TERRA

Toyota Introduces I-Road Pod Car

Source: Green Car Reports

Source: Green Car Reports

Toyota’s three-wheeled I-Road is now under limited testing in Japan. The I-Road is designed to be far more mobile in the city (it’s just 33 inches wide) and can park almost anywhere. It’s all electric - using two 2kW motors - which provides only 5 horsepower but enough to push the I-Road around. It’s active suspension system leans into turns, giving the feeling of a motorcycle, but with the safety and reliability of a car. It’s just fun to drive. According to Christopher DeMorro writing for CleanTechnica:

The best part though is that it returns a sense of “driving” to the car experience, as you’re not insulated from the road by a massive machine. Instead, you lean with the i-Road, and you have more control on the overall experience than you’d find in almost any other production car.

"Climate change affects military readiness"

Climate change affects military readiness, strains base resilience, creates missions in new regions of the world and increases the likelihood that our armed forces will be deployed for humanitarian missions. In many cases it also threatens our infrastructure and affects our economy. And our continued reliance on the fossil fuels whose consumption leads to climate change ties our nation’s hands on the world stage and tethers us to nations that do not always have our best interests at heart.
— Rear Adm. David Titley (Ret.)

Solution: Turning plastic bottles into thatched roofs

Image: reuseeverything.org

Image: reuseeverything.org

The previous post, “The ghosts of our consumption,” illustrates the scourge of plastic on sea life. Could plastic thatch roofs be a solution?

Betsy Teutsch writing in The Atlantic:

“David Saiia, a professor of strategic management and sustainability at Duquesne University, has come up with a brilliant alternative: plastic thatch from the huge amount of discarded plastic.”
“Saiia specializes in developing business solutions that will help people out of poverty while preserving habitats. On one of his many trips taking university students to the Ecuadoran nature preserve, Maqui Picuna, he challenged them to think of something useful to do with all the plastic bottles littering this scenic Andes cloud forest. Saiia’s sculpture, painting, and drawing skills kicked in; shortly a proverbial back-of-the-envelope drawing launched his business transforming bottles into thatch strips. The tops and bottoms are sliced off; the remaining body of the bottle is flattened and then cut into strips. (Saiia and Carnegie Mellon’s Engineers without Borders are now tweaking a human-powered machine to do this work.) Next, the strips are adhered to a cross-strip using ultrasonic sealing machines provided by Dukane. If you’ve ever sliced yourself wrestling with a device encased in clam-shell plastic, you know how effective ultrasonic sealing is.”

Replacing traditional thatch roofs with corrugated tin roofs creates homes trap heat and produce deafening noise when it rains. Plastic thatch roofs are a quieter, longer lasting solution.

Sources

“The ghosts of our consumption”

Image: Chris Jordan 

Image: Chris Jordan 

“Albatross chicks eat what their parents feed them, plastic included.” Unfortunately, the ocean is now littered with plastics “including pieces of shotgun shells, paintbrushes, pump spray nozzles, toothpaste tube caps, clothespins, buckles, toys - just to name a few.” Their parents “mistake the trash for food as they forage the vast, polluted Pacific Ocean.”

Source: Gyre: The Plastic Ocean exhibit, Anchorage Museum, Alaska

Book: Gyre: The Plastic Ocean

Related

 

Damnation: "Nasty questions" about dam removal

"This powerful film odyssey across America explores the sea change in our national attitude from pride in big dams as engineering wonders to the growing awareness that our own future is bound to the life and health of our rivers. Dam removal has moved beyond the fictional Monkey Wrench Gang to go mainstream. Where obsolete dams come down, rivers bound back to life, giving salmon and other wild fish the right of return to primeval spawning grounds, after decades without access. DamNation’s majestic cinematography and unexpected discoveries move through rivers and landscapes altered by dams, but also through a metamorphosis in values, from conquest of the natural world to knowing ourselves as part of nature."

Damnation

Oceana: International Ocean Conservation

"Oceana, founded in 2001, is the largest international organization focused solely on ocean conservation. Our offices in North America, South America and Europe work together on a limited number of strategic, directed campaigns to achieve measurable outcomes that will help return our oceans to former levels of abundance. We believe in the importance of science in identifying problems and solutions. Our scientists work closely with our teams of economists, lawyers and advocates to achieve tangible results for the oceans."

Oceana: What We Do

Climate Extremes: Anxiety or Opportunity?

Colorado National Guardsmen respond to floods in Boulder County, Colorado, United States. 12 September 2013. Image: United States Department of Defense

Colorado National Guardsmen respond to floods in Boulder County, Colorado, United States. 12 September 2013. Image: United States Department of Defense

"Impacts from recent climate-related extremes, such as heat waves, droughts, floods, cyclones, and wildfires, reveal significant vulnerability and exposure of some ecosystems and many human systems to current climate variability (very high confidence). Impacts of such climate-related extremes include alteration of ecosystems, disruption of food production and water supply, damage to infrastructure and settlements, morbidity and mortality, and consequences for mental health and human well-being. For countries at all levels of development, these impacts are consistent with a significant lack of preparedness for current climate variability in some sectors."

Unfortunately, though clear cut and definitive, statements like this trigger anxiety, guilt, denial, or sadness. Fortunately, for some, they trigger opportunity - an opportunity to make a difference. Even small differences added together make things happen. 

Source: IPCC WGII AR5 Summary for Policymakers 

 

Tesla Gigafactory: Making high-end battery powered cars affordable

“Very shortly, we will be ready to share more information about the Tesla Gigafactory. This will allow us to achieve a major reduction in the cost of our battery packs and accelerate the pace of battery innovation. Working in partnership with our suppliers, we plan to integrate precursor material, cell, module and pack production into one facility. With this facility, we feel highly confident of being able to create a compelling and affordable electric car in approximately three years. This will also allow us to address the solar power industry’s need for a massive volume of stationary battery packs.”

Read more at http://cleantechnica.com/2014/02/23/will-telsa-build-gigafactory/#iXlHivbtRi2d6cbj.99

Extreme weather images paralyze effective action

New research has shown that images of extreme weather in the media create negative emotional meanings and might lead to disengagement with the issue of climate change. The images symbolised fear, helplessness and vulnerability and, in some cases, guilt and compassion. Appealing to fear of disaster can lead to denial and paralysis rather than positive behaviour change. (emphasis added)

Extreme weather images in the media cause fear and disengagement with climate change

Paying attention to sinking land & rising seas

We periodically hear about rising seas, but little about sinking land - except possibly in places such as New York’s Battery Park, coastal New Jersey and Norfolk, Virginia. Rising seas and sinking land increases flooding and eventually decrease property values. According to Justin Gillis of the New York Times:

“Scientists say the East Coast will be hit harder for many reasons, but among the most important is that even as the seawater rises, the land in this part of the world is sinking. And that goes back to the last ice age, which peaked some 20,000 years ago.”

“As a massive ice sheet, more than a mile thick, grew over what are now Canada and the northern reaches of the United States, the weight of it depressed the crust of the earth. Areas away from the ice sheet bulged upward in response, as though somebody had stepped on one edge of a balloon, causing the other side to pop up. Now that the ice sheet has melted, the ground that was directly beneath it is rising, and the peripheral bulge is falling.”

Sinking along the East Coast varies by location and thus ocean rise will vary:

“Even if the global sea level rises only eight more inches by 2050, a moderate forecast, the Rutgers group foresees relative increases of 14 inches at bedrock locations like the Battery, and 15 inches along the New Jersey coastal plain, where the sediments are compressing. By 2100, they calculate, a global ocean rise of 28 inches would produce increases of 36 inches at the Battery and 39 inches on the coastal plain.”

“These numbers are profoundly threatening, and among the American public, the impulse toward denial is still strong. But in towns like Norfolk — where neighborhoods are already flooding repeatedly even in the absence of storms, and where some homes have become unsaleable — people are starting to pay attention.”

Source:  The Flood Next Time

Plant Neurobiology: “Foolish distraction” or “new science”?

Leaf_1_web.jpg

Michael Pollan, author of Omnivore’s Dilemma and other books, has written an interesting article on The Intelligent Plant in The Atlantic. He begins by recounting the ruckus in the scientific community following the 1973 publication of the “The Secret Life of Plants.” Over the years, most of the claims in the book were discredited. However, the issue has surfaced again, this time with more scientific evidence. Stated simply: Are plants “intelligent” and should the corresponding field of study be called “plant neurobiology?”

Among the arguments for a plant intelligence:

“Plants are able to sense and optimally respond to so many environmental variables—light, water, gravity, temperature, soil structure, nutrients, toxins, microbes, herbivores, chemical signals from other plants—that there may exist some brainlike information-processing system to integrate the data and coördinate a plant’s behavioral response. The authors pointed out that electrical and chemical signalling systems have been identified in plants which are homologous to those found in the nervous systems of animals. They also noted that neurotransmitters such as serotonin, dopamine, and glutamate have been found in plants, though their role remains unclear.”

According to Yale professor Clifford Slayman of the opposing camp: "Plant intelligence’ is a foolish distraction, not a new paradigm.”

Pollen writes:

“Many plant scientists have pushed back hard against the nascent field, beginning with a tart, dismissive letter in response to the Brenner manifesto, signed by thirty-six prominent plant scientists (Alpi et al., in the literature) and published in Trends in Plant Science. ‘We begin by stating simply that there is no evidence for structures such as neurons, synapses or a brain in plants,’ the authors wrote. No such claim had actually been made—the manifesto had spoken only of ‘homologous’ structures—but the use of the word ‘neurobiology’ in the absence of actual neurons was apparently more than many scientists could bear.”

Pollen surmises:

 “The controversy is less about the remarkable discoveries of recent plant science than about how to interpret and name them: whether behaviors observed in plants which look very much like learning, memory, decision-making, and intelligence deserve to be called by those terms or whether those words should be reserved exclusively for creatures with brains.”

Stefano Mancuso a plant scientist at the International Laboratory of Plant Neurobiology in Florence provides a different perspective and views plants as a “a great symbol of modernity” since they are

“organized around systems and technologies that are networked, decentralized, modular, reiterated, redundant—and green, able to nourish themselves on light…. their brainlessness turns out to be their strength, and perhaps the most valuable inspiration we can take from them.”

While I find the work on “plant intelligence” fascinating, labeling the field as “plant neurobiology” is clearly incorrect. Ramon y Cajal laid the foundation of modern neuroscience through his discovery of the neuron and the interconnectedness of neurons, a profound natural discovery now known as the “neuron doctrine”. Plants, though possibly intelligent (depending on the definition) have no neurons, a unique component of the animal nervous systems.

Perhaps the controversy should be viewed in a wider context. Plants are not animals, however, they certainly are more complex than previously believed. There should be a wider term that encompasses complex life that has arisen on Earth whether plant or animal. And, as Pollen notes, prepares us with a wider conception of intelligent life should we “contact” living things in other worlds.

As Pollan concludes, if you define “intelligent behavior” as “the ability to adapt to changing circumstances” then “plant intelligent behavior” should replace “plant neurobiology.” Even critic Slayman concedes: 

“Yes, I would argue that intelligent behavior is a property of life.”

John Oró, MD

Urban farm in the outer skin of Tokyo office building

"Pasona HQ is a nine story high, 215,000 square foot corporate office building for the Japanese recruitment company, Pasona Group, located in downtown Tokyo. It is a major renovation project consisting of a double-skin green facade, offices, an auditorium, cafeterias, a rooftop garden and most notably, urban farming facilities integrated within the building. The green space totals over 43,000 square feet with 200 species including fruits, vegetables and rice that are harvested, prepared and served at the cafeterias within the building.  It is the largest and most direct farm-to-table of its kind ever realized inside an office building in Japan."

Follow link to images: Pasona H.Q. Tokyo

Fair winds for wind power

Image: Alessio Sbarbaro 

Image: Alessio Sbarbaro 

"Wind power is now competitive with fossil fuels" writes Kiely Kroh and Jeff Spross for ThinkProgress

“We’re now seeing power agreements being signed with wind farms at as low as $25 per megawatt-hour,” Stephen Byrd, Morgan Stanley’s Head of North American Equity Research for Power & Utilities and Clean Energy, told the Columbia Energy Symposium in late November. Byrd explained that wind’s ongoing variable costs are negligible, which means an owner can bring down the cost of power purchase agreements by spreading the up-front investment over as many units as possible. As a result, larger wind farms in the Midwest are confronting coal plants in the Powder River Basin with “fairly vicious competition.” And even without the production tax credit, wind can still undercut many natural gas plants. A clear sign of its viability, wind power currently meets 25 percent of Iowa’s energy needs and is projected to reach a whopping 50 percent by 2018."

13 Major Clean Energy Breakthroughs Of 2013

Is the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010 killing Gulf of Mexico dolphins?

 Deepwater Horizon April 21, 2010. Image: United States Coast Guard

 Deepwater Horizon April 21, 2010. Image: United States Coast Guard

When the Deepwater Horizon exploded and collapsed in April 2010, it released of “an estimated 4.9 million barrels of oil into the northern Gulf of Mexico.” Fatal to 11 oil workers, injurious to others, and disruptive of the environment and fishing industry along the Louisiana and Mississippi coasts, the “largest accidental marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry” has for many of us, receded into the past. Its aftereffects, however, continue to reverberate and now pose a serious threat to dolphins in areas "that received heavy and prolonged oiling."  

According to a recent multicenter study published in Environmental Science & Technology, a “guarded” or “grave” prognosis has been given to 65% of the bottlenose dolphins studied in Barataria Bay, Lousiana. 

“The oil spill resulting from the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon drilling platform initiated immediate concern for marine wildlife, including common bottlenose dolphins in sensitive coastal habitats. To evaluate potential sublethal effects on dolphins, health assessments were conducted in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, an area that received heavy and prolonged oiling, and in a reference site, Sarasota Bay, Florida, where oil was not observed.” 

“Barataria Bay dolphins were 5 times more likely to have moderate–severe lung disease, generally characterized by significant alveolar interstitial syndrome, lung masses, and pulmonary consolidation. Of 29 dolphins evaluated from Barataria Bay, 48% were given a guarded or worse prognosis, and 17% were considered poor or grave, indicating that they were not expected to survive. Disease conditions in Barataria Bay dolphins were significantly greater in prevalence and severity than those in Sarasota Bay dolphins, as well as those previously reported in other wild dolphin populations. Many disease conditions observed in Barataria Bay dolphins are uncommon but consistent with petroleum hydrocarbon exposure and toxicity.” 

Source:  Health of Common Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, Following the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill

Related Article:  Focus on Ocean’s Health as Dolphin Deaths Soar