UC, CSU, CCC Sustainability Conference
See http://geog.ucsb.edu/sustainability/conference2007/keynote.php for full biographies of keynote speakers.
To register, please visit: http://geog.ucsb.edu/sustainability/conference2007/index.php
See http://geog.ucsb.edu/sustainability/conference2007/keynote.php for full biographies of keynote speakers.
To register, please visit: http://geog.ucsb.edu/sustainability/conference2007/index.php
MAQUILAPOLIS is a documentary about (and by) workers in
Well, there are a few communities that are working hard to create drastically innovative living centers that change land use and transportation needs for the better. These "eco-cities" are something I've been meaning to share for some time--there's one in development right here in
Learn more, click here
Blog notice provided by USP2'er Maria Sotero.
CPI Action Alert
February 19, 2007
As the guest blogger Tuesday on Cafe San Diego, CPI Research and Policy Director Murtaza Baxamusa details the ways in which
Cafe

photo by doveimaging.com
JEFF TIETZ
Smithfield Foods, the largest and most profitable pork processor in the world, killed 27 million hogs last year. That's a number worth considering. A slaughter-weight hog is fifty percent heavier than a person. The logistical challenge of processing that many pigs each year is roughly equivalent to butchering and boxing the entire human populations of New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Antonio, San Diego, Dallas, San Jose, Detroit, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, San Francisco, Columbus, Austin, Memphis, Baltimore, Fort Worth, Charlotte, El Paso, Milwaukee, Seattle, Boston, Denver, Louisville, Washington, D.C., Nashville, Las Vegas, Portland, Oklahoma City and Tucson.
For full article, click here, copied from Rolling Stone.
This story brought to our attention by USP Undergraduate TA Melissa Munsell
Low Impact Living seeks to help the millions of Americans who realize that our environment is rapidly deteriorating and who want to do something to lessen their load on the Earth. Low Impact Living will help people understand their current environmental impacts and teach them how to make their homes and lifestyles more environmentally sustainable. We show people what projects to undertake, how much they will cost, and what the environmental benefits will be. We want to be America¹s One Stop Green Shop. Some of the unique benefits we offer are:
The most comprehensive environmental impact calculator on the market today‹covering not only energy use and carbon emissions, but also trash production, fresh water use, storm-water runoff production, and other impacts. Users simply put in their zip codes and some more basic information about their homes and then we display the environmental impacts of a similar home in their area AND recommend projects for them to start making their homes and lives more eco-friendly.
The largest referral service of green service providers available on the web today‹with over 1,500 nationwide suppliers, ranging from green architects & interior designers to installers of solar systems, insulation, and bamboo flooring. Just put in your zip code and you¹ll be amazed how many green experts are waiting to help you.
Over 600 green home products, ranging from toxin-free home cleaners to energy-efficient appliances to organic bedding‹please check out our selection.
Please share any reactions/feedback/questions you haveŠwe¹re eager to hear your thoughts. And please forward this to any friends who you think might be interested in Low Impact Living.
Jessica M. Jensen
Co-Founder
Low Impact Living, Inc.
phone (213) 804-8886
Ned McMahon, General Manager for Homeblown's U.S. manufacturing plant in San Diego, CA exhibited the surf industry’s first “green” surfboard blanks at Surf Expo. Homeblown US manufactures Biofoam blanks in which nearly 50% of the core ingredients are from agricultural products. Biofoam is produced by replacing the polyol component of the foam with materials converted from natural plant oils.China's Filthiest Export
By Jennifer L. Turner and Juli S. Kim
The economic boom Deng Xiaoping sparked in 1980 brought millions out of poverty and turned China into the world's factory. However, by following in the footsteps of many western countries that opted to "pollute first and clean up later," China built its economic success on a foundation of ecological destruction. This environmental destruction is threatening the economy, human health, and social stability, as well as potentially causing irreparable damage to the water, soil, and forest ecosystems.
China's weak enforcement of environmental laws is also leading to natural resource destruction well beyond its borders. China already consumes more energy and emits more greenhouse gases (GHG) than any country except the United States. It is expected to surpass the United States in GHG emissions by 2009. The expansion of China's power plants alone—562 new coal-fired power stations by 2012—could nullify the cuts required under the Kyoto Protocol from industrialized countries.
Jennifer L. Turner directs the China Environment Forum and edits the China Environment Series at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. The China Environment Forum recently initiated a new China Environmental Health project with Western Kentucky University. She can be reached at cef@wilsoncenter.org. Juli S. Kim is program assistant for the China Environment Forum and can be reached at juli.kim@wilsoncenter.org.
See new FPIF article online at:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/3978