Giant Sushi

A couple of scores this week led me back to a favorite Google game, wherein in I grab top rankings for obscure phrases that amuse me. An abbreviated list of some of the phrases I ownz, or at least ownz a substanial share of, starting with this week’s new additions to the list:

The China Problem

Joseph Kahn, Mark Landler and others had the latest yesterday in the New York Times series on the problems enveloping China’s rapid growth.

The story uses the journalistic trope of moving from the illustrative particular to the more significant general issue underlying it.

The particular in this case is the shift of steel production from Germany’s Ruhr Valley to Handan, in China. The general is the global problem associated with the shift of dirty industrial production (both in terms of greenhouse gas emissions and the more mundane and traditional pollutants that get your laundry dirty when it hangs on the line) from the developed to the developing world. The payoff comes deep in the story, and illustrates the central trick in coming up with a post-Kyoto emissions reduction regime:

One apparent benefit of China’s industrial rise is that developed countries have slowed or cut their carbon emissions, a political and environmental boon as pressure to combat climate change has increased. Even the United States, which has declined to set limits on carbon emissions, has recently shown slight declines. But the gains are illusory.

A study by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University found that if all the goods that the United States imported between 1997 and 2004 had been produced domestically, America’s carbon emissions would have been 30 percent higher.

A separate study for the European Parliament examined the transfer of steel production to China from Germany. It found that China’s less efficient steel mills, and its greater reliance on coal, meant that it emitted three times as much carbon dioxide per ton of steel as German steel producers.

From Beijing’s perspective, its exports of steel and other “carbon-intensive” products provide one more reason — along with its still moderate per capita emissions and its low standard of living — for rejecting mandatory caps on carbon emissions. Rich countries, it says, should cut their own emissions sharply and transfer technology so that China will not pollute as much as those countries did when they had their industrial booms.

Some leading environmental economists agree. “The footprint of the rich countries is very large because they lay claim to resources in other countries,” said R. Andreas Kraemer, director of the Ecologic Institute for International and European Environmental Policy in Berlin.

He and other experts say wealthy countries may have to reduce their consumption as well as their production of carbon in the future. That would oblige them to count what they import from China and elsewhere.

But that idea is notional, while heavy industry’s shift to China is inexorable. (emphasis added)

Santa Goes Green

This just in:

NORTH POLE — Kris Kringle announced today that he has dropped the centuries-old tradition of stuffing coal into the stockings of naughty boys and girls. The decision comes at a time when record warm temperatures and thinning sea ice are threatening the very existence of Kringle’s North Pole toy-making and distribution center.

“In light of the prominent role of coal burning in global warming, Santa has decided that he can no longer in any way endorse the extraction of coal,” explained Ilbereth, Kringle’s spokes-elf. Poor behavior will not go unpunished, however. “Silicate rocks and organic mulch will be replacing coal in stockings, with the occasional mercury-free rotting sardine and DVD of An Inconvenient Truth for those extraordinarily naughty individuals.”

Stuff I’ve Been Writing All Week Elsewhere

atomos for peaceReaders of this blog might get the mistaken idea that most of my journalistic attention is focused on climate, but for the last 17 years nuclear weapons have been my primary professional preoccupation. In that regard, it has been a remarkable week.

Sunday night, Congress approved a spending bill that ended months of uncertainty surrounding the possibility for deep budget cuts in the U.S. nuclear weapons program. For those not familiar with New Mexico’s political and economic geography, we are home to two nuclear weapons labs, and some 10,000 New Mexicans are directly employed in nuclear weapons work:

The main message of that first-day story was parochial – budget and jobs. A story has to be about one thing. But one of the most important decisions – small in dollar terms but large in international implications – was the cancellation of the “reliable replacement warhead”, which would have been the first new U.S. nuclear weapon since the end of the Cold War. So after burying that theme on day one, I tried to make clear what it meant on day two:

The most dramatic bit happened on day three, as the National Nuclear Security Administration rolled out its plans for a new U.S. nuclear weapons design and manufacturing complex for the 21st century. The marquee bit was the designation of Los Alamos, here in New Mexico, as the future home of plutonium manufacturing for U.S. nuclear weapons.

This decision is quite literally the culmination for me of 17 years of reporting I have done on this subject. Back in the early 1990s, it was widely argued that Los Alamos would eventually get the plutonium mission, which is central to manufacturing nuclear weapons. I tried to sketch out the background here:

Godwin’s Law and the Climate Debate

Between David Roberts and James Hansen, I think we’re well past invoking Godwin’s law, but a friend sent along a new example this morning of climate change-Nazi rhetoric that I found particularly, um, amusing:

One of the great ironies of 2007 was Al Gore’s sharing the Nobel Peace Prize. I argue below that Gore’s climate change crusade is a threat to peace. In fact, if the Nobel Committee’s current members could be transported back in time to about 1938, one might see another master propagandist, Leni Riefenstahl, similarly honored – maybe sharing the prize with Neville “Peace in Our Time” Chamberlain.

Writing About Lee’s Ferry


Lee’s Ferry, on the Colorado

Originally uploaded by heinemanfleck.

Sitting at home working on a chilly Saturday, this photo from a trip in 2005 reminds me that I’d rather be at Lee’s Ferry than sitting home writing about it. But it’s a pretty interesting place, so writing about Lee’s Ferry is a good close second. Sadly, since this is a book you’ll have to wait a bit to read what I have to say. In the meantime, close your eyes tight, imagine this picture and repeat those three magic words:

“John Wesley Powell. John Wesley Powell. John Wesley Powell.”