Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Cancún, Won't Cún


Yes, I know the title of the post doesn't make sense, but once it was stuck in my head I couldn't get rid of the damn thing!

Anyway, the UN are having another go at fixing the climate. Following on from the debacle that was COP15 in Copenhagen last year, we have COP16 in Cancún, Mexico.

Not that you would notice if you were relying on the British media. The UN have been downplaying any major announcements, so the press have taken them at their word and are barely mentioning it.

The BBC, famously, blew a huge chunk of their budget sending hundreds of people to cover the Chilean Mine Rescue and decided that they couldn't afford to cover Cancún. Not even Mike and the fine folk of One Planet are being sent to cover proceedings.

The Guardian is at least making an attempt at covering events, as is the Independent, but it appears that if you want in-depth analysis then you're going to have to stick to the green websites.

Oneclimate in particular is carrying video and an interactive stream, and there's also the official website and their YouTube channel. So if watching people from 200 different countries simultaneously bang their heads off their desks is your thing, you'll be well covered!

The whole thing kicks off on the oneclimate website round about 2pm UK time tomorrow. I'll probably be behind my sofa crying by 3pm.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Gotcha!

Anyone who is "out" as an environmentalist or green-minded person has faced it: the one person who just won't listen to the scientists, who won't believe in climate change and denigrates anything you try to say on the subject.

I have one of them at my work. Last winter, he was gleeful as the country got covered in snow.

"Where's yer global warming now, eh?" he baited me.

I tried telling him that climate change doesn't mean we won't have winter. It doesn't mean we'll never have snow. It doesn't mean that temperatures will not go up and down depending on the seasons.

But he wasn't listening. All he knew was that it was snowing heavily for the first time in many years and therefore the globe couldn't be warming.

Then I played my zinger:

"Remember when we were kids in the 70s and we used to get brilliant snowfalls that closed the schools for days?"

"Aye, it was always great. Sledging and giant snowball fights, you never wanted to go hame!"

"Well," I said, "it's a shame we don't get those winters any more. The only reason the snow is news is because it's so unusual nowadays".

He grunted at me, and the conversation ended.

Fast forward 9 months, and I was sitting in the mess room today watching the news. My colleague walked in, and didn't notice me around the corner. As he took his coat and scarf off, he addressed my other workmates sitting there:

"I don't care what anybody says, the weather is getting weirder".

Wry smile? Me? Of course I did!

Enjoy the snow.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Green In The Media 29th November - 5th December

Monday 29th November

The Climate Connection
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530, 2030, 0130)
Can research from other fields help us find solutions where conventional thinking around environmentalism might have failed?

The Empire of Climate
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:45 to 16:00
Eminent geographer Professor David Livingstone wants us to see that climate is more than just the weather outside our window - it's an empire that has shaped our lives and history.

Tuesday 30th November

The Climate Connection
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530, 2030, 0130)
Can research from other fields help us find solutions where conventional thinking around environmentalism might have failed?

Home Planet
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:00 to 15:30
Richard Daniel and the team discuss listeners' questions about our world and our impact upon it.

The Empire of Climate
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:45 to 16:00
Eminent geographer Professor David Livingstone wants us to see that climate is more than just the weather outside our window - it's an empire that has shaped our lives and history.

Wednesday 1st December

The Climate Connection
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530 ,2030, 0130)
Can research from other fields help us find solutions where conventional thinking around environmentalism might have failed?

The Empire of Climate
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:45 to 16:00
Eminent geographer Professor David Livingstone wants us to see that climate is more than just the weather outside our window - it's an empire that has shaped our lives and history.

Thursday 2nd December

The Climate Connection
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530, 2030, 0130)
Can research from other fields help us find solutions where conventional thinking around environmentalism might have failed?

The Empire of Climate
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:45 to 16:00
Eminent geographer Professor David Livingstone wants us to see that climate is more than just the weather outside our window - it's an empire that has shaped our lives and history.

Friday 3rd December

The Climate Connection
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530, 2030, 0130)
Can research from other fields help us find solutions where conventional thinking around environmentalism might have failed?

The Empire of Climate
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:45 to 16:00
Eminent geographer Professor David Livingstone wants us to see that climate is more than just the weather outside our window - it's an empire that has shaped our lives and history.

Saturday 4th December

The Climate Connection
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 05:32 to 06:00 (Also 1330, Sun 0630, 2030)
Can research from other fields help us find solutions where conventional thinking around environmentalism might have failed?


Excerpts taken from DigiGuide - the world's best TV guide available from
http://www.getdigiguide.com/?p=1&r=20818
Copyright (c) GipsyMedia Limited.

Saturday, November 27, 2010

The Week In Green Numbers

1.3 million

- sharks harvested by industrial-scale fisheries in the Atlantic in 2008 #

75%

- proportion of the Atlantic's shark species threatened with extinction #

0.08 - 0.16° C

- increase in global temperature over the last decade #

120 million acres

- area of Alaska designated "critical polar bear habitat" #

56 gigatonnes

- expected world output of CO2 in 10 years time. The "safe" limit is 44 gigatonnes #

Friday, November 26, 2010

Rail Projects Go Ahead, But Still No New InterCity Trains

Photo by Irargerich

The government announced "£8 billion" worth of investment in the railways yesterday.

Well, actually, they announced a load of things which were already either being built or on the drawing board, and that train passengers will be paying for most of it through sky-high increases in fares.

But it's spun as £8 billion of investment.

So it was good news for Thameslink, Crossrail and Oxfordshire commuters. Bad news for those travelling to London from Wales.

And just to show they weren't focussing exclusively on the capital, the government have thrown a sop to the north-west with electrification of Liverpool-Manchester-Preston.

But my eye was firmly on the new InterCity trains announcement, which we were promised this week. Unfortunately the government have once again delayed the decision.

Hitachi, the preferred bidder, and the Japanese must be looking on with complete disdain.

If the Department for Transport are going to cancel the project, then just bloody say so instead of continually pushing the announcement back.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Environment Watchdog Scrapped

The Scottish Government have scrapped the Sustainable Development Commission, the body which holds the government to account on the decisions they take.

My first thought was that this was inevitable after the UK government scrapped the English variety of the SDC.

But actually, it needn't be inevitable. The government needs someone to hold them to the highest standards. They need someone to tell them where they're going wrong. And, I'll be fair, where they're going right.

They need someone watching over their every move.

And I'm far too busy to do it all on my own!

Tony Blair's Journey: A Green Perspective

I've finally finished it!

I'm not a fast reader, but even for me Tony Blair's book A Journey has taken an incredibly long time, although I was only reading it at work when I had the time. And there was a three week period when even the thought of continuing with it brought me out in hives!

But finish it I have, so I thought I'd review it from a greenish perspective.

First off, I suppose I should share my feelings on Blair overall. I would say it was fair to categorise him as a better-than-average Prime Minister, with the caveat that he was a lying, warmongering, press-obsessed egomaniac. I voted Labour in 1997, and I was hopeful of what he could do to change society. I really liked him, I was proud that Britain once again had a statesman in Number 10, and I guess a lot of people are now in the same boat as me - we weep for what could have been.

The book itself follows a loose timeline, with each chapter dealing with a topic rather than reading like a diary. Some of those topics I found easy to read and found fascinating, like his thoughts on Europe, the Northern Ireland Peace Process and Kosovo and Sierra Leone.

Other chapters I found painful. Surprisingly, the interior machinations of the Labour Party were dull when all you're reading is Blair's take on why everyone else was wrong. There were no real revelations on Gordon Brown either, other than the previously quoted "lack of emotional intelligence" line.

Most painful of all, though, was the chapters justifying the war in Iraq. This was where I got bogged down on, as I had to keep putting the book down to pick my chin back up off the floor. Blair still doesn't see it. He still doesn't realise, or doesn't want to realise, that he was played by the American NeoCons into supporting an unjustified and illegal war. He spends fifty pages banging on about Saddam being a tyrant and Weapons of Mass Destruction, at one point reprinting at length a report on VX nerve gas.

And here's the first greenish part of the book. The fact that the Iraq war may possibly be about oil is dismissed in ONE PARAGRAPH! Here it is, so you don't have to go through the pain of reading the entire thing just to get this delusional nugget:
The issue of oil raises another allegation: that it was all about oil. Although fatuous as an explanation, it gained enormous currency and will have its adherents today. In truth, if oil had been our concern, we could have cut a deal with Saddam in a heartbeat. He would have readily given more in return for the lifting of sanctions and the threat of inspections.
So there you have it, the war couldn't have been about oil because we could have bought some from Saddam. There's no mention of American companies land-grabbing the oilfields as soon as the conflict starts and ensuring that they were the ones to get the contracts to redevelop the fields. No, it wasn't about oil because we could have bought some!

Climate change, on the other hand, is dealt with in a matter-of-fact way. The first mention of it is in relation to Blair and Bush having different views on subjects, but thankfully Blair deals with the subject as if it is a fact and a threat without trying to get bogged down in scientific details.

The main thrust about climate change comes in the chapter dealing with the G8 meeting at Gleneagles in 2005, alongside debt-cancellation for Africa. But he takes the opportunity to have a pop at NGOs:
Over time, I'm afraid I came to dislike part of the NGO culture, especially the Green groups. NGOs do a great job, don't misunderstand me; but the trouble with some of them is that while they are treated by the media as concerned citizens, which of course they are, they are also organisations, raising money, marketing themselves and competing with other NGOs in a similar field. Because their entire raison d'être is to get policy changed, they can hardly say yes, we've done it, without putting themselves out of business. And they've learned to play the modern media game perfectly. As it's all about impact, they shout louder and louder to get heard. Balance is not in the vocabulary. It's all 'outrage', 'betrayal', 'crisis'. They also have their own tightly defined dogma and conventional wisdom which, if you challenge them, they defend fiercely - not usually on their merits, but by abusing your motives for challenging them. On Africa, I tried constantly to get them to see free trade, with aid for trade, as an essential African interest, but it was virtually impossible. Part of their coalition basically took the position that 'globalisation is a rich-country conspiracy', and challenging that was to fracture their support. So they resisted.
So at the start of the paragraph the NGOs are competing and at each other's throats, but at the end of the paragraph they're in a coalition. And Blair complaining about anyone being media-savvy is, quite frankly, laughable!

The reason NGOs oppose free trade and would prefer fair trade is that free trade doesn't let Africa compete on a level playing field. All the large multinational companies come in and either undercut the local competition or buy up the land and commercial rights to ensure they have all the resources.

Blair continues in the next paragraph:
It's like the Greens over nuclear power. The case for nuclear power is now so overwhelming that frankly it is almost irresponsible - faced with an energy crunch and climate change - to oppose its development. I bet many of them know that privately, but it would be such heresy to say so and would divide the movement.
There are some "greens" who say so, but mainly because they're in thrall to the nuclear industry - see the ballyhoo about Channel 4's documentary a few weeks ago. If nuclear was the right thing to do, why didn't Blair's government build new nuclear power stations? Because they're expensive and there's a major drawback in the form of nuclear waste and local contamination.

So what to make of the book overall? Again I come back to the feeling of a wasted opportunity. Here was a Prime Minister who "got" climate change, but couldn't see that you can't let the markets guide you out of it and you have to do some unpopular things. He's wholly unrepentant over a lot of decisions he took, not just Iraq, and thinks it bizarre that Labour and now the Conservatives are distancing themselves from some of those, like ID cards and 90 day detention.

Actually, I felt sorry for him towards the end of the book. He was clearly quite delusional. He proclaims that in 2007 he was at the height of his powers, on top of his game and was a much better Prime Minister than he was in 1997, so it was slightly unfair that he was pushed out. He clearly couldn't see that most of the population were putting two fingers up to their TVs every time he came on and that he was a figure of immense hate.

And still is.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Have A Greener Monday




Leith-based Greener Monday contacted me a few weeks ago asking if I wanted to review one of their box deliveries. Never one to look a gift-horse in the mouth I agreed, and picked my box up at their stall at the Scottish Green Party conference.

First of all, a bit about Greener Monday. They sell locally-sourced items, pledging to ensure that everything is produced within 100 miles of Edinburgh. If you already get a veggie box delivered then you'll find that Greener Monday's stuff is intended to complement that rather than replace it, so the boxes are filled with jam and chutney, oils and biscuits.

So what was in my box?


There were two items that I didn't get near. The girlfriend nicked the Hand Cream, although in all honestly I couldn't see myself using it! And the Honeycomb Honey, like the hand cream from Chainbridge Farm, was snaffled to give to her gran.






I have to admit that the Ginger Buddhas from Chocolate Tree didn't last very long. I certainly felt I looked like buddha after realising they'd all gone so quickly!






Next to swiftly disappear was the Ginger Stem Shortbread from Shortbread House of Edinburgh. There was a distinctly ginger theme to the overall box (perhaps they'd seen the beard I was sporting that weekend), and I have to say that I don't go out of my way to buy products with ginger in them. But the shortbread was gorgeous. Not too crumbly, not too sticky and not too sweet, it was shortbread as it should be made!




The Mulled Wine Beets from Henshelwoods Fine Foods have not yet been tried, but just looking at their product range has my mouth watering!











The hit of the box, though, was undoubtedly
Isabella Preserves' Hot Banana Chutney. Actually the name is slightly misleading in that I didn't find the chutney in the least bit hot or spicy, but oh my god was it gorgeous! So nice, in fact, that I slathered it on everything I thought I could get away with, whether it was my work sandwiches or the ginger shortbread.

If you're a foodie, or you know a foodie who would like something different for their christmas, then go and visit
Greener Monday's website, or their stall at Out Of The Blue Drill Hall, Dalmeny Street, Leith every Saturday between 10am and 2pm.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

All Give, No Take

Photo by DWRose

I overheard the end of a story at the Scottish Green Party conference the other week, where someone was telling of hearing a government minister regale a meeting about all the things they were doing to combat emissions.

"Yes," said the person, "but what are you going to STOP doing?"

It's equally important to encourage people to curb some activities.

One of my work colleagues last weekend couldn't understand how I could own a car but not drive to work. The fact that she didn't drive to work for five years before she bought her car was of no consequence - in her mind, if you owned a car then you gave up using public transport and drove everywhere.

That mindset isn't being helped by the Scottish Government, who have dropped a raft of proposals that may have gone some way to limiting car use, from speed limit changes to charges for parking at your workplace.

The government are good at announcing the carrot, but shy away from the stick.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Global Emissions Barely Down in 2009

Photo by Foto43

The BBC is reporting that global carbon emissions fell by 1.3% in 2009.

The recession is being blamed for the fall in the industrialised nations, but those big falls were offset by developing countries like India and China.


Two things spring to mind.


Firstly, when are we going to stop calling India and particularly China "developing"?


Secondly, there is a small strain of green activists that welcomed the recession as a way to push down emissions. This clearly hasn't worked on a global scale, and locally will only turn people against you as you try to keep them "depressed" (in both meanings of the word).


These are the figures given in the BBC article, but there's no link to all of the countries yet:

China +8%

India +6.2%

Germany -7%

UK -8.6%

Japan -11.8%

Has King Coal Been Killed?

Photo by Bert K

Is new coal in Scotland now dead?

Rob Edwards reported in yesterday's Sunday Herald that the Scottish Government now think that new coal-fired power stations will not be needed to cover our electricity needs.

The change in thinking comes about because the government are now projecting more renewables than they were previously. In fact, it looks like they've been caught on the hop by the number of companies which want to use Scotland's natural resources.

With them previously ruling out new nuclear power stations, and now new coal stations, it looks like Scotland will be on the right track to produce most of it's energy from CO2-free sources.

It should certainly sound the death-knell for the proposed Hunterston plant.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Green In The Media 22nd - 28th November

Tuesday 23rd November

Home Planet
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:00 to 15:30
Richard Daniel and the team discuss listeners' questions about our world and our impact upon it.

Wednesday24th November

Eco Asceticsm
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 12:32 to 13:00 (Also 1630, 0030)
A new spiritual focus on lifestyle changes that reduce personal consumption and carbon footprint.

Thursday 25th November

One Planet
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530, 2030, 0130, Sat 2030, Sun 0630)
One Planet looks at how we use our planet.

Friday 26th November

Fifth Gear
On: Five
Time: 19:30 to 20:00 (Also Sat 1015)
Guest presenter and electric car guru Robert Llewellyn tests the eco-friendly Nissan Leaf. Tiff takes two green yet fast coupes for a spin.

Saturday 27th November

Making Scotland's Landscape
On: BBC 2 Scotland
Time: 19:15 to 20:15
The Climate.
Professor Iain Stewart concludes a landmark five-part series in which he reveals how Scotland's unique and beautiful landscape has been shaped over the centuries. During the Industrial Revolution, Scottish scientists and engineers unwittingly helped to set off a chain of events that today we know as climate change; a process that is transforming our atmosphere and warming our planet. Professor Stewart looks at how Scotland is on the verge of another revolution - the transformation of a carbon economy to a green one.

Sunday 28th November

What Happened at Copenhagen?
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 13:30 to 14:00
A year after the Copenhagen climate summit, Roger Harrabin explores what really happened in the negotiations and asks why such a massive effort lead to such a small result.

Countryfile
On: BBC 1
Time: 18:30 to 19:30
John Craven is in Scotland investigating plans to position massive fish farms out in the Atlantic.


Excerpt taken from DigiGuide - the world's best TV guide available from
http://www.getdigiguide.com/?p=1&r=20818
Copyright (c) GipsyMedia Limited.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

The Week In Green Numbers

$32 billion

- subsidy given to US and EU cotton farmers over the last 10 years #

100 million becquerel

- radioactivity of a piece of waste found off the Scottish coast near an old nuclear power plant #

£7 million

- landfill tax that Edinburgh Council has to pay each year #

148

- number of BP-owned oil pipelines which are suffering from corrosion in North Slope, Alaska #

40%

- increase in wheat and maize prices in the last few months #

Friday, November 19, 2010

Just How Radioactive Is The Dounreay Seabed?

The Dounreay nuclear plant has long been a sore on the landscape in Scotland, and for the last couple of years it has been a sore on the seabed too.

Radioactive particles have been washing up on local beaches since the 1980s. but it was only in 2008 that they started to clean up what was lying on the seabed offshore from the plant using remote control subs.

They've been picking up particles ever since, but the latest report is frightening - one particle they recovered measured 100 million becquerels of radiation. Anything greater than 1 million is a health risk.

And this in the week that it was revealed that radioactive material was washed into the Clyde, and the company responsible wants to store all of Scotland's nuke waste there.

The Scottish people aren't daft. Only 18% of them want new nuclear power plants in the country. And this is one of the reasons why.


(Incidentally, while looking at old posts I was reminded of my "favourite" Dounreay story. The workers took some low-level radioactive waste containers into Thurso and used them to house a Santa's Grotto! I suspect this is how Rudolph got his red nose)

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Plastic State Of Mind

Just how many parodies is the song Empire State Of Mind going to inspire?

Here's another one, with an environmental theme:


Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Donald Trump's Golf War


Due to work commitments, I only got around to watching Donald Trump's Golf War last night (you can see it on the iPlayer here for the next week). Intending to blog on it, I thought I would make copious notes during the programme, but as it turns out I actually wrote the word "prick" 247 times in increasingly spidery handwriting.

Well okay, that last bit was a joke. But it was how I felt, and not just about Trump but about his entire entourage.

First off, I have to admit to being pleasantly surprised by the programme. I knew the BBC would be a bit more even-handed than Channel 4 would ever be if they had made the film, but actually the Beeb decided that their story was the David v Goliath one which would be sympathetic to David. It was set up as a documentary version of Local Hero, to the extent that they even had Denis Lawson narrating it.

This was shoved down our throats a number of times - New York was portrayed as brash and noisy, and Scotland was idyllic and tranquil. Only towards the end was any rain shown!

Trump was his usual charming self. And yes, that's sarcasm. The problem with Trump is, he thinks he's being charming while not realising that he's getting folk's backs up. The programme exposed him as basically a bully who thinks that throwing money at a problem will solve it. At one point, after hearing that they had won the first planning application, he is heard on the phone laughing that Michael Forbes (one of the local residents) will be "devastated" because he could have sold out for money and Trump was withdrawing the offer. He, and later his son "Don Junior", clearly couldn't comprehend that Forbes' fight wasn't about money but about his home and livelihood.

His main oppo - until Don Junior was flown in - was George Sorial who again came across as a not very likeable man. His toys came out of the pram when they lost the second planning application, declaring to the press that if you wanted large scale business done, don't do it in the North East of Scotland. He and Trump had decided that the area needed the money too much to turn down any request that they made so couldn't understand an opposing view.

(And while I'm on the press, the reporter who rather pathetically asked "Have you worn a kilt? Have you eaten haggis?" needs to be taken round the back and beaten up before having his press pass withdrawn and his Scottish passport revoked. Talk about cringeworthy!)

As for Don Junior, slimy was the first word that sprang to mind, and that wasn't just his hair. Clearly used to privilege, I took against him when he got out of a car and wandered off, leaving the door wide open for someone else to close. And speaking of Don Junior and cars, a laugh out loud moment came near the end when someone harassed him because his driver had left the car engine running while he was in a meeting.

Trump and his team complained that the campaign against them was using "inappropriate and underhand" tactics, without realising that they were doing the same thing.

All in all it was a good programme as far as those opposing the development are concerned, and I can't imagine Trump will be pleased with it. I can't imagine the Aberdeen Evening Express will be too chuffed either, since they were painted as Trump's hitmen, but funnily enough the programme doesn't seem to get mentioned on their website yesterday.

I doubt we'll see a follow up documentary that will be quite this in-depth, as I imagine access to Trump will be withdrawn to the programme -makers, which will be a shame as the entire story needs to be told. If you want to keep up to date you can always visit the Tripping Up Trump website.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Seriously Stupid



As a society, is there a serious disconnect in our thinking, or do we just not care?

There were two stories in the Sunday Herald yesterday which were connected, but when put together make you wonder for the sanity of our species.

The first story is of a leak of radioactive material from the decommissioned Hunterston A nuclear power station on the River Clyde.

Despite this being Scotland, it would appear that the site can't handle rain.

Incidentally, the quote from the trade union representative at Hunterston says it all with regards to nuclear power:
“There are quite a few challenges on the site because our forefathers did things which we would not do, and we’re left with the legacy”
The second, connected, story regards Scotland's nuclear waste, and the ongoing saga of where to store the stuff. Obviously you're looking for somewhere safe and secure, somewhere that it can lay undisturbed for generations until we figure out what to do with it.

Or how about we just dump it somewhere that can't handle a wee bit of rain?

Yes, the same company that can't keep the radiation in Hunterston A because of the weather wants to take the entire country's radioactive waste and store it there.


Now, what's the definition of insanity?

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Green In The Media 15th - 21st November

There are two programmes which are Scotland-specific this week. The first looks at Donald Trump's golf course in Aberdeenshire and the ensuing fight as he tries to evict local residents from their homes so that he can destroy a Site of Special Scientific Interest. The second is the last part of Iain Stewart's enthralling series Making Scotland's Landscape, in which he looks at the effects of climate in the past and in the future.

If you're not in Scotland, you can see both programmes on the BBC iPlayer. Or, y'know, just move to Scotland.

Monday 15th November

JG Ballard - The Drowned World
On: BBC Radio 7
Time: 18:30 to 19:00 (Also 0030)
The author's 1962 debut novel set in a submerged London of the future, transformed by global warming. Read by Robert Glenister. Episode 1 of 4.

Donald Trump's Golf War
On: BBC 2 Scotland
Time: 21:00 to 22:00
Documentary following the epic battle of American billionaire Donald Trump to build 'the greatest golf course in the world' on a beautiful, protected stretch of coastline in the north-east of Scotland. He announces bold plans for two golf courses, private houses and a five-star hotel, but not everyone welcomes him with open arms. Protestors find an unlikely local hero in farmer Michael Forbes. His 22-acre property is surrounded on all sides by prime Trump real estate, yet the stubborn local farmer is not selling. Featuring five years of exclusive interviews with Trump and his family, the programme tells the story of this controversial billion-pound development from first announcement to the moment the diggers roll.

Tuesday 16th November

Home Planet
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:00 to 15:30
Richard Daniel and the team discuss listeners' questions about our world and our impact upon it.

JG Ballard - The Drowned World
On: BBC Radio 7
Time: 18:30 to 19:00 (Also 0030)
Tropical conditions trigger people's primal memories. Robert Glenister reads the author's 1962 novel set in submerged London. Episode 2 of 4.

Horizon
On: BBC 2
Time: 21:00 to 22:00
Deepwater Disaster - The Untold Story.
Horizon reveals the untold story of the 87-day battle to kill the Deepwater Horizon oil blowout a mile beneath the waves - a crisis that became America's worst environmental disaster. Engineers and oil men at the heart of the operation talk for the first time about the colossal engineering challenges they faced and how they had to improvise under extreme pressure. They tell of how they used household junk, discarded steel boxes and giant underwater cutting shears to stop the oil - an operation that one insider likens to the rescue of Apollo 13.

Wednesday 17th November

JG Ballard - The Drowned World
On: BBC Radio 7
Time: 18:30 to 19:00 (Also 0030)
Looters clash with the surviving inhabitants. Robert Glenister reads the author's 1962 story set in submerged London. Episode 3 of 4.

Thursday 18th November

One Planet
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530, 2030, 0130, Sat 2030, Sun 0630)
One Planet looks at how we use our planet.

JG Ballard - The Drowned World
On: BBC Radio 7
Time: 18:30 to 19:00 (Also 0030)
Kerans desperately tries to re-flood the city. Robert Glenister concludes the author's 1962 story set in submerged London. Episode 4 of 4.

Sunday 21st November

Making Scotland's Landscape
On: BBC 1 Scotland
Time: 20:00 to 21:00
Climate. Episode 5.
Professor Iain Stewart concludes a landmark five-part series in which he reveals how Scotland's unique and beautiful landscape has been shaped over the centuries. During the Industrial Revolution, Scottish scientists and engineers unwittingly helped to set off a chain of events that today we know as climate change, a process that is transforming our atmosphere and warming our planet. Professor Stewart looks at how Scotland is on the verge of another revolution - the transformation of a carbon economy to a green one.


Excerpts taken from DigiGuide - the world's best TV guide available from
http://www.getdigiguide.com/?p=1&r=20818
Copyright (c) GipsyMedia Limited.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

The Week In Green Numbers

5%

- fall in new car emissions in the EU in 2009 #

22.8 days

- "normal" energy use of a display of Christmas lights outside your house #

£12.7 million

- cost of cleaning toxic waste from the Olympic site in London #

5 years

- delay imposed by the new UK Agriculture minister on a ban on "beak trimming" of hens #

16,000

- annual turtle catch in the villages of Toliara, the south western province of Madagascar #

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Flashing In Leith

I have been somewhat remiss in not mentioning the proposed Leith Biomass plant lately. If you recall, this is the plant which Forth Energy wants to build in Leith Docks to provide energy using woodchips imported from America.

Greener Leith has been all over it, as you would expect since it will be in their back yard, so I decided only to mention any major events on here.

But I've been remiss even in that, so let me point you towards the website for a new dedicated campaign group, No To Leith Biomass Plant, which has sprung up in the last few weeks. They also have a petition to sign calling on the Scottish Government to reject the application for the biomass plant.

I've said this before - don't be fooled into thinking that this biomass plant is in any way sustainable or green. Having to import wood from America in order to throw into a big fire is ludicrous, and having to compete with other biomass plants which are springing up in the west will make the plant an expensive one to run. And that's before we even mention the CO2 output and the effects on the local environment.

If you can find the time to demonstrate tomorrow (Friday 12th) in person, then there will be a flashmob protest taking place at South Leith Parish Halls, 6 Henderson Street, at 12.30pm. If you can't be there, then sign the petition and show your support.

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

Bordering On Obstruction

Photo by Bert K

I'm not sure what it is about the Borders Railway that the Scottish Government hate so much. Maybe it's because it wasn't their idea in the first place.

Time and again we've seen them dragging their heels to such an extent that John Swinney could have been used to plow most of Perthshire.

They'd rather see the wholly unnecessary It's-A-Replacement-Not-A-New-Bridge-Honest new bridge across the Forth than a public transport initiative that can only benefit an entire area.

Now it appears that the Americans have had enough and are going home, and who can blame them? The BBC reports that one bidding consortium member has run out of patience with the whole process and has given up.

I can't imagine the other consortia are too happy either - we're still a year off from a winning bidder being named.

So what exactly has been done since the SNP came to power and immediately tried to strangle the Borders Railway?

It would appear, diddlysquat.

Monday, November 08, 2010

The Greens: A Thank You

I started this blog back in 2007 because I was a frustrated man.

Frustrated because no one else in Scotland seemed to see the world the way I did. All the big environmental blogs were American, all the big environmental charities didn't seem to be looking too close to home.

Sure, there was the Scottish Greens, but that was just about politics. My way of looking at the world had the environment front and centre in almost every aspect of life (and death!).

Then a funny thing happened. People read my blog and contacted me. I discovered other bloggers with the same attitudes, with the same way of looking at the planet. I realised I wasn't alone in my thoughts.

I got an email one day from a blogger who turned out to be from the Scottish Greens. He sounded like a very polite young man, and the more of his stuff I read, the more I realised that the political party I voted for actually contained people who thought like me.

I know that sounds strange, but it was a revelation that there were all these people right on my doorstep, if only I had actually looked.

I joined the party, I started to get involved and I got to know them better. Which led me to this past weekend, my first party conference. An entire hall full of people who all saw the world the same way I did, who were all, ahem, despairing at the lack of progress in saving the planet, but who all believe that their party can make a difference.

Patrick Harvie by Callum McLellan Photography

There were a few highlights of the weekend for me.

I've heard Patrick Harvie speak in public before, but I'm continually amazed that he can riff knowledgeably on a topic for ten minutes without notes, as he did in two fringe meetings I attended.

Andy Wightman spoke about land reform and ownership with such energy and passion that it was clear to everyone that he loved the subject.

And then of course there was Caroline Lucas, leader of the Green Party in England & Wales and the first ever Green MP. She thoroughly deserved her standing ovation, and you can read her speech here. But there was one line which has been quoted continually since on twitter:
"If the planet were a bank it would have been saved years ago"
Caroline Lucas by Callum McLellan Photography

Normal service will be resumed tomorrow, but I'm going to use & abuse this blog to say thank you.

Thanks to those that I met for the first time and were welcoming. Thanks to those that I was meeting again and who didn't question the grey/ginger thing growing on my chin. Thanks to all the twitterers who brought a whole other dimension to the conference. And thanks to that blogger who reached out to me a couple of years ago and who showed me that there was a party for me.


So now I'm doing the same to you. If you see the world through a green tint, if you think the environment should be considered in everything we say and do, if you think politics should be progressive instead of regressive, then join the Scottish Greens or the English & Welsh Greens.

Sunday, November 07, 2010

Green In The Media 8th - 14th November

Monday 8th November

Dispatches
On: Channel 4
Time: 20:00 to 21:00
A Dispatches investigation into the working conditions in clothing manufacturing units in the UK. Undercover filming reveals poor treatment of workers making clothes which end up being sold by large fashion retailers.

Tuesday 9th November

Home Planet
On: BBC Radio Four
Time: 15:00 to 15:30
Richard Daniel and the team discuss listeners' questions about our world and our impact upon it.

BP: $30 Billion Blowout
On: BBC 2
Time: 21:00 to 22:00
The Money Programme team presents an inside account of the BP oil spill. Features a host of interviews with key industry insiders, including world exclusives with Bob Dudley, the new Head of BP and Tony Hayward, his predecessor.

Wednesday 10th November

Grand Designs
On: Channel 4
Time: 21:00 to 22:00
Four years ago Daren Howarth and Adi Nortje moved from Brighton to Brittany to take on a huge life experiment. Their plan was to build an earth-sheltered home almost entirely from recycled materials, and to live the most sustainable lifestyle as possible. Based on ideas pioneered in the 1970s in New Mexico, their main building blocks were old tyres packed with rammed earth. But this very low tech house required lots of low tech energy to build it. To keep costs down Daren and Adi enlisted the help of a bunch of unskilled volunteers to help out, in exchange for teaching them the techniques. All very admirable, but with the main components of this build being rubbish and mud, the danger was that the project would end up looking like a hobbit house. Now that the work is finished Kevin returns to see whether their big life experiment has been a success.

Thursday 11th November

Live Energy and Climate Change Questions
On: BBC Parliament
Time: 10:30 to 11:30 (Also 0100, 0330)
Live coverage of questions in the House of Commons to Energy and Climate Change Secretary Chris Huhne and his ministerial team.

One Planet
On: BBC World Service Radio
Time: 10:32 to 11:00 (Also 1530, 2030, 0130, Sat 2030, Sun 0630, 2330)
One Planet looks at how we use our planet.


Excerpts taken from DigiGuide - the world's best TV guide available from
http://www.getdigiguide.com/?p=1&r=20818
Copyright (c) GipsyMedia Limited.

Saturday, November 06, 2010

The Week In Green Numbers

6 months

- jail time for any landowner in Scotland who allows their gamekeepers to kill birds of prey #

42 litres

- water needed to make a normal pair of jeans #

34 million

- salmon in the Pacific North West river system this year #

20%

- proportion of those salmon which were bred in hatcheries #

$8.2 billion

- investment in offshore windfarms by South Korea #

Friday, November 05, 2010

What Channel 4 Got Wrong


Last night saw the head-bangingly inaccurate documentary "What The Green Movement Got Wrong" broadcast on Channel 4. I had said on Sunday that it's perhaps a conversation that the green movement needs to have, but quite frankly I was giving the programme too much credit - it was a one-sided travesty that didn't even attempt to portray anything but it's own agenda.

And that agenda was that environmentalists are unscientific, stuck-in-the-past hippies who do more harm than good because they blindly follow "causes" without looking at the facts surrounding them.

The evening was split into two parts, the film followed by a studio "debate". To be fair to Channel 4, the debate was a more even-handed event - in fact I would go so far as to say that the representatives from Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace, backed up by George Monbiot, fairly trounced the "new environmentalists" and knocked their arguments into the long grass.

The film started with a short history of the environmental movement in America (curiously absent was a history of the green movement in Britain). This was the context in which to paint all environmentalists as hippies who are stuck in the 60s, dreaming of a Utopia where they can live in the forest and partner-swap while dancing naked around the campfire.

If that's your thing, then fine, but unlike the stereotype the green movement has moved on.

After claiming that environmentalism had failed and that was the real reason behind climate change being so bad with no one doing anything about it, we were on to the subject of nuclear power. The real heartbreak of the night for me was seeing Mark Lynas, an author I admire, being caught up in this and perpetuating some myths. If you haven't read his book Six Degrees then I highly recommend it.

Here, Lynas was sent off to Pripyat, the town in the Ukraine next to Chernobyl to have a guided tour of the abandoned houses and schools. The film claimed that "only" 9,000 people were directly affected by Chernobyl, and therefore it wasn't that bad.

It then went on to claim that the environmental movement were responsible for every coal-fired power station that was built in America after the Three Mile Island Incident. I think it was the guy from Greenpeace who pointed out in the debate afterwards that it was more likely the financiers who wouldn't touch nuclear with a bargepole that were responsible for the cheap coal plants.

No mention was made of the fact that we're still dealing with the radioactive contamination from Chernobyl in the UK, with some farmer still unable to legally sell their sheep.

Nuclear energy was presented as an easy solution to climate change which was being stopped by luddites who have never researched the facts.

The second half of the film seemed to be sponsored by Monsanto. GM crops, we were told, were entirely safe for human consumption and we could easily feed the entire planet right now if only we would all get with the program and stop scaremongering.

Photo by art_es_anna

With a backdrop of Indian slums, the green movement was accused of deliberately keeping these people in poverty and only GM food could set them free. As Monbiot pointed out later, there is actually a food surplus in the word - it's just that the West uses a lot of it to feed their animals and make biofuels.

No mention was made either of how third world farmers would be forced to buy the GM seeds and the appropriate pesticides from the same company, and how once bought they would have to go on buying them because the plants are sterile, or how agribusiness locks them into contracts that they find difficult to get out of, or how there's a high incidence of suicide amongst Indian farmers who can't get off the GM merry-go-round and are losing their livelihoods because GM doesn't actually deliver more crops.

There was also an inaccurate account of how Zambia, in the midst of a famine, sent GM food aid back to America. The fact that this was basically big business trying to use a disaster as a business opportunity seemed to pass the filmmakers by.

The final, almost throwaway segment at the end of the film dealt with geoengineering, those mythical promises that science will eventually come up with a solution to save the planet without us having to get off our backsides and actually reduce the pollution we pump into the atmosphere. If only we could blanket the atmosphere with a layer of volcanic ash, everything would be alright with the world and we wouldn't have to worry about anything!

All in all, a fairly unsatisfying documentary although a more-rounded debate afterwards. Unlike some, I'm not against showing in public that there are conflicting opinions in the green 'movement', and I'd rather see green issues debated on TV than be ignored completely. But this is the third time Channel 4 has painted environmentalists as unscientific idiots without giving much recourse to reply. Now if only they would commission a pro-green documentary, in the interests of balance.

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

Hell On Wheels


Edinburgh's New Disgrace, the deeply troubled Tram project, has led the news in Scotland all day today after the chairman resigned and started blasting with both barrels at the main contractor.

I gave up trying to defend the whole scheme last year. I think that eventually they'll be wonderful for the city, and I'll always defend more public transport and anything that gets people out of their cars. But the whole thing has been completely mismanaged seemingly from both the contractor and the council side.

But I think I speak for almost every Edinburgh resident when I say: just get the fucking thing finished!

Right Fund, Wrong Priorities

Photo by Andy S-D

Sometimes Alex Salmond makes sense. Sometimes not.

The Scottish First Minister announced plans yesterday for an investment fund to prepare ports and shipyards for shipping wind turbines and wave and tidal power machines offshore.

That's the sensible part, and he gets plaudits from me for doing so.

The bit that doesn't make sense is that the fund is only £70 million.

Well, I say only, but £70 million would be a lot of money to some people. It just seems dwarved by comparison to some of the other figures that get bandied around for capital projects.

That bleeding Replacement Forth Road Bridge for example, which the government want to spend £2.3 billion on.

The priorities are back-to-front. Salmond would gain even more plaudits from me if he announced the billions for a renewable energy investment fund, and the £70 million to replace the cables on the existing Forth Road Bridge.

But then where would they tie the ribbon for him to cut it?