Monthly Archive for May, 2011

Announcing the 2011 Conference on Climate Change Dinner

Announcing the 2011 Conference on Climate Change Dinner – Thursday, 21 July – 7:00pm

“On the edge of Copacabana, the refinement of the Mediterranean.”

Seated right on Copacabana Beach, Don Camillo Restaurant offers a warm atmosphere, an extensive wine list, and traditional Italian cuisine ranging from traditional pastas to fresh seafood.  Enjoy a relaxing evening of great conversation, delicious food and wine, and a beautiful view of Copacabana.

Don Camillo is located in walking distance of the JW Marriott, and directions will be provided at the conference.

For more information, please visit the conference website

2011 Conference On Climate Tour Announced – Rio at Night

Announcing the 2011 Conference on Climate Tour – Rio at Night – Friday, 22 July, 6:30pm – 10:30pm

US $80

See some of the most famous sights of Rio in a guided bus tour, specifically designed for Common Ground delegates!

A chartered bus (or mini-bus) and a licensed tour-guide will meet us at the lobby of the JW Marriott and escort us to Urca, a historical neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro.

From Urca, we will take a cable car up Sugarloaf Mountain to take in wonderful views of Rio beaches and landscapes.  The 360 degree view from the cable cars creates unparalleled sight-seeing opportunities.

After the Cable Car ride, our chartered bus (or mini-bus) and tour guide will escort us through various neighborhoods of Rio, including the South Zone and Historical Rio, and finally drop us back off in front of the JW Marriott.

A not-to-be-missed tour and Rio experience!

Price includes chartered transportation, knowledgeable tour guide, and cable-car fare.

An Unlikely Power Duo Emerges in the Global Fight Against Climate Change

Todd Heisler/The New York Times

By John M. Broder from the New York Times

Bill Clinton and Michael R. Bloomberg have circled each other warily for a decade, ever since Mr. Clinton landed in Harlem after leaving the White House and Mr. Bloomberg ascended from a hugely successful business career to become the mayor of New York City. They have appeared together at a few civic functions, dined out a couple of times a year and hacked at golf balls on the same course.

But until now they have never joined forces on a project with global reach that could advance both of their legacies. They are taking on an issue — climate change — that may well shape the world’s economic and social future for decades to come.

Mr. Bloomberg’s billions of dollars and Mr. Clinton’s billions of friends are a potent combination, but can this unlikely power coupling make an impact in stemming rising seas or cooling the planet?

To Read More…

Global Energy: The Latest Infatuations

By Vaclav Smil from American Scientist

To follow global energy affairs is to have a never-ending encounter with new infatuations. Fifty years ago media ignored crude oil (a barrel went for little more than a dollar). Instead the western utilities were preoccupied with the annual double-digit growth of electricity demand that was to last indefinitely, and many of them decided that only large-scale development of nuclear fission, to be eventually transformed into a widespread adoption of fast breeder reactors, could secure electricity’s future. Two decades later, in the midst of the second energy “crisis” (1979–1981, precipitated by Khomeini’s takeover of Iran), rising crude oil prices became the world’s prime existential concern, growth of electricity demand had slumped to low single digits, France was the only nation that was seriously pursuing a nuclear future, and small cars were in vogue.

After world crude oil prices collapsed in 1985 (temporarily below $5 per barrel), American SUVs began their rapid diffusion that culminated in using the Hummer H1, a civilian version of a U.S. military assault vehicle weighing nearly 3.5 tonnes, for trips to grocery stores—and the multinational oil companies were the worst performing class of stocks of the 1990s. The first decade of the 21st century changed all that, with constant fears of an imminent peak of global oil extraction (in some versions amounting to nothing less than lights out for western civilization), catastrophic consequences of fossil fuel-induced global warming and a grand unraveling of the post-WW II world order.

To Read More…

Drawing Water: the Hypothetical Trajectories of Rainwater in the U.S

From information aesthetics

Drawing Water [sansumbrella.com] looks like a generative painting, but in fact illustrates the relationship between where water falls and where it is consumed within the United States. It shows how water is channeled, pumped, and siphoned to locations far from where it fell to the ground, based on real water consumption and rainfall data.

Each blue line corresponds to a daily rainfall measurement, of which the length and location are determined by the amount of rainfall measured and where it fell, respectively. The end location and color of each line are determined by the influence of water consumption: the more water a city uses, the stronger its pull on the rainfall.

To Read More…

Announcing the Winner of the International Award for Excellence

Congratulations to Zareen Shahid and Awais Piracha the winners of the International Award for Excellence in the area of Climate Change: Impacts and Responses with their paper Climate Change Impacts in Pakistan: Awareness and Adaptation.

Abstract: Climate change is a serious threat to the security and prosperity of the world in the twenty-first century. Although it is an inherently global problem but its impacts will not be felt equally across our planet. Developing countries are much more vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.

This paper explores various climate change impacts and their consequences in Pakistan. Pakistan is already a resource poor country with a very high and fast growing population, very low natural resource base and peculiar unfavourable local socio-cultural conditions. Climate change is an additional stress for this country. According to a recently published index, Pakistan was ranked 12th on the list of countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.

It is known that increasing environmental awareness leads to better planning and management of environmental resources. An important aspect of this research is to look into relevance of awareness about climate change impacts among policymakers in Pakistan. This paper analyses climate change adaptation measures for a poor, developing and stressed country like Pakistan. In particular it assesses the possible role of GIS (Geographical Information System) in awareness raising about climate change impacts in Pakistan.