By Heidi Strebel •
November 28, 2007
Imagine this: A man is standing in a small, white kitchen peeing into a glass on the floor. It’s the middle of the night. He finishes peeing, picks up the glass and pours his urine into a water-purifier pitcher.
The man sits down with a sigh. As he raises the glass of “purified” urine to his parched lips, he catches sight of his distorted reflection in the chrome sink. He pauses and then throws the [...]
By Heidi Strebel •
November 6, 2007
“We feared the mountain would give birth to a mouse…” said Daniel Richard, president of the World Wildlife Fund France, referring to the skepticism that green groups had for the recent multilateral environmental negotiations in France, the Grenelle talks. There was much concern that President Nicolas Sarkozy’s “environmental New Deal” would turn out to be much ado about nothing.
By Heidi Strebel •
November 1, 2007
The stage was set with a single podium, and beside it were two flags. The first flag was colored red white and blue, no stars and stripes, but three bands of red white and blue. The second flag was blue, and in its center was a circle of yellow stars. The keynote speaker stepped up to the mike. He was there to present a revolution. "A revolution in our way of thinking and in [...]
By Heidi Strebel •
October 22, 2007
Chocolate, chocolate, chocolate. The word is music to my ears, while the thing itself – when it is a bittersweet pearl of cocoa, or a spicy hazelnut praline, or again the warm melting heart of a rich gateau – why, no words can describe it! No wonder the famed Azetec Emperor Montezuma drank 50 cups of chocolate a day. No wonder the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus chose the name "Theobroma cacao" or "food of [...]
By Heidi Strebel •
October 8, 2007
Heave ho and the horn blows. It’s departure time for another container ship. Port of embarkation: Savannah, Georgia. Destination: Adana, Turkey. About 25 of the containers on this ship are filled with Georgian cotton. Despite the enduring cotton crisis in America, half a million tons of the fiber pass through the port of Savannah each year, representing some 500 million dollars in exports that are shipped to countries around the world, including China, Pakistan [...]
By Heidi Strebel •
October 2, 2007
The first phase in the French government’s environmental "New Deal" is complete. Jean-Louis Borloo, the minister of ecology and sustainable development, hosted a conference in Paris last Thursday to present the results of that initial phase and to launch the second phase. In his press release, Borloo employed rousing terms to describe a momentous turning point in French society.
After a time of inquiry, now is the time for action, and France will be
[...]
By Heidi Strebel •
September 24, 2007
From Budapest to Beijing, and from Bangkok to Buenos Aires, city dwellers across the globe hoped to enjoy an entire day without of the habitual pollution and hassle of automobile traffic.
Towns and cities signed up to participate in the annual car-free day held last Saturday. Since 2000 the World Carfree Network, an international association dedicated to advancing alternatives to automobile dependence, has called for the celebration of cities and public life "free from [...]
By Heidi Strebel •
September 18, 2007
Green events are in, but are they for real? Whether it is a music festival or a sports championship, a biennial fashion show or an annual athletics meet, cultural and sporting events are increasingly being promoted as environmentally friendly. Given their size, many of these events inevitably generate inordinate amounts of greenhouse gases and unthinkable volumes of waste. So any plan to curb the harmful effects is a welcome initiative. But are the promises [...]
By Heidi Strebel •
September 10, 2007
A wind of change is blowing through the world of rugby. A green wind.
The 2007 Rugby World Cup, the 3rd largest sports event in the world with an estimated 2.5 million spectators from around the world, is being held in France from September 7 to October 20. The organizers, including a special rugby committee, a government agency and the French Rugby Federation, have vowed to make the event tangibly eco-friendly, and number [...]
By Heidi Strebel •
September 4, 2007
Currently over 250 million people experience the direct consequences of desertification. Many of them are the world’s most destitute and vulnerable citizens.
2000 participants are expected in Madrid for the eighth international conference of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), which runs from September 3 - 14. Ecologists, representatives from 800 NGOs, and envoys from the 191 countries that ratified the Convention will meet to report on recent developments in the battle against [...]