Monday, April 26, 2010

James Cameron Talks to treehugger.com

James Cameron - Director of Film "AVATAR"
Photo by Nancy Wilson


Earth Day Climate Change Rally on the National Mall



Article and Photos by -
David DeFranza

Earth Day - Climate Change Rally on the National Mall

Sunday 25 April 2010


With news that the climate bill had fizzled in the Senate spreading and thunderclouds looming over Washington, DC, things looked bleak for the Earth Day Network's Climate Rally on the National Mall early Sunday morning. Still, event staff hurried to complete preparations to ensure the stage, tents, exhibits, and lawn would be ready for the crowds—however large or small they ended up being.
In spite of the bad news from the Hill—and menacing weather—Nate Byer, Earth Day 2010 campaign director, remained excited, rushing in and out of tents, talking into his radio, and trying his best to heed his staff's warnings to "stay clean." The success of the event, it seemed in these early hours, may indeed ride upon his enthusiasm.
And in Byer's mind, the Climate Rally was not simply a field day. There would be music, sure; dancing, of course; but the reason his team had spent months of hard work putting the event together was to show that climate change and energy policy are issues that transcend environmentalism. He told TreeHugger that it's an issue that concerns "national security...the youth community, the social justice community...it's a movement that affects all of us and that we all care about."
How much people care, however, is a hard thing to pinpoint. The United States, weary environmentalists often point out, just suffered a recession of historic proportions. It is, perhaps, a good excuse for a person to forget about LED lightbulbs or postpone buying a hybrid—but there are several other, more unsettling, sources of fatigue when it comes to issues of the planet and climate.
The president's inability to derive meaningful legislation on climate and energy policy, the stark failure of COP15, the erosion of support for legitimate climate science, and the persistent denial movement are bitter challenges much harder to accept than increasing concern over personal finances.

Even as the first speakers took the stage—followed by the first musicians—it seemed that, perhaps, the movement had not weathered the strain. In those early hours, only a few people had found their place on the large lawn—the empty corrals stretching into the distance as an invitation to the ridicule of skeptics.
Then, as Bob Weir took the stage, the sun broke through the clouds. A more palpable turning could not have been imagined—nor scripted by the now-frenzied staff. As the air warmed, the crowd swelled, overflowing from the area in front of the stage, filling in the lawn behind, and expanding to the grassy strips on either side.

Sure, the draw for many was the music—a line-up that included the Roots, John Legend, Bob Weir, Sting, and many others—but once there they became part of something more.
Speaker after speaker took the stage, offering comments on the destructiveness of coal mining, the floundering climate bill, simple things we can all do at home, and the dire necessity of immediate action. If the music was the candy, Avatar star CCH Pounder told TreeHugger, than the speakers "were the medicine."

Talking with people in the crowd, it quickly became clear that this medicine was not something they resigned themselves to on Earth Day. Perhaps they had been infected by Byer's enthusiasm, or the camaraderie of the crowd, but the "medicine," it seemed, had become part of their lives, more a vitamin than a cough syrup, and coming together on Earth Day was a means of solidifying their beliefs, renewing their determination, and finding companionship with people who may not speak loudly about the importance of environmentalism during the rest of the year, but offer their silent support nevertheless.
Earth Day, these everyday environmentalists told me, is not simply about recycling; it's about showing you care, finding community, and speaking out loud—it's the assertion that the values of environmentalism are important and those that hold them are not alone.
And it is in this way, above all others, that Earth Day should be celebrated every day.
More Earth Day Coverage from TreeHugger
Earth Day 2010 on Planet Green
Read more about the Climate Rally on the National Mall:From Patrick Stump to Robert Kennedy, Jr.: Musicians, Activists, and Celebrities Muse on the Meaning of Earth Day (Video)Thinking About Earth Day: Past, Present, and Future (Video)Margaret Atwood Offers Three Actions That Have a Big Impact (Video)James Cameron on Why Earth Day Matters and What We Can Learn From the Amazon (Video)Follow @TreeHugger on Twitter & get our headlines with @TH_rss!
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Thursday, April 22, 2010

Gulf of Mexico Oil Rig Explodes - Large Oil Spill Foreseen

Burning oil rig sinks, setting stage for big spillBy KEVIN McGILL and HOLBROOK MOHR , 04.22.10, 08:06 PM EDT
AP

NEW ORLEANS -- A deepwater oil platform that burned for more than a day after a massive explosion sank into the Gulf of Mexico on Thursday, creating the potential for a major spill as it underscored the slim chances that the 11 workers still missing survived.
The sinking of the Deepwater Horizon, which burned violently until the gulf itself extinguished the fire, could unleash more than 300,000 of gallons of crude a day into the water. The environmental hazards would be greatest if the spill were to reach the Louisiana coast, some 50 miles away.
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Crews searched by air and water for the missing workers, hoping they had managed to reach a lifeboat, but one relative said family members have been told it's unlikely any of the missing survived Tuesday night's blast. The Coast Guard found two lifeboats but no one was inside. More than 100 workers escaped the explosion and fire; four were critically injured.
Carolyn Kemp of Monterey, La., said her grandson, Roy Wyatt Kemp, 27, was among the missing. She said he would have been on the drilling platform when it exploded.
"They're assuming all those men who were on the platform are dead," Kemp said. "That's the last we've heard."
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Jed Kersey, of Leesville, La., said his 33-year-old son, John, had finished his shift on the rig floor and was sleeping when the explosion occurred. He said his son told him that all 11 missing workers were on the rig floor at the time of the explosion.
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"He said it was like a war zone," said Jed Kersey, a former offshore oil worker.
An alarm sounded and the electricity went out, sending John Kersey and other workers scurrying to a lifeboat that took them to a nearby service boat, his father said.
"They waited for as many people as they could," Jed Kersey said. He added that his son wasn't ready to talk publicly about his experience.
As the rig burned, supply vessels shot water into it to try to keep it afloat and avoid an oil spill, but there were additional explosions Thursday. Officials had previously said the environmental damage appeared minimal, but new challenges have arisen now that the platform has sunk.
The well could be spilling up to 336,000 gallons of crude oil a day, Coast Guard Petty Officer Katherine McNamara said. She said she didn't know whether the crude oil was spilling into the gulf. The rig also carried 700,000 gallons of diesel fuel, but that would likely evaporate if the fire didn't consume it.
Coast Guard Rear Adm. Mary Landry said crews saw a 1-mile-by-5-mile rainbow sheen with a dark center of what appeared to be a crude oil mix on the surface of the water. She said there wasn't any evidence crude oil was coming out after the rig sank, but officials also aren't sure what's going on underwater. They have dispatched a vessel to check.
The oil will do much less damage at sea than it would if it hits the shore, said Cynthia Sarthou, executive director of the Gulf Restoration Network.
"If it gets landward, it could be a disaster in the making," Sarthou said.
Doug Helton, incident operations coordinator for the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration's office of response and restoration, said the spill is not expected to come onshore in the next three to four days. "But if the winds were to change, it could come ashore more rapidly," he said.
At the worst-case figure of 336,000 gallons a day, it would take more than a month for the amount of crude oil spilled to equal the 11 million gallons spilled from the Exxon Valdez in Alaska's Prince William Sound.
The well will need to be capped off underwater. Coast Guard Petty Officer Ashley Butler said crews were prepared for the platform to sink and had the equipment at the site to limit the environmental damage.
Oil giant BP ( BP - news - people ), which contracted the rig, said it has mobilized four aircraft that can spread chemicals to break up the oil and 32 vessels, including a big storage barge, that can suck more than 171,000 barrels of oil a day from the surface.
Crews searching for the missing workers, meanwhile, have covered the 1,940-square-mile search area by air 12 times and by boat five times. The boats searched all night.
The family of Dewey Revette, a 48-year-old from southeast Mississippi, said he was also among the missing. He worked as a driller on the rig and had been with the company for 29 years.
"We're all just sitting around waiting for the phone to ring and hoping for good news. And praying about it," said Revette's 23-year-old daughter, Andrea Cochran.
Adrian Rose, vice president of rig owner Transocean ( RIG - news - people ) Ltd., said Thursday some surviving workers said in company interviews that their missing colleagues may not have been able to evacuate in time. He said he was unable to confirm whether that was the case.
Those who escaped did so mainly by getting on lifeboats that were lowered into the gulf, Rose said. Weekly emergency drills seemed to help, he said, adding that workers apparently stuck together as they fled the devastating blast.
"There are a number of uncorroborated stories, a lot of them really quite heroic stories of how people looked after each other. There was very little panic," Rose said.
Coast Guard Petty Officer Kevin Fernandez was the flight mechanic on a helicopter that was the first to respond, about 15 minutes after the explosion. Fernandez said he could see the fire from 80 miles away, with flames rising about 500 feet.
"I was kind of expecting worse" in terms of fatalities, he said. But all the survivors already had made their way from the lifeboats into a supply boat. Fernandez and his crew plucked two critically injured survivors to a nearby rig that had a paramedic on board.
Family members of two missing workers filed separate lawsuits Thursday accusing Transocean and BP of negligence. Both companies declined to comment about legal action against them after the first suit was filed.
The U.S. Minerals Management Service, which regulates oil rigs, conducted three routine inspections of the Deepwater Horizon this year - in February, March and on April 1 - and found no violations, MMS spokeswoman Eileen Angelico said.
The rig was doing exploratory drilling about 50 miles off the coast of Louisiana when the explosion and fire occurred, sending a column of boiling black smoke hundreds of feet over the gulf.
Rose has said the explosion appeared to be a blowout, in which natural gas or oil forces its way up a well pipe and smashes the equipment. Precisely what went wrong is under investigation.
Transocean Ltd. spokesman Guy Cantwell said 111 workers who made it off the Deepwater Horizon safely after the blast were ashore Thursday, and four others were still on a boat that operates an underwater robot. A robot will eventually be used to stop the flow of oil to the rig. He said officials have not decided when that will happen.
Seventeen workers brought to shore Wednesday suffered burns, broken legs and smoke inhalation. Four were critically injured.
Rose said the crew had drilled the well to its final depth, more than 18,000 feet, and was cementing the steel casing at the time of the explosion. They had little time to evacuate, he said.
The explosion is not expected to have a major impact on the oil industry. There are 90 rigs in the offshore Gulf of Mexico either drilling wells or performing work on existing wells, according to the MMS.
"It's a personal tragedy," Arthur Weglein, director of the Mission Oriented Seismic Research program at the University of Houston. "Besides that, it's just one rig less in the deep water."
The explosion came less than a month after President Barack Obama's decision to open portions of the East Coast to oil and gas exploration, and opponents of the move have seized on the blast as a reason to reverse course.
"The bottom line is that when you drill for oil, there is always a risk that not only puts lives on the line, but a risk that puts miles of coastline and the economy on the line as well," Sens. Robert Menendez and Frank Lautenberg, both New Jersey Democrats, said in a statement.
Working on offshore oil rigs is a dangerous job but has become safer in recent years thanks to improved training, safety systems and maintenance, said Joe Hurt, regional vice president for the International Association of Drilling Contractors.
Since 2001, there have been 69 offshore deaths, 1,349 injuries and 858 fires and explosions in the gulf, according to the Minerals Management Service. Coast Guard Senior Chief Petty Officer Mike O'Berry said accidents are rare given that 30,000 people work on rigs there every day.
"They're highly trained. They know the dangers," O'Berry said. "The safety precautions they take are extreme. A testament to that is of the 126, 115 are home today with their families."
Associated Press Writer Holbrook Mohr reported from Jackson, Miss. Associated Press Writers Mike Kunzelman, Cain Burdeau, Janet McConnaughey and Alan Sayre in Louisiana, Chris Kahn in New York and Sofia Mannos of AP Television News contributed to this report.

Link to read more: http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2010/04/22/general-energy-us-louisiana-oil-rig-explosion_7541505.html?boxes=Homepagebusinessnews

Top of blog:http://www.usaalternativeenergynow.blogspot.com/

The Earth Day CLIMATE RALLY – National Mall – Sunday, April 25, 2010


The Earth Day CLIMATE RALLY – National Mall – Sunday, April 25, 2010
The 40th anniversary of Earth Day is quickly approaching, but the United States has failed to enact a comprehensive climate bill.
It is time to stop protecting polluters and enact comprehensive climate legislation that will create American jobs, cap carbon emissions and secure our nation’s future. The first Earth Day was a success because 20 million Americans demonstrated their outrage for the state of the environment. Together, we can make Earth Day 2010 a pivotal moment in the environmental movement.
On Sunday, April 25, Earth Day Network will organize a massive climate rally on The National Mall to demand Congress pass strong legislation. The Climate Rally will include notable speakers Reverend Jesse Jackson, film director, James Cameron, AFL-CIO President, Richard Trumka, Olympic gold medalist, Billy Demong, producer, Trudie Styler, author, Margaret Atwood, NFL player and television personality, Dhani Jones, environmental photographer Sebastian Copeland and many more.
The Climate Rally will also feature live music from Sting, John Legend, The Roots, Jimmy Cliff, Passion Pit, Bob Weir, Willie Colón, Joss Stone, Robert Randolph, Patrick Stump, Mavis Staples, Booker T, Honor Society and Tao Rodriguez-Seeger.
Please RSVP on this page - we will send a friendly reminder and notify you when we stream the live event on EarthDay.org.
Free buses to the Climate Rally
Earth Day Network is sponsoring free buses from New York City, Philadephia, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Columbus, Charleston WV, Richmond, Charlottesville, and Baltimore. RSVP today.
Buses to DC will park at RFK Stadium. There will be easy access to the Climate Rally by Metro Rail.
Driving to DC?
Vans, buses, and cars are encouraged to park at the RFK Stadium parking lot. There will be a shuttle service to the rally along with vendors and access to water. Please sign up to register your bus, van, or car ahead of time to park at RFK!
Take Metro to the Climate Rally
The Smithsonian stop on the blue/orange line is the preferred station.
Volunteer Opportunities
The Climate Rally needs volunteers, please email mailto:volunteer@earthday.net to sign up.

EARTH DAY APRIL 22, 2010



Forty years after the first Earth Day, the world is in greater peril than ever. While climate change is the greatest challenge of our time, it also presents the greatest opportunity – an unprecedented opportunity to build a healthy, prosperous, clean energy economy now and for the future.
Earth Day 2010 can be a turning point to advance climate policy, energy efficiency, renewable energy and green jobs. Earth Day Network is galvanizing millions who make personal commitments to sustainability. Earth Day 2010 is a pivotal opportunity for individuals, corporations and governments to join together and create a global green economy. Join the more than one billion people in 190 countries that are taking action for Earth Day.



Yike Bike _Smallest Electric Bike












How one entrepreneur wants to electrify your urban commute.As urban bike ridership continues to grow all over the world, cyclers are being inundated with two-wheeled options. Now, thanks to New Zealand entrepreneur Grant Ryan, urbanites have another rather different way of achieving efficient mobility: the YikeBike.In addition to its slick aesthetic, the YikeBike is the smallest electric bike in the world, weighing half of what any other folding electric bike on the market does. Grant notes the bike’s foldable design as a key to its utility, giving city dwellers the ability to cruise quickly between home and public transport, seamlessly switching from walking to biking to riding. The bike was built to be quickly shouldered and carried in a bag, a design feature that makes it an ideal travel companion “anywhere in a city, train, bus, car, or elevator.”At $4,800, the bike isn’t cheap, but Ryan explains that the “total cost of a YikeBike is about the same as the cost of running a car for a year. The average cost of running your YikeBike on electricity for a month is less than a Big Mac meal.” He also points out how you’ll save the time and money you spend on parking if you ditch your car. Plus, you won’t have to worry about theft because the YikeBike’s compact frame lets you take your wheels with you wherever you go.The bike has a top-speed of 15 mph, a weight of around 20 pounds, and its fast-charging lithium phosphate battery promises a fluid commute. The bike is currently launching in Europe and New Zealand but Ryan says the bike would work well in dense cities like New York and San Francisco.As a personal transportation device, the bike is a tool that complements and increases the velocity and range of your daily commute. For the millions of people who live in crowded urban areas and ride public transit to and from work, their ticket to “urban freedom” can now come with a sleek set of electric wheels.Image courtesy of YikeBike.