Posts Tagged ‘Respecting Earth’

Regulation: Now More Than Ever

Posted by: Sam Folin

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

The BP failure in the Gulf of Mexico reminds us why regulating market based economies is crucial.

Last week Steven Pearlstein  penned an excellent article in  the Washington Post, and observed,

“The big flaw in the business critique of regulation is not so much that it overstates the costs, but that it understates its benefits — in particular, the benefits of avoiding low-probability events with disastrous consequences. Think of oil spills, mine explosions, financial meltdowns or even global warming. There is a natural tendency of human beings to underestimate the odds of such seemingly unlikely events — of forgetting that the 100-year flood is as likely to happen in Year 5 as it is in Year 95. And if there are insufficient data to calculate the probability of a very bad outcome, as is often the case, that doesn’t mean we should assume the probability is zero.”

Read his entire article here:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/25/AR2010052505154.html?sub=AR

Our history is filled with instances where business profit is privatized and business disasters are socialized. No doubt the BP spill will be yet another example.

OSF

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Global Warming

Posted by: Sam Folin

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Last week’s Economist magazine has a reasonably good editorial and an excellent review of climate science on page 83.

It is the March 20-26, 2010 issue and can be found here: http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15719298

OSF

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Geothermal Tremors

Posted by: Steven Gervais

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

It was no surprise to me that the Basel geothermal plant in Switzerland was suspended, because more than 10,000 earthquakes occurred in the first 6 days of water injection, with some earthquakes measuring 3.4 on the Richter Scale (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007AGUFM.V53F..08D).

After all, Earth is a whole, living organism; a ‘mother’ for all life. All of life is birthed ‘in Earth’ and kept alive by her waters, nutrients and air. I say ‘in Earth’ rather than ‘on’, because Earth is not just a surface in which the drama of our lives is unfolding – she extends up into the fullness of the atmosphere to transport water vapor, moderate temperature, (more…)

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Geothermal Toxins

Posted by: Steven Gervais

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

A Nobel Laureate winner in Physics and a chemical engineering professor at MIT are hopeful that geothermal, particularly ‘Enhanced Geothermal Systems’, will be the renewable energy solution to extend geothermal power generation beyond plate boundaries to almost anywhere on Earth (see brief video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O6r_3AgI49Y&feature=player_embedded).

Drilling 4-10 kilometers into Earth’s crust and injecting water to create thousands of small pathways for the water to flow, be heated, and brought back to the surface to power turbines and generate electricity, also inevitably carries back to the surface (more…)

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