Water – Aug 24
-Driving new changes in Asian irrigation
-Nile Delta: ‘We are going underwater. The sea will conquer our lands’
-Our Water Supply, Down the Drain
-Cattle, crop losses mount in Texas drought
-Driving new changes in Asian irrigation
-Nile Delta: ‘We are going underwater. The sea will conquer our lands’
-Our Water Supply, Down the Drain
-Cattle, crop losses mount in Texas drought
It is a sign that the world may be upside down when French tourists in Las Vegas take pictures of themselves in front of the Paris Las Vegas hotel and casino complex which includes a half-scale replica of the Eiffel Tower. And, yet this is not the strangest behavior I observed recently during a trip to southern Nevada, an area that along with the much of the West is suffering through the worst drought on record.
If we are to work on a community level, we’re going to have to use the old community and neighborhood organizing strategies, rather than a series of showings of End of Suburbia or How to Boil a Frog (don’t get me wrong, I really think very highly of these movies). That is, that we are going to have to be able to enlist people at very low levels of commonality, rather than at high levels of education about the future of the world if we’re to get enough bodies on the ground to do what is needed. And that these communities need to be built, well, yesterday.
-Peak Oil and Tourism
-Let There Be Light!
-Bolivians look to ancient farming
-Ambitious Solar Project to Use Recycled City Wastewater
-Another bold move in Portland
-Is there any point in fighting to stave off industrial apocalypse?
-Puberty on the Scale of a Planet
-Something Bigger than Life is Trying to Work Through Us
I am 53 years old, which makes me a post-World War II “Baby Boomer” (those born between 1946 and 1964). First off, I want to issue a blanket apology to younger cohorts (generations X & Y) for the excesses of my generation. No generation in the human history was given so large an opportunity to ravage the Earth through excess consumption, and Boomers did not squander that opportunity. No generation has adversely affected the welfare of future generations as the Boomers have. So much for Woodstock and the Age of Aquarius.
-A tempting proposition
-There is No Recession
-The Queen’s Postbag Becomes A Battleground For Credit Crunch + Energy Debate
The Archdruid returns from vacation with a few unexpected announcements and a glimpse at a future that may resemble nothing so much as the nineteenth-century past.
-Empty car parks to sprout vegetable plots
-The Omnivore’s Delusion: Against the Agri-intellectuals
-An ‘agri-intellectual’ talks back
-The death of ideas
-Economics is not natural science
-Renewable Transition 2: EROEI Uncertainty
The first reports of drought-related suicides have begun filtering in from the district press. Farmers in the eastern coastal state of Andhra Pradesh are taking their own lives – the toll is said to be 20 farmers over the last 40 days. The state is one amongst many which has so far been forsaken by the South-West monsoon in 2009…An official with the state agriculture department has called the conditions the worst in 50 years. But the state government has still not declared Andhra Pradesh as hit by drought. Such declarations have in India become politically charged positions that the state ruling is forced to take, instead of being policy conclusions that can quickly bring relief and rehabilitation.
-Barrister to barista: The rise of part-time Britain
-Ellie and Gordon set a good example: voluntary service trumps compulsion
-Organic producers suffer as green fingered customers go it alone