Celebrate Earth Day at the Green Apple Festival Sunday, April 20th!
April 17, 2008 by Jamie S. Dent
Filed under Cottonwood Institute News
On Sunday, April 20, in Denver’s City Park, Cottonwood Institute will be participating in the largest Earth Day celebration in the history of the Front Range! The 1st Annual Green Apple Music Festival will occur from Noon to 6 p.m., and will feature a wide variety of green businesses, organic and natural food vendors, nonprofit organizations, speakers, and music by local and national bands such as the Neville Brothers, Rose Hill Drive, and the Duo. The Green Apple Music Festival is FREE and will be occurring simultaneously in eight US Cities, making it America’s largest Earth Day Festival. Come be part of the fun as we celebrate the beauty and majesty of Mother Earth.
The Cottonwood Institute is looking for CAP and CI Alumni to help volunteer at the Green Apple Music Festival at City Park. We need help representing the Cottonwood Institute at our booth, while soaking in some rays and listing to great live music. If you can make it down to Denver for an hour or two to help us out, please email Jamie Dent: jamie@cottonwoodinstitute.org.
For more information about the event, go to Green Apple Festival Website.
How Green are Solar Panels?
April 4, 2008 by Eric Ellison
Filed under Environmental Sustainability
In many circumstances, the products we use in our efforts to be more
sustainable have a bigger footprint than we think. Recent articles in
the Washington Post and from the Worldwatch Institute
show how the production of large amounts of polysilicon in China are
dumping toxic wastes on the surrounding landscape—the homes of poor
Chinese villagers. The byproducts from these industrial processes
include silicon tetrachloride, which ruins the soil chemistry and
releases poisonous fumes. The situation is ironically inconsistent with
the end use of this valuable product, which is usually for photovoltaic
solar panels, which turn solar energy into "green, renewable"
electricity. This is actually only one example of the ways that efforts
by the developed world to become sustainable only result in more
environmental degradation and socio-economic disparities.
The
situation in [one Chinese] village points to the environmental
trade-offs the world is making as it races to head off a dwindling
supply of fossil fuels. Forests are being cleared to grow biofuels like
palm oil, but scientists argue that the disappearance of such huge
swaths of forests is contributing to climate change. Hydropower dams
are being constructed to replace coal-fired power plants, but they are
submerging whole ecosystems under water. –washingtonpost.com
Producing
polysilicon is extremely profitable due to high demand, and the Chinese
manufacturers are increasing their profits by refusing to invest in
recycling technology, which is available now. The manufacturers
apparently have the law on their side. They maintain that their
practices are in keeping with all Chinese environmental restrictions,
and while formal complaints have been made to portions of the
government responsible for environmental protection, no action has been
taken.
Guiding Questions:
To what extent is the industrial production of a product the
responsibility of the various stake holders: the government, the
impacted villagers, the company producing the material, the companies
that buy the materials to produce the end product, and the eventual
consumer? Also, what can a potential consumer (or just a concerned
individual) in the US do to oppose this kind of situation?
Survivorman Movie Night
April 1, 2008 by Lucy Parham
Filed under Cottonwood Institute News
One man - alone in the wilderness for seven days. No food, no shelter, no fresh water, no tools. Survivorman star Les Stroud has what it takes to survive, do you? To find out, join the Cottonwood Institute and REI this Thursday, April 3, 2008 as we host a Survivorman Movie Night. We will watch an episode of the hit television show Survivorman and hold an informal discussion to share survival priorities, tips, strategies, and techniques. This free clinic will be held at 7pm at the REI store in Boulder.




