The Climate Minute - James Hansen retirement edition




The Climate Minute show

Summary: James Hansen retired from NASA, paving the way for him to expand his role in the climate debate, it's about time, jeez, you almost never hear from the guy...  Kidding aside, that's just one of the things Rob and Ted talk about in this issue of the Climate Minute.  From the wind swept expanses of the Athabasca tar sands fields to town meeting in Manchester Massachusetts, welcome to the MCAN Climate Minute. As always, click on the “MCAN Climate Minute” picture to the right to start the recording in a new window, or go to our iTunes page and download or subscribe to the podcast. Some links to go enhance your listening experience: James Hansen is retiring after 46 years in NASA service.  Congratulations to Dr. Hansen, and we're excited to see you expand your activism (if that's possible) for the good of of the planet. Dr. Hansen's predictions from 1981 prove to be pretty reliable, over thirty years later.  Maybe he was on to something, eh? Bummer given his predictions about the impact of Keystone XL on climate change. But the fight over Keystone isn't over yet.  We've provided what we hope is a handy guide to talking Keystone with your climate denier friends and maybe getting them to oppose the pipeline on non-climate grounds. The Mayflower, Arkansas spill is just the latest disaster involving tar sands.  Perhaps the most galling aspect of that spill is the fact that tar sands derived oil doesn't even pay into the trust fund that is being used to clean up the spill.  If that doesn't get people ticked off about the idea of transporting more tar sands through the country, I don't know what does. To top it all off, Exxon has been running the show in Mayflower, and even denying press access to the disaster. Chris Hayes, of "All In" on MSNBC has done some excellent shows about the Mayflower spill and Keystone recently, check them out (after you're done listening here, of course!). Closer to home, tempers are flaring over wind turbines, with folks in Kingston upset about turbine flicker(sorry, story's only available behind the Globe's paywall), and Falmouth voting at town meeting next week on whether or not to spend millions of dollars to take down their existing turbines. There is some good news at town meetings though, with Manchester-by-the-Sea, a town as pretty as its name would suggest, passing the optional Stretch Building Code earlier this week, and towns like Lunenburg, Framingham, and West Newbury coming up in the next several weeks. The Legislature is in hearing season, and while the hearing on the Oil Heat Efficiency program we talked with Natalie Hildt about earlier this week has been pushed off, the debate about the future of transportation funding in the Commonwealth will take place next week. Competing plans have been proposed by the Governor and Legislative leadership, and while the Governor's plan provides more support for the system and new projects not covered in the Legislature leadership's plan, the Legislative plan does contain taxes on gasoline and electricity that inch us ever closer to our favorite topic: the Carbon Tax! The Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance has many thoughtful posts about the competing plans and what they feel is truly needed for lasting transportation reform in Massachusetts. Spring also means the fight for the updated bottle bill starts over.  Tomorrow night there will be a great event in Arlington, "The Battle for the Bottle Bill," a night of comedy, music, and conversation about the new bottle bill legislation before become hill.  Go here for more information.  We've only been trying to to get those pesky water bottles and juice bottles taken care of for 16 years, maybe this is the year! The bladeless wind turbine, via Grist Let's end on a hopeful note.  Ted found a neat new invention -- a bladeless wind turbine.  Perhaps the power of the future will be generated by these machines and "wind turbine syndrome" and fli