Voici la question qui me guide dans mes recherches...

L’appât du gain manifesté par les entreprises supranationales et certains groupes oligarchiques, de même que le contrôle des ressources naturelles par ceux-ci, dirigent l’humanité vers un nouvel ordre mondial de type féodal, voir même sa perte. Confronté à cette situation, l’être humain est invité à refuser d’accepter d’emblée une pseudo-vérité véhiculée par des médias peut-être à la solde de ces entreprises et groupes. Au contraire, il est invité à s’engager dans un processus de discernement et conscientisation afin de créer sa propre vérité par la confrontation de sa réalité nécessairement subjective à des données objectives, telles que révélées par la science, par exemple.

The penalty that good men pay for not being interested in politics is to be governed by men worse than themselves. - Plato

samedi 13 juin 2009

Les taxes sur le carbone compromettes les budgets hospitaliers

Voici quelques informations sur un sujet "chaud" qui commence a affecter nos institution et nos entreprises. Les nouvelles taxes sur le carbone qui commence a apparaitre un peux partout dans la monde pour semble t-il diminuer le réchauffement climatique selon leur détracteur, affecte les institutions publiques comme cet exemple en Colombie Britannique.

The Lower Mainland's health authorities will have to dig more than $4 million a year out of their already stretched budgets to pay B.C.'s carbon tax and offset their carbon footprints.
Selon le site web du gouvernement:
According to the IPCC 4th Assessment - Synthesis Report, “an effective carbon-price signal could realize significant mitigation potential in all sectors.” A preliminary estimate by an independent consulting company (MK Jaccard and Associates) suggests that in absence of all other GHG reduction strategies, the carbon tax alone could cause a reduction in B.C.’s emissions in 2020 by up to three million tonnes of CO2 equivalent annually.
Cet organisme contrôle les taxes sur le carbone en Colombie Britannique.
Pacific Carbon Trust (PCT) is a provincial Crown corporation with a mandate to deliver quality BC-based greenhouse gas offsets to help clients meet their carbon reduction goals and to support growth of this industry in B.C.
Quelques points de discussion et d'interrogation:

“You have public hospitals cutting services to pay a tax that goes to another 100 per cent government-owned agency,” NDP health critic Adrian Dix said. "That just doesn’t make sense.”

Avons-nous la preuve que nos réductions de CO2 vont vraiment diminuer la température de la planète? Plusieurs articles dans mon blog en discute. A part les modèles mathématiques, nous n'avons aucune preuve mesuré que le CO2 affecte le climat. Il faut simplement regarder les graphique comme celui-ci pour voir que la relation est loin d'être évidente. Le climat est contrôlé par d'autre facteurs, comme le soleil, les océans et les nuages. Le CO2 affecte de façon très minime la température du globe. Pour en savoir plus, aller lire "Le Manuel du Sceptique Climatique"

Nous avons donc des taxes, très couteuse, qui diminuerons de façons très minime, la quantité de CO2. La preuve, reste encore a faire sur la réduction réel de ces mesures. Ceci dans le but de diminuer un gaz à effet de serre qui à un effet négligable selon plusieurs sur le climat de la planète.

Somme nous en train d'acheter des indulgences? Qui profite de ces mesures? Qui est responsable?

vendredi 12 juin 2009

Peinturer nos toits blanc pour stopper le réchauffement?

Steven Chu, le secrétaire à l'énergie d'Obama, à affirmé ceci:

By lightening paved surfaces and roofs to the colour of cement, it would be possible to cut carbon emissions by as much as taking all the world’s cars off the roads for 11 years
Source avec vidéo

Est-ce que ce plan fait du sens? Plusieurs se le demande, dont Rush Limbaugh:
“Now, would somebody explain to me how he knows this? … If we can do something that will effectively remove the carbon emissions of every car on the road for 11 years, then why are we doing anything else? Why are we doing cap and trade? Why are we getting rid of SUVs? … How much paint is this going to take, by the way? How much of a footprint does paint manufacturing leave? … I need a scientist to answer this for me. I understand how clouds at altitude can help reflect the heat, but I want to know … where does that reflected heat go? … Are we being told here that reflected heat is not damaging at all, but direct heat is? It seems to me that, if we had ‘global warming’, wouldn’t we want dark roofs to absorb the heat?”
Plusieurs bonnes questions.... Pour un début de réponse, aller lire ce fichier PDF.
Increasing the Earth’s albedo by 0.1% would cut the average amount of solar radiation in the atmosphere from 236 to 235.6 Watts per square meter, which translates to a global cooling of just o.2 Fahrenheit degrees.
À quel prix?

mardi 9 juin 2009

Home le film de Yann Arthus-Bertrand

Avez vous vu le film "Home" de Yann Arthus-Bertrand

Quand pensez vous, avez vous des commentaires à faire. De toute évidence, ce film ne laisse pas indifférent. Plusieurs articles en font la critiques.

Voir:

J'ai regardé rapidement la section "les chiffres" sur le site web et le tout me semble assez alarmiste et comme plusieurs conception malthusienne et propagandiste du genre, basé sur des probabilité future.

Il est clair que l'humanité peux faire mieux et doit faire mieux. Mais quelles solutions sont proposées?

Vous êtes inquiets, vous voyez tout noir devant vous, je vous invite à visionner la conférence des Bâtisseurs de nation du 11 mars 2009. De l'espoir et des solutions sous forme concentrés...

lundi 8 juin 2009

Article à lire: Nuking green myth

Excellent article d'un professeur sur les changements climatiques en Australie.

Source

IF climate change is the inconvenient truth facing our fossil fuel-dependent society, then advanced nuclear power is the inconvenient solution staring right back at the environmental movement.

Since the 1970s, when the Sierra Club and other prominent environmental groups switched from being active supporters to trenchant detractors, nuclear power has fought an ongoing battle to present itself as a clean, safe and sustainable energy source. Today, a mix of myths and old half-truths continue to constrain people's thinking on nuclear power.

Some of the most regularly raised are that uranium supplies will run out, nuclear accidents are likely, long-lived radioactive waste will be with us for 100,000 years, large amounts of CO2 are produced over the nuclear cycle, it's too slow and costly, and a build-up of nuclear power will increase the risk of weapons proliferation.

Yet the surprising reality is that none of these perceived disadvantages of nuclear power need apply in the future. Indeed, many don't apply now.

Worldwide, nuclear power is undergoing a renaissance. There are 45 so-called generation III reactors under construction, including 12 in China, and another 388 are planned or proposed.

These modern reactor designs are efficient, with capacity factors exceeding 90 per cent, and have a high degree of passive safety based on the inherent principles of physics. For instance, the risk of a meltdown as serious as the Three Mile Island incident in the US (which resulted in no fatalities) for GE-Hitachi's Economic Simplified Boiling Water Reactor has been assessed as once every 29 million reactor years. So judging the ESBWR against the type of reactor that was destroyed at Chernobyl in Ukraine is like comparing the safety of a World War I biplane against a modern jetliner.

In terms of costs and build times, standardised, modular, passive-safety designs, which can be factory built and shipped to site, are game changers for the industry.

The future of nuclear power is brighter still. Although the 2006 Switkowski report on nuclear power in Australia hardly mentioned so-called fast reactors, these have the potential to provide vast amounts of clean, baseload energy for thousands of years.

For instance, a technology developed between 1984 and 1994 at the Argonne National Laboratory in the US, the Integral Fast Reactor, which burns up to 99 per cent of the nuclear fuel, leaves only a small amount of waste, which drops below background levels of radiation within 300 years, shuts itself down if the control systems fail or the operators walk away and cannot be used to generate weapons-grade material.

A new book by Tom Blees, Prescription for the Planet, describes this technology in fascinating detail.

The IFR, and other generation IV designs using depleted uranium and thorium as a fuel, offers a realistic future for nuclear power as the world's primary source of sustainable, carbon-free energy. And the cost of new nuclear power is only fractionally more than coal and with even a modest carbon tax is cheaper than coal.

Renewable energy, such as solar and wind, and energy efficiency and conservation, will certainly allow for a partial transition to a low-carbon economy. Indeed, these are Australia's only realistic prospect for emissions reductions during the next decade. But I am convinced that ultimately they will be insufficient for the problems we face. We will need concentrated sources of energy that are not constrained by geography or intermittency and do not require large-scale energy storage and fossil-fuel back-up.

We need Power to Save the World, to borrow from the title of another recent book on nuclear energy, by Gwyneth Cravens.

The only realistic way out of the climate and sustainability pincer is to find ways to generate more energy, not less. This is patently obvious globally, with the rapidly developing mega-economies of China and India, but it also will be true for Australia. Desalination and electric vehicles will be two new, energy-hungry demands.

The Switkowski report said that, under a fast-paced schedule, we could see nuclear power delivering electricity in Australia within 10 years. Perhaps with sufficient will and a decent carbon price we can get there even faster. But it's absolutely clear we must start the process now.

As a climate scientist, I consider the public dialogue on nuclear power to be every bit as urgent as the debate on a carbon price and the need for climate change adaptation. Yet Australia is dragging its feet while places such as China and India are leading.

Australia's sustainable energy future depends critically on choices made today. It's time for green groups to become rational Promethean environmentalists. Why? Because there's no silver bullet for solving the climate and energy crises. The bullets are made of depleted uranium and thorium.

Barry Brook is the Sir Hubert Wilkins professor of climate change at the University of Adelaide.

lundi 1 juin 2009

Le réchauffement provoque 300 000 morts par an?

Selon L'ONU et certaine étude, le réchauffement climatique cause déjà 300 000 morts par an.

Est-ce que quelqu'un peut m'expliquer quel partie du réchauffement dans ce graphique est responsable de ces morts?
Est-ce que ces morts, ne seraient pas causé par autre chose, comme la cupidité des nos institutions corporative supranationale centré sur le profits à tout prix aux dépends de l'humanité?

Nous manquons collectivement de scepticisme et nous laissons les profiteurs de ce monde nous contrôler. Ceci à notre perte et pour leur profit.

Je vous invite à consulter ce manuel du septique et de confronter vos élus sur la réalité qui est devant nous tous. Aussi, passer le mot a votre entourage.

Écouter L'auteur du livre à qui profite le développement durable

Et si l'idée du développement durable n'était qu'une ruse des pays du Nord pour mieux dominer ceux du Sud ? A l'heure du grenelle de l'environnement, une mise au point sur une question d'actualité. L'auteur prône un développement qui profiterait avant tout aux hommes. Est-ce encore possible ?