Patricia March 7th, 2008

This educational presentation is so excellently done. We have all become so incredibly programmed to consume. Here is the beautifully- executed graphic story of our post-World War II human culture. Simple, easy to comprehend, inspiration to change our ways and what is at stake if we don’t. Watch this video NOW!
http://www.storyofstuff.com/
Technorati Tags: Community, Peace, Uncategorized
Patricia February 22nd, 2008
photograph by Stu Worrall
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DO YOU KNOW?
This is one of the best newsletters on the environment, global economics and change!
Check out these statistics and sign up to stay informed.
Need data? Sometimes numbers can tell a story. Here are some of the
figures from the behind-the-scenes research for the latest book from Earth
Policy Institute, Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, by
Lester R. Brown. Complete data sets and charts are now available on-line at
www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB3/data.htm.
Did you know?:
The eight warmest years on record have all occurred in the last decade.
For seven of the last eight years, the world has consumed more grain
than it produced; grain stocks are now at a historic low.
One fifth of the U.S. grain harvest is now being turned into fuel
ethanol.
One third of reptile, amphibian, and fish species examined by the World
Conservation Union are considered to be threatened with extinction.
Grain yields increased half as fast in the 1990s as they did in the
1960s.
Life expectancy in sub-Saharan Africa today is lower than it was in the
late 1980s.
Today’s economically recoverable reserves of lead, tin, and copper
could be depleted within the next 25 years if their extraction expands at
current rates.
Nearly half of the annual global military budget of $1.2 trillion is
spent by one country — the United States.
But not all the news is bad:
South Korea leads the world in paper recycling, recovering an estimated
77 percent of its paper products.
Conservation agriculture is practiced on more than 100 million hectares
around the world
Four years after London introduced a fee on motor vehicles entering the
city center, average car traffic had fallen by 36 percent while
bicycle trips had increased by 49 percent.
The world produces 110 million bicycles a year, more than twice the
annual production of 49 million cars.
Fish farming, largely of herbivorous species, is the fastest growing
source of animal protein worldwide, increasing by an average of 7 percent
each year since 1995.
World soybean production has quadrupled since 1977.
Coal use in Germany has dropped 37 percent since 1990; in the United
Kingdom it has fallen by 43 percent.
Solar cell production is doubling every two years, making it the
world’s fastest growing energy source.
Electricity used for lighting around the world can be cut by 65 percent
through efficiency improvements like switching from incandescent bulbs
to compact fluorescents.
** Find out more in Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization,
on-line at www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB3/index.htm, and explore the complete
datasets at www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB3/data.htm.
For information contact:
Earth Policy Institute
1350 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 403
Washington, DC 20036
Web: www.earthpolicy.org
Technorati Tags: Community, Earth Policy Institute, Lester R. Brown, Peace, Spiritual, Uncategorized