Bartlett addresss House on reducing fossil fuels
Three different groups in our country have common cause in campaigning for a reduction in the use of fossil fuels. The three interests are national security, peak oil and climate change.
Three different groups in our country have common cause in campaigning for a reduction in the use of fossil fuels. The three interests are national security, peak oil and climate change.
Globally, no rush to mend ways
China blames the west for global warming
Blame Canada for climate change
Brazil’s Lula blasts rich nations on climate
Global warming’s simple remedy
Australia: A tax for our future
Climate ‘realism’ demands carbon tax
Energy efficiency suffers in budget shuffle
The Economist: Green America
CEOs, retired generals push to curb oil reliance
Lester Brown interview (“PO may be imminent”)
Australia oil supply report to be released
“The End of Oil” – Link TV special Feb 9, 10
Peak oilers’ error
Bartlett on CNN at 5:30 ET Feb 6
DVDs of the Boston Peak Oil Conference
If leaders do not begin to abide by these axioms, society as a whole, or some aspects of it, will assuredly collapse.
Chavez takes up energy conservation
Turkey: It’s “you” who will save the world
War and skis
Arabs urged to use energy judiciously
No quick fix to Eskom energy crisis
France to US: sign climate pacts or face tax
Paxman accuses BBC of hypocrisy over environment
Investment winners & losers of global warming
The week in carbon
How climate change hits India’s poor
As part of a public relations outreach effort to improve their image on climate change, Exxon Mobil invited a half-dozen or so green-shaded bloggers to a conference call with their Vice President of Public Affairs.
Princeton profs drive ‘wedges’ into policy debate
Climate is changing, politically
White House climate documents sought
Climate scientist Shindell and Rep. Waxman on Bush interference
Word from participants who shall remain nameless is that China has taken the lead in global warming obstructionism in 2007.
Senate Committee witnesses from three of America’s premier energy research institutions cast grave doubt on the feasibility of reaching President Bush’s State of the Union goal of manufacturing 35 billion gallons a year of alternative fuels by 2017. (Ed: A scoop? – other media outlets seem to have missed the story.)