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February 29, 2008

Follow the Green

Who has raised the most money in the exciting and nail-biting Presidential campaign so far?  A new cool widget from the award-winning Money and Politics mashup MAPLight lets you follow the money up close. It updates automatically at the end of every month. Now that is the kind of widget I like.



Looking at this data makes me wonder a few things. Does the candidate who raises the most money automatically win?  Should they or not?  I don't think it should be all about the money. Second, should it cost this much money to run for office. And where does all of this money go. What is the opportunity cost of this money?  And who is hoping for an unspoken in when the campaign is over?  See www.maplight.org for more intriguing links between money and politics.

We, the individuals and the companies, are often asked to pay for these campaigns out of our own pockets, and the contributions are not tax-deductible. Imagine if a number of TV ads were free to presidential candidates who met a certain threshold. Imagine if these hundreds of millions of dollars were invested in schools, in the environment, in our country instead of in media ads.

Some people tell me that public financing for public elections will never work because if you create a rule, the special interest money will just pop up in another place and be even harder to track. I don't think that should stop us. Clean elections are working well in Arizona and Maine. See Public Campaign and the Public Campaign Action Fund for more mouth-watering details about the future of clean elections around the country. Imagine if elected officials could spend less time fundraising and more time governing for the people by the people. Let's dream this dream.

Who is the best presidential candidate on the environment?  Let's look at the records. Here are some eye-opening links:

Grist Compare the Candidates - Grist goes the green political distance

League of Conservation Voters National Scorecard - how is it possible that John McCain received a 0% score in 2007 for missing every environmental vote, including a critical one on repealing tax breaks for oil companies (they need tax breaks?) where he would have been the decider.

CLCV California Environmental Scorecard 2007 which shows the average Assembly Republican score of 5% pro-green and the average Assembly Democrat score of 94% pro-green. Is the environment really still such a partisan issue?  We have to get beyond this to create a green economy and sustainable future for all.

CLCV Candidates Positions on Global Warming with enlightening answers by two big names. I see pledges of an 80% target reduction in greenhouse gases by 2050. Now that is straight talk I like.

Let's follow the green all the way to the big office. And I don't mean money.

Heart of Green is a nonpartisan, independent web site focused on all things green.

February 27, 2008

Missy Takes The Green Wheel

Missy_higgins_album_cover_3 Who is the fairest green rock star of them all?  Incubus, Maroon 5, and Coldplay have all been vying for the prize.

Now here comes the talented Aussie breakout singer songwriter Missy Higgins who just released her new album On a Clear Night from Warner Bros. A sensation in Australia, the newly-transplanted Los Angeles resident is now taking the U.S. by storm.

Missy Higgins is clearly a contender for the eco-heavyweight title of greenest female rock star: Miss Green. In late 2007, she traveled across America in a silver Prius, the new-new tour bus, and played to sold-out audiences on her Green Tour. Was the Prius pimped out is my question? 

You can watch all of her hybrid-cruising action in the documentary video series Missy Takes The Wheel. And the microphone. Nice shot of the Golden Gate Bridge, and love her accent!  Watch the excellent Video Trailer and check out the full widget.

On the road, Missy visited many environmental scientists, green schools, and green hotels, i.e. this is not just a Prius shell game. She wants to sing big but tread lightly on the Earth. Her interest in the planet is as real as her passionate singing. Speaking of, I am wild about her songs "Where I Stood" and "Steer". The latter is the best traveling-in-a-Prius music I’ve heard in a long time.

Soak it all up on www.missyhiggins.com

February 26, 2008

Green Oscar Party is Golden

Sh2 The eco-celebrities shined brighter than a solar thermal plant. The green Oscar message was not overshadowed by the lunar eclipse. The Prius car limo line was around the block not idling. The eco-stylish crowd partied hard for the planet while rocking out to the most in-demand musicians in the biz.

The Global Green pre-Oscar Party on Wednesday night at the Avalon Theater in LA was the hottest event to cool global warming ever.

Salma Hayek was ravishing on the green carpet in an eco-fashionable Stella McCartney suit. One of the biggest green-minded Hollywood stars, Entourage's Adrian Grenier spoke of his recent trip to visit the Achuar in Peru. I have tremendous respect for how Adrian is going deep into the most pressing environmental issues of our time - changing a light bulb yes, but also protecting endangered forests in Canada, indigenous peoples, fresh water, and more. Watch this Adrian Grenier interview about him going green at the 11th Hour premiere. He is also investigating media culture, wink. You were warned. Adrian Grenier and his very cool producing partner Peter Glatzer at Reconcile are filming a new series called The Green Life for the Discovery Channel.

Bill Maher charmed the crowd as only he can. Fresh from an eco-trip to Alaska, Q’orianka Kilcher was stunning in a reincarnated gown of her own creation. Jason Lewis dished on his passion for green but not on The Sex & The City movie details. Tate Donovan biked up to the paparazzi line but didn’t run them over.

It was truly a supernatural night for music on the main stage. Damien Rice delivered a soaring rendition of Blower’s Daughter and other classics. The now Oscar-winning duo, Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova of The Swell Season brought down the house with Falling Slowly. Featured in the movie Once, this pair and their music are unforgettable. One of the best films of the year without a doubt. Congratulations to them!

One of my favorite artists on the planet, Michelle Branch sang her top songs to adoring fans. The full band was in the house. We joked that I was now listening to Michelle Branch YouTube Radio on my computer because I play her videos in the background while working. Is this legal I wonder?

The new planet-conscious, organic LIVE energy drink launched at the party with much fanfare. An unprecedented 50% of LIVE's profits go to charity including many environmental organizations. No, this is not a scam. This is the vision of founder and social entrepreneur Wilson Ling, who wants to help the planet now and doesn’t want to have to become a billionaire first. Smart man. www.drinklive.org

Josie Sports Illustrated model and eco-fashionista Josie Maran was on hand showcasing her new fabulous line of natural sparkling cosmetics, also featured in this month’s green issue of Domino Magazine. Josie Maran Cosmetics are packaged in biodegradable PLA cases that are simply glamorous, far more glamorous than most non-eco cases I must say. After a try-on session in the ladies room, we decided that the limited edition Powder Palette and the Optimism lip gloss were must-haves. As Josie says, this is eco-beauty without the baggage. Available at Barney’s counters or online at www.josiemarancosmetics.com

Celebrity photographer Sebastian Copeland made a passionate plea to the audience to go home later that night, or the next morning more likely, and find 1 or 5 things in their lives to greenify. He spoke of his moving trip to the polar ice caps. See his epic Antarctica: The Global Warning Book. The Global Green party raised over $400,000 to benefit Global Green’s climate change initiatives including green schools, green affordable housing, and the green rebuilding of New Orleans, the latter being one of the brightest rays of hope in a still torn-up region. Global Green's Red Carpet/Green Cars campaign kicked off with the Tesla Roadster EV and the Fisker Karma on display. The clean car caravan of stars continued on Oscar day. Clearly, now is the time to act green.

In addition to organic foods, organic beverages, and sustainable lounges, the whole party was climate offset by Climate Clean. Real stars go climate neutral.

Until next year, keep on rocking the green lifestyle, one eco-footprint at a time. And smile because you never know when a reporter on the green carpet is going to strike.  www.globalgreen.org

Clean Air Awards are coming

Sky Do you know someone who has made the air we breathe in the Bay Area cleaner and better for all?  Don’t wait, nominate them for a Clean Air Award by the deadline of March 14, 2008.

Hosted by the 100-year-old Breathe California organization, the Clean Air Awards honor businesses, organizations, and individuals who are committed to improving air quality and reducing global warming. Breathe California is the oldest voluntary health organization in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Bookmark the date April 18, 2008 for the Clean Air Awards Ceremony 2008 in The Carnelian Room in San Francisco with a spectacular view and a special keynote address by Mary Nichols, the new chairman of the influential California Air Resources Board (CARB).  www.cleanairawards.org

As a Clean Air Award winner in Public Awareness for Heart of Green, I will be participating again year. I look forward to Mary Nichol’s remarks on how the state of California is addressing global warming. I encourage Heart of Green readers to submit nominations and look forward to seeing you at the luncheon above the clouds.

And remember, if you are sitting in traffic and you are bored, you can always spice things up by reporting cars with dirty exhaust to the 1-800-EXHAUST line or online at www.800exhaust.org. It is less dangerous than texting; just don’t let the offending car see you memorizing their license plate.

February 25, 2008

Where is the Green Beef?

Cow3_2 Last week the largest beef recall in US history occurred. 143 million pounds of beef from the Westland/Hallmark Meat Co. of Chino, California, a third of which went to the national school lunch programs and another hunk to In-N-Out.

“Where are the inspectors? There are not enough USDA inspectors!” everyone shouted. But I am going to argue that no number of inspectors would have helped in the long run. Because those cows aren’t green. They are a mess.

There is a critical detail about this scandal that is not being reported - the cow’s diet. Corn. Mounds of cheap corn. Corn that cows are force-fed in industrial feedlots. Corn that the cows are completely allergic to and makes them sick. So sick that they fall down and can’t walk to their fate.

Cows are grass-eaters. They cannot digest corn. Ruminants is the technical term. Yet, they are forced to eat corn through tubes in feedlot operations. And they get really, really sick as a result. Antibiotics to the rescue. Drugs for all of the cows. Drugs that make their way into our systems when we eat the meat and drink the milk. Overuse of antibiotics that leads to drug-resistant superbugs no doubt. Drugs or no drugs, these cows are more likely to contract and transfer E. coli because their stomachs are too acidic from the corn. I don’t know about you, but I am losing my appetite.

How did we get here? These anti-green, unsanitary, and inhumane conditions are the result of one small change in the farm bill in the 1970s. Policy matters. Government incentives determine what the country eats. Before 1973, the government propped up a target market price for corn by buying up surpluses and offering farmers loans to delay selling. In the 1973 Farm Bill, everything changed. Direct payments were instituted. Farmers were paid for every bushel of corn they could produce, and so they produced a lot. Bushels and bushels and bushels of kernels.

The plague of cheap corn began. Corn became the backbone of our processed food system. High-fructose corn syrup, fructose, malodextrin, xanthan gum, and more. In 1984, Coke and Pepsi switched from sugar to high-fructose corn syrup because it was cheaper. Coca Cola is essentially liquid corn.

Factory farms switched from feeding their cows grass to feeding them indigestible, inexpensive corn. The cows became ill. The cows fell down at feedlots like Westland/Hallmark and were prodded with sticks. This is not an isolated incident. This is an epidemic.

At the same time, the nation’s obesity rated shot up. The government is subsidizing cheap corn and therefore, cheap fast foods. This is why a Big Mac is cheap and an organic salad is not.

What are the green solutions?  Where's the green beef?  First, we need a new Farm Bill that encourages fresh and organic foods. Second, we can eat Grass-Fed Beef from pastoral farms where cows still roam free and graze on their natural grass. This is the way Mother Nature intended. Ask for grass-fed beef at your local stores and restaurants. It is healthier with 35% less saturated fat and more natural vitamins and omega-3s. You can taste the difference too. Excellent sources of green beef include:

Niman Ranch

Marin Sun Farms

Paicines Ranch

Vermont Natural Beef

The pivotal books on this beefy subject are Michael Pollan’s riveting The Omnivore's Dilemma and In Defense of Food. He makes the best case for eating whole foods as close to how nature intended as possible.

We are what our animals eat and what is in our soil. In the old days, we put cows out to pasture in the morning, and they would come back home to the barn in the evening to be milked. Let’s modernize the Farm Bill and get back to our grass-fed roots. Otherwise, we are going to be facing similar beef recall and health problems until the cows come home. 

February 18, 2008

Global Green Oscar Party

You are invited to party for the planet like a rock star at Global Green's popular Pre-Oscar Party in Hollywood.

Global Green Pre-Oscar Party

Ggo_2

WHEN:
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
8:00 pm
Green Carpet Arrivals

WHERE:
Avalon Hollywood Theater
1735 Vine Street
Hollywood, CA 90028

HONORARY HOSTS:
Penelope Cruz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Salma Hayek, Orlando Bloom, Kate Bosworth, Q'orianka Kilcher, Matt Petersen

FEATURING:

  • Live Musical Performances including Michelle Branch
  • Celebrity Guests
  • Festive Hosted Cocktail Party
  • Organic Cocktails and Wine
  • Eco-Design Lounge
  • Smart Solutions to Global Warming

TICKETS:
Ggoscars_2 All proceeds benefit the nonprofit Global Green and their efforts to fight global warming and rebuild New Orleans green.

$250 Event Ticket
$1,000 Premier with Reserved Table Seating & Premium Bottle Service
$5,000 Patron Sponsor with 2 Patron Lounge tickets & Green Carpet Entrance

RSVP Required:
Tickets are going quickly, please rsvp here:
www.globalgreen.org/oscars

INQUIRIES: Please call 310-876-1703

GLOBAL GREEN:
The proceeds from the event will support Global Green's work on Green Schools in Los Angeles, California and New Orleans, as well as their Green Affordable Housing Initiative, Climate Solutions for Communities project, and their efforts to lead the Green Rebuilding of New Orleans visible at holycrossproject.globalgreen.org. More information at www.globalgreen.org

Wildlife Works Spring Collection

Imagine looking eco-good and helping to save wild things simultaneously.

Stop by the Wildlife Works eco-boutique on Union Street in San Francisco for a sneak peak and fashion show of the much-anticipated Spring Collections of eco-fashion designer labels Wildlife Works and Del Forte Denim. I’ve seen a preview of some of the items and let me just say, they are gorgeous!

Eco-Fashion Spring Collections Party

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WHEN:
Friday, February 29, 2008
7 pm - 10 pm

WHERE:
Wildlife Works Boutique (100% Eco-Chic Fashion)
1849 Union Street at Laguna
San Francisco, CA 94123

FEATURING:

  • Trunk Show of new Spring Collections
  • Launch of Wildlife Works designer Black Label from London
  • Del Forte Denim
  • Micro Fashion Show
  • DJ Music
  • Green Zebra
  • Eco-Raffle for Prizes

Inquiries:
store at wildlifeworks dot com
415.738.8544

WILDLIFE WORKS:
Designed in London, the new Wildlife Works Designer Black Label features an inspired collection of innovative, flirty pieces that are both chic and modern. The Wildlife Works main label offers stylish everyday wear that takes an urban twist on the classics.  All of their clothing is made from organic cotton, soy and other eco-friendly fabrics. Their collections are also fair trade, sewn with pride by skilled craftspeople in their eco-factory in Kenya, Africa. Proceeds benefit the Wildlife Works Animal Sanctuary   www.wildlifeworks.com

DEL FORTE DENIM:
The hot organic jeans denim line by Tierra del Forte  www.delforte.com

 

Chicago 10 SF Premiere

Chicago10poster From the producers of An Inconvenient Truth comes another earth-changing indie masterpiece film - Chicago 10 - about the power of one man - Abbie Hoffman - to harness and unite the power of people against war in 1968. Hordes of people to be exact.

I saw the first-cut of this movie at Sundance, and it was fantastic. It had it all: protests, moving scenes, rare archival footage, animation, edge-of-your-seat drama, a great soundtrack, and even some long hair and bell bottoms. For me, the best part is that the film makes you feel empowered and motivated to be a part of democracy, a part of our country. You have a voice. I have a voice. Collectively our voices can matter even more. At what point do they become a threat and trigger an immune response by the establishment?  To say that this film is timely is an understatement.

Please join Vanity Fair, Participant Productions, Roadside Attractions, and River Road Entertainment for an evening of film and conversation at the premiere of Chicago 10 in San Francisco.

CHICAGO 10
San Francisco Movie Premiere

WHEN:
Thursday February 21, 2008
6:30 pm Doors Open
7:00 pm Film Screening
8:30 pm Expert Panel

WHERE:
Sundance Kabuki Theater
1881 Post Street
San Francisco, CA 94115

PANEL FEATURING:

MOVIE:
Chicago 10 directed by Brett Morgen
www.takepart.com/chicago10

RSVP:
Call 310-246-7735

Note:  The Washington DC premiere is Tuesday night, and the Los Angeles premiere is Wednesday night.

February 17, 2008

Ascencion

Sunsetreeds_2 And now for something completely different. Imagine working on a project for twenty years sparked by a photograph - marked by decades of research, obstacles, surprising discoveries, and triumphs - all culminating in the world premiere of a dramatic opera about a historic, wise Native American grandmother:  Ascencion Solorsano de Cervantes (1854-1930) of the Amah-Mutsun tribe of San Juan Bautista, California. A woman whose secrets, customs, ancient language, and teachings were revered by her tribe but would have been lost forever had it not been for the foresight of one Smithsonian ethnologist, John Peabody Harrington, to interview her before her death, and the dream of one opera singer, Helene Joseph-Weil, to bring her story back to life.

Why I am writing about this on Heart of Green?  The Native Americans teach us about the sacredness of the land, the animals, the mountains, the planet on which we reside. They lived in harmony with nature and understood its ebbs and flows intricately. When the sun sets and the sky turns a brilliant color of orange, the Native Americans believe that their ancestors are smiling down at them. Now that is living. Participating in a Medicine Wheel ceremony once changed my life and gave me a new understanding of balance. And Helene Joseph-Weil just happens to be my mother. Yes, putting on avant-garde events for the community runs in the family!

I believe we are all Native American in some way. We are living on land originally inhabited by them. They are our indigenous peoples.  The green wave honors their core principle of environmental stewardship. They seek to pass along a sustainable planet to their relatives. An ancient Native American proverb says, “When we show our respect for other living things, they respond with respect for us.”

Ascención

Dramatic Opera Cantata for Mezzo-Soprano, Piano, Chorus & Indigenous Instruments

Music by Benjamin Boone
Book & Lyrics by Helene Joseph-Weil

WHEN:
World Premiere
Sunday, February 24, 2008
3:00 p.m.

WHERE:
Concert Hall
California State University Fresno
5241 N. Maple Avenue (at Shaw and Cedar)
Fresno, CA 93740

FEATURING:

  • The remarkable and inspiring story of Ascencion
  • Helene Joseph-Weil (singer, mezzo-soprano)
  • Hatem Nadim (piano)
  • Chamber Singers & Concert Choir
  • Dr. Anna Hamre (director)
  • Costanoan Musical Instruments
  • First ever recording of the bells of Mission San Juan Bautista

Visit the official Ascencion Project web site

TICKETS:
$10.00 General
$7.00 Students & Seniors
(559) 278-5829
Tickets for this groundbreaking work can be purchased at the box office online

Helene Joseph-Weil explains, "It is a dream come true to be performing the Ascención cantata that I have been developing since 1988. The cantata’s sole intent is to honor the life and spirit of Ascencion, one of the last members of the California Amah-Mutsun San Juan tribal band to retain complete linguistic and cultural fluency of her people."

"I first learned about this remarkable Native American woman in an article by Prof. Larry Engleman that appeared in the SF Chronicle on July 10, 1988. On that Sunday morning mesmerized by Harrington’s photo of Ascencion and reading the article about the tragic history of her Amah-Mutsun people and how Ascencion became known as The Saint of Gilroy, I was so moved that it came to me very strongly that a dramatic musical presentation could be one way to honor her memory and help preserve for the world what might have been lost forever. This goal I have now pursued for almost 20 years. Ascencion’s warm personality, sharp wit, and amazing memory shined, and I am excited to finally share her inspirational story and spirit with the audience."  www.ascencionproject.com

Listen to the full scoop on the NPR California Report story and the NPR national story.   View the rare photos of Ascencion and her family.

Also see the extraordinary International Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers from all over the world who have formed a global alliance to help save the Earth. And visit the Sacred Land Film Project for a window into the last remaining sacred places.

February 14, 2008

Natalie Portman Unveils Vegan Shoes

Np "It is all about the shoes," I have been told over the years. Well, now it is all about the vegan shoes thanks to eco-celebrity Natalie Portman.

She was on hand in New York for the unveiling of her new signature, limited edition Natalie Portman vegan shoe collection at the Te Casan boutique.

The word vegan next to the word shoe always makes me pause because I associate vegan with eating, or not eating. But a vegan shoe means free of animal products - no leather! Natalie's shoes are so eco-sexy that they seem good enough to eat.

Natalie explained, "As a vegan, it's been challenging finding designer shoes made of alternative materials. This collection offers a great selection without compromising quality or style."

Natalie’s Paloma, Petra, and Pippa are gorgeous, playful, and elegant. Audrey Hepburn would approve. Only 100 pairs of each size were made for the launch, and several styles are selling out as we type.

If you are fortunate enough to live in New York, you can visit the Te Casan boutique directly. All of us other poor eco-souls can order by calling 1-877-Tecasan or online at www.tecasan.com

Natpshoes_6

Proceeds from the Natalie Portman collection will be donated to The Nature Conservancy, which protects ecologically fragile and important lands often by buying them outright.

My favorite shoes to date that I wear frequently are Charmone vegan stilettos and boots hand-crafted in Italy. For eco-conscious shoe lovers, that's amore.

Te Casan Boutique, 382 West Broadway, New York, NY 10012, 212.584.8000, www.tecasan.com

February 13, 2008

The Whole World in China's Hands

Panda4_3 If the future of the planet depends upon China, then the environmental organizations working with China hold all of us in their hands. And please don't drop us. I've been meeting with many of them recently and have some uplifting news to report. Yes, there are lots of shocking statistics that strike fear in our green hearts. There are also wonderful people working long hours, and they have only just begun.

Why care about China?  Let's review the numbers.

China is now the largest emitter of carbon dioxide (CO2) pollution per year, surpassing the U.S. for the first time in 2006. And this only counts fossil fuel burning and cement production - not agriculture, deforestation, aviation or shipping.

America’s carbon-dioxide emissions would have been 30% higher in 2004 if we included the emissions of goods consumed here but produced in China. Extrapolating that statistic to 2007 imports yields the conclusion that US CO2 emissions would have been 49% higher in 2007 if Chinese goods were counted.

China has over 1.3 billion people, compared to 300 million in the U.S. That means that 1 in every 5 people on the planet currently resides in China. China is striving to move 500 million people from the country to cities for a total of 1 billion people in cities by 2030. This is a mass exodus with an expectation of an American-style lifestyle with electric gadgets, a car, the works. 

China is building 1-2 new coal-fired power plants per week.

One third of the smog we breathe in California is thought to come from China.

One quarter of China's people drink toxic water according to SEPA, and stories of cancer villages and polluted rivers are leaking out.

The U.S. trade deficit with China in 2007 (what we import/buy vs. what we export/sell) clocked in at $256 billion. It is startling to realize that this deficit was only $6 billion in 1989 and rose to $124 billion in 2003. Note that China joined the WTO in 2001 and created 50 so-called global corporate champions with a strategy to try to dominate world markets. And clearly it has worked.

The Chinese currency, the Yuan, is artificially kept 20% to 50% lower than its true market value, which makes its exports cheaper to buy. See point above.

China is now the world’s largest builder of dams in other countries such as the Sudan and Zambia in Africa. The China Exim Bank was willing to finance projects that no other bank would touch due to environmental and human rights issues. Last year, the China Exim Bank made $36 billion in loans, more than the World Bank. China is rapidly investing in oil, mining, and logging in environmentally-sensitive areas to gain access to resources for its global economic expansion.

Health issues have recently made headlines with the tainted pet food scare and the lead paint discovered in toys. Trader Joe's plans to phase out any single-ingredient food items sourced from mainland China by April 1, 2008 including garlic, ginger, and spinach.

Stevenspeil The Beijing Olympics in 2008 are expected to be an opportunity for change.  Mia Farrow is calling for a boycott with her Save Darfur, Genocide Olympics campaign. Steven Spielberg just ceased all involvement in the Beijing Olympics because China has sold the Sudanese government weapons that are being used to commit crimes against humanity in Darfur. WildAid is raising awareness of tiger poaching in Asia and has produced excellent PSAs with celebrities and Olympians.

China has become the world's factory and consequently, the smokestack for the world. Made in China stickers are ubiquitous. Are we outsourcing our pollution to China?  China’s environmental problems can be partially linked to the consumption of cheap disposable goods made in China. American and multinational corporations outsourced manufacturing to China (where environmental controls were nonexistent), and now we have become appalled at the rising carbon dioxide from China’s smokestacks. We can’t have our Chinese cake and eat it CO2-free.

I have high hopes for Wal-Mart, which forced its vendors to manufacture in China because it was cheap, or else. With its new green agenda, Wal-Mart can hopefully encourage its vendors to produce products in a cleaner and greener way, or else.

Red Rays of Green Hope

JUCCCE: The Joint US-China Cooperation on Clean Energy nonprofit is a network of US and Chinese leaders working to further renewable energy, energy efficiency, and environmental education in China. According to JUCCCE, the Chinese are recognizing the environmental problems and want and need our help. Look out for their promising Chinese Mayoral eco-training seminars and the JUCCCE China Clean Energy Forum in November 2008. Visit www.juccce.com  or www.give2asia.org

International Rivers: They work around the globe to safeguard clean rivers and human rights, and their Policy Director Peter Bosshard has been doing some groundbreaking work with China. See his recent editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle entitled We are all Chinese here. Visit www.internationalrivers.org

NRDC: The NRDC’s Partnership for the Earth has made China one of its cornerstone priorities for saving the planet. They have been helping Chinese officials craft clean energy policy in the areas of green buildings, clean power, and sustainable transportation. Visit NRDC China

Let's support these excellent organizations working to make a difference in China and thus, to combat climate change and pollution around the world.

It is comforting to know that the famous green architect Bill McDonough is working to help design seven new sustainable cities in China including solar power and farmland on roofs.

In the meantime, we can buy local. Buy vintage. Buy essential. Best of all, buy from companies that are socially and environmentally responsible regardless of their country of origin. Vote for the planet and for human rights with your dollars. If China holds the planet's future in its hands, then we hold the future of China - and therefore the planet – partially in our wallets.

February 11, 2008

SIGGnificant Bottles

Siggbottles The green question of the day is: what would you say are the most significant environmental moments in history?  No peeking now. Let's think. There is the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency in 1970.  The founding of Earth Day also in 1970. The Wilderness Act in 1964 with David Brower. The Clean Water Act (with amendments) enacted in 1977. The Kyoto Treaty initiated in 1997. The debut of the Prius hybrid in 1997. Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth movie in 2006. The signing of the landmark AB 32 greenhouse gas legislation in California in 2006. And let's not forget all of the changes individuals and companies are making. Those count a lot too.

In honor of SIGG’s 100th anniversary making colorful hip reusable aluminum water bottles, SIGG is hosting a SIGG100 web site dedicated to the 100 most significant, I mean SIGGnificant, environmental moments in history.  How did we do?  Let's check their list. Move that scroll bar down. And take a swig from your SIGG. All of this thinking can make you thirsty.

Jackj On the site, you can enter to win a trip for 2 to Hawaii to attend the Kakua Music Festival in Honolulu headlined by all-the-rage, green surfing rock star Jack Johnson and benefiting the Kakua Hawaii Foundation, which promotes environmental education in the schools and communities of Hawaii. The flight is carbon offset I assume?

Plastic water bottles are out. Reusable water bottles are in. The famous Alice Waters of Chez Panisse dropped plastic water from their menu like a gourmet potato. Plastic bottles leach chemicals into the water, have a high carbon footprint, create islands of waste in the ocean, and consume millions of barrels of oil to make and transport. That is not very sexy. The mayors of San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis and New York are urging residents to drink filtered tap water and are showing plastic the door at their City Halls.

Want to apply the 1-2 punch to plastic in your life?  Carry reusable water containers like SIGG lifestyle bottles that show off your true colors.  Add a water filter to the tap at your home and office. Fill up, drink, and repeat. For large meetings and events, consider having filtered water pitchers and reusable glassware or compostable cups on hand.  Or give out SIGGs as presents. Now that is a green promo goodie that will delight your guests and be reused over and over again. Significant environmental progress has been made in the last 30 years, and in the last 3 years. I look forward to the upcoming months. There is much left to do, and we will have much more to celebrate I imagine!  www.sigg100.com

February 04, 2008

Paper, Plastic or Planet?

San Francisco has banned plastic grocery bags. Oakland is trying to ban them, pending an expensive lawsuit (the industry's new favorite tactic). San Jose is considering a ban. China has gone negative on plastic bags. Whole Foods just phased them out. This is cause for celebration, right? 

The plastic bag ban trend is definitely a major victory for the environment. Californians used 27.5 billion plastic bags last year that took 3 million barrels of oil to produce and cost cities millions in clean-up costs. We’ve all seen these flimsy urban tumbleweeds flying through the air, and tried to chase them down.

Going Undercover

Now that the plastic bag ban is in place in San Francisco, are things better?  To find out how the plastic bag ban was going, I went undercover and visited the local grocery stores. Here are the results of the investigation.

Cartwithbags_4 Safeway: At Safeway, the new paper bag assembly line seemed to be running smoothly. When asked how it was going, their veteran checker said, “I'm still getting used to the new paper bags, but I really like them. They are bigger than the plastic ones.” The Safeway paper bags contain 40% post-consumer recycled content, the minimum required by the new law. And they sport the words “Reusable and Recyclable” on the bag. Great!

109_0901_2 On the positive side, I didn’t see any plastic bag violations obviously, because they are now illegal. That is pretty cool. Safeway is pushing its black reusable bags for 99 cents, but they seem too small to be that useful?  In an ironic twist, Safeway has upgraded its plastic bag recycling receptacle. “Recycle your plastic bags here!” it pronounces in front of the store. Thanks to the ban, there will be a lot fewer bags to insert into that hole.

I even saw one girl (wearing a green sweater) bring in a Nature Conservancy canvas tote to Safeway. “Nice bag,” I yelled. She smiled. I had never seen that before. It would have made Al Gore’s day.

On the flip side, I only saw that one person bringing her/his own bag. Everyone else was opting for paper bags. And lots of them. What have we done?  Is this better?  I didn’t see any messages at the check-out counter encouraging people to bring their own bags. Where is the sign that says, “Bring your own bag and receive 10 cents”? One sign could go a long way. People are motivated by money, even 5-10 cents.

Lucky’s: The Lucky's hotly-promoted new reusable plastic bag is perplexing. That's right, plastic. Its picture even made its way into the San Francisco Chronicle as the example new bag. I was baffled because I thought we were supposed to be banning plastic bags. Should we love or hate this bag?

Plasticbagroplast Off to Lucky's to investigate. Well, it indeed is a plastic bag. It costs 25 cents to buy, and every time you bring it back, you receive a 5 cent bag credit. “Reusable” is written in big letters on the front. On the back is a nice plug for California parks and no littering. According to Lucky’s, this bag is a miracle, built to last 10+ times so that you can “actually earn money on these bags.” It is proudly “in compliance” with the SF ordinance because it is reusable. Pretty clever of them you have to admit.

How is this plastic bag legal?  Per the SF plastic bag ban ordinance, stores shall provide only recyclable paper bags (with 40% post-consumer recycled content) and/or compostable plastic bags as checkout bags. The ordinance also allows stores to use "reusable bags," which are defined as bags with handles that are specifically designed for multiple reuse and are either made of cloth, another machine washable fabric, or durable plastic that is at least 2.25 mils thick. Touche Lucky's.

It is still of course a plastic bag made from petroleum. The plastic is sturdier than the old-school plastic bags, but the handles seem pretty weak. Let’s put this bag to the test and see how long it really lasts. As a plus, it contains 20% recycled plastic. And if someone really did bring this bag back 10 times to the store, it would be better for the environment than using up a brand new paper bag each time.

Paper From Where at What Cost?

Safeway and Lucky’s are using the same new paper bag. It contains the minimum required 40% post consumer recycled content, which means that 60% is virgin paper from forests needed for water, CO2 absorption, animal habitat, and more.

These bags are made by Weyerhaeuser. This is concerning because Weyerhaeuser is known for unsustainable forestry practices, i.e. cutting down too many trees too fast. In fact, they have helped to devise a bogus, industry-led program called the Sustainable Forestry Initiative or SFI. Look on the bottom of the bag, and you will see the SFI Certified Sourcing symbol. It allows widespread logging of irreplaceable old growth forests. See www.dontbuysfi.com for the full scoop.

The best standard so far is the independent Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). You may have seen labels for FSC-certified wood or FSC mixed sources paper. FSC mandates that one tree must be planted for every tree cut down. FSC is not perfect, but it is the best unbiased standard we have to date. Weyerhaeuser’s SFI is a red herring set up by the industry. How did this become the default bag for Safeway and Lucky’s?  The cities are celebrating, but are the forests in mourning?

It takes 4 times as much energy to make a paper bag than a plastic bag. As the paper bags degrade in landfills, they release carbon dioxide into the air. Some studies report that making paper bags generates 70% more air pollutants and 50 times more water pollutants than plastic bags. All the more reason to BYOB, Bring Your Own Bag.

So in banning plastic bags, we have done a good thing. My lingering question is: what are the unintended consequences of this ban for forests, for energy consumption, for pollution, for global warming?  Why did compostable bags like BioBags not pick up some of the slack?  We banned one planetary ill, but we traded it for virgin paper consumption. Did we incentivize the most planet-friendly alternative in the process?  Are more people bringing their own bags to the store as a result?

Littering a Root Cause?

Pinkbaglitter Walking around San Francisco, litter is visible on the ground. Plastic water bottles, Styrofoam peanuts, cigarette butts, Starbucks coffee cups, coffee lids, candy wrappers, fewer plastic bags but still the pink ones from Chinatown and the white ones from Wal-Mart. I’m sure this is the same for every city, but it makes me wonder, how did all of this trash end up on the ground and in the park?

When cities complain about the over $3 million in plastic bag clean up costs, is a real problem littering? And/or the lack of plastic bag recycling incentives and availability?  People lament the plastic bags in the trees, but how did they get there?  They had to escape from somebody’s hands. Or from an overflowing garbage can.

I am coming to believe that we as a society need a massive anti-littering campaign again. In CA, there is supposed to be littering fines of $100 - $750 per incident plus litter clean-up duty, but I think people have forgotten. They litter with no fear of the consequences. I have seen several strangers recently throw empty water bottles out of their cars into the gutter. Mothers Against Littering. Littering Costs You & The Planet.  Littering is for Losers. Let’s pick a slogan and go big.

On that note, there is the Keep America Beautiful organization with good tips about litter prevention. One tip involves tipping point theory. Litter attracts more litter. Also see the campaign Keep California Beautiful.

Solutions Are In The Bag

Plasticbagnot_2 Net net, what to do?  Take your new reusable bag friends with you when you shop. Don’t leave home with them. Green is passing on paper and plastic. See how long you can make your paper grocery bags last. The record is over 6 months, at a rate of one shopping trip per week. Chico Bags are a pleasant option that fit in your pocket or purse.

Incentives matter a lot. What we incentivize is what we get. There are credits for bringing your own bag which is great. Let’s advertise this delicious financial feature of BYOB more: Save Money and the Planet. Stores can make it cool and desirable to bring your own bag. In other cities considering a plastic bag ban, please consider requiring paper bags to be 100% recycled paper. That could help a lot. In an ideal world, it would cost a few cents to request any new bag from the store. This could change everything I suspect as it has in Europe.

See the Plastic Bag Rehab post for more sexy bag ideas. Let’s make it uncool to litter again. In the Paper, Plastic, or Planet tradeoff, let's choose the planet.