Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Appealing Vegan Food

If your friends and family think vegan food is tasteless and insubstantial, bring this dish to the next dinner party. Every time I serve this a few people ask me for the recipe. Eating lower on the food chain is better for your health and helps our environment. Enjoy!

Tabbouleh with Mint and Pistachios

¼ c. fine bulgur
3 Tbs. lemon juice
¼ tsp. honey
1 1/3 c. finely chopped pistachios
1 c. finely chopped curly parsley
1 small cucumber, finely chopped (1 cup)
1 medium tomato, finely chopped (1/3 cup)
4 green onions, finely chopped (1/3 cup)
1/3 cup finely chopped fresh mint
3 Tbs. olive oil

Place bulgur in large bowl and add 1/3 cup boiler water. Let stand 5 minutes. Stir in lemon juice and honey, and let stand 5 minutes more, or until all liquid is absorbed. Fluff bulgur with fork, and stir in remaining ingredients. Season with salt and pepper.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Is Sustainability Inevitable?

What if Martin Luther King Jr. had given a speech called “I Have a Nightmare” instead of “I Have a Dream”? Do you think “I Have a Nightmare” would have accelerated the civil rights movement in the same way? While we still have a long way to go until people judge others by the content of their character instead of the color of their skin, we have made great progress.

According to Shellenberger and Nordhaus's book Break Through, on August 28, 1963, hundreds of thousands of people assembled near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. to hear King speak. President Kennedy had recently returned from Germany where he had called for freedom for those living behind the Iron Curtain. Yet prior to King’s speech, Kennedy had asked King to call off the demonstration, saying “We want success in Congress, not just a big show at the Capitol”

This put King in a bad mood. He asked gospel singer Mahalia Jackson to open with the song “I Been ‘Buked and I Been Scorned." Then he started off his speech with a metaphor about the debt America owed African Americans. At one point in the speech Mahalia Jackson interjected: “Martin, tell them about your dream.” King paused and then said “But let us not wallow in the valley of despair. And so even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream.”

Which part of this speech echoes today in the hearts of Americans? Which part motivated people to think that suddenly integration seemed… inevitable: the negative or the positive part? Was it both?

There is a struggle going on currently in the environmental movement for the movement’s soul. Is the best way to save the planet to tell people to stop destroying it OR to try and inspire them to create a more sustainable future?

Martin Luther King Jr. wasn’t the first American visionary to have a great dream. Henry David Thoreau, who inspired King, also encouraged those of us who dream of a more sustainable future. In Thoreau’s book entitled Walden, he wrote:

“I learned this, at least, by my experiment; that if one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours. He will put some things behind, will pass an invisible boundary; new, universal, and more liberal laws will begin to establish themselves around and within him… If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.”

Let us walk the middle path between knowledge of how much things need to improve and the possibility of how good things could be so that a sustainable future seems… inevitable.

Monday, March 10, 2008

The 3 Percent Solution

One of my fantastic professors at Tufts University, Bill Moomaw, recently published an article (Tufts Magazine, Winter 2008) entitled “The 3% Solution” about how our country can achieve an 80% reduction in CO2 emissions by approximately the year 2050. If we reduce carbon emissions by 3% each year, we will realize the “50 percent mark in 23 years and the 75 percent mark in 47 years.” At this rate, in 53 years we will attain the 80 percent reduction needed to stabilize atmospheric carbon at 450 parts per million (ppm) and avoid irreversible melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. Current atmospheric carbon is 383 ppm.

The U.S. must lead the way in carbon reduction. Once China, India and other developing nations have grown their economies enough to meet their extremely poor citizens’ basic needs for food, shelter, sanitation, clean drinking water, education and healthcare; then they can join us in prioritizing climate stabilization.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

ROPE - A New Set of Sustainability Principles

To ensure most of us are pulling in the same direction, we need a common set of sustainability principles to guide our actions. Dozens of sets of sustainability principles are chronicled in Andres Edwards’s book The Sustainability Revolution. The problem with most of these sets is that they’re too detailed to remember or they’re framed in a negative way. Building on principles from Janine Benyus’s biomimicry approach, William McDonough’s Hannover Principles, Karl Henrik-Robert’s The Natural Step, and Lovins’s and Hawken’s Natural Capitalism, here is a set of positive and concise sustainability principles. Just like the efforts of an organization to become sustainable, which is a journey not a destination, this list of principles is a work in progress.

Collapsing several sustainability concepts into a short acronym is one way to help people remember the principles. I submit for your consideration the ROPE acronym: Resources, Opportunity, Perspective and Environment. This ROPE is a lifeline that will pull us toward a sustainable future.

Resources should focus on using “just enough” local, small-scale, decentralized and renewable inputs whenever possible. Opportunity is the way to view a sustainable future: creating a world that meets our needs even better than what we have now. Perspective involves taking an intergenerational and global view where everyone’s basic needs are met while the privileged consider what truly makes them happy. Perspective also involves valuing the strength that diversity and interdependence bring to a community and an ecosystem. As for Environment, we have a responsibility to restore the environment our lives depend on: for our own sakes, for the benefit of future generations, and for Nature’s well-being.

Monday, February 18, 2008

What Exists Is Possible – Leading Transformational Change for Buildings

The American Institute of Architects recently issued the AIA 2030 Challenge which aims to reduce energy use in new buildings by 50 percent by 2010 and challenges its members to create carbon-neutral buildings by 2030. Ideally, a carbon neutral building will generate as much on-site renewable power as it uses, instead of simply purchasing carbon offsets to compensate for carbon emissions.

To accomplish carbon neutrality with on-site green power generation, buildings must first maximize energy efficiency by insulating the building envelope (walls, roof, and windows); installing efficient equipment; and installing controls to turn off heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems (HVAC), and lights and equipment when not needed.

One of the early adopters of this transformational approach to building design is the electrical engineering firm Integrated Design Associates in San Jose, California. Their green workspace is comfortable and pleasant, and serves as a role model for others. After all, what exists is possible.

Some notable green features of the 7,200 square foot building include:

* A ground source heat pump connected to radiant flooring (water flows through pipes in the ground then up through the concrete slab, tapping into the year-round 57 degree temperature of the Earth) to cool the building occupants in the summer and warm them in the winter

* Abundant indirect daylighting (passive solar) lights and heats the office space

* 30 kilowatts of photovoltaic panels tied to the electricity grid (so they don’t need batteries)

* Equipment controls connected to the burglar alarm so when the last person leaves for the day, the photocopier and plotter are automatically turned off

* Motion sensors connected to the lights and computer for each cubicle

* Electrochromic glass (which darkens to shade the occupants from direct sunlight)

The principal of the firm, David Kaneda, estimated that these additional green features added a five percent premium to the cost of the building. However, these costs are an investment that yields quick returns since operating costs over the life of a building are generally estimated to be three times the architectural design and construction costs.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Is It Possible to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions 80% by 2050?

In June 2005, California Governor Schwarzenegger set an aggressive goal to address climate change with Executive Order S-3-05: reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80% below 1990 levels by 2050. Since then, people around the country have been debating wildly how the state is going to achieve this goal and even if this goal is possible to achieve.

Let’s assume it is possible and that we have a responsibility to future generations to try to stabilize atmospheric carbon. How would we do it? Clearly there will not be one single solution: every activity that contributes greenhouse gases must contribute to the solution.

Commonalities among various think tank plans to stabilize atmospheric carbon include: increased vehicle fuel efficiency, reduced miles driven, more mass transit, more solar power, more wind power, more tree planting, alteration of energy-intensive agricultural practices, and net zero carbon buildings. Princeton University’s Carbon Management Institute is betting we will figure out how to sequester carbon on a large scale (beyond tree planting) and solve the twin nuclear power problems of radioactive waste disposal and high cost compared to other sources of energy.

We will need to allow ourselves a period of time to experiment with promising options so we can determine what more we need to do to address this issue. Now that the mainstream public better understands the problem, we have political will to implement solutions. It’s exciting to watch various sectors pitch in and help: government agencies at all levels are setting policies that encourage energy efficiency, the financial sector is investing in clean energy, utilities are expanding their rebate programs, and leading corporations are setting aggressive greenhouse gas reduction goals and meeting them.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Where Are We Going to Find Five More Earths?

An "ecological footprint" is a measure of the amount of resources needed to sustain one person and absorb her/his wastes. In the United States, the ecological footprint of the average U.S. citizen is large compared to most other countries in the world. If everyone in the world lived like the average U.S. citizen, the global community would need six planets. While Costco sells many useful household items in large sizes, they don’t sell planets, in singles or in five-packs.

Our planet is a savings account. We are currently living off the interest and drawing down the principal. To be sustainable, we need to find a way to live off the interest; that is, use renewable resources and not use them up faster than they can replenish themselves.