Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Friday, September 26, 2008

It's Hip To Be Green

Courtesy of Newsweek



Just before the first amplified chords of Guster's hit single "Satellite" filled the hall, lead singer Ryan Miller stepped up to the mike. Instead of belting out a song or urging the audience to buy the band's latest CD, he encouraged them to pick up a free pamphlet on the environment. "I don't want to get all preachy," said the slight, scraggly-bearded musician, 34, "but if one out of 10 of you did it, it would make a difference." Then it was back to the music.

For the last year and a half, Guster, a popular indie rock band, has been on a mission to spread green wisdom to its fans along with its music. On each of their stops, band members invite their audiences—mostly undergrads who turn out for their Campus Consciousness Tour—into their bus, where they tout the benefits of biodiesel, show off their biodegradable tableware (made from corn and potatoes), explain that they use only rechargeable batteries onstage and soy ink in their liner notes, and urge fans to buy carbon credits to offset their car rides to the concert. "We don't want to be soapboxy, because that could backfire," says guitarist and vocalist Adam Gardner. "But it's something we just want to make available to people. And if they're not interested, then here's the next song."

There's no question that young people have woken up to the realities of global warming. A new poll from Gallup shows that 44 percent of those between the ages of 18 and 34 believe we need to take "immediate, drastic" action on the environment, compared with 38 percent of those between the ages of 35 and 54, and 33 percent of those 55 and older. A higher percentage of young people also say they understand global warming well and believe it results from human activities as opposed to natural changes in the environment.

Reared on MTV, YouTube and celebrity magazines, young people are attacking the environmental movement with a different strategy than those who became politically active in the 1970s. Speth says the approach is a more subtle one. Some call it "light green." Rather than boycotting companies and organizing violent demonstrations, many activists are marshaling savvy marketing and technology skills in order to attract a wider, more diverse group of people to the cause. "We're hopefully trying to move the conversation into the mainstream," says Lauren Sullivan, who, with her husband, Guster's Gardner, founded Reverb, an organization that helps musicians like Sheryl Crow and Barenaked Ladies make their tours more green. The group sets up tents before each show, where audiences can meet representatives from local environmental groups and sample organic products.

Danny Seo, 29, a pioneer in the field of eco-living, says, "For a long time I think people have been saying you gotta go green because it's good for you, because it's good for the planet. But no one wants to do that for that reason alone. You have to make it affordable and stylish and exciting, because at the end of the day, that's what good marketing is."

Some are critical of this softer approach. Fred Meyerson, a professor of demography, ecology and environmental policy at the University of Rhode Island in Kingston, says that many groups have started to shy away from important environmental issues like population control because they've deemed them too contentious. "They don't really push the envelope the way people did in the '70s and '80s." And, whatever the approach, even the most optimistic of Gen-Xers aren't convinced that environmentalism is here to stay. "We need to make sure this environment boom isn't just a two-year trendy thing, but that green becomes embedded in our culture," says Grist.org's Giller. No matter how it gets done.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Plan to turn Sg Akar landfill into a park

Source: Brunei Times by Rasidah H A B. To view article from Brunei Times website click here.

BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN
Tuesday, July 1, 2008

THE Brunei Economic Development Board (BEDB) is planning to close the Sg Akar landfill and turn it into a recreational park.

The board recently opened tenders for the design and construction of the systems and facilities for the closure and transformation of the 33 hectare rubbish dump site and for the operation and maintenance of the adjoining 20 hectare site as a transitional rubbish dump site for a period of up to five years.

Among the essential requirements to be met by the potential companies is that it must be a reputable local, international or joint venture company with relevant expertise in solid waste management and the engineered closure of solid waste dump sites.

The transformation project aims to rehabilitate the rubbish dump site and transform it into a green zone which can be used for recreational purposes, with landscaping, ponds, roads and other facilities.

The Sungai Akar landfill at the moment is operating at full capacity, and receives most of the 300 tonnes of waste per day produced in Brunei-Muara district. The current conventional dumping system is no longer appropriate to handle the waste.

Previously, The Brunei Times had reported residents' complaints that the rubbish landfill area is not only a persistent nuisance with foul smell and flies everywhere, but also poses serious environmental and health hazards.

The transformation of the rubbish dump site would require eradicating rodents, pests and the foul smell emanating from the site within the shortest period possible. The project also requires the implementation of an engineering system to remove contamination to ground and surface water.

The tender also calls for a facility for public education to promote awareness on the transformation of the dump site and the importance of solid waste management.


*Bahri: finally my prayers have been answered!*

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Sungai Akar Dumpsite

Source from informative Mr. Brunei Resources' article here.

Not In My Backyard

I thought I will spend a bit of time on the rubbish dump problem that everyone is talking about nowadays. Sungai Akar Dump is interesting - not rubbish dump interesting but it makes a classic administrative failure case study.

The history of rubbish dumps in Brunei has always been where the municipal waste goes to. Once Brunei starts urbanising, that is when rubbish starts being created. Most of us who lived in the non city centre in the earlier days learnt how to deal with our rubbish earlier on which is mostly burning them. But in the municipal area, there are trucks and rubbish collectors who do the rubbish throwing for the residents. In the very early days, rubbish was dumped at Pusar Ulak being the first rubbish dump in Brunei. As Bandar grows bigger and encroached to Pusar Ulak, it was Batu 2 at Jalan Tutong where the second rubbish dump was created.

But even Batu 2 gets encroached by the enlarging Brunei Town, the third dump site was near where the City Hall is at the moment at Kumbang Pasang. Even that was found unsuitable before rubbish was dumped at Jalan Menteri Besar, next to where Ministry of Health is. Yup, that huge forest next to MOH was a former rubbish dump site. The forest has been thinned up now and there is a park built by the Environment Department on it. For a time before government agencies started to be built in the area, Jalan Menteri Besar was for a time known as Jalan Sampah. By the early 80s, that started to be too full and search went on for the fifth dump site.

And that's when Sungai Akar started. Sungai Akar was supposed to have closed down by the end of the 1990s and something to replace it. Sungai Akar was essentially a municipal dump site but by then, rubbish collectors sensing a business opportunity offered their services not just to rubbish inside the municipal area but also to the growing number of households outside it. More and more rubbish was collected and more and more are dumped into Sungai Akar. Everyone expects BSB Municipal Department to find a solution. But it is not their fault too. Bandar Seri Begawan Municipal Department does not have the ability and by 2004, the newly created Environment, Parks and Recreation Department under the Ministry of Development was asked to take over.

It was only then studies are conducted and by this year under the new five year Development Plan, was the money available to do something about Sungai Akar. Finding a new dump site is not easy - it suffers from the NIMBY effect. Not in my backyard. Alternatives - incinerators etc. But ashes from incinerators need to be kept properly too and not to mention the gases it produces. There are other bio alternatives too. These also suffered from NIMBY effects and other side effects too. What is also important is to get everyone to save and to push the idea of recycling and reusing so that there will be less sampah by every citizen of this country.

Friday, July 4, 2008

Relation To Global Food Crisis

There are many ways where environmental issues throughout the world can be related to the global food crisis:
- Oil is largely used in the transportation of food, thus the skyrocketing oil prices has contributed A LOT to the worldwide increase in food prices
- Oil is also used in the production, i.e. in fertilizers, as well as in the manufacturing of food
- Climate change is a major factor, reducing land that's available for cultivation and generating more weather disasters that wipe out food crops, and the amount of land that could be cultivated with food is finite
- Primary types of fishes farmed (sustainably) for food have decreased significantly due to climate change
- Et cetera…



It's not just that demand is getting bigger, but there are limits on how much it's possible to increase supply. Thus, food prices WILL soar continuously.

In five years' time, we could be living in a world where millions are dying in famines with no food aid to hand, regular storms and droughts wipe out acres of crops, and skyrocketing food prices have created global political panic, food experts say.

Food costs have shot upwards so quickly that even a consumer in a rich country who doesn't usually keep track of the price of bread will have noticed it. And anyone who counts the pennies has been feeling the pinch already, as global food prices have risen 83 percent over the last three years.

It puts the Western diet in question. Cutting down on inappropriate consumption of meat and dairy foods would be in everyone's interests. It's the least efficient kind of food production, and these are the foods that create health problems when people eat too much of them.

India and China's growth shows no sign of slowing, and the hunger for meat among their growing middle classes is a major factor in pushing grain prices up.

Now we’ve seen how the food crisis is intimately linked to energy factors as well as environmental issues... So, what happens if the world doesn't adapt, and food costs just keep on rising?

In the worst-case scenario, humanity will be struggling to cope with wars and deadly famines, new diseases, water shortages, and storms and droughts that wipe out crops. Oil will cost something like $200 a barrel, and there will probably be a global recession as food prices keep on rising.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Previous Themes


2007 - Melting Ice – a Hot Topic?

2006 - Deserts and Desertification - Don't Desert Drylands!

2005 - Green Cities – Plan for the Planet!

2004 - Wanted! Seas and Oceans – Dead or Alive?

2003 - Water – Two Billion People are Dying for It!

2002 - Give Earth a Chance

2001 - Connect with the World Wide Web of Life

2000 - The Environment Millennium - Time to Act

1999 - Our Earth - Our Future - Just Save It!

1998 - For Life on Earth - Save Our Seas

1997 - For Life on Earth

1996 - Our Earth, Our Habitat, Our Home

1995 - We the Peoples: United for the Global Environment

1994 - One Earth One Family

1993 - Poverty and the Environment - Breaking the Vicious Circle

1992 - Only One Earth, Care and Share

1991 - Climate Change. Need for Global Partnership

1990 - Children and the Environment

1989 - Global Warming; Global Warning

1988 - When People Put the Environment First, Development Will Last

1987 - Environment and Shelter: More Than A Roof

1986 - A Tree for Peace

1985 - Youth: Population and the Environment

1984 - Desertification

1983 - Managing and Disposing Hazardous Waste: Acid Rain and Energy

1982 - Ten Years After Stockholm (Renewal of Environmental Concerns)

1981 - Ground Water; Toxic Chemicals in Human Food Chains

1980 - A New Challenge for the New Decade: Development Without Destruction

1979 - Only One Future for Our Children - Development Without Destruction

1978 - Development Without Destruction

1977 - Ozone Layer Environmental Concern; Lands Loss and Soil Degradation

1976 - Water: Vital Resource for Life

1975 - Human Settlements

1974 - Only one Earth