Trees Ontario celebrates planting 10 million trees
Toronto – With the spring 2010 tree planting season coming to a close, Trees Ontario is recognizing the significance of … Continue reading Trees Ontario celebrates planting 10 million trees
Toronto – With the spring 2010 tree planting season coming to a close, Trees Ontario is recognizing the significance of … Continue reading Trees Ontario celebrates planting 10 million trees
Woodbridge, Ontario – Earth Rangers, a charitable organization dedicated to educating children about biodiversity loss and empowering them to take … Continue reading Bring Back the Wild
Waterloo, Ontario – The Government of the Northwest Territories has entered into a scientific partnership with Wilfrid Laurier University based in Waterloo, Ontario. Continue reading Northwest Territories signs new research partnership with Wilfred Laurier University
Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent
Andrew Nikiforuk
Vancouver: Greystone Books, 2008, 208 pages.
It’s no secret that Stephen Harper’s Conservatives have designed their environmental policy to fit a full-speed-ahead exploitation of Alberta’s tar sands. It’s important, therefore, to have an understanding of the industry’s environmental impact. Andrew Nikiforuk’s award-winning Tar Sands offers precisely that.
First, “oil sands” is a misnomer. The resource is actually a mixture of sand and clay that contains a small percentage of bitumen – a sticky concoction of hydrocarbons that also
contains sulfur, nitrogen and heavy metals. Energy companies scour vast reaches of the … [Click here to read more!] Continue reading Tar Sands: Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent
I am not the traditional environmentalist by any means. I am in no way crunchy (well except for those years in highschool when I wore bell bottoms every day – and no this was not the 60’s) and I am a big believer in making change from within instead of fighting it from the outside. I have worked for a chemical company (oh the horror) and loved the change I was able to make while there. Do I have a line? Yes ofcourse I do.
Congratulations Eric on winning this week’s Green Books Giveaway:
1. Protect or Plunder? by Vandana Shiva
2. Hot Flat and Crowded by Thomas Friedman
3. Grow Organic: A cleaner, greener book
We asked our readers to tell us “Where is your favourite place to buy Green Books?”
Our winning contestants answer:
I like to buy at Second Look Books on Queen Street, in downtown Kitchener.
-Eric
Thank you to all of our contestants for sharing their green book stores. Continue reading Green Books Giveaway Winner: Where Do You Buy Eco Books?
682: 24 May 2010 – Published by Green Communities Canada. ICANWALK. Green Communities Canada received a grant from Ontario Ministry … Continue reading Free Retrofit, Humancides, Walking Conference – GCNews #682
TEDtalksDirector — May 20, 2010 — http://www.ted.com As the world’s attention focuses on the perils of oil exploration, we present … Continue reading Watching – Richard Sears: Planning for the end of oil
Negotiating the Climate Change Web: A Community Vision is an innovative gathering, bringing together Nova Scotian stakeholders – including government, NGOs and the public – to discuss the interrelationships between trade, environment, society and climate change. Continue reading Negotiating the Climate Change Web: A Community Vision
By David Suzuki with Faisal Moola. I was struggling through my routine at the gym in April when the owner … Continue reading Driving home the benefits of staying active – Science Matters
Climate Wars
Gwynne Dyer
Toronto: Random House, Canada, 2008, 288 pages.
Global Warring
Cleo Paskal
Toronto: Key Porter Books, 2009, 288 pages.
Here’s a fact I had never considered: the word “rival” comes from the Latin word rivalis, meaning “those who draw water from the same source.” Rivalry is closely related to the availability of shared resources, and tensions are easily triggered when food and water are at stake.
Now, let’s take this to the extreme: climate change projections suggest that the flow of many of the world’s major rivers will be seriously
reduced as glaciers retreat. The scale of potential conflict is staggering. The Himalayan watershed alone, which includes the Ganges, Indus, Yangtze and Mekong
Rivers, supplies water to almost half the people on this planet, including nuclear powers China, India and Pakistan.
But this is about more than rivers. Two new books on the issue, Climate Wars and Global Warring, introduce a bevy of reasons for concern: natural disasters, disappearing low-lying island states, shifting coasts and access to oceanic exploitation zones, the melting Northwest Passage, desertification and altered patterns of food production. Each has the potential to redefine how we interpret and conceptualize international law, how we interact diplomatically with other nations, and how and why we engage militarily.
Cleo Paskal, a fellow at Chatham House who boasts journalistic stints at The Economist and
the Chicago Tribune, seeks to “introduce and legitimize the idea that environmental change is about to have enormous, and specific, geopolitical consequences.”…[Click here to read more!] Continue reading Climate Wars + Global Warring
Norway – Dr. James Hansen, one of the world’s foremost climate scientists, has thrown his support behind a Greenpeace and … Continue reading Leading climate scientist urges Norway to pull out of tar sands