Derail Doha, Save the ClimateWalden Bello | July 28, 2008 Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco | |||
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Etiquetas: Doha, gl, Walden Bello
Blogueando desde marzo de 2004 / Blogging since March 2004. Creador también de The World According to Carmelo: carmeloruiz.tumblr.com. Contacto: ruiz@tutanota.com. Twitter: @carmeloruiz
Derail Doha, Save the ClimateWalden Bello | July 28, 2008 Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco | |||
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Etiquetas: Doha, gl, Walden Bello
By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 24th July 2008
For the past two years I have been fretting over a mystery. Though Labour seems to have done everything possible to ensure that it stays out of office, there remains a possibility that it might form another government at some point between now and 2050. This means that its climate change bill, which will become law in the autumn, could come back to haunt it. Despite its evident flaws, this is radical and unprecedented legislation. It imposes a legal obligation on future governments to cut carbon dioxide pollution by 60% or more by 2050, with binding interim targets every five years.
The government has some good climate policies. It also has some bleeding disastrous ones, which appear to commit the United Kingdom to high carbon pollution for the entire period covered by the bill. A future Labour government would find itself snared by its own current policies. Surely it wouldn’t be foolish enough to set such a trap for itself?
Etiquetas: Global Warming, Monbiot
Solar Thermal Power Coming to a Boil
Jonathan G. Dorn
After emerging in 2006 from 15 years of hibernation, the solar thermal power industry experienced a surge in 2007, with 100 megawatts of new capacity coming online worldwide. During the 1990s, cheap fossil fuels, combined with a loss of state and federal incentives, put a damper on solar thermal power development. However, recent increases in energy prices, escalating concerns about global climate change, and fresh economic incentives are renewing interest in this technology.Etiquetas: Earth Policy Institute, Energy, Solar
The Internet Is No Substitute for the Dying Newspaper Industry
By Chris Hedges, Truthdig.All these forces have combined to strangle newspapers. And the blood on the floor, this year alone, is disheartening. Some 6,000 journalists nationwide have lost their jobs, news pages are being radically cut back and newspaper stocks have tumbled. Advertising revenues are dramatically falling off with many papers seeing double-digit drops. McClatchy Co., publisher of the Miami Herald, has seen its shares fall by 77 percent this year. Lee Enterprises Inc., which owns the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, is down 84 percent. Gannett Co., which publishes USA Today, is trading at nearly a 17-year low. The San Francisco Chronicle is now losing $1 million a week.
The Internet will not save newspapers. Although all major newspapers, and most smaller ones, have Web sites, and have had for a while, newspaper Web sites make up less than 10 percent of newspaper ad revenue. Analysts say that although Net advertising amounts to $21 billion a year, that amount is actually relatively small. So far, the really big advertisers have stayed away, either unsure of how to use the Internet or suspicious that it can’t match the viewer attention of older media.
Newspapers, when well run, are a public trust. They provide, at their best, the means for citizens to examine themselves, to ferret out lies and the abuse of power by elected officials and corrupt businesses, to give a voice to those who would, without the press, have no voice, and to follow, in ways a private citizen cannot, the daily workings of local, state and federal government. Newspapers hire people to write about city hall, the state capital, political campaigns, sports, music, art and theater. They keep citizens engaged with their cultural, civic and political life. When I began as a foreign correspondent 25 years ago, most major city papers had bureaus in Latin America, the Middle East, Europe, Asia and Moscow. Reporters and photographers showed Americans how the world beyond our borders looked, thought and believed. Most of this is vanishing or has vanished.
COMUNICADO DE PRENSA
Administración del DRNA comete fraude para
favorecer proyecto eólico en el Bosque Seco
Más aún, el acuerdo revela un esquema de fraude por altos funcionarios del DRNA para no referir el caso al Departamento de Justicia y evitar que sea procesado criminalmente. Estos funcionarios ocultaron información a la Junta de Calidad Ambiental (JCA), al United States Fish and Wildlife Service y a la Junta de Planificación para inducirlas a endosar permisos y una Declaración de Impacto Ambiental (DIA) deficiente e incompleta. En el “endoso” emitido el 1ro de febrero de 2007 por parte del subsecretario del DRNA a la JCA como parte del proceso de evaluación de la DIA, éste omite brindar información sobre los daños por acciones de desmonte previos a la aprobación de permisos para construir en el lugar. Esta omisión representa uno de los elementos claves del fraude.
Aunque el secretario del DRNA expresó en el 2006 su intención de referir el caso al Departamento de Justicia ante la gravedad de los delitos, hasta el momento el caso aún no ha sido referido. En aquel momento, tras intervenir y detener las obras, los vigilantes del DRNA describieron los daños como “una de las peores violaciones ambientales que se ha visto” y aseveraron que “este caso, si no es el más violento, está entre ellos”.
Según informes del DRNA, Windmar destruyó yacimientos arqueológicos, hábitat crítico esencial, miles de árboles de bosque seco, causó desmonte y remoción de la corteza terrestre en zona cársica, construyó vías y accesos sin autorización, rellenó un humedal y una quebrada intermitente, impactando especies varias amenazadas o en peligro de extinción. Los artículos 240 y 243 del Código Penal (Ley 149 de 2004), tipifican estos daños como estrago y contaminación ambiental agravada, delitos graves que conllevan reclusión. Al negociar penalidades por intercambios de titularidad, la administración del DRNA pretende otorgar impunidad al inversionista y favorecer sus intereses.
La administración del DRNA no se percata de que si efectúa el acuerdo en contra de las recomendaciones de su propio personal científico, será cómplice de los graves daños ambientales ocasionados y abrirá las puertas para que Windmar continúe destruyendo Punta Ventanas, Cerro Toro y Punta Verraco, por lo que ambos podrían ser procesables criminalmente.
# # #
23 de julio de 2008
Contacto:
José Sáez Cintrón, Portavoz - Coalición Pro Bosque Seco Ventanas Verraco
787 601-3175, jsaezcintron@yahoo.com
http://www.coalicionventanasverraco.org
Referencias:
http://coalicionventanasverraco.org/node/357
http://coalicionventanasverraco.org/node/420
http://coalicionventanasverraco.org/node/562
http://www.drna.gobierno.pr/oficinas/asesoras/legales/documentos/Presentacion%20Delitos%20Ambientales.ppt
Etiquetas: Bosque Seco, DRNA, Puerto Rico, Windmar
By: GRITtv Monday July 21, 2008 11:00 pm |
What you'll see here is a trailer of a multimedia extravaganza to be presented in full next year at the BAM Opera House Next Wave Festival. In "Terra Nova: Sinfonia Antarctica," , DJ Spooky explores the profound ecological change confronting our planet. He is bringing a version of The Antarctica Suite to Denver during the DNC.
Etiquetas: Antartica Suite, DJ Spooky, Laura Flanders, Video
June, 02 2008 By A.K. Gupta
One striking aspect of the rising commodity prices is that when charted, they look similar to the Internet stock mania a decade ago or the charts of soaring (and plunging) home prices of late. This is no mere coincidence. One of the main factors in accelerating commodity and food costs is financial speculation. The same Wall Street banks and hedge funds that gave us the stock bubble and the housing bubble are reportedly throwing billions of dollars at the commodity markets, betting they can make a fast buck. One analyst interviewed by the Wall Street Journal estimates that "investors have poured roughly $175 billion to $200 billion into commodity-linked index funds since 2001." The Journal explained, "As with energy markets a few years ago, pension funds and hedge funds have flocked to grain investments as the supply of farm acreage and crop output shrinks relative to the growing global population and new demands for crops for biofuels and food. Many such investors make predominantly bullish bets," that is, expecting the price to rise.
The daily fluctuations on commodity exchanges are at times greater than used to occur in an entire year. On February 25 alone, at the Minneapolis Grain Exchange, one type of wheat jumped 29 percent. On a single day in March, "the price of cotton jumped 15 percent despite reports showing cotton supplies were at near record highs," according to the Toronto Globe and Mail. During the CFTC hearings, commodity producers laid the blame for soaring prices at the speculators' door. A representative of the National Grain and Feed Association testified, "Sixty percent of the current [wheat] market is owned by an index fund. Clearly that's having an impact on the market," while a cotton producer stated, "The market is broken, it's out of whack."
If there is a main culprit, it is the market. There is a lot of talk about growing consumption and falling supplies for both food and energy, but most of the data contradicts these claims. For example, despite a drought in Australia, ice and snow storms throughout China, and a cold, wet winter in the American breadbasket, the UN Food and Agricultural Organization projects global cereal production for 2007-2008 to increase by 92 million tons to 2.102 billion tons. But almost all this increase is from a record U.S. corn harvest, which is feeding the market for biofuels.
In essence, large speculators ranging from Wall Street banks and hedge funds to oil companies and agribusiness giants are making a killing from trading commodities. Analysts say some players may be manipulating the markets, but this is extremely difficult to prove because regulatory oversight of these markets has been deliberately rolled back. Still, many sectors appear to be engaging in blatant profiteering. This includes speculators, but also extends to food retailers, food producers, and fertilizer manufacturers. One of the ironies of the current situation is that even as the revenue of farmers is increasing furiously, especially in the United States, they are losing out on profits because of the wild gyrations in the commodities markets.
Grain shortages abound because speculators' profits are literally coming at the expense of the world's poor. Food riots have occurred in Egypt, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Ethiopia—countries where many people spend half their income or more on food (compared to less than 10 percent for Americans). The starkest indication of the deprivation is seen in countries like Haiti where, as rice prices have skyrocketed, the poor have been turning to mud cakes made with oil and sugar for sustenance.
Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved, says, "It's obviously a crime against humanity that this kind of financial speculation is allowed to continue. It's one thing to have speculation on the price of widgets or car parts, but it's another thing to have speculation in the fount of human life.... This should be a wake-up call to help us realize that food isn't a commodity, it's a human right." In a speech on April 2, World Bank President Robert Zoellick noted that food prices "have jumped 80 percent" since 2005, and "33 countries around the world face potential social unrest because of the acute hike in food and energy prices." A few weeks later, the World Food Program called high food prices "a silent tsunami" that has already pushed an estimated 100 million people deeper into poverty and which threatened "to plunge more than 100 million people on every continent into hunger."
In the United States, the situation is troubling, if not as dire as the developing world. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates 12.1 percent of Americans, or more than 35 million people, experienced "food insecurity" in 2006. For many, this meant running out of food towards the end of the month, skipping meals, or not eating for a whole day. (Until the Bush administration changed definitions, this used to be known as "hunger.") Reports from media outlets, food banks, and soup kitchens indicate that food insecurity is increasing, caused by the leap in food and energy prices, along with the weakening economy, falling home prices, and fast-rising unemployment. Many low-income Americans, especially retirees on fixed incomes, are being forced to choose between eating, staying warm, or purchasing prescription drugs.
One of the more disturbing signs of economic desperation is that many Americans are selling off their belongings to "meet higher gas, food and prescription drug bills," according to the Associated Press. The hard evidence comes from websites like Craigslist where the number of for-sale listings from March 2008 have "more than doubled to almost 15 million from the year-ago period" and are often accompanied by pleas like, "Please buy anything you can to help out."
Etiquetas: Food Crisis, Gupta, Speculation
The Great Global Warming Swindle is just one example of Channel 4’s war against the greens
By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 22nd July 2008.
So here we go again. For the second time, Channel 4 has been fiercely criticised by the broadcasting regulator for a programme attacking environmental science. For the second time the director was Martin Durkin. Ten years ago, his series Against Nature was found to have misled his interviewees about “the content and purpose of the programmes” and distorted their views “through selective editing”(1). Now Ofcom has ruled that the programme he made last year – The Great Global Warming Swindle – treated two scientists and an organisation (the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) unfairly(2). For the second time, Channel 4 will have to make an embarrassing primetime apology.
But while the new ruling exposes some of the channel’s practices, it also exposes the limitations of the regulator. The programme was peppered with distortions and misleading claims. But despite being presented with a vast dossier of evidence by climate scientists, Ofcom decided that it could not rule on the matter of accuracy. While news programmes are expected to be accurate, other factual programmes are not, and Ofcom “only regulates misleading material where that material is likely to cause harm or offence.” It decided that The Great Global Warming Swindle hadn’t caused actual harm to members of the public and would not rule on whether or not the programme had misled them. In fact, it is precisely because “the discussion about the causes of global warming was to a very great extent settled by the date of broadcast”, meaning that climate change was no longer a matter of political controversy, that a programme claiming it is all a pack of lies could slip past the partiality rules. The greater a programme’s defiance of scientific fact, the less likely Ofcom is to rule against it. This paradoxical judgement allows Channel 4 to keep getting away with it.
The Great Global Warming Swindle is part of a long-standing pattern. Channel 4 upsets all sorts of people, and it has every right to do so. On all other issues it appears to do so in a random fashion, sometimes attacking people on one side of the debate, sometimes on the other. But one polemical position has kept recurring over the past 18 years: a fierce antagonism towards environmentalism. Some of these programmes have used misrepresentation, distortion or fabrication to sustain claims that environmental concerns are the fantasies of self-serving scientists. It is arguable that no organisation in the United Kingdom has done more to damage the effort to protect the environment.
In 1990 Channel 4 screened a documentary called The Greenhouse Conspiracy, directed by Hilary Lawson at the company TVF. It maintained that “there is no evidence at all” for dangerous climate change. There is a conspiracy among scientists, it said, to talk up the dangers in order to win funding(3). No reasonable person would dispute that Channel 4 should show countervailing views, or would claim that it has an obligation to take an environmentalist line. But there were three problems with this programme, which appear to characterise several of the channel’s films about the environment.
Etiquetas: Global Warming, Monbiot
Image credit: Shall.us
For many people, Paul Hawken is a man who needs no introduction at all. As an author, a speaker, a theorist, and a business person, Paul Hawken has shaped the discussion of what sustainability is, and how it can be achieved. His Ecology of Commerce was an eye opener for many people (including Ray Anderson, last week’s interviewee), and Natural Capitalism, that he wrote with Amory and Hunter Lovins, can often be seen in the hands of Bill Clinton, brandished as a wakeup call to industry. Paul’s new book, Blessed Unrest (and its sister web community, Wiser Earth), is something different altogether: an exploration of what he says is the largest movement in human history. ::TreeHugger Radio
Listen to the podcast of this interview via iTunes, or just click here to listen, right-click to download.
Special thanks go to CraigMichaels, the organizer of the Sustainable Operations Summit, for arranging this interview.
Etiquetas: Hawken, Treehugger
Ediciones Corregidor 2008
corregidor@corregidor.com
Rodríguez Peña 452 –
011 4374 5000 / 4959
Ciudad de Buenos Aires 1020
Producción periodística del programa
Horizonte Sur: Bernardo Elffman
berekproducciones@gmail.com
011 15 52622242
Comunicado de prensa - 2 de julio de 2008
ENCE y el apoyo a uruguayos en España
En días recientes el gobierno uruguayo otorgó formalmente el permiso a la empresa española Ence de instalar una gigantesca fábrica de celulosa en Colonia. Si bien la empresa tuvo que sortear algunos obstáculos burocráticos para lograr la aprobación, era un secreto a voces que contaba con el total apoyo del Estado. Tanto apoyo que no solo le dio el permiso, sino que le facilitó una zona franca. Parafraseando a García Márquez, era la “crónica de una aprobación anunciada”.
Al mismo tiempo, otra historia se estaba –y se está– desarrollando en España: la expulsión casi diaria de ciudadanos uruguayos y la entrada en vigencia de una legislación que facilitará la expulsión de miles de extranjeros –uruguayos incluidos– de Europa en general y de España en particular.
En este contexto, son muy ilustrativas las recientes declaraciones de Daniel Caserta, presidente de la Casa Uruguay en Madrid quien informa que “La situación está muy complicada” y que “se creó mucho temor e incertidumbre entre la gente". De acuerdo con lo informado por El Observador (2/7/08), Caserta reclamó más apoyo del gobierno de Tabaré Vázquez a los uruguayos que viven en España.
Más allá de la responsabilidad del actual gobierno, lo cierto es que el modelo económico aplicado por los sucesivos gobiernos uruguayos ha sido el responsable de que tantos y tantas compatriotas hayan tenido que migrar, en su gran mayoría por no encontrar en su patria las condiciones necesarias para vivir decorosamente. Los conciudadanos del Departamento 20 –creado por el actual gobierno– tienen todo el derecho a exigir apoyo al actual gobierno.
De acuerdo con Caserta, el gobierno uruguayo debería realizar una verdadera acción en repudio a la política migratoria europea. "El comunicado enviado por Uruguay a la Comunidad Europea criticando la nueva normativa queda lindo, pero no es una solución. Solución es lo de dijo Chávez de que si le tocan a un venezolano le corta el suministro de petróleo".
Pensando en términos uruguayos y siguiendo esa línea, lo primero que viene a la mente es decir: si nos tocan a un uruguayo le retiramos a Ence la bonificación de la zona franca y hasta el permiso de instalar su fábrica. Ese sería un acto de verdadero apoyo.
Firmantes :
Javier Rodríguez Pardo (Movimiento Antinuclear del Chubut-MACH), Jorge Eduardo Rulli (Reconciliarnos con la Tierra/GRR), Carlos A. Manessi (CEPRONAT), Daniel Verzeñassi (Foro Ecologista de Paraná), Carlos Vicente (Acción por la Biodiversidad), Myrian Genisans (Pro Eco Tucumán), Silvana Buján (Bios Argentina).
Etiquetas: Netroots
ENTREGAN A JUECES DEL SUPREMO IMPORTANTE PUBLICACION
SOBRE LA ZONA MARITIMO TERRESTRE
San Juan – Ante el creciente número de controversias llevadas a la atención de los tribunales de Puerto Rico relacionadas a la construcción de proyectos en la zona marítimo terrestre (ZMT), la organización Iniciativa para un Desarrollo Sustentable (IDS) entregó a cada uno de los jueces del Tribunal Supremo de Puerto Rico copia de la Cartilla de la Zona Marítimo Terrestre, publicación especializada sobre esta área de la zona costanera.
“La construcción de estructuras residenciales y turísticas en la ZMT, principalmente, esta impactando severamente su integridad ecológica, a parte de limitar el acceso público a las playas, y de exponer la vida y propiedad innecesariamente a amenazas naturales como marejadas e inundaciones. En vista de esta grave situación, es vital que los jueces cuenten con la mejor información posible para que puedan comprender como sus decisiones tendrán consecuencias permanentes sobre la realidad física, a corto y a largo plazo, de este valioso recurso costero, mas allá de una determinación legal” señaló Luis Jorge Rivera Herrera, científico ambiental de IDS.
La publicación, preparada por expertos en ecología, oceanografía, y planificación, entre otras disciplinas, explica en forma sencilla diversos conceptos y procesos sobre la ZMT, tales como las condiciones climáticas de la costa, las características físicas y ecológicas de la ZMT, sus beneficios, usos y amenazas, entre otros temas relacionados.
“Confiamos que los funcionarios públicos de nuestro mas alto foro se beneficien de esta excelente referencia, no solo en el caso de Paseo Caribe, sino posiblemente en muchos otros que estarán llegando a su consideración sobre la ZMT, en vista de cómo las agencias administrativas continúan actuando de forma inconsistente y contraria al mandato constitucional de lograr su mejor conservación y aprovechamiento para beneficio general de la ciudadanía”, indicó Rivera Herrera.
Este añadió que estarán haciendo próximamente las gestiones para entregarle también copia de la Cartilla a los jueces del Tribunal de Primera Instancia y del Tribunal Apelativo.
La Cartilla de la ZMT es una publicación desarrollada por la Asociación de Maestros de Ciencia de Puerto Rico (AMCPR), el Instituto Internacional de Dasonomía Tropical (IITF, por sus siglas en inglés), adscrito al Servicio Forestal Federal, y el Programa Sea Grant de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, administrado a la Administración Oceánica y Atmosférica de los Estados Unidos (NOAA, por sus siglas en inglés).
Contactos: Luis Jorge Rivera Herrera (IDS): 787-460-8315
Etiquetas: Puerto Rico
MoveOn is ten years old, and the Nation's Christopher Hayes takes a long look at it in the new Nation cover story out today. Here is the link below for the article titled: "MoveOn@Ten" http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080804/hayes
I am quoted briefly and accurately in it as a critic of MoveOn, and some of my thoughts are further spelled out in this interview I did last week with David Sirota examining the difference between MoveOn's elitist top-down marketing and fundraising, and what we really need to activate democracy in America which is bottom-up populist citizen empowerment and movement building
http://www.prwatch.org/node/7523
"The War, Dems, MoveOn and The Uprising"
In a related vein, here is my piece today on the Netroots Nation confab in Austin, "Netroots Nation Convenes in Austin, True Blue and On Message"
http://www.prwatch.org/node/7562
As always, feel free to use my pieces with appropriate attribution.
John Stauber
Behind the Scenes at a Food Riot
The excellent Avi Lewis, whose documentary with Naomi Klein -- The Take -- is well worth watching, has turned his attention to the struggles around rice in Haiti. Here, in seventeen minutes, is one of the best treatments of the recent food riots in Haiti, and their long history.
Raj's blogEtiquetas: Food Crisis, Haiti, Raj Patel, Video
Desarrollistas anhelan “dictador” para adelantar sus proyectos
Jueves, 10 de julio de 2008
Cándida Cotto / Claridad
ccotto@claridadpuertorico.com
Sólo desde la prepotencia o la ignorancia se puede hacer una petición como la que hizo recientemente Federico Stubbe, uno de los portavoces de los llamados desarrollistas, al gobernador Aníbal Acevedo Vilá, de que se convirtiera en un dictador para que sea quien único dé y quite permisos en Puerto Rico. Si absurdo y atrevido es ese pedido, y contrario a los más elementales preceptos democráticos, mucho más lejos de la verdad son las alegadas razones que lo motivaron.
Según expresó el presidente de la Asociación de Constructores de Hogares (ACH), Rafael Rojo, en el almuerzo de la entidad con el gobernador Aníbal Acevedo Vilá, celebrado en el Bankers Club a fines de junio, los proyectos San Miguel Four Seasons (SMFS) en Luquillo, Dos Mares J.W. Marriott Resort, en Fajardo, Costa Serena en Piñones, la expansión del Courtyard Marriott en el balneario de Isla Verde y Windmar en Guayanilla, tienen permisos aprobados y fueron revocados por protestas sin fundamento científico o legal hechas por grupos minoritarios, mediante presiones públicas indebidas. La ACH forma parte de una llamada Coalición del Sector Privado, que integran también la Asociación de Hoteles y Turismo (AHT), la Asociación de Industriales (AI), la Asociación de Contratistas Generales (ACG) y la Cámara de Comercio (CCPR). Esta Coalición se pronunció en términos similares días antes a las que hizo la ACH en el referido almuerzo.
El científico ambientalista Luis Jorge Rivera Herrera , portavoz de la organización Iniciativa para un Desarrollo Sustentable (IDS), desmintió las alegaciones de los desarrollistas sobre cada uno de los proyectos. Contrario a lo que alegan los constructores ninguno de estos proyectos ha logrado obtener permiso alguno de construcción precisamente por la falta de cumplimiento con las leyes ambientales.
En los casos de Costa Serena y Dos Mares Resort, sus declaraciones de impacto ambiental fueron rechazadas por el Tribunal de Apelaciones y el Tribunal Supremo (en dos ocasiones) respectivamente, porque no cumplían con los requisitos legales mínimos establecidos para evaluar su impacto ambiental. Por eso ninguna agencia ha podido otorgar permiso alguno en el pasado, según ordena la Ley de Política Pública Ambiental de Puerto Rico. Según Rivera Herrera, los desarrollistas ignoran el hecho de que estos proyectos también fueron rechazados por el Servicio Forestal de Estados Unidos (UFS, siglas en inglés) y el Servicio de Pesca y Vida Silvestre (FWS), entre otras organizaciones profesionales.
El otro proyecto cuya DIA fue rechazada es San Miguel Four Seasons. La JCA rechazó el documento en tres ocasiones consecutivas, durante diferentes administraciones gubernamentales, por contener deficiencias crasas. “Una de estas deficiencias hacía mención de que el Océano Pacífico se encuentra al norte de Puerto Rico. Este proyecto también ha sido objetado por agencias federales, entidades profesionales y organizaciones conservacionistas internacionales”, declaró el científico ambientalista.
Sobre el Marriott en Isla Verde, sus proponentes omiten decir que el Tribunal de Primera Instancia dictaminó que el contrato de arrendamiento de los terrenos donde se proponía el proyecto era ilegal, puesto que ello equivaldría a la privatización y enajenación de bienes de dominio público como son nuestras playas.
En la controversia más reciente, la de la compañía CEMEX en Ponce, el Tribunal de Apelaciones revocó el permiso otorgado por la JCA para la quema de neumáticos porque no se llevaron a cabo los procedimientos requeridos legalmente de evaluación sobre su impacto al ambiente y por consiguiente, a la salud pública. Una vez más los constructores e industriales no dicen que hace sólo dos semanas la Agencia de Protección Ambiental de Estados Unidos (EPA) declaró a la CEMEX en Ponce como “Violadora de Alta Prioridad”. Esta categoría constituye el señalamiento o nivel más serio sobre violaciones ambientales entre las industrias reguladas por EPA en Estados Unidos bajo la Ley federal de Aire Limpio.
Las alegaciones de la Coalición del Sector Privado sobre el proyecto de los molinos de viento en Guayanilla tampoco son correctas. Este proyecto Windmar todavía está bajo evaluación de las agencias gubernamentales. Aun así, el director ejecutivo de la Autoridad de Energía Eléctrica (AEE), Jorge Rodríguez, ha hecho declaraciones públicas de que firmará el contrato con Windmar aunque no tenga permisos. A lo anterior se suma el endoso recibido del Departamento de Recursos Naturales y Ambientales (DRNA) pese a que la Secretaria Auxiliar de Permisos del mismo Departamento recomendó lo contrario.
En cuanto a Costa Serena, es harto conocido que el Gobierno adoptó la política pública de proteger los terrenos. Todavía el aspecto legal de la adquisición de los terrenos está en veremos. Tan reciente como marzo de 2008 el desarrollista Joel Katz y su empresa PFZ demandó por la cantidad de $81 millones en el Tribunal de Estados Unidos en Puerto Rico a la organización sin fines de lucro “Trust for Public Land”. Esta era la organización que el gobierno iba a utilizar para adquirir los terrenos.
Pero esa demanda no es la única acción legal contra el Gobierno por los interesados de los proyectos en cuestión. Los proponentes del Marriott acudieron a la Corte de Quiebra buscando que el Gobierno les compense por no dejarlos construir en terrenos públicos. Otra acción judicial contra el Gobierno es la de los proponentes de Dos Mares, luego de que el Gobernador declarara reserva natural los terrenos del Corredor Ecológico del Noreste (CEN).
A la luz de los hechos, el portavoz de IDS reiteró que las alegaciones de los proyectistas “constituyen una falta de respeto a nuestro sistema judicial y a todos los funcionarios públicos que forman parte del mismo. Estas declaraciones persiguen ignorar la realidad: estos proyectos no han podido ser construidos porque nunca han cumplido con las leyes que rigen el desarrollo sostenible de los suelos, la conservación y aprovechamiento de nuestros recursos naturales y la protección del medio ambiente. Como consecuencia, resultan contrarios al interés público y por ende, al beneficio general de la comunidad”.
Rivera Herrera exhortó a las entidades empresariales responsables por las declaraciones a que reflexionen profundamente sobre las mismas. “De lo contrario, se entendería que apoyan y endosan la ilegalidad, conducta que debe ser entonces repudiada por todos los sectores de nuestra sociedad”.
http://claridadpuertorico.com/content/view/402210/32/
Etiquetas: Claridad, Corredor Ecologico, Corredor Ecológico del Noreste, Puerto Rico
Five years to the day after American forces began their campaign of "shock and awe" in Iraq, opponents of the war gathered in Washington. While some came with bullhorns and drums and flag-draped coffins, danced down K Street and confronted legislators on Capitol Hill, others formed a quiet vigil in Lafayette Park across from the White House. Here there were no bullhorns or drums. Instead, there were a few news cameras, a banner that read Invest in America, Not Endless War in Iraq and a clutch of several dozen members of MoveOn. Bill Hamm, a retired Air Force pilot from Texas who had come to Washington for the Take Back America conference, told me that during his military career, fellow pilots often gave him push back because of his liberal politics. But, he said, "I think that's changing now." Hamm told me that back in Austin, where he and his wife serve as regional coordinators for MoveOn's local councils, his wife was organizing a 150-person vigil outside the governor's mansion. Because of "war on terror" restrictions they were told they couldn't bring candles. "So they're going to use flashlights."
This is in large part because MoveOn has been viewed through the distorting lens of a four-decade culture-war narrative, one whose labels have long outlasted the movements and dynamics that gave rise to them. In 1968, as the country approached what seemed to many at the time something like a civil war, Richard Nixon addressed the Republican National Convention in Miami Beach. He described "cities enveloped in flame...sirens in the night...Americans hating each other, fighting each other, killing each other at home." Amid this tumult and chaos, Nixon presented himself as a tribune for those who weren't in the streets, who weren't seeking out confrontation and attention, "the forgotten Americans," he called them, "the non-shouters."
Etiquetas: MoveOn, The Nation
By: GRITtv Thursday July 17, 2008 9:00 am |
There's an economic crisis but is capitalism itself in crisis? It certainly doesn’t appear very healthy with foreclosure rates mounting, food prices and energy costs soaring, and daily calls for taxpayers to bail out banks. But the government seems to have little in the way of solutions. As Naomi Klein, author of The Shock Doctrine says on our panel, “Bush is an advertisement for the uselessness of government.” His calls for consumers to spend more along with Phil Gramm’s comment that the crisis is mental indicate a level of cognitive dissonance that we haven’t seen since, well, Hurricane Katrina. There are two worlds in this country and the schism is widening.
Here to discuss the current economic crises along with Klein are Jeff Madrick, author of The Case for Big Government, and Bhairavi Desai, Executive Director of the Taxi Workers Alliance. Desai is involved in an effort to organize Taxi workers across the globe and they've achieved some impressive victories. A new kind of globalization? Find out here on GRITtv.
Etiquetas: Grit TV, Naomi Klein, Video
Climate Progress has covered the impending climate disaster known as Coal to Liquids again and again (see below). Recently the Natural Resources Defense Council has produced a 10-minute video on coal to liquids. If you know someone who prefers his or her information in video form, send them a pointer.
Related posts:
Etiquetas: Coal, Energy, Global Warming
By: GRITtv Wednesday July 16, 2008 9:00 am |
Formerly known as the Yearly Kos, Netroots Nation gathers this weekend for its third annual convention in Austin, Texas to discuss politics, the media, and how the netroots can influence the '08 election. In just three years the event and the blogosphere itself have become a prominent part of our political conversation. Last year, of the Democratic candidates, everyone but Joe Biden made an appearance at the convention. From Howard Dean’s virtual rise and fall to Barack Obama’s web savvy campaign the net has been hyped and some would say over-hyped.
On our roundtable Sam Seder, host of the Sam Seder Show on Air America, Robert George a columnist for the NY Post, Justin Krebs of Living Liberally, and Katie Halper, a blogger and co-founder of laughing liberally discuss the future of the blogosphere.
Halper says that a brief recovery period after Bush leaves office will be necessary but that the left will not retreat. These are after all not the Clinton years. According to Seder the liberal media will continue to grow and in fact become more liberal. Listen to the roundtable here.
Etiquetas: Grit TV, Laura Flanders, Netroots, Video
Solar Power Sizzles
Washington, D.C.—Global production of solar photovoltaic (PV) cells increased 51 percent in 2007, to 3,733 megawatts, according to the latest Vital Signs Update from the Worldwatch Institute, produced in collaboration with the Prometheus Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
More than 2,935 megawatts (MW) of solar modules were installed in 2007, according to early estimates, bringing cumulative global installations of PVs since 1996 to more than 9,740 MW—enough to meet the annual electricity demand of more than 3 million homes in Europe.
“Thanks to strong, smart policies in countries like Germany and Spain, the PV industry is making great strides in efficiency and cost, bringing solar power closer to price parity with fossil fuels,” says Janet Sawin, Worldwatch Senior Researcher and author of the update.
Over the past year, Europe—led by Germany—surpassed Japan to lead the world in solar cell manufacturing, producing an estimated 1,063 MW in 2007. Thanks to government policies that guarantee high payments for solar power fed into the electric grid, Germany remains the world leader in solar PV installations, accounting for almost half the world total in 2007. About 40,000 people are now employed in the PV industry in Germany.
Spain ranked second after Germany for total installations in 2007, but accounts for only an estimated 3 percent of global production. As in Germany, the Spanish market is being driven by a strong guaranteed price for PV electricity.
Despite a dramatic increase in solar cell production in the United States, up 48 percent to 266 MW, the nation’s share of global production and installations continued to fall in 2007.
In contrast, China raced past the United States for PV cell manufacturing in 2006 to place third globally, and it now ranks second only to Japan for national production. Over the past two years, China’s PV production has increased more than sixfold, to 820 MW in 2007. Despite these impressive numbers, the domestic market remains small and most PV cells made in China are exported to Europe.
“With billions of dollars invested in the solar energy technologies in the last 12 months, the PV sector is primed for accelerating its impact in both centralized and distributed generation at increasingly competitive costs,” says Travis Bradford, President of the Prometheus Institute. “As it reaches widespread cost parity in the next few years, demand will flourish in many places around the world simultaneously.”
Solar PV prices declined slightly in 2007, with even greater reductions held back by the hot pace of demand and a continued shortage of polysilicon, an essential ingredient for conventional solar cells. Analysts expect much more dramatic price drops—perhaps as much as 50 percent in the next two years—as more polysilicon becomes available, production and installation are further scaled up, manufacturing efficiencies increase, and more advanced technologies are introduced. As a result, solar electricity could soon be a competitive alternative to conventional retail power in many regions, including California and southern Europe.
According to Sawin, “PV and other renewables offer significant potential to meet global energy needs while addressing climate change, enhancing energy security, and creating jobs. Scaling up renewables is primarily a matter of political will and enacting strong, consistent policies that create demand.”
Etiquetas: Energy, Renewable Energy, Solar, Worldwatch