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The Climate Minute examines current news on global warming, climate change, renewable energy and the prospects for progress on international negotiations, carbon taxes and clean energy policy.
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Friday Dec 13, 2013
The Climate Minute - The Choices We Make.
Friday Dec 13, 2013
Friday Dec 13, 2013
We're back again recording, unfortunately without our new contributor Eugenia, but at least we managed to be able to hit "record" and actually get sound this week!
This week we're all about choices; sometimes tough choices like turbines vs. bald eagles, and sometimes what should be an easy choice -- we're not going to drive a vehicle that gets the same gas mileage cars were getting thirty years ago!
First up, some activists howled when the Administration made new rules this week that will protect wind generators from prosecution for bird deaths, particularly protected birds like Bald Eagles, for the foreseeable future.
Does the need for alternative energy outweigh the protections we've created for certain species? And there are efforts to try and minimize turbine impacts on wildlife.
The Supreme Court is currently hearing arguments about the EPA's cross-state air pollution rule. The gist of the issue here is that the EPA has developed rules which give it some flexibility in dealing with air pollution based more on the cost-effectiveness of pollution control than the actual percentage contribution each particular state is making to address air pollution.
Ted and Rob compare two instances of lawsuits being used to confound power plants. In one case it's efforts to raise questions about a new natural gas plant in Salem, while in another it's a very small group of people who are trying to derail Cape Wind, the largest off-shore wind project underway in the country.
The Salem case is leading to all sorts of interesting behaviors, from the state representative from the area filing legislation to attempt to block all appeals of permits (which is hardly cricket in a litigious little state like Massachusetts), and what appears to be a situation where local environmental activists support the new plant while a large regional environmental group is trying to stop it.
Rob got his high-dudgeon on when he saw EPA gloating over the highest fleet-wide MPG ratings for new cars. He finds this particularly galling when clearly the technology is there (and affordable) for people to be driving ultra efficient hybrids or plug-in battery electrics, and we're celebrating an efficiency average that is no better than the MPG rating of a 1985 Buick Century. If we can only improve the Ford Mustang's MPG rating by three miles to the gallon in thirty years how are we ever going to significantly reduce gasoline usage?
Finally, as we mention last week, the State of Massachusetts has unveiled a revamped Dashboard showing their progress in meeting the state's lofty global warming goals. Check it out and let us know what you think.
Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do.
As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog.
When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Your generous donations help us continue to bring climate news and views to you through our podcast and blogs, but also help support the Annual MCAN conference (this year on March 2nd, at Northeastern University), and our local climate action.
So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions- specifically to pay for the full cost of carbon pollution at the time we create it, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is our patriotic duty as citizens to speak out, we must insist that the US put a price on carbon.

Saturday Nov 30, 2013
The Climate Minute - A Happy Thanksgiving to You!
Saturday Nov 30, 2013
Saturday Nov 30, 2013
Happy Thanksgiving from the Massachusetts Climate Action Network! This week, Ted discusses a recent paper published in the journal Climatic Change, entitled “Tracing anthropogenic carbon dioxide and methane emissions to fossil fuel and cement producers, 1854–2010”, by Richard Heede. The paper is summarized in the British paper The Guardian (which has become something of a beacon of light given the sad happenings at the New York Times!) As a final topper, the podcast “On the Green Front” has our friend D.R. Tucker interviewing the author himself. There is a lot to unpack in the article, but it provides an interesting complementary view of how we got to over 400ppm of CO2 in the air. The story down in Falmouth reminds us of Machiavelli’s quote (although he said it in in Italian) “It must be remembered that there is nothing more difficult to plan, more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to manage than a new system. For the initiator has the enmity of all who would profit by the preservation of the old institution and merely lukewarm defenders in those who gain by the new ones. ” It seems that a few people in Falmouth want to preserve the “old institutions.” A judge agreed that the turbines might be a nuisance and issued a preliminary injunction against night time operation. Over at The Green Miles they point out a few aspects of the medical claims that will make you grind your teeth in frustration! In Warsaw, the COP ended with a mild agreement to help get countries to make announcements of their intended level of carbon pollution reduction levels well in advance of the next 2015 COP in Paris. You can read the summary here or revel in the US’ relative good standing compared some others, like Canada and Austrailia. If you like cars, you will love a recent report on the advent of hydrogen powered fuel cell cars. What’s a fuel cell? Go here. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Your generous donations help us continue to bring climate news and views to you through our podcast and blogs, but also help support the Annual MCAN conference (this year on March 2nd, at Northeastern University), and our local climate action. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions- specifically to pay for the full cost of carbon pollution at the time we create it, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is our patriotic duty as citizens to speak out, we must insist that the US put a price on carbon.

Friday Nov 22, 2013
The Climate Minute - We're not in Kansas anymore edition
Friday Nov 22, 2013
Friday Nov 22, 2013
Another week, another example of extreme weather pointing us toward what will be the new normal in a climate-damaged world. This week Ted and Rob are joined by DR Tucker, the prolific blogger, commentator, and cynical optimist as we try to make some sense out of the week's events. Now, the links Dr. Jeffrey Sachs of Columbia University's Earth Institute was a guest on PRN's "On The Greenfront" with Betsy Rosenberg and DR, talking about the recent monster storms and their potential to force our government to finally aggressively address climate change. Dr. Sachs had the same message in an op-ed in the Washington Post. Mindy Lubber, the President of CERES which works with businesses to help the address their climate footprint, thinks that the investor sector will play a large role in getting companies to focus on climate change. Her slightly different op-eds in The Guardian and Forbes this week highlight efforts by large investor groups calling on large companies to explain how they are positioning themselves to address the new realities of carbon regulation and the coming post-carbon world. The recent tornadoes in the midwest provided an opportunity to discuss the seemingly increasing incidence of extreme weather events (and reach a whole new audience, as fantasy football players everywhere had to wait through a tornado-caused delay in the Bears-Ravens game), and also gave birth to another Richard Muller and Michael Mann dust-up. Muller, you may remember, is the former climate skeptic who famously "converted" into a climate change believer in 2012. The most interesting part of that journey is Muller had previously been heavily supported by the Koch brothers... Anyway, Muller has an op-ed in the New York Times calling "time out" on the speculation that climate change has anything to do with tornado activity -- well, if anything, it might actually decrease the severity and number of storms. Muller quoted climate scientist Michael Mann in his New York Times piece, which Mann felt took his statements out of context, leading to a rebuttal from Mann in the Huffington Post. What's the take away? Well, at the end of the day, both Mann and Muller acknowledge anthropomorphic climate change is happening. There are certainly instances where a changing climate may have a beneficial side effect - increased rainfall in previously arid areas, perhaps, or opening new lands to agriculture -- but certainly on balance the negative impacts (and the uncertainty over the unknown yet to be realized consequences) surely lead to a recognition that climate change needs to be minimized to ensure a safe future for humankind. I think a more useful approach by both Mann and Muller would be to acknowledge the overall problem, and take a more humble tact with respect to particular impacts; isn't "this may be happening" enough to raise alarm? In other news, the Warsaw Conference of the Parties talks are winding down with few concrete results. Yesterday a number of NGOs (non-governmental organizations) walked out of the talks to protest lack of action. Here's Rob's thoughts (which most likely aren't shared by DR or Ted, but hey, I'm writing this section): Bravo. You walked out. What did you accomplish in doing so? You said your time shouldn't be wasted in non-productive talks -- what did you use the time to do? Did you all go out an weatherize some homes, or build a wind turbine, or plant trees instead? No, you held a press conference. You complained about lack of action and took off. Unfortunately, whether you like it or not, the only place where an international agreement on climate can be reached is within these talks. Either you're at the table, or you're not. And if you're not at the table (and outside the house, throwing bricks at the house...), you're not likely to have a real impact. End of Rob's soapbox. The irony here is that the United States may finally be being seen as having made some movement on our own climate change policies, which would make the US more of an active and respected player at these negotiations. The "You Had Me At Pigovian" talk at Babson College we've been talking about for the last couple of months happened earlier this week, and the entire one hour and 45 minutes has been uploaded to YouTube. Here's the video, or you can see it here. http://youtu.be/cXtg9UA7u18 Hat tip to John Carlton Foss, who took the video. Finally, Sheldon Whitehouse, the climate advocate US Senator from Rhode Island, has been making speeches on the Senator floor about climate change for the last year, and made his 50th speech this week. Congratulations to Senator Whitehouse, and keep up the good work! We'll tune in again next week for number 51. Well, that's it for now. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Your generous donations help us continue to bring climate news and views to you through our podcast and blogs, but also help support the Annual MCAN conference (this year on March 2nd, at Northeastern University), and our local climate action. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is a patriotic duty as citizens, we insist that the US put a price on carbon. Good bye and see you next week…

Friday Nov 15, 2013
The Climate Minute - Fighting Off Depression Edition
Friday Nov 15, 2013
Friday Nov 15, 2013
Typhoon Haiyun, and yet another climate meeting with little prospect for meaningful action have Ted a bit down, but Rob tries to give reasons why soldiering on is possible on this week's Climate Minute. Now, the links Typhoon Haiyun devastated the Philippines last week, and out hearts go out to the thousands displaced or lost in the mega-storm. But was climate change to blame? Folks at the World Meteorological Society point out that even if climate change wasn't the cause of the Typhoon, changes over the last 100 years, including sea level rise, made the storm much more intense than it would have been otherwise. Delaware Governor Jack Martell and Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse are also raising the connection. The 19th Conference of Parties is kicking off in Warsaw, Poland. Expectations of game-changing agreements are low even with mounting evidence of climate damage. Meanwhile the government of Poland is hosting a summit called by the World Coal Association seeking to seek lower-emissions solutions to keep coal a relevant energy source well into the next century. Talk about mixed messages... In the face of all this though, new research out from Stanford University social psychologist Jon Krosnick shows that there's significant understanding of climate change and support for climate action across the country -- including red states like Oklahoma and Texas. And we're clearly making gains in renewable power. In fact, solar power's success in Arizona has the utilities concerned and looking to levy new charges against customers who have solar on their roofs. The utilities are actually bankrolling third party ads against solar power. Solar power advocates must be doing something right. In other neat news, the Boston Redevelopment Authority will shortly adopt new regulations requiring developers to consider climate impacts -- including storm resilience -- in new large buildings. That's good news, no? Meanwhile, in Washington, the White House has been busy on twitter, including tweeting about the continuing surge in domestic oil production. While lowering reliance on foreign oil is a good thing, tagging the the tweet with the hashtag #climateaction was perhaps a bit much. On the lighter side, Star Trek fans will understand what we're talking about when we say that there are apparently billions of M-Class planets out there. The Kepler Telescope has been scanning our galaxy and NASA scientists have determined there are about 8.8 billion planets in the Milky Way that are in the "habitable zone" where water can be found in its liquid state. So we've got that going for us... Things to do "You Had Me at Pigovian..." is the alluring tagline of an event being held Tuesday, November 19th, at Babson University discussing the importance of a carbon tax. See more information here. The Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance is holding their Annual Conference (with speaker Governor Deval Patrick) on Wednesday, November 20th at the Boston Convention Center. Read more about the conference and register here. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Your generous donations help us continue to bring climate news and views to you through our podcast and blogs, but also help support the Annual MCAN conference (this year on March 2nd, at Northeastern University), and our local climate action. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is a patriotic duty as citizens, we insist that the US put a price on carbon. Good bye and see you next week…

Friday Nov 08, 2013
The Climate Minute - Champions All Around...
Friday Nov 08, 2013
Friday Nov 08, 2013
We're back with another edition of the Climate Minute, and Ted and Rob are once again gloating about Massachusetts' continued dominance: the Red Sox are champions, and the state is number one in Energy Efficiency. Yes, we are unbearable... Now, the links Massachusetts "three-peats" on energy efficiency, securing a first place in the American Council for and Energy Efficient Economy's state rankings for the third year in a row. Have you had an energy assessment lately? WHY NOT?!? Go to the MassSave site and sign up for one right now! Go on, we'll wait. For an interesting explanation of how Massachusetts came to adopt some of the strongest efficiency programs in the country, check out this article. Worth it for the explanation of how the phrase "the rat gets the cheese" became emblematic of energy efficiency programs -- and how it stemmed from a utility executive volunteering that he was the rat... The Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources is taking comments about the future of the Stretch Code, the state's alternative high efficiency building code in anticipation of developing a replacement code. They recently ran a webinar talking about the code and giving the questions they are looking for answers to, which you can find here, or send comments to the state via the email address Stretchcode@state.ma.us. To check out the Massachusetts Clean Energy and Climate Plan and read about the state's efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, go here. Read about the President's Executive Order on Climate Preparedness here. As the post suggests, this is a welcome addition to the federal climate change response and will focus efforts on strengthening climate resilience. As we mentioned, Dr. James Hansen, Dr. Kerry Emmanuel, and other eminent climate scientists have called for a re-examination of nuclear power as a bridge source away from fossil fuels to renewables. For more discussion on the connection between climate change and capitalism, here's a good place to start. Do you think capitalism is a core cause of climate change, which is where Ted is, or do you lean toward Rob's opinion that climate change is an impact of human activity, capitalistic, communistic and other, and we need to drop the value judgements and work on solutions? Finally, our thoughts and prayers go out to the people of the Philippines as they recover from Typhoon Haiyan, a "super typhoon" with sustained winds of 190 mph and peak winds of 230 mph. We're not saying climate change is the cause of Typhoon Haiyan, but... Things to do "You Had Me at Pigovian..." is the alluring tagline of an event being held Tuesday, November 19th, at Babson University discussing the importance of a carbon tax. See more information here. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Every dollar you give will be doubled by a generous backer, so long as we reach our fundraising goal. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is a patriotic duty as citizens, we insist that the US put a price on carbon. Good bye and see you next week…

Friday Nov 01, 2013
The Climate Minute - Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble...
Friday Nov 01, 2013
Friday Nov 01, 2013
It's been an exhausting week here in New England with a certain local team made good while depriving the entire region of sleep for about two weeks, but we're here bright and early with this week's edition of The Climate Minute. This week Ted and Rob talk carbon bubbles, wonder if we've learned anything since Superstorm Sandy, and even talk about revolutionary scientists plotting the overthrow of capitalism. Well, not quite... Now, the links First tulips, then housing, and now carbon. For more discussion of the coming "carbon bubble," check out Bloomberg's report here (how apropos that the writer of that one is Justin Doom - you can't make this stuff up), and for Al Gore's op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, check this link. While we're talking bubbles and stock values, the stock market provides an instructive analog to climate change and temperature. Remember - we're talking trends, not fluctuations. Several sites have done Sandy Anniversary stories. Tom Ashbrook did an On Point episode you can listen to here, and continuing our public radio obsessions, here's a piece from the Bill Moyers & Friends site. For a nifty tool to assess your community's energy efficiency, download the ACEEE tool here. Finally, Ted's favorite Naomi Klein, is causing trouble again -- or more accurately talking with scientists who are causing trouble -- suggesting that science is telling us it's time to revolt against the dominant capitalistic paradigm! Things to do The "Playing for the Planet" world music benefit will be taking place tomorrow, November 2nd, at 7pm at Emmanual Church in Boston. The concert benefits our good friends at 350Massachusetts. For more information, go here. The EPA is taking “their show on the road” and is doing a “public listening tour” taking public input on their newly announced powerplant co2 rules. They will be coming to Boston on November 4th, you can sign up to testify here. "You Had Me at Pigovian..." is the alluring tagline of an event being held Tuesday, November 19th, at Babson University discussing the importance of a carbon tax. See more information here. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Every dollar you give will be doubled by a generous backer, so long as we reach our fundraising goal. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is a patriotic duty as citizens, we insist that the US put a price on carbon. Good bye and see you next week…

Friday Oct 25, 2013
The Climate Minute - The Frackquake edition
Friday Oct 25, 2013
Friday Oct 25, 2013
If it’s Friday, it’s the Climate Minute, thank you for joining us! This week Rob and Ted reflect upon the week’s climate news, including an unexpected danger of fracking, a good news / bad news emissions story, and a kind listener takes us to task for pastry-related crimes… Now, the links Good News / Bad News: CO2 emissions are down, even with increase gross national product and more energy production. However, all that natural gas use means methane emissions (from leaks in the natural gas delivery system) are up, and we all know how bad methane is compared to CO2... For carbon wonks, California has unveiled the “California Carbon Dashboard,” which has links and info about all things AB32-related. AB32, of course, is California’s groundbreaking carbon regulation law. We first noted the apparent connection between subsurface fracking wastewater disposal and seismic activity several months ago, now the US Geological Survey has ruled out natural causes as the source of the recent “earthquake swarm” reported in the Oklahoma area. Is time running out for Cape Wind? Grist has an interesting report that the clock is ticking. The project needs to get underway before the end of this year, or some very important tax breaks and $200 million in financing disappear… Remember those Greenpeace “pirates” from last week? Well, the Russian government has downgraded them to “hooligans.” Sadly the penalty for hooliganism in Russia is up to seven years in jail. Which reminds me of our listener mail. We apologize to the Russian security forces that we mistakenly accused of wearing dessert on their heads when they busted those dangerous Greenpeace activists. Apparently you eat baklava, and wear a balaclava… Finally, for your weekly roundup of politics, here's a piece about Ted Cruz, Rachel Maddow talks about the history of "good governance" with historian Michael Beschloss, and Robert Reich wrote a very interesting piece in Commondreams about the focus on deficits and the "size of government" distract from the real problems in American governance. Things to do Go hear MCAN Board Member (oh, yeah, and head of the Better Future Project) Craig Altemose as he speaks about the need to build a movement to address the climate crisis tonight, at 7:30pm, First Parish, Concord. Here’s our calendar listing. Cambridge City Council candidates will meet at a forum on Energy and the Environment on Oct 30th, at the Cambridge Senior Citizens Center. The EPA is taking “their show on the road” and is doing a “public listening tour” taking public input on their newly announced powerplant co2 rules. They will be coming to Boston on November 4th, you can sign up to testify here. "You Had Me at Pigovian..." is the alluring tagline of an event being held Tuesday, November 19th, at Babson University discussing the importance of a carbon tax. See more information here. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Every dollar you give will be doubled by a generous backer, so long as we reach our fundraising goal. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is a patriotic duty as citizens, we insist that the US put a price on carbon. Good bye and see you next week…

Friday Oct 18, 2013
The Climate Minute - The "We're No Lawyers" Edition...
Friday Oct 18, 2013
Friday Oct 18, 2013

Friday Oct 11, 2013
The Climate Minute - The End of Coal in New England is in Sight...
Friday Oct 11, 2013
Friday Oct 11, 2013
It's Climate Minute time, here's your weekly smorgasbord of links you can read while avoiding "real work." This week we talk about the surprise (to some) announcement that the Brayton Point coal plant will be closing by June of 2017. Also on the punch list? Neat new technology that makes solar power a 24-hour proposition, overrspending the Earth's carbon budget, and it may never be cooler than it is now... The Links. For more about the planned closure of the Brayton Point coal plant, you can read pieces at ThinkProgress, The Providence Journal (which has an excellent roundup of the "perfect storm" of factors leading to Brayton's closure), and this piece from South Coast Today which deals with some of the imapct to the host community Brayton's closure will have. Remember Bill McKibben's "Do The Math" tour? The premise was that there is a finite amount of carbon we can put into the atmosphere and still expect to have a recognizable climate. The latest IPCC report has taken that view and run with it, and has incorporated calculations into the latest version which show some frightening results. In other bad news, a new study released in the journal Nature finds that within 30-50 years we will reach a point where our coolest years are hotter than the high temperature years of the past 100 years... The study looked at scenarios where no serious efforts to curb emissions were made, resulting in a stunning 900+ppm of carbon (little less than three times the amount today), and a carbon constrained model where efforts to reduce emissions lead to a worldwide average of 530+ppm. The story is currently also in the Boston Globe. But let's leave on a positive note. A recently opened 280MW solar field in Arizona has become the first large-scale project in the United States to use molten salt (molten salt!) to "store" solar energy in the form of heat to the plant can produce power day and night. While there have been smaller scale facilities created with this technology, this is a utility scale system capable of powering 70,000 homes. While it's land intensives at 3 square miles, this is the perfect facility for sun-soaked and under-populated areas like the American southwest. Things to do: Remember, if you live in the 5th Congressional district in Massachusetts you will be going to the polls on Tuesday for the primary to choose your next member of congress. Find out where to vote here. Who to vote for, well, we can't help you there... On the 22nd there will be another opportunity to hear where the two remaining candidates for Mayor of Boston stand on energy and environmental issues. The second conversation regarding energy, the environment and the green economy will be held on from 1 to 2:30pm at the Old South Meetinghouse. You can download the flyer here. Go hear MCAN Board Member (oh, yeah, and head of the Better Future Project) Craig Altemose as he speaks about the need to build a movement to address the climate crisis on October 25th, at 7:30pm, First Parish, Concord. Here's our calendar listing. Cambridge City Council candidates will meet at a forum on Energy and the Environment on Oct 30th, at the Cambridge Senior Citizens Center. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Every dollar you give will be doubled by a generous backer, so long as we reach our fundraising goal. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is a patriotic duty as citizens, we insist that the US put a price on carbon. Good bye and see you next week…

Friday Oct 04, 2013
The Climate Minute - No One Shuts Us Down! Edition
Friday Oct 04, 2013
Friday Oct 04, 2013
It's Climate Minute time, and here's the links version of the podcast. Grab a cuppa' and listen while we talk shutdowns, IPCC report, Koch Daycare, and just what the heck the discount rate means for climate change... (and just what the heck is a discount rate?) The Links. The Shutdown has pulled attention away from anything of substance, but there is a climate hook there too. Huffington Post reports that up to 94% of EPA employees will be idled, while oil and gas producers might just be chuckling about the whole thing. Politico has a good roundup of the various ways the shutdown will impact environment and energy programs. Former Senator John Sununu's op-ed in the Globe comparing the EPA's obligation to regulate carbon emissions to the hunt for Col. Kurtz in Apocalypse Now is still available in the free site, as of this morning. Check it out before it goes behind the pay wall. Speaking of important, non-shutdown related news, here's a good summary of the more salient points in the latest IPCC report. As we mentioned, billionaire climate denier David Koch donated $20 million to MIT for daycare for students and employees of the university. This is on top of the some $150 million Koch has donated to the university over the years. So here's the question for you: should MIT, an institution devoted to scientific truth, take Koch's money, even if it's for good purposes? Here - tell us what you think: [polldaddy poll=7449348] Read more about the discount rate, and how the value of money over time might change some of the calculus about taking action on climate change, check out this Bloomberg article. Finally, check out this great video of a Fox announcer trying to hide his disdain for the alignment of Tea Party and renewable energy advocates in Georgia. Things to do: Oct 6th on the Rose Kennedy Greenway, the Boston Local Food Festival. AltWheels Fleet Day is Oct 7th, at the Four Points Sheaton, Norwood. On Wednesday, October 9th, the group Forecast the Facts will bring over 50,000 signatures to WGBH's Board of Trustees meeting calling for the removal of climate denier David Koch from the 'GBH board. You can sign up to attend the public demonstration here. Cambridge City Council candidates will meet at a forum on Energy and the Environment on Oct 30th, at the Cambridge Senior Citizens Center. Remember, for more climate activities near you check out our MCAN climate action calendar. You can enter events as well as browse for interesting things to do. As always, it’s been a pleasure sharing climate news and views with you. You know, you can subscribe to our iTunes feed and get our podcasts automatically here. Feel free to give us your thoughts on our Facebook page, or through old-fashioned email. You can even follow us on twitter @MassClimate , so there are lots of ways for you to listen and participate in the dialog. When you are on the website, please contribute to MCAN. Every dollar you give will be doubled by a generous backer, so long as we reach our fundraising goal. So we will close the way we always close, by saying that because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is a patriotic duty as citizens, we insist that the US put a price on carbon. Good bye and see you next week…
