldn't wait for the government to solve the problem, said Ira Rohter, a University of Hawai'i political science professor. 'Food is going to be rising very dramatically, which means we should be looking at community farming,' he said. 'People should be looking at how to insulate their homes to cut down use of air conditioning. We're going to be carpooling very soon. It's no longer business as usual.'"

Also, in the same paper, there were at least two interesting letters to the editor:

One was from Darryl Perry. He writes that the police will be coming out with a new mission statement. It was apparently unveiled last Wednesday to employees but still not to the public. Juan Wilson called for this as early as May 15th online at www.islandbreath.org, which specifically called for "In the overhaul of our police department, we should consider adding 'Integrity,' 'Compassion,' and the 'Spirit of Aloha' to the Mission Statement." It should be said that a new "Chief's Message" is not the same thing as an organizational "Mission Statement." 'Compassion' should be in there. Other Hawaii police departments use 'compassion' even in their recruitment radio advertising. BTW, somebody should be paid to write earnest, less sarcastic statements for Chief Perry.

Second was from Michael Wells. He writes, "Are you willing to ride a bike, take the bus or car pool? No?...Tired of the high price of food? Then (if you have one) dig up your lawn and grow a garden...For a relatively small conversion cost one can run an internal combustion engine on pure alcohol. More octane and less pollution...Stop buying and drinking water in plastic bottles. It takes 3 liters of oil to make a 1 liter plastic bottle. Come on folks, Kaua‘i water is OK to drink and with a good filter it’s better than this plastic nonsense..."

Along these lines from the current Inspiration Journal May/June 2008 on pages 20 and 21 are the following, "You can do something right now -- Ride the bus and carpool, install solar water heating on your home and switch to compact fluorescent light bulbs, eat your vegetables, and recycle." Further useful quotes from Apollo Kauai on page 21.

Aloha, Brad

Monday, May 26, 2008

Matthew R. Simmons: The 'Peak Oil' Guru

"Maybe the enemy is us...Grow food at home." - Matthew R. Simmons, June 20, 2006, at a Pentagon-sponsored seminar series 'Energy: A Conversation About Our National Addiction'

"I don’t think there is [a solution to the energy shortage]. The solution is to pray. Pray for mild weather and a mild winter. Pray for no hurricanes and to stop the erosion of natural gas supplies. Under the best of circumstances, if all prayers are answered there will be no crisis for maybe two years. After that it’s a certainty." --Matthew R. Simmons, 2003

Biographical Profile

"He graduated cum laude from the University of Utah and received a Masters degree with distinction in Business Administration from Harvard Business School. He then served on the faculty as a research associate for two years. In 1974, he founded Simmons & Company International. Simmons is the CEO of the world’s largest energy investment bank, Simmons & Company International...speaks often and knowledgeably about 'peak oil.'"

Some links on him:
http://www.simmonsco-intl.com/
http://www.simmonsco-intl.com/research.aspx?Type=msspeeches
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Simmons
http://www.emagazine.com/view/?2574
http://www.energybulletin.net/17555.html
http://globalpublicmedia.com/matthew_r_simmonss_13_points_of_light
http://events.caltech.edu/events/event-4681.html
http://www.environment.harvard.edu/navigation2/Simmons.pdf

More on what this guy has to say later,
Aloha, Brad

Excellent Op-Ed on Kauai by Ben Sullivan

http://www.kauaiworld.com/articles/2008/05/25/opinion/edit02.txt
May 25, 2008 KAUAI Opinion
"Kaua‘i over a barrel"
by Ben Sullivan

"Oil prices this week went over $134 per barrel while our community remains highly vulnerable and largely unaware of the magnitude of the crisis we face.

Yes, there is much concern about the cost of electricity and gasoline, and even recognition of the impact of oil prices on food costs and other commodities. However, proposed solutions are moving in slow increments and continue to focus almost entirely on new sources of energy, as opposed to identifying the root cause of our self-imposed crisis.

Political leaders struggle with the difficulty of being the bearers of bad news. While some progress is occurring, we often instead look for Band-Aid solutions such as massively subsidizing poor alternatives like ethanol, or worse, cutting taxes on gasoline or jet fuel. Such policy decisions perpetuate continued consumption and in effect, move us further from solving our real problems.

On a subject that might be considered closer to home, the airline industry, the lynchpin of Kaua‘i’s tourist economy, has already begun to falter. First Aloha Airlines and ATA folded. Now, all major airlines are reducing service in cities across the country, with some smaller airports losing air traffic altogether as airlines look for a way to survive the impossible squeeze of today’s oil prices. Although Congress is looking at another attempted bailout, the futility of such a move seems quite clear.

American Airlines CEO Gerald Arpey recently stated, “The U.S. airline industry as it is constituted today was not built for $125 or $130 oil.” This news in the context of other events such as the ever-growing mortgage crisis, the global food shortage, and accelerating climate change offer a veritable neon sign calling for the need to embrace the fundamental changes that are headed our way. It is time to rise to the challenges of transitioning away from our high-energy lifestyles while we still have the resources to do so.

Although oil prices have been on a consistent and steep incline since 2000, it is often misunderstood as simply another commodity. Apollo Kaua‘i and other community groups have been discussing rising energy costs at considerable length for the past several years.

Peak oil, as it is termed in the industry, is defined as the point at which world oil production reaches its maximum output and thereafter declines. The concept of peak oil was first described by M. King Hubbard in the 1950s. Hubbard accurately predicted peak production in oil in the lower 48 States of the U.S., which occurred in the early 1970s.

Although there is much debate about the timing of such an event on a global scale, it is perhaps less necessary to try to understand exactly when we have hit a peak, and more appropriate to focus on the cause and implications of an oil-constrained world. For expediency, here is a list of some of the issues:
• Oil is a fundamental and necessary component of our society and economy as currently defined. Because oil was historically so cheap, we have developed systems that rely on it for everything imaginable. On Kaua‘i, we depend on oil not only for gasoline and electricity, but also for water, food, health, economy, education, entertainment, agriculture, travel and almost everything else we need or desire, including even taro.
• Oil, although historically quite plentiful, is finite in terms of human history. The oil that we consume today was created over hundreds of millions of years, and cannot be replaced during a timescale at all relevant to human civilization.
• As a general rule, our society has exploited the easiest energy to find and extract first. Extraction of easy oil started in the United States, as it was and remains the global epicenter of oil consumption. Today, U.S. and multinational oil corporations drill more than a mile down or refine tar sands from massive open pits, or with the assistance of the U.S. government, demonize countries who dare to maintain control of their own resources so that we may sustain the flow of oil that preserves our enormous wealth.

In spite of our most aggressive efforts, however, oil prices are rising out of control as a result of the increasing energy required to obtain it, increasing worldwide demand, and rapidly declining discovery of new fields.

Other nations have come to understand the U.S. strategy of global energy dominance and have begun to replicate it. Although some people seem to infer that the energy crisis is the fault of countries like China and India, we must recognize that they are simply emulating the model of consumption that we have perfected over decades in the U.S.

Now, thanks to our short-term success over the last century, there’s simply not enough oil to go around.

Many people, including President George Bush, point to available resources in protected areas as necessary solutions to the oil crisis. The most popular citation is ANWAR, or the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, where it is documented that there is possibly as much as 10 billion barrels of oil in the ground. Although this is a potentially valuable resource, it needs to be recognized that it really is not that much oil. The U.S. alone consumes over 20 million barrels of oil every day. That means that 1 billion barrels represents a supply of 50 days, and the entire ANWR reserve, at most, represents enough to fuel America for a year and a half. Not exactly a long-term strategy or a solution for our oil addiction.

Many Americans rely on a false comfort in market forces and expect someone from government or the private sector to provide solutions to our impending energy crisis. Here are two important facts that underline the danger of these misgivings:
• Liquid fuels derived from oil have no viable alternative at the scale of our current usage. Heavily subsidized attempts to replace a small fraction of our oil consumption with corn ethanol and biodiesel have been, by all accounts, disastrous, both economically and environmentally.
• Any further scaling of these efforts would bleed the economy, impinge even more on world food supplies and exacerbate — and perhaps propel — climate change into an irreversible disaster.

Other cleaner renewable energies such as wind, solar, hydro or geothermal do offer significant potential, but they continue to be perceived as ‘solutions’ to our growing crisis. One only has to look at the relative scale of energy from oil, versus all of these sources combined to understand that they currently account for only a tiny fraction of all the energy consumed in the U.S. The well-documented challenges associated with making a transition away from oil are both technical, economical and, most fundamentally, a function of time. That is to say, the very oil that we are losing access to is the key ingredient in the industrial and economic functions necessary as part of our transformation away from oil dependence.

This brief summary, at its core, is an attempt to illicit response from our community on what the author sees as the most urgent issue facing Kaua‘i today. Much more open and constructive dialogue is needed on this critical subject.

The assertion herein is that the motives that we currently identify with related to community actions are likely about to change substantially, and that such changes are reasonable to infer. For example, widespread community efforts are currently focused on stemming overdevelopment. Historically, this has been a real concern and an important area for community focus. However, it is conceivable, and perhaps even reasonably inferable that overdevelopment may no longer be an issue given the effect of a continuing energy-induced recession on the already dismal real estate market.

Further, details of a stable society such as “should dogs be allowed on the bike path” might be considered on a scale of relative urgency, and perhaps set aside temporarily while we address more pressing issues.

What are our greatest liabilities related to oil dependence? What will be the impacts on tourism? What other critical needs and functions are currently dependent on oil? Can we depend on continued imports for 80 percent of our food supply? Can we continue to afford our SUVs, or should we vigorously stimulate alternative transportation networks? How can we guarantee the function of our municipal water and wastewater systems without oil-based energy inputs? Do we currently have fuel reserves adequate to assure police and emergency vehicle operation in the event of a major protracted fuel shortage?

It would serve us to immediately identify our greatest liabilities specific to oil dependence in our community, and begin the systematic process of reducing those liabilities.

Major cities including San Francisco, Portland, Denver, and Austin, along with a host of smaller cities around the country are doing just that. By forming peak oil task forces, developing strategic energy plans and other activities, these cities are working to protect the well-being of their citizens as energy costs continue to wreak havoc on our global economic system.

There is much we can do to prepare for these changes, and perhaps even substantial opportunities in what at first look might be considered a bleak situation. Great advantage exists in being prepared for this foreseeable risk. However, the first step is in identifying the problem and facing it squarely and facing it together.

Please give this some consideration, and if you are compelled to, take action for the sake of our community. We can not continue to rely on someone else to safeguard Kaua‘i’s future, but we can and should rely on ourselves."

• Ben Sullivan is a longtime resident, husband, and father of three who lives in Lawa‘i. He is the former chair of Apollo Kaua‘i, a renewable energy advocacy group started on-island in 2005.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

How high can oil prices go? Renewables, etc.

A few days ago I went to an Apollo Kauai meeting with Andrea Brower and her mom hearing from local KIUC utility officials on the reality of prospective hydro energy projects on Kauai. There were about 50 people in attendance, a number of them I recognized from my pet issue. A lot of interesting things were covered.

The biggest contractual hurdle is something called "avoided cost pricing" which is basically the cost of using diesel fuel (as opposed to "open-book cost-plus pricing"), thus realizing no cost benefit from what otherwise should be lower cost renewable energy. State Rep. Mina Morita in attendance seemed to indicate that the State Legislature would work on "de-coupling" the older standard of pricing here that works against renewable energy projects.

The meeting also mentioned that micro-projects and net-metering are small scale projects that individuals might pursue, but that the utility feels it has to focus on meeting total community and greater development demands. Energy conservation by the individual user was the main recommendation that the KIUC officials could recommend to the audience.

On a related matter, I was talking last night with another person on Kauai writing a very interesting book. Seperate from the subject matter of that book, the question came up, could I do an analysis on the oil price per barrel at which 'the system breaks down,' particularly trucking/shipping companies and maybe a higher figure for utilities? I would have to look at that for a while to try that analysis. I told my friend that I would guess that Goldman Sachs may have done that analysis. So, I did a Google search and here is a start on what I found from a blog of a few days ago in Britian:

http://transitionculture.org/2008/05/20/why-planning-for-200-barrel-oil-is-so-important-or-why-government-is-failing-us-in-times-of-transition/
20 May 2008
"Why Planning for $200 Barrel Oil is so Important, or, Why Government is Failing Us in Times of Transition"

"With the oil price looking pretty settled at $126 a barrel having reached as high in recent days as $128, what does the UK Government estimate the future oil price to be? Clearly one would imagine that as the most responsible body in the land, charged with making long term decisions that affect us all, they would have their fingers on the pulse of this one. Unfortunately the official position is as insulting as it is pathetic...

So in other words, when prodded by a Parliamentary question to come up with an overall assumption, months after oil first broke $100 for the first time on January 1st 2008, since when it has not dipped back into double figures, they go for something midway between their central and high scenarios in their White Paper.

Especially as they must have been aware of the recent Goldman Sachs report that came out around the same time which said that the price was going up not down, and that $200 a barrel was not too far off. They also revised their forecast for the second half of 2008 from $107 to $141. At least someone is paying attention...

Strikes me that at this point in time, in terms of our future forecasting, we need to be seriously planning for a $200 a barrel world, and that planning for anything less is criminally negligent. Whether it is a year away or 3 years away, fact is we have left ourselves virtually no time to prepare for it at all. At $200 a barrel, expansions to airports cease to be worth the investment, and one would have to question whether anyone has questioned how viable it is to build new nuclear power plants at that cost (given the high amount of embodied energy in the materials). Indeed, planning for $200 a barrel will lead to the asking of some very hard questions, questions which business as usual will really struggle to answer...

Indeed it is not just Government who need to be planning for the $200 a barrel era. There are plenty of other organisations who develop long term plans that affect us all, principally local authorities, but also a range of others. I mentioned here the other day a talk I gave recently at Hartpury College near Gloucester, at the end of which I sat on a panel with various representatives of the South West Regional Development Agency...

Me, I long for a $200 a barrel world, as much as anything because perhaps when we get there, we will be able to sit down with the people at BERR who write this rubbish, and ask them what they thought they were doing. It should, as we sit beneath a mature walnut tree, with children running through the abundant food gardens behind us and as ripe, full walnuts punctuate the conversation by dropping earthwards and bouncing off our heads, be a most instructive conversation."

Well, that's food for thought. Be sure to click on those Goldman Sachs links. Will try to find if the analysis is available publicly at what high oil prices do things start 'breaking down.'

Aloha, Brad

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Bicycle use Booming Globally, except in the U.S.

Ride your bike! Submitted by Andrea on Wed, 05/14/2008

Published on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 by One World.net
"Pedaling Toward Cleaner Cities"
by Alison Raphael

WASHINGTON - "What single silver bullet can simultaneously reduce air pollution and oil dependency, roll back urban congestion, and fight obesity?

It’s not a pill, nor a complicated formula concocted by the World Bank. People around the world are turning to bicycles by the millions, as governments rush to create incentives for the low-tech transport alternative to gas-glugging, smog-making, traffic jam-producing automobiles.

Some 130 million bikes were produced worldwide in 2007 — more than double the number of cars rolling off assembly lines (52 million). Bike production took off in the 1970s, and after a brief dip, has been soaring since 2001, according to an "Eco-Economy Indicators" report issued Monday by the Earth Policy Institute.

Although more than 80 percent of all bicycles produced today are made in China, rising wealth led many Chinese to set aside their bicycles in favor of cars. But in the face of rising urban pollution and congestion, Chinese authorities are insisting that bike lanes be re-established in major cities. In Beijing, bike rentals are being strongly promoted.

China is following a growing trend in Europe and developing country smog centers such as Mexico City, Bogota, and Seoul, South Korea. The latest master plan for New Delhi, India, for example, calls for fully segregated bicycle lanes on all main roads to reduce growth in fossil fuel consumption.

Amsterdam, Copenhagen, and the German city of Freiburg are all investing millions in infrastructure to encourage more people to bike to work. In Amsterdam more than 55 percent of those who travel five miles or less to work already ride bikes. The government plans to spend $160 million by 2010 on bicycle paths, parking, and safety, according to the Earth Policy report.

Paris now has some 20,000 bikes available for rental by credit card, scattered around the city at strategic sites. Six million people used the new rental program during the first three months after it was launched last year.

The United States lags far behind this emerging trend, with less than 1 percent of workers commuting by bicycle. Overall, bike ridership has dropped by 32 percent since the early 1990s. But, the report notes, there are positive signs as well: “Aided by $900 million a year in federal funding for promotion of biking and walking for 2005 to 2009, the installation of bicycle facilities — including parking, bike-friendly roads, and designated lanes — is proceeding at a record pace” in the United States.

Several large cities, including New York, plan to double bike and pedestrian routes by 2030. Washington, DC is set to begin a bike-sharing program like that in Paris, and even hilly San Francisco is considering a similar program, according to the Worldwatch Institute, and environmental think tank.

Bicycle advocacy groups are expanding, and a “Complete Streets” movement has blossomed in recent years, bringing together a broad coalition of citizen and environmental groups demanding more pedestrian- and cyclist-friendly roads. Six states and more than 50 cities, counties, and metro regions have now enacted some form of Complete Streets legislation.

With more than half of the world’s population now living in cities, and given the steep health and economic costs of continuing reliance on oil-fueled cars, many analysts expect the lowly two-wheeler to continue to become more and more fashionable."

Aloha, Brad


"Historical fling with airflight has been fun"

Snagged this from Andrea. Same line of thought of some other things I have posted. It's a very interesting article, esp. for the look at alternative means of jet propulsion:

"Saying Goodbye to Air Travel"
Submitted by Andrea on Fri, 05/16/2008
http://globalpublicmedia.com/saying_goodbye_to_air_travel
"Saying Goodbye to Air Travel" 14 May 2008
by Richard Heinberg

"The airline industry has no future. The same is true for airfreight. No air carrier has a viable plan to make a profit with oil at current prices—much less in years to come as the petroleum available to world markets dwindles rapidly.

That’s not to say that jetliners will disappear overnight, but rather that the cheap flights we’ve seen in the past will soon be fading memories. In a few years jet service will be available only to the wealthy, or to the government and military.

Sir Richard Branson of Virgin Atlantic says he wants to use biofuels to power his fleet of 747’s and Airbuses. There are still some bugs to be worked out in terms of basic chemistry, but it might be possible in principle—if only we could make enough biodiesel or ethanol without further driving up food prices and wrecking the soil. Even then it would be very costly fuel.

Are there other options for powered flight?

Hydrogen could be burned in jet engines, but doing so would require a complete redesign of our commercial aircraft fleet, and H2 would be expensive to make—unless the growing trend toward more costly electricity (as we phase out depleting, polluting coal and increasingly scarce natural gas) can somehow be reversed.

Last year I was invited to give the keynote address at the world’s first Electric Aircraft Symposium. NASA and Boeing sent representatives, but all told there were only about 20 in attendance. The planes being discussed were ultralight two-seaters: that’s the limit of current or foreseeable battery technology. These might come in handy in a future where they are the only option for emergency air travel (blimps need depleting helium or explosive hydrogen). But forget about 300-seat planes running on solar or wind power, ferrying middle-class vacationers to Bali or Venice.

There are good reasons to cut down on air travel voluntarily: flying not only swells our personal carbon emissions but spews CO2 and other pollutants into the stratosphere, where they do the most damage. However, the worsening scarcity of the stuff we use for making jet fuel takes the discussion out of the realm of optional moral action and into that of economic necessity and personal adaptation.

I fly to educate both general audiences and policy makers about fossil fuel depletion; in fact, I’m writing this article aboard a plane en route from Boston to San Francisco. I wince at my carbon footprint, but console myself with the hope that my message helps thousands of others to change their consumption patterns. This inner conflict is about to be resolved: the decline of affordable air travel is forcing me to rethink my work. I’m already starting to do much more by video teleconference, much less by jet.

Those who live far from family will be more than inconvenienced, as will the hundreds of thousands who work for the airline industry directly or indirectly, or the millions who depend on tourism or airfreight for an income. These folks will have few options: teleconferencing can accomplish only so much.

Our species’ historically brief fling with flight has been fun, educational, and enriching on many levels to those fortunate enough to benefit from it. Saying goodbye will be difficult. But maybe as we do we can say hello to greater involvement in our local communities."

Awesome article,
Aloha, Brad

Monday, May 12, 2008

Regarding Invasive Species...Fireweed and DOA

Click on above graphic to read it. Credit Honolulu Advertiser for the above graphic.

I wanted to post here over the past few weeks on the price of oil, Aloha Air Cargo, tourism and the Hawaii economy, but I have not had the time to do so. Today, though, something very interesting was reported that attracted my attention.

First, from a prior blog post on January 26, 2008:

"Saw on Akaku recently an interview of a Maui Upcountry rancher by the name of Chuck DeCoite talking about the problem of the invasive species called Fireweed. It turns out Chuck is related to somebody I know. This guy Chuck comes across in the interview as being very sharp. He has tried everything but cannot erradicate the fireweed on his property and it is becoming a problem, esp. for his livestock. Chuck wants somebody to study it and find a way to effectively deal with fireweed. Wonder if somebody at the State Department of Agriculture or at U.H. would be interested in this. Will follow-up more on this. Aloha, Brad"

Apparently there are those who have been working on it. There was a great article today in the Honolulu Advertiser by Lynda Arakawa regarding this "Bugs readied for eco-battle; Hawaii may set loose 4 kinds of insects to control invasive species," May 11, 2008:

"The state is moving closer to releasing insects from Asia and Africa to help combat three harmful invasive species that have taken hold in the Islands. State officials have completed a final environmental assessment...

...as well as seeking state and federal permits to release an African moth whose larva eats toxic Madagascar fireweed. It's believed Hawai'i would be the first in the world to deliberately release these particular insects for pest control...

The pending insect releases follow years of searching for a natural enemy of these invasive species, testing in a containment facility and field studies in the species' native countries. Finding a predator that will specifically target a pest without harming other species is key. For example, state exploratory entomologist Mohsen Ramadan brought back from Africa eight to 10 possible natural enemies of fireweed, but researchers found that some of them will feed on Island native plants and thus scratched them from the project, Reimer said. Ultimately, only one — the arctiid moth Secusio extensa — was determined safe for release, he said...

In the case of the moth to target fireweed, there was some evidence that the caterpillar fed to some extent on sunflowers, but it was minimal, and the caterpillar preferred fireweed, Reimer said. Draft environmental assessments on the biocontrol projects for the fireweed, nettle caterpillar and strawberry guava are available for public comment through May 23...

See: http://oeqc.doh.hawaii.gov/default.aspx?RootFolder=%2fShared%20Documents%2fEA%20AND%20EIS%20ONLINE%20LIBRARY%2fStatewide&View=%7bF4E3E6A9%2d2607%2d49FC%2dB7A5%2d2928B79F10B4%7d




The state has released 43 biocontrol organisms since the early 1970s, none of which posed problems, Reimer said...

Reimer noted the moth that would target fireweed may also be vulnerable to predators here...

The larvae of the moth Secusio extensa are voracious eaters of Madagascar fireweed leaves and terminal shoots, the agriculture department said. Fireweed has infested thousands of acres of pastures and rangelands on Maui and the Big Island and is highly toxic to cattle and other grazing animals that eat it...

He said he hopes to see the insects' impact at specific sites within two to three years."

Very interesting work by Mohsen Ramadan of the DOA.
Lynda, very nice article.
Aloha, Brad

Sunday, May 11, 2008

GMO's and Bee Colony Collapse Disorder? -- Follow-up

Follow-up to: GMO's and Bee Colony Collapse Disorder?:

Maui News Letter to the Editor May 11, 2008
"Varroa not sole cause of bee colony collapse"

"Mahalo to Paul Koehler for his astute answer (Letters, May 6) to my speculations regarding bee deaths.

Yes, I am well aware that the Varroa mite and its associated virus were thought to be the cause until late last year. But, as the following quote from the U.S. Department of Agriculture states, they are not now considered the sole cause and other possibilities are being actively sought. My letter was intended to offer some of those.

'The brood patterns did not present characteristic bee parasitic mite syndrome (BPMS) symptoms and coupled with the low mite levels indicate that Varroa was not the leading cause of the loss of colonies.' — USDA, September 2007."

Nadine Newlight
Paia


Oh, yeah, Nadine, good work. I'll be watching for you to get to the bottom of this.

Aloha, Brad