Climate Change

Better Growth Better Economy

Lord Stern's New Climate Economy report argues we can tackle climate change without harming the economy. Seven key lessons emerge from the report, according to a recent article in the Guardian. 1. Greener cities would be cheaper to build. 2. Repair farmland. 3. Renewables could supply half of our new electricity supplies. 4. Ditch fossil fuel subsidies. 5. Use green bonds to fund the transition to a low carbon world. 6.

One Small Step to Change the World

There is nothing like the chorus of many voices coming together as one. There is no power more impactful than the unification of people all over the planet, in support of a very worthy cause. This Sunday, the 21st marks the largest worldwide mobilization for climate change in history. It’s called the People’s Climate March, and it has already received extensive media coverage, as well as massive amounts of support on an international scale.

The Good Society--Making a Difference

I’ve just finished reading this article about a recent study conducted by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO). This particular article is very informative, in the sense that it uses very clear language and statistical evidence to effectively communicate the very real impact of rising CO2 levels, and the urgency to act immediately to implement climate change adaptation and mitigation.

A Call to Action

 I recently came across this article, entitled Prophetic visions can rouse politicians from complacency to save the planet. It presents several concrete examples of how some of the current economically based arguments against environmentally proactive changes are being refuted. It also addresses the fact that many of the scientific ideas and attitudes against the human impacts on our changing climate are losing serious clout.

You Must Watch This

This video by John Oliver is great, humour goes a long way to opening up the mind and hopefully the heart. But how do you change someone who is ideologically opposed to the issue, it doesn't matter what the facts are, they will deny the problem as it means having to change?

Business Leaders

Tim Cook, Apple's chief executive, at their annual meeting last month responded to questions from a rightwing thinktank, saying, "If you want me to do things only for ROI [return on investment] reasons, you should get out of this stock."  Writing on his blog, Virgin Group chairman and founder, Sir Richard Branson, Branson said that businesses should take a stand again

Big Oil Accepts Climate Change

ExxonMobil was the most profitable company in the US in 2012, according to Forbes 500. Ten years ago, it funded research to deny climate change, but now it’s integrating a hefty carbon tax into its financial plans. Tom Carnac, North American president of Carbon Disclosure Project, said that the five big oil companies seem to have determined that a carbon price is an inevitable part of their financial future.