Author Archive

Watch the Ice

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Reading another report on global climate change impacts, this time written by professors Markku Rummukainen (the  Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute) and Erland Källén (Department of Meteorology,  Stockholm University). They draw many conclusions, but the one striking closest to home is the alarming rate of melting ice.

Recent studies of land ice sensitivity to atmospheric warming and land ice melting rates suggest that future sea level rise may be higher than the values reported in AR4. The total sea level rise may be around one meter in the coming one hundred years. These estimates are still very uncertain

The dramatic reduction in Arctic sea ice cover during the years 2007 and 2008 could be the first observed threshold effect or “tipping point” in the climate system. A confirmation of this depends on how persistent the sea ice reduction will be in the next few years.

We want less of these

We want less of these

Overall, Rummukainen and Källén draw the conclusion that all earlier predictions seem more likely than ever to be correct, and that things are probably worse. One could also call it business as usual among scientists.

EDIT: For a more personal presentation of the Arctic, check out Baffin Babes – 80 days in the Arctic!

Nuclear tra$h, also as US import

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

The next hyper-dangerous load will go from plants in Italy to the Utah desert, reports Treehugger. How terribly silly.

Testing out nuclear trash storage in Jordan?

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Last week Jordan announced that the USA will design and construct storage facilities for Jordanian nuclear and radioactive trash. The facilities are expected to hold the ultra-toxic energy residue for about 50 years, so we’re not talking terminal storage here, since noone really seems to have a sollution for that. Surprisingly few communities around the world seem eager to want to live on top of deeply buried radioactives that will sit tight for about 1 000 000 years.

However, the fact that the Jordanian plant will be deployed wholly by the USA is interesting. Does it suggest a special nuclear-tight relationship between the two states? Or does it rather suggest that clever negotiators in the US Departments of Energy and Defense, together with the Environmental Protection Agency, put their heads together and found a way to test new ideas? Then again, it could just be global capitalism.

Pick Up the Trash Day is here!

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Remember how I wrote in February about the annual Pick Up the Trash Day? Well, now it’s April and kiddos all over Sweden are gearing up to run around and clean up their communities. So far over 145 000 young ones are signed up for this year.

New for 2009 is that all participating schools, municipalities etc. can post on a collective blog, so that we all can check in on what’s up. And get more pix like this one here:

Trash kids from Byrsjö School

Trash kids from Byrsjö School

Still in transit…

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Been quiet as I’m still kind of in transit from Stockholm to Brooklyn, but my broadband should come around soon. At the moment though I have an urgent need to tell you that the password for the free wifi where I now enjoy a cup of coffee is “pleaserecycle”. Love.

The Bulky Trash Watchman

Sunday, March 22, 2009

My folks housing cooperative have a long standing internal battle against people in the cooperative not taking responsability for the recycling routines. In short, many choose to throw more or less everything in the room reserved for bulky trash (such as furniture), resulting in high costs for the cooperative when trash workers sort out the refrigerators and bottles from the couches and bags of old clothes.

This unruly behaviour has now come to an end. The board of the cooperative have put in place a harsh and virtually impenetrable line of defense: The Bulky Trash Watchman. Before this new regime, everyone had their own keys to the room, and could sneek down with their illegal trash at 4am in the morning without being noticed. No more. Now there’s one key, possessed by a man dubbed the Bulky Trash Watchman of the block.

Instead of being a 24-hour room, the bulky trash room os now open Sundays 7pm-8pm. The Watchman stands, with a grim look upon his face, inside the room and carefully eyes your bulky trash before nodding and directing you to place it next to whatever is in there already. The eagle eyes of the Watchman sees all attempts of cheating, and will happily share the regulations on what stuff goes in the room, and where one should recycle trash deemed unworthy.

Needless to say, the costs for recycling for the housing cooperative have dropped dramatically in a very short space of time. Good proof that regulation and big brother might need to step in when we oh-so-earthfriendly citizens talk the talk, but fail to walk the walk.

More crisis less trash

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Municipal recycling stations in Sweden note a decrease in the stuff that one really doesn’t need to purchase, but swipe your credit card for anyway, like electronics. Less cash and more insecurity makes us cling on to that four year old thingie, even though our neighbour bought a cooler version. The extravagance we see in time of prosperity goes beyond the usual flat screen and Wii though, as trash worker Börde Edlund gives example of:

Before, people came here with entire kitchen furnishings because they had the wrong colour.

Idiotic beyond belief, the way we live. Sometimes it just hits me. Aaaargh!

The International Scientific Congress on Climate Change

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Today is the last of three days of scientific discussions on climate change, held between some 2 000 experts in Copenhagen. Obviously, with so much brains in the room(s), summarizing outcomes is quite the challange, but the intrigued should check out the conference website for online abstracts. Later, a book will be published to be handed over to our mighty policy makers at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP-15), also to be held in Copenhagen, in November-December 2009. As we know, the COP-15 iwill be the site for negotiating the post-kyoto protocol, so this book should be valuable input.

Ghana tra$h shore – the pix

Monday, March 2, 2009

Over a couple of very depressing pages in Sunday’s edition of my morning paper, SvD, I could again follow Mattias Hagberg (read our previous interview with him!) to Ghana. Today, I am “happy” to be able to tell you that the pictures from the piece, taken by Karl Melander, can be viewed in a slideshow at the web edition of the paper. Not the  “Atlantic coast beach” most of us are used to.

The Independent

Friday, February 27, 2009

…has a very troublesome map over the plastic soup melange in the Pacific. Note that there are 100 million tonnes of trash floating around, dubbed “Eastern Garbage Patch” and “Western Garbage Patch”.

Stockholm 2010!

Monday, February 23, 2009

And yay! Stockholm is the European Green Capital 2010! Read all about it, and inspire yourself on how your city too can reduce emissions per capita by 25% in just under 20 years.

European Green Capital

Monday, February 23, 2009

Tonight, at an award ceremony in Brussels, the European Commission* will announce which European cities will recieve the awards European Green Capital, for the years 2010 and 2011. The nominees are Oslo, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Bristol, Frieburg, Copenhagen, Münster and Hamburg.

The award has been established to reward local authorities’ efforts for a more sustainable urban environment. I.e., this is a reward for the politicians. And I do think we have to recognize that some of them indeed deserve a pat on the back, for fighting the tra$h industry, the oldtimers, listless voters and elecetion politics. Further, the coming environmental plans of the cities who win the awards will be presented on the award website, will return with a summary of that!

(*For those who might not know, the Commission is by far the most powerful institution of the European Union.)

“Trash infarct” and kids trash interaction

Sunday, February 22, 2009

A news item in todays Svenska Dagbladet (2nd largest morning paper) talks about how Sweden is on it’s way to a “trash infarct” situation. As of now, we produce 1133 pounds (or 514 kilogrammes) of trash per person, per year. Even though we are top of the world in recycling, our garbage heaps grow with 3% every year, and then we haven’t even mentioned the unrecyclable (that a word?) toxic stuff that ends up at the bottom of our many trash combustion factories.

Another news item in the same paper is a cute story about kids in preschool making toys from trash, instead of buying toys. One challange seems to be that the municipal run tra$h company see risk of loosing profit in this sweet and educational activity. Makes me draw parallells to the only good scene in the movie Mammoth, where a grandmother takes her grandson to a scrap heap, showing him how kids work with collecting items that can be sold at a market, and how he doesn’t have to do that, since his mother works as a maid in the United States. (For those wondering why I would know of this particular movie, it’s from a Swedish director I will always love for his fantastic debut Fucking Åmål.)

The Pick Up the Trash Day

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Went to one of those political breakfast seminars this morning, and shared the table with Emma and Elin from the cool Keep Sweden Tidy Foundation. The KSTF run a couple of great campaigns, like the Agricultural Scrap Campaign, but my closest relation with them comes from my childhood, and the Pick Up the Trash Day.

The Pick Up the Trash Day has been a standing tradition for preeschools  and lower compulsory schools all over Sweden for decades. It’s pretty straight forward: Kids go out in their communities with their teachers for a day and pick up trash. I have fond memories of the kid Victor running around the neighbourhood and it’s sorroundings with classmates in the late 80’s spring, armed with a black trash bag, picking up cigarette stumps and thrown away plastic stuff. If one of us spotted a broken bottle or any other shards, we would shout “Mrs! GLASS!!!”, and one of the adults would come and take care of the dangerous pieces.

The next Pick Up the Trash Day happens in the week of April 20th-26th. Last year 220 000 kids (Sweden’s total population is 9 million) participated, and the KSTF hope for even more this year. I have already decided to have my own Pick Up the Trash Day, wherever I am in the world in two months from now. Who wants to join in?

The Office 3.0 – Silent Art

Friday, February 13, 2009

This week I had an errand at the Stockholm based communications agency Futurniture. Founder and CEO Jakob Lind took the opportunity to give us a little tour of an art exhibition they currently host: The Office 3.0 – Silent Art, a reference to the 1963 classic Silent Spring, written by Rachel Carson. The exhibition is made up of work from several artists, my favourite being Johanna Gustafsson Fürst’s art, which is all made from two weeks of trash from the Futurniture office.

Gustafsson Fürst has covered all door handles in newspaper, hidden their aquarium (normally sporting a couple of plastic dishgloves flying around inside…) beneath a heap of I-don’t-know-what, taped flattened milk cartons to the floors, etc. It’s all over the place really, but since the office is such a busy creative creator’s space anyway, it takes a while before you realize what was actually there before Gustafsson Fürst’s takeover. I like it! Another, more serious, part of the exhibition, is a group of watercolour paintings made with toxic water, composed by Jan Stene Markus Anteskog. All curated by Jan Stene. Provocative as only art can be.