Your Questions About Green Living

Paul asks…

Please answer these 10 geography questions?

An example of something that comes from nature that people use.

What is a human resource?
What is a natural resource?
What is a capital resource?
None of the above

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

Tiny roundworm commonly found in grassland soils that help provide nutrients and mixing of soil to keep it healthy.

What is a nematode?
What is bacteria?
What is a mole?
What is a night-crawler?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

Hydropower, wind energy, solar power, geothermal, biofuels and hydrogen.

What are examples of renewable energy resources?
What are examples of capital resources?
What are examples of nonrenewable energy resources?
What are examples of fossil fuels?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

May contain approximately 68 percent of all undiscovered oil and 74 percent of undiscovered natural gas reserves in the United States.

What are urban areas?
What are national parks?
What are federal lands?
What are capital resources?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

Gave the National Park Service the authority in 1973 to use restoration as a conservation tool in the recovery process for listed species.

What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is OSHA?
What is the Bureau of Land Management?
What was the Endangered Species Act?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

A government agency created in 1916 and given the task of preserving U.S. natural resources so that Americans can enjoy, benefit, and learn from them.

What is the National Park Service?
What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

A government program that cleans up polluted areas and makes them safe.

What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is Superfund?
What are the Leave No Trace Principles?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

Its scientific name, Canis latrans, means “barking dog” and its ability to exist under extreme conditions is one reason it is now the most widespread mammal in the U.S.

What is the grey wolf?
What is the prairie dog?
What is the domesticate dog?
What is the coyote?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

Formed from the remains of tiny organisms that lived in seas and rivers millions of years ago.

What is coal?
What are hydrothermal resources?
What is petroleum?
What are renewable resources?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

————————————–…

What the Environmental Protection Agency calls the main ingredient in smog.

What is carbon dioxide?
What are the three R’s?
What is ground-level ozone?
What is carbon monoxide?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

The Expert answers:

What is a natural resource?

What is a nematode?

What are examples of renewable energy resources?

What are national parks?

What was the Endangered Species Act?

What is the National Park Service?

What is Superfund?

What is the coyote?

What is petroleum?

What is ground-level ozone?

Robert asks…

SomeOne Please answer these 10questions for me 10points?

An example of something that comes from nature that people use.

What is a human resource?
What is a natural resource?
What is a capital resource?
None of the above

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Tiny roundworm commonly found in grassland soils that help provide nutrients and mixing of soil to keep it healthy.

What is a nematode?
What is bacteria?
What is a mole?
What is a night-crawler?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Hydropower, wind energy, solar power, geothermal, biofuels and hydrogen.

What are examples of renewable energy resources?
What are examples of capital resources?
What are examples of nonrenewable energy resources?
What are examples of fossil fuels?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

May contain approximately 68 percent of all undiscovered oil and 74 percent of undiscovered natural gas reserves in the United States.

What are urban areas?
What are national parks?
What are federal lands?
What are capital resources?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Gave the National Park Service the authority in 1973 to use restoration as a conservation tool in the recovery process for listed species.

What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is OSHA?
What is the Bureau of Land Management?
What was the Endangered Species Act?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

A government agency created in 1916 and given the task of preserving U.S. natural resources so that Americans can enjoy, benefit, and learn from them.

What is the National Park Service?
What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

A government program that cleans up polluted areas and makes them safe.

What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is Superfund?
What are the Leave No Trace Principles?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Its scientific name, Canis latrans, means “barking dog” and its ability to exist under extreme conditions is one reason it is now the most widespread mammal in the U.S.

What is the grey wolf?
What is the prairie dog?
What is the domesticate dog?
What is the coyote?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Formed from the remains of tiny organisms that lived in seas and rivers millions of years ago.

What is coal?
What are hydrothermal resources?
What is petroleum?
What are renewable resources?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

What the Environmental Protection Agency calls the main ingredient in smog.

What is carbon dioxide?
What are the three R’s?
What is ground-level ozone?
What is carbon monoxide?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

The Expert answers:

1. Natural Resource
2. Nematode
3. Renewable energy resources
4. National parks
5. Endangered Species Act
6. Enviromental Protection Agency
7. OSHA
8. Coyote
9. Petroleum
10. Carbom monoxide

Chris asks…

I need help on school work?

An example of something that comes from nature that people use.

What is a human resource?
What is a natural resource?
What is a capital resource?
None of the above

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Tiny roundworm commonly found in grassland soils that help provide nutrients and mixing of soil to keep it healthy.

What is a nematode?
What is bacteria?
What is a mole?
What is a night-crawler?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Hydropower, wind energy, solar power, geothermal, biofuels and hydrogen.

What are examples of renewable energy resources?
What are examples of capital resources?
What are examples of nonrenewable energy resources?
What are examples of fossil fuels?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

May contain approximately 68 percent of all undiscovered oil and 74 percent of undiscovered natural gas reserves in the United States.

What are urban areas?
What are national parks?
What are federal lands?
What are capital resources?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Gave the National Park Service the authority in 1973 to use restoration as a conservation tool in the recovery process for listed species.

What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is OSHA?
What is the Bureau of Land Management?
What was the Endangered Species Act?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

A government agency created in 1916 and given the task of preserving U.S. natural resources so that Americans can enjoy, benefit, and learn from them.

What is the National Park Service?
What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

A government program that cleans up polluted areas and makes them safe.

What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is Superfund?
What are the Leave No Trace Principles?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Its scientific name, Canis latrans, means “barking dog” and its ability to exist under extreme conditions is one reason it is now the most widespread mammal in the U.S.

What is the grey wolf?
What is the prairie dog?
What is the domesticate dog?
What is the coyote?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

Formed from the remains of tiny organisms that lived in seas and rivers millions of years ago.

What is coal?
What are hydrothermal resources?
What is petroleum?
What are renewable resources?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

——————————————————————————–

What the Environmental Protection Agency calls the main ingredient in smog.

What is carbon dioxide?
What are the three R’s?
What is ground-level ozone?
What is carbon monoxide?

POINT VALUE: 10.0 points

The Expert answers:

You don’t want help. You want answers.
Don’t ask other people to do your homework.

Laura asks…

History Help Please!!?

I know i should not be doing this but please please please help me this is like a 4th of the test please help………. thnxx in advanced

1. An example of something that comes from nature that people use.

What is a human resource?
What is a natural resource?
What is a capital resource?
None of the above

2. Tiny roundworm commonly found in grassland soils that help provide nutrients and mixing of soil to keep it healthy.

What is a nematode?
What is bacteria?
What is a mole?
What is a night-crawler?

3. Hydropower, wind energy, solar power, geothermal, biofuels and hydrogen.

What are examples of renewable energy resources?
What are examples of capital resources?
What are examples of nonrenewable energy resources?
What are examples of fossil fuels?

4. May contain approximately 68 percent of all undiscovered oil and 74 percent of undiscovered natural gas reserves in the United States.

What are urban areas?
What are national parks?
What are federal lands?
What are capital resources?

5. Gave the National Park Service the authority in 1973 to use restoration as a conservation tool in the recovery process for listed species.

What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is OSHA?
What is the Bureau of Land Management?
What was the Endangered Species Act?

6. A government agency created in 1916 and given the task of preserving U.S. natural resources so that Americans can enjoy, benefit, and learn from them.

What is the National Park Service?
What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area?

7. A government program that cleans up polluted areas and makes them safe.

What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is Superfund?
What are the Leave No Trace Principles?

8. Its scientific name, Canis latrans, means “barking dog” and its ability to exist under extreme conditions is one reason it is now the most widespread mammal in the U.S.

What is the grey wolf?
What is the prairie dog?
What is the domesticate dog?
What is the coyote?

9. Formed from the remains of tiny organisms that lived in seas and rivers millions of years ago.

What is coal?
What are hydrothermal resources?
What is petroleum?
What are renewable resources?

10. What the Environmental Protection Agency calls the main ingredient in smog.

What is carbon dioxide?
What are the three R’s?
What is ground-level ozone?
What is carbon monoxide?

The Expert answers:

1) If it is something that comes from nature it is natural.

Sandra asks…

Can someone please answer these 3 geography multiple choice questions?

An example of something that comes from nature that people use.

A) What is a human resource?
B) What is a natural resource?
C) What is a capital resource?
D) None of the above

Tiny roundworm commonly found in grassland soils that help provide nutrients and mixing of soil to keep it healthy.

A) What is a nematode?
B) What is bacteria?
C) What is a mole?
D) What is a night-crawler?

Hydropower, wind energy, solar power, geothermal, biofuels and hydrogen.

A) What are examples of renewable energy resources?
B) What are examples of capital resources?
C) What are examples of nonrenewable energy resources?
D) What are examples of fossil fuels?

The Expert answers:

B) What is a natural resource?

A) What is a nematode?

A) What are examples of renewable energy resources?

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Your Questions About Green Living

Sandy asks…

ReNEWABLE ENERGY BASICS?

wHAT ARE THE DEF. OF SOLAR,HYDROPOWER,WIND, GEOTHERMAL AND BIOMASS ENERGY?WHAT R SOME EXAMPLES,ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF THESE ENERGYS.
LIST THOSE ENERGY SOURCES THAT R FOSSIL FUELS,WHAT MAIN ADVANTAGES DO FOSSIL FUELS HAVE OVER THE RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES,WHAT R 2 MAIN DISADVANTAGES OF FOSSIL FUELS COMPARED TO RENEWABLE ENERGY?

The Expert answers:

Next time turn Caps Lock off please. 🙁

Solar Energy-Energy from the sun-solar power is renewable- costly to install

Hydropower-Energy produced by falling water inespensive, water is renewable, and produces little pollution-destroys forests an wildlife

Wind Energy-Energy produced by the wind-renewable, windmills take up little space-only certain places have enough wind

Geothermal Energy-energy from heat in the Earth’s crust-produces little pollution-only possible in a few places

Biomass-organic matter that contains stored energy-plant material can be changed into liquid fuel-needs a lot of land

Fossil Fuels(these are just a few)-petroleum, natrual gas, coal

David asks…

what do u want to do to conserve the energy resources on earth?

Apart from switiching off the lights etc. I want to know about some other ideas that u’d have to conserve energy ..for example …an efficient way to use a renewable souce of energy ? … If u can find the information to this in some other website…plz let me know along with the name of the website… My topic is basically ” The nature and money efficient ways of conserving energy” … thanks .

The Expert answers:

By consciously using the non-renewable energy resources

Paul asks…

What do you make of the new study finding that 31 states could be self-reliant with renewable energy?

A new report from the New Rules Project finds that over 60% of all U.S. states have the renewable energy resources to be “energy self-reliant.”

For example, North Dakota could provide 14,000% of its energy needs with wind alone. 19 states could provide more than their total energy needs with just onshore wind (see page 13). A further 6 states could provide more energy than they need with offshore wind. Alaska could provide for all its energy needs with just conventional geothermal. Almost every state could provide all of its energy needs with enhanced geothermal, although this technology is excluded because it’s not yet mature enough.

Combined, 31 states could be self-sufficient using only current renewable energy technology (see page 23). 11 states could provide over 10 times more energy from renewable sources than they need.

The study also finds that most states could reduce their energy needs by 50-75% by meeting California’s energy efficiency (page 25).
http://www.newrules.org/sites/newrules.org/files/ESRS.pdf

Interesting stuff. What are your thoughts on this study?
Rio, I suggest you look up the definition of the term “literally”. I also suggest you provide relevant answers which don’t contain baseless bashing of the best state in the country.

The Expert answers:

The study also finds that most states could reduce their energy needs by 50-75% by meeting California’s energy efficiency.

That’s the most important part… If we start building all new structures to be net-zero energy and bring everything else up to speed, the cost of the alternative systems would be greatly reduced by the smaller capacity needed.

As a green builder of net-zero energy homes, I have people waiting in line while other builders are going out of business building the same old cheap crap!

Robert asks…

different energy?

what are some examples of nonrenewable energy resources and renewable energy resources?

The Expert answers:

Primary Non Renewable
Fossil Fuels
Coal
Petroleum
Natural Gas

Non Fossil Fuel
Non-Breeder Nuclear Technology

Primary Renewable

Ethanol
Biomass Methane Conversion

Hydroelectric
Tide Power
Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC)

Solar Energy
Photovoltaic
Solar Thermal Conversion

Geothermal

WindPower

Animal Power

Breeder Reactor Technology

and my favorite renewable energy source:

Energy Conservation and Efficiency

Michael asks…

need help with this please help me?

An example of something that comes from nature that people use.
What is a human resource?
What is a natural resource?
What is a capital resource?
None of the above

Tiny roundworm commonly found in grassland soils that help provide nutrients and mixing of soil to keep it healthy.
What is a nematode?
What is bacteria?
What is a mole?
What is a night-crawler?

Hydropower, wind energy, solar power, geothermal, biofuels and hydrogen.
What are examples of renewable energy resources?
What are examples of capital resources?
What are examples of nonrenewable energy resources?
What are examples of fossil fuels?

May contain approximately 68 percent of all undiscovered oil and 74 percent of undiscovered natural gas reserves in the United States.
What are urban areas?
What are national parks?
What are federal lands?
What are capital resources?

Gave the National Park Service the authority in 1973 to use restoration as a conservation tool in the recovery process for listed species.
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is OSHA?
What is the Bureau of Land Management?
What was the Endangered Species Act?

A government agency created in 1916 and given the task of preserving U.S. natural resources so that Americans can enjoy, benefit, and learn from them.
What is the National Park Service?
What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area?

A government program that cleans up polluted areas and makes them safe.
What is OSHA?
What is the Environmental Protection Agency?
What is Superfund?
What are the Leave No Trace Principles?

ts scientific name, Canis latrans, means “barking dog” and its ability to exist under extreme conditions is one reason it is now the most widespread mammal in the U.S.
What is the grey wolf?
What is the prairie dog?
What is the domesticate dog?
What is the coyote?

Formed from the remains of tiny organisms that lived in seas and rivers millions of years ago.
What is coal?
What are hydrothermal resources?
What is petroleum?
What are renewable resources?

What the Environmental Protection Agency calls the main ingredient in smog.
What is carbon dioxide?
What are the three R’s?
What is ground-level ozone?
What is carbon monoxide?

The Expert answers:

I have one correction to the above responder who provided the whole list of answers to your questions and a clarification to the one responder regarding nematodes.

Nematodes are, in fact: “Tiny roundworms commonly found in grassland soils that help provide nutrients and mixing of soil to keep it healthy.” (references provided below)

However, a government program that cleans up polluted areas and makes them safe. What is Superfund.

EPA is an agency that implements many different environmental programs. Superfund is one of those programs that focuses specifically on cleaning up contaminated sites.

Http://www.blueberries.msu.edu/nematodes.htm
http://www.blm.gov/nstc/soil/nematodes/index.html

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Your Questions About Green Living

Sandy asks…

help on my construction?

Construction information sheet for:
Identifying and describing developments in the use of sustainable materials

1.The influence of sustainable materials on the design process.
Describe what is meant by the word sustainability. Why do we need to make greater use of sustainable materials? What influence do they have on the design of buildings?

2.Recycling, reclamation, reusability (including packaging).
What does it each term mean? Link to Harraton site.

3.Salvage, refurbished or remanufactured materials
What does each term mean. Give examples of construction materials and products that may be used again.

4.Resource efficient manufacturing processes
This section is about reducing job-site waste. How can this be done? Have you seen evidence of this on construction sites?

5.The specification of natural, plentiful or renewable resources wherever possible
What is a natural resource? What is a renewable resource? Identify and describe the use of these in the construction industry. Identify natural and renewable materials on the Harraton development

6.Locally available materials specified wherever possible
What does this mean? Why is it important? Give examples.

7.Durable materials specified wherever possible
What does durable mean? Why is it an important feature?

just ignore the stuff about harraton

thanks nath

The Expert answers:

This belongs in the homework category.

Robert asks…

If you can answer these science questions CORRECTLY, I will award your awesome self with 10 points [;?

1. What is the most common use of water in the United States? (Points : 3)
power plants
industry
domestic use
agriculture

2. Which of the following abiotic factors would likely affect humans directly? (Points : 3)
water availability
climate change
soil pH
humidity

3. A conservation easement would be best suited to offset which of the following threats to biodiversity? (Points : 3)
habitat loss
exotic species
overharvesting
habitat degradation

4. Which of the following would have direct effects on the resources available to a population? (Points : 3)
socioeconomic status of individuals
religious beliefs
housing
war

5. Which prediction is true based on this population pyramid?

(Points : 3)
The population is not growing.
The population is growing rapidly.
The population is declining.
The population is growing slowly.

6. If over a 10-year period, a nation of 100 million people has a birth rate of 15 million, but a death rate of 5 million and a net migration rate of 2 million, the population is doing which of the following? (Points : 3)
decreasing in size
growing in size
decreasing first and then growing
staying the same over time

7. Which of the following would reduce water tables? (Points : 3)
flood
water pollution
snowmelt
overpopulation

8. Which of the following stresses would most likely cause an ecosystem to respond by succession? (Points : 3)
water pollution
wildfire
air pollution
urbanization

9. How might a flood affect the population of an area? (Points : 3)
reduce the need for resources
reduce the population
increase the population
increase available resources

10. Which of the following is a natural resource? (Points : 3)
plastic
iron
steel
concrete

11. Which of the following is a nonrenewable resource? (Points : 3)
oil
solar energy
wind power
geothermal energy

12. Which mineral is used in making cans and is found mainly in Australia? (Points : 3)
magnetite
hematite
tektite
bauxite

13. Smelting is the major method used to refine and enrich which of the following? (Points : 3)
iron ore
oil
uranium ore
coal

14. Which of the following is an example of sustainable use of natural resources? (Points : 3)
clear-cutting a forest
continuously strip mining coal deposits in an area
planting multiple crops together on a field and harvesting them at different times
harvesting huge populations of fish from a fishing shoal

15. A resource is being used by a population. Which graph represents a sustainable yield of that resource?

(Points : 3)
Graph A
Graph B
Graph C
Graph D

16. Which of the following is a renewable resource? (Points : 3)
forests
iron ore
coal
oil

17. Which technology would best help the United States wean itself from foreign oil? (Points : 3)
more nuclear power plants
geothermal energy
solar-heated homes
biodiesel fuel

The Expert answers:

1 agriculture
2 water avaliability
3 all of them
4 war
5 cant answer without picture
6 growing in size
7 over population
8 wildfire
9 reduce the population
10 iron directly. Plastic is a bi product of crude oil.
11 oil
12 magnatite.
13 iron ore
14 planting multiple crops together. (1 plant species in a field is called a monoculture
15 unanswerable without graph
16 forrests
17 all of them

Maria asks…

if you are a science WIZ i need a help on some questionS?????

QUESTION 1:
what makes the left side of your heart efficent at pumping blood throughout your body?

QUESTION 2:
describe the function of each major organ of the digestive tract.

QUESTION 3:
describe the function of each accessory organ if the digestive tract.

QUESTION 4:
name the 4 components of blood and what each one does.

QUESTION 5:
list the levels of organazation of the human body in order from smallest to largest.

QUESTION 6:
explain why a bicycle would be considered a system. What would happen if part of it were removed ?

QUESTION 7:
what is the difference between qualitative and quantitative data?

QUESTION 8:
give at least one example of qualitative data and one example of quantitative data.

QUESTION 9:
list the renewable and non- renewable resource and descibe how they produce energy.

QUESTION 10:
what are the advantages and disadvantages of renewable and non-renewable resources?

The Expert answers:

3) The mouth is for chewing/consuming the food. Saliva helps lubricate it. The esophagus sucks the food into the stomach. Stomach mixes food, has Pepsin, Hydrochloric Acid, and Mucus in it. Helps break down food. The intestines break it down further and turn the stuff into the waste that comes out the “back door.”

6) A bicycle is a system because it uses every part to work fully. In other words, everything works together as a “team.” If something were removed, it wouldn’t work at all.

7) Qualitative data is based on information in the form of words; quantitative data is usually more numerical data. That should help you come up with an answer for number 8.

Ruth asks…

SCIENCE HELP PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE?

1. A 13-kg sled is moving at a speed of 3.0 m/s. At which of the following speeds will the sled have twice as much kinetic energy? (1 point)
1.5 m/s
4.2 m/s
6 m/s
9 m/s
2. Which of the following is an example of an object with elastic potential energy? (1 point)
a wind-up toy that has been wound up
a compressed basketball
a stretched rubber band
all of the above
3. Why is the gravitational potential energy of an object 1 meter above the moon’s surface less than its potential energy 1 meter above Earth’s surface? (1 point)
The object’s mass is less on the moon.
The object’s weight is more on the moon.
The object’s acceleration due to gravity is less on the moon.
both a and c
4. A 4-kilogram cat is resting on top of a bookshelf that is 3 meters high. What is the cat’s gravitational potential energy relative to the floor if the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8 m/s2? (1 point)
7 J
12 J
29 J
118 J
5. The total potential and kinetic energy of all the microscopic particles in an object make up its _____. (1 point)
chemical energy
electric energy
nuclear energy
thermal energy
6. Nuclear power plants are designed to convert nuclear energy into what type of energy? (1 point)
chemical
electrical
geothermal
mechanical
7. Which of the following statements is true according to the law of conservation of energy? (1 point)
Energy cannot be created.
Energy cannot be destroyed.
Energy can be converted from one form to another.
all of the above
8. If no friction acts on a diver during a dive, then which of the following statements is true? (1 point)
The total mechanical energy of the system increases.
Potential energy can be converted into kinetic energy but not vice versa.
(KE+ PE)beginning = (KE + PE)end
all of the above
11. Nonrenewable energy resources do not include which of the following? (1 point)
coal
hydrogen fuel cells
oil
uranium
12. A drawback of solar energy is that it _____. (1 point)
cannot be converted directly into electrical energy
depends on the climate
produces water pollution
is not a renewable resource
13. A benefit of a hydrogen fuel cell is that its byproduct is _____. (1 point)
carbon dioxide
oxygen
water
uranium
14. Based on your knowledge of energy conservation, which of the following statements is true? (1 point)
Manufacturers can increase a light bulb’s energy efficiency by using technology that increases the amount of electromagnetic energy the bulb converts from a given amount of electrical energy.
Energy can be conserved by turning off lights when they are not in use.
both a and b
neither a nor b

The Expert answers:

Yes

Steven asks…

Is this a good essay on man vs nature?

I have to write an essay on who is crueler man or nature is this good

Who is more cruel:
Man or Nature

Man and nature are two different forces that act alike in many ways, nature has many dangerous attributes or forms such as a tsunami or an earthquake but it can also be peaceful and harmless such as a butterfly. Man has traits that resemble the one’s previously stated some are evil and selfish, others peaceful and generous.Some say man is far more cruel than nature others disagree, but why do most people think man is crueler than nature ?

Nature is equivalent to the natural world and refers to the phenomena of the physical world, and also to life in general. Nature can positively influence humans and everything existing, for example rain can help fertilize the soil for better growth of plants and similarly the sun’s light provides energy to green plants through photosynthesis. Although nature acts positively in many ways it also acts in a negatively.
For example volcanoes release boiling hot magma that destroys land and causes deaths, in 1815 a volcano erupted in Indonesia which killed approximately 92,000 people. Similarly this year there was an earthquake in Haiti on the 12th of January that had a magnitude of 7.0 and killed about 230,000 people,left 1,000,000 people homeless and had 52 aftershocks with a magnitude of about 4.5.

Man represents all homo sapiens or all humans that existed in the past and present time.Like nature, man has many positive influences to help develop a better world, for example many people study medicine to help heal people from diseases and injuries and some become enforcers of the law and protect the citizens of an area from criminals breaking the law. In contrast many other humans act negatively by disobey laws or causing chaos. For example Adolf Hitler was a very cruel german leader who believed that people that people who were handicapped or physically disabled or believed in a different religion did not deserve to live,he sent soldiers to capture them and kill them using a gas chamber and/or other cruel ways of death. Some humans also cut down trees and rain forests just to open a factory. Some overuse non-renewable resources which we can never regain( coal,oil,natural gas etc.) carelessly without thinking about the environment they are polluting and the after math of the situation. What really strengthens my opinion that man is far more cruel than nature is because unlike nature man has a conscience on whether or not to something.

In conclusion nature and man both influence the world positively and negatively equally throughout our current generation and the ones of the past, what really strengthens my opinion that man is far more cruel than nature is because unlike nature man has a conscience on whether or not to something.
Thank you,This is an essay we have to write(in grade 9) do you think i should hand this in, is there anything better i could add

The Expert answers:

Its not bad, spell and grammer check it. And man is crueler. Just my opinion. Not only for the point you brought up at the end but the earth gives back. Humans take and take. Barely giving back anything. So I guess I’m agreeing with you. I personally think the earth should shake human kind off like fleas. We are a virus that do nothing but infect and multiply. And take up resources.

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Your Questions About Green Living

Charles asks…

Can anyone give me all the examples of renewable energy resources?

i need examples of renewable energy resources for a science project. it is due in wed 3rd dec and i need the examples because i am writing a letter explaining what you could use instead of non-renewable energy resources and i need to write down all of them. please could you help peoples, 10 points if you do. and please can i not have any negative answers about looking it up, because it doesn’t give me the full works if you know what im saying.

The Expert answers:

Solar Cell – Makes energy from the sun’s photons forcing electrons out of a cell’s silicon core.

Solar Panel – Uses the sun’s energy to heat water; the steam produced makes a turbine turn to generate electricity.

Wind Power – The power of the wind turns a turbine, which uses a generator to generate electricity.

Hydroelectric – The power of massive amounts of water being released in a place (usually a dam) creates huge amounts of electricity. Countries such as Norway are powered almost 100% by Hydroelectric power.

Geothermal – Pipes underground full of water are heated up by volcanic activity underneath the earth crust. The steam created again makes a turbine turn… And you know what happens after.

Biomass – burning specific sources such as wood or animal/human feces releases vast amounts of energy. – Note that burning feces releases methane, a greenhouse gas which contributes to global warming. Hence, identity as a renewable source of energy is debatable.

Tidal – The power of the waves generates electricity much like hydroelectric power.

Nuclear Power – Uranium atoms are split in a nuclear reactor in a reaction which is called nuclear fission. Countries such as France are powered almost entirely by this. It has no direct effect on the environment, however it produces large amounts of radioactive waste. Most people consider Nuclear power as being renewable, however it must be brought up that the supplies of Uranium and Plutonium will eventually run out.

All these sources of energy are renewable, as the source they come from will never finish. A lot of these also create hardly any waste and require few maintenance, hence they are plausible alternatives to the polluting manner of generating electricity mostly used today (namely coal powered power stations).

Jenny asks…

What is the difference between inexhaustible and renewable energy resources? Give specific examples of each.?

The Expert answers:

An inexhaustible resource would be one we cant use up, like solar radiation, the wind, wave energy. No matter how much we use them, they will always be available (until of course, something happens to the Sun).

A renewable resource is one, that through natural process, and/or careful management, can renew, replenish or recycle itself, like freshwater, or forests/trees. If we manage our fresh water resources, it will always be available; if we replant as we cut down, a forest could last forever while still providing wood for furniture, paper etc.

We as humans can’t really mess up the inexhaustible resources, but we can be poor managers and locally exhaust renewable resources.

Hope this helps

Helen asks…

What are renewable & non- renewable energy resources?

What are renewable energy resources? Give three examples
What are non-renewable energy resources? Give two examples
btw this is out of curiosity i never really listened in science… =]

The Expert answers:

Renewable energy is energy generated from natural resources—such as sunlight[2], wind, rain, tides and geothermal heat—which are renewable (naturally replenished). Renewable energy technologies include solar power, wind power, hydroelectricity, micro hydro, biomass and biofuels.

Http://www.eia.doe.gov/kids/energyfacts/sources/whatsenergy.html

Non-renewable energy is energy taken from “finite resources that will eventually dwindle, becoming too expensive or too environmentally damaging to retrieve”, [1] as opposed to renewable energy sources, which “are naturally replenished in a relatively short period of time.” [2]

Fossil fuels:
Coal exists as a mined solid.
Petroleum is a liquid, and forms the basis for heating oil, diesel fuel, and gasoline.
Natural gas is commonly also referred to just as gas. It is mostly methane, and most of the additional material is removed before use as a fuel.
Nuclear energy fuel for fission is mined as Uranium ore, see Renewable energy#Nuclear power.

Goodluck! Sometimes I agree science is BORING!

Sandra asks…

What is the difference between renewable and inexhaustible energy resources?

What is the difference between renewable and inexhaustible energy resources? What are examples of inexhaustible energy resources?

The Expert answers:

Renewable energy sources can be replenished in a short period of time. Inexhaustible is not exhaustible; incapable of being depleted: an inexhaustible supply.

Five renewable sources used most often are:
biomass – including wood and wood waste, municipal solid waste, landfill and biogas, ethanol, and biodiesel
water (hydropower)
geothermal
wind
solar

Inexhaustible:
Tidal power
wind power
Fusion plasma power being tested

Richard asks…

Flow and Renewable Resources?

Would wind and solar energy be considered flow resources or renewable resources? Wind and solar energy can be reused but I don’t know if they are classified under flow or renewable.

What are some examples of renewable resources, like trees.

I heard that meat from animals is renewable but how is that renewable?

The Expert answers:

Biomass
Solar
wind
Geothermal

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Your Questions About Green Living

Michael asks…

Hi. Could You Please Help Me With These 5 Multiply Choice Questions?

1. Because there is only a small amount of distortion over a local area, what type of map is used for road maps and weather maps?
A. Mercator projection map
B. conic projection map
C. Robinson projection map
D. gnomonic projection map

2. Which of the following is powered by energy from Earth’s interior?
A. erosion
B. a volcano
C. weather
D. ocean circulation

3. Which of the following is an example of a renewable resource?
A. iron
B. petroleum
C. energy from flowing water
D. coal

4. What is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid with an orderly crystalline structure and a definite chemical composition?
A. a mineral
B. an element
C. an isotope
D. a compound

5. Minerals form from bodies of water due to the process of ____.
A. condensation
B. precipitation
C. melting
D. cooling

The Expert answers:

1. D(?)
2. B volcano.
3.C energy from flowing water.
4. A a mineral
5. B precipitation.

Nancy asks…

I have some science questions.?

If one ecosystem or community is badly damaged, how does it affect the ecosystems/communities near it?

Put the continents in order from largest to smallest.

Put the continents in order of population highest to lowest.

Which continents contain the tundra?

How can the Scientific Method help us study the enviroment?

How can we use the S.M. to help an endangered species?

How do we use maps? What are they useful for?

How are maps useful in studying the enviroment?

Give 5 SPECIFIC examples of things we can easily do to conserve resources. Explain.

Would solar cells and solar energy gathering be a good alternate energy source in Las Vegas?

What would be a good alternative energy source in a place like Alaska?

Is garbage a renewable resource? Why or why not? If it is, what could it be used for?

How can fossils be found? Where are they usually found?

What can fossils tell us about the climate of the Earth millions of years ago?

Need answers by Friday!!!
These are the actually…few questions I can’t figure out. All the other ones i ahve/

The Expert answers:

I’m sorry, I’m not trying to sound rude or anything but this site really wasn’t created for people to cheat.
You’re just hurting yourself by doing so…!
If you have all of that to answer by tomorrow I’d get busy!!
Good luck!!!!

George asks…

PLEASE HELP ME WITH THESE QUESTIONS!! THEIR ON MY WORKSHEET AND I CONT FIGURE IT OUT! EASY 10 POINTS!!!!!!!!!!?

ok so he res the questions and please don’t joke about it real answers… its a big part of my grade

1) explain why we should be concerned about renewable resources?
2) explain why we should be concerned about nonrenewable resources?
3) describe how renewable resources is being confronted
4) describe how nonrenewable resources is being confronted.
5) give your opinion of the importance of renewable resources with an example
6) give you opinion of the importance of nonrenewable resources with an example

7) define mining and tell what is important about the mining
8) give your opinion of the importance of mining with an example.

The Expert answers:

1) renewable resources will run out eventually. Either because no one can afford it or it’s out of date or everyone wants it but there’s not enough left to meet the demand so no one can afford it.
2)When time runs out that’s you lot,save for the future as rainy days happen all too often.
3+4) When a resource has run out,try another one until it runs out then, try another one hoping that the first resource will come back but never happens so try alternate resource which runs out and can’t afford to try another. So wish you hadn’t wasted the first resource.
Like trying to save money with a deficit so give up,might as well.

David asks…

PLEASE HELP ME I AM SO STRESSED OUT! IF U SMART THEN PLEASE HELP ME! I LOOKED EVERYWHERE BUT I CANT FIND IT!!!?

ok so he res the questions and please don’t joke about it real answers… its a big part of my grade
FYI I DID LOOK BUT I CANT FIND IT ANYWHERE AND MY TEACHER WONT HELP ME SHE JUST YELLS AT ME… IT makes me want to cry

1) explain why we should be concerned about renewable resources?
2) explain why we should be concerned about nonrenewable resources?
3) describe how renewable resources is being confronted
4) describe how nonrenewable resources is being confronted.
5) give your opinion of the importance of renewable resources with an example
6) give you opinion of the importance of nonrenewable resources with an example

7) define mining and tell what is important about the mining
8) give your opinion of the importance of mining with an example.

The Expert answers:

The key term is “renewable resources”. This has a lot to do with energy conservation, global warming and recycling.

A resource is some material used to manufacture something. In terms of automobiles, it can be the Iron ore used to make the steel or the petroleum which is refined to make the fuel.

A renewable resource can be recycled after it is used. This is why fossil fuels are not renewable. After they burn, there is no way to turn them back into coal or petroleum. The scrap iron recovered from an old car is renewable. It can be refined just like the Iron ore was and used to make new steel and ultimately new cars.

Obviously the ability to renew a resource becomes very important if the resource itself is limited. If it is non-renewable there will be none of it available after the last of it is used. This is not the case with renewable resources, which can be reused indefinitely.

Petroleum is a non renewable resource which will be completely gone in around 50 years. The petroleum formed when marine algae were buried and compressed over millions of years. The natural vegetable oils they produced were slowly turned into petroleum. Fossil fuels which require 200 million years to make are not renewable. However, petroleum in the future might come again from algae, although the process which turns them into petroleum will be speeded up enormously. At present, bio diesel fuels can replace the fossil fuel in diesel engines. The first of these engines actually ran on peanut oil. Today they run on kerosene from petroleum but can be made to run on waste grease and old cooking oil. The ecological advantages to this is that the CO2 generated from burning renewable fuels is recycled by plants into more fuel. This means there is no net increase in the amounts of CO2 in the atmosphere. This gas appears to be causing global warming as the levels of CO2 increase.

CO2 has always been a natural part of the environment, but all the extra gas comes either from coal fired electricity generation or automobile exhaust. In the case of electricity, it can be produced in many other ways, the least polluting being solar energy. Nuclear energy does not produce CO2 either, but nuclear fuel is the most non renewable fuel of all. All the Uranium on earth is the result of a supernova explosion over 5 billion years ago, long before our solar system existed.

Mining is the process of obtaining resources from below the surface of the earth. The two types are traditional mines and open pit mines. Traditional mines are tunnels cut into solid rock which contains the resource. The rock is hauled out of the mine to be processed. An open pit mine is just a very large, shallow pit dug into the ground. Most precious metals and gemstones come from traditional mines because the resource is unevenly distrubuted and exists in very narrow deposits. Coal mines are also often of this design because soal ocurrs in shallow layers between layers of rock. Open pit mines take advantage of widely dispersed mineral deposits. Iron ore is the best example. The resource is not concentrated in any one particular place.

The resources which come from mining are all the metals used in the world and all the coal. Coal is the most abundant fossil fuel and even at the present rate of consumption, it will not be exhausted for at least another 200 years. The most renewable metal is Aluminum. Nearly all of it is recycled because it atkes enormous amounts of electricity to refine the aluminum ore. It is far cheaper to simply re use Aluminum which is already refined.

Hope this helps. Any teacher who yells at their studfents is a total jerk and an incompetant disgrace to the educational system. You can tell them Roger the chemist says so.

Ken asks…

Society and the Environment-Petroleum (oil)?

1.What type of resource is Petroleum? natural/man-made etc.? Explain?
2.Is Petroleum a renewable or non renewable resource? Explain
3.Where is Petroleum (Oil&Gas) in Australia and in other countries?
4.Why do we need to make choices as to how Petroleum products are used? what are these choices?
5.How can we use petroleum products efficiently? examples?
6.When people manage resources they consider clever, innovative (enterprising) ways to use these resources to acheive the results that they want. What are some examples of enterprising ways of using petroleum products?
7.What choices are being made by people as to how petroleum proucts can be used carefully?
8.What affect does the price of petroleum have on household budget? How is that managed?
9.What might be some of the different forms of work in the petrol industry? (paid/unpaid,fulltime/parttime etc)
10.What goods and services are produced in the petrol industry?
11.What career might you have in the Petrol industry?

The Expert answers:

1. The American Petroleum Institute, in its Manual of Petroleum Measurement Standards (MPMS), defines it as “a substance, generally liquid, occurring naturally in the earth and composed mainly of mixtures of chemical compounds of carbon and hydrogen with or without other nonmetallic elements such as sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen.”
2. Petroleum and natural gas are considered non-renewable resources, as they do not naturally re-form at a rate that makes the way we use them sustainable.
3.Petroleum is found in porous rock formations in the upper strata of some areas of the Earth’s crust. It consists of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons, mostly alkanes, but may vary greatly in appearance and composition.
4.Since petroleum is a non-renewable resource, many people are worried about peak oil and eventual depletion in the near future. Due to its continual demand and consequent value, oil has been dubbed black gold.
5. Dunno
6. Largest share of oil products is used as energy carriers: various grades of fuel oil and gasoline. Refineries also produce other chemicals, some of which are used in chemical processes to produce plastics and other useful materials.
7. Dunno
8. High prices of petroleum can impact the household budget greatly because if you are used to spending so much on petroleum every week and then the price doubles, it will have a ripple effect on the other necessities. One way to manage it is to budget only a certain amount for petroleum and start using public transport, carpooling, cycling or walking. Good for the budget, and better on the environment.
9. Drilling for the oil, mudlogger (A mudlogger in the modern oil field is tasked primarily with gathering data and collecting samples during the drilling of a well. They then organize this information in the form of a graphic log, showing the data charted on a graphic representation of the wellbore), roughneck (roughneck is one of several roles in the hierarchy on an oil rig. A roughneck’s duties could include anything involved with the connecting and “tripping” of pipe down the well bore.), Derrickhand (Responsible for the “mud,” the water + barite + bentonite + chemical mixture used in drilling oil wells, and for catching samples. Also assumes the position in the derrick, usually 60 to 90 feet off the ground, while “tripping pipe.”) worm (Worm: Usually the lowest member of the drilling crew. Works the “break-out” or “back-up” tongs on the left side of the drilling floor).
10. Petroleum is used mostly, by volume, for producing fuel oil and petrol (gasoline), both important “primary energy” sources (IEA Key World Energy Statistics). Petroleum is also the raw material for many chemical products, including solvents, fertilizers, pesticides, and plastics
11. Dunno

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Your Questions About Green Living

George asks…

Broke young and in love couple gift ideas?

Okay! My older brother is engaged to the love of his life (and my best friend!). They are both young (22) and looking for jobs overseas (like peace corp.)

Anyways, their wedding is going to be extremely small because they don’t have any money and can’t get large gifts because they will most likely leave the country.

I want to get them something cool and useful, but I’m short on funds and out of ideas.

Does anyone have any suggestions?

ps. They both have graduated college with political degrees and are very eco friendly.

The Expert answers:

A Swiss Army Knife? The “Camper” model is my favorite; small enough to be handy, but a great selection of blades. Or, one of those Leatherman tools, perhaps?

Chris asks…

What gifts have you received from YAHOO Answers??

I got an ecofriendly light bulb a while back and just got a canvas tote bag today! Awesome!!

The Expert answers:

The tote-bag, 18 of the CF light bulbs (my friends are getting presents!), stickers, a coffee mug in a horrendous shade of green (like the banner on here!), etc. Nice to get goodies once in a while, huh?

Steven asks…

Gifts for Maya Lin?

I’m doing an art project and need to come up with gifts to give architect Maya Lin. I know she went to Yale, is ecofriendly, and is Chinese-American.
I was thinking about a wind power card and yale emblem…Can you help me come up with more ideas. I need a total of 6 gifts. Thanks!

The Expert answers:

Give her a card with a chinese character that says about a chinese wisdom, such as: double happiness or ‘luck – love – prosperity’. I think you can find such cards in book stores.

Jenny asks…

Where can I find a solar panel charger like this one?

http://www.allthingsgreen.net/marketplace/freeloader-supercharger-solar-panel-charger-ecofriendly-p-5990.html

Its for a gift and I live in the US. I would like it to be around the same price as well and not off the internet. If it is off the internet to be off a well-known site.

The Expert answers:

Try Costco. They only sell it online.

Mark asks…

Bridesmaid gifts – any unique ideas?

I am looking for something to give my bridesmaids as a nice thank you present. I am the first of my friends to get married so not sure of what to get. Everything online is corny and personalized. I don’t want to get them a tote bag or jewelry box – that’s pretty much what I’ve found online! I am doing an ecofriendly wedding with a “Poetry in Nature” theme, if that helps. Please give me ideas of things you would genuinely like to receive instead of just things I can give as if to just fulfill my obligation to give a gift! It would be nice if it fit my theme but it’s not necessary – it just shouldn’t clash (i.e. nothing TOO environmentally damaging). Thanks for your help!

The Expert answers:

There are a couple of sites online that supposedly offer eco-friendly bridesmaids gifts and wedding favors, but I think American Bridal has the best and most unique selection. They offer everything from seeds, eco-friendly coaster favors, plus a wide selection of unique, not-necessarily eco-friendly gifts.

Good luck

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Your Questions About Green Living

Linda asks…

Will 2010 be known as “The Year Global Warming Died”?

“The chief defence offered by the warmists to all those [2009] revelations centred on the IPCC’s last 2007 report is that they were only a few marginal mistakes scattered through a vast, 3,000-page document.

“OK, they say, it might have been wrong to predict

that the Himalayan glaciers would melt by 2035;

that global warming was about to destroy 40 per cent of the Amazon rainforest and cut African crop yields by 50 per cent;

that sea levels were rising dangerously;

that hurricanes, droughts and other “extreme weather events” were getting worse.

“These were a handful of isolated errors in a massive report; behind them the mighty edifice of global warming orthodoxy remains unscathed. The “science is settled”, the “consensus” is intact.

“But this completely misses the point. Put the errors together and it can be seen that one after another they tick off all the central, iconic issues of the entire global warming saga. Apart from those non-vanishing polar bears, no fears of climate change have been played on more insistently than these: the destruction of Himalayan glaciers and Amazonian rainforest; famine in Africa; fast-rising sea levels; the threat of hurricanes, droughts, floods and heatwaves all becoming more frequent.

“All these alarms were given special prominence in the IPCC’s 2007 report and each of them has now been shown to be based, not on hard evidence, but on scare stories, derived not from proper scientists but from environmental activists. Those glaciers are not vanishing; the damage to the rainforest is not from climate change but logging and agriculture; African crop yields are more likely to increase than diminish; the modest rise in sea levels is slowing not accelerating; hurricane activity is lower than it was 60 years ago; droughts were more frequent in the past; there has been no increase in floods or heatwaves.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/7332803/A-perfect-storm-is-brewing-for-the-IPCC.html

The Expert answers:

I wish!…
But there’s a huge industrial/governmental bandwagon based on the “global warming” scam that may prove to be more difficult to cull.
Also, a large number of “scientists” make a good living out of keeping the lie alive with their latest “discoveries”. They won’t go quietly!

William asks…

Montessori Model United Nations HELP PLEASE!!!?

Montessori Model United Nations HELP PLEASE!!!?
My country is Gabon the Location is Western Africa, bordering the Atlantic Ocean at the Equator, between Republic of the Congo and Equatorial Guinea. Kind of confusing, I know. So my paper’s due Tuesday September 27th 2011 2:15 pm. and need as many questions as you can answer submitted. Here are some of the basic questions:

Allies/Blocs:_________________________…

Ports/waterways:______________________…

Infrastructure status:_________________________________…

U.N. dues payment status:____________________

Environmental stance; e.g., problems, innovations:_____

Standard of living (UNDP Annual Report):______________

Has the United Nations ever cited this country for human rights violations? If so, what were the circumstances?__________________________…

What are problems/threats that currently seem to affect this nation?_________________________________…

Ethnic/cultural issues:_________________________________…

Refugees problems:_______________________________…

Trade blocs/association:______________________…

Balance of payments/trade:_________________________…

Military organization:___________________________…

Military expenditures (percent spent on defense):_____

Major weapons, arsenal, nuclear, capability, etc: ________________________________________…

Percent of GNP spent of ODA (Overseas Development Aid): ________________________________________…

Economic system:_________________________________…

IMF, WB, GATT positions (debtor nation? Donor nation?): __________________________________ ________________________________________…

Energy sources (both the type of energy and its origin): _____________________________________

Major conflicts both past and present: ________________________________________… ________________________________________… ________________________________________…

Based on your research, what do you feel as the heart of this nations identity?: ________________ ________________________________________…

Development status:_______________________________

U.N. peacekeeping role (Blue Helmets):_____________

Has the U.N. ever had to intervene in any conflict involving this nation? If so, where the circumstances?: ___________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________

Also if you can answer any that would be fantastic! Thanks for all your help.

The Expert answers:

Google it before you ask us to do your homework.

Mandy asks…

” A perfect storm is brewing for the IPCC “, does this make you feel sorry for the Warmers?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/7332803/A-perfect-storm-is-brewing-for-the-IPCC.html

” The chief defence offered by the warmists to all those revelations centred on the IPCC’s last 2007 report is that they were only a few marginal mistakes scattered through a vast, 3,000-page document. OK, they say, it might have been wrong to predict that the Himalayan glaciers would melt by 2035; that global warming was about to destroy 40 per cent of the Amazon rainforest and cut African crop yields by 50 per cent; that sea levels were rising dangerously; that hurricanes, droughts and other “extreme weather events” were getting worse. These were a handful of isolated errors in a massive report; behind them the mighty edifice of global warming orthodoxy remains unscathed. The “science is settled”, the “consensus” is intact.

But this completely misses the point. Put the errors together and it can be seen that one after another they tick off all the central, iconic issues of the entire global warming saga. Apart from those non-vanishing polar bears, no fears of climate change have been played on more insistently than these: the destruction of Himalayan glaciers and Amazonian rainforest; famine in Africa; fast-rising sea levels; the threat of hurricanes, droughts, floods and heatwaves all becoming more frequent.
All these alarms were given special prominence in the IPCC’s 2007 report and each of them has now been shown to be based, not on hard evidence, but on scare stories, derived not from proper scientists but from environmental activists. Those glaciers are not vanishing; the damage to the rainforest is not from climate change but logging and agriculture; African crop yields are more likely to increase than diminish; the modest rise in sea levels is slowing not accelerating; hurricane activity is lower than it was 60 years ago; droughts were more frequent in the past; there has been no increase in floods or heatwaves.
Furthermore, it has also emerged in almost every case that the decision to include these scare stories rather than hard scientific evidence was deliberate. As several IPCC scientists have pointed out about the scare over Himalayan glaciers, for instance, those responsible for including it were well aware that proper science said something quite different. But it was inserted nevertheless – because that was the story wanted by those in charge. ”

So there is now going to be an international investigation.

What do you think of this?

The Expert answers:

Back in the ’70s we had a huge scare from the climate groups claiming that man was causing global COOLING. We were apparently heading for an ice age. I sure am glad this global warming arrived in time to stop us from ice skating in Panama.

What I think of this is easy:

It was BS then and it’s BS now.

Nancy asks…

Can you please grade my SAT essay.?

Quote: The old saying, “be careful what you wish for,” maybe an appropriate warning. The drive to achieve a particular goal can dangerously narrow ones perspective and encourage the fantasy that success in one endeavour will solve all of life’s difficulties. In fact, success can sometimes have unexpected consequences. Those who propel themselves toward the achievement of one goal often find that their lives are worse once “success” is achieved than they were before.
Assignment: Can success be disastrous? Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue. Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from reading, studies, experience, or observations.
My Response:
Although many may think success can clear all problems, in truth, success narrows ones perspective and can lead to disaster. So, the saying “Be careful what you wish for” is apt. I would like to support my view using the story of Macbeth, the success and disaster in Lake Victoria and the recent hurricane, Katrina in USA.
My first example is from the literary work, “Macbeth” written by William Shakespeare. In it, Macbeth wanted to become the king and ‘becoming the king’ was his success. He achieved success and he gained many enemies in his path to success and he was never happy after he got success. He had to feel tensed every moment thinking Macduff or Banquo would usurp his throne. His position as a general was a happy one and kingship only brought him sadness and eventually death. One has to be careful with choosing one’s success.
My second example is from Lake Victoria. Nile Perch is a fish which grows well, breeds at high rate and whose meat is very delicious. The colonial powers of Africa introduced it into Lake Victoria for commercial purposes. The lake which was deserted earlier attracted tourists and gained the countries a sum of 600 million $. But, Nile Perch, a predator of cichlids, started eating the existing population of cichlids in the lake. This led to extinction of cichlids and Nile perch eventually perished of hunger. Cichlids which eat the plankton and smaller fish were no longer present and this led to exponential increase of algae and ferns. Algae covered the entire surface inhibiting the sunlight and air to enter the lake. Lack of lighting and fresh air in the water led to other species of fish to perish. And finally, Lake Victoria became a lake with no aqua life in it. The commercial success led to environmental disaster and eventually a great ecological imbalance.
Very recently, many heard of the hurricane Katrina which created havoc in USA. Although, many may get amazed about why a natural disaster made up to the human success-failure list, human’s lack of foresight led to such a disaster. Americans drenched many small islands in the mouth of Lake Mississippi to allow the sea water to enter the main land. They wished to avoid cost of transportation of goods from coastal areas to internal lands. But, the salty marshes and the mud acted as sponges for the storm and with their absence, the storm entered the main land creating the havoc. Human actions exacerbated the disaster. Katrina killed about a 1000 people in New Orleans. This was successful economically but failed environmentally.
With this, one is clear that one has to be careful in selecting what one’s success is. Else, it can lead to adverse effects. When once tries to succeed, one needs to consider the long-time effects of that success.
I think my intro is pretty boring and my conclusion is pretty short, I would be grateful if you give me tips to develop the above mentioned parts as well and Please grade it on a scale from 1-6

The Expert answers:

Bad romance.

Carol asks…

Ever think of WHY Somali Pirates Are Doing What their Doing?…..?

I mean, no one seems to realize and want to know WHY Somali pirates are hijacking ships.

Its mostly because of environmental protection.

Waste dumping

Following the massive tsunami of December 2004, there have emerged allegations that after the outbreak of the Somali Civil War in the late 1980s, Somalia’s long, remote shoreline was used as a dump site for the disposal of toxic waste. The huge waves which battered northern Somalia after the tsunami are believed to have stirred up tonnes of nuclear and toxic waste that was illegally dumped in Somali waters by several European firms. The European Green Party followed up these revelations by presenting before the press and the European Parliament in Strasbourg copies of contracts signed by two European companies—the Italian Swiss firm, Achair Partners, and an Italian waste broker, Progresso—and representatives of the warlords then in power, to accept 10 million tonnes of toxic waste in exchange for $80 million (then about £60 million). According to a report by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) assessment mission, there are far higher than normal cases of respiratory infections, mouth ulcers and bleeding, abdominal haemorrhages and unusual skin infections among many inhabitants of the areas around the northeastern towns of Hobbio and Benadir on the Indian Ocean coast—diseases consistent with radiation sickness. UNEP continues that the current situation along the Somali coastline poses a very serious environmental hazard not only in Somalia but also in the eastern Africa sub-region.

Under Article 9(1)(d) of the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal, it is illegal for “any transboundary movement of hazardous wastes or other wastes: that results in deliberate disposal (e.g. dumping) of hazardous wastes or other wastes in contravention of this Convention and of general principles of international law”.

According to Nick Nuttall of the United Nations Environmental Programme, “Somalia has been used as a dumping ground for hazardous waste starting in the early 1990s, and continuing through the civil war there,” and “European companies found it to be very cheap to get rid of the waste, costing as little as $2.50 a tonne, where waste disposal costs in Europe are something like $1000 a tonne.”

Illegal fishing

At the same time, illegal trawlers began fishing Somalia’s seas with an estimated $300 million of tuna, shrimp, and lobster being taken each year depleting stocks previously available to local fishermen. Through interception with speedboats, Somali fishermen tried to either dissuade the dumpers and trawlers or levy a “tax” on them as compensation. In an interview, Sugule Ali, one of the pirate leaders explained “We don’t consider ourselves sea bandits. We consider sea bandits (to be) those who illegally fish and dump in our seas.” Peter Lehr, a Somalia piracy expert at the University of St. Andrews says “It’s almost like a resource swap, Somalis collect up to $100 million a year from pirate ransoms off their coasts and the Europeans and Asians poach around $300 million a year in fish from Somali waters.”

According to Roger Middleton of Chatham House, “The problem of overfishing and illegal fishing in Somali waters, is a very serious one, and does affect the livelihoods of people inside Somalia […] the dumping of toxic waste on Somalia’s shores is a very serious issue, which will continue to affect people in Somalia long after the war has ended, and piracy is resolved.”To lure fish to their traps, foreign trawlers reportedly also use fishing equipment under prohibition such as nets with very small mesh sizes and sophisticated underwater lighting systems.

Under Article 56(1)(b)(iii) of the Law of the Sea Convention:

In the exclusive economic zone, the coastal State has jurisdiction as provided for in the relevant provisions of this Convention with regard to the protection and preservation of the marine environment”.

Article 57 of the Convention in turn outlines the limit of that jurisdiction:

“The exclusive economic zone shall not extend beyond 200 nautical miles from the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured”.

The Expert answers:

Nothing to do with the ransoms they demand then……

And because they have been able to get away with it, they do

did you know that some have claimed asylum in britain when captured by british navy…..they complained they would be punished severely if returned to somalia…..they now conduct their business from birmingham and london….disgraceful

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Your Questions About Green Living

Sandy asks…

Do you think your MONEY has been wasted on the Stimulus?

This is what “SOME” of your money that will be paid by your GREAT, GREAT Grand children will be paying for.

2050:
Grandpa…..what the HELL am I paying for that your generation did back in 2009

$650 million for the digital television converter box coupon program.
• $88 million for the Coast Guard to design a new polar icebreaker (arctic ship).
• $448 million for constructing the Department of Homeland Security headquarters.
• $248 million for furniture at the new Homeland Security headquarters.
• $600 million to buy hybrid vehicles for federal employees.
• $400 million for the Centers for Disease Control to screen and prevent STD’s.
• $1.4 billion for rural waste disposal programs.
• $525 million for the Washington DC sewer system.
• $150 million for Smithsonian museum facilities.
• $1 billion for the 2010 Census, which has a projected cost overrun of $3 billion.
• $75 million for “smoking cessation activities.”
• $200 million for public computer centers at community colleges.
• $75 million for salaries of employees at the FBI.
• $25 million for tribal alcohol and substance abuse reduction.
• $500 million for flood reduction projects on the Mississippi River.
• $10 million to inspect canals in urban areas.
• $6 billion to turn federal buildings into “green” buildings.
• $500 million for state and local fire stations.
• $650 million for wild land fire management on forest service lands.
• $1.2 billion for “youth activities,” including youth summer job programs.
• $88 million for renovating the headquarters of the Public Health Service.
• $412 million for CDC buildings and property.
• $500 million for building and repairing National Institutes of Health facilities in Bethesda, Maryland.
• $160 million for “paid volunteers” at the Corporation for National and Community Service.
• $5.5 million for “energy efficiency initiatives” at the Department of Veterans Affairs National Cemetery Administration.
• $850 million for Amtrak.
• $100 million for reducing the hazard of lead-based paint.
• $75 million to construct a “security training” facility for State Department Security officers when they can be trained at existing facilities of other agencies.
• $110 million to the Farm Service Agency to upgrade computer systems.
• $200 million in funding for the lease of alternative energy vehicles for use on military installations

That’s over 124 BILLION dollars in pork.

I’m especially fond of the 75 million to pay for salaries in the FBI. Were their projections so bad that they are already out of money, or is this evidence of Obama re-instating the failed Clinton policy of treating the Global War on Terror as a police activity?

How about another 650 billion to allow people to buy TV converters for the switch to digital. I never spent my expired coupons- how many other people ordered them and didn’t spend them? How much money has fallen through the cracks on this already?

400 million to prevent STD’s. I have one comment- zip up your fly- it’ll save us 400 million dollars.

Lastly 2 BILLION DOLLARS to fund a clean coal plant that has already been deemed a failure.

3 Million for the First Lady’s closet re-do

The Expert answers:

Yes indeed it has been wasted.

Chris asks…

Are you starting to realize the Economy is the issue to dump the Republican Mantra?

It’s a matter of pay now or pay letter. Republicans are all for lower taxes and smaller government except when their greed gets them in financial trouble.

Here is the issue that you are dealing with… Since the Stock Market collapse of 1929 a system of checks and balances was instituted as the economy grew to keep greed in check. However, after Ronald Reagan took office and developed the theory of Trickle Down economics, They began to chip away at several levels of checks and balances. One of the first levels that they attacked were the Unions. Unions offered a level that reported abuses in the labor market. Second was deregulation where they actually removed regulation by allowing business to move off shore where inspection and over sight where non-existent… then they moved to gut the budgets of regulatory agencies that were left, to stop over-site. Usury laws were thrown to the wind and bankruptcy laws were changed to protect the rich. (Look up Usury Laws)

Example: There are only 8 inspectors for all the livestock sold for food in California. Providing 30 percent of all the meat eaten in the United States and exported.

The result is that you have lead painted toys for your children to play with, food is polluted with chemicals and Salmonella and Wall Street Collapses in a heap and your 401K falls through the floor while Oil prices shoot threw the roof because they changed the rules to allow speculation in the Oil market and fought alternative energy. All the while the Republicans keep claiming your taxes are to high and the reason is it’s Ear Marks were causing it which equal less than 1 percent of the US budget .

We need to start thinking smarter and get back to enforcement of good sound banking rules and reduce greed out of the equation. We need over sight at all levels of both government and business. We need to pay those taxes necessary to enforce regulation and stop investing billions in “Wars to No Where”. Think where we would have been financially if we had not swallowed “Georges War to No
Where” based on a lie.

Wake up America!!! Obama for President

The Expert answers:

While I am voting for Ron Paul, I agree that the economy is the main issue here. Unfortunately, the Republican party has become so entangled in a web of lies that it won’t be able to figure out a way to hide the economy issue and in the end, it will show up as the reason why they will lose the election.

John asks…

Do we have scientific or economic/political differences of opinion here?

Let’s assume a new study (or hopefully several) came out that proved conclusively that CO2 was directly responsible for 90% of recent observed warming and 10% to natural causes.

From my perspective, before rushing to sign any Copenhagen treaty or instituting various cap and trade or carbon taxes, I’d want to look a little further into the impacts.

The first thing I’d start with is to project CO2 levels into the future, predict the corresponding warming effect of those future levels and then reconcile that with the predicted natural trend to get a future climate forecast. Then I’d want to look much more closely at the impact of that projected climate in the especially big areas like sea level rise and drought/flood predictions.

Second, I’d want to look at new technologies to assist this problem like carbon capture/sequester and geo engineering to produce an offset cooling. Who knows, maybe those technological solutions could prove cost effective. We’d also of course have to look at various CO2 reduction strategies and costs and effects on man of those.

In other words, we would have the largest and most complex risk management analysis in the history of mankind.

Yet, here we are today. Even the IPCC has not stated that CO2 is responsible beyond all doubt. Research into the effects of a warming world is sketchy. Sea levels have not been rising as predicted; hurricane activity has not been devastating, etc. Geo-engineering and carbon sequestering have generally been tossed aside without much thought or study. And most importantly, the cost and consequences of a treaty like Copenhagen are not fully transparent. That just might mean they aren’t known.

Sorry, I just don’t understand all this and how some people think it is clear how proceed based on what we know today. The only reasons I can think of are: well you give me some.

If you think cap and trade and Copenhagen are needed right now, tell me why to help me understand. Is it to reduce pollution anyways? We are running out of oil so this will force the research in alternative energy? Is a global governance needed to get control of runaway “Westernism”? Or is just “we need to save the planet and all costs”?
I gotta say Dr. Blob, you win some sort of special award for the longest post without actually saying anything. Perhaps you could expand a bit by explaining what “current approach is not working” (that’s just one of about ten).

And what the hell does this mean? “All who would use or transform resources should have to show how their activity can be sustained for the long term before being allowed to commence.” Does that mean you would vote for a leader who said this? And actually had some plan to implement it?

The Expert answers:

You are right that we shoudl first determine if CO2 is indeed the cause and then if human activity places enough CO2 into the atmosphere to make a significant difference.

Now assuming we found that we were the main cause, and that man is responsible for 90% of the warming, certainly the .12-.17 degree per decade, would not justify a “do whatever it takes” policy. If we had reason to believe an exponential increase would insue, then that would be enough reason.

At this point I am willing to say that if we could reasonably demonstrate that we were the cause 90% of the warming and the government taxing us would be a way to effectively combat the situation, even at .12-.17 degree per decade increase, these bills may be justifiable.

With the little we actually know, the little they are actually able to demonstrate, and the many unknowns in both the models and the economic impact of cap and trade, it seems absolutely stupid to believe that this is justifiable.

We are truly talking about instituting a tax during a recession. This tax is to curb our CO2 output, which may or may not effect the Overall CO2 content of the atmosphere, which may or may not have an effect on the global temperature. And if it does, we have no idea how much, nor any way to measure if the bill is successful at doing what it is supposed to do.

This is asking for alot of faith, and I don’t usually believe in anything that requires this level of faith.

Maria asks…

WHAT ARE YOUR REACTIONS Of this ?Synthetic Cells Shed Biological Insights While Delivering Battery Power?

Trying to understand the complex workings of a biological cell by teasing out the function of every molecule within it is a daunting task. But by making synthetic cells that include just a few chemical processes, researchers can study cellular machinery one manageable piece at a time. A new paper from researchers at Yale University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) describes a highly simplified model cell that not only sheds light on the way certain real cells generate electric voltages, but also acts as a tiny battery that could offer a practical alternative to conventional solid-state energy-generating devices.
Each synthetic cell built by NI-ST engineer David LaVan and his colleagues has a droplet of a water-based solution containing a salt — potassium and chloride ions — enclosed within a wall made of a lipid, a molecule with one end that is attracted to water molecules while the other end repels them. When two of these “cells” come into contact, the water-repelling lipid ends that form their outsides touch, creating a stable double bi-layer that separates the two cells’ interiors, just as actual cell membranes do.
If the researchers only did that much, nothing interesting would happen, but they also inserted into the bi layer a modified form of a protein, , made by the bacterium Staphylococcus Ayres. These embedded proteins create pores that act as channels for ions, mimicking the pores in a biological cell. “This preferentially allows either positive or negative ions to pass through the bi layer and creates a voltage across it,” La Van says. “We can harness this voltage to generate electric current.”
If the solutions in the two cells start with different salt concentrations, then poking thin metal electrodes into the droplets creates a small battery: electrons will flow through a circuit connected to the electrodes, counterbalancing the ion flow through the channels. As this happens, the ion concentrations in the droplets eventually equalize as the system discharges its electric potential.
Building synthetic versions of complex real cells-such as those that enable an electric eel to zap its prey-is far too difficult a task for now, says La Van. So the researchers instead created this far simpler system whose performance they could understand in terms a handful of basic properties, including the size of the droplets, the concentration of the aqueous solutions, and the number of ion channels in the barrier between the two cells.
A tiny battery with two droplets, each containing just 200 nanometers of solution, could deliver electricity for almost 10 minutes. A bigger system, with a total volume of almost 11 micro liters, lasted more than four hours. In terms of the energy it can deliver for a given volume, the biological battery is only about one-twentieth as effective as a conventional lead-acid battery. But in its ability to convert chemical into electrical energy, the synthetic cell has an efficiency of about 10 per cent, which compares well with solid-state devices that generate electricity from heat, light, or mechanical stress-so that synthetic cells may one day take their place in the nanotechnology toolbox.

The Expert answers:

First, see the reference, from which this was plagiarized. The article even shows appropriate ways to give credit.

Second, this is a superb example of modern research which can not only increase our understanding of how our world works, but also offers the potential to capitalize on ideas to improve the quality of life for mankind. It takes time for research ideas to work their way into practical technology. That time can be shortened by wise funding. That’s a key role of the likes of NIST and NSF. They look at thousands of fledgeling ideas and projects like this, and apportion limited funds toward them, aiming for the best overall result. Perhaps if people cared more about our planet and science than mindless entertainment and short-term pleasure, ideas like this could receive the funding they deserve. And our planet will be the better for it.

Michael asks…

Can someone summarize this yahoo! article?

By Mary Milliken September 13, 2006
SACRAMENTO, California (Reuters) – A leading U.S.

climate researcher said on Wednesday the world

has a 10-year window of opportunity to take decisive

action on global warming and avert a weather

catastrophe.

NASA scientist James Hansen, widely considered

the doyen of American climate researchers, said

governments must adopt an alternative scenario to

keep carbon dioxide emission growth in check and

limit the increase in global temperatures to 1 degree

Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit).
“I think we have a very brief window of opportunity to

deal with climate change … no longer than a decade,

at the most,” Hansen said at the Climate Change

Research Conference in California’s state capital.
If the world continues with a “business as usual”

scenario, Hansen said temperatures will rise by 2 to

3 degrees Celsius (3.6 to 7.2 degrees F) and “we will

be producing a different planet.”
On that warmer planet, ice sheets would melt quickly,

causing a rise in sea levels that would put most of

Manhattan under water. The world would see more

prolonged droughts and heat waves, powerful

hurricanes in new areas and the likely extinction of

50 percent of species.
Hansen, who heads NASA’s Goddard Institute for

Space Studies, has made waves before by saying

that

President George W. Bush’s administration tried to

silence him and heavily edited his and other

scientists’ findings on a warmer world.
He reiterated that the United States “has passed up

the opportunity” to influence the world on global

warming.
The United States is the largest emitter of

greenhouse gases, most notably carbon dioxide. But

Bush pulled the country out of the 160-nation Kyoto

Protocol in 2001, arguing that the treaty’s mandatory

curbs on emissions would harm the economy.
Hansen praised California for taking the

“courageous” step of passing legislation on global

warming last month that will make it the first U.S.

state to place caps on greenhouse gas emissions.
He said the alternative scenario he advocates

involves promoting energy efficiency and reducing

dependence on carbon burning fuels.
“We cannot burn off all the fossil fuels that are

readily available without causing dramatic climate

change,” Hansen said. “This is not something that is

a theory. We understand the carbon cycle well

enough to say that.”

The Expert answers:

We have 10 years to fix the actions and activities that are causing global warning AND to think of ways to reverse the effects. If we don’t do this within 10 years, our world will be beyond any means of saving, at least by any means developed or known about at this time.

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Your Questions About Green Living

Donald asks…

Design Engineering or Energy Mangement jobs in Australia?

Hi all,
I am currently looking to move to Australia with my partner and was wondering if anyone had any advice on design engineering or energy management jobs over there? What is the market currently like?

Education wise I have a BA in Product Design and an MSC in Design Engineering, plus training in energy management.

I have 4 years experience working as a design engineer for 2 firms, designing prefabricated cooling equipment.
As well as the above I have a wealth of experience in renewable technology and energy management; heat pumps, solar panel etc.

What does anyone think? Would there be jobs for me? Any particular areas worth considering?

The Expert answers:

Professions abroad are certainly an exciting prospect, but you have to be really careful of the legislative implications, if you don’t do your research properly, there can be undesirable conseqences! The website in the box below has loads of instruction on professions abroad, my mate discovered it, now he is a barman in Tasmania!

Nancy asks…

Is the Department of Energy doing a good job of meeting its goals as set forth in its mission statement?

1.In your opinion, is the Department of Energy doing a good job of meeting its goals as set forth in its mission statement? Why or why not?

2. Do you agree with President Obama’s policies to reduce dependency on foreign energy and increase domestic production of renewable energy? Why or why not?

3. What are you doing to decrease your personal consumption of energy?

4. Do you think our nation is doing enough to address the growing energy needs of our population? What energy policy do you feel is best for our nation?

The Expert answers:

The dept of E. Is responsible for making sure we have a source of nuclear material for nuclear weapons. They are doing a poor job of this. The other stuff is B.S.

Mandy asks…

Obama has promised tons of green jobs, how is this program working for California?

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123336500319935517.html?mod=djemEditorialPage

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was all smiles in 2006 when he signed into law the toughest anti-global-warming regulations of any state. Mr. Schwarzenegger and his green supporters boasted that the regulations would steer California into a prosperous era of green jobs, renewable energy, and technological leadership. Instead, since 2007 — in anticipation of the new mandates — California has led the nation in job losses.

The regulations created a cap-and-trade system, similar to proposed federal global-warming measures, by limiting the CO2 that utilities, trucking companies and other businesses can emit, and imposed steep new taxes on companies that exceed the caps. Since energy is an input in everything that’s produced, this will raise the cost of production inside California’s borders.

Now, as the Golden State prepares to implement this regulatory scheme, employers are howling. It’s become clear to nearly everyone that the plan’s backers have underestimated its negative impact and exaggerated the benefits. “We’ve been sold a false bill of goods,” is how Republican Assemblyman Roger Niello, who has been the GOP’s point man on environmental issues in the legislature, put it to me.

The environmental plan was built on the notion that imposing some $23 billion of new taxes and fees on households (through higher electricity bills) and employers will cost the economy nothing, while also reducing greenhouse gases. Almost no one believes that anymore except for the five members of the California Air Resources Board (CARB). This is the state’s air-quality regulator, which voted unanimously in December to stick with the cap-and-trade system despite the recession. CARB justified its go-ahead by issuing what almost all experts agree is a rigged study on the economic impact of the cap-and-trade system. The study concludes that the plan “will not only significantly reduce California’s greenhouse gas emissions, but will also have a net positive effect on California’s economic growth through 2020.”

So now that we have seen how the “GREEN” jobs program works, why do we want to force this issue?
Meanwhile, the state is losing jobs, a lot of them. California’s unemployment rate hit 9.3% in December, up from 4.9% in December 2006. There are now 1.5 million Californians out of work. The state has the fourth-highest housing foreclosure rate in the nation, has lost more businesses than any state in recent years, and is facing a $40 billion deficit. With cap and trade firmly in place, the economic situation is only likely to get worse.

Other states are plundering the Golden State’s industries by convincing businesses to pick up stakes and move out before the cap-and-trade earthquake hits. Governors and Washington politicians who want to reduce their “carbon footprint,” but are worried about the more immediate crises of cascading unemployment, unbalanced budgets, and the housing-market collapse, would be wise not to follow California’s lead. Green policies have a tendency to push states into the red.
Meanwhile, the state is losing jobs, a lot of them. California’s unemployment rate hit 9.3% in December, up from 4.9% in December 2006. There are now 1.5 million Californians out of work. The state has the fourth-highest housing foreclosure rate in the nation, has lost more businesses than any state in recent years, and is facing a $40 billion deficit. With cap and trade firmly in place, the economic situation is only likely to get worse.

Other states are plundering the Golden State’s industries by convincing businesses to pick up stakes and move out before the cap-and-trade earthquake hits. Governors and Washington politicians who want to reduce their “carbon footprint,” but are worried about the more immediate crises of cascading unemployment, unbalanced budgets, and the housing-market collapse, would be wise not to follow California’s lead. Green policies have a tendency to push states into the red.

The Expert answers:

Sadly the masses ought to wake up, the game is simple yet to cross all your t’s and dot all your i’s takes far longer, the powers that be, namely the banking system’s elite have mostly covered their bases. They are more than apt at throwing snowstorms into everyone’s faces and distracting your focus. You are bright but where is your focus, involved within a fight that no one really cares about. People bright people chasing their own tails like demented puppy dawgs. Do you think Mr Ooohbooma is not a yes man to the system, bless him he offers promise, he offers hope, what does he promise and what hope does he offer ? And all these people latch onto those ‘words’ hope, promise, freedom …. But they will not happen, how long will the masses wait ? Until it is far too late and they get slaughtered in droves, culled. This has not happened over night, we all chose to look at what we look at in our own ways. Answer me this: The CONductor awaits the orchestra, what will happen if the orchestra refuses to play the CONductor’s CONcerto …..?

Sandy asks…

Is Obama’s “green jobs” plan going to end up the same way it did in California: a complete failure?

http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB123336500319935517-lMyQjAxMDI5MzMzMTMzNjE1Wj.html

“Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was all smiles in 2006 when he signed into law the toughest anti-global-warming regulations of any state. Mr. Schwarzenegger and his green supporters boasted that the regulations would steer California into a prosperous era of green jobs, renewable energy, and technological leadership. Instead, since 2007 — in anticipation of the new mandates — California has led the nation in job losses.

The regulations created a cap-and-trade system, similar to proposed federal global-warming measures, by limiting the CO2 that utilities, trucking companies and other businesses can emit, and imposed steep new taxes on companies that exceed the caps. Since energy is an input in everything that’s produced, this will raise the cost of production inside California’s borders.”
madd……….but the general plan that was implemented in California in 2006 is very similar to what Obama is talking about doing on a national scale.

The Expert answers:

Yes. When the government subsidizes industries they usually wind up a failure.

James asks…

In your opinion what are a few ways jobs can be created?

I’m just curious as to what many think about our current economic situation. Some believe that this stimulus bill will do nothing but create more national debt, and it won’t create jobs. However some have faith in it. If more jobs are going to be created I believe we need to have renewable energy, and start assessing the damage done at the root which is the value of our money. What do you think the key is to creating more jobs?
By the way, the stimulus bill that was just passed is worth $838 Billion.
Genie: I think you are onto something. The infrastructure is damaged and without the rebuilding, there can be no job growth.

The Expert answers:

Infrastructure. Infrastructure. Infrastructure. Not only our roads and bridges but also our sewerage and water systems are in dire repair. And for those who claim this is only a temporary fix and will not stimulate the ecomomy: you are wrong. The people working in these jobs will have money—which they will spend, thus creating a domino effect and the want for more products and services and resulting jobs to provide those products and services.

Another way to create jobs is to bring industry back to this country. I don’t know what the answers are but something has to be done to stop industrial jobs from leaving the U.S., setting up somewhere else, and then bringing their product back to us. Call it protectionism…whatever. But the current system is not working.

It’s impossible to be a top industrial nation without the industry. Right?

We need to be in on the ground floor of green energy needs. The entire world will be moving toward alternative energy and the U.S. Needs to be the go-to place to get the technology and supplies for that industry. WE should be building the windmills and other things.

Much like the money which was spent on our goal to go to the moon and other space travel, the money spent on alternative energy and increased energy efficiency will come back to us 100 fold.

We also need to catch up to other countries in the medical research field of genetics/DNA/and stel cell. The Bush administration caused us to fall way behind in that technology and we should now support this industry with much-needed increases in government financial resources.

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Your Questions About Green Living

Mark asks…

What’s Whole Foods’ stance on SUSTAINABLE SEAFOOD?

I’m taking a class titled “Ecology of Sustainable Seafood.” My independent project for the class is to research Whole Foods’ stance on seafood, and sustainability in seafood. What are some good links for me to check out so I can make some bullet points about their policy?

The Expert answers:

You should know first of all, the Whole Foods’ policies on food does not match what they actually do.

I once met the man who owned the food supply company that supplied some 29 Whole Foods locations at a conference. We got to talking, and he stated that all of the land he owned was in Mexico, and none of the food produced there was organic. Yet, Whole Foods labels much of their food as organic. He said that in all of the time that he had been supplying Whole Foods, they never once asked him about food production. The reason why they never asked is that, if word got out of this situation, they would legitimately have plausible deniability. And of course, there was a huge markup at the retail level. This guy was growing the food in Mexico year-round with dirt cheap labor, then passing across the border without inspections, and dropping it off at a distribution center where it was split up and taken to the stores.

So, whatever you discover about sustainable seafood, you might want to also check and see which company supplies them with seafood, then research how that company gets their seafood – whether caught in the open sea or farmed.

Robert asks…

Hi fellow seniors, do you leave food out for our feathered friends?

I’m more inclined to do so now especially in this cold snap.

I never used to put any out in the past because up until last year we used to have a cat and as you know it doesn’t do to encourage birds and cats to share the same small area.

We now have a lovely bird table adorned with various recommended feed and a water unit (which keeps on getting iced over) also a little box to keep warm in and it’s such a joy to see our native birds helping themselves to sustainable food at this inclement time of the year.

So do you like to feed and watch the birds in your vicinity?

The Expert answers:

Yes! We’re avid bird feeders and squirrel feeders. I know some cringe at the thought of those pesky squirrels who always get into the bird feeders, but once you get the right baffle on there (like an upside down 2 litre bottle with the nozzle cut off)… The squirrels are perfectly happy to ground feed around the feeders.
We also set our picnic table with a tarp over it right at our picture window so that we can put out cranberries, raisins, toasted bread or cracker crumbs… Peanuts in shell… The occasional apple core… They truly have a feast and we get such a kick out of watching all the various birds out there… We even have two different types of hawks who come occasionally to the table… And a night owl who has left his undeniable droppings around the patio. Makes for great video footage and awesome snapshots… And the feathered friends love us for it!
Happy holidays to you … And to all.

Susan asks…

Can we create a self-sustainable civilization on the moon or another planet?

So it seems like NASA is gonna be sending a colony to the moon soon. I am wondering how that will work? Where will they get food, water and oxygen? But my main question is: are there any ways to perhaps grow (or even synthesize) those things? (food/water/oxygen) Without any help from our planet what so ever. I know that for electricity and heat we could use solar energy, but not sure of the rest.

The Expert answers:

Similar to what is done aboard the ISS, as many necessities as possible will be recycled (air, water)

so far as i know, food would need to be imported

Daniel asks…

Are exponential population growth, consumer economics, and climate change the ultimate “tragedy of the Commons?

Individually and as nations we fight to protect what we “own”. But what are we doing to protect the Commons nobody owns (unless privatized) but on which life itself depends – clean air, water, sustainable food, and assurance of peace. It’s apparently not safe to leave it to politicians?

The Expert answers:

In modern countries the concept of “National Parks” is the beginning of a new awareness of Common property. It does require a somewhat democratic country for the people to feel that it is their common, or public, property. It is also in those countries where unrestrained population growth decreases. It can only be trusted to those politicians who can be fired through the democratic process.
The tragedy of Commons happened because it was set up for commercial use, which always leads to abuse. There are state parks in the US which allow commercial use, and the people are trying to stop that now. If the people of the Earth could see their planet as common property, not a corporate resource, then the same tragedy could be averted.

Short answer=Yes.

Mary asks…

What are some good books about food ?

I’m looking for some books about nutrition. I’m not looking to loose weight as much as to develop a sustainable, healthy diet.

I’d like to read a book, or books, with advice that is grounded in science but also engaging and inspirational. Maybe even with a philosophical bend. Any recommendations?

Thanks!

The Expert answers:

Pandora’s Picnic Basket

Seeds of Deception

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