Month: January 2012

Initiative Watch: The Polluter Accountability Act

California’s Legislature did manage last year to stanch some of the state’s initiative craziness when it passed a law mandating that all initiative appear on the general election ballot, not the primary ballot.  Now, our ballot “pamphlets” won’t resemble a phone book every election.  (The fact that general elections get higher turnout, and thus tend to …

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Is Bureaucratic Leadership an Oxymoron?

History shows that that those much-maligned bureaucrats are sometimes the unsung heroes of policy improvement.

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California’s New Clean Car Rules: How Can They Succeed?

Yesterday, the California Air Resources Board significantly toughened the state’s regulations on carbon emissions from automobiles: The package of Air Resources Board regulations would require auto manufacturers to offer more zero- or very low-emission cars such as battery electric, hydrogen fuel cell and plug-in hybrid vehicles in California starting with model year 2018. By 2025, …

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Ambivalence Toward Environmental Scientists

Two seemingly unrelated stories on the NY Times webpage reveal the strangely conflicted place of scientists in today’s society.  One story reveals our respect for those who, despite difficult circumstances, dedicate themselves to the pursuit of knowledge.  That story is about Samantha Garvey, a homeless teenager who has found recognition for her study of the …

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The Wall Street Journal Publishes Quite a Piece on Climate Change

This piece is worth reading.  It doesn’t have that much new content but it does take up a lot of the page.  I must admit that I’m envious.  It appears that the WSJ has rejected my OP-ED submission.  In my piece, I discuss how the rise of charter cities in developing countries could offer individuals …

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Preserving U.S. Fisheries: A Bipartisan Pipe Dream?

President Obama’s call in his 2012 State of the Union address for a new spirit of bipartisanship brought to mind a recent Washington Post article on current federal efforts to preserve U.S. fisheries. In what qualifies as a rare “good news” story involving federal environmental policy, that article reports that the Obama Administration is poised to …

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Urban Form and Public Health

The Chronicle of Higher Education has a very nice story about UCLA’s Dick Jackson.  To quote this article;  “In 2001, while still at the CDC, Dr. Jackson was a co-author of an article published by Sprawl Watch Clearinghouse that contended that poorly planned built environments had adverse effects on air quality, physical activity, and public …

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Energy and the State of the Union

There’s quite a bit about energy in the State of the Union, including a discussion of the potential for natural gas and this about clean energy: We can also spur energy innovation with new incentives. The differences in this chamber may be too deep right now to pass a comprehensive plan to fight climate change. …

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Rebound Redux

I’ve posted  previously about the rebound effect.  Improving energy efficiency frees up money, which can be used to purchase more of the same product or different products that use energy.  This “rebound” cuts away at the energy savings and correspondingly at the carbon reduction achieved through energy efficiency.  Everyone seems to agree that the rebound …

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Attention K-Mart Shoppers! Get With the Program

I’ve blogged before about Asia Pulp & Paper, which has one of the worst records on destroying critical species habitat in its logging operations and abusing human rights in the process.  (Not surprisingly, it also has a fake certification from greenwahser Programme for the Endorsement of Forestry Certification).  Well, the tigers (and humans) have some …

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