Monday, June 26, 2006

PC users 'want greener machines'

Consumers are willing to pay up to an extra £108 ($197) for a PC containing fewer chemicals, a survey has found. People also feel manufacturers should take responsibility for the disposal of old machines, the research shows. The study by Ipsos-Mori for Greenpeace coincides with an announcement by PC maker Dell to phase out a number of toxic chemicals in its products.

So-called e-waste is a growing global problem, with 30 million PCs being dumped each year in the US alone. See more details on my Corporate Social Responsibility blog.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

UN Decade of Education for Sustainable Development

From an interesting blog 'Industrial Ecology' -
The UN declared 2005-2014 to be the 'Decade of Education for Sustainable Development'

("Industrial Ecology is sometimes called 'the Science of Sustainability'. Although this might be too broad a definition, Industrial Ecology promotes a broad scientific solution to sustainability problems. This means that Industrial Ecologists tackle sustainability problems with a systems perspective using natural, social and technical science tools.")

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

UK has appointed a special representative on climate change

John Ashton, a diplomat and government adviser, will be charged with building new international partnerships to tackle climate change.

Recently Mr Ashton headed the Foreign and Commonwealth Office's (FCO)Environment, Science and Energy department, before leaving to form a new initiative called E3G, a 'change agency' that has brokered deals on climate and energy between developed and developing countries.

Friends of the Earth welcomed the move, saying "We welcome John Ashton in this role - he is a proven advocate with a track record in helping to move the global community forward on climate change, notably in terms of persuading Russia to ratify the Kyoto Protocol." But they added that Britain's ability to persuade other countries to curb emissions causing climate change is compromised by its own rising carbon dioxide emissions. "The impact of the government's advocacy with other countries would be very much enhanced if it was able to meet its own targets at home,"

Mr Ashton acknowledged this concern: "As a matter of diplomacy you can't go to countries like Brazil or India and say 'please do this' if you're not doing it yourself.

For a full report see the BBC here.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Al Gore appears at Cannes film festival

At the Cannes Film Festival, Former US vice-president Al Gore warned that the world is facing a "planetary emergency" due to global warming. A documentary based on the politician's environmental campaigning is being screened at the festival. Mr Gore said the world faced a stark choice between the end of civilisation and a future for its children and that global warming was a "challenge to our moral imagination to understand it and then to respond to it urgently".

The documentary An Inconvenient Truth is based on lectures Al Gore has been delivering about environmental crisis for many years. The film shows photographs of changes to glaciers around the world, with snow disappearing from the Alps, Antarctica and the South Pole.

"People have been moved by it," Mr Gore said. "People coming out feeling a sense of urgency." He stressed the problem was moral, not political, and said he hoped the current US government would re-think its environmental strategy and sign up to the successor to the Kyoto treaty. "I even believe that there is a chance that within the next two years even Bush and Cheney will be forced to change their position on this crisis," he said. "One can only attempt to create one's own reality for so long. Reality proper has a way of insisting itself upon you. Mother nature has joined this debate with a very powerful and persistent voice."

But he said he was not thinking of running for president in two years.
"I don't plan to be a candidate again for national office," he said. "There are other ways to serve."

From the BBC - see the full report here.

Saturday, May 20, 2006

Construction of China's Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River is expected to be completed today

When the whole project is finished in 2009 will be the world's biggest flood control and hydropower station. The final cost, estimated at US$10.8 billion in 1993, is expected to reach US$25 billion.

Environmentalists fear the project will cause severe pollution and silting by slowing the river's flow with waste from the remnants of abandoned factory sites, homes and hospitals.

For more mind-boggling facts about the dam see Reuters Planet Ark and the Three Gorges Project Corporation web site.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Biodiesel in Manchester, UK

Green Gold Biodiesel, the first and only forecourt in Manchester, UK selling biodiesel aims to have its first delivery of Pure 100% Biodiesel before theend of February.

In order to use the Pure 100 fuel, you must be a member ofthe biodiesel cooperative. The more members there are, the more fuel can be bought and the cheaper it will become. Membership brings several benefits including access to advice and information regarding biodiesel use, compatibility and technical issues. The station also offers Basic 5 (5% bio diesel) fuel that can be used by anyone.

Membership of Manchester Biodiesel Co-op is £10/year for individuals (up to three vehicles), £15/year for not for profit organisations (up to five vehicles), and£25/year for businesses(ten vehicles). To join, contact the Co-op directly.

Green Gold Biodiesel, 100 Fairfield Street, Manchester, M1 2WR, UK

telephone: +44 (0) 845 373 2769

e-mail: info@greengoldbiodiesel.co.uk

http://www.greengoldbiodiesel.co.uk

Coming soon to your computer screen - Green TV

From the blog of DeSmogBlog I found this item: Earth Day (March 20) will mark the launch of Green.tv.

According to Green TV Director James Arthur, Green.tv will be a broadband TV channel dedicated to environmental issues. It is also a charity endorsed by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), with support and films from environmental organisations around the world, including the European Environment Agency, the UK Environment Agency , Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

From What's New This Week from Japan for Sustainability (10 - 16 Jan. 2006):

Waste-to-Cement Material Recycling Project Awarded

The Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry announced the winners of the 2005 Awards for Resource-Recycling Technologies and Systems on October 7, 2005. With the aims to promote resource recycling by inviting and encouraging excellent businesses and initiatives that reduce waste generation, reuse used products, and use recycled resources effectively, the program has been conducted jointly by the ministry and the Clean Japan Center since 1975.

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All views expressed here, unless otherwise stated, are my own. John Cockaday