Global Change Associates Inc. (GCA) was founded in 1991 by Peter C. Fusaro to focus on the convergence of energy and environmental financial markets. Peter is a recognized "thought leader" on energy and environmental markets, and he provides advisory to many companies on dealing with the impacts of climate change, clean technology and renewable energy for his clients. GCA's focus is on recognizing opportunities in both sustainable energy and environmental projects for financial services companies such as hedge funds and investment banks and for venture capital in cleantech and renewable energy. Peter published the first studies on green trading markets, energy hedge funds, Enron and energy e-commerce. His intellectual curiosity and market intelligence is second to none due to his extensive global network of energy and environmental industry experts. Peter believes in the concept of "high tech, high touch" which encompasses the capabilities of the Internet coupled with the importance of personal human contact. His live presentations are both insightful and passionate.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Reducing carbon emissions 75% by 2050 is like...
Reducing carbon emissions 75% by 2050 is like agreeing to stop smoking by the time your lung cancer becomes inoperable...
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
EcoHaul
Specializing in reuse, recycling, and donation, EcoHaul serves Residential and Business customers by providing enthusiastic, high quality customer service that is cost effective and efficient. No other removal and hauling company diverts more of their
customers' material from our landfills -- plus, EcoHaul is powered by Biodiesel!
In other words if you're a typical American and have consumerised your way to having too much stuff, these guys can help you without feeling guilty that your stuff is just going to a landfill.
Friday, November 7, 2008
A look at California Interfaith Power and Light
With a name that sounds like a utility company, California Interfaith Power and Light (CIPL) are an activist group working on environmental green issues from a religious perspective.
Some Christians take the statements in the Bible to mean we can do anything we want with the planet, and that theological frame of mind is partly responsible for the degradation of our beautiful planet. However others take the same Bible statements to mean we are to be "faithful stewards of Creation". It seems obvious to me that the Jesus who spoke of the beauty of the Lilly in the field would recommend that we care for the planet we live on if only to encourage more beauty to live and thrive.
The mission of California Interfaith Power and Light (CIPL) is to be faithful stewards of Creation by responding to global warming through the promotion of energy conservation, energy efficiency and renewable energy. This ministry intends to protect the earth's ecosystems, safeguard public health, and ensure sufficient, sustainable energy for all.
They have this to say about the theological basis for stewardship: Becoming an eco-steward is engaging in spiritual practice. Our call to care for Creation is articulated similarly by a range of diverse traditions, some examples of which are provided in the following resource links on the theological basis for eco-stewardship: a) Catholic Conservation Center, b) COEJL: Jews, Jewish Texts, and Nature: A Brief History, c) Evangelical Environmental Network: Scripture, d) Islamset: Environmental Protection in Islam, e) Web of Creation: Prayers, sample sermons, resources, liturgies
They have a Green 'Congregational Covenant' and set of steps for implementing the covenant. This includes educating your congregation, conducting an energy audit, make energy efficiency improvements in the congregations buildings, utilizing green renewable power (such as purchasing carbon credits or installing solar power systems), establish tree planting programs, invest in alternative energy sources, have a goal of becoming carbon neutral, and support public policies that support the goal of ecological stewardship.
This strikes me as an achievable range of goals but perhaps not the most comprehensive. For example there is an over-focus on carbon emissions, but what about the whole range of other pollutants? Also while making efficiency improvements is a great step to take what's really required is a wholesale rethinking of how we are to live. A program like that isn't about rethinking our lives, it's about small incremental steps that don't address the longterm problem.
They have two working groups, one in Sacramento the other in the 'Peninsula/South Bay' area. Thus this group is highly focused on the San Francisco Bay Area as shown by the membership list. Another thing I see in the membership list is the heavy focus on Christian denominations. While there are a few Buddhist listings (http://www.greensangha.org/) the majority are Christian churches. I thought this is an Interfaith group? If they're so heavily denominated by Christians how is that Interfaith? Oh, wait, there's a few others including Islamic, Jewish, non-Denominational, Shamanistic, Swedenborgian, and Sufi.
Looks pretty good.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Transition Towns- A way through the coming dual crises of peak oil and climate change
There are twin crises looming in our immediate future .. ones which threaten our society with its very survival. Our society has reached a great and beautiful place, in many ways, but the core foundation our society rests on is cheap oil. We are coming to the end of the age of cheap oil and it seems almost nobody knows about the problem. Further complicating the problem is one more people know about, climate change, where the environmental conditions we humans have enjoyed for eons are spiraling into an extremely hot period. Neither of these issues are ones which will kill all life everywhere, so we are not talking about apocalypse here. However these mean an end to the lifestyle to which we have become accustomed. The transition from our current overly luxurious lifestyle to the new one can be easy, or it can be abrupt and bloody.
The Transition Town concept is about preparing society for a more orderly transition to a different style of living. The suggested lifestyle is lower in impact, sustainably focused, localized, human scale, etc. It shares a lot of concepts with other simplification lifestyles and one could see this as a remedy for the high stress high speed lifestyle modern life has become. Wasn't technology supposed to give us a life of leisure? If so then why are we rushing about so madly? Maybe we just need to slow down irregardless of the threats of peak oil or climate change?
http://transitiontowns.org/ - is the home site for the Transition Town movement. It began in 2006, apparently, in Totnes, UK and is spreading like wildfire. It is most prevalent in the UK but groups are springing up worldwide.
What is a Transition Town (or village / city / forest / island)? It all starts off when a small collection of motivated individuals within a community come together with a shared concern: how can our community respond to the challenges, and opportunities, of Peak Oil and Climate Change? They begin by forming an initiating group and then adopt the Transition Model with the intention of engaging a significant proportion of the people in their community to kick off a Transition Initiative.
There are twelve key steps to setting up a transition town group:-
#1. Set up a steering group and design its demise from the outset
#2. Awareness raising
#3. Lay the foundations
#4. Organise a Great Unleashing
#5. Form sub groups
#6. Use Open Space Technology - a meeting format that allows for very open ended conferences that organically grow
#7 Develop visible practical manifestations of the project
#8. Facilitate the Great Reskilling
#9 Build a bridge to Local Government
#10 Honour the elders
#11 Let it go where it wants to go…
#12 Create an Energy Descent Plan
Friday, August 29, 2008
Climate Code Red
Climate policy is characterised by the habituation of low expectations and a culture of failure. There is an urgent need to understand global warming and the tipping points for dangerous impacts that we have already crossed as a sustainability emergency, that takes us beyond the politics of failure-inducing compromise. We are now in a race between climate tipping points and political tipping points.
This is a book and web site about the urgency of the situation regarding climate change. They use the phrase "Code Red" in the way that hospitals mean it, that the patient is in critical danger, that everybody should drop what they're doing and go to emergency stations, and that it's this critical.
Avalon Springs
Avalon Springs is an experiential learning environment, anchored by a healing hot springs retreat center and staff ecovillage - a living mystery school for an emerging sustainable human culture. As a land-based holistic retreat center and ecovillage in Northern California, Avalon Springs aligns the most advanced green technologies, systems and philosophies to become a living template for an abundant, sustainable economic, social and environmental future.