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Our Challenge

As Stewart Brand said in the introduction to the Whole Earth Catalogs,

"If we are going to act like gods, we might as well get good at it."

And Biomimicry is one key, and in a sense, one of the legacy's of the Whole Earth movement. Like Buckminster Fuller's comprehensive antipatory design science, Biomimicry is (1) the exploration and understanding of nature, i.e., the environment, as the technology and economy of an exquisitely evolved and designed regenerative life support system (living machine) that has been tested and developed over 3.8 billion years of evolution (see-the time line of evolution) and then (2) applying those battle-hardened principles to all aspects of human activity--designing, creating, and managing of society, from industrial products, to urban and regional systems, to public policy, business, the economy, etc., i.e., Sustainability 2030 and the leading edge of the sustainability response.

Key Questions

Sustainability 2030's (S2030) research/practice program addresses the following key questions:

1. How can you/we become effective, powerful, even transformational forces for sustainability?

2. What is the program required for ultimate sustainability success--the end game?

3. Who has part of the answer now (current sustainability champions), how far do they take us, and how can we harness the state-of-the-art leading edge sustainability to an innovative research/practice program that gets us to ultimate success in the limited time remaining?  (more)

Mission

Advance, accelerate, and amplify an accurate understanding of the sustainability challenge and how to harness the power and potential of sustainability for an effective response before time runs out. The Strategic Sustainability2030 Institute  (S2030I) is a web-based think/do tank (more).

Announcements

UPCOMING:

April 2013, Chicago, APA National Conference.

May 13-15, 2013, Seattle, Living Future unConference.

PAST (2012):

October 23-26, Portland, EcoDistrict Summit 2012.

July 31-Aug. 4, Portland, Ecosystem Services Conference.

May 2-4, Portland, The Living Future Unconference for deep green professionals.

June 15-18, Brazil, Rio+20 United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development

Affiliations
International Society of Sustainability Professionals
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Our Challenge

as Buckminster Fuller observed, is

"to make the world work for 100% of humanity, in the shortest possible time, through spontaneous cooperation without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone."

This goal is the essence of sustainable development! The Buckminster Fuller Institute (BFI) provides access to Bucky's legacy, including his comprehensive anticipatory design science revolution. Check out their website, their programs, and engage.

Problem & Way Out

  

Caption: "Sadly, the only proven way to achieve global GHG reductions so far has been economic recession." Comment: Fortunately, shifting to 100% renewables would catalyze the global transition to durable prosperity and community well-being in a way that would eliminate GHG production AND grow the economy <<continued>>. (See also: strategic sustainabilitynatural capitalismits four strategies, and RMI's Reinventing Fire [energy] Program.) 

APA Links
FEATURES1

Green Urbanism - Formulating a series of holistic principles

Green Growth - Recent Developments (OECD)

Foundation Earth - Rethinking Society from the Ground Up

Reinventing Fire - A key transformational initiative of RMI worth knowing/watching.

A Quick-Start Guide to Strategic Sustainability Planning

NEW Report: Embedding sustainability into government culture.

New STARS LEED-like sustainable transportation tool for plans, projects, cities, corridors, regions.

Strategic Community Sustainability Planning workshop resources.

Leveraging Leading-Edge Sustainability report.

Winning or losing the future is our choice NOW!

How Possible is Sustainable Development, by Edward Jepson, PhD.

Legacy sustainability articles -- the Naphtali Knox collection.

FEATURES2

TNS Transition to Global Sustainability Network

EcoDistricts -- NextGen Urban Sustainability

Darin Dinsmore: Community & Regional Sustainability Strategies and Planning

Sustainable Infrastructure: The Guide to Green Engineering and Design

APA-SCP (Sustainable Community Planning) Interest Group

Sustainability Learning Center

New path breaking Solutions Journal

Institute for Governance & Sustainable Development

Strategic Sustainability -- distance learning at BHT

Q4 Consulting - Mindfulness, Sustainability, and Leadership

RealClimate--Climate Science by Real Scientists

World Cafe--Designed Conversation for Group Intelligence

Real Change--Research Program for Global Sustainability Decision Making

RMI Conference, SF, 10-1/3-2009

Real Time Carbon Counter

Global Climate Change - Implications for US

Agenda for a Sustainable America 2009

ALIA Institute Sustainability Leadership

Frontiers in Ecological Economics

Herman Daly -- Failed Growth to Sustainable Steady State?

EOF - Macroeconomics and Ecological Sustainability

Gil Friend - Truth About Green Business

Sustainable Transpo SF

Google Earth-Day KMLs

AIA Sustainability 2030 Toolkit

Donella Meadows - Which Future?

Urban Mobility System wins Bucky Challenge 2009

Renewable Economy Cheaper than Systems Collapse

Population Growth-Earth Forum

Breakthrough Ideas-Bucky Challenge

Urban & Regional Planning-Cities at a Turning Point

John P. Holdren-Meeting the Climate Change Challenge

Stephen Cohen's Weekly Column in the New York Observer

SUSTAINABILITY 2030 CLIPS 

Quick access to key sustainability resources from an emerging whole systems and critical-path perspective: pioneers, leaders, powerful ideas, path-breaking initiatives, beyond best practices, important events. Comment. Search. Go to the Sust-Clips Index of categories. See also: the State of Sustainability (SOS)TM Journal for commentary.


Sunday
Nov302008

Sustainability - A New Journal

http://www.liebertpub.com/sus SUSTAINABILITY: The Journal of Record meets the needs of the rapidly growing community of professionals in academia, industry, policy, and government who have the responsibility and commitment to advancing one of the major imperatives of this young century.The Journal provides the information and resources to foster collaboration, between sustainability managers, educators, corporate executives, administrators, policy makers, economists, and technology innovators who have the mandate to address and move forward the imperatives of the preservation and sustainability of global resources.

 

Sunday
Nov302008

Solar Assessment Districts - Innovative Finance for Real Production

Will Berkeley's Solar Plan Go Viral? Cisco DeVries, who came up with the innovative financing plan, is trying to convince cities nationwide to join the solar revolution. http://www.eastbayexpress.com/news/will_berkeley_s_solar_plan_go_viral_/Content?oid=868408

Monday
Nov172008

The Climate for Change - Gore Op Ed

In this OpEd piece, Al Gore illuminates a practical path to the seemingly impossible, shifting society to a sustainable economy based renewable energy in ten years or less and simultaneously solving the global financial crisis along the way. Now THAT's thinking out of the box!

 

By AL GORE Published: November 9, 2008, New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/09/opinion/09gore.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2&ref=opinion

The inspiring and transformative choice by the American people to elect Barack Obama as our 44th president lays the foundation for another fateful choice that he — and we — must make this January to begin an emergency rescue of human civilization from the imminent and rapidly growing threat posed by the climate crisis. . . .

The world authority on the climate crisis, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, after 20 years of detailed study and four unanimous reports, now says that the evidence is “unequivocal. . . .” 

Here is the good news: the bold steps that are needed to solve the climate crisis are exactly the same steps that ought to be taken in order to solve the economic crisis and the energy security crisis. . . .

Economists across the spectrum — including Martin Feldstein and Lawrence Summers — agree that large and rapid investments in a jobs-intensive infrastructure initiative is the best way to revive our economy in a quick and sustainable way. Many also agree that our economy will fall behind if we continue spending hundreds of billions of dollars on foreign oil every year. Moreover, national security experts in both parties agree that we face a dangerous strategic vulnerability if the world suddenly loses access to Middle Eastern oil. . . .

Here’s what we can do — now: we can make an immediate and large strategic investment to put people to work replacing 19th-century energy technologies that depend on dangerous and expensive carbon-based fuels with 21st-century technologies that use fuel that is free forever: the sun, the wind and the natural heat of the earth. . . .

What follows is a five-part plan to repower America with a commitment to producing 100 percent of our electricity from carbon-free sources within 10 years. It is a plan that would simultaneously move us toward solutions to the climate crisis and the economic crisis — and create millions of new jobs that cannot be outsourced. . . .

This year similarly saw the rise of young Americans, whose enthusiasm electrified Barack Obama’s campaign. There is little doubt that this same group of energized youth will play an essential role in this project to secure our national future, once again turning seemingly impossible goals into inspiring success.

 

 

Wednesday
Nov122008

FW: Porter Nov 20: Globalised Agroecosystems - play, fast-forward, rewind or pause?

-----Original Message-----
From: Stockholm Seminars [mailto:stockholmseminars@albaeco.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 12, 2008 3:28 AM
To: Scott Edmondson
Subject: Porter Nov 20: Globalised Agroecosystems - play, fast-forward,
rewind or pause?

------------------------------------------------------
THE STOCKHOLM SEMINARS:
FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE AND POLICY
------------------------------------------------------

We have the great pleasure to invite you to the seminar:

“Globalised agroecosystems - play, fast-forward, rewind or pause?”

Prof. John R. Porter
Department of Environment, Resources and Technology,
University of Copenhagen


Thursday, November 20, 2008, 14.00–15.00
Linné Hall, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences,
Lilla Frescativägen 4, Stockholm

Download the seminar announcement as a pdf-file at:
http://albaeco.com/htm/pdf/porter1120-08.pdf

Please, post or circulate the announcement among your colleagues or put it
on the note board. The seminars are open for all interested and free of
charge. No registration needed.

Very welcome!

---

ABSTRACT:
The talk examines four scenarios for possible future agroecosystems and
examines the issue of ecosystem services in agriculture and how they may be
improved.

ABOUT PROF PORTER:
John R Porter is Professor of Agroecology, Head of the Department of
Environment, Resources and Technology at The University of Copenhagen. His
integrative, multi-disciplinary and collaborative research and teaching is
on the response of arable crops, energy crops and complex agro-ecosystems to
their environment with an emphasis on climate change and ecosystem services.
He has published over 90 papers in reviewed journals and has received four
international prizes for research and teaching. In 2007, he was one of the
scientists honoured by the Nobel Peace Prize for his work with the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change since 1995.

ABOUT THE STOCKHOLM SEMINARS: FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE AND POLICY

The Stockholm Seminars cover a broad range of perspectives on sustainability
issues and are focused on the need for a sound scientific basis for
sustainable development policy. The Stockholm Seminars is arranged by seven
interdisciplinary institutes to communicate scientific results on
sustainable development. The seminars are given at the Royal Swedish Academy
of Sciences and are visited by a large audience, including scientists,
students, media and policy makers in the public and private sector.

The lectures are free of charge and open for all interested. For more
information: contact Albaeco (08 - 674 74 00) or e-mail: info@albaeco.com,
or www.albaeco.com/sthsem


ARRANGED BY:

- The Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics, the Royal Swedish Academy of
Sciences

- The Stockholm Resilience Centre

- The Stockholm Environment Institute, SEI

- The International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, IGBP, the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences

- The Stockholm International Water Institute, SIWI

- The Swedish Biodiversity Centre, CBM, at the Swedish University of
Agricultural Sciences and Uppsala University

- The International Foundation for Science, IFS

--------------------------------------------------------------------

WANT TO UNSUBSCRIBE?
Follow this link http://www.albaeco.com/subscribe/unsubscribe.asp?id=3

Albaeco 2008, http://www.albaeco.com

Tuesday
Nov112008

What is Sustainability?

Cross-Post from:  http://hansonbridgett.com/edms/grn_newsltr_2008-11/article2.html

Article "My Company Just Started a Sustainability Department. What Do I Do Now?" By Daniel Winokur, Daniel Winokur is a strategic sustainability consultant pursuing his MBA in Sustainable Management at the Presidio School of Management. He has consulted for multiple businesses looking to start a sustainability department or initiative. Currently, he is working with Red Bull of North America, helping them to reduce their carbon footprint through fleet MPG improvements and a solar array. You can email him at dwinokur@presidiomba.org with any questions about this article.

Tuesday
Nov112008

Strategies for a Green Economy - Joel Makower

Cross-Post from SFSU NetImpact Group Meeting 11-12-2008

Joel Makower recently published a new book, entitled "Strategies for the Green Economy: Opportunities and Challenges in the New World of Business" (http://www.makower.com/book.html).

Visit http://www.makower.com/for more information on Joel Makower and his endeavors. "For more than 20 years, Joel Makower has been a well-respected voice on business, the environment, and the bottom line. As a writer, speaker, and strategist on corporate environmental practices, clean technology, and green marketing, he has helped a wide range of companies align environmental responsibility with business success.

His balanced, realistic, and credible approach to sustainable business and clean technology has helped senior managers in a variety of companies and sectors create strategic roadmaps, make the business case, articulate a vision internally, form meaningful partnerships, and communicate with a broad range of stakeholders.

The Associated Press has calledhim"The guru of green business practices."

Joel is co-founder and executive editor of Greener World Media, Inc., which produces GreenBiz.com and its sister sites, ClimateBiz.com, GreenerBuildings.com, and GreenerComputing.com. He also serves as a senior strategist at GreenOrder, a sustainability consultancy, as well as co-founder and principal of Clean Edge Inc., a research and publishing firm focusing on building markets for clean energy technologies. From 1991 to 2005, Joel was editor and publisher of The Green Business Letter, an award-winning monthly newsletter he founded on corporate environmental strategy. In 2005, he was appointed a Batten Fellow at the Darden Graduate School of Business at the University of Virginia.

Joel has helped a wide range of companies improve their environmental strategy and communications -- including Clifbar, Gap, Hewlett Packard, Levi Strauss, Nike, Procter & Gamble, and Stonyfield Farm -- as well as advising more than a dozen early-stage companies focusing on environmentally sustainable products and services.

A former nationally syndicated columnist, Joel is author or co-author of more than a dozen books, including his latest, Strategies for the Green Economy. Previous books include Beyond the Bottom Line: Putting Social Responsibility to Work for Your Business and the World, about the profit and potential of socially responsible business practices; The E-Factor: The Bottom-Line Approach to Environmentally Responsible Business, on how companies are responding to environmental challenges in positive and profitable ways, and The Green Consumer, a best-selling guide to the environmental marketplace.

In addition, he is author of an oral history of the Woodstock music festival, published in 1989, which Rolling Stone called "the definitive history of the mega-event."

Joel has been a featured commentator on environmental topics for public radio's "Marketplace" and appears frequently in both broadcast and print media (read recent clippings here). He serves as a board member or adviser to a range of for-profit and nonprofit organizations and lectures regularly to companies, industry groups, and business schools around the world." (www.makower.com)

 

Monday
Nov102008

Organic Agriculture In Africa More Productive than Chemicals

Cross-Post: Union for Concerned Scientists http://www.ucsusa.org/food_and_agriculture/feed/feed-november-2008.html#2

FEED - November 2008

Contents

     1. USDA regulations would allow pharma crops to threaten food supply
     2. New organic rules guarantee pasture for grazers
     3. MRSA associated with food animals
     4. Organic farming in Africa wins over chemical methods
     5. California voters pass initiative to modernize food animal production

4. Organic farming in Africa wins over chemical methods. A major study from the United Nations Environment Program reported that the use of organic practices in Africa produces higher yields than farming with pesticides and fertilizers. The study of 114 projects in 24 countries found that yields often more than doubled when organic or near-organic practices such as crop rotation and composting were used. Organic agriculture also brought benefits to families and communities: it encouraged the improvement of local infrastructure like roads, built social relations in the community, increased farmers' incomes, improved soil fertility, and increased the land's resistance to drought. Because organic agriculture relies on available resources rather than on expensive inputs like genetically engineered seed or pesticides, poor farmers can more readily implement organic methods than industrial agriculture methods, and they can retain more earnings. The study concluded that organic techniques are a practical way for African farmers to achieve the crop yields they need and generate food security for the growing population. Read the report (pdf), or read an article about it in The Independent (UK).

Sunday
Nov092008

New Biodiversity Agenda

 

Cross-Post:  http://ncseonline.org/Conference/Biodiversity/

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR SCIENCE AND THE ENVIRONMENT invites you to participate in the 9th National Conference on Science, Policy, and the Environment: Biodiversity in a Rapidly Changing World, to address the challenge the changing world poses to biodiversity (and to humanity). The conference will provide an opportunity to look at what is happening to biodiversity in the context of radical climate disruption, human population rise, land use changes, globalization and other economic forces. We will collectively develop a 21st century biodiversity science and conservation strategy.

JOIN US to Create A New Biodiversity Agenda!
December 8-10, 2008
Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, Washington, DC
http://ncseonline.org/Conference/Biodiversity/

Sunday
Nov092008

Thomas Friedman - Hot, Flat, & Crowded--Why We Need a Green Revolution

 Thomas L. Friedman's latest book, Hot, Flat, and Crowded--Why We Need a Green Revolution and How It Can Renew America  (FSG 2008), brings a "fresh and provocative outlook to the two biggest challenges we face today: America's surprising loss of focus and national purpose since 9/11; and the global environmental crises of destabilizing climate change and rising competition for energy, which is affecting everything from food to fuel to forests. In this ground breaking account of where we stand now and how we got here, he shows us how the solutions to these two big problems are linked"--how restoring the economy by restoring the environment (i.e., sustainability) will also revive America at the same time! He sees this response as an imperative in the face of the dire consequences for humanity from the great climate destabilzation, and calls the response "Code Green," envisioning the need for a war-time-type mobilization to avoid the worst results of global warming and to invent the ecologically sustainable and empowered economy that is our only option for durable prosperity and security. This was/is the essential hope underlying the industrial revolution and the American experiment, and America can and should honor its history by renewing that role and world leadership with Code Green.

 

Read the complete summary and take advantage of a range of reading guides available on the publisher's website.

 

Thomas L. Friedman, a world-renowned author and journalist, joined The New York Times in 1981 as a financial reporter specializing in OPEC- and oil-related news and later served as the chief diplomatic, chief White House, and international economics correspondents. Friedman has reported on the Middle East conflict, the end of the cold war, U.S.domestic politics and foreign policy, international economics, and the worldwide impact of the terrorist threat. Friedman currently writes a syndicated column for the New York Times on related issues.

 

Friedman is the author of From Beirut to Jerusalem (FSG, 1989), which won both the National Book Award and the Overseas Press Club Award in 1989 and was on the New York Times bestseller list for nearly twelve months. From Beirut to Jerusalem has been published in more than twenty-seven languages, including Chinese and Japanese, and is now used as a basic textbook on the Middle East in many high schools and universities. Friedman also wrote The Lexus and the Olive Tree(FSG, 1999), one of the best selling business books in 1999, and the winner of the 2000 Overseas Press Club Award for best nonfiction book on foreign policy. It is now available in twenty languages. In 2005, The World Is Flat was given the first Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award, and Friedman was named one of America's Best Leaders by U.S. News & World Report. His latest book, Hot, Flat, and Crowded (FSG 2008), brings a fresh outlook to the crises of destabilizing climate change and rising competition for energy.

 

Sunday
Nov092008

Sustainable Jobs - A Recent Summary

A sustainable economy is based on economic activity where limited resources cycle endlessly, cheap and abundant energy is renewable and harvested and deployed on a centralized and dispersed basis, toxic materials are not allowed to cycle through the biosphere, and agriculature is organic, local and industrial-scaled, but not industrially toxic and fossil-fuel-based.  Jobs based on the present economy's unsustainable principles of production and consumption are doomed for loss. Jobs involved in the R&D and production of the transition to and maintenance and enhancement of a highly prosperous sustainable economy will grow and endure. The following report from the WorldWatch Institute summarizes some recent U.N and WWI findings on the topic.

Cross-Posting: From World Watch Instittue: http://www.worldwatch.org/node/5840?emc=el&m=165635&l=4&v=6927f7d54f

UN Officials

Photo courtesy of Steven King

Ronnie Goldberg (International Organization of Employers), Achim Steiner (UNEP), Juan Somavia (ILO), Guy Ruder (International Trade Union Confederation), and Nick Nutall (UNEP) at the Green Jobs report launch.In 2007 and 2008, Worldwatch Senior Researcher Michael Renner, in collaboration with the Cornell University's Global Labor Institute, carried out a state-of-the-art review of green jobs funded and commissioned by the UN Environment Programme under a joint Green Jobs Initiative with the International Labour Office, the International Trade Union Confederation, and the International Organization of Employers.

The report, Green Jobs: Towards Decent Work in a Sustainable, Low-Carbon World, is the first comprehensive compilation of global green jobs trends and prospects. In October 2008, Worldwatch released its report Green Jobs: Working for People and the Environment, which summarizes thelarger report for a general audience. Green Jobsdescribes the state-of-play ofgreen employment inrenewable energy, buildings, transportation, basic industry, recycling, farming, and forestry.

Working with its partner organizations, the Worldwatch Institute provides high-quality data and analysis that demonstrates the positive linkages between environment, employment, and livelihoods. The Institute's research highlights opportunities and success stories and identifies the policies needed to overcome existing barriers to green jobs development.

Publications & Resources:

Recent Green Jobs Analysis and Commentary from Worldwatch:

 

Monday
Oct202008

What is Ecological Economics?

Principles of Ecological Economics: Guidance for a Sustainable Society with Robert Costanza, PhD, Wednesday, January 23, 2008 See http://www.iceh.org/pdfs/SBLF/CostanzaInfoSheet.pdf 

 

Ecological economics vs. conventional economics
Ecological economics is a growing transdisciplinary field that aims to improve and expand economic theory to integrate the earth’s natural systems, human values and human health and well-being. In conventional economics, the primary goal is to increase goods and services produced by human industries (built capital), and the gross domestic product (GDP) is a national measure of the total value of goods and services produced annually. Conventional economics assumes that ever-increasing GDP is desirable, possible, and that everyone benefits. Ecological economics takes a broader perspective and recognizes that there are more things that contribute to human well-being than just the amount of stuff, such as health and education (human capital), friends and family (social capital) and the contribution of the earth and its biological and physical systems (natural capital). Its goal is to develop a deeper scientific understanding of the complex linkages between human and natural systems, and to use that understanding to develop effective policies that will lead to a world which is ecologically sustainable, has a fair distribution of resources (both between groups and generations of humans and between humans and other species), and efficiently allocates scarce resources including “natural” and “social” capital.

 

What is sustainability and how does it relate to Ecological Economics?

 

Ecological economics reminds us that "sustainability" is a multi-faceted goal by focusing on the complex interrelationship between different elements of sustainability: ecological sustainability, social sustainability and economic sustainability. It reminds us of the complexity of the many interacting systems that make up the biosphere and the uncertainty that is a fundamental characteristic of all complex systems. Ecological economics is concerned with the problem of assuring sustainability in the face of uncertainty, and aims to maintain the resilience of ecological and socioeconomic systems by conserving and investing in natural, social and human assets.

 

 

Ecological economics also seeks true economic efficiency. Economic efficiency and good economic decision making are not possible if all of the costs and benefits are not considered or included in prices. Often current market prices do not capture the full costs of an economic activity that depletes resources or damages natural systems (natural capital); or inflicts costs to human health and well-being (social and human capitals) caused by pollution or other side effects of the activity. These excluded costs are called "externalities", defined as costs that are not included in the price of the product but are shouldered by a third party, outside the producer/seller and buyer/consumer. Capture of these costs in the market would provide a powerful incentive to move towards sustainability. 

 

Sunday
Oct192008

Tract Solar Coming to your Nearest Greenfield!

How sustainable is solar, greenfield tract development? If it is the difference between solar and no solar, the solar version is better, but . . . that begs the real question of what type of land use patterns follow from and support sustainability, which is not a question asked or answered at the developer's end of the process, for the most part. In any case, solar tract development is a good transitional step. Read their promotional material at http://www.pinnbros.com/news/news-081507.php

Press Release: Pinn Brothers Fine Homes to Standardize Solar, Beginning with 455 Homes in Brentwood. Old Country Roofing and BP Solar Partner with Innovative California Homebuilder to Go Solar, August 15, 2007. Brentwood, CA Pinn Brothers Fine Homes, an innovative Northern California homebuilder, today announced that it is adopting an aggressive regional strategy to standardize solar energy into its building practices. The first community where these solar electric systems will be featured is in the City of Brentwood, where Pinn Brothers has started construction on 455 single family homes.
Sunday
Oct192008

Stanford's Multidisciplinary Initiative on Sustainability

Stanford describes its program as follows:

The 21st century is a critical time in our earth's history. The quality and quantity of natural resources—oceans, forests, freshwater, air—are stressed by the increasing demands of human activity. At the same time, nearly a billion people do not have enough food to eat and more than a billion do not have access to clean water. The challenges of providing the resources we need without irrevocably compromising our precious life-support systems are formidable. Through Stanford's Initiative on the Environment and Sustainability, environmental researchers and scholars are taking up these challenges, helping to ensure that current and future generations can live well on our planet. Related Website's: The Woods Institute for the Environment and the Stanford Challenge: Initiative on Environment of Sustainability.

Monday
Oct132008

New Sustainable Resources District - San Francisco

PRESS RELEASE (SFGOV) Newsom joins Former President Bill Clinton during his Clinton Global Initiative to announce 3-year commitment to maximize energy and water efficiency, reduce waste, and increase the use of wastewater 

09/25/08 - Today San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom announced that San Francisco has agreed to a formal partnership with the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) to transform the city’s Civic Center into a sustainable resource district that maximizes energy and water efficiency, reduces waste, and increases the use of wastewater. Sustainable strategies will be implemented on the Civic Center’s buildings and public spaces to provide measurable and replicable results for cities worldwide and create a global center that educates the public on sustainable concepts.

"San Francisco’s Civic Center sits at the core of one of the most visited cities in the world," said Mayor Newsom. "What better way to educate the world on sustainability than by transforming that core to showcase how we can use water more efficiently, promote food security, and reduce our dependence on fossil fuels. San Francisco has always been a leader – willing to think differently and act boldly. And now, our Civic Center will stand as a global model for how we achieve a more sustainable future."

The goals of the sustainable resource district are:

  • 80% potable water use reduction
  • 45% wastewater discharge reduction
  • 35% peak power demand met by renewables
  • 33% annual energy reduction
  • Reduction of the community carbon footprint by 2,225 tons annually; the equivalent of the annual greenhouse gas emissions of 1,286 San Francisco households

Although implementing the overall vision will take several years, the 3-year Commitment to Action is anticipated to launch on October 20th, 2008 with a formal partnership with the Clinton Climate Initiative (CCI), followed by planning and evaluation with the community and experts, design development, identifying potential funding, and public outreach, with installation of the first projects set for late 2009.

Potential initial projects include the installation of solar rooftop photovoltaics, water conservation fixtures, living roofs, and a public Wi-Fi connection, among others.

http://www.sfgov.org/site/mayor_index.asp?id=89398

Saturday
Oct112008

FW: [citnet-news] Launch of Citizens Guide to Sustainable Energy

-----Original Message-----
From: jbarber@isforum.org [mailto:jbarber@isforum.org]
Sent: Saturday, October 11, 2008 7:27 AM
To: citnet-news@citnet.org
Subject: [citnet-news] Launch of Citizens Guide to Sustainable Energy

October 11, 2008

Dear CitNet members and friends,

I am pleased to announce the launch of the first version of the Citizens
Guide to
Sustainable Energy, in conjunction with the Earth Charter Community Summits
on Climate
Change being held today across this and other countries (see www.citnet.org)

The Citizens Guide to Sustainable Energy is a website (part of the main
CitNet website)
focused on identifying resources and information about sustainable energy.
The Guide is a
tool for citizens to help inform and educate themselves about the impacts
and
alternatives to our current ways of producing and consuming energy.

This is the first of the 5-Step Citizens Action Plan on Climate and Energy.

The Guide is also a work-in-progress in which we welcome the suggestions
and ideas, and
support of the community of concerned citizens. This is just a beginning.
There are many
gaps to be filled, many more questions to be asked and answered in the
months ahead.

With your help, we will continue to build this tool we hope to be a useful
tool as we
examine the challenge and options now on the table.

So please visit www.citnet.org and let us know what you think and how we
can build and
improve this tool.

Respectfully,

Jeffrey Barber
National Coordinator


--------------------------------------------------------------------
mail2web - Check your email from the web at
http://link.mail2web.com/mail2web

Saturday
Oct112008

FW: next sust wave

-----Original Message-----
From: sfp@igc.org [mailto:sfp@igc.org]
Sent: Friday, October 10, 2008 11:35 PM
To: Scott-e22
Subject: next sust wave

http://www.triplepundit.com/pages/book-review-the-next-sustainab-002419.php

Thursday
Oct092008

The bad economy is good for the environment

Thomas Kostigen is going in the right direction, but is not going far enough. Seeing the economy as the source of the problem only in terms of effect and consumption leads to no real solutions--reducing consumption and economic growth. Ultimately, consumption and growth may in fact decline. Instead, the source of the problem needs to be seen as the current principles, processes, and tools of economic production itself. This line of inquiry leads to a possible solution--new principles, tools, and processes. This is the direction a large portion of sustainability thinking and initiatives are taking these days illustrated in the arenas of ecological economics, natural capitalism, The Natural Step, biomimicry, etc. As such, the answer to the question of "how to fix the economy" would be to fix the environment, and vice versa. However, Kostigen makes a good start and points out the essential paradox of modern economic success, its unsustainability, if reducing consumption and growth are the only ways it can intrinsicaly solve the environmental problem.

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- The answer both presidential candidates should have to the question of how to fix the environment is: More of the same -- economic problems that is. What's bad for the economy is good for the environment. . . . Eco comes from the Greek, oikos, which means house. We are being told in no uncertain terms to get our houses in order. Or we may lose them. The irony is that the financial crisis may help us to keep our common home, Planet Earth. Other side of the coin. Commentary: The bad economy is good for the environment. Thomas Kostigen MARKETWATCH — 8:10 PM ET 10/09/08.
 

https://news.fidelity.com/news/news.jhtml?cat=Opinion&articleid=200810092010MRKTWTCHNEWS_SVC_D2893A2D-3A43-4987-BB69-E5AB7FAC34DE&IMG=N

Thomas M. Kostigen is the author of "You Are Here: Exposing the Vital Link Between What We Do and What That Does to Our Planet" (HarperOne).

http://www.amazon.com/You-Are-Here-Exposing-Between/dp/0061580368
Thursday
Oct022008

Green Economy Could Create Millions of New Jobs

New York, 24 September 2008 (ILO/UNEP)-A new, landmark study on the impact of an emerging global "green economy" on the world of work says efforts to tackle climate change could result in the creation of millions of new "green jobs" in the coming decades.

The new report entitled Green Jobs: Towards Decent work in a Sustainable, Low-Carbon World, says changing patterns of employment and investment resulting from efforts to reduce climate change and its effects are already generating new jobs in many sectors and economies, and could create millions more in both developed and developing countries.
http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=545&ArticleID=5929&l=en
There are links to media coverage of the report too.
Thursday
Sep252008

Sustainable Future - REnewed SF Academy of Sciences

Check it out:  http://www.calacademy.org/ or http://www.calacademy.org/sustainable_future

Nearly 10 years and $500 million dollars in the making, it's finally here. The new Academy is a masterpiece in sustainable architecture, blends seamlessly into the park's natural setting, and is filled with hundreds of innovative exhibits and thousands of extraordinary plants and animals.

Thursday
Sep252008

The Green Jobs are Coming!

Cross Post from WorldWatch Institute: www.worldwatch.org, email of 9-25-08

Creating Millions of New "Green" Jobs. 


Barefoot Photographers of Tilonia/Flickr

Global financial markets face increasing pressures, but a report released yesterday shows that a new green economy is emerging, creating millions of jobs in the next decades that will help tackle climate change. Whether creating clean-burning fuels, installing solar water heaters, or improving the energy efficiency of homes and offices, new jobs will form a key part of the market for environmental products and services, which is expected to reach $2.7 trillion by 2020.

The landmark study, funded and commissioned by the UN Environment Programme under a joint Green Jobs Initiative with the International Labour Office, the International Trade Union Confederation, and the International Organization of Employers, was produced by the Worldwatch Institute, with technical assistance from Cornell University's Global Labor Institute.

Read: Global Economy Special Focus: Green Jobs
Read Also: Press Release: Landmark New Report Says Emerging Green Economy