The Green Generation is an initiative of Kenyan Environmentally conscious generation It is an initiative that will enable the young generation conserve their environment since it focuses more on the current issues affecting the country and the globe as a whole. As the incoming conservationists we should try as much as possible to create awareness to the young as well as the young at heart as to why we should conserve our environment.
BLOGGING FOR A SUSTAINABLE TOMORROW!!
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Living Green Tips
We all know that it is imperative that we recycle. Did you know that you could recycle more than glass, paper, metal, and plastic? You can also recycle clothes, electronics, appliances, and even food. If you have the initiative to create a compost bin in your yard, you will have natural fertilizer that needs no chemicals to give your flowers and grass a boost in growth. Clothes that can be worn should be donated. However, for the clothes that you can no longer wear, you can create amazing patchwork quilts. Broken dishes make for perfect materials for mosaic works of art. If the dishes are glass, you can recycle those through normal recycle bins. For electronics such as cellphones, places such as Staples offer recycling stations.
Another thing that you can do around the house to make your home and lifestyle greener is to check your windows for energy efficiency. Windows that are more efficient can cut down on energy dependency during the winter months. If you have the money as well as the type of home able to use them, solar panels are a wonderful investment. Not only will the panels cut your electric bills down significantly, but also they have the capability to make you money over time. Solar energy is clean and free once you have the proper equipment. Another good green idea that you could install is a rain catching system. Storing rainwater is an easy way to cut down on your water bill because you can use that water to wash your car, water your lawn, or water your flowerbeds.
The most important thing you should take into consideration when you are going green is how much time you have to dedicate to being green. Take for instance your trips to the grocery store. If you take cloth bags and freezer bags with you, dependence on plastic bags with you individually can cut out at least one hundred plastic bags a year if not more. That plastic can be used for more important things such as medical supplies. You have to have time and patience when you move to a greener lifestyle. However, after experiencing the benefits of green living, you will not want to stop pressing forward.
As mentioned earlier, protecting the future of our world is also a great way to show our children how to take responsibility. When deciding to go green, explain why you are changing to this type of lifestyle to your children. Tell them what they can do to contribute to being green. Getting them involved with the process will make it easier for them to continue green living when they are adults. Start a tradition that may last for generations and help protect this world centuries to come.
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Butterflies react to climate change
Friday, September 16, 2011
Insects: the future of food? Would you find it easier to eat insects and arachnids if you knew you already do?
Insects: the future of food?
"Is it not a wonder", he asked, "that people do not look around them for the many gastronomic treasures lying neglected at their feet? Prejudice, prejudice, thy strength is enormous!" As Victorian kitchen classics go, this flimsy tract might not be viewed with the same affection as more famous works by Isabella Beeton or Agnes Marshall, but it's quite possible that Holt's time has at last arrived.
The UN appears to think so. Their Food and Agriculture Organisation is exploring the possibilities of insects providing a greater share of global food needs, and the statistics appear to suggest that a future of crunchy critter consumption isn't beyond the realms of possibility.
With the planet's population heading ever more rapidly towards the seven billion mark (we'll get there in October) and an ever-less-economical reliance on meat, farmed insects might just provide an answer. They produce much more meat per kilogram of feed than the more usual farmed animals do, and more of their body mass is edible.
What's more, they produce a fraction of the greenhouse gasses pumped out by cattle and are rich in minerals, vitamins and proteins. Just four locusts provide as much calcium as a glass of milk, while mopani worms, gram-for-gram, contain more protein than beef.
Insects are already eaten in four-fifths of nations, from the grasshopper tacos popular in Mexico to China, where almost anything goes. I once pointed at a piece of delicious, dripping honeycomb on display at a restaurant in Xi'an, Shaanxi province, and was somewhat surprised to be served a plateful of baby bees.
Elsewhere, western tourists are approaching the idea of insect and arachnid cuisine with more open minds. The consumption of a delicious Cambodian deep-fried tarantula was once the preserve of macho food tourists like Anthony Bourdain. Then the experience was added to the gap-year checklist alongside full moon parties in Koh Phangan and bungee jumps in Queenstown. The signs are that the "edible insect movement" is finally being treated much more seriously with chefs getting in on the act. Even the New Yorker, that bible of urban sophistication, recently devoted 6,500 words to the subject.
But insects taste terrible, right? Well, perhaps not. In his introduction to Man Eating Bugs‚ The Art and Science of Easting Insects author Peter Menzel writes that a toasted witchetty grub tastes like "a tender cheese omelette rolled in a smoky philo-dough shell" and that Ugandan termites are akin to "roasted peanut skins, only juicier".
Suspicious that Mr Menzel has a book-selling agenda that renders him incapable of saying bad things about such morsels, I make my way to the Natural History Museum in London's swinging Kensington, where an event is being held. It's called "Edible insects: food for the future? A tasting event with a difference", and a trio of experts are lined up to inform the uninformed.
There's the NHM's resident insect identifier Stuart Hine, Meredith Alexander, a "hunger expert" for the charity ActionAid, and Daniel Creedon, head chef at Archipelego, on whose menu chilli and garlic locusts nestle comfortably alongside chocolate-covered scorpions.
The first thing we discover is that we're already eating insects. And yes, that "we" includes you. That delicious bar of chocolate you've saved for later? In all probability it contains 60 or more insect fragments (a type of contamination known in the trade as "insect filth"). That sweetcorn? The average tin is home to a couple of sizeable larvae chunks. And frozen broccoli? You really, really don't want to know.
The knowledge that we're already seasoned insect eaters, albeit unwittingly, makes the food that follows easier to swallow for the assembled diners. The waxworm larvae have a very subtle sweetness, while the fried crickets leave a pleasantly nutty aftertaste. Toasted weaver ants taste of very little‚ not even toast, and the chocolate ant wafers are delicious but taste almost entirely of chocolate.
My favourite treat is an off-menu item, a scorpion dipped in chocolate and processing a gentle alcoholic kick. The worst? No-one seems keen on the silkworm pupae. South Koreans buy these like crisps at convenience stores, but they don't go down well here. "Like rancid fish sauce", says Creedon.
In-between courses it's Q&A time. Which wine works best with insects? The answer, apparently, is "beer". How many locusts would one need to eat for breakfast to replace two eggs? "About 74", says Hine, tongue firmly in cheek. Is the recent tourist predilection for spiders endangering the tarantula population? Can one eat insects or arachnids live? Are insects sentient beings capable of sensing cruelty? Hine suggests not, but a vegan in the audience argues that while insects might not be able to philosophise, you could say the same of most humans, obsessed as they are with the X-Factor and EastEnders. Yeah! In your face, science!
As the evening draws to a close, one gentleman rises from his seat, sheepishly makes his way forward, and offers the evening's host a small bowl containing a single silkworm pupa. It looks for all the world like some kind of demented courtship gesture. Reluctantly, she pops it in her mouth, and instinctively makes the kind of sour, scrunched face only worn by those with a desperate, sudden need for a glass of water and a toothbrush. At this very moment, assuming bugs haven't entirely consumed him, Vincent M Holt is probably spinning furiously in his grave.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Scotland Makes World's First urban Green Space Map!
Finding a place to hike or picnic in Scotland's cities just got easier with the introduction of what is thought to be the world's first comprehensive, interactive online map ofurban green space -- 429 square miles in all.
The tool may also help councils develop planning and environmental policy. Those who produced the map said it would provide a baseline for future updates, allowing them to track changes in the amount and type of green space in Scotland's towns and cities.
Unique Environmental Initiative to Conserve Mountain Resources
The two- day Mt Kenya Extreme Sport Challenge 2011 has attracted participants from all over the world to sensitize on climate change and save Mount Kenya- Africa’s second highest and most spectacular mountain ranges.
The event was officially launched last Friday by Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of State Provincial Administration and Internal Security Francis Kimemia urged for a balance between development and environment conservation. He decried rampant cutting of the countries for firewood and said urgent measures should be taken to conserve mountain and forest resources.
"The event is a unique opportunity for everyone to be involved in sports tourism. Mt Kenya Extreme Sports Challenge is not only an opportunity to help conserve the environment, especially when the world is feeling the dire effects of climate change, Kimemia said.
Organized by Mt Kenya Extreme School of Adventure and Leadership (KESAL), the event running from October 20–22, 2011 targets over a thousand participants. According to KESAL Director John Mwangi, the occasion, blending fun and fitness, will raise awareness on the need to conserve the countries several heritage sites. He said forests are carbon seeds, which have to be jealously conserved to reduce environmental degradation.
Speaking at the launch, Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCAA) Director Hillary Kioko said urged reduction of carbon emissions would help third world countries gain from carbon credits. Administration Police Commandant Kinuthia Mbugua said environment issues are threats to security and hailed the event, which he said promote environmental education.
Some disciplines to be contested individually and in groups include Extreme Adventure, Sky Marathon, Rock Climbing and jungle Race. Proceeds will be used to construct at least 1000 energy saving jikos for the community, buy seeds and seedlings of indigenous trees, which will act as carbon sinks and educate the community about the need for conservation of Mt Kenya ecosystem.
Senior Warden at Mount Kenya National Park Captain Robert K. Obrien says they are ready to host the event targeting 15 teams of four participants each and is open to persons of 18 years and above “We assure that we will provide security and serene environment for participants during this important event', he said.
The event is organized alongside Athletics Kenya, Brand Kenya, Postbank, Kenya Wildlife Service, Kenya Forestry Service, National Environmental Management Authority (NEMA)
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Green-Generation-Kenya/209286159120510
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Carbon tax rebate may be logical if it can level the playing field
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Friday, September 9, 2011
Google Details, and Defends, Its Use of Electricity
Related
DealBook: In a Twist, Google Reviews Zagat, and Decides to Bite (September 8, 2011)
DealBook: New-Form Press Release, in Blog, Tweet and Haiku (September 8, 2011)
Paul Sakuma/Associated Press
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Thursday, September 8, 2011
DuPont Offers Compensation for Dead Trees
The company pulled the product off the market in early August, and a few days later the Environmental Protection Agency banned sales of it.
A new fight to save Africa’s elephants
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Post titleSuperb parrot or wind farms: which is the threatened species?
Wind farms respond
Blue Whales Spotted off King Harbor
Monday, September 5, 2011
Finally- NoteBooks and Renewable Energy
Sunday, September 4, 2011
"Plant Bottle- Is it really a step to Sustainability?"
If you're wondering how environmentalists feel about Coca-Cola Co.'s PlantBottle -- PET and HDPE containers made in-part from bio-based raw materials ... well, let's say it's not completely positive.
The Earth Resource Foundation sent a news release today after some of them received an invitation to an Earth Day event to launch Coke's Dasani-brand bottled water in a PET PlantBottle.
The release, titled "No Glee from Environmentalists for Coca-Cola 'PlantBottle'," takes the company to task. Much of the critcism could apply to any bottled water manufacturer, but a few of the points are specific to the PlantBottle material:
We Regret that despite your green leaf logo, your "plant bottle" is still just a PET plastic bottle and is not biodegradable or compostable on land or at sea.We Regret that Coca-Cola will not be collecting and recycling their own PET "plant bottles," and that only approximately 20.9% percent of PET bottles are "recycled" (mostly into lower grade material that is not used in bottles again) in America. The remainder, at over 20 billion bottles, last forever in our landfills or in our environment, including our oceans. We also regret that Coca-Cola failed to achieve it's own pledge of using at least 10% recycled content in PET bottles and has just announced the shut down of it's PET recycling joint venture in South Carolina.
We Regret that Coca-Cola is substituting its chemical-laden petroleum plastic bottle with a chemical-laden petroleum and plant plastic bottle.
We Regret that estrogenic compounds in your PET "plant bottle" may leach into the water and impair human health and reproduction.
The release is in the form of a petition, and is signed by a number of leaders of California-based environmental groups.
While the petition does not link to Plastics News, we are the source of the information about Coke's recycling plant in South Carolina. For that story, check out this news story (which was updated today), as well as this interview with Coke's Scott Vitters.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Endangered hawksbill turtles make a surprise appearance
The finding is particularly significant because it suggests a potentially unique evolutionary trajectory, said Alexander Gaos, lead author of a report being released Thursday in the online scientific journal Biology Letters.
"We now know there are about 500 adult female hawksbill turtles in at least four inland mangrove saltwater forests in El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and Ecuador," Gaos said in an interview. "They are among the last remaining strongholds for this species. If these estuaries are destroyed by development of aquaculture and housing, the hawksbill turtle will disappear with them … that's more hawksbill turtles than anyone thought were left, but still very few."
Scientists are collaborating with coastal villages in the vicinity of the mangroves to "create community-based conservation programs," said Bryan Wallace, director of science and strategy for Conservation International's marine flagship species program. "All egg clutches are being relocated to hatcheries," he said.
Until now, Eretmochelys imbricata was believed to prefer open coasts and coral reefs in the Caribbean and Indo-Pacific regions. As recently as 2007, hawksbill turtles were considered nearly wiped out, based on research and scarce sightings.
To map the movements of the eastern Pacific's remnant turtle population, a team of scientists attached satellite transmitters to the backs of 12 adult females. Gaos said 83% of those turtles remained settled in the mangrove forests, contrary to the long-held notion that hawksbills are coral reef dwellers.
"These particular hawksbills spend the majority of their lives nesting and foraging in the mangroves," said Gaos, executive director of the nonprofit Eastern Pacific Hawksbill Initiative."We still do not know why they adapted to this habitat, but we believe it may be due to a lack of coral reefs in the region."
Although adaptation has become a central concern of climate scientists because of global warming, there is no apparent connection between the habitat change and climate shifts, Gaos said.
"It is possible that global climate change could, at some point in the future, drive marine turtles into estuaries such as these," he said. "However, at this point, we do not believe that what we are seeing is a pattern that occurred over the past 20 to 30 years."
The findings support the results of a survey released last year showing that the largest known rookeries of the turtle, categorized as "critically endangered" by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, are in El Salvador and Nicaragua.
The earliest reports of the hawksbill turtle date to diaries of 18th century pirates and missionaries who chronicled the growth of "tortoiseshell" industries in northwest Mexico.
Weighing about 100 pounds, with shells about 3 feet in diameter, hawksbill turtles have been killed by the millions for their shells, used to fashion folk art, eyeglasses, cigarette lighters and jewelry. Scientists believe the species is within several years of extinction. There is no accepted estimate of its worldwide population. It has been on the U.S. list of endangered species since 1975.
"We now have a new set of habitats to search for the species and fine-tune recovery efforts," Gaos said. "There's more hope now than ever for this rare and imperiled creature."
Monday, August 29, 2011
Environmental Conservation
Environmental Education and Awareness Initiative (EEIA)
EEAI is an initiative by MEMR to provide a platform to inform, educate and engage various stakeholders. The goal is to enhance voluntary initiatives and participation in environmental conservation activities by every Kenyan through education and awareness campaigns.
This is expected to foster inclusiveness and partnerships in environmental conservation and management. The implementation of EEAI will ensure effective stakeholder involvement and resource mobilization in environmental management.
Objectives of EEAI
i) Increase environmental awareness and participation in environmental activities
ii) Mobilize the general public to get involved in the protection and conservation of the environment and especially catchment conservation.
iii) Encourage media to embrace effective, positive and informative environmental coverage in order to enhance awareness and prioritization of the environment.
Proposed EEAI Activities
EEAI will mainly cover the following seven key areas:
• Public awareness campaigns
• Outreach and education
• Tree plantingEEAI
• Clean-up campaigns
• Creating awareness of environmental challenges and solutions
• Promotion of best practices
• Dissemination of environmental messages through mass and folk media
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Are women victims or the main contributors to climate change?
These examples show that under the current scenario, the impact of climate change will in the long run contribute to an increase in social inequalities. In other words, due to their role in society, women in developing countries are the most vulnerable to environmental degradation. An environmental degradation to which they have little or no influence on.
Women in developing countries have also subscribed to the stereotype that “women are not supposed to be heard, they are there to be seen” and as a result they have decided not to participate in any decision making process involving climate change. When decision are made, their role in society is not actively incorporated, hence being marginalized. For example, In the European heat wave in 2003, the excess mortality for women was 75% higher than that for men of all ages. Similarly, the excess mortality in the 1995 heat wave in Greater London was more pronounced for women, in ways that cannot entirely be accounted for by age. While the explanation is complex, this was largely attributed to women not involved in decision-making processes and as a result neglected the early warning systems.