Vapor Trails

Price: $28.95

Mason Burnside was the number two man at Splendid Oil, a company with a budget larger than most countries. His top spot came from years of leaving a path of personal and ecological destruction in his wake while fighting to meet market demand. Long time rival, CEO Jack Masterson, finds a way to topple Burnside as his signature project in Ecuador turns into an environmental disaster. Now Burnside is demoted and head of the company’s token and toothless sustainability department.

After his idealistic new assistant, Ellen Greenbaum, convinces him to attend a global sustainability conference in New Orleans, Burnside finds himself in a struggle for survival amidst a category four hurricane, eventually stranding him on a rooftop with Diana Mars, one of the conference keynotes. Enthralled with Diana’s moral clarity and the power of her vision, as well as her beauty, Burnside begins to question his win-at-all-costs existence.

Returning to Houston, he learns how his predecessor, John Pennington, a man truly dedicated to the cause, has disappeared mysteriously somewhere in Asia after having stumbled upon an internal intrigue so damaging, that Masterson would stop at nothing to keep it secret. Burnside, recognizing the catastrophic possibilities, agrees to lead the rescue party, but only after he has faced his demons in a secretive and dangerous trip to the wilds of Ecuador, where a fateful decision he made years earlier doomed an entire region. What he discovers in Asia is a shock to everyone involved.

This sweeping story, that crisscrosses the planet at a feverish pace, is grounded in carefully researched science. Written by two authorities in both the environmental movement and the energy industry, it is as informative as it is entertaining. Roger Saillant, a former Ford Executive and CEO of Plug Power is a frequent international speaker on energy and sustainability. RP Siegel, is an award-winning inventor, freelance journalist and environmental advocate. The culmination of their experiences delivers a commentary on how the treacherous waters of environmental destruction can be navigated by individuals and corporations alike.

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Author Harvey Stone: 500,000 Homeless; 31 Clueless

Committee on Energy and Commerce. (cc) Government source. Author not listed.

Some blogs are harder to write than others. This has been one of the hardest.

On the one hand, I feel tremendous sadness for the people of Japan, who will face years of nuclear, economic and personal fallout.

So far, more than three thousand lives ended tragically. Half a million people are homeless. Countless millions will be psychologically scared – just as their towns and coastlines are physically scarred. Their hopes are washed way along with their cars. Worse than the loss of trust in their government may be their loss of trust in life.

On the other hand, I am off-the-charts furious at US politicians who are doing their part to guarantee that the US and other nations suffer the equivalent of 8.9 floods, droughts, heat waves, hurricanes and a lot more.

Case in point: the House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce, as it “discussed” HR 910 – an attempt to prohibit the EPA from regulating greenhouse gasses.

Here are some low-lights:

–A letter to the Committee from a retired Air Force Lt. General, a Navy Rear Admiral and an Army Major General stated: “America’s dependence on oil constitutes a clear and present danger to the security and welfare of the United States. As former senior military officers, we are concerned about Congressional efforts to undermine the Environmental Protection Agency’s regulatory authority that is critical to reducing our dependence on oil.” (emphasis in original.) Nevertheless, the Committee voted to undermine the EPA’s regulatory authority.

–A letter from the American Lung Association, American Public Health Association and four other organizations stated: “We the undersigned write to express our strong opposition to H.R. 910. We believe that this legislation would block the Environmental Protection Agency from setting sensible safeguards to protect public health from the effects of air pollution.” Nevertheless, the Committee ignored not only the letter, but also a study cited in the letter: namely, the Benefits and Costs of the Clean Air Act from 1990 to 2020 “…found that the air quality improvements under the Clean Air Act will save $2 trillion by 2020 and prevent at least 230,000 deaths annually.”

–And, while there are other, similar examples, here is the worst in my opinion: by a strict party line vote, 31 Republicans voted down these three amendments:

1. From Ranking Member Henry Waxman: “Congress accepts the scientific finding of the Environmental Protection Agency that ‘Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, as is now evident from observations of increases in global average air and ocean temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice, and rising global average sea level.’’

2. From Colorado Congresswoman Diana Degette: “Congress accepts the scientific finding of the Environmental Protection Agency that the ‘scientific evidence is compelling’ and that elevated concentrations of greenhouse gases resulting from anthropogenic emissions ‘are the root cause of recently observed climate change.’’

3. From Washington State Congressman Jay Inslee: “Congress accepts the scientific finding of the Environmental Protection Agency that ‘the public health of current generations is endangered and that the threat to public health for both current and future generations will likely mount over time as greenhouse gases continue to accumulate in the atmosphere and result in ever greater rates of climate change.’

Whether those Members of Congress are ignorant of consensual science or insidiously focused on political power, they are threatening American security and global stability.

The earthquake and tsunami in Japan were natural events. We humans contributed to it because we built homes, businesses and nuclear reactors on the coast of a country that, in recorded history, has experienced more than 150 tsunamis.

The future floods, droughts, storms, heat waves and other extreme weather patterns that will increasingly destroy our crops, coasts and communities will also be natural events. We humans contribute through our refusal to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions and our insistence on electing individuals like those 31 Republicans.

In the end, this is truly not a political diatribe about one Party. Ignorance and insidiousness are Party-agnostic. At heart, this blog is about what you, me and the rest of us in economically-advanced democracies  choose to do with our wealth and our freedom.

  shareshare

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Author Harvey Stone: The Japan Tsunami and Events of Mass Destruction

March 11, 2011 – Tsunami waters flood Japan; Photo: Kyodo News

Along with the rest of the world, I’ve been watching the videos and photos of the 8.9 earthquake that just devastated Japan. I feel sickened by the whole thing. Aside from today’s death and destruction, we know it will be years before infrastructure is rebuilt, businesses rebound and people adjust to the loss of their loved ones, property and sense of security.

I was also shaken, as the 500 mph waters raced towards Hawaii.

My wife and I were on Kauai ten days ago. Just over a year ago, we were on Kauai when the 8.9 Chilean earthquake set off a tsunami. I still remember the shrill Civil Defense sirens. We were evacuated to a hillside, where we waited as the waters roared towards the coastline.

That experience deeply impacted me. It also moved me to write a MELTING DOWN scene in which a major earthquake hits near Hawaii – and then a tsunami storms across the Islands with the level of devastation that it just stormed across Japan.

Both 8.9ers are reminders that, as cuddly as “Mother Nature” sounds, Mother Nature has a ferocious side.

In Hawaiian culture, Mother Nature is sometimes referred to as Pele. In MELTING DOWN, Zavia Jansen, the female protagonist, is a world-class expert in storm surge barriers, who meets with the Hawaiian Governor when the tsunami hits. She says to him. “Pele. It’s Pele.”  Then, in narration, “…Pele was the goddess of fire who was as unmerciful in how she destroyed as she was miraculous in what she created.”

We humans are like Pele. We create such a marvelous human world in so many ways. We also damage the human world in so many ways – through the poisons we put in the soil and the volumes of heat-trapping gasses we put in the atmosphere.

Human activity does not cause earthquakes or volcanoes. But human activity strengthens Acts of Nature like hurricanes and floods.

Unless we mitigate those activities that destabilize our climate, we will see more Events of Mass Destruction that are jointly produced by Mother Nature and one of her species.

  shareshare

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Author Harvey Stone: Connecting the Dots Between Three News Stories

F/A-18 Super Hornet testing biofuel made from the camelina plant for naval aviation use. Photo: (CC) U.S. Navy photo by Noel Hepp/Released)

Story #1: The mainstream media report Col. Gadhaffi’s  dual attack on the people trying to bring him down and the oil infrastructure that props him up.

The Chicago Sun Times, for instance, quotes an opposition leader, who says  “government artillery hit a pipeline supplying Sidr from oil fields in the desert. An oil storage depot also was hit, apparently by an air strike.”

Furthermore, fighting has occurred around four eastern ports, where nearly 60% of Libya’s oil is exported.

The net result is that Libya’s oil supply – 17th largest in the world – has been disrupted. That disruption is a contributing factor to the price of oil now being well past $100 a barrel.

Story #2: In the March 3, 2011 online edition of Scientific American, Secretary of the Navy Mabus announced FY 2012 funding requests. As part of the request, he noted that: “For every dollar the price of a barrel of oil goes up, the Navy spends $31 million more for fuel.”

On January 1, 2011, the per-barrel price of Brent crude was just under $95. Because of the Libyan oil disruption (and other factors), it is today around $105 per barrel.

Assuming the same oil demand, the US Navy is now spending $310 million dollars more of our taxpayer money in fuel costs.

To cut those costs, the Navy has set a goal of “…driving half its energy needs from non-fossil fuel sources by 2020 as well as making half of its bases energy self-sufficient. Already, the Navy has ordered some 150,000 liters of jet fuel derived from camelina – an oil-seed plant like canola – and more than 75,000 liters of diesel-like fuel for ships from algae…”

Story #3: According to the Wall St. Journal, the Gang of Six (US Senators Mark Warner, Saxby Chambliss and four others) “…are seeking to craft a proposal that would shave $4 trillion off the Federal government’s projected budget deficit over 10 years.”

One way to reduce that deficit would be for the US government to invest in renewable energies as a way of supporting the US military in reducing both its cost and its vulnerability to oil supply disruptions.

Think it’ll happen with this Congress?

  shareshare

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Author Harvey Stone: Risky Business

Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland, April, 2010. Photo: Henrik Thorburn; Creative Commons Attribution 3.0

If I were a corporate executive, I’d be of two distinct minds about American politics.

On the one hand, Democrats and especially Republicans are more than willing to cut my corporate and personal taxes.

On the other hand, they’re playing Russian roulette with my ability to run my business in a world that is so inter-connected and so just-in-time.

Take, for example, the Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland last April. When it blew millions of tons of ash into the atmosphere, it also blew away the plans of millions of people and the profits of many, many businesses. As an example:

  • More than 100,000 flights were cancelled, the airline industry lost about $200 million a day and more than ten million passengers were stranded worldwide
  • Producers of flowers, fruit, pharmaceuticals and other time-sensitive products watched their products and profits wither, unable to ship them into Europe
  • BMW shut down three production plants in Germany because suppliers couldn’t get them parts

Volcanoes erupt from time to time. They can affect the climate for days or even years. But they are not impacted by the changing climate, which brings us back to Democrats and Republicans.

2010 was a year in which more extreme weather events occurred than ever before. Munich Re, one of the world’s largest re-insurance companies, reports that (including earthquakes) there were 960 events compared to the ten-year average of 785 events. The overall economic loss was in the $150B ballpark – 2/3 of which was related to storms, floods, droughts, fires and other non-earthquake events.

Of these events, several were well reported, e.g. Russia’s heat wave and fires, Pakistan’s floods and Australia’s floods. Less well reported was the enormous business disruption to industries as diverse as agriculture, tourism and coal – not to mention the impact of these events in lower food supplies that contributed to the uprisings in Arab countries, where surging prices contributed to surging throngs of people into city squares.

In the future, there will be more and more business interruptions and risk. As our climate becomes more volatile, so will businesses that rely on local weather and global supply chains.

In that light, corporate executives, farmers and the rest of us should be yelling out our windows and marching in the streets.

If passed by the Senate and signed by the President, the House budget bill just passed will decimate our ability and the overall world’s ability to track, mitigate against, and adapt to the changing climate. If George Will thinks that Gov. Huckabee is delusional for making up stories about President Obama growing up in Kenya and being influenced by Mau Maus, imagine what he must think about the greater House delusion that says “if we stick our head as far in the sand as it’ll go, we don’t have to see the impacts of the changing climate.”

Case in point, the House bill provides:

  • $0 for the Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change – the UN organization that most closely documents the changing climate
  • $0 for the World Bank’s clean technology fund to prevent deforestation, which leads to less ability to absorb CO2 out of the atmosphere
  • A roughly 85% reduction in the budget for the Energy Information Agency, which tracks information on energy production, consumption and pollution
  • Amendments to eviscerate the EPA’s greenhouse gas regulatory powers, thereby leaving it up to the large emitting industries to regulate themselves

If we don’t turn things around, Nature will.

  shareshare

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Author Harvey Stone: Libya: As Always, There is More to the Story than Meets the Eye

The Mosque of Atiq. Photo – Mario 1952. CC-BY-3.0.CC-BY-3.0.

As the crisis in Libya continues to unfold, there are facets of the story that are under-reported or not reported at all. It is critical to understand that 1) there are economic, social and environmental components to what is happening;  2) Libya is deeply inter-connected with global events; and 3) our own personal behavior is also part of the story.

  • Libya was colonized by the Ottoman Turks and – from 1911 to 1943 – by the Italians. “Italian colonization altered the patterns of land use in Libya, turning pastoral and rainfed agriculture lands in many parts to cultivated lands followed by deterioration of ecosystem especially in the coastal areas.”
  • Libya is one of the many countries where repressive dictators have been tolerated, if not supported, by the US, the EU and other nations. Why? Numerous reasons. One main reason: Libya is the world’s 17th largest oil producer. It produces 1.7M barrels of oil every day and exports 1.2M (71%) onto the world oil commodity market.
  • Oil revenues account for about 95% of export earnings, 25% of GDP, and 80% of government revenue. In other words, as with other petro-dictatorial countries (to use Tom Friedman’s phrase), people, corporations and governments have supported Libya’s repressive government by buying its products.
  • Libya could be to solar what Saudi Arabia is to oil. “The July (2007) issue of the Arab Water World magazine reports of a new study commissioned by the German Government showing how Europe can meet its future needs in electricity, cut emissions of carbon dioxide from electricity generation by 70% by 2050 and phase-out nuclear power at the same time – all involving the deserts of the MENA (Middle East & North Africa) region…Libya has an area of almost 1.8 million square kilometers, 90% of which is hot sunny desert.”
  • Libya has one of the highest GDP’s in Africa. Its 2010 GDP was $89B – 74th largest in the world. But little of that wealth trickles down to its people. This is very similar to other repressive regimes around the world. While the US is not Libya, the trend in the US is towards greater concentration of wealth in the hands of fewer individuals and corporations.
  • Libya’s unemployment rate is roughly 30%
  • Like other protesting Middle Eastern countries, poor Libyans spend a greater portion of their income on food – and food prices are surging due to poor harvests around the world that, in part, are due to extreme weather events linked to the changing climate. Also, in that regard, less than 2% of Libya’s territory receives enough precipitation for settled agriculture
  • Slightly larger than Alaska, Libya is the 17th largest country in the world by area. 95% of Libya is desert, and the desert is spreading.
  • In Libya, the amount of water withdrawal is over eight times its renewable water resources. The Great Manmade River Project is being constructed to transport water from aquifers under the Sahara to coastal cities. It is the world’s largest water project. It is estimated that the country’s water deficit will be more than 4 billion cubic meters per year in 2025.
  • 1/3 of Libya’s 6.5M people are 14 years old or younger. Half the country is under 24.2 years old.
  • Libya spends 2.7% of its GDP on education and ranks 159th in the world. As a comparison, the US spends 2X as much (5.5%) and ranks 46th – behind Saudi Arabia (#41), Tanzania (#25) and Cuba (#2)
  • The US rescinded Libya’s designation as a state sponsor of terrorism in June 2006. In January 2008, Libya assumed a nonpermanent seat on the UN Security Council for the 2008-09 term.
  • Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will address the UN’s Human Rights Commission today in Geneva, presumably seeking to have Libya removed from the UN’s Human Rights Council. Despite worldwide protests last year, Libya was seated on the Council in May, 2010.

Sources:

  shareshare

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End of the Trail

Price: $24.95

End of the Trail is an autobiographical account of Route 66 enthusiast Dan Rice’s eight-year struggle with Traumatic Brain Injury. His Hollywood life and high-paced track to a Ph.D. in Psychology was abruptly derailed in 2002 when he suffered severe brain injuries in a near-fatal car accident. A long and painful road to recovery began only after a desperate period of depression, anger, sadness, insomnia, vertigo, suicidal ideations, and an increasing inability to understand the world around him. The book, written about the accident and struggle to recovery is told from the vantage point of Route 66, intertwining Rice’s journey to recovery with his lifelong passion for the historic Mother Road that is in its own struggle for survival.

The book’s title refers to a historic sign that once showed the western end of Route 66 in Santa Monica. To Rice, the represents a milestone in his recovery when he overcame all odds and replaced the missing historic sign at the Santa Monica Pier with other Route 66 advocates demonstrating that he is living the life of his dreams in full recovery.

Rice explores the desperate conditions he and his family lived in before the injury was diagnosed and as he began his recovery tells also of the story of Route 66. The historic Mother Road’s own struggle for survival mirrors Rice’s and is used as a metaphor to demonstrate the path of recovery and the importance of raising awareness for the victims and their families.

End of the Trail was written to bring needed information, warning signs, and insights to victims and their families, but is also about providing hope and showing that the trail’s end is well worth the journey.

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Green Morality

Price: $29.95

Green Morality, renowned environmental columnist Edward Flattau’s fourth book, is a thorough and timely exploration of mankind’s moral role in environmental responsibility. The candid exploration of environmentalism exposes moral hypocrisy, failed environmental movements and policies, globally disastrous scenarios, and reckless endangerment of the world’s species throughout the twentieth century and today. Crucial issues not in the forefront of environmentalism are illuminated and draws urgent attention to worldwide actions that will avert environmental devastation because of a universal moral imperative inherit in all cultures, countries and political systems.

Crossing political and cultural boundaries, Flattau portrays environmentalism as a universal moral imperative that every person has a duty to uphold, not only for the salvation of the world’s species, but also for mankind itself. The analysis of environmentalism’s current situation and its history throughout the twentieth century uncovers global devastation committed by individuals, corporations and governments and Flattau demonstrates how this devastation is a moral failing.

Flattau delivers starkly eminent solutions to avert environmental destruction that require a re-alignment of modern society’s moral compass, transcending historical, political or institutional obligations.

Edward Flattau is the nation’s longest running syndicated environmental newspaper columnist with 40 years in the industry, columns in more than 120 daily newspapers, assignments from his Washington base, around the country, Europe, Asia, Africa and South America, and the recipient of ten national journalism awards.

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The Tree Museum

Price: $14.95

To Whom It May Concern:

In order to live harmoniously

And avoid conflict, we have

Devised these simple guidelines for survival.

Those who choose not to follow these guidelines

Will risk permanent removal if they decide

Not to correct their error…

With these simple roadside signs, an unseen force is reshaping the fabric of society and Nate has had enough. But all Rosemary wants is a peaceful life with the man who used to put her first.

When Rosemary goes in search of her simple life, Nate is forced to choose between rebelling against the ominous forces changing his world and the woman he loves.

As Nate and Rosemary travel across an unrecognizable new landscape, internal and external forces build to an explosive climax in a lyric examination of one couple’s place in today’s world, the power of words to change our lives and the ultimate personal cost of Utopia.

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Author Harvey Stone: $1.3 Trillion: Evidently, a Common Number

Offshore UK wind turbines. Photo: Steve Fareham (CC) Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license

Weird! What are the odds that four stories would feature ‘$1.3 trillion’ in each of them?

First, according to the US Congressional Budget Office, the US ended fiscal year 2010 with a budget deficit of “just under $1.3 trillion…” (http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/10/07/cbo-finished-fiscal-year-trillion-…

Second, a Moody’s Investors Service report claims that non-financial corporations are expected to have a $1.3 trillion “wall of debt” by 2015 (http://distresseddebt.dealflow.com/reports/article.cfm?id=wdgvyvgyovctjyt).

Third, World News reports that “China plans to spend at least $1.3 trillion over the next five years to ease transport and freight bottlenecks…” (http://article.wn.com/view/2011/02/19/China_to_spend_13t_on_new_rail_road_infrastructure/).

Fourth, take a wild guess at what the United Nations Environment Programme estimates it will take to “…trigger greener, smarter growth while fighting poverty.” That’s right: $1.3 trillion – an investment of roughly 2% of the world’s GDP.

From a MELTING DOWN perspective, a key piece of the $1.3 trillion investment would be in projects that simultaneously address social, economic and environmental projects within the same solution. This triple bottom line, systems-based approach is a sub-plot in the novel. I included it, hoping that more people would understand the power of this systems-based approach.

Today, there are a growing number of projects utilizing this approach. To see some of these projects, please go to www.tbltimes.com.

  shareshare

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