Monday, June 19 2006 @ 05:17 PDT Contributed by: Alan Views:: 435
Fossil carbon free communities day
You’re invited to a Tropo (Tweed Richmond Organic Producers’ Organisation) field day at Corndale Butter Factory.
Featuring permaculturist, Tim Winton on the “Big Rollover”.
This field day is intended to help you and your local community to eat your way through the increasingly rapid climate change and resource depletion, especially fossil energy depletion, by planning to establish and diversify your local food supplies.
Together with Organic growers and permaculture designers you can plan how to develop growing systems and areas for a balanced local diet. Consider also your future water supplies, the tools you will need and recycling the nutrients.
Also the film “Community Solutions – How Cuba survived the oil crisis” will be showing and you can view progress on the Climate Change Action Network’s 3m mobile parabolic dish.
Where: Corndale Organic Bushfoods, Corndale Butter Factory, 805 Corndale Rd, Corndale.
When: 10am to until you’re happy, Sat 24th June 2006.
Food: Local Organic menu, tea, coffee, including baby dish’s solar Organic espresso….
Cost: Except for buying food the event is free, sponsored by Corndale Organic bushfoods & Tropo
Contact: Alan Roberts email alan_roberts@ozemail.com.au ph: 02 666 35 224
Everybody is welcome.
Peak Soil: Why cellulosic ethanol, biofuels are unsustainable and a threat to America
Written by Alice Friedemann
Released April 10, 2007
"The nation that destroys its soil destroys itself." - President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Peak Soil: Why Cellulosic ethanol and other Biofuels are Not Sustainable and are a Threat to America’s National Security
Part 1. The Dirt on Dirt.
Part 2. The Poop on Ethanol: Energy Returned on Energy Invested (EROEI)
Part 3. Biofuel is a Grim Reaper.
Part 4. Biodiesel: Can we eat enough French Fries?
Part 5. If we can’t drink and drive, then burn baby burn. - Energy Crop Combustion
Part 6. The problems with Cellulosic Ethanol could drive you to drink.
Part 7. Where do we go from here?
Appendix
Department of Energy's Biofuel Roadmap Barriers
References
read more (10,325 words) 1 comments Most Recent Post: 11/21 06:08 by Anonymous
Satellite instruments, pointing directly at the sun, measure the intensity of the sunlight above the atmosphere as 1370W/m². This is called solar insolation. In combination the earth's clouds, aerosols, atmosphere and surface reflect an average 31% of this sunlight, leaving 69% to be absorbed.
After an informative Climate Change refugee seminar put on by Friends of the Earth, I wrote to our federal politicians to find out what they were doing or intending to do about climate change and those displaced by climate change.