Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Artic ice melting fast, near tipping point?
The report released by World Wildlife Fund (WWF), called the Arctic Climate Impact, shows vast climate change in all arctic systems that is already altering ecosystems and affecting the people and animals living there.
The scientists behind the report are alarmed to the point of discussing whether the Arctic is near the so-called tipping point where nothing can be done to reverse the damage.
The reduction of greenhouse gases worldwide is what will help reduce the melt.
Read the full story: Climate change hitting Arctic faster, harder
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Volun-tourism
So voluntourism is a growing movement where people can travel somewhere and donate their time there.
MSNBC.com reports on this trend, how it is green and easy to do. Overseas volunteer vacations are becoming increasingly more expensive so this is creating a domestic market making it easier to volunteer closer to home:
"Domestic volunteer vacations, on the other hand, can offer equally rewarding experiences in more familiar surroundings. You can work with Native Americans in Montana or immigrant families in Minnesota with Global Volunteers or help build homes in a dozen different states with Habitat for Humanity."Read the full story: You don't have to go far to do good
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Fishing, hiking and camping along California's Kern River
Martin, a "spring fever" trout fisher, says fishing should not be a "contact sport" like it is at popular angler spots along the Owens River Valley.
So he set off to find less-crowded spots to enjoy his pastime as well as other outdoor activities.
The Kern is located about 150 miles northeast of Los Angeles and just east of Bakersfield.
Read the full story: The fishing's fine along California's Kern River
Friday, April 25, 2008
Sting and wife eco-hypocrites
In this ad for an organic yogurt, Styler lends her face and the words:
"I'm committed to protecting the rainforest and the people who live there..."
But according to the DM report they travel extensively by private jets and a "fleet of cars" between their - count 'em - seven homes. Their carbon footprint has even been estimated to be 30-times the average Briton's.
Their so-called environmental commitment sounds like robbing someone of $100 and giving them back $5...
Sting even admits to having "a huge carbon footprint."
An eco-hypocrite by any other name would smell just like - well - Harrison Ford.
Read the full story: 'It's true - we're hypocrites...'
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Books on the endangered environment
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Florida without a car
Miami Herald reporter Marjie Lambert was given the task of traveling through Florida sans car.
For her five-day trip she actually had to take the train to three cities and - gasp - walk to all her sightseeing destinations. American cities are not made for walking especially when lugging a suitcase, I'll give her that, so her car-free trip was actually a real challenge that even Ecotravel News would not enjoy undertaking.
Ms. Lambert had a healthy attitude however and by the end of her trip relished in her brush with slow travel, especially since it was cheaper than driving:
"Each leg has taken at least an hour longer than the same trip by car, and cost some convenience. But this journey is part of the growing trend of slower travel with its own pleasant compensations -- the leisure of the train ride, the scenery not visible from I-95, the absence of traffic jams and metal detectors -- and I know I've gotten a real deal."Read the full story: Florida by train, cities by foot
Monday, April 21, 2008
Earth Day ecotravel deals from Budget Travel
Among the suggestions is a volunteer vacation to clean-up trash from a national forest in Washington State.
In additon there are weblinks to green organizations for people who want to "make every day earth day."
Read the full story: Give back to the Earth
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Houston tops U.S. air pollution emission study
Unsurprisingly cities with major traffic and/or oil business were the largest offenders.
The Vulcan report, funded by NASA and the Department of Energy (DOE), named the Houston area number one with CO2 emission at 18.6 million tons and Los Angeles area a close second with 18.59.
Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit complete the top 5.
Read the full story: Houston, LA named top CO2 polluters
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Art created with plastic bags
They are hard to avoid in every day life and even harder when traveling, ask Senator Barack Obama. (We endorsed Hillary remember?)
So whenever a clever way of reusing or recycling plastic bags comes along, we like it.
One doesn't usually think of art when thinking about plastic bags, but that is what one innovative art student did.
Joshua Allen Harris (left in picture) created art using plastic bags and air pushed out through the New York City subway grating.
Some of his creations include the Air Bear:
the Air Zoo:
and the Air Giraffe:
According to the Associated Press, these creations are usually installed in the Chelsea neighborhood near Mr. Harris' art school.
So now there's another thing to add to visitors' or curious environmentalists' lists of things-to-see-or-do in NYC.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Contradictions in Costa Rica's ecotourism trade
But although many tourists visit this Central American country to enjoy nature, the tourist outfits aren't always thinking about keeping the environment as pristine as one would think.
The Christian Science Monitor explored this dark issue in a recent article:
"Statistics revealed that 97 percent of Costa Rica's sewage flows untreated into rivers, streams, or the ocean, and that more than 300,000 tons of garbage was left uncollected on streets in 2006. And a flurry of illegal well-drilling is running aquifers dry, ironic in a country where as much as 20 feet of rain falls annually.Despite the chaos, less than a quarter of coastal towns have zoning plans to balance tourism development with natural resources and government services such as sewage treatment and public water supply."
Read the full story: Costa Rica sees tourism's environmental dark side
Thursday, April 17, 2008
British Columbia's eco-campaign
It's a new publication dropping today that "will help you connect with eco-friendly vacations in British Columbia."
Sounds good to us.
Read the full story: Be wild and green in B.C.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Fodor's gives 10 green travel tips
Some of the 10 tips include (with Ecotravel News' comments inside the parens):
#2 Ask about the [tour] company's green philosophies (Good tip, especially if they claim they are eco, they could still use unenvironmental methods like transportation)
#4 Be sensitive to cultures and customs (Although good advice, not sure how that applies to being a green traveler?)
#5 Never litter (!)
Read the full story: 10 tips for greener travel
Monday, April 14, 2008
W Hotels to offer free bikes on Earth Day
Guests will be provided with free bikes and helmets. There is a "Spring Fling" package that will donate 100 trees to a charity org. And W will offer a green limo service using hybrids or alternative-fuel vehicles.
Because it's a luxury chain, the green limo service will probably be the greenest thing the guests will be able to sacrifice their lifestyles for. Somehow I don't see these guests using bikes to get to and fro. And who knows how long these so-called green services will last...
Read the full story: W celebrates Earth Day
Sunday, April 13, 2008
For-profit ecotourism in Peru reaps many rewards
The area of the Amazon in Peru is fast becoming an eco-tourist destination with a reported 20-times increase in the past 15 years.
Rainforest Expeditions operates Posada Amazonas the largest tourism outfit in the area. Its goal has always been conservation through tourism, which has been successful, but it has also enriched the local families in the area as well. RE has actively involved the local community in the tourism projects, the locals get most of the profits and eventually will take over entire control. The peoples literacy, health and nutrition levels have benefited greatly while the forest has remained intact.
But the future of Peru's rain forest is still up in the air because of a newly paved road straight through it leading directly to Brazil. Past statistics of paved roads leading into Brazil's Amazon have shown that an increase in damaging development has occurred.
Read the full story: Rumble in the jungle
Friday, April 11, 2008
Plastic beach trash reaches highest level ever
"[Environmental group] the Marine Conservation Society, which campaigns for cleaner beaches and seas, said plastic litter has increased by 126 percent since its first survey in 1994.Scores of marine wildlife species, including seals and turtles, have died after eating plastic or drowning after getting tangled in debris or old fishing nets, it said.
In the last decade, the amount of plastic drinks bottles has risen by 67 percent, plastic bags by 54 percent and cigarette butts by 44 percent, the society said."
Read the full story: Record beach litter threatens marine life
Thursday, April 10, 2008
The greening of national museums
Correspondent Yvonne Zipp writes that Michigan's Grand Rapids Art Museum (GRAM) is the very first to get the Gold LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification.
Others such as Denver's Museum of Contemporary Art will also join GRAM with a Gold status.
Pittsburgh's Phipps Conservatory is so environmentally friendly that it has even banned bottled water.
"The director of the Phipps, Richard Piacentini, can describe every step the conservatory has taken to become more environmentally sustainable.Read the full story: Museums sprout 'green' architectureThis fall, the conservatory will break ground on a greenhouse that Piacentini and his team hope will become the first Living Building in the United States – one that is completely self-sustaining and relies exclusively on renewable energy.
Organic waste will power the fuel cell that supplies the building with electricity, and a combination of constructed wetlands and a 'living machine' (with anaerobic bacteria) will treat the sewage for the entire complex."
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Kansas reporter's Southwest Chief train ride
Eschewing a harried plane trip, Hutmacher took Amtrak's Southwest Chief train that travels back and forth between L.A. and Chicago.
Hutmacher was prepared to be bored during the day-long journey but he found interesting people to talk with and even enjoyed the dining car experience:
"It was refreshing that I could choose when, what or if I wanted to eat, as opposed to being offered a tray with a stale ham sandwich, a cup of fruit, a bag o' nuts and can of soda."
Monday, April 7, 2008
Endangered Malaysian lizards off the menu
"Two years ago, the state's wildlife officers seized 5,400 clouded monitor lizards bound for Hong Kong, [state wildlife director Saharudin Anan] said. Those caught for smuggling endangered species of animals face a fine of up to 5,000 ringgit ($1470) and three years in prison."Although the clouded monitor lizard is endangered it still is considered a delicious meal to some as well as having healing medicinal qualities.
Read the full story: Malaysian wildlife officials save wok-bound monitor lizards
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Slow travel for our 100th post
Slow travel is essentially traveling without the airplanes that everyone knows are bad for the environment and slowing down and enjoying the journey to the new country.
One man that slow traveled around the world is Ed Gillespie who spoke to NPR recently about his journey:
"'What is the purpose of travel?' [Gillespie] asks. 'Is it about a checklist of sights that we want to go and see? ... Or is it actually about the notion of just getting away? And can we experience that notion of getting away with methods that don't have the same kind of environmental impact that unfortunately flying does?'"Listen to his interview: First slow food, now a movement for slow travel
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Border fence go-ahead violates numerous laws
The Associated Press via the Houston Chronicle says that the U.S. government "does not have to explain how the border fence will affect the environment."
Even though under the National Environmental Policy Act it is required by law to submit a comprehensive report.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff was given permission by Congress to waive this and another 30 laws in order to build the fence to "to protect against terrorism and stem the tide of illegal immigration."
Read the full story: U.S. will not explain how border fence will affect environment
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
ABC News reports on growing ecotourism in Cambodia
Read the full story: Go on vacation, save an ecosystem