Author Archives: Philippe Boucher

Energy matters

This weekend on EcoTalk Betsy’s guests are

Hilda_solis_1 Congresswoman Hilda Solis (D-CA East LA) will tell us about the so called Gas Act, the raucous GOP (Getting Outrageously Pushy) House vote on legislation to relax restrictions on oil refineries. She led a drive for an alternative bill. 

Listen (11 min)

Solar_cells A solar decathlon underway near the Washington mall will also also be a focus – college students from around the country competing to build the greenest house to show the public, and politicians, what’s possible – we’ll speak with Tor Allen of the Rahus Institute and Cal Poly student Robert Johnson. Listen (6 min)

Our third segment is devoted to solar pioneers Joyce Mason, Vice-President Marketing for Pardee Homes building the nation’s first 100% solar-powered housing development and developer Jack Fleming creating the first solar-powered seniors home.  Listen (11 min)

Lightbulbsmall Finally Wendy Reed, Communications Manager for Change a light, change the world  wil ltalk about this campaign of the EPA’s Energy Star programListen (7 min)

LISTEN to the whole show (37 min)

And thanks from an ET fan

—–Original Message—–
From: Susan [mailto:sdubno@leviton.com]
Sent: Mon 10/10/2005 10:25 AM
To: Betsy Rosenberg
Subject: Website Feedback: I’m so happy

I love your show and have been waking up to tape it at 7am to listen to
it later. Saturday noon is good. Let’s aim for a late weeknight so I
can relax after work with your show. It is so informative and has
fabulous topics. The BEST Air America shows are EcoTalk, Al Franken and
Ring of Fire. The BEST NPR shows are Car Talk and Fresh Air with Terry
Gross. As far as I am concerned, you are one of the top radio
interviewers. Keep up the great show.

Is the show repeated any time during the week?


— The following message was sent using the feedback page —

Driving less? Dams, the David Brower Youth Awards and the necessity to clean coal

Here is our program.

Lowell_unger_photoThe Alliance To Save
Energy
’s Lowell Unger will tell us  why W’s recent request for Americans to drive less is
not going to get us where we need to go, and what you can do about getting CAFÉ
standards out of “stall” mode in the legislature.
Listen (8 min)

Author Jacques
Leslie
will talk about his new book, Deep Water, about the destructive power of
dams. Listen (6 min)

Davebroweryouth_4Three young eco-activists, recipients of the David
Brower Youth Awards

talk about their projects.
Listen (11 min)

Covercoalfall05_1Coal-fired power plants are the single largest source of man-made CO2, accounting for one quarter to one third of the world’s total.
An entire generation of obsolete
coal-fired power plants built in the 1950s and 1960s needs to be
replaced.

Hawkins_bw_2_1David Hawkins,
director of the NRDC‘s Climate
Center explains the strategic importance of choosing the right
technology for the new coal plants that are going to be built:  "If the
plants
are not designed up front to capture their CO2, they will lock us into large amounts of global-warming emissions for their entire operating lifetimes."  Listen (7 min)

Read the feature story by Craig Canine in onearth

LISTEN to the whole show (37 min)


Dear Subscribers

ThankyouflowersThe audiofiles for the October 1st program about Green Hotels are now available.
Thanks for your patience.

Green hotels

Hotelsign2We’ll let you know what your
favorite hotel chain is doing, or should be doing, to lighten their impact on
our environment.
From hybrid displays in the lobby to eco-chic celebrity suites,
we’ll learn which players in the hospitality industry are beating a path to
sustainability.

GreenlodginglogoRosario Marin and Bill Orr with California’s Green Lodging
program
will tell us about the new “four palms” rating system. Listen  (11 min)

Steve Pinetti
with the Kimpton Hotel Collection will discuss why, for them, sustainability is
not just a marketing gimmick
Listen (13 min)
Anne White with the Fairmont chain will weigh in  Listen (4 min)

As will Kathy Shepard with the Hilton hotels  Listen (7 min)

Listen to the whole show (37 min)

John Passacantando

Passacantando_1
Serving more than ten
years in the public interest sector, John Passacantando has been Executive
Director of Greenpeace USA since September 2000. 
From the headquarters
office in Washington, D.C., John leads a team of 72 and oversees an
organization with 300,000 members in the U.S. and a budget of $20 million.
Since 1971, Greenpeace has been a leading voice of the environmental
movement and work throughout the world to protect oceans and ancient
forests, and to fight toxic pollution, genetic engineering, global-warming
and nuclear threats.
With John’s commitment to aggressive and creative
tactics, the organization continues to be known for its direct confrontation
of corporations and governments as a means of forcing change. Greenpeace
has satellite offices in San Francisco and Anchorage.
Prior to joining Greenpeace,
John rallied the grassroots movement to stop global warming as co-founder
and Executive Director of Ozone Action. Founded in 1993 by John and
Karen Lohr, formerly
of Greenpeace, Ozone Action initially campaigned to strengthen the international
effort to stop ozone depletion. Under John’s leadership, Ozone Action
broadened its efforts and emerged
as the largest organization focused solely on stopping global
warming.
He assembled a team that built grassroots support through aggressive
investigative and media campaigns to address the public health, environmental
and economic threats of global warming. The organization was dissolved
into Greenpeace when John took the helm.
Before founding Ozone
Action, John was executive director of the Florence and John Schumann
Foundation, helping focus its grant making programs on the grassroots
renewal of democracy. John worked to support the Foundation’s efforts
on campaign finance reform and environmental issues.
Prior to making the leap
to environmental advocacy, John fine- tuned his marketing and media
skills while working in the corporate world.
He worked as Director
of Marketing for Polyconomics, Inc., providing
economic analysis to the country’s largest institutional investors.
He distilled tax law, interest rate and commodity price changes for
more than 80 clients.
Before that, he sold turnkey computer systems
throughout New York, New Jersey and Connecticut for Triad Systems Corporation.
John received a BA in
economics from Wake Forest University and an MA, also in economics,
from New York University.
John has testified before
Congress and participated in several PBS debates on global warming.
In addition to interviews on Good Morning America and other news programs,
John has been quoted in virtually every major newspaper in the United
States and has had numerous op-eds published nationwide.
In 1999,
he received the Tides Foundation 1999 Jane Bagley Lehman Award for Excellence
in Public Advocacy for his work on global warming solutions.
John is married to Lisa Guide, the Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Policy and International Affairs and the U.S.
Department of the Interior.
They have two young daughters, Sophia
and Mollie.

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