Modest African footprint still approaching limits

Solar Speedboat Gets 30 Knots Per Hour
Here’s another flashy concept that uses solar energy for transportation: the solar speedboat! Unlike the solar sailor we talked about earlier, the Dutch MK1 prototype is designed to travel at speeds up to 30 knots per hour! In 2006 the Delft Technical University Solarboat Team raced the speedboat to first place in the Nuon [.]
Bloggers Unite for Human Rights: May 15, 2008
Sponsored by Amnesty International and BlogCatalog. Please post about human rights on May 15!Whether you belong to BlogCatalog (a free social network for bloggers) or not, see here for banners. My earlier statement, “It appears that you need to be a member of BlogCatalog to see the banners and badges,” has been corrected kindly [.]
Sustainability Conference Follow Up
For everyone who attended my talks at the International Conference on Peak Oil and Climate Change, I have the home energy checklist that I didn’t have time to cover at the conference.This list is from Urban Options, a great resource for energy efficiency for both commercial and residential buildings. (N.B. I am on the [.]
Tree 4 All Begins April 17
Spring has arrived! We’re digging in the dirt and counting trees again this year. The Mile High Million’s 2008 spring planting season begins on April 17 and runs through mid-May. Events will take place throughout the metro area. Some events still need volunteers! Find an event near you | Find an event near you | Register your tree
Urban Wind Power by AeroVironment
AeroVironment Wind Turbines The late Dr. Paul MacCready’s firm AeroVironment has long been on the frontier of energy efficient aviation, starting with the creation of the first human powered airplane, and then the first human powered airplane to cross the English Channel. AeroVironment has gone on to design solar powered aircraft that can linger [.]
Mayor Hickenlooper Adopts Denver’s Climate Plan
Denver’s Climate Action Plan was officially adopted on October 24, 2007 following eight months of research by Denver’s Greenprint Council and five months of public feedback. Mayor Hickenlooper also signed Executive Order 123, which formally establishes the city’s sustainability policy. It includes Denver’s first municipal green building policy along with several measures to promote sustainability within city operations.
Modest African footprint still approaching limits
Individual Africans might consume less on average than residents of any other continent, but rising population is bringing Africa close to its ecological limits, the first ever detailed assessment of Africa’s ecological footprint has found.Africa-Ecological Footprint and human well-being, prepared for WWF by the Global Footprint Network and released at the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment today finds the average African had an Ecological Footprint (an estimate of the area of land or sea used annually in providing for personal consumption) of 1.1 global hectares in 2003, well below the global average of 2.2 hectares per person.
China eyes domestic emissions trading scheme.
China’s central bank has drawn up a tentative outline for a domestic emissions trading scheme that could cover everything from greenhouse gases to water pollutants, and speed the country’s push for greener growth.
Press Release: Farm Bill Conference Report Called “Mixed Bag”

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Contact
:

Sean Crowley - (202) 572-3331 - o, scrowley@edf.org
Sara Hopper – (202) 572-3379 - o, shopper@edf.org
 

(Washington D.C. - May 8, 2008) – The 2008 farm bill conference report appears to include important new investments in conservation, but will not do enough to meet the growing need to expand and improve conservation programs, or to reform our antiquated system of farm subsidies, according to Environmental Defense Fund (EDF).   

While the full text of the conference report is not available, EDF cited the $4 billion in new outlays for conservation programs announced by conferees during a news conference this afternoon as an important step forward, but it is still insufficient to meet farmer demand.  Since enactment of the 2002 farm bill, $13.5 billion in requests for conservation assistance from almost half a million farmers and ranchers have gone unfunded.  

“The good news is that conference committee members recognized the need to boost conservation funding at a time when very high commodity prices are increasing pressure on our land, water, and important wildlife habitat,” said Sara Hopper, an attorney with EDF who was a staff member of the Senate Agriculture Committee during the 2002 farm bill.  “The bad news is that this new funding falls short of what’s needed to provide farmers, ranchers, and private forest landowners with the resources they need to help us solve some of the nation’s biggest environmental problems.”

EDF also criticized the House-Senate conference committee for increasing, rather than decreasing, farm subsidies. 

“With crop prices and farm incomes at record levels, Congress missed a once-in-five-years opportunity to reduce farm subsidies,” Hopper said. “Instead, Congress has increased support levels for some crops, added new crops to the subsidy roll, and failed to make any significant reduction in direct payments.  Direct payments will cost over $5 billion a year for the next five years and mostly flow to producers of corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton and rice regardless of how high prices are or whether the farmer needs the assistance.” 

Both the House and Senate versions of the bill included a “Sodsaver” provision that would have barred crop insurance and some disaster payments to producers who plow up native grasslands in order to plant crops, but conference committee members gutted this provision during meetings that were not open to the public.

In a report issued last fall, the Government Accountability Office found that loss of grasslands — more than 25 million acres since 1982 — has been driven by the availability of crop insurance, disaster payments and other farm subsidies. 

“The conference committee’s decision to gut Sodsaver — while adding almost $4 billion in new subsidies for a new permanent disaster fund that will accelerate the conversion of grassland to intensive crop production — is a real disaster for the nation’s remaining native prairies,” concluded Hopper. “Add this to the pressures on grassland from high crop prices and you have a perfect storm for environmental destruction on the Great Plains.”

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