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For a Moment

John Kerry and Teresa Heinz Kerry chat about their new environmental book

By Amanda Griscom Little
29 Mar 2007
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The environment brought them together. And now, together, they've brought out a book on the environment. (No flip-flop jokes, please.)

John Kerry and Teresa Heinz Kerry
John Kerry and Teresa Heinz Kerry.
Photo: Diana Walker
John Kerry first met Teresa Heinz at an Earth Day rally in 1990. The two reconnected at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, and then, three years later, wed. He continued to focus on the environment as a Democratic senator from Massachusetts, earning the title "Environmental Hero" from the League of Conservation Voters, while she continued her work as chair of the Heinz Family Philanthropies, a major grant maker in the areas of health and the environment.

Now, having survived a failed presidential bid, the political power couple has refocused on the issue that inspires them both. Their new book, This Moment on Earth: Today's New Environmentalists and Their Vision for the Future, highlights more than a dozen grassroots activists, most of whom they encountered on the campaign trail in 2004. The book is emphatically optimistic about the green movement: "environmentalism isn't dead," they write, "it's just being reborn -- the very idea of what it means to be an 'environmentalist' is being revolutionized. People from all walks of life, without concern for party or ideological lines, are coming together in unprecedented numbers across the globe."

This Moment on Earth: Today's New Environmentalists and Their Vision for the Future
This Moment on Earth, by John Kerry and Teresa Heinz Kerry.
The duo introduce readers to people like Ellen Parker, a social worker from Cape Cod who battles cancer-linked pollutants, and Helen Reddout, an orchard owner in Washington state who struggles against fecal runoff from nearby dairy farms. Better-known figures like attorney and activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and green architect and designer Bill McDonough also make appearances. Throughout, the authors weave in their own experiences with the natural world -- from Heinz Kerry's childhood in the wilds of Mozambique to Sen. Kerry's environmental advocacy on Capitol Hill.

Last week they spoke with me from their home in Washington, D.C., about the characters in their book, their 2004 campaign experience, and the role the environment will play in the next presidential election.




question There are so many topics that you could have covered on the heels of your 2004 election experience. Why did you decide to focus on the environment?

answer John Kerry: It presents the most important challenges in front of us.

question Can you elaborate? There are certainly plenty of politicians and Americans who would argue that the war is the greatest challenge in front of us.

answer JK: Global climate change is a security issue on a planetary scale. There are millions of lives that may be impacted by it. But it's not just climate change that presents critical challenges -- it's overfishing, it's acidity in the oceans, it's the mercury in our lakes, streams, and rivers that contaminate our fish. What does it say about a country like ours when 40 percent of our rivers, lakes, and streams are too polluted for fishing or swimming? Our water bodies and air quality are challenged beyond any point in our history. It's a disgrace, and it's a challenge to all of us to get it right.

question Your book is very hopeful. What inspired you to write a hopeful book at a time when the challenges are so vast?

answer JK: This is not at all a Chicken Little doomsday deal. There are tremendous economic opportunities in addressing these problems, climate change in particular. Here you can improve the environment and public health, but also create jobs and strengthen national security. The potential economic byproducts of addressing this issue are enormous. Not only that, the tipping point is near.

Teresa Heinz Kerry: The 2004 election convinced both of us of the need to connect the dots for people -- between the threats, the solutions, and all the concerned citizens who are working to reverse our downward course. We met so many wonderful people while campaigning who were tackling all different kinds of environmental challenges, and creating solutions at a grassroots level. We were very moved by this hopeful surge of activism.

question Who were some of the most inspiring activists you met?

answer JK: The first story that comes to mind is that of Rick Dove, down in North Carolina. He's a 67-year-old Marine who became a fisherman in retirement with his son. They started developing lesions on their hands and loss of memory, as did other fishermen nearby. Suddenly they see literally tens of thousands of fish floating by over a period of time with sores on them, and they realized that this is all traceable back to the hog farming and the fecal matter that's being released straight into the river. So they take matters into their own hands -- challenging the authorities, enforcing the law, and holding people accountable. It's a wonderful story of a guy who had every right in the world to retire completely, but who sees a sense of duty, and responsibility, and goes out and does it. That's patriotism at its best.

THK: There's another interesting parallel to the Dove story. A few years back in the Chesapeake Bay area [of Maryland], pollution from local chicken farming triggered neurological problems -- paralysis and brain dysfunction -- among fishermen and boaters, and those affected mounted an impressive response. There are countless examples of people in different ways turning around what was illness, fear, and in some cases despair, into action that is very forceful, very practical, and quite successful.

But probably the most inspirational for me of them all is the one I've known the longest, which is Bill McDonough, a philosopher who dares to think beyond any normal constraint. He enlightened me to the connectedness of human health, the strength of our economy, and the well-being of our environment -- to the possibility of creating goods and services that simultaneously generate ecological, social, and economic value.

question The activists you spotlight embody what you call a "bottom-up" approach to environmental activism. You argue that it's more effective than a "top-down" approach. How so?

answer THK: Whenever we've had systemic and sustainable change in this country, it's because the grassroots has been ready to accept it. Top-down activity from the government cannot take root unless there's bottom-up acceptance. In other words, I don't think the feds can implement aggressive, massive change unless there's a readiness at the ground level. I think we're at that moment right now.

JK: You're going to have to do both. You can't deal with global climate change unless there's a government policy to have carbon priced, to have an economy-wide cap, to create incentives for capital to flow toward solutions. But the pressure to make all that happen is going to come more from the bottom up. That's what spurred the first environmental movement in the 1970s when we got the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, marine mammal protections, and all those other laws. We believe that a similar explosion of grassroots activity is happening today.

question It seems to me that the common thread that unites most of the activists you profile is environmental justice, and yet that term only comes up in a few instances in your book. Why did you decide not to use that as a unifying phrase?

answer JK: Many of the people we spoke with didn't consider themselves "environmentalists" or part of any particular movement -- they just thought they were making a commonsense choice between right and wrong. We'd ask, "Do you consider yourself an environmentalist?" And they'd invariably say, "Not really," or "No, I don't," or "I never think about it."

Ultimately, we believe, the labels are not important. In fact, the labels can sometimes get in the way -- they tend to polarize and isolate. What we want to do is prove that this is inclusive around a bigger set of values and principles that people can all embrace.

question There's an impression among many Americans that you have to be well-off to live an eco-friendly life -- to afford organic arugula, a Prius, energy-saving devices, and the like. You both have the resources to build a green home, but what would you say to people who don't?

answer JK: It is absolutely true that people with resources have an easier time making these choices. But economies of scale are going to push a lot of these things down in cost, and they'll become far more accessible. You watch -- you're gonna see Wal-Mart and Costco and a bunch of people selling many green products and energy-saving home retrofits at affordable prices before very long.

Even now, people have choices -- you may not necessarily go organic, but you can go local, which tends to be a lot cleaner and cuts down on the energy used to ship the produce from far-off places.

question Do you think the environment will play a greater role in the 2008 election than it did in 2004?

answer JK: Yes. We tried very hard [in 2004]. There wasn't one state where we didn't do a major environmental initiative of one kind or another. We did global warming, we did water quality, air quality, we did offshore drilling, wind farms, hog farms, energy independence. You name it, we did the issue. But the press didn't necessarily pick it up. On the heels of An Inconvenient Truth and the significant public awakening that it has sparked, I think the political climate has changed sufficiently that, indeed, this will probably be more of a cutting issue in 2008.

question Do you think that other candidates will, or should, follow John Edwards' lead in making his campaign carbon-neutral and proposing 80 percent CO2 cuts by 2050?

answer JK: I think a lot of the candidates have been taking stands on the climate issue. Hillary Clinton supports a carbon cap. [Barack] Obama supports a carbon cap -- I think he's joined on to the bill I introduced in February with [Sen.] Olympia Snowe [R-Maine], that calls for a 65 percent reduction in greenhouse gases below 2000 levels by 2050.

question Who do you see as the presidential candidate articulating the strongest environmental agenda?

answer JK: I'm not going to get into the presidential race right now. I will down the road probably articulate that, but at the moment, I just don't want to get involved in the '08 stuff.

question Can you tell us about your own personal connection to the environment, how you take steps to lighten your own environmental footprint?

answer JK: Well, we've become much more conscious of it in the last couple of years, although as many as 11 years ago we built our house with a lot of energy efficiency in mind. More recently, we've become much more conscious of the carbon imprint, and we buy carbon credits. We've also shifted to hybrid vehicles -- not all of our cars, but I have a hybrid here in Washington, we have a hybrid in Massachusetts, we have a hybrid at our home in Idaho. We've changed almost all of our light bulbs. We're looking at solar installation and wind installation -- localized to home power. And we're going to continue to move down that road, very aggressively.

THK: I know for me the hardest thing, and the one I'm trying to work the hardest on, that really would impact me, is my flying schedule -- how to do the meetings that I have to do via video conferencing, and do less flying. That's hard for me, but that's where I'm trying to make improvements.



Tools: print | email | discuss | write to the editor | subscribe | RSS
Amanda Griscom Little writes Grist's Muckraker column on environmental politics and policy and interviews green luminaries for the magazine. Her articles on energy and the environment have also appeared in publications ranging from Rolling Stone to The New York Times Magazine.
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Waving green flags.

We hear so much about the problems and about the heroes doing heroic things.  We hear about goals and legislation.  But we hear so little about believable solutions that will actually save our civilization.  

How are we going to heat whole cities, power our industries, light our homes, drive our cars, and so on without CO2 pollution?

Even if all coal power plants, new and old, used carbon sequestration we would only affect 30% of the problem.  How are we to reduce global fossil fuels combustion by 80%?  Where is the leadership on this problem?

waving green flags

sunflower:
You ask how we are going to continue our civilization without CO2 pollution.  The answer is that we, each and every one of us, needs to take responsibility for our part and act responsibly with what we can do.

First step: conserve.  For less than $250. you can change your lightbulbs (and turn them off) to CFLs and reduce your personal carbon footprint by 1.5 lbs. of CO2 per kWh of electricity saved.  Then look critically at the rest of your electrical usage: your coffepot, dishwasher, washer, dryer, refrigerator, water heater (basically everything) and turn it off, use it less, or replace it with a more efficient model.

When your kWh draw is as low as you can get it, then we can talk about generating your own electricity from the sun to cover your usage, or meeting your heating needs with solar.  When you take the last step, you've done YOUR part and it'll be up to the rest of us to do ours.

Green Flag credentials...

I live in a passive solar plus firewood home constructed from recycled materials, carpool in a Prius, grow my own food, eat organic, don't fly, use swirl lights, preserve forests, develop low-carbon energy technology, and I advocate hope whenever possible.  But this is not about me.  I'm going to die.  The survival of civilization is the issue.

My neighbors around the world are too busy struggling for existence to follow a volunteer carbon mitigated lifestyle.  And pinning our hopes on such human behavior is not believable.  

The question for John and Teresa Heinz Kerry and their readership is:  Where is the leadership for believable solutions to global warming?

John Kerry's comments

I agree that the average person does not have the resources to build a Green home or replace their present vehicle and we all just can't wait until Walmart and Costco and the rest bring the prices down. There are numerous small things that can be done.
My husband doesn't know how to turn off a light. If you have someone like that in your house, take the time to do it for them!
Stop using synthetic fertilizers on your lawn, the organic ones are much cheaper now plus you will improve your soil so much that it will not need all that fertilizer. It will also require a lot less water!
Instead of spraying pesticides, try some beneficial insects and some home rememdies. You wouldn't believe what is in your kitchen that you can use without harming the environment. There is one solution of baking soda and water that does a real job on moss. Vinegar with lemon or orange oil and some dish detergent sprayed on weed leaves will kill them. Corn Gluten which can be eaten is a great pre-emergence. These things are so safe, your kids and pets can walk on them.
Instead of putting in a ton of annual flowers that need lots of water, put in native perennial plants.
Make a compost pile. A great deal of your kitchen garbage can go in it along with leaves,etc. from your yard. After it turns to 'black gold'...put in on your yard or flower beds.
If you have a depression in your yard, don't fill it in...turn it into a rain garden.
There are many things you can do aside from recycle & re-use...don't wait to build a 'green house'or have the money to switch over to solar or other large ticket item...every little thing helps...start small and you can start now!

GJC - Environmental Habitats and Landscape Solutions
The Kerrys are great: Act, no more writing

Love the Kerrys -- but hope they are using their considerable assets to address the fundamental issues of global warming.

How can we get the oil, coal, natural gas companies to retool to use non-carbon energy sources: solar, wind, geothermal?

They win, we win-- and we get to keep living on the planet!

Fun, fast online quiz about global warming. Do you know what's happening?
http://www.audubon.org/globalWarming/quiz1.php

57 Varieties of Carbon Production


You've got to be kidding.   The hieress of a billionaire food manufacturer's fortune?

You have the nerve to call these people "green"?

I'm surprised you didn't get any mayonaisse banner ads from it, Grist.

Texeme.Construct(Participant)

Re: "57 Varieties" comment

Hmm. For someone whose sigline implies that they know something about the value of intelligent text memes, jbailo, that is a profoundly thick-headed and meaningless comment.

Yes, it is true that Teresa Heinz Kerry's late husband, Senator Henry Heinz (R-PA), was an heir to the Heinz family of, among many other things, ketchup-making fame.

That particular biographical factoid is, though, completely and totally irrelevant to anything discussed in this article or in the book on environmental activism that she co-wrote with her current husband, Senator John Kerry (D-MA).

Teresa Heinz Kerry has been an ardent environmentalist activist for her entire public life (as, for that matter, has Senator Kerry). She has a great deal of well-established credibility on this subject.

Your off-topic (and, by the way, misspelled) reference to her being a Heinz family inheritor -- as though that had some meaning in this context outside of a self-serving effort to slip in a bit of gratuitous snarkasm on your part -- clearly indicates that you, however, do not.

Hold On For A Moment Before Praising Heinz

Teresa Heinz is certainly a force in the environmental community.  

However I am cynical about her environmentalism.  While in this book she and Senator Kerry embrace the grassroots, my impression is that much of her funding and energy has gone to centrist elite environmentalism as exemplified by her long term association as a board member (even vice-chair of the group for a period) and major financial supporter of Environmental Defense (Fund), to be termed E.D. below.  

I and others have written critically of the E.D. for many of its stances which have been at odds with grassroots environmentalists.  For example, support of NAFTA and utility deregulation which placed it in league with other elite corporate-linked environmental groups but at odds with the grassroots.

You can see my website which has been moribund for sometime -- http://www.NonprofitWatch.org -- for an extended but several years old critique of E.D.  in regards to a controversial global warming agenda which even engendered criticism from NRDC.  Moreover, in that report I noted some of the group's conflicted and eco-creepy board members such as a lawyer who had personally defended International Paper for polluting Lake Champlain.  The guy was no Erin Brokovich.

Also, you'll find a brief critique of Heinz in regards to her close tie with Ken Lay while E.D. pursued policies favorable to Enron's interests.  This brief was released after Enron had fallen and when it appeared that Kerry's presidential run was about to die before the Iowa primary.  At the time he was criticizing Bush about deregulation and the California energy debacle -- a point upon which I agreed with him; however I also noted that I believed Heinz bore culpability as well regarding the California fiasco on account of E.D.'s advocacy for policies that benefitted Enron.

PR Watch a.k.a. the Center for Media and Democracy has also generated criticism of Teresa's favorite environmental group E.D. -- I term it her favorite group on account of the vast support it has received from her foundations and her role as a board member.  See http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Environmental_ ...

The grassroots-oriented Environmental Research Foundation which has published Rachel's Democracy & Health News has been also quite critical of Environmental Defense.  Carry out a search with the term "environmental defense" at the project's website http://www.rachel.org and you'll find numerous newsletters with criticism of E.D..

I apologize for not posting this sooner.  Perhaps the powers that be at Grist will keep this article on the front page through Monday so others will see my comment and be able to respond to it.  

I should mention E.D.'s advocacy for nuclear power -- an energy source disdained by the grassroots.

In the past I made several inquiries of Teresa Heinz's office for how much money Ken Lay had donated to the Heinz Center for Science, Environment and Economics of which he was a founding board member; a position he held for almost a decade.  This information was never shared. Perhaps Grist could inquire?

tu quoque

Your rebuttal is a fallacy.  Even if the Kerry's were environmental terrorists, it doesn't weaken their argument in the least on any rational level.

Kerry's Opportunity - Environment & 2008 Elect

It is wonderful that Senator Kerry and his wife Teresa are putting such a focus on environment right now. However, I cannot stop thinking that what they are doing is just not enough. Unfortunately, when John Kerry ran for President he did not put enough of a focus on the environment and on the need for sustainable development to make it a primary issue in the campaign; and personally I believe it cost him the Presidency. And it will probably cost our country far more than that over the long run too.

But it is not too late for the two of them to help us turn our country around. For the past five years I have worked on the development of a US Campaign for Leadership on Sustainability, based on the idea that we all need to join together to figure out how we can make a rapid transition to a fully sustainable future before it is too late. I went to Boston for the Democratic Convention to try to get Senator Kerry to embrace this effort, but with no success.

During the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002 all of the UN Member States agreed not only to create National Strategies for Sustainability but also to begin to implement them by 2005. The Clinton Administration took some first steps in this direction in response to the 1992 Rio Earth Summit with the work of the President's Council on Sustainable Development, but nothing has been done on this since. I thus spoke with John and Teresa's son Andre in Boston and asked him to talk with them about this commitment and make it a part of Senator Kerry's Presidential Campaign.

Unfortunately, it never happened; but it may not be too late now. If Senator Kerry would introduce a bill in Congress that would require the US government to create and implement a National Strategy for Sustainability and to fulfill the Bush Administration's global commitment, then we may be able to make this an issue in the Presidential Campaign and be able to get a good number of the candidates to agree to support and work on it. Certainly John Kerry has the stature and visibility to put this matter on the table now; and to be able to convince the people, as well as the politicians, that it is something that we just have to deal with.

If anyone is willing to help me work on this, you contact me, Rob Wheeler, at rob@wmgd.net and robineagle@worldcitizen.org or call 717-264-5036.

Thank you,

Rob Wheeler
US Citizens Network for Sustainable Development
World Movement for Global Democracy

My 2 cents

I'm very proud to find another American with political roots that sounds like a stand up guy. I was beginning to think it was an extinct species. Bravo John & Teresa Kerry.
www.okiespotlight.com

One More Thing

I'm an Oklahoman who has been learning how to fight political corruption which allows unimaginable pollution of our ground water for about 9 or 10 months now.
I've had absolutely no help at all from a state government which is totally sold out to oil money. If you knew the right people to ask and they would tell you the truth you'd find out that I've had these people on the ropes and done more to change our situation from behind this keyboard then all the environmental activist with lawyers in tow have for the last 50 years.

I've done it by research and educating people and as John Kerry says creating a grass roots movement because hey .... if the people don't move .... things don't happen. They have to be motivated with truth about what we've done and allowed to be done to our environment.
Anyone with a tug at their heart and an extra cup of coffee can make a difference one phone call at a time ... one email at a time multiplied X 10,000 really adds up.
When folks start seeing that they can make a difference like that then they begin to wake up and get green as you guys refer to it .... And that's what needs to happen.
Leave the rest to American ingenuity .... Leave the problems of the energy needs to the problem solvers but first ..... WAKE THEM UP ..... AND GET THEM GOING .... GET THEM INVOLVED .
...... The way I understand it our population is pretty much an over the hill gang and that's good because those guys have left their youth and ignorance behind them and they have the ability to see the what the future needs to hold.
They have the tools to create the needed changes.

I've only recently taken time to look you green types up and read your thoughts. Boom here's the first problem I see with most of you.
Whether or not Al Gore gets solar panels and trades his Lexus for a bicycle will have absolutely 0 impact on our environment in itself. John & Teresa Hines Kerry being rich or poor will have no effect at all in solving our problems.
If they gave all their money away tomorrow for some type of environmental remediation it would only be a flash in the pan and no more.
What Teresa Kerry does have .... what John Kerry ... and Al Gore both have are good hearts and life's largely dedicated toward our planet but more importantly .... toward our people ... our youth ... and our future.
Anything more than that .... anything past a good heart .... to me is kind of like add on options that make the people who steer the good heart ... more comfortable in the journey.
It just means that they have more means at their disposal ........... more time to take the heart places that it can make a difference.  If the vehicle they arrive in is without the good heart ....... then the journey is not truly a journey of the heart but simply a long weary road with no reward at the end.
So you have to ask yourself this question ..... why would they waste there time if their heart was not in their struggle?
Why bother? And if they let people who always look for fault take their money and try their hand ... what would they do? Where does their heart seem to be? If I can ever find a politician in Oklahoma who is willing to stand up and tell the truth and fight for justice I'll guarantee you the last thing I'll ever do is say one bad word much less slam him.
I guess I've gone a little past the two cents thing now ... but that's how I feel. It's not about money or how much of it anyone has ..... it's not about where you are in your green journey ...... it's about the fact that you are on the road with no looking back .... Gaining ground everyday. God speed to those people.  
WWW.OKIESPOTLIGHT.COM


Global Warming

Why is it that there are two "New" inventions that no one is willing to put into the forefront as something that will work.  One is generating your own electricity with propane, oil,soybean or corn oil, etc and producing water as the emission - which can be consumed.  Two is the water engine.  The hydro engine that runs on water by burning the hydrogen and emitting water.  If there was enough grass roots behind these two inventions, we would cut green house gasses tremendiously.  Why are we letting these wonderful things fade into the background.  We as the Grass roots should be demanding such innovations.

Running on water

RedClay, "the hydro engine that runs on water"?  C'mon now, get a grip on reality.  If you believe in that, then I have a bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.

Most Grist readers are savvy enough to understand that hydrogen, as in H2 molecules, as in the potential basis of a 'hydrogen economy', has promising potential as an energy storage and transport medium, but it is not some miraculous energy resource.  

Anyone who paid attention in high school chemistry knows it requires a large amount of energy to liberate hydrogen gas from water.  So where will your hydro engine get that energy to produce H2?  From hydrogen gas?  Congratulations, it sounds like you've just invented a perpetual motion machine.

I personally think hydrogen does have great potential down the line as a means of storing energy generated in one location (e.g. wind farms) and transporting it elsewhere where it can be used for other applications (e.g. hydrogen fuel cell vehicles).  Which, as your post suggests, would generate only water as a 'pollutant'.  However, ultimately, such a vehicle's energy would come from the wind.

How Did You Say To Saddle This Dinosaur?

I¡¦m with you at that. I¡¦m thinking the same thing.
Here are some other thoughts I¡¦ve had a time or two. I keep believing that someday I¡¦ll hear someone speaking intelligently about turning the billions of tons of trash we bury every day into something we can burn for fuel since we can¡¦t seem to talk people into recycling.
Couldn¡¦t we do that?
I mean it might not be the most cost effective source of alternative energy at first glance but as a bird killer it looks to get 3 or 4 with one stone so that has to count for something.

#1 Free fuel for some power plant if subsidies account for processing costs.
#2 No more ground pollution to come back and haunt us as a Super Fund issue 50 years from now. (also plenty of emergency caches already on deposit :-)
#3 Consumers save a ton of money on garbage bills that they can spend in the market place and cities actually make money hauling off trash.
#4 If successful on a large scale we can stop rooting around in mother earth and destroying the foundation we call home for coal.
#5 Very low transportation costs from fuel source to market.
#6 I would think smaller more independent plants with less need for huge distribution system and hence less energy loss and that would definitely make for conservation.
As a citizen I would vote for all kinds of tax free stuff and subsidies to support that.

That's all I can think of for right now. I know turning trash into treasure is not nearly as glorious as getting a multitude of corporate executives to lay down their bow and arrows and smoke the piece pipe ... and .... we would have to wear gloves and not pinky rings ... but I think it would work. But what do I know?

Didn't they laugh at the leap thinker that dreamed up Star Wars which eventually brought about the end of the cold war? Haven't we now decided that we have the ability to do that if we desire? I think I read in a book somewhere that man can do anything he sets his mind to do.
Seems to me that we need to quit polishing our business etiquette and start thinking about each other instead of how to outwit our financial selves. Maybe if we hired some good old fashioned slick talking con artists to convince the oil companies to invest in this
http://www.okiespotlight.com/audio/WaterFuel.wmv as a new energy industry before someone else does then they can save the hard to reach oil still down there as a retirement plan.

After all it should take hundreds of year to get away from all the petroleum related products we now use that are low carbon generators. That is unless Captain Kirk jumps back in time and leaves a few replicators for reproduction.

I'm not very smart but it just seems to me most green types seem to be centered around finances and not futuristic thinking. It may be that everyone is hypnotized into believing that we're going to be designing new saddles for the same old dinosaur from now on.
It looks like these guys are really scared of their own shadows. I mean who's the competition? Wouldn't there be more gravy in getting water virtually free and turning it into money more or less?
Who could compete with the oil industry in that win, win, win endeavor? They already have the distribution system for the new hydrogen fuels ... the trained transportation specialists.... the refinery building expertise of unparalleled craftsmen to take us into a new green age with the profits largely going to them and them alone.  

What in the world are they scared of? Those guys are the real Chicken Little's and they can't seem to understand that. Go figure.
I'll tell you one thing that I know for postitive sure. If Pandora's box really did let evil into the world then it was because we didn't want to learn to think outside the box after we got here.


Top 100 new energy technologies

Any one that wants to see a listing and description of the top 100 new energy technologies, many of which are price competitive and being implemented now can go to:

www.peswiki.com/index.php/Congress:Top_100_Technologies_--_RD

And

www.peswiki.com/index.php/New_Energy_Congress

Enjoy the reading.

Rob

Thanks Rob!

That's some pretty neat stuff. I especially like the geothermal oil well concept. If we can get the Oklahoma Mafia to quit polluting our aquifers we're saved.
Oklahoma has dilled over 450,000 oil wells and as far as I can tell not one abandoned well has ever been found to have been plugged as the law requires. That should save a bundle on opening them up for retooling. Thanks again, Mark H.


I cannot take Teresa Heinz Kerry seriously.

If she has any influence in the Heinz company, and truly cares about the environment, the best thing she can do is remove the high fructose corn syrup from the Heinz Ketchup. This pesticide is as bad for you as mecury or any of the others, yet it's included on the list of ingredients in Heinz Ketchup.

If you need proof, look at the back of the bottle and read the ingredients for yourself. If she is serious, she will look into this along with Mr. Kerry.

If she has no influence over what is put in the Heinz products, she should say so in her next interview. I've boycotted all products with high fructose corn syrup in them. High fructose corn syrup raises health care expenses for our nation, and is the main cause behind the obesity problems.

It makes no sense, to worry about pesticides in fisheries, if we don't even have clean food and water. If Teresa Heinz Kerry is serious, she should be the person to address this issue or at least take a leadership position and tell us what we can do.

By the way

Heinz Organic Ketchup does exist, so this is not an attack on the Heinz company. However, Heinz is not a green company. Any company which sells products with any pesticides in it, cannot be considered a green company.


Designing is the key

Actually there are engines which run on air, there are engines which run on water, there are engines which run on electricity, there are engines which run on human waste. We could create a urine powered engine if we wanted to.

It's not that the technology does not exist, it's more that the industry behind the technology does not exist, and the organization does not exist.

If you are going to create new industries, new economic eco-systems, you need a 10 year plan, and you need to meet at summits, and discuss that 10 year plan, then execute the 10 year plan locally.

Each technology connects to each other like a large puzzle in an eco-system, and until someone figures how it all connects together and creates a plan it's going to be difficult to connect it all.

Then after it's all connected, stragetically, and the eco-system is defined, you still have to finance it, so it's going to take billions of finance dollars to get the ball rolling. Finally once the ball is rolling, then consumer demand will pick up.

I think solar is the easiest place to start, and I think all houses should be built with solar panels built it. This would mean architects and home builders, people who design and build homes, have to actually start building with eco-friendly designs in the first place. I'm still seeing houses built with designs that were created 100 years ago. The houses are not modern enough for our century, and this is why it's difficult to solve the climate change problem.

When you buy a new house, it should have all of this stuff built in by default, just like every house has a bathroom, toilet, shower, all of that is expected. Each house should also have solar energy panels and be designed to blend in with the land itself.

The cheap urban designs, are part of the reasons why we have ghettos in the first place. If we stop designing ghettos, we won't have them. This means we have to design communities again, and focus on efficiency.


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