Sleep-out protest in third week in Boston; Dr. Hansen testifies
November 9th, 2009 · 2 Comments
Green Right Now Reports
Rallying for a clean energy bill in Massachussetts, noted climatologist Dr. James Hansen told students this weekend that they must take the future in their hands.

Massachusetts Sleep Out (Photo: Ian McClellan)
“Our universe is incredibly unjust and inequitable for young people and future generations. ” Dr. Hansen said. “Unless someone can change the direction, young people are really in trouble. Our governments are not taking actions or planning actions that will achieve this.”
Tags: · 100 percent clean energy by 2020, Boston, Dr. James Hansen, lobbying for clean energy, sleep out protest, student activists, The Leadership Campaign
Climate change explained with science and faith
November 9th, 2009 · No Comments
What do you get when a scientist and a minister collaborate?
When the subject is climate change, you get a book, A Climate for Change, co-authored by scientist Katharine Hayhoe and her husband, pastor Andrew Farley.

A Climate for Change
The premise of the couple’s book, published Oct. 29, is that before anything can be done about climate change, people need to be convinced that there is a need to do so. Their book, as the subtitle suggests – “Global warming facts for faith-based decisions” – attempts to address questions that Hayhoe and Farley have received in their respective lines of work.
Tags: · A Climate for Change, Andrew Farley, global warming believers, global warming deniers, Katharine Hayhoe, religion and climate science, Texas Tech University
Green Patriarch urges respect for Mother Nature as planet reaches ‘limits’
October 28th, 2009 · No Comments
By Harriet Blake
Green Right Now
It’s not just environmental lobbyists who are gearing their words toward strong action at the upcoming Copenhagen climate change negotiations.
At a recent appearance in New Orleans, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, dubbed the “Green Patriarch” by Al Gore, minced no words about the urgency of addressing climate change:
“We have reached a defining moment in our history…the point where absolute limits to our survival are being reached,” and we “instead of living on income, or the available surplus of the earth, we are consuming environmental capital and destroying its resources as if there is no tomorrow.”
Tags: · "Restoring Balance: The Great Mississippi", Green Patriarch, His All Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew, New Orleans, planet reaching limits, Religion, Science and Environment Symposium, the Mississippi
Crawl for toxic chemical reform
October 27th, 2009 · No Comments
By Ashley Phillips
Green Right Now
In an effort to bring attention to the nation’s outdated toxic chemical laws, Seventh Generation, the makers of many environmentally safe home products, has partnered with Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families in the Million Baby Crawl. This campaign is asking everyone, moms or not, to urge Congress for stronger chemical regulations.

Erin Brockovich
Tags: · Amy Smart, Catherin McCord, Eric Brockovich, Hollywood, Kellie Martin, Million Baby Crawl, Seventh Generation, toxic chemical reform, Toxic Substance Control Act, TSCA
Get ready for an International Day of Climate Action
October 22nd, 2009 · No Comments
By Ashley Phillips
Green Right Now
This Saturday is International Day of Climate Action — a chance for everyone to take a stand on behalf of the planet and possibly participate in one of 4,300 actions that are planned in 171 countries.
350.org began the International Day of Climate Action campaign not only to wake up politicians, but wake up the world. The group wants everyone to know about and understand the number 350, which signifies the level many scientists have identified as the safe utmost limit for CO2 in the atmosphere, in parts per million.
Here are a few unique events around the US:
Tags: · #350ppm, 350 parts per million, 350.org, demonstrate for carbon reductions, International Day of Climate Action, join events for International Day of Climate Action, reduce your carbon imprint, stop carbon pollution
Youth receive Brower Awards for environmental work
October 19th, 2009 · No Comments
By Harriet Blake
As the Nobel Prize Committee noted in awarding President Obama with the Nobel Peace Prize last week, the world is in a better place than it was a year ago.
The world also is in a better place thanks to six young people who are being honored on Tuesday for their heroic environmental efforts. [...]
Tags: · Adarsha Shivakumar, Alec Loorz, Brower Youth Awards, Climate Change, Diana Lopez, Earth Island Institute, Hai Vo, Nobel Peace Prize, Robin Bryan, Sierra Crain-Murdoch, teen climate activitists, The Climate Project, youth activism, youth environmentalists, youth movement
Save a turkey this Thanksgiving
October 14th, 2009 · 1 Comment
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Halloween is still a few weeks out, but for farm animal advocates, it is time to talk turkey.

Ginnifer Goodwin at the Farm Sanctuary (Photo: Ryan Pfluger)
Tags: · confined livestock, de-beaking, environmental footprint of livestock, Farm Sanctuary, Ginnifer Goodwin, humane animal treatment, turkeys, vegetarianism
‘Mad Men’ star January Jones advocates for sharks
September 29th, 2009 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
January Jones, star of the Mad Men TV series and an ocean advocate, went to Washington this week to lobby for the Shark Conservation Act of 2009 and stronger US leadership for saving the ocean’s top predators.
“We should be scared FOR sharks, not of them,” said the Golden Globe nominee. “The survival of sharks and the health of our oceans depend on it.”
Jones met with various members of Congress, including Senators Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.).
The actress, best known for her role as Betty Draper in the critically acclaimed Mad Men series on the American Movie Channel, became a spokesman for Oceana’s Save Sharks campaign earlier this year.
Tags: · January Jones, Mad Men, ocean conservation, Oceana, Shark Conservation Act, sharks
‘The National Parks: America’s Best Idea’: Take the kids and hit the couch
September 15th, 2009 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Midway into Ken Burns’ new ode to American history, The National Parks: America’s Best Idea (starting on PBS Sept. 27), the filmmaker tells how the nation’s early park caretakers realize that wildlife is integral to preserving the parks.
You’d think this would have been obvious. But it came as an epiphany in the 1930s, decades into the development of the park system.
Oddly, until then, the public had been so busy ogling mountains and gaping at the exotic canyons of America’s national parks, that the animals seemed secondary, even incidental. Wildlife appearances were welcomed, of course. Bison wandering through a Rocky Mountain meadow enhanced the mountain vista beyond. Mountain sheep verified that one was high in the Rockies and the faithful appearance of the Yellowstone bears at the “bear dumps” or roadside feeding stops made an excursion to see Old Faithful complete.
Tags: · conservation, Ken Burns, National Park Service, National Parks, PBS, recreation, The National Parks: America's Best Idea
International beach and waterway clean up set for Sept. 19
August 31st, 2009 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Coastal residents, surfers, fishers, beach combers and sea lovers – get ready to pay it back this September by participating in the largest single day of trash collection along waterways at the annual International Coastal
Cleanup.
The Coastal Cleanup, set for the third Saturday of every September, brings out hundreds of thousands of volunteers worldwide, who cart away millions of pounds of debris.
Tags: · Earth Day Network, International Coastal Cleanup, marine polllution, Ocean Conservancy, plastic trash, trash pick up
Oceana honors Glenn Close and Morgan Freeman at summer fundraiser
August 26th, 2009 · No Comments
From Green Right Now Reports
Oceana raised nearly $900,000 at last weekend’s second annual SeaChange Summer Party, where it honored celebrities Glenn Close and Morgan Freeman.
The gathering supporting the ocean protection group was star-studded. Attendees included Oceana board member Ted Danson, last year’s honorees Harrison Ford and John Picard; Kate Walsh, Aaron Peirsol, Lauren Hutton, Anne Heche, Jeff Goldblum and many others.
Tags: · Glenn Close, Morgan Freeman, ocean conservation, Oceana, SeaChange Summer Party, Ted Danson
California teen starts Kids vs. Global Warming group
August 11th, 2009 · No Comments
By Harriet Blake
Green Right Now
At a time when most 15-year-olds are thinking about sports, learning to drive and dating, Alec Loorz is trying to stop global warming.
The Ventura, California teen is the creator of Kids vs. Global Warming, a non-profit group dedicated to getting youth involved in the fight against global warming. “As young [...]
Tags: · Al Gore, Alec Loorz, Alliance for Climate Education, Climate Change, Copenhagen, global warming, Inconvenient Truth, Kids vs. Global Warming, United Nations Climate Change Conference


