In This Issue
- Flanigan’s EcoLogic: Crafting a Safe and Sustainable Post-Covid World
- Three Climate-Hero Trees
- Renewable Natural Gas 201
- 47.1% Photovoltaic Efficiency
- Big Solar and Qatar’s Low Price
- Sweden is Coal Free
- Laundry to Landscape
Flanigan’s EcoLogic: Crafting a Safe and Sustainable Post-Covid World
Twisted is the environmental news: There were no Earth Day 50 gatherings this year… except online. April 22nd came and went.
But the news and social media bring us stunning images of wildlife on the Yosemite Valley floor, fantastic sea turtle populations, whales have been freed of incessant low frequency sounds of freighters now less traveled, Italians can now see fish in the canals of Venice… a sunken ship laying on its side is visible from the air due to the calm in the Great Lakes.
So many magical images of our clean environment given the eerie and painful shut-down of our economy. The freeway maps of LA are all green, no traffic. People are walking and biking in their neighborhoods. Clear skies in Beirut, large Chinese coal plants toggled down 60%. Certain parts of India can now see the snow-capped Himalayas for the first time in years.
The International Energy Agency projected in March that global energy demand for the year will drop by 6% and greenhouse gas emissions are slated to fall by 8%, to their lowest levels since 2010 and the largest drop in history. The anticipated 8% drop in oil use is the biggest decline since World War 2.
Our cities have been able to take a breath of fresh air. Nitrous oxides down over 50% in Madrid, Paris, and other large cities. A boon for the environment. Habitat is relaxed. Animals have more room to roam. Herds of deer in Japanese neighborhoods, monkeys loiter in New Delhi, wild turkeys in now abandoned playgrounds in Oakland, there are wild mountain goats in Whales. Some think that at long last the pandas in a Chinese zoo consummated their relationship… possibly thanks to the lack of ogling zoo visitors.
Some experts believe that humans have had a lot to do with the pandemic. “Rampant deforestation, uncontrolled expansion of agriculture, intensive farming, mining, and infrastructure development, as well as exploitation of wild species, have created a perfect storm for the spillover of diseases from wildlife to people,” is one explanation. New Zealand’s leaders are now preparing to spend a billion dollars on nature, working to build thriving forests and wetlands to avoid future pest control costs.
The most optimistic vision of our recovery from Covid-19 is that we not only gain control of the pandemic and our health, but that we take the best of the shut-down and make it long-term. As individuals, we want the clean air, the clean water, the uncongested freeways. We need adequate hospital capacity with American-made PPE. We buy local, we eat local, we support local restaurants. We telecommute and drive less. We Zoom and WebEx more. Flights become a privilege rather than a weekly right. We reach out to old friends and honor family more. We play more music, we cook more. We’ll value more the process of making art and cherishing friends.
The United States must regain its leadership position with climate protection… promoting entrepreneurship, innovation, and collaboration like war efforts of the past. The war on carbon must not take a back seat to the pandemic. Devashree Saha of the World Resources Institute is quoted above, we cannot miss this chance to recover from the pandemic in ways that make sense, in ways that are strategic, putting low-carbon sector jobs at the forefront. More focus on energy efficiency – that creates jobs and savings – more public transportation, we need to modernize the electric grid to make storage real, and we need massive tree restoration, support for wind farms and electric vehicles. Let’s rebuild for resilience, health, and wellbeing.
Let’s be the change agents. While we recover, we must promote change through policies and leadership and community action, doubling down on climate protection and equity. Just as we are bound together to fight the Corona virus, we must be bound together to aggressively address the very real threat of climate change that could kill millions of global citizens, destroying the quality of life we cherish, and causing economic impacts larger than Covid-19.