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You're Fired ... and Iced

Photos of Iceland reveal a land of extremes


06 Apr 2005
Read more about: Iceland
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In case you haven't heard, we're giving away a trip to Iceland. As a result, this photo essay is a bit of a divergence from our usual tough-as-nails coverage, wherein the prettiest pictures we run are of, well, politicians. But we're not just shilling here -- Iceland is a hotbed of Grist-worthy news.

Iceland is known as the land of fire and ice thanks to dramatic glaciers and volcanoes, but recently the country's reputation has been running hot and cold among environmentalists, too. In 2003, the country raised hackles by rejecting an international ban on commercial whaling, a practice the government defended as important to scientific advancement. That same year, Iceland earned global kudos by opening the world's first hydrogen-fuel filling station -- a concrete step in a sweeping and much-praised project to shift the entire country to hydrogen-based energy over the next few decades.

Even that clean-energy dream finds its foes. Some local environmentalists say harnessing the country's waters to create hydrogen will destroy unparalleled landscapes and decimate biodiversity. Now, a high-profile dam-construction project that will flood the nation's wild eastern highlands to power an aluminum smelter has awakened activists around the world. While that battle rages, there's climate change to think about, and its impact on the glaciers that make Iceland, well, icy.

In short, this land of ecological wonders has become a land of ecological wondering. These glimpses by Minneapolis-based photographer Layne Kennedy offer a sense of what's at stake.

Click here to see the photo gallery.

Read more about: Iceland
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Hydrogen in Iceland

Sorry but I am afraid that we here in Iceland are not building dams to get electricity to produce hydrogen.  No.  We are sinking land for an aluminum smelter by Alcoa and we are giving away our energy.  The economics of the dam is daubtful to say no more.

I would give these dams a chance if we had plans to use the energy to produce hydrogen fuel.

Atually I have to mention that we do not burn coal or gas to produce the electricity for aluminum smelters.  We use hydropower or geothermal energy to make electricity.

Im sorry to say that the government of Iceland is trying to get more aluminum smelters here and to give away more energy (toooo low price) to international companies.

Still we have lots of clean air and refreshing wind.
Come see us.

Johannes Arnason Akureyri Iceland

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