Monthly Archives: January 2007

Environmental politics

The things you see in the woods

All around the mainstream media and the blogosphere there is news about the weird (and scary) things the weather is doing around the world. I was talking to my grandmother in Australia this morning and in the small NSW country town where she lives it was 41C today. (Not that one day of that is remarkable, but there’ve been a lot more of those days than usual.)

But I think this photo definitely wins the prize for the weirdest and wackiest example of the phenomenon. (And it is a flower that can even keep itself warm, it seems, should the weather turn…)

That’s the entertainment, now the bad news:

A draft copy of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, obtained by The Observer, shows the frequency of devastating storms – like the ones that battered Britain last week – will increase dramatically. Sea levels will rise over the century by around half a metre; snow will disappear from all but the highest mountains; deserts will spread; oceans become acidic, leading to the destruction of coral reefs and atolls; and deadly heatwaves will become more prevalent….
The really chilling thing about the IPCC report is that it is the work of several thousand climate experts who have widely differing views about how greenhouse gases will have their effect. Some think they will have a major impact, others a lesser role. Each paragraph of this report was therefore argued over and scrutinised intensely. Only points that were considered indisputable survived this process. This is a very conservative document – that’s what makes it so scary,’ said one senior UK climate expert.

And more bad news from another study:

This evening Sir David Attenborough will explain what that means, showing in detail the alarming consequences for Britain — how climate change will affect us all. Specifically, Attenborough presents three snapshots, from 2020, 2050 and 2080. One key point is the increased likelihood of heatwaves. The murderously hot summer of 2003 is 25 times more likely to recur by 2020.
It will be regarded as a normal summer by 2050 — and might even seem cool by 2080.

Blogging/IT History

Simple explanations are often the best

Just found out about a new carnival, of anthropology, called the Four Stone Heath, the latest on the delightfully named Aardvarcheology. I was particularly taken by the link about out-of-place artefacts post – and particularly its account of the “Baghdad battery”, from the 3rd century BC – ’tis amazing what the human imagination can come up with. (Actually a pot for storing papyrus…)

Hat-tip to Sharon on Early Modern Notes, who incidentally is looking for hosts for the history carnival – particularly female hosts to get some gender balance. Now I know there are women’s history bloggers who visit here who would be ideal (you DON’T have to be a professional historian! – I’m not and I’ve hosted it twice – although you can be of course…) You know who you are – please volunteer (or I might just send Sharon a list of suggestions!)

Environmental politics

Wind farm plans

Plans for a wind farm to power 25% of the houses in Scotland were announced yesterday.

The project, which is still subject to planning permission from the Scottish Executive, will be run in conjunction with the Shetland Islands’ council, who will own a 50 per cent stake in the site through their subsidiary Viking Energy. The council will plough all profits from the venture back into the local community.
The farm will have approximately 300 wind turbines, covering 90 square kilometres of landand producing around 600 megawatts of power. The plan is to connect the farm to the Scottish mainland using a cable which will run underneath the sea.

No doubt we need this on one level, but it is more “big power” – rather than the small local generation schemes that would attach people to their power and think about its usage…

Yes, I am in favour, but with reservations.

Feminism Women's history

Marriage: who needs it?

Interesting that trends in the West (latest report out from Australia suggests that the next official figure will put the number of married women at 45% of the total) are being followed by China – where the age of marriage is rising significantly.

Chinese women have been delaying wedlock over the past decade and the average age for a woman to marry is now 24, a research report has found.
Since 1990, Chinese women have married between at 21.9 to 22.8 years old and the age was 22.6 in 2000, says a report published by China Youth and Children Research Center, an institution for helping the government set youth policies.

A cause for celebration – more free women in the world…

And in case you think that is extreme, landing in my inbox this morning is an account of how it used to be, from France in 1772:

The complainant [Marie-Françoise Bertaud, linen merchant in Paris, who is seeking a legal formal separation]… in marrying sir Gagneur, had no other intention that to run her business with her husband as they had agreed. Sir Gagneur, far from performing as he had promised his wife in helping her run her business, a month after their marriage left her and went to live with a girl nicknamed the Hungarian, who was in sir Restier’s troupe of tumblers, at the St-Germain fair.
One evening it got into sir Gagneur’s head to bring his concubine home to sup there; the complainant, his wife, opposed this, not wanting to admit this concubine to her table; the sir Gagneur mistreated his wife in hitting her and then drawing his sword against her…

It goes on with an astonishing familiar tale – hubbie comes and goes, mostly goes, to the Hungarian and a succession of other women (the tally is four illegitimate children with different women, frequently beats and threatens his wife, she tries again and again to make the marriage work.
(From the excellent Sundries.)

Politics

Bangladesh … the scarcely covered story

The collapse of planned democratic elections in Bangladesh is one of the great under-covered stories of recent weeks. Bangladesh is, by its standards, doing quite well economically at present, but so sad that the politicians are unable to achieve any sort of accommodation among themselves. Particularly since there are female politicians at the core of the conflict.

The Guardian reported:

Analysts say the rivalry between Sheikh Hasina and the last prime minister, Begum Khaleda Zia, has irreparably damaged politics in the country. The pair have not spoken to each other for more than a decade.

Democracy isn’t any easy business.

Cycling Environmental politics

Get on a train – with your bike

Or at least sign a petition to make it a bit easier…

We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to Make the provision for Bicycles on Trains Free and Compulsory by all train operators.

(Yes, ’tis a pity about the random capitalisation.)

UK citizens only, sorry – but why not start your own. Although as I understand it if you are in France you wouldn’t have to.

Deadline, January 21