Blog Action Day is here! Do you know what you’re writing about?
If you need some help or inspiration we’ve put together the eight best sites to check out with some of the most interesting, inspiring, informative and intriguing climate change resources out there that can help you with your post.
Here we go:
1. Google has built a site where you “explore the potential impacts of climate change on our planet Earth and find out about possible solutions for adaptation and mitigation, ahead of the UN’s climate conference in Copenhagen in December.” They’ve got a Google Earth mashup, a introductory video featuring Al Gore, and more. Visit: Climate change in Google Earth
2. Climate change is a human issue. It isn’t just about saving the planet and communities around the world face serious threats from the climate crisis. The TckTckTck campaign has created a great tool for learning the stories behind the human face of climate change. It’s called the Climate Orb and it is an animated interactive tool housing first-hand stories searchable by country, keyword and timeframe. Explore the Climate Orb.

3. There’s a lot more to solving the climate crisis than just sitting back and leaving it to world leaders and policy wonks to figure everything out. Need inspiration? Meet Alec Loorz, the creator of Kids vs. Global Warming. He describes it as “group of kids that educate other kids about the science of global warming and empower them to take action.” The site shows that everyone really can play a role in tackling climate change.
4. Just the facts, that’s what some people want—as long as there are lots of cool charts, graphs and clear explanations of course. That’s what’s great about the Pew Center for Global Climate Change’s “Facts and Figures” site, it is filled with all the charts and graphs you need to get a much clearer picture of what causes climate change and what effects it has. If you want even more information you can also check out their entire Climate Change 101 series.

5. At this point you’ve probably heard of “carbon footprints” and you might have even used an online calculator to figure out what yours is (and thus what your impact is on climate change). The problem is that there are just so many calculators out there now it can be hard to figure out which one to use. Thankfully you can learn about your options from MNN’s 15 Best Carbon Calulators survey.
6. OK, but how will climate change affect you? What are the consquences that are mostly likely to impact your day-to-day life? Take a look at this list of The Top 100 Effects of Climate Change. From “Say Goodbye to Pinot Noir” to “More Bear Attacks” to “Malaria Spreading in South America” to “More Stray Kitties” it seems like climate change is going to have a lot of consequences, some big, some not so big.

7. On the other side of the coin, you might want to be a little more optimistic and review the science behind “10 Solutions for Climate Change” which details what we can actually do to solve these problems personally and as a larger society.
8. Finally, don’t forget that people all around the world are getting involved and taking action. Next week, on October 24, 350.org is organizing the International Day of Climate Action. You can visit their site and see what people all around the world are planning to do next week to demonstrate their commitment to stopping climate change.
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Robin
Ben
Judith
Danny
Mark
Matt
Easton
Mike





Alena
October 14th, 2009
thanks – these links are great.
Ram
October 14th, 2009
Hi,
As you people wake up for the Blog Action day, the Indian Government has let the first edible GM Food by approving the Bt Brinjal (egg plant for you) against major protest across the country.
Brinjal is a humble vegetable grown by small farmers for their own consumption and for the market with seeds retained and exchanged amongst themselves.
This step will move us towards the take over of this vegetable by the industrial corporates, making it more carbon footprint intense. Do include a note to the Minister for Environment & Forestry, Government of India as part of the Blog Action Day.
Mari Lynch
October 14th, 2009
Thanks for the resources, including #7: Scientific American’s \10 Solutions.\ (BTW, their tenth solution was pretty sobering.) Oct 15-19, my 21 yr old is headed to the Bioneers Conference. It’s her 4th yr and she loves this annual conference because it’s all about eco solutions! There are satellite conferences in 19 US cities, with the main conference in San Rafael, CA. Check out http://www.bioneers.org.
Galit of SlowLane
October 14th, 2009
Thanks Robin, You’re great!
I was thinking really hard the last couple of days, have tons of ideas for posts but disqualified them one after the other….
I just got a good idea from your post!
Bye now! time to write!
Good luck everyone!
Richard Matthews
October 14th, 2009
Great stuff, pleasure to be part of it all!
Govinda
October 14th, 2009
Please visit the web : http://bhutannews.blogspot.com/2009/10/climate-change-coping-change-happily.html
Valid Information
October 14th, 2009
This is useful information for me. Writing the article on Climate change soon.
BMGM
October 15th, 2009
OK, my post is up.
http://badmomgoodmom.blogspot.com/2009/10/blog-action-day-2009-climate-change.html
Robby
October 15th, 2009
Many events have not we all want to have happen everywhere. In Indonesia, a prolonged summer occurs, forest fires occurred and homes everywhere. Farmers crop failure and others.
This is also due to climate change is happening now.
solution .. please!
greeting: secretultrarich.blogspot.com
Srecko
October 15th, 2009
pozivam ljude iz Hrvatske i Bosne i Hercegovine na poduzimanje necega oko ovog naseg jedinog planeta,
Martha Lyimo
October 15th, 2009
Hi,
this site is very usefull. I learn new things.
Luiz Ramos da Silva Filho
October 15th, 2009
Good event.
But I can´t access my register on.
Mindanaoan
October 15th, 2009
Very helpful links! Thank you
Jorge Isaac
October 15th, 2009
Good event, Great idea.
Nelson Tembra
October 15th, 2009
Old reasons for climate changes…
Power-Games over the Environment Issue
Nelson Tembra
A few days ago, the brazilian Press put out the news: “The Tucuruí Lock Nº2 has been taken by protesters. The “invaders” belong to various “social movements” and submit a heavy negotiation backlog alleging their seeking for environmental impacts solutions.
It is reported that the Dam-Affected People Movement has adopted a new approach over the past two years by networking with other “social movements”, such as MST (Landless People Movement), FETRAF (Family-farming Workers Federation) and other ones by strengthening their common claims. The heavy claims-list bunches the various groups involved in the occupation together.
Among the claims by the “Social Movements” acting in the area affected by the Tucuruí Lake, are listed the impacts caused by the logging activity, charcoal production and land exploitation, i.e., the secondary impacts caused by the spontaneous colonization process brought about by the Locks construction.
The claiming leaders argue over the excessively slow-moving indemnification funds freeing in favor of the Locks construction affected families, as well as over the lack of a straight-forward and well-defined position by the Municipal Government regarding the land-area to be set aside for the building of 300 popular houses and an open-air fair around the area from which the Locks Lake is foreseen to emerge.
This type of protest-action tends to stretch on and on, as well as to further stiffening, as long as the Government does not ensure the proper and efficient application of the rules for environmental licensing of such highly-impacting projects, particularly when social and economic aspects are to be taken into account.
The Writer’s purpose is not to “warm over” this issue. The problem and its causes have indeed been recurring, have been taking place over and over, repeatedly, though in different situations, throughout the very history of Brazil and govern-rulings by various partisan colors, as time wears on, and always connected to the implementing of infra-structure mega-projects and those aimed at natural resources exploitation, no matter if renewable ones, or not.
All actions and proper measures are required to be foreseen and plainly defined, in full harmony with prevailing Legislation, by means of the control instruments, or, environment-committed projects. They should not be limited to the compensation effect range, but, on the other hand, they should aim at mitigating the negative impacts, as well as enhancing the positive ones, highlighting those of social-economic and environmental value.
In the State of Pará, what has regrettably taken place is the fact that, neither COEMA (the Environment State Council), which counts on a strong Civil Society representation, nor Citizens themselves, have taken advantage of such favoring Law provisions, throughout the public hearings which are held way-before the prospective studies are finished.
In hindsight, no matter if whites or Indians, as soon as they reach out for compensations, what they end up being after, in fact, are non-existing rights, inasmuch as, outside the requirements and parameters that expressly ruled the Environmental Licensing obtained by a company, all and any action expected from such a company has to be rigorously considered as “voluntary” and/or “self-free/goodwill-initiative”. The State machine ends up powerless to legally charge supposed infringers, while even the renewal and releasing of further Licenses could as well be bound up to fair compensations fulfillments.
Participatory democracy should ensure its own space as well as stimulate formal democracy to further broaden and strengthen civil society’s influence upon Government-made decisions. This sort of dynamics should help changing the very meaning of “governing”. A new perspective for decisions making would arise, leading non-governmental actors to share responsibilities with public sector managers, thus playing an effective role in the public scenario.
Whoever labors on the painstaking drudgery of consolidating participatory democracy, finds himself faced with the challenge of reconciling the efficiency of the made decisions with democratic ethics. For such, one ought to count on rulers’ political goodwill in giving in and sharing some power, and, from those occupying these participation spaces, the ability to attain top-improvement would be expected. The challenge would be for both winning the real participation space, and for consolidating the patterns of participatory and sustainable co-management, every time such public places are taken over by a population stratum. The participatory democracy exercise requires, though, permanent collective efforts, by both society and government.
Besides being quite more complex, the participation-based decision-makings do require much more hard-work in meetings, negotiations and processes organizing than those arisen from a centralized and non-participation model do. Therefore, it would be highly recommendable that participants’ neither time nor energies be wasted throughout these meetings.
The problems emerge and can be depicted from each participating individual’s attitude along the Public Hearings. Barriers to the success of these meetings usually arise from the participants’ very own attitudes. Different viewpoints, interests and goals may come into shock and further harden the situation if the issues inherent to the process are not duly clarified and negotiated. Background differences, like previous training and experience, as well as the institutional role played by each participant, are enough to establish this unevenness. Participation quality and ethics are jeopardized by a centennial legacy of a clientele-dependent, ego-cultist and authoritarian political culture.
The afore factors all contribute to nourishing certain “Power-Games”, which may have none, little or greater relevance in the decisions-making process. The problem becomes more serious when these “games” playing overmatch the goals, not only upon each meeting or Public Hearing, but throughout the whole participation process in general. As time wears on, the bona fide participant starts losing faith in the process and stepping out of it, frustrated by feeling exclusion and the perception of being inserted in something where the real purpose being fought over is nothing but only power-holding. The lack of ethics and true effectiveness leads the process to fading away both quantity and quality-wise.
It is such an issue that requires unselfishness and personal efforts by one in order to act open in relation to others, as well as negotiation, tolerance, patience, briskness and discipline skills, among other requirements. What mostly endangers a participatory meeting are the authoritarian mechanisms, typical to an anti-democratic political culture, played, to a greater or lesser extent, by the participants, impelled either by habit or deliberate purpose. It is important to be able to identify such mechanisms and to prompt the actions that will lead the participants to understand them, so that the work-group can replace them by democratic alternatives, opposed to indifference, to the hidden scene play, to the empty rhetoric dispute, to the unfocussed acting, to the generalized speech, to the conspiracy theory or the persecution syndrome.
marcos antonio
October 15th, 2009
yo apoyo este día es importante pronunciarse y esta forma es la mejor forma creo que todo lo que deseamos fuertemente lo podemos resolver si creemos fielmente
Adalto Ap. Aleixo
October 15th, 2009
Imagine se o planeta terra tivesse consciência, Inteligência… Guardada as devidas proporções, o ser humano estaria para o planeta terra como o vírus da AIDS está para o ser humano. Somos vírus inteligente.
Os vírus anteriores, os mais antigos, conseguiam manter o equilíbrio natural entre as espécies evitando a proliferação… Agora, não funcionam mais, perderam sua eficácia, pois o vírus “ser humano”, como o vírus da AIDS, é inteligente, e sempre encontra uma maneira de se livrar. Fabricamos vacinas para ficarmos imunes ao controle da natureza.
O planeta “sabe”, ou melhor, “sente”, que já perdeu esta batalha e está em contagem regressiva caminhando em direção do aniquilamento total: A desertificação… Está desesperado esperando um milagre!
Oh! Senhor! Tenha piedade do planeta terra. Livre-o deste terrível mal!!!
arianny moran
October 15th, 2009
is a very generous gesture the people created this page, and all so that all we bring a grain of sand on this page (http://ariannymoran.blogspot.com/) have published something that will serve d helps:)