Wednesday, September 26, 2007

In Beach Enclave, Affluent at Odds Over Effluent

Jeff Clark for The New York Times

Hillary Hauser, an environmental activist, believes getting rid of septic tanks will make the water cleaner.

By REGAN MORRIS Published: September 25, 2007

RINCON POINT, Calif. — Septic tanks or sewers? The question of how to treat wastewater in this exclusive beachfront community is pitting neighbors, surfers and environmentalists against one another.

Surfers have long complained about getting sick at the world-class surf break here that straddles Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties. And blame for the pollution has long been laid on the septic tanks of the multimillion-dollar homes in the gated enclave of Rincon Point.

After nine years of debate and several lawsuits, homeowners are to vote next month on whether to convert from the tanks to a sewer system. While most residents appear to back the conversion, a vocal group of residents is questioning its wisdom, with several saying they feel bullied into paying for an expensive system that would only encourage more development and more pollution.

 

“There is no evidence that our septic tanks are polluting anything,” said a homeowner, Billy Taylor, who with his wife, Brook Harvey-Taylor, is a surfer and an outspoken opponent. “Are we cleaning up the ocean? Or are we just moving our waste into another part of the ocean?”

Tests in 1999 showed signs of human waste in a creek that runs through Rincon Point into the ocean. But no fecal coliform bacteria were found upstream, which proponents of a sewer system say proves the septic tanks are responsible.

Opponents of the change say that since 1999 malfunctioning or old septic tanks have been repaired or replaced. Lauren Orlando, a wastewater expert from Boston University whom they brought in, said that the tests proved nothing and that the bacteria could have come from the diaper of a child swimming in the creek or ocean.

If the sewer vote passes, the owners of Rincon Point’s 72 homes will have to pay about $80,000 each to build the infrastructure to hook up to the waste treatment center in the city of Carpinteria, next to Rincon. The state would contribute about $2.1 million.

In part because Rincon Point property is so valuable — a beachfront cottage considered a “tear down” by at least one agent is now listed for $4.4 million — most residents can afford to pay, either up front or over 30 years.

An environmental advocacy group, Heal the Ocean, has been pushing for sewers for nine years. But Hillary Hauser, who recounts founding the group because surfers asked her to help clean the water off Rincon Point, says “misinformation” could derail the project. Ms. Hauser pointed to what the Carpinteria Sanitary District’s general manager, Craig Murray, said were “absurd” reports that homeowners were being asked to bankroll the project because it is critical to developers of a proposed resort.

Still, Ms. Hauser was optimistic the sewer project would pass because of homeowners like Steve Halsted, who says the “silent majority” of residents support the sewer.

Mr. Halsted said the public perception of Rincon Point was of “ a lot of rich people polluting their ocean.”

“It’s time we do the right thing and get off of our septics and onto sewers and get this cloud away from us,” he said.

Some homeowners also say they want sewers so they can add bathrooms and bedrooms to their homes and not have to worry about litigation or alternative treatment systems that could require permits.

The ballots, which have been mailed to homeowners, will be tallied at a public meeting in Carpinteria on Oct. 16.

If the sewer is turned down and more fecal bacteria is found, enforcement action against individual homeowners is possible, said Harvey Packard of the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board. But it is not clear how violators would be identified. Ms. Hauser speculated that homeowners could be required to put dye in their tanks, so polluters could be singled out.

Hugh Kaufman, a senior engineer with the federal Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, said that too often sewers were thought of as the only solution for water pollution.

“In Rincon, it appears to me the biggest problem for the ocean is the discharge from the sanitary district going into the ocean,” Mr. Kaufman said. “If it is a problem with a particular septic tank, that’s easy and cheap to fix, a heck of a lot cheaper than sewering an area.”

But Mr. Murray and Ms. Hauser noted that the district dumps treated water into the ocean 1,000 feet offshore — not into Rincon Point’s creek.

In Southern California, it is common practice for people to stay out of the water for days after rain because of runoff pollution. But surfers often opt to take their chances in places like Rincon Point and Malibu, which has problems similar to Rincon Point’s.

“I don’t think you can blame the septic tanks for the pollution,” said Ray Gann, who has been surfing Rincon since 1962. “We get surfers getting sick up and down the coast.”

Other surfers disagree. Wayne Babcock, a cofounder of Clean Up Rincon Effluent, said that the beach at Rincon Point was “notorious” for making surfers sick and that the homeowners should be forced to stop using septic tanks. When asked why they continue surfing here, Mr. Babcock and other surfers waxed poetic.

“You don’t have a choice,” Mr. Babcock said. “It’s Rincon. There’s nothing like it.”

Posted by M at 03:14:29 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Healing the Lake

A key battle in the effort to restore Tahoe’s once-pristine waters to crystal clarity is being waged in little-known marshland on the Upper Truckee River

Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Bruce Eisner tromped past a half-dozen geese lolling in the water, marched across the muddy shoreline and stopped on the grassy bank of the Upper Truckee River.

It was a brilliant warm day at Lake Tahoe, the forested mountains rising spectacularly all around, but Eisner was focused on a bit of scenery that few people on the bustling south shore even notice.

As the program manager for the California Tahoe Conservancy, his work and passion is the restoration of the Upper Truckee Marsh, the largest wetlands system in the Lake Tahoe Basin and the source of about a third of all the water - and most of the sediment - that flows into the famous lake.

“That’s the man-made channel,” he said, pointing from the bank upriver toward a long, straight water-filled gully carved into the earth. “The river was altered so significantly, it became like a ditch.”

The marsh and river system, next to the Tahoe Keys Marina in the heart of South Lake Tahoe, is where one of the biggest pushes is being made to restore the water of Lake Tahoe to the crystal-clear prism it was before development brought pollution.

The effort is, in many respects, a symbol for the entire region, which is still suffering from the effects of massive home and commercial construction from the 1950s through the 1970s. Scientists believe the buildings, asphalt and lack of proper drainage are responsible for sending pollutants flowing into the once-pristine lake, causing algae buildup and drastically reducing water clarity over the past 40 years.

The drainage issues are exacerbated by vehicles spewing air pollution and dripping oil and gasoline and by conflagrations like the recent Angora Fire, which consumed large sections of forest that was overgrown as a result of fire-protection activities over the past century.

More than 50 public and private organizations, led by the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and the Tahoe Conservancy, have joined forces over the past decade to address the problem, creating the Lake Tahoe Environmental Improvement Program. It has become a national campaign, fueled in part by the ubiquitous “Keep Tahoe Blue” bumper stickers from the League to Save Lake Tahoe.

One of the top priorities is the Upper Truckee Marsh, which once covered 1,100 acres. It was partially filled with tons of dirt, and the river was channelized by developers starting in the 1950s. The plan was to build a massive lakeside housing development, but lawsuits blocked the way.

Years of litigation resulted in the 1988 purchase by the Tahoe Conservancy of 208 acres and then, in 2000, of the remaining 311 acres of undeveloped marshland, including 1,400 feet along the lake shore. The rest is still privately owned.

More than 80,000 cubic yards of landfill has been removed, and 11 acres of marshland has been restored, but the Upper Truckee and its primary tributary, Trout Creek, are still the single largest source of sediment flowing into the lake.

It will take years, and millions of dollars, to restore the rest of the marsh and set the river on a more natural course through the wetlands. Still, the project is considered crucial in the fight to improve the clarity of Lake Tahoe, the measuring stick by which environmentalists assess the ecosystem of the entire region.

“A wetland like this, at the terminus of a river, is really the last place where the heavy sediments can be deposited,” Eisner said. “The wetlands act like a sponge, sucking up the bad stuff before it enters the lake.”

The problem isn’t limited to the Upper Truckee. About 75 percent of Tahoe marshlands and 50 percent of the meadow habitat was altered during the building boom. Not far from the marsh project is a giant intersection known as “The Y,” a place where a person can see only buildings, asphalt and concrete without a single stretch of open ground or natural vegetation.

“We would like to see this redeveloped,” said Julie Regan, communications and legislative affairs chief for the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, which was created by California and Nevada in 1969 with the goal of protecting Lake Tahoe. “It’s this kind of coverage of the ground that has more impact on the lake than anything else.”

The environmental push in Lake Tahoe began in earnest in 1997 when President Bill Clinton held the first of what has become an annual forum on the lake ecosystem, a meeting that led to the creation of the Environmental Improvement Program.

Clinton reprised his role two weeks ago on the 10th anniversary of that gathering, telling a crowd of more than 1,000 people, including Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., that “we owe the world the preservation of Lake Tahoe.”

“It’s not just for you, your children and your grandchildren,” he said. “It’s for everyone who might ever visit.”

Federal officials announced they would contribute another $45 million to the restoration effort. Over the past decade, $1.1 billion has been spent on 266 restoration projects around the lake, from new roads and drainage to runoff basins and stiff construction requirements.

In all, more than 3,000 acres of private property have been purchased for open space and public use, 739 acres of wetlands have been restored, 374 acres of denuded land have been revegetated, and public pathways and mass transportation has been improved. The U.S. Forest Service and California’s state park system, which own 85 percent of the land area in the Tahoe Basin, have thinned more than 21,000 acres of overgrown forest in an effort to reduce fire danger and prevent erosion.

Despite all the efforts, conditions appear to be getting worse.

The lake is warmer and soupier than ever before, according to a 45-page study released in August by UC Davis scientists. The report, the most comprehensive ever done on the lake, outlines significant changes in weather patterns over the years, including less snowfall and more rain, deteriorating lake clarity and increasing water temperature in the Lake Tahoe Basin, which is encouraging invasions of exotic fish and plant species.

The average temperature of the surface water in July has increased almost 5 degrees since 1999. On July 26, 2006, it was 78 degrees, the warmest in Lake Tahoe’s recorded history, according to the report.

As of last year, the study found, Lake Tahoe was clear to an average depth of 67.7 feet. That’s 4.6 feet less than in 2005. When measurements began in 1968, the lake was clear to an average depth of 102.4 feet.

Regan insisted things are improving, but clearing the lake of pollutants and sediment may take awhile. Lake Tahoe is the second-deepest lake in the nation behind Oregon’s Crater Lake. It is so deep, at 1,645 feet, that a drop of water entering from one of its 63 tributaries will take 700 years to find its way out, according to scientists.

“We’re actually fixing a lot of the environmental damage that occurred in the past,” said Regan, pointing out that only 5,000 of the 42,000 developed properties in the Lake Tahoe Basin were built within the past 20 years.

“Healing the lake is a long process,” she said. “The scientists say it is possible to get back to 100 feet clarity in 20 or 30 years if we make some hard choices.”

Redevelopment is one of the choices that might begin to pay dividends. The Tahoe City Public Utility District recently completed a major renovation of the dam separating the lake from the Truckee River, building a park plaza and bicycle/pedestrian trail.

In an area where plumes of brown runoff could once be seen flowing into the river and lake, native vegetation, gutters, drains and an underground filtration system now capture storm water.

A newly built park at Commons Beach uses similar drainage techniques to reduce runoff into the lake. Miles of bicycle trails are being laid and sidewalks with drainage systems have been installed throughout Tahoe City.

“The reason it was done was to capture the water and improve the drainage and we took it a step further and decided if we are going to do that, let’s make it a walkable town,” said Ron Treabess, director of partnerships and planning for the North Lake Tahoe Resort Association, a nonprofit organization that works with Placer County on how to spend hotel tax money. “We need it for the people who live here. We need it for the visitors and to take care of the lake.”

Similar redevelopment projects are being planned around the lake. Officials also hope to improve bus and shuttle service in the region and establish local and cross-lake ferry systems to ease congestion on the roadways.

Ultimately, keeping Lake Tahoe blue as the bumper sticker commands will require a long-term commitment and collaborative effort among all the stake-holders, including homeowners.

Eisner said he believes the restoration of the Upper Truckee marsh can be completed by 2010, but, like most projects in Lake Tahoe, it will take a collective will to overcome the inevitable squabbles over exactly how the project should proceed.

“Restoring the lake and the various related habitat features is not a decade process, it is a multi-decade process,” Eisner said. “This is a big lake, and it is not going to change overnight.”

Online resources

Lake Tahoe Environment Improvement Program:

links.sfgate.com/ZRQ

Tahoe Regional Planning Agency:

www.trpa.org

Tahoe Conservancy:

www.tahoecons.ca.gov

League to Save Lake Tahoe:

www.keeptahoeblue.org

E-mail Peter Fimrite at pfimrite@sfchronicle.com

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Posted by M at 14:27:13 | Permalink | No Comments »

Thursday, August 30, 2007

More people, more concrete, and lots more heat in Phoenix

An ‘urban heat island’ effect, fed by the city’s growth, is trapping heat and making temperatures soar.
| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
from the August 30, 2007 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0830/p01s01-wogi.html

Arizona is poised to take another record. It’s about as unwelcome as a couple of other firsts – No. 1 in the nation for most illegal immigrants crossing the border, or No. 1 in the nation for identity thefts.

This “one” directly corresponds with another No. 1 – its status as the fastest-growing state in the nation. While news of global warming becomes as common as the wheeze of air conditioners here, Phoenix is fighting a different, if related, problem. In part because of heavy growth – particularly in the Phoenix metro area – heat is being reflected, trapped, and absorbed in concrete, rooftops, and a maze of buildings that blocks wind. At the same time, there’s little vegetation to absorb the heat, and high energy usage generates more.

It’s called the “urban heat-island effect,” and whatever the impact of global warming here, this phenomenon is sending the mercury rising. On Tuesday, Phoenix tied the all-time record of 28 days at 110 degrees or greater in one summer, reached in 1979 and again in 2002. If the temperature rises to 110 degrees one more day this year, Phoenix will set a record.

 

“We’re forecasting 111 for Wednesday, 109 for Thursday, and 110 again on Friday,” says Keith Kincaid, a forecaster with the National Weather Service here. But if the temperature doesn’t hit 110 on those days, he adds, “we have had 110-degree days in September before.”

This summer is hot elsewhere, to be sure. But in few places can you fry an egg on a sidewalk as quickly and thoroughly as you can here. And you’d have to fry a lot of them: Experts say the main reason the number of 110-degree-or-higher days has risen so steadily – and steeply – is rapid growth. In the 1950s, for example, the temperature rose to 110 or higher an average of 6.7 days per year. In the 1960s it was 10.3 days per year; in the 1980s it was 19 days per year, and in the 2000s (through Aug. 21, 2007), 21.9 per year, according to the National Weather Service.

For Westerners living here, it’s about as much fun as an earthquake, a drought, or, well, a 110-degree day. But it does have people’s attention. True, it’s not as difficult as this summer’s devastating floods or fires elsewhere in the US. Many people have swimming pools, and most have air conditioning. But that, too, adds to the problem of the heat-island effect, experts say.

“Every time you use that mechanical air conditioner, you’re throwing hot air back into the environment,” says Jay Golden, an expert on urban climate and energy at Arizona State University in Tempe. “It’s not only the sun and the pavement, but we’re generating more heat because of human adaptation.” And that’s where global warming comes in: The hotter it is, the more we need to cool off; and the more we try to cool off – with air conditioning, for instance – the more heat-trapping greenhouse gases and “waste energy” we create, feeding both phenomena.

No escape in the Phoenix nights

The lows at night are rising, too. Three decades ago, the nighttime low here was about 30 degrees cooler than the days. Today, it is on average only 20 degrees cooler. That’s because cities are slower to cool off at night, retaining their heat in roads and buildings.

Dr. Golden points to differing temperatures between downtown Phoenix and a rural weather station at the Casa Grande National Monument, about 50 miles southeast. In 1950, he says, it was only six degrees warmer in Phoenix than at the Casa Grande Monument. By 2000, the temperature in Phoenix was 12 degrees higher. Now, it is almost 14 degrees warmer in the city than in the adjacent rural areas.

That has a huge impact on water consumption and electricity generation, he says. Researchers in his department recently calculated the correlation between nighttime temperatures and water consumption. “A one-degree nighttime [temperature] increase equals 677 gallons more on average per household per year,” he says – due as much to evaporation from pools, irrigation, and agriculture as to human consumption. Golden and his colleagues study these rises in temperatures for urban areas from here to London and Beijing.

“We are trying to do two things,” Golden says. “One is to quantify the impacts from this national trend of climate change in the broad context…. Then, we try to provide policymakers sound science and engineering to understand what the impacts are.”

Looking toward solutions

Here in the Phoenix area, for example, 40 percent of the heat-island effect is due to paved surfaces, according to Golden. “We’re trying to transition to pervious pavement, which would allow for water penetration,” he says.

That, he adds, would support the growth of urban vegetation, which is typically removed for new building projects. And urban vegetation planted at intervals, as well as the water pervious pavement retains, would lead to cooler temperatures at night.

“If we were to take all the surfaced parking lots in this city and cover them with 50 percent tree cover,” that would significantly decrease the surface temperatures, he says. His department is also studying the survival methods of this area’s early inhabitants, such as the Hohokam with their earthen structures.

Today, two-story houses are popular, he says. But what if policymakers were to ban future building of two-story houses – or at least upper floors – in order to make buildings shorter, and less prone to trapping heat. Instead, housing plans could include basements, he says, which would naturally remain cooler – though the prospect of lower levels has long been considered too expensive or difficult, despite the plethora of inground pools.

The good news about these rises in temperatures, if there is any, Golden says, is that local governments are beginning to pay attention to how they design cities, how closely they space houses, and how much forestry and agriculture they plan.

Phoenix, for example, is pushing for more open-space parks with trees downtown. And the city of Mesa is offering $500 rebates to residents who convert their yards from lawns to xeriscape, including desert trees that provide canopy shade.

Posted by M at 21:15:40 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, August 27, 2007

Why is Greece on fire?

Saturday’s high winds helped spread wildfires across Greece, scorching villages and sending smoke across the Ionian Sea, as seen in this satellite image from NASA.

As at least 170 wildfires spread, many say that a lack of environmental protection is to blame.

| Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
from the August 27, 2007 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0827/p01s03-woeu.html

The scenes of desperation played out on television: residents phoned local media outlets begging to be saved as walls of fire descended on their houses and villages, while overstretched firefighters battled more than 170 blazes that erupted seemingly simultaneously.

 

On Sunday, at least 51 people were confirmed dead in the worst series of fires to hit Greece in decades. And still, fires, many of them blamed on arsonists, continued to spread across the country, fanned by gale-force winds and fed by vegetation dried out from long months of drought.

Now, as authorities struggle to deal with the immediate crisis, the fires have pushed the environment to the top of the political agenda in a country where such issues previously won little attention. With Greek national elections less than three weeks away, questions are being raised about how seriously the government takes the protection of the country’s open spaces.

Calling the fires an “unspeakable tragedy,” Greek Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis declared a state of emergency Saturday, along with three days of mourning. For the time being, campaigning in the election has been called off and some analysts suggest that the election may even be delayed. Indeed, the fires have spawned outrage and anger across the country.

“Right now we’re in state of hiatus, and no one knows how it will finally shake out, but clearly it will be a key issue,” says John Psaropoulos, editor of the Athens News, from near Zaharo, one of the hardest hit areas of Greece where dozens have been killed.

This has been one of the hottest and driest summers in recent history, and much of southern Europe has been plagued by forest fires. In Greece, the dry conditions have played a role. But many of the fires, government and forestry experts say, have been set by arsonists, hoping to clear land for development.

“So many fires breaking out simultaneously in so many parts of the country cannot be a coincidence,” Mr. Karamanlis said in a nationally televised address Saturday. “The state will do everything it can to find those responsible and punish them.”

Already, at least three people have been arrested for setting this weekend’s fires; one, accused of setting a blaze that killed six people, is being charged for murder as well as for arson. But in the past, local activists say, the state has had a poor record of catching and prosecuting these types of arsonists. The problem persists, they say, and in large part perpetrators have previously gotten away with it.

“Most of the reasons concern changing of land use – from forest to something else [such as] construction, or building, or to grazing, or agriculture,” explains Nikos Georgiadis, head forest officer for the Greek office of WWF (the World Wildlife Fund). “But the response from the government has not been effective at all.”

But there is beginning to be a backlash against government inaction – as Greek villagers desperately battle blazes using garden hoses and buckets of water – that is likely to intensify as a result of this weekend’s fires.

Earlier this summer, after a fire burned one of the last remaining forests on Mount Parnitha, near Athens, thousands of people took the streets outside the Greek parliament demanding more action from the government to protect forests and ensure that burned areas were replanted.

Many observers saw that fire as a turning point in local politics toward a greater green consciousness.

“People in Athens, but also around Greece, are becoming more green,” says Dr. Georgiadis, who said that hundreds of people called the WWF office in the aftermath of that fire, outraged and offering to help. “Since the response that we got after the big forest fire on Parnitha mountain, there is a big change. More and more people became sensitive on environmental matters.”

Greece has one of the worst records in the European Union on environmental issues, and on forest protection in particular. Environmental groups say recycling is in its infancy, development is largely unregulated, and protected areas neglected.

Although forested areas cannot legally be built on, that law is difficult to enforce because Greece – unlike every other country in the European Union – has no national record of what land is forested.

For now, the country is focusing on putting out the blazes and helping those affected. Thousands are now homeless and whole villages destroyed. At least 12 countries have responded to Greece’s plea for international help.

But ultimately, says Georgiadis, Greece must develop a long-term plan for saving its natural spaces.

“Forests are an ecosystem that needs time to grow, time to manage,” he says. “It’s not something you can do in one or two weeks.”

Posted by M at 11:23:53 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Cork Debate Pits Wine vs. Environment

By SARAH SKIDMORE, Associated Press Writer
Sunday, August 26, 2007 (08-26) 11:45 PDT Portland, Ore. (AP) –

It’s the main event in the battle over how to close a bottle of wine: Cork vs. screw cap. To some, it’s a matter of style. To others, it’s an issue of quality. And now, it’s a question of what is best for the environment.

Cork was the standard closure for ages. But winemakers began moving to alternatives in the past decade because of problems with cork that were ruining wines. Screw caps became a popular option and are now seen topping many fine wines, such as some bottles from Napa’s PlumpJack winery that sell for $100 or more.

But some winemakers and environmental groups are urging wineries to return to basics — saying cork is the best choice for the environment.

“This is one of those things where something we have done for years that is traditional is actually the sustainable choice,” said Jim Bernau, owner and founder of Willamette Valley Vineyards in Turner. “How often can you say that for anything we’ve done in the past 50 to 100 years?”

Cork is a renewable material — made from the fiber stripped from cork trees that can then regrow. The largest and most profitable use of this harvested cork worldwide is for wine stoppers.

Several environmental groups say the growing popularity of alternatives like screw caps are threatening Mediterranean cork forests, where cork is mainly grown. Cork oak covers about 6.7 million acres in the region and provides income for more than 100,000 people, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

Cork forests are predominantly privately owned, which puts them at greater risk for neglect or sale for development if the popularity of cork lessens.

Cork producers say they have seen the overall production of wine stoppers drop in the past decade. And last year, The World Wildlife Fund estimated that if winemakers continue their move away from cork, three-quarters of the western Mediterranean’s cork oak forests could be lost within the decade, threatening jobs and ecosystems.

The Rainforest Alliance recently jumped into the fray, offering a certification system for wineries to verify that their cork comes from cork forests that meet Forest Steward Council’s social, economic and environmental standards — lending assurance to winemakers and consumers that the cork was properly handled.

The issue is complicated for winemakers, who are often swayed by issues of sustainability but have been burned by cork’s quality issues in the past.

The primary problem that drove vintners away from cork was “tainting” or “corking.” Cork taint is actually a chemical compound called TCA, which results from an interaction of mold, chlorine and other organic compounds that produce a moldy or musty smell and flavor that makes wine undrinkable.

Estimates vary, but some wineries say as much as 15 percent of their wine has been tainted in the past. Screw caps, by comparison, don’t have issues with tainting and are a fraction of the cost. However, they are usually made from nonrenewable material — typically aluminum with a plastic insert. That also makes them difficult to recycle.

The debate is particularly hot in Oregon, where sustainability is a badge of honor among winemakers. Several wineries boast the use of solar panels, biodiesel-fueled tractors and organic farming practices. There are salmon-safe wines, which ensure the winemakers’ practices don’t harm water that feeds into salmon waterways. And 16 Oregon wineries recently pledged to go carbon-neutral in the next 18 months.

“I think all of us are paying a lot more attention to (the environment),” said Bernau, whose winery got the first Rainforest Alliance sustainable cork certification this year. “When you start seeing the temperature change in your vineyard, you start to pay more attention to it.”

But environmental concerns are not enough to sway some winemakers.

Willie Lunn, senior winemaker with Argyle Winery in Dundee, Ore., said his business became solely screw caps in 2002 and will be staying put for the time being.

“The reason we went to screw cap was purely a quality point of view,” Lunn said. “For us, wine making is about the wine.”

And as consumers’ resistance to screw caps or romantic ties to cork have died down some, screw caps seem to have strengthened their footing. Winemakers say they are even seeing some consumers ask for screw caps for ease of use.

The cork industry did react as winemakers fled to other options, cleaning up its production and screening process to cut down on taint, such as using better wood and quicker drying methods. The world’s largest cork maker, Amorim, said it has spent several million dollars on its upgrades.

That’s what won Bernau, whose winery once successfully sued its cork maker over taint, back to cork. He says the level of taint has been dramatically reduced with some of the cork industry’s new innovations.

But it is still unresolved for some.

“It’s a very complex issue. I don’t have a problem with cork,” said Dave Paige, winemaker at Adelsheim Vineyard in Newberg, Ore. “I’m just acknowledging that sooner or later someone is going to come up with something relative to cork that is equal in quality, acceptable to the public and recyclable. Then the conversation is over.”

Posted by M at 14:14:16 | Permalink | No Comments »

As China Roars, Pollution Reaches Deadly Extremes

Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

China’s industrial growth depends on coal, which is plentiful but polluting, from strip mines like this one in Shenmu, Shaanxi Province.

By JOSEPH KAHN and JIM YARDLEY Published: August 26, 2007

BEIJING, Aug. 25 — No country in history has emerged as a major industrial power without creating a legacy of environmental damage that can take decades and big dollops of public wealth to undo.

But just as the speed and scale of China’s rise as an economic power have no clear parallel in history, so its pollution problem has shattered all precedents. Environmental degradation is now so severe, with such stark domestic and international repercussions, that pollution poses not only a major long-term burden on the Chinese public but also an acute political challenge to the ruling Communist Party. And it is not clear that China can rein in its own economic juggernaut.

Public health is reeling. Pollution has made cancer China’s leading cause of death, the Ministry of Health says. Ambient air pollution alone is blamed for hundreds of thousands of deaths each year. Nearly 500 million people lack access to safe drinking water.

Chinese cities often seem wrapped in a toxic gray shroud. Only 1 percent of the country’s 560 million city dwellers breathe air considered safe by the European Union. Beijing is frantically searching for a magic formula, a meteorological deus ex machina, to clear its skies for the 2008 Olympics.

Environmental woes that might be considered catastrophic in some countries can seem commonplace in China: industrial cities where people rarely see the sun; children killed or sickened by lead poisoning or other types of local pollution; a coastline so swamped by algal red tides that large sections of the ocean no longer sustain marine life.

China is choking on its own success. The economy is on a historic run, posting a succession of double-digit growth rates. But the growth derives, now more than at any time in the recent past, from a staggering expansion of heavy industry and urbanization that requires colossal inputs of energy, almost all from coal, the most readily available, and dirtiest, source.

“It is a very awkward situation for the country because our greatest achievement is also our biggest burden,” says Wang Jinnan, one of China’s leading environmental researchers. “There is pressure for change, but many people refuse to accept that we need a new approach so soon.”

China’s problem has become the world’s problem. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides spewed by China’s coal-fired power plants fall as acid rain on Seoul, South Korea, and Tokyo. Much of the particulate pollution over Los Angeles originates in China, according to the Journal of Geophysical Research.

More pressing still, China has entered the most robust stage of its industrial revolution, even as much of the outside world has become preoccupied with global warming.

Experts once thought China might overtake the United States as the world’s leading producer of greenhouse gases by 2010, possibly later. Now, the International Energy Agency has said China could become the emissions leader by the end of this year, and the Netherlands Environment Assessment Agency said China had already passed the milestone.

For the Communist Party, the political calculus is daunting. Reining in economic growth to alleviate pollution may seem logical, but the country’s authoritarian system is addicted to fast growth. Delivering prosperity placates the public, provides spoils for well-connected officials and forestalls demands for political change. A major slowdown could incite social unrest, alienate business interests and threaten the party’s rule.

But pollution poses its own threat. Officials blame fetid air and water for thousands of episodes of social unrest. Health care costs have climbed sharply. Severe water shortages could turn more farmland into desert. And the unconstrained expansion of energy-intensive industries creates greater dependence on imported oil and dirty coal, meaning that environmental problems get harder and more expensive to address the longer they are unresolved.

China’s leaders recognize that they must change course. They are vowing to overhaul the growth-first philosophy of the Deng Xiaoping era and embrace a new model that allows for steady growth while protecting the environment. In his equivalent of a State of the Union address this year, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao made 48 references to “environment,” “pollution” or “environmental protection.”

The government has numerical targets for reducing emissions and conserving energy. Export subsidies for polluting industries have been phased out. Different campaigns have been started to close illegal coal mines and shutter some heavily polluting factories. Major initiatives are under way to develop clean energy sources like solar and wind power. And environmental regulation in Beijing, Shanghai and other leading cities has been tightened ahead of the 2008 Olympics.

Yet most of the government’s targets for energy efficiency, as well as improving air and water quality, have gone unmet. And there are ample signs that the leadership is either unwilling or unable to make fundamental changes.

Land, water, electricity, oil and bank loans remain relatively inexpensive, even for heavy polluters. Beijing has declined to use the kind of tax policies and market-oriented incentives for conservation that have worked well in Japan and many European countries.

Provincial officials, who enjoy substantial autonomy, often ignore environmental edicts, helping to reopen mines or factories closed by central authorities. Over all, enforcement is often tinged with corruption. This spring, officials in Yunnan Province in southern China beautified Laoshou Mountain, which had been used as a quarry, by spraying green paint over acres of rock.

President Hu Jintao’s most ambitious attempt to change the culture of fast-growth collapsed this year. The project, known as “Green G.D.P.,” was an effort to create an environmental yardstick for evaluating the performance of every official in China. It recalculated gross domestic product, or G.D.P., to reflect the cost of pollution.

But the early results were so sobering — in some provinces the pollution-adjusted growth rates were reduced almost to zero — that the project was banished to China’s ivory tower this spring and stripped of official influence.

Chinese leaders argue that the outside world is a partner in degrading the country’s environment. Chinese manufacturers that dump waste into rivers or pump smoke into the sky make the cheap products that fill stores in the United States and Europe. Often, these manufacturers subcontract for foreign companies — or are owned by them. In fact, foreign investment continues to rise as multinational corporations build more factories in China. Beijing also insists that it will accept no mandatory limits on its carbon dioxide emissions, which would almost certainly reduce its industrial growth. It argues that rich countries caused global warming and should find a way to solve it without impinging on China’s development.

Indeed, Britain, the United States and Japan polluted their way to prosperity and worried about environmental damage only after their economies matured and their urban middle classes demanded blue skies and safe drinking water.

But China is more like a teenage smoker with emphysema. The costs of pollution have mounted well before it is ready to curtail economic development. But the price of business as usual — including the predicted effects of global warming on China itself — strikes many of its own experts and some senior officials as intolerably high.

“Typically, industrial countries deal with green problems when they are rich,” said Ren Yong, a climate expert at the Center for Environment and Economy in Beijing. “We have to deal with them while we are still poor. There is no model for us to follow.”

In the face of past challenges, the Communist Party has usually responded with sweeping edicts from Beijing. Some environmentalists say they hope the top leadership has now made pollution control such a high priority that lower level officials will have no choice but to go along, just as Deng Xiaoping once forced China’s sluggish bureaucracy to fixate on growth.

But the environment may end up posing a different political challenge. A command-and-control political culture accustomed to issuing thundering directives is now under pressure, even from people in the ruling party, to submit to oversight from the public, for which pollution has become a daily — and increasingly deadly — reality.

Perpetual Haze

During the three decades since Deng set China on a course toward market-style growth, rapid industrialization and urbanization have lifted hundreds of millions of Chinese out of poverty and made the country the world’s largest producer of consumer goods. But there is little question that growth came at the expense of the country’s air, land and water, much of it already degraded by decades of Stalinist economic planning that emphasized the development of heavy industries in urban areas.

For air quality, a major culprit is coal, on which China relies for about two-thirds of its energy needs. It has abundant supplies of coal and already burns more of it than the United States, Europe and Japan combined. But even many of its newest coal-fired power plants and industrial furnaces operate inefficiently and use pollution controls considered inadequate in the West.

Expanding car ownership, heavy traffic and low-grade gasoline have made autos the leading source of air pollution in major Chinese cities. Only 1 percent of China’s urban population of 560 million now breathes air considered safe by the European Union, according to a World Bank study of Chinese pollution published this year. One major pollutant contributing to China’s bad air is particulate matter, which includes concentrations of fine dust, soot and aerosol particles less than 10 microns in diameter (known as PM 10).

The level of such particulates is measured in micrograms per cubic meter of air. The European Union stipulates that any reading above 40 micrograms is unsafe. The United States allows 50. In 2006, Beijing’s average PM 10 level was 141, according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics. Only Cairo, among world capitals, had worse air quality as measured by particulates, according to the World Bank.

Emissions of sulfur dioxide from coal and fuel oil, which can cause respiratory and cardiovascular diseases as well as acid rain, are increasing even faster than China’s economic growth. In 2005, China became the leading source of sulfur dioxide pollution globally, the State Environmental Protection Administration, or SEPA, reported last year.

Other major air pollutants, including ozone, an important component of smog, and smaller particulate matter, called PM 2.5, emitted when gasoline is burned, are not widely monitored in China. Medical experts in China and in the West have argued that PM 2.5 causes more chronic diseases of the lung and heart than the more widely watched PM 10.

Perhaps an even more acute challenge is water. China has only one-fifth as much water per capita as the United States. But while southern China is relatively wet, the north, home to about half of China’s population, is an immense, parched region that now threatens to become the world’s biggest desert.

Farmers in the north once used shovels to dig their wells. Now, many aquifers have been so depleted that some wells in Beijing and Hebei must extend more than half a mile before they reach fresh water. Industry and agriculture use nearly all of the flow of the Yellow River, before it reaches the Bohai Sea.

In response, Chinese leaders have undertaken one of the most ambitious engineering projects in world history, a $60 billion network of canals, rivers and lakes to transport water from the flood-prone Yangtze River to the silt-choked Yellow River. But that effort, if successful, will still leave the north chronically thirsty.

This scarcity has not yet created a culture of conservation. Water remains inexpensive by global standards, and Chinese industry uses 4 to 10 times more water per unit of production than the average in industrialized nations, according to the World Bank.

In many parts of China, factories and farms dump waste into surface water with few repercussions. China’s environmental monitors say that one-third of all river water, and vast sections of China’s great lakes, the Tai, Chao and Dianchi, have water rated Grade V, the most degraded level, rendering it unfit for industrial or agricultural use.

Grim Statistics

The toll this pollution has taken on human health remains a delicate topic in China. The leadership has banned publication of data on the subject for fear of inciting social unrest, said scholars involved in the research. But the results of some research provide alarming evidence that the environment has become one of the biggest causes of death.

An internal, unpublicized report by the Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning in 2003 estimated that 300,000 people die each year from ambient air pollution, mostly of heart disease and lung cancer. An additional 110,000 deaths could be attributed to indoor air pollution caused by poorly ventilated coal and wood stoves or toxic fumes from shoddy construction materials, said a person involved in that study.

Another report, prepared in 2005 by Chinese environmental experts, estimated that annual premature deaths attributable to outdoor air pollution were likely to reach 380,000 in 2010 and 550,000 in 2020.

This spring, a World Bank study done with SEPA, the national environmental agency, concluded that outdoor air pollution was already causing 350,000 to 400,000 premature deaths a year. Indoor pollution contributed to the deaths of an additional 300,000 people, while 60,000 died from diarrhea, bladder and stomach cancer and other diseases that can be caused by water-borne pollution.

China’s environmental agency insisted that the health statistics be removed from the published version of the report, citing the possible impact on “social stability,” World Bank officials said.

But other international organizations with access to Chinese data have published similar results. For example, the World Health Organization found that China suffered more deaths from water-related pollutants and fewer from bad air, but agreed with the World Bank that the total death toll had reached 750,000 a year. In comparison, 4,700 people died last year in China’s notoriously unsafe mines, and 89,000 people were killed in road accidents, the highest number of automobile-related deaths in the world. The Ministry of Health estimates that cigarette smoking takes a million Chinese lives each year.

Studies of Chinese environmental health mostly use statistical models developed in the United States and Europe and apply them to China, which has done little long-term research on the matter domestically. The results are more like plausible suppositions than conclusive findings.

But Chinese experts say that, if anything, the Western models probably understate the problems.

“China’s pollution is worse, the density of its population is greater and people do not protect themselves as well,” said Jin Yinlong, the director general of the Institute for Environmental Health and Related Product Safety in Beijing. “So the studies are not definitive. My assumption is that they will turn out to be conservative.”

Growth Run Amok

As gloomy as China’s pollution picture looks today, it is set to get significantly worse, because China has come to rely mainly on energy-intensive heavy industry and urbanization to fuel economic growth. In 2000, a team of economists and energy specialists at the Development Research Center, part of China’s State Council, set out to gauge how much energy China would need over the ensuing 20 years to achieve the leadership’s goal of quadrupling the size of the economy.

They based their projections on China’s experience during the first 20 years of economic reform, from 1980 to 2000. In that period, China relied mainly on light industry and small-scale private enterprise to spur growth. It made big improvements in energy efficiency even as the economy expanded rapidly. Gross domestic product quadrupled, while energy use only doubled.

The team projected that such efficiency gains would probably continue. But the experts also offered what they called a worst-case situation in which the most energy-hungry parts of the economy grew faster and efficiency gains fell short.

That worst-case situation now looks wildly optimistic. Last year, China burned the energy equivalent of 2.7 billion tons of coal, three-quarters of what the experts had said would be the maximum required in 2020. To put it another way, China now seems likely to need as much energy in 2010 as it thought it would need in 2020 under the most pessimistic assumptions.

“No one really knew what was driving the economy, which is why the predictions were so wrong,” said Yang Fuqiang, a former Chinese energy planner who is now the chief China representative of the Energy Foundation, an American group that supports energy-related research. “What I fear is that the trend is now basically irreversible.”

The ravenous appetite for fossil fuels traces partly to an economic stimulus program in 1997. The leadership, worried that China’s economy would fall into a steep recession as its East Asian neighbors had, provided generous state financing and tax incentives to support industrialization on a grand scale.

It worked well, possibly too well. In 1996, China and the United States each accounted for 13 percent of global steel production. By 2005, the United States share had dropped to 8 percent, while China’s share had risen to 35 percent, according to a study by Daniel H. Rosen and Trevor Houser of China Strategic Advisory, a group that analyzes the Chinese economy.

Similarly, China now makes half of the world’s cement and flat glass, and about a third of its aluminum. In 2006, China overtook Japan as the second-largest producer of cars and trucks after the United States.

Its energy needs are compounded because even some of its newest heavy industry plants do not operate as efficiently, or control pollution as effectively, as factories in other parts of the world, a recent World Bank report said.

Chinese steel makers, on average, use one-fifth more energy per ton than the international average. Cement manufacturers need 45 percent more power, and ethylene producers need 70 percent more than producers elsewhere, the World Bank says.

China’s aluminum industry alone consumes as much energy as the country’s commercial sector — all the hotels, restaurants, banks and shopping malls combined, Mr. Rosen and Mr. Houser reported.

Moreover, the boom is not limited to heavy industry. Each year for the past few years, China has built about 7.5 billion square feet of commercial and residential space, more than the combined floor space of all the malls and strip malls in the United States, according to data collected by the United States Energy Information Administration.

Chinese buildings rarely have thermal insulation. They require, on average, twice as much energy to heat and cool as those in similar climates in the United States and Europe, according to the World Bank. The vast majority of new buildings — 95 percent, the bank says — do not meet China’s own codes for energy efficiency.

All these new buildings require China to build power plants, which it has been doing prodigiously. In 2005 alone, China added 66 gigawatts of electricity to its power grid, about as much power as Britain generates in a year. Last year, it added an additional 102 gigawatts, as much as France.

This increase has come almost entirely from small- and medium-size coal-fired power plants that were built quickly and inexpensively. Only a few of them use modern, combined-cycle turbines, which increase efficiency, said Noureddine Berrah, an energy expert at the World Bank. He said Beijing had so far declined to use the most advanced type of combined-cycle turbines despite having completed a successful pilot project nearly a decade ago.

While over the long term, combined-cycle plants save money and reduce pollution, Mr. Berrah said, they cost more and take longer to build. For that reason, he said, central and provincial government officials prefer older technology.

“China is making decisions today that will affect its energy use for the next 30 or 40 years,” he said. “Unfortunately, in some parts of the government the thinking is much more shortsighted.”

The Politics of Pollution

Since Hu Jintao became the Communist Party chief in 2002 and Wen Jiabao became prime minister the next spring, China’s leadership has struck consistent themes. The economy must grow at a more sustainable, less bubbly pace. Environmental abuse has reached intolerable levels. Officials who ignore these principles will be called to account.

Five years later, it seems clear that these senior leaders are either too timid to enforce their orders, or the fast-growth political culture they preside over is too entrenched to heed them.

In the second quarter of this year, the economy expanded at a neck-snapping pace of 11.9 percent, its fastest in a decade. State-driven investment projects, state-backed heavy industry and a thriving export sector led the way. China burned 18 percent more coal than it did the year before.

China’s authoritarian system has repeatedly proved its ability to suppress political threats to Communist Party rule. But its failure to realize its avowed goals of balancing economic growth and environmental protection is a sign that the country’s environmental problems are at least partly systemic, many experts and some government officials say. China cannot go green, in other words, without political change.

In their efforts to free China of its socialist shackles in the 1980s and early 90s, Deng and his supporters gave lower-level officials the leeway, and the obligation, to increase economic growth.

Local party bosses gained broad powers over state bank lending, taxes, regulation and land use. In return, the party leadership graded them, first and foremost, on how much they expanded the economy in their domains.

To judge by its original goals — stimulating the economy, creating jobs and keeping the Communist Party in power — the system Deng put in place has few equals. But his approach eroded Beijing’s ability to fine-tune the economy. Today, a culture of collusion between government and business has made all but the most pro-growth government policies hard to enforce.

“The main reason behind the continued deterioration of the environment is a mistaken view of what counts as political achievement,” said Pan Yue, the deputy minister of the State Environmental Protection Administration. “The crazy expansion of high-polluting, high-energy industries has spawned special interests. Protected by local governments, some businesses treat the natural resources that belong to all the people as their own private property.”

Mr. Hu has tried to change the system. In an internal address in 2004, he endorsed “comprehensive environmental and economic accounting” — otherwise known as “Green G.D.P.” He said the “pioneering endeavor” would produce a new performance test for government and party officials that better reflected the leadership’s environmental priorities.

The Green G.D.P. team sought to calculate the yearly damage to the environment and human health in each province. Their first report, released last year, estimated that pollution in 2004 cost just over 3 percent of the gross domestic product, meaning that the pollution-adjusted growth rate that year would drop to about 7 percent from 10 percent. Officials said at the time that their formula used low estimates of environmental damage to health and did not assess the impact on China’s ecology. They would produce a more decisive formula, they said, the next year.

That did not happen. Mr. Hu’s plan died amid intense squabbling, people involved in the effort said. The Green G.D.P. group’s second report, originally scheduled for release in March, never materialized.

The official explanation was that the science behind the green index was immature. Wang Jinnan, the leading academic researcher on the Green G.D.P. team, said provincial leaders killed the project. “Officials do not like to be lined up and told how they are not meeting the leadership’s goals,” he said. “They found it difficult to accept this.”

Conflicting Pressures

Despite the demise of Green G.D.P., party leaders insist that they intend to restrain runaway energy use and emissions. The government last year mandated that the country use 20 percent less energy to achieve the same level of economic activity in 2010 compared with 2005. It also required that total emissions of mercury, sulfur dioxide and other pollutants decline by 10 percent in the same period.

The program is a domestic imperative. But it has also become China’s main response to growing international pressure to combat global warming. Chinese leaders reject mandatory emissions caps, but they claim that the energy efficiency plan will slow growth in carbon dioxide emissions.

Even with the heavy pressure, though, the efficiency goals have been hard to achieve. In the first full year since the targets were set, emissions increased. Energy use for every dollar of economic output fell but by much less than the 4 percent interim goal.

In a public relations sense, the party’s commitment to conservation seems steadfast. Mr. Hu shunned his usual coat and tie at a meeting of the Central Committee this summer. State news media said the temperature in the Great Hall of the People was set at a balmy 79 degrees Fahrenheit to save energy, and officials have encouraged others to set thermostats at the same level.

By other measures, though, the leadership has moved slowly to address environmental and energy concerns.

The government rarely uses market-oriented incentives to reduce pollution. Officials have rejected proposals to introduce surcharges on electricity and coal to reflect the true cost to the environment. The state still controls the price of fuel oil, including gasoline, subsidizing the cost of driving.

Energy and environmental officials have little influence in the bureaucracy. The environmental agency still has only about 200 full-time employees, compared with 18,000 at the Environmental Protection Agency in the United States.

China has no Energy Ministry. The Energy Bureau of the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s central planning agency, has 100 full-time staff members. The Energy Department of the United States has 110,000 employees.

China does have an army of amateur regulators. Environmentalists expose pollution and press local government officials to enforce environmental laws. But private individuals and nongovernment organizations cannot cross the line between advocacy and political agitation without risking arrest.

At least two leading environmental organizers have been prosecuted in recent weeks, and several others have received sharp warnings to tone down their criticism of local officials. One reason the authorities have cited: the need for social stability before the 2008 Olympics, once viewed as an opportunity for China to improve the environment.

Posted by M at 01:50:58 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, August 24, 2007

As an energy-saver, the clothesline makes a comeback

A ‘Right to Dry’ movement is growing, with some states introducing legislation to override clothesline bans.
 
| Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
from the August 24, 2007 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0824/p01s03-ussc.html

It started out innocently enough. Concerned about global warming and her family’s energy consumption, Michelle Baker wanted to hang her wash outside. She scoured stores for a clothesline durable enough to withstand Vermont winters and classy enough for her Waterbury backyard. She came back empty-handed every time.

So Ms. Baker and her husband made their own: a few lines of pristine white rope hung between two Vermont cedar poles. Soon, friends and neighbors were enviously asking where they got it. Born of enterprise, enthusiasm, and wet shirts flapping in the breeze, the Vermont Clothesline Co. debuted in April.

And just in time, as a national clothesline – or “Right to Dry” – movement escalates. In fact, Vermont is the latest state to introduce a bill that would override clothesline bans, which are often instituted by community associations loath to air laundry even when it’s clean. Now, clothesline restrictions may be headed the way of bans on parking pickup trucks in front of homes, or growing grass too long – all vestiges of trim and tidy hopes that may not fit with the renewed emphasis on going green.

 

“This trend … is about people making a little change to help the environment as opposed to something like solar panels which is much more of an investment,” Baker says.

Baker’s orders have steadily risen. While most initial buyers were fellow Vermonters, the company now receives orders from across the United States, including such places as Tennessee, Texas, and Arkansas.

Over in New Hampshire, clothesline activists have asked for legislative advice from Project Laundry List – the first US clothesline activist group – according to the group’s founder, Alexander Lee. And North Carolina recently passed a law invalidating city or county limitations on “energy devices based on the use of renewable resources.” In addition, the clothesline movement there is hoping to find a “test case” to legally establish clothesline rights in North Carolina, Mr. Lee says.

“We get e-mails and calls every day from people wanting to know where they can get the materials to hang out their clothes or how to deal with homeowners’ association rules,” says Bryan Wentzell, the group’s chairman of the board. “[The Right to Dry movement] could take off all across the country,” he says, noting that independent states like Vermont will be the first to jump on the bandwagon.”

Maybe. In June, Vermont’s Gov. Jim Douglas (R) vetoed an energy bill with Right to Dry language – though not because of the clothesline clause, according to state Sen. Dick McCormack (D). Proponents are now revising a bill to be introduced in January, one similar to legislation in Florida and Utah that prohibits “state or local laws or regulations or private contracts from limiting the ability of dwellers to erect and use clotheslines for the drying of clothes.”

Dryer data

At last count, in 2005, there were 88 million dryers in the US, according to the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers. Annually, these dryers consume 1,079 kilowatt hours of energy per household, creating 2,224 pounds of carbon-dioxide emissions.

Besides the global-warming and cost-saving aspects of clotheslines, proponents say hanging out clothes requires exercise and time outside – elements that are missing from many Americans’ lives. “So much of our lives have become automated,” Mr. Wentzell says. Plus, using a clothesline makes “your clothes last longer and smell better.”

Despite clotheslines’ purported benefits – and a scent that can rival dryer sheets’ “fresh rain” fragrance – “the overwhelming majority” of community associations regulate or ban them, says Frank Rathbun, vice president of communications for the Community Associations Institute in Virginia. Sixty million Americans belong to one of 300,000 homeowners’ associations, according to the institute, a national organization of community association leaders and management firms.

The rules exist for aesthetics, residents’ expectations, and property values, Mr. Rathbun says: Environmental leanings have to be balanced against the desires of those who find their neighbors’ blue jeans, khakis, and the occasional flannel nightgown to be unseemly, unsightly, or both.

Senator McCormack dismisses such concerns. Amid growing concern about global warming, he says, governments have a responsibility to protect people’s right to voluntarily conserve, if not actively support energy conservation.

Protesters and quilters

On Sept. 14, Project Laundry List will participate in an event at the energy company Hydro-Québec, protesting the diverting and damming of the Rupert River. Such damming would not have to occur, Lee says, if people adopted energy-saving methods like clotheslines. The group will display messages on T-shirts and sheets hung from – what else? – a 400-foot clothesline.

The group is getting the word out through other art forms, too. Several painters and quilters who specialize in depictions of clotheslines have donated work to Project Laundry List to be auctioned off, with proceeds going to the cause.

And, hoping for more, Wentzell is thinking outside the box and beyond the laundry room: “Hey, maybe we’ll get some celebrities taking up the cause by hanging out their laundry behind their mansions!”

Posted by M at 11:11:07 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, August 20, 2007

Factory Eyesores, Transformed

Kirk Condyles for The New York Times
Seasons at Plainview, which has 134 homes, is one of several developments going up on sites once used for industrial purposes.
By VALERIE COTSALAS ; Published: August 19, 2007

PLAINVIEW, N.Y.

JUDGING from a number of developments going up on Long Island, former industrial sites are sometimes just the kinds of properties that communities are happy to see transformed.

In fact, Jan Burman, who is responsible for four new projects, has found that converting dead factories into clustered housing developments can earn the blessing of local government. For one thing, industrial sites do not arouse the protective instincts of civic groups that might otherwise oppose new housing. The trick — for Mr. Burman and other developers — is finding the right factory in the right location.

 

“The smart builders ahead of the trend have realized that developing industrial sites is the way to go,” said Robert A. Wieboldt, the executive vice president of the Long Island Builders Institute, a building industry organization. “In most cases, people feel that if the reuse is more attractive than the existing industrial use, they want it.”

Take Seasons at Plainview, the Burman development now being built on a 10-acre former fiberglass shower manufacturing plant within a large industrial park. All the 134 pale yellow town houses at the site, which cost roughly $35 million to build, have been sold.

The town of Oyster Bay, which encompasses Plainview, normally would not approve homes within an industrial area, according to Leslie Maccarone, a deputy commissioner for the town’s department of planning and development.

But Mr. Burman discovered a way to separate the residential traffic from the industrial park’s roads by carving an entrance from the Long Island Expressway service road. That, and the environmental studies showing that the site was clean of contaminants, helped gain approval for the housing.

With its 2,000-square-foot clubhouse and indoor pool, Seasons at Plainview borders the expressway and has only the one entrance, on the North Service Road, flanked by stone walls that act as sound barriers.

All of its units are attached in groups of four — two second-floor units and two on the ground floor — and each home has windows on three walls.

Twenty-eight of its units, for first-time buyers, were sold below market rates: two-bedroom units priced at $250,000 for those with incomes of up to $100,000 a year. In exchange for including them, Mr. Burman was allowed by the town to build more houses per acre than are usually permitted. They look just like the remaining 106 homes priced at market rates, around $500,000 for buyers 55 and older.

Ninety of the units have certificates of occupancy, and people are moving in, Mr. Burman said. There is a waiting list for the remaining units, he said; they are completed but awaiting inspection.

The other three residential communities that Mr. Burman’s Garden City-based firm, Engel Burman Group, is building on former industrial sites are: 63 attached homes, priced from $350,000 to $375,000, that will replace an old lamp manufacturing factory in Amityville; 53 single-family homes in West Hempstead being developed with James Neisloss of Meadowood Properties on the site of a now-demolished scientific toy factory, priced from $450,000 to $600,000; and 61 homes in Oceanside, priced around $400,000, replacing an old warehouse formerly owned by South Nassau Communities Hospital.

Suffolk County, too, offers examples of using development to transform industrial eyesores, and sometimes commercial ones as well. The town of Brookhaven plans to rezone the 19-acre site of a defunct sand mine in the hamlet of Middle Island, as well as a 13-acre former multiscreen movie theater and parking lots in the hamlet of Coram. The goal: to create town centers and closely clustered new housing — in fact, to create separate identities. What exists now are sprawling subdivisions separated by lengths of strip malls.

Connie Kepert, a Brookhaven councilwoman, says she envisions “pedestrian-oriented” centers for an area where three neighboring hamlets are barely distinguishable from one another. “Right now,” Ms. Kepert said, “you don’t know if you’re in Coram, Selden or in Middle Island.”

Kenneth Faltischek is the developer for the sand-mine property, Ms. Kepert said, and the developer Parviz Farahzad owns the movie theater property.

When it comes to older homes on Long Island, there are increasing numbers for sale and fewer buyers to go around. But at the same time there is stronger demand for new homes, closer together in gated communities, where monthly fees cover maintenance, said Maryann Caputo, general manager of the real estate firm Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes and Estates, based in Woodbury in Nassau County.

“We find that it doesn’t matter what age group you’re in,” Ms. Caputo said. “It’s a type of lifestyle that many people want.”

Couples and parents who work long hours, she added, “want to spend their free time with their children or socializing rather than fixing up the house or mowing the lawn.”

Posted by M at 04:49:45 | Permalink | No Comments »

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

On Playing Fields, Grass Is an Endangered Species

Oscar Hidalgo/The New York Times

Brandon Diaz, 13, fires a pitch to his father at a grass ball field in Battery Park City. To remain in good playing condition, the field must be left idle all winter and once a week the rest of the year.

Published: August 13, 2007

Brandon Diaz ran across the springy grass infield, stood atop the pitcher’s mound and, with a short windup, let loose with a curveball to his father, John. The hardball zipped through the warm air, landing squarely in his father’s glove with a plop that could barely be heard above the raspy hiss and clang from a high-rise under construction across the street.

Oscar Hidalgo/The New York Times

Gabriela Curbelo Zeidman and her brother, Daniel Zeidman, kick a ball on synthetic turf in Red Hook, Brooklyn. The field is in constant use on weekends.

Though Brandon, 13, now plays in a Brooklyn league, he and his father love these fields of thick grass near their apartment in Battery Park City. In fact, a lot of people love the fields, which are home to youth baseball and soccer leagues, as well as adult teams. More young players are on the way, too, judging from the apartment buildings that continue to rise on nearby blocks.

The almost unnaturally pastoral feel of these green oases may be a thing of the past, however, because of the area’s continued popularity with families. To avoid the ignominy of being trampled underfoot, the grass fields need to be idle all winter, and once a week the rest of the year. As a result, there is increasing pressure from league coaches to install synthetic turf to allow the fields to be used year-round to meet local demand.

Mr. Diaz would like to keep the local fields real. Then again, he has seen nature’s niceties give way to the local building boom.

“I used to have a river view in my apartment until they put up another building,” he said. “Look at the shadows on this field. We used to have nice sun in the afternoons until the buildings blocked it off. I’m not crazy about artificial turf, but everything is doable, you know.”

A similar need to increase recreational space across the city has led parks officials to rely on synthetic turf to reclaim bleak asphalt yards or extend the life of scraggly soccer fields. Its proponents also cite its cheaper maintenance costs.

“New Yorkers expect to play where they want, when they want,” said Adrian Benepe, the commissioner of parks and recreation. “Our biggest need is to make a lot of places where kids can play so we can address health risks like obesity.”

But the use of turf has also prompted other health concerns, about the possible dangers posed by the materials used to make it, as well as its ability to soak up so much sunlight that it heats up to extreme temperatures.

Scientists at Columbia University who analyzed satellite thermal images of New York City the past two summers concluded that synthetic turf fields were up to 60 degrees hotter than grass fields. They attributed the difference to the pigments used in making the turf, as well as the turf’s reliance on filaments that increase the surface area that soaks up heat. More important, the turf lacked grass’s ability to vaporize water and cool the air.

Stuart Gaffin, an associate research scientist at the Center for Climate Systems Research at Columbia University, said the synthetic fields get almost as hot as a tar rooftop.

“I’ve been telling everybody that turf is among the hottest surfaces in the city,” said Dr. Gaffin, who is publishing the study later this year. “With the scale we are talking about here, I think they are going to be hazardous places to be during heat waves in the city. I know the public wants these spaces. My position is: Can we engineer a lower temperature?”

Even without the heat, some opponents of turf have raised questions about the recycled tire rubber that is ground up and sprinkled on the turf to give it added cushion and springiness. William Crain, a psychology professor at City College who paid to have the rubber analyzed, said it contained “worrisome” levels of a known carcinogen, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, or P.A.H. The manufacturer said the chemical could not be absorbed by the skin or stomach, but Dr. Crain insisted further study was needed.

His objections to turf go beyond any possible physical effects it may have. As a psychologist who has studied children and play, he insisted that natural fields stimulated children’s mental development by increasing their curiosity and their powers of observation.

“In a city where there is very little nature left, kids are already living in a synthetic indoor setting,” he said. “When they go outside, they should feel grass and soil. Instead, we’re putting artificial surfaces outside, too.”

Similar arguments are found in Battery Park City, as a task force studies the pros and cons of synthetic and natural fields. The group, whose members said they were leaning toward synthetic turf, will make its recommendation to the Battery Park City Authority , which oversees the area’s development. A final decision may come by the year’s end.

James F. Gill, the authority’s chairman, said he wanted to be sure that his concerns about adverse effects on health were addressed to his satisfaction. At the same time, he understands the unceasing pressure to provide recreational spaces in an area that has seen its population double in the last 10 years. While the area was built on landfill, some from the construction of the original World Trade Center, many residents are now proud of its environmentally friendly reputation.

“We have been on point with respect to being green and protecting the environment here,” Mr. Gill said. “I know artificial turf is not in keeping with that, but it is always a balancing thing. You get something, but you give something up.”

Mark Costello, a parent who is the president of the Downtown Little League, said synthetic turf would double the available playing time.

“The alternative for me is sports fields or my kid in front of a computer playing video games,” he said. “I would love my kids to play on grass for aesthetic reasons. That is just not the reality we are facing. Artificial turf serves urban leagues better.”

The prospect of losing the grass fields at Battery Park City has alarmed Christian DiPalermo, the executive director of New Yorkers for Parks, an advocacy group that last year issued a report urging caution on installing the fields.

“That would be a sin,” he said. “To take away grass in an area with a dearth of parkland just for a few more games? That does not make sense.”

The local support for the fields was typical, Mr. DiPalermo said, of other communities in the city where the turf is seen as a quick fix, rather than part of a long-term strategy. “We know the problem is overcapacity,” he said. “But where is the vision? We don’t even know how long this turf will last.”

Yet the city keeps installing the synthetic fields wherever possible. Commissioner Benepe said that while he was not aware of any hazards posed by turf, he had asked the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to review the current research on synthetic turf and make recommendations if necessary. He added that his department was trying to see if changing the color or consistency of the rubber used for the fields would result in lower temperatures, too.

“There is nothing inherently dangerous to these fields,” Mr. Benepe said. “What is dangerous is letting kids play touch football on asphalt. There is a greater likelihood of head injuries in a fall than any danger from ingesting the rubber crumbs.”

A few days ago in Red Hook, Brooklyn, a handful of young people kicked soccer balls and ran drills on a smooth synthetic field. At a grass pitch across the street, only pigeons pecked though the scraggly blades that ringed the large bald spot between the goal posts.

The area is so popular that both fields are in nonstop use on the weekends. John Triana, a trainer and coach, said he kept his players off the grass field because it had too many rocks and sometimes even glass shards.

He admitted that the synthetic field sometimes looked like a desert in the summer, with shimmering waves of heat rising from its surface. On hot days, he makes his players take water breaks every six minutes. Sometimes they get blisters on their feet.

Still, he said, most players liked it.

“You can run faster,” he said. “It’s like playing on a pool table.”

Personally, he preferred playing on grass. It gave him a visceral kick back to his college days.

“You smell the grass and it reminds you of competition,” he said. “Dewy grass in the morning is like, wow, the preseason. It sends chills up my spine like nothing else. Artificial turf doesn’t give you that.”

Posted by M at 05:35:52 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Beijing smog clouds Olympic forecast

June’s blue-sky tallies were the worst in seven years, but officials promise clear days for the Games.
| Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
from the August 08, 2007 edition - http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0808/p07s02-woap.html

With exactly one year to go, Beijing is pulling out all the stops for the 2008 Summer Olympics, a sporting event billed as China’s coming-out party.

Organizers say the construction frenzy that is reshaping this ancient city is well on track for completion, as are preparations to host more than 10,000 international athletes and millions of spectators during the three-week event.

The opening gala is timed for maximum good fortune, according to Chinese folklore: 8:08 p.m. on 8/8/08. Volunteers are lining up to help China put on a show of national pride and worldly ambition.

But Beijing’s choking air pollution and the vagaries of summer skies are threatening to spoil the party. In recent months, a thick haze of auto emissions, swirling dust, and factory smoke has shrouded the city’s rising skyline. Official “blue skies” tallies – a somewhat liberal definition of air quality – are running behind target this year. June was the worst month on record in seven years, with 15 days classified as substandard.

 

Still, that noxious cloud may well be gone by next August, along with the crush of cars that clog the city’s roads. Olympics teams have been reassured that China has contingency plans to clear the air and ensure a cobalt-blue backdrop when the TV cameras pan skyward. Among the possible measures are restrictions on private cars, factory closures, and a building ban during the runup to the games.

The inexorable rise in China’s car culture, spurred by massive government and private investment in the auto industry, presents a challenge to any clean-air campaign, as well as to ambitious targets to improve energy efficiency by 20 percent within three years. Long after the Olympics crowds leave, many of Beijing’s 15 million-plus residents will aspire to own a car.

But having promised to stage a “Green Olympics,” Beijing has invested heavily in new subway lines and other mass transit projects that could yield long-term benefits, as well as river cleanups and tree plantings. China is now rethinking its urban transit policies, says Liang Benfan, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and an adviser on transport to the Beijing municipal government.

Officials from BOCOG, the Beijing organizing committee, say that, despite setbacks, these efforts are paying off: The number of “blue skies” days rose from 100 in 1998 to 241 in 2006.

“Good air quality and blue skies in Beijing are not only important for the opening ceremony, but also for the health of the athletes, the spectators, and the people of the city,” Executive Vice-President Wang Wei told a press conference Monday in an upbeat assessment of Beijing’s preparedness.

Last year, Beijing ordered a half-million cars off the streets during a six-day summit held with African heads of states. Seen as a dry run for an Olympics shutdown, it cut auto emissions by 40 percent and yielded blue skies and traffic-free streets.

Still, says Gilbert Van Kerckhove, a consultant to BOCOG, “I see very little progress [on air pollution]. The situation is very ugly.” But, he adds, “during the Olympics, no problem. They’ll stop everything for three months, the sky will clear up, and there will be no pollution.”

While predictions of clear skies may seem at odds with reality, Beijing and other cities are beginning to turn the corner on air pollution, argues David Dollar, country director of the World Bank, which is funding a slew of environmental projects in China. Sulfur emissions, which used to darken the air during much of the year, have fallen sharply over the past decade as urban households have switched from coal to gas for heating and cooking.

At the same time, though, auto emissions have climbed as more Chinese take to the roads. Beijing has 3 million registered cars, a number expected to reach 3.3 million by next August.

Mr. Dollar says that surveys indicate that urban residents are increasingly willing to bear the cost of tackling pollution amid rising concern over its impact. A joint study by the World Bank and China’s Environmental Protection Agency recently estimated that the health costs associated with air pollution were equivalent to 3.8 percent of China’s GDP, or $76 billion.

“The Olympics is a one-time event, and it’s important. But air and water issues are much bigger than the Olympics,” he says.

Some of Beijing’s summer smog is seasonal, say experts, stoked by southerly winds and tamped down by fog. Emissions from nearby provinces with heavy industry and coal mines add to the problem. The Olympics construction boom, which should wind down by the end of the year, is also adding dust and grit to the mix. Nearly 10,000 construction sites dot the city, according to state media.

Still, the drive by Beijing’s urban planners to promote mass transit over private vehicles is yielding some success, claims Mr. Liang.

One example is a fleet of new buses run on cleaner fuel that cut through traffic along dedicated lanes. Adding fast buses should encourage commuters to leave their cars at home, particularly when the cost of driving is on the rise because of higher gas prices and parking charges. “I don’t drive much now. I take the bus. It’s cheaper,” he says.

Then there’s the electric bicycle, a zippier version of the sturdy two-wheeler that once defined mobility in China. “If families go by electric bike, they can travel fast, and they won’t buy a car,” says Liang.

Posted by M at 11:07:09 | Permalink | No Comments »