An Introduction

Hello and welcome to The Green Room, a show which is broadcast biweekly from WESU Middletown 88.1 FM, Wesleyan University's community radio project. The show is written and produced by me, Sam Bernhardt, a student at Wesleyan. The show's first season was based around a collaborative project between WESU and Professor Suzanne O'Connell, of the Wesleyan Earth and Environmental Science department, in which students of Professor O'Connell's Environmental Justice class created their own radio segments, which were aired as part of the show and which you can find on the show's iTune's U page.


However, this is only the start. For our next season, starting in September, I hope to expand this collaboration between WESU and Wesleyan's classes even further, giving the microphone to a whole range of classes in Wesleyan's newly created Environmental Studies department.

This blog is partly to provide another venue for listening to the show (in addition to itunes U and live streaming from WESUFM.org and, of course, traditional listening on 88.1 FM if you are in the middle-northern connecticut area). More generally, it acts as another medium for communicating information, especially as a way to keep up with the environmental newsing while I am away from WESU for the summer.



Monday, May 25, 2009

17 Arrested in Direct Action against Mountain Top Removal, 6 Still Held in Custody

Six activists are currently being held in police custody after trespassing the Kayford coal mine property in West Virginia. The activists locked themselves to coal mining equipment in a successful effort to temporarily shut down mountain removal operations. The bail for each of these young volunteers has been set at $2000, an unprecedented amount for such actions. Donations to the bail fund can be given at mountainjustice.org.


Meanwhile, two more activists are being held for floating a sign that reads "No More Toxic Sludge" at the Massey coal sludge damn, which currently holds 8 billion tons of coal sludge, the condensed byproduct of coal purification. The damn is within miles of Marsh Fork Elementary School. The official charges against these two are trespassing and LITTERING. ON AN 8 BILLION TON COAL SLUDGE MINE. West Virginia police must have a sense of humor.

During his campaign for the Democratic nomination last May, President Obama said that "We're tearing up the Appalachian Mountains because of fossil fuels." In recent months, it looked like the new administration was making progress on this issue, calling into question dozens of new permits for mountain top coal mining. However, the Obama administration has not lived up to its promises. Reuters reported that last week, the EPA gave the green light to the army corps of engineers on 42 new Mountain Top removal sites. The EPA has defended its actions, stating that "Twenty-eight of the projects have two or fewer valley fills. Eleven have no valley fills at all. None have more than six." However, the approval of these permits ensures the destruction of more Appalachian land, and should be reversed.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

The view from Blandy

This picture captures just a fraction of the Blandy Experimental Farm, in Boyce, Virginia. I'll be here for the next ten weeks on an NSF fellowship to study the passion flower plant. Its truly a beautiful place, and there will be more pictures to come.

The Shenandoah Valley is part of the Appalachian Mountains, and I hope to be traveling south to join efforts against the coal industry, in West Virginia

Saturday, May 23, 2009

The climate bill: merrits and failures

Given that the Markey-Waxman bill making its way through congress is America's first attempt at a climate change bill, anything will be a step in the right direction. The bill calls for a 17% reduction in carbon emissions below 2005 levels by 2020, and an 83% by 2050, through a comprehensive cap-and-trade scheme.

However, there are several LARGE problems with the bill. As Breakthrough Institute reports here, companies may not have to actually reduce emissions until 2030 by using various loopholes, specifically where emissions offsets are concerned. Companies will be allowed to divert offsets internationally, and domestic offsets appear shaky. For example, one offset opportunity listed is forest conservation, which is surely important, but a stable forest actually does not act as a sink for carbon, instead is at equilibrium (it is no longer growing, so there's just as much carbon capturing photosynthesis as there is carbon producing respiration).

Also, even if the companies pull through with emissions cuts as advertised, we must look at what these numbers really mean. 17% reductions by 2020 may seem like a lot, but it all depends on what we are setting as our standard. The US was held to a 7% reduction in the Kyoto Protocol, but never signed the treaty, and instead increased carbon emissions from around 6 billion metric tons to 7 billion metric tons, or about a 16% increase. So, the Markey-Waxman bill actually puts us back where we were in 1990, which is not where we want to be.

The bill also devotes $1 billion dollars to clean coal technology, which is truly a travesty. This money should be put towards developing truly renewable technology. We may be able to pump carbon dioxide from coal-fire plants underground, but this in no way makes coal "clean." The extraction of coal, particularly through mountain top removal, is extremely toxic, contaminating local water sheds. The storage of coal ash, the product of coal plants, is also very harmful and dangerous, as we saw with the TVA earlier this year.

Now let me correct myself: this is NOT the first climate legislation to be proposed in America. Actually, we have a bunch of it already. For example, ten states have signed the Regional Greenhoues Gas Initiative, which calls for 20% reduction below 1990 levels! California has similar legislation in place, and the Midwestern Greenhoues Gas Accord has yet to come to fruition.

Is any change good? The Markey-Waxman bill seems to be a compromise between congress and industry. Such a compromise seems unnecessary when we have a president who promised action on climate change, a democrat-controlled congress and an (almost) fillibuster-proof senate. Should we be aborting our efforts here and save our legislative resources and lobbying power for a stronger bill? At the very least, I say that if this bill does pass, let us not settle. Let's keep going, and let President Obama and congress know that this is not good enough.


Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Green Room #7

Sounds from Wesleyan's Earth Day celebration.

Wesleyan students from Professor Suzanne O'Connell's Environmental Justice and Sustainability class discuss: Holyoke's Nuestras Raices gardens, which provide a local agricultural paradise in deep in an urban area; a look back on where the Environmental movement has come from and where it must go in the future; an interview with a representative from Rising Tide, a climate justice advocacy group.


4.28.09


Green Room #6

I went out to Wesleyan's Long Lane Farm, a student run agricultural initiative which has functioned as a CSA for almost five years, providing a vital link This year, the farm hopes to divert most of its produce to a local food pantry. We'll also hear excerpts from a lecture on mountain top coal removal.

Students of Professor O'Connell's class are taken on a tour by We Act, an environmental justice group based in Harlem, New York, as well as environmental activist organizations closer to home in Connecticut.

4.14.09

Green Room #5

EPA head Lisa Jackson takes center stage with multiple big actions; The Green Room goes to the Wesleyan Farmer's Market; We talk to two Wesleyan students who are proponents of the new environmental movement "bright green."

Students of Professor O'Connell's Environmental Justice and Sustainability class make three segments on recycling and compost, as well as waste water management.

3/31/09

Green Room #4

POWERSHIFT!!

This entire episode is composed of recordings from Power Shift 2009, a youth climate change conference which took place in March in Washington, D.C. The conference featured multiple outstanding speakers, including Van Jones, Majora Carter, and Congresspeople Ed Markey (of the Markey-Waxman climate bill) and Donna Edwards.

The conference was also composed of smaller lectures, panels and workshops. It was truly an inspiring weekend for all who attended, as we were able to come together as a movement, giving the call for the environment a presence in the nation's capital.

3.17.09 Power Shift

Green Room #2

In this episode of the green room, I profile the new environmental officials put in place by the Obama administration, specifically head of the EPA Lisa Jackson, and energy chief Steven Chu. I also interview Jono Boyer-Dry, a Wesleyan graduate who works in the wind energy sector, on the economy and how alternative energy efforts are being affected.

The show also features three segments created by Wesleyan students on the subjects of environmental justice and transportation.

Green Room #2: Obama and Transportation

Green Room #1

Robert Bullard Comes to Wes

In February, Dr. Robert Bullard visited Wesleyan to deliver the Martin Luther King Day address. Dr. Bullard has been called the father of the environmental justice movement, and is a true champion of the environment. Bullard says he was "drafted" into environmental justice while working as an environmental sociologist in Houston in the late 1970s. He has published numerous books on the relationship between socioeconomic status and the environmental conditions a community encounters.


Robert Bullard delivers Matin Luther King Day address at Wesleyan 1.27.09

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Green Room #3

Hilary Clinton goes to China, the EPA sets its aims on carbon regulation, and Connecticut struggles to direct funds for alternative energy; An interview with Wesleyan student Tim Devane, who has started a nonprofit ecotourism organization with the aim of sending young people to the rainforest.

Students of Wesleyan's Environmental Justice and Sustainability class examine the topic of brownfields, land which has been contaminated by industrial practices (most involving the coal industry).

3.03.09

An Introduction

Hello and welcome to The Green Room, a show which is broadcast biweekly from WESU Middletown 88.1 FM, Wesleyan University's community radio project. The show is written and produced by me, Sam Bernhardt, a student at Wesleyan. The show's first season was based around a collaborative project between WESU and Professor Suzanne O'Connell, of the Wesleyan Earth and Environmental Science department, in which students of Professor O'Connell's Environmental Justice class created their own radio segments, which were aired as part of the show and which you can find on the show's iTune's U page.

However, this is only the start. For our next season, starting in September, I hope to expand this collaboration between WESU and Wesleyan's classes even further, giving the microphone to a whole range of classes in Wesleyan's newly created Environmental Studies department.

This blog is partly to provide another venue for listening to the show (in addition to itunes U and live streaming from WESUFM.org and, of course, traditional listening on 88.1 FM if you are in the middle-northern connecticut area). More generally, it acts as another medium for communicating information, especially as a way to keep up with the environmental newsing while I am away from WESU for the summer.