Gulf Wars

Gulf Wars

July 21, 2010Leave a Comment 

July 14, 2010
Around the world, a lot of gulfs are in what The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration classifies as one of 64 Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs) based on ecological factors, not human ownership or political divisions. Collectively, LMEs account for about 80% of the ocean wild fish catch, most of our [...]

Will Coleman: Mohr Davidow Ventures

Will Coleman: Mohr Davidow Ventures

July 20, 2010Leave a Comment 

Will Coleman talks with THE GREEN ECONOMY about the evolution of technology, and how to drive innovation so that we cross the barriers that are stalling the new industries the US needs.
How do you see the cleantech revolution?
We’ve been reliant on the same industrial platforms for almost a century in some cases and it leaves [...]

John Denniston: Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers

John Denniston: Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers

July 20, 2010Leave a Comment 

John Denniston talks with THE GREEN ECONOMY about the future of clean technologies, how the US may be loosing our future to China, and what we should do about it.
Is cleantech catching on?
It’s doing much more than catching on. World-class entrepreneurs are sprinting into the greentech sector from all walks of life: large companies, small [...]

The Expanding Case for Compression

The Expanding Case for Compression

July 7, 2010Leave a Comment 

July 2, 2010
The opening chapter of the book, Compression, could only reference a few reasons why Compression appears necessary. The main objective, of course, is to drastically reduce consumption of resources. Almost any problem of the 21st century can be alleviated by simply processing and consuming less stuff. But why?
The case [...]

The Nigerian Muddle

The Nigerian Muddle

June 28, 2010Leave a Comment 

June 25, 2010
Nigeria’s muddle is more like the muddle we all face in Compression than the oil spill in the Gulf. Nigeria sits on a lot of oil, sweet crude preferred by American refineries. About 40% of Nigerian oil exports go to the the U.S., and it accounts for about 10% of [...]

Our “Titanic Syndrome”

Our “Titanic Syndrome”

June 17, 2010Leave a Comment 

We suffer from “Titanic Syndrome”: a collective disbelief that a big, state-of-the-art ship can sink, and that disaster is real, not cosmetic. That disbelief blinds us to the realities that we now face.
First off, no amount of money will restore the Gulf to what it was. We can only pay for partial remediation, and even [...]

Hey! It’s a blowout!

Hey! It’s a blowout!

June 15, 2010Leave a Comment 

It is up to us all to take a stand to preserve our resources–like oil and gas–unless we genuinely believe we are the last generation to need to them.  If that is the case, we can all party hardy now, because tomorrow will never come.
It’s not a spill: a gentle, gradual thing like [...]

Foiling Malthus

Foiling Malthus

June 14, 2010Leave a Comment 

Were we successful stabilizing global population at about 9 billion people in a post-expansionary society, say by 2040, how would this play out?  What to do may be counterintuitive if we’re not to replicate the fate of long ago societies. For instance, population has now leveled off in Japan and many [...]

Light Cones and Model Myopia

Light Cones and Model Myopia

June 4, 20101 Comment 

June 3, 2010
Fumbling in the dark, we grab a flashlight to “expand our light cone.” In a car at night, we hit the high beam for the same reason. And if infrared night vision is an option, a driver can indirectly expand her light cone using another wavelength of radiation. Anything warm [...]

Endocrine Disruption

Endocrine Disruption

June 4, 2010Leave a Comment 

June 3, 2010
Worrywart’s are beating endocrine disruptor drums louder and louder.
In very small concentrations these are known to adversely affect glandular functions and chemical balances in animals. Accumulating evidence suggests that endocrine disruption may seriously affect humans, for instance, by cutting sperm counts. Well-known effects on animals like frogs were [...]

Next Page »