Renewables & efficiency Jan 16
Alarmed by claims about Google searches
Growth in Energy Use Could Drop 22 Percent by 2030 Under Right Conditions: Report
It’s Flue Season
Alarmed by claims about Google searches
Growth in Energy Use Could Drop 22 Percent by 2030 Under Right Conditions: Report
It’s Flue Season
Strategies for Community Food Security: The Local Foods Coop
Hope and the new USDA chief
Sustainable Table suggests sustainable food for thought
Oil will peak. I get it…I am convinced that this thing we call civilization is ludicrously based on profit and is a madman’s interpretation of the pursuit of happiness. I recognize the insanity. The illusion that participating in the race for stainless steel appliances and ride-on lawn mowers as a worthy endeavor is squashed forever.
So now what?
Because just as my friend’s husband found, when something is needed – and by needed I mean either practically necessary because there is no alternative (ie, the baby is coming or the power is out) or when something is needed because a body of people are committed to its rightness and seriousness (ie, the embargo requires us to make our own cloth, or the bus boycott requires elderly women to walk miles each day) we find in ourselves capacities that we hardly knew were there. While sometimes the worst does happen, often we are surprised by outcomes – simply because we underestimate people.
Embracing Petrocollapse
A New Kind of Big Science
Seven Grams CO2 per Google Search? Not True or Relevant, but Fun To Repeat
Sustainable Cooking Stoves
Saving the Economy, One Furnace at a Time
The Roots of Energy Efficiency
A Chill Blows Through Wind Power
Peak Phosphorus – Commence Urine Recyling on Space Station Earth
Enjoy low food prices, they are not here to stay
Women bear brunt of drought
Gardening in January
…the world reserves of phosphate rocks, which are used for the production of phosphate fertilizers, are declining. They can be depleted even this century. The problem with the lack of phosphate fertilizers does not start, however, when all phosphate rock reserves are gone. It starts as soon as the demand for phosphate fertilizers exceeds the supply of phosphate rocks available for export… And this situation may appear within the next 10-20 years.
…So, what can we do?
Alex Steffen: Where We Are And Where We’re Going
Reality Report: Bill McKibben
The Effect of Natural Gradients on the Net Energy Profits from Corn Ethanol
Kissinger: The Chance for a New World Order
Steven Chu Eases Up on the Gas Price Pedal
Greening the stimulus
Back on Tracks
A Bicycle Evangelist With the Wind Now at His Back
Jimmy Carter’s bike stolen from Carter Center
Produce will sail into Ballard
Book Review: Permaculture, a beginner’s guide
Going Amish: The Decision