Author Archives: e0knk4m

Trump’s status on the Paris Agreement? It’s complicated.

In 2012, Katherine Miller was frustrated that Americans weren’t really talking about issues of sustainable food and nutrition. She realized that chefs were in a position to restart those discussions. Restaurants, after all, are home to intimate and weighty discussions, all of it centered around food.

Miller decided to use her experience coaching community advocates to show chefs how to start conversations and discuss important issues with patrons and politicians alike. She founded the Chef Action Network to connect chefs with politicians and local organizations and, along with food education and advocacy group James Beard Foundation, organized a series of policy boot camps for chefs to sharpen their conversation skills.

After training ’em up, Miller puts chefs — prominent local business owners in their own right — in touch with representatives who will listen to their voices on issues like antibiotic overuse and catch limits. She also helps chefs get involved at the local level. In January, JBF partnered with NRDC and Nashville Mayor Megan Barry on the Food Saver Challenge, an initiative that aims to help Music City reduce waste.

Miller is hopeful that chefs can dish out common ground. “In a time when Americans have stopped talking to each other, chefs and restaurateurs are setting the table for all of us to have difficult conversations.”


Meet all the fixers on this year’s Grist 50.

Link:  

Trump’s status on the Paris Agreement? It’s complicated.

Posted in alo, Anchor, FF, G & F, GE, LAI, ONA, organic, Ringer, The Atlantic, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Trump’s status on the Paris Agreement? It’s complicated.

8 Things That Shouldn’t Go in the Dishwasher

Dishwashers are precious, magical and life-changing gifts for anyone who spends time in the kitchen. These miracle appliances slash household chore time and ensure a deep, quality clean on your everyday dishes and cutlery. While it may be tempting to throw everything inside and set it and forget it, there are some objects that really shouldnt find their way into a dishwasher.

Cracking, tarnishing and general deterioration are never fun to discover when you unload the latest batch of dishes. To avoid these unpleasant discoveries, make sure to pay close attention to which kitchen utensils are alright to throw in the wash and which are best set aside for a hands-on cleaning:

1. Wooden utensils and cutting boards

Warping can easily occur when soaking wooden dinnerware in water or running them through a mechanical washing cycle. Also, if your nice wooden salad tongs have a finish on them, they might not after a trip through the wash.

2. Cast iron skillets

Cast iron skillets and pans require some TLC throughout their lifetime. By properly seasoning, gently cleaning and thoroughly drying your cast iron you can ensure many, many years of use. Scrubbing with dish soap (unless you are re-seasoning) or running them through the wash is a definite no-no.

3. Fine crystal

It probably goes without saying that fine (and expensive!) crystal can easily become damaged in a dishwasher. Use soft cloths to clean these items, instead.

4. Copper pots and pans

Love the gorgeous golden color of your copper dishware? Make sure to hand wash them so theyll keep their good looks!

5. Vintage dinnerware

Fine china has no place in a dishwasher! The delicate details of vintage dishes can easily chip away through the fairly rough cycle of a dishwasher. Wash these beauties by hand so you can pass them onto the next generation.

6. Quality chefs knives

General rule of thumb: if you spent a bunch of money on a top-notch kitchen tool, you should probably pause before stacking it in the dishwasher. Knives can dull in the dishwasher or damage the plastic racks, if not stored properly.

7. Jars with labels

The heat and soapy water will take off some of the label from your everyday jam jar, but the material will more than likely get stuck in the filter or on other dishes in the wash. And there will probably still be goopy adhesive on the jar! Instead, try this method of cleaning labels off of jars.

8. Regular dish soap

The only reason to put regular old dish soap into a dishwasher is if youd like to create a makeshift foam party in your kitchen. If thats the case, throw on some house music and kick the strobe lights into high gear! If not, stick to soap made specifically for dishwashers.

Photo credit: Thinkstock

Disclaimer: The views expressed above are solely those of the author and may not reflect those of Care2, Inc., its employees or advertisers.

View the original here: 

8 Things That Shouldn’t Go in the Dishwasher

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on 8 Things That Shouldn’t Go in the Dishwasher

Here’s How You Can Get Solar Panels for 20-30% Off

See original article:  

Here’s How You Can Get Solar Panels for 20-30% Off

Posted in FF, GE, LG, ONA, solar, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Here’s How You Can Get Solar Panels for 20-30% Off

Solar Composting Toilets Highlight Green Changes to NYC Park

The proposed design at Riverside Park includes green rooftops and solar-powered composting toilets. Photo: COOK + FOX

Typically, the opening of a public restroom doesn’t merit a lot of hoopla. But then again, most public restrooms aren’t as green and carbon neutral as the facilities that are being planned for Riverside Park in New York City. The restrooms in the park overlooking the Hudson River will use solar power and compost sewage to fertilize park greenery. The new restroom complex is being designed so that it will not create any carbon dioxide emissions, which contribute to global warming. Plus, in addition to producing fertilizer (instead of sewage), the composting toilets will use little to no water. (By comparison, conventional toilets use about 3.5 gallons of water per flush.)

“These toilets are vital,” says Mark McIntyre, executive director of the Riverside Clay Tennis Association. He says that much of the Hudson River Greenway, where the park is located, is built on a landfill along areas that are not connected to New York City’s sewer system. Even if they were able to connect to the existing sewer system, that system is already aging and stressed.

“Tens of thousands of people are now using this riverfront pathway, and there are not enough [bathrooms] to accommodate the need,” McIntyre says. The opening of the Hudson Riverwalk has increased bike and pedestrian traffic by the thousands, and presently portable toilets are the only option for park visitors.

“If we are to build the necessary amenities, we want to do it in an environmentally responsible way and one that is economically feasible,” he says.

Next page: Going Off the Grid

earth911

Link to original:  

Solar Composting Toilets Highlight Green Changes to NYC Park

Posted in alo, eco-friendly, FF, GE, LG, ONA, Paradise, PUR, solar, solar panels, solar power, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Solar Composting Toilets Highlight Green Changes to NYC Park

Why This Red-State Republican Mayor Backs Obama on Climate Change

Mother Jones

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN” “http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd”>

Just a few days after the Treasury Department announced it would no longer back funding for most overseas coal-fired power plants, today President Obama issued a new executive order that lays the groundwork for how the US will prepare for climate change within its borders. The order is the latest in a series of policies stemming from the president’s Climate Action Plan; earlier this year, for example, the administration issued new greenhouse gas emission limits for power plants and cars. But rather than addressing carbon pollution, per se, today’s plan focuses on how cities and states can prepare for the climate impacts already on the way.

“We need to work on bipartisan solutions, and put politics aside,” said Mayor James Brainard of Carmel, Indiana, a Republican who is one of the local officials taking part in a new advisory task force created by today’s order. “The climate is changing, and we need to be prepared for it.”

So what does the order call for? Here’s what you need to know:

Prioritize climate-ready projects: In the wake of Superstorm Sandy, many civic planning experts called for future infrastructure plans—for bridges, roads, housing development, and the like—to emphasize climate resilience (a popular buzzword among climate wonks that means being able to quickly bounce back from disasters).

Today’s order requires federal agencies to support and incentivize “smarter, more climate-resilient investments” through grants, guidance, and other forms of assistance. These could include moving roads away from crumbling coasts or requiring seaside homes to be built higher above the floodplain. The order also directs agencies to “identify and seek to remove or reform barriers that discourage” resilient investments—for example, policies that currently encourage cities to apply weak rebuilding standards after natural disasters.

“What we’re seeing here is a promise that resources that might have been dedicated just to rebuilding, there would now be a mandate to rebuild in a more resilient fashion,” said Rachel Cleetus, a climate economist at the Union of Concerned Scientists.

The order gives a nod to natural systems, too: Federal agencies are required to look for ways to protect places like watersheds, marshes (which are themselves an important protective barrier from sea level rise), and forests from climate impacts and are directed deliver specific recommendations to the White House within nine months.

Continue Reading »

Source: 

Why This Red-State Republican Mayor Backs Obama on Climate Change

Posted in FF, GE, LAI, LG, ONA, Uncategorized, Venta | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Why This Red-State Republican Mayor Backs Obama on Climate Change

Italian mafia boss says pollution turned him into a police informant

Italian mafia boss says pollution turned him into a police informant

Shutterstock

The Italian mob didn’t just murder its enemies. With its illegal dumping of toxic waste, it also condemned people living in and around Naples to cancer.

As the Italian Senate investigates links between toxic dumping and cancer clusters, a former mob boss is claiming that his disgust with the pollution prompted him to become a police informant. From the BBC:

Two decades ago doctors noticed that the incidence of cancer in towns around Naples was on the rise. Since then, the number of tumours found in women has risen by 40%, and those in men by 47%.

As senators investigate a possible link to the mafia — which secured lucrative contracts to dispose of waste, then dumped much of it illegally — one ex-mafia boss, Carmine Schiavone, looks on with particular interest.

He was once at the very heart of the criminal network that sowed the land with poison. He knows how much damage the mafiosi have done. …

He became what’s called a mafia pentito — “a penitent one”, siding with the police, and testifying for the state against his fellow mob bosses. …

But it seems that it was not the killing, in the end, that made him sick of his life of crime. What made him a pentito, he says, was his fear about the impact the Casalesi’s illegal dumping of waste was having on the land. …

“I did it when I knew that people were doomed to die from cancer. They had injected all this land — millions of cubic metres — with toxic substances. A scary cocktail.”

Too bad the victims and their families won’t be able to fuhgettaboutit.


Source
The toxic reason a mafia boss became a police informant, BBC

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

Find this article interesting? Donate now to support our work.Read more: Business & Technology

,

Living

Original source:

Italian mafia boss says pollution turned him into a police informant

Posted in Anchor, FF, G & F, GE, LAI, ONA, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Italian mafia boss says pollution turned him into a police informant