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	<title>Tracker Editor's Blog &#187; Diaster relief</title>
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		<title>Hungry Planet</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/11/09/hungry-planet/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/11/09/hungry-planet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Nov 2011 19:33:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[agriculture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[climate change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Diaster relief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[food]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[TrackerBlog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[TrackerNews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[water]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[water pollution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chickpeas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[diarrhea]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GAIN]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grameen Danone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hygiene]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[malnutrition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[medicins sans frontieres]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[micronutrients]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[MSF]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nutrition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[peanuts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pepsico]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plumpy'nut]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[prebiotics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[probiotics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shakti Doi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[starved for attention]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ultra rice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[VitaYeast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wawa mum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WFP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[World Food Programme]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Link suite overview on malnutrition, blighted futures, dumb food aid, sachets of hopes, micronutrient magic, microbiology and new markets There are now, by recent tally, 7 billion people on planet Earth and at least 2 billion of us are hungry. Malnutrition, either from lack of food or too much of the wrong food is a [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=2297&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<h5><span style="color:#9c1000;">Link suite overview on malnutrition, blighted futures, dumb food aid, sachets of hopes, micronutrient magic, microbiology and new markets</span></h5>
<div id="attachment_2306" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 309px"><a href="http://www.trackernews.net"><img class=" wp-image-2306  " title="Hungry Planet" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/11_9_11_hungry_planet.jpg?w=299&#038;h=219" alt="" width="299" height="219" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Links become part of the TrackerNews searchable database.</p></div>
<p>There are now, by recent tally, 7 billion people on planet Earth and at least 2 billion of us are hungry. Malnutrition, either from lack of food or too much of the wrong food is a human tragedy on every level imaginable. By the time they are just two years old, malnourished children are permanently stunted, both in body and mind. Illness defines their lives (diarrhea to diabetes). The spark of potential dims.</p>
<p>Translated into the cold hard statistics of economic health, a humanitarian crisis starves the state of GDP. <a title="Childhood Malnutrition in China Causes Significant Economic Losses " href="http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/china-news/childhood-malnutrition-in-china-causes-significant-economic-losses-63369.html" target="_blank">Productivity losses due to chronic famine in western China </a>are estimated in the hundreds of billions of dollars annually. <a title="hunger bill map" href="http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2011/10/hungerbill_states.html" target="_blank">In the US, a &#8220;Hunger Bill Map&#8221; </a>calculates, state by state, the cost of avoidable illnesses, poor educational outcomes and the value of emergency charitable donations.</p>
<p>As goes the &#8220;bottom of the pyramid,&#8221; so goes the pyramid: human potential, both at an individual level and as a species, squandered.</p>
<p>In world increasingly bound together by global trade and digital communications, lowering tides may not sink, but most certainly threaten, all boats. Whether from compassion or self-interest, malnutrition, a crisis whose vast dimensions have been obscured by images of the most extreme cases—the extended-bellies, toothpick-thin limbs and glassy-eyes of children more dead than alive—<em>must be comprehensively tackled</em>. The alternative is simply too grim to consider.</p>
<p>According to the <a title="UNDP 2011" href="http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/global/hdr2011/" target="_blank">UN&#8217;s 2011 Human Development Report,</a> continued degradation of the environment just about guarantees that all development gains made in the world&#8217;s poorest countries will be erased, if not reversed, by mid-century. The issues of pollution, deforestation, soil erosion and climate change are deeply entwined with malnutrition.</p>
<p>Even if all the eco-angles were addressed, it will take more than a better distribution of calories to fix the problem. International aid group Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF / Doctors Without Borders) has been at the forefront of a campaign—<em><a title="Starved for Attention" href="http://starvedforattention.org/" target="_blank">Starved for Attention</a></em>—against grain-based food aid, primarily from the US, that fails to meet the nutritional needs of children. Although a boon to American farmers, shipping tons of corn and soy halfway around the world is a staggeringly inefficient and expensive way to help.</p>
<p><span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/11/09/hungry-planet/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/qw2fHVD-dZE/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span></p>
<p>MSF promotes all-in-one &#8220;Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Foods&#8221; (RUTF) such as <a title="A silver bullet for world hunger? Scientists find new ways to help the starving." href="http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700195360/A-silver-bullet-for-world-hunger-Scientists-find-new-ways-to-help-the-starving.html?pg=1" target="_blank">Plumpy&#8217;Nut,</a> an enriched peanut butter paste that comes packaged in small packets called sachets, which are small enough for even the littlest hands to grasp. Rip open a sachet and a child squeezes out the sweet paste. Supplies can be given to mothers, shortening stays at emergency feeding centers. Another advantage: no water required.</p>
<p>A similar product call <a title="UN chick pea vitamin paste battling malnutrition in Pakistan" href="http://www.nutraingredients.com/Industry/UN-chick-pea-vitamin-paste-battling-malnutrition-in-Pakistan" target="_blank">Wawa Mum</a> using chickpeas as the base was used in Pakistan as part of the World Food Programme&#8217;s (WFP) post-flood emergency response. By incorporating a locally grown crop, the fortified food can also help revive a local economy.</p>
<p>Food giant <a title="PepsiCo partnership to boost Ethiopian chickpeas" href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/09/21/us-pepsico-chickpeas-idUSTRE78K0MR20110921" target="_blank">PepsiCo, partnering with USAID and WFP</a>, has announced a similar effort in Ethiopia that will enlist 20,000 small farmers and develop a nutritional food for young children.</p>
<p>Corporate partnerships have become an increasingly important trend.<a title="Grameen Danone" href="http://www.grameensocialbusiness.org/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=96&amp;Itemid=94" target="_blank"> France-based Danone has collaborated with Bangladeshi microfinance pioneer Grameen </a>to develop an inexpensive fortified yogurt that can last up to week without refrigeration. A cartoon-ish and child-friendly spokes-lion (someone dressed up in a lion suit) is used to help market &#8220;Shakti Doi,&#8221; which comes in both mango and vanilla flavors. Everything about the production and distribution of the yogurt is designed to generate jobs and strengthen community. Local dairies supply the milk. Thousands of women sell the product door to door.</p>
<p>The network that develops through the Shakti Doi yogurt routes also provides a way to distribute information about health and hygiene. Malnutrition weakens immune systems and people who are sick are more likely to be malnourished.</p>
<p>This hyper-local distribution model offers other advantages as well. <a title="India's malnutrition crisis" href="http://ibnlive.in.com/blogs/ananthapriyasubramanian/3040/62827/indias-malnutrition-crisis.html" target="_blank">In an op-ed piece for Indian broadcaster IBN</a>, Save the Children&#8217;s Ananthapriya Subramanian tells the story of a mother who cannot risk leaving her home in an illegal Mumbai slum for fear it will be burgled. The door is a flimsy sack. Help has to come to her or help won&#8217;t happen.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">THINKING SMALL</span></h4>
<p>Calories and micronutrients can&#8217;t help a child with diarrhea. The food doesn&#8217;t stick around long enough for its nutrition to be absorbed. An estimated 1.6 million children die annually from diarrhea—a leading cause of death of young children worldwide. Something as simple as <a title="Clean the World Foundation" href="http://www.cleantheworld.org/our-cause.asp" target="_blank">a bar of soap can make a difference.</a></p>
<p><a title="Probiotics — A Viable Therapeutic Alternative for Enteric Infections Especially in the Developing World" href="http://www.discoverymedicine.com/Roy-D-Sleator/2010/08/06/probiotics-a-viable-therapeutic-alternative-for-enteric-infections-especially-in-the-developing-world/" target="_blank">Probiotics (beneficial gut microbes) and prebiotics (substances that help good gut microbes thrive) </a>have been shown to cut the length of a bout of diarrhea in otherwise healthy children. A robust gut biome is also able to absorb more nutrition from food. More research is needed to determine whether pro- and prebiotics could make a difference among those moderately malnourished.</p>
<p>Another small and potentially powerful answer could come in the form of a genetically modified fungus called <a title="Vita Yeast by JHU team / iGEM" href="http://2011.igem.org/Team:Johns_Hopkins" target="_blank">VitaYeast</a>. Developed by a group of Johns Hopkins undergrads for the iGEM competition (international genetically modified machines), the yeast is wired to produce vitamin A. As the yeast multiplies during bread-making, vitamin A is infused into the dough. Baking kills off the yeast. Still in experimental stages, the approach shows promise. It should be cheaper to add vitamin-enhanced yeast into dough than to fortify grain or grow GMO wheat.</p>
<p>PATH, an international health organization, has taken a slightly different approach, developing <a title="PATH, Abbott and the Abbott Fund Form Innovative Partnership to Prevent Malnutrition" href="http://www.abbott.com/press-release/2011-nov3-2.htm" target="_blank">&#8220;Ultra Rice,&#8221; a fortified rice dough.</a> &#8220;Grains,&#8221; that look just like regular rice are added to regular rice at a ratio of 1:100. PATH recently partnered with drug-maker Abbott to refine the manufacture and distribution of the product in India.</p>
<p><span style="color:#008000;">______________________________________</span></p>
<p><strong><em></em>Hungry Planet</strong> is one of the larger <span style="color:#008000;"><strong><em><a title="TrackerNews aggregator" href="http://www.TrackerNews.net"><span style="color:#008000;">TrackerNews</span></a></em></strong></span> link suites, with more than 40 stories. All links on the aggregator become part of the <span style="color:#008000;"><strong><a title="TrackerNews &quot;search&quot;" href="http://www.trackernews.net/search/" target="_blank"><span style="color:#008000;"><em>TrackerNews</em> searchable database.</span></a></strong></span><em></em></p>
<p>Among the highlights:</p>
<ul>
<li><a title="World Food Programme / Hunger" href="http://www.wfp.org/hunger" target="_blank">World Food Programme Backgrounder on Hunger</a> (website)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="GAIN" href="http://www.gainhealth.org/" target="_blank">GAIN / Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition</a> (website)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Honduras: Are high food prices fueling child malnutrition? " href="http://blogs.worldbank.org/latinamerica/honduras-are-high-food-prices-fueling-child-malnutrition" target="_blank">Honduras: Are high food prices fueling child malnutrition?</a> / Marie Chantal Messier / World Bank blogs</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Hunger Notes" href="http://www.worldhunger.org/" target="_blank">Hunger Notes</a> / World Hunger Education Service (aggregator)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Dr. Mehmood Khan taking on the PepsiCo nutritional challenge" href="http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-06-20/business/ct-biz-0620-profile-khan-20110620-56_1_pepsico-cheetos-snacks" target="_blank">Dr. Mehmood Khan taking on the PepsiCo nutritional challenge</a>/ PepsiCo&#8217;s Global Nutrition Group / <em>Chicago Tribune</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Price of Potassium Iodate Soars" href="http://www.gainhealth.org/programs/price-potassium-iodate-soars" target="_blank">Price of Potassium Iodate Soars</a> / GAIN</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="MixMe™ micronutrient powder from DSM Nutritional Products: an improved solution to combat iron and zinc deficiency" href="http://www.dsm.com/en_US/html/dnp/news_items/110131_MixMe_micronutrient_powder_from_DSM_Nutritional_Products.htm" target="_blank">MixMe™ micronutrient powder from DSM Nutritional Products: an improved solution to combat iron and zinc deficiency</a> / DSM<strong><br />
</strong></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Sliced Bread Just Got Better" href="http://youtu.be/4mqoS1xfTW8" target="_blank">Sliced Bread Just Got Better</a> / Johns Hopkins University (video)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="It Takes a Banker: Ecosystem Economics, Climate Change &amp; the Poor " href="http://www.webdoc.com/documents/C4D58097-0EF0-0001-F91A-1C708DAD15B8" target="_blank">It Takes a Banker: Ecosystem Economics, Climate Change &amp; the Poor </a>/ J.A. Ginsburg / <span style="color:#008000;"><em>TrackerNews</em></span></li>
</ul>
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		<title>Hello, Sunshine!</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/10/12/hello-sunshine/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/10/12/hello-sunshine/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Oct 2011 01:05:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[climate change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Diaster relief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[solar]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Daniel Nocera]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[nanotech]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[solar leaf]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Solyndra]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Link suite overview on solar scale up: better tech, lower costs, variety, better batteries and bottle bulbs The shades may have been drawn on Solyndra, but the sun still shines on solar. Despite Big Carbon&#8217;s industry front group-funded campaign to sell us on a fossil-fueled future, solar is going mainstream fast. Even heads deeply buried [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=2278&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<h4><span style="color:#b22222;">Link suite overview on solar scale up: better tech, lower costs, variety, better batteries and bottle bulbs</span></h4>
<div id="attachment_2284" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 431px"><a href="http://www.trackernews.net"><img class="size-full wp-image-2284 " title="10_11_11_hello_sunshine" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/10_11_11_hello_sunshine.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Links become part of the TrackerNews searchable database. </p></div>
<p>The shades may have been drawn on<a title="Solyndra Plant Had Whistling Robots, Spa Showers" href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-09-28/solyndra-s-733-million-plant-had-whistling-robots-spa-showers.html" target="_blank"> Solyndra</a>, but the sun still shines on solar. <a href="http://www.webdoc.com/documents/C4F208D5-E2D0-0001-9B4B-43C0A41E166C" target="_blank">Despite Big Carbon&#8217;s industry front group-funded campaign to sell us on a fossil-fueled future</a>, solar is going mainstream fast. Even heads deeply buried in tar sands can sense the shift.</p>
<p>There is no &#8220;one&#8221; solar answer. Solar comes in all shapes and sizes: from rooftop panels and peel-and-stick window film, to boats and backpacks, solar &#8220;ivy&#8221; and solar &#8220;leaves,&#8221;  giant concentrated solar arrays and recycled plastic bottles. Almost daily there is news of improved efficiency, better batteries and more products available off-the-shelf.</p>
<p>Costs are tumbling, too—and not just because the <a title="China’s Grip on Solar Power" href="http://www.theworld.org/2011/10/chinas-grip-on-solar-power/" target="_blank">Chinese have heavily subsidized the manufacture of photovoltaic panels</a>, undercutting everyone else in the market. Solar, finally, is enjoying the benefits of scaling up.</p>
<p>This year, <a title="DOE Solar Decathlon" href="http://www.solardecathlon.gov/" target="_blank">the Department of Energy&#8217;s biannual Solar Decathlon</a> saw home construction costs come in third cheaper than in 2009. The expense and learning curve of prototypes has  given way to the savings of lessons learned.</p>
<p>There are also more jobs—and better-paying local jobs, too—in installation than in manufacturing, lessening the sting of market share  loss to China. In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, groups such as the <a title="Make It Right / Poptech video" href="http://youtu.be/nVwulENEDg8" target="_blank">Make It Right Foundation created &#8220;a teachable moment,&#8221;</a> to train builders and appliance installers to work with greener technologies. Even the cleanest of coal (energy&#8217;s reigning oxymoron) cannot compete against a smartly designed solar home whose monthly electric bill comes in under $30.</p>
<p>It is that kind of bargain-happy free market decision-making that has Chevron—yes, <a title="Chevron Makes Use Of Solar Energy to Recover Oil" href="http://www.triplepundit.com/2011/10/chevron-solar-energy-recover-oil/comment-page-1/" target="_blank">Chevron—scrapping pricey natural gas in favor of a concentrated solar power (CSP) array </a>to heat water for steam to to make heavy crude oil thin enough to pump: new sun to mine ancient sun. Beyond the obvious irony, this promises to quickly ramp up into a multi-billion dollar business.</p>
<p>Elsewhere, vast arrays of photo voltaic panels are sprouting everywhere, from <a title="Flexible solar offers Georgia landfill a second life" href="http://www.cleanenergyauthority.com/solar-energy-news/flexible-solar-offers-georgia-landfill-a-second-life-100611/" target="_blank"> a capped garbage dump turned &#8220;energy park</a>,&#8221; to <a title="Solar bridge points to a bright future" href="http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/e0e3cbc2-ede1-11e0-a491-00144feab49a.html" target="_blank">a Victorian-era London bridge</a>. Both are pilot projects, but expect many more to follow. There are an estimated 100,000 aging landfills in the US prime for PV.</p>
<p>Cutting right to the chase—no power generation required—in the Philippines, <a title="Isand Litrong Liwang / A Liter of Light" href="http://isanglitrongliwanag.org/" target="_blank">soda bottles are being recycled into 55 watt wireless lights </a>through an ingenious design courtesy of MIT&#8217;s D-Lab. &#8220;Bottle bulbs&#8221; inserted into tin roofs bring free daylight into otherwise dark interiors, reducing the need—and expense—of air-fouling kerosene.</p>
<p>So let there be light! And power. And cheaper energy. And a cleaner planet, too.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">________________________</span></h4>
<p><span style="color:#008000;"><strong><em>Hello, Sunshine</em></strong></span> ranks among one of the larger <strong><em><span style="color:#008000;">TrackerNews</span></em></strong> link suites, with more than 40 stories. Among the highlights:</p>
<ul>
<li><a title="A leaf that could power the future" href="http://articles.boston.com/2011-09-30/business/30230106_1_fuel-cells-hydrogen-leaf" target="_blank">A leaf that could power the future</a> / Erin Ailworth / <em>Boston Globe</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Daniel Nocera  / Brookhaven lab" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLo9blxbb7k" target="_blank">Daniel Nocera, inventor of the &#8220;solar leaf&#8221; at Brookhaven National Lab</a> (video)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="10 Solar Decathlon lessons" href="http://www.electroiq.com/articles/pvw/2011/10/10-solar-decathlon-lessons.html" target="_blank">10 Solar Decathlon lessons</a> / Steve Leone / <em>Renewable Energy World</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Transforming the Solar Market" href="http://blog.rmi.org/TransformingtheSolarMarket" target="_blank">Transforming the Solar Market</a> / Rebecca Cole / Rocky Mountain Institute</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="US Miliary bullish on renewables" href="http://thinkprogress.org/romm/2011/06/14/244716/military-renewables-efficiency-and-energy-security/" target="_blank">The U.S. Military Leads the Charge on Renewables, Efficiency and Energy Security</a> / Bracken Hendricks, Daniel J. Weiss,  Lisbeth Kaufman / <em>Climate Progress</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Pay as you go solar" href="http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20991-pay-as-you-go-solar-power-makes-energy-cheaper.html" target="_blank">Pay as you go solar power makes energy cheaper</a> / Jacob Aron / <em>New Scientist</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Solar plant generates at night" href="http://www.solardaily.com/reports/Backers_Solar_plant_generates_at_night_999.html" target="_blank">Solar plant generates at night </a>/ <em>Solar World Daily</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Spain's solar tower / James May" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-vvbMdJ4EA" target="_blank">Spain&#8217;s solar tower</a> / James May (video)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="D-Rev Rise Solar " href="http://d-rev.org/projects/risesolar.html" target="_blank">D-Rev&#8217;s Rise Solar: $50 solar concentrator units</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Solar boat promotes path to cleaner health" href="http://edition.cnn.com/2011/10/03/world/asia/solar-boat-world-tour/" target="_blank">Solar boat promotes path to cleaner fuel</a> / Anna Coren  / <em>CNN</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Frito-Lay Opens 'Near Net Zero' Facility" href="http://www.environmentalleader.com/2011/10/05/frito-lay-opens-75-net-zero-facility/" target="_blank">Frito-Lay Opens ‘Near Net Zero’ Facility</a> / <em>Environmental Leader</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Take Anywhere Solar Chargers" href="http://www.sierraclubgreenhome.com/uncategorized/take-anywhere-solar-chargers/" target="_blank">Take Anywhere Solar Chargers</a> / Debra Atlas / <em>GreenHome, Sierra Club</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Sulfur in hollow nanofibers overcomes challenges of lithium-ion battery design" href="http://news.stanford.edu/news/2011/october/sulfur-nanofibers-battery-100411.html" target="_blank">Sulfur in hollow nanofibers overcomes challenges of lithium-ion battery design</a> / Sarah Jane Keller / <em>Stanford University News</em></li>
</ul>
<p>(All links on the aggregator become part of the <strong><a title="TrackerNews &quot;search&quot;" href="http://www.trackernews.net/search/" target="_blank">TrackerNews searchable database.</a></strong><em></em>)</p>
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		<title>The Days, Years After: Recovering from Bigger, Badder Disasters</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/08/31/days_years_after/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/08/31/days_years_after/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Aug 2011 00:27:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Diaster relief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[earthquake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[floods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haiti]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hurricanes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[maps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[philanthropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social networks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[TrackerBlog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[TrackerNews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[water]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Christchurch earthquakes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fukushima]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[green energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haiti earthquakes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hurricane irene]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hurricane katrina]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joplin tornado]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pakistan floods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queensland floods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[resilience]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Link suite overview: on recovering from disasters; the lessons of Irene, Joplin, Fukushima, Pakistan flood, Queensland flood, Christchurch quakes, Haiti quakes, Katrina; collateral damage and eco-smart design as insurance It has been a banner year for disasters in the US with  a record-breaking 10 &#8220;billion-dollar-plus&#8221; knock-out punches, and still four months to go. So far: [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=2227&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<h4><span style="color:#ac333f;">Link suite overview: on recovering from disasters; the lessons of Irene, Joplin, Fukushima, Pakistan flood, Queensland flood, Christchurch quakes, Haiti quakes, Katrina; collateral damage and eco-smart design as insurance</span></h4>
<div id="attachment_2231" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 431px"><a href="http://www.trackernews.net"><img class="size-full wp-image-2231 " title="irenetrackernews" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/irenetrackernews.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Links become part of the TrackerNews searchable database.</p></div>
<p>It has been a banner year for disasters in the US with  <a title="Hurricane Irene Will Make 2011 a Record Disaster Year" href="http://www.livescience.com/15801-hurricane-irene-billion-dollar-disaster.html" target="_blank">a record-breaking 10 &#8220;billion-dollar-plus&#8221; knock-out punches</a>, and still four months to go. So far: massive blizzards, epic floods, murderous tornadoes and one staggeringly large, coast-shredding hurricane. As  a grace note, an earthquake on an previously unknown fault in Virginia put cracks in the Washington monument—a wound as disturbing symbolically as structurally.</p>
<p>Globally, the news is no less jaw-dropping: Floods stretching to the horizon in Australia and Pakistan. Two devastating earthquakes <em>each</em> for New Zealand and Haiti. And a <a title="&quot;trifecta&quot; / wikipedia" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trifecta" target="_blank">trifecta</a> of tragedy in Japan where an earthquake triggered a tsunami that drowned a nuclear plant.</p>
<p>Droughts—comparatively stealthy as disasters go—only grab headlines when people start keeling over from starvation by the tens of thousands (Somalia), or crop losses are so large, sticker shock sets in at the grocery store, while global food security—which means global security—becomes notably less secure (Russia, US).</p>
<p>The only bright spot in this litany of gloomy news is that communication during and about disasters has improved markedly.  As Hurricane Irene buzz-sawed its way up the eastern seaboard, The Weather Channel went into overdrive, leading a media mob—both mainstream and &#8220;citizen&#8221;—reporting, tweeting, crowdmapping, photographing, making videos, texting donations, aggregating, blogging, facebooking, and sharing every last little nugget of awful news.</p>
<p>It made a difference. People got out of harm&#8217;s way. Although the death toll has now climbed into mid-forties, with likely a few thousand more injured, an estimated 65 <em>million</em> people felt some part of Irene&#8217;s fury. Most stayed safe, which is remarkable.</p>
<p>Yet for all the technical brilliance that made it possible to track a weather blip off the coast of Africa to its lethal landfall an ocean away, or to plan mass evacuations, share safety tips and keep track of loved ones, there was no <em>stopping</em> Irene. Financial losses may have been less than expected—mostly because property values are lower in Vermont than in New York City—but they are enormous and devastating. Homes have been torn apart, lives turned upside down.</p>
<p>The collateral damage has yet to be tallied from lost incomes, delayed school starts, <a title="Hurricane Irene's Health Risks Likely To Linger " href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/27/hurricane-irene-health-mold-water-pollution_n_938919.html" target="_blank">exposure to toxic mold, toxic water, mosquito-borne illnesses</a> and weakened infrastructure.</p>
<p>It becomes a vicious circle: Until businesses affected by the storm are up and running again, tax revenues will decline, making it that much more difficult to pay for repairs or proactive maintenance. In Japan and New Zealand, bonds and special taxes are now on the table to cope with recovery costs estimated in the tens of billions of dollars.</p>
<p>In fact, the high cost of these mega-disasters—often quoted a percentage of a country&#8217;s GDP—can itself become a cost. Insurance companies, faced with catastrophic losses, are hiking rates and <a title="Are you covered? Answers to your Irene insurance questions" href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/29/us-storm-irene-personalfi-idUSTRE77S4DD20110829" target="_blank">cutting coverage</a>. But the more businesses and home-owners are forced to spend on insurance and out-of-pocket expenses, the less money they have to expand businesses or make purchases.</p>
<p>There are also more people than ever in harm&#8217;s way. <a title="Insurers 'need a greater say' " href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/5439280/Insurers-need-a-greater-say" target="_blank">Much of the development in Queensland, Australia over the last 30 years, for example, was on a floodplain.</a></p>
<p>Although specific storms are difficult to link directly to climate change, our warmer world holds more moisture in its atmosphere than it did even just a few decades ago. That means there is more rain to to be rained, and more energy to interact and magnify well-known weather drivers such as El Nino / La Nina.</p>
<p>Whether or not this is the &#8220;new normal&#8221; remains to be seen. It certainly seems to be the &#8220;more frequent.&#8221;</p>
<h3><span style="color:#008000;">IN RECOVERY</span></h3>
<p><em><span style="color:#008000;">&#8220;The Days, Years After,&#8221;</span></em> a new link suite story on the <span style="color:#008000;"><a title="TrackerNews" href="http://www.TrackerNews.net" target="_blank"><span style="color:#008000;"><strong>TrackerNews</strong></span></a></span> aggregator, looks at a half dozen disasters from the last few years, focusing on recovery efforts. Each disaster is tragic in its own way, but patterns emerge.</p>
<ul>
<li>Political gridlock (<a title="Anger in tsunami zone over Japan power games" href="http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Anger_in_tsunami_zone_over_Japan_power_games_999.html" target="_blank">Japan</a>) can be just as devastating as corruption (<a title="Rebuilding Haiti The long, hard haul" href="http://www.economist.com/node/18390114" target="_blank">Haiti</a>) in slowing recovery</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Good communications networks make a tangible difference (<a title="Rebuild Joplin" href="http://rebuildjoplin.org/about" target="_blank">Joplin</a>, New York)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Donor burn-out threatens (anyone remember Jay-Z, Bono, the Edge and Rihanna crooning, <a title="Haiti Mon Amour" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0bcQbEgbsbw" target="_blank">&#8220;We&#8217;re not going to leave you stranded,&#8221;</a> to Haiti&#8217;s quake victims?)</li>
</ul>
<p>On a more encouraging note, all sorts of new and better tools for  mapping, clean-up, construction and communication have emerged since Hurricane Katrina, all made accessible, and some made possible, by the web.</p>
<p>Many of the technologies are eco-smart, which turns out to be a good disaster defense strategy as well.</p>
<p>Imagine, for example, the difference it would have made if the electric grid in the Northeast had been based on a distributed power paradigm. Rather than large central power plants generating electricity transported over long distances on vulnerable wires, individual buildings and neighborhoods would generate their own, preferably green, power. <a title="Giant Fluid Batteries Could Store Renewable Energy for 2,000 Homes" href="http://inhabitat.com/scientists-devloping-giant-fluid-batteries-that-could-could-store-renewable-energy-for-2000-homes/" target="_blank">Batteries capable of storing enough energy from solar panels and wind-turbines to power as many as 2,000 homes</a> would be tied into local grid, which could, in turn, could be tied into a larger grid. A hurricane would still knock lights out, but <em>not</em> to <a title="Irene leaves 5.5 million without power. Can power companies do better?" href="http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2011/0829/Irene-leaves-5.5-million-without-power.-Can-power-companies-do-better" target="_blank">millions of people</a>.</p>
<p>Clean, green energy independence means energy insurance, too.</p>
<p>Additional highlights of the link suite include:</p>
<ul>
<li><a title="Make It Right Foundation" href="http://www.makeitrightnola.org/" target="_blank">Make It Right Foundation</a></li>
</ul>
<span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/08/31/days_years_after/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/nVwulENEDg8/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span>
<ul>
<li><a title="A Conversation of Cameron Sinclair" href="http://www.theatlantic.com/life/archive/2011/03/a-conversation-with-cameron-sinclair-ceo-of-architecture-for-humanity/72782/" target="_blank">A Conversation with Cameron Sinclair, CEO of Architecture for Humanity </a>/ <em>The Atlantic</em>, Daniel Fromson</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Ocean Springs Cottages" href="http://blog.gulflive.com/mississippi-press-news/2011/08/ocean_springs_cottages_at_oak.html" target="_blank">Ocean Springs Cottages at Oak Park are ready for business and feature green amenities</a>  / <em>The Mississippi Press</em>, Cherie Wood</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="QuaDror: A New Structural System" href="http://www.archdaily.com/114141/quadror-a-new-structural-system/" target="_blank">QuaDror: A New Structural System</a> / <em>Arch Daily</em>, Kelly Minner</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="When the Water Rises" href="http://nymag.com/arts/architecture/features/64304/" target="_blank">When the Water Rises</a> / <em>New York magazine</em>, Justin Davidson</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Irene Recovery Map" href="http://blog.ushahidi.com/index.php/2011/08/28/irene-recovery-map/" target="_blank">Irene Recovery Map: For Ordinary People Helping Ordinary People</a> / <em>Ushahidi blog</em>, Patrick Meier</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Exploring Joplin, Missouri, Recovering from Disaster" href="http://www.gadling.com/2011/08/25/exploring-joplin-missouri-recovering-from-disaster/" target="_blank">Exploring Joplin, Missouri, Recovering from Disaster</a> / <em>Traveling the American Road</em>, Paul Brady</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Virgina Quake Raises Questions" href="http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=virginia-quake-raises-questions-about-east-coast-infrastructure" target="_blank">Virginia Quake Raises More Questions About US East Coast Infrastructure</a> / <em>Scientific American</em>, Michael Moyer</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Blue Goo Sucks Up Toxic Waste" href="http://money.cnn.com/2011/05/25/technology/toxic_waste_cleanup_goo/index.htm" target="_blank">Blue Goo Sucks Up Toxic Waste</a>  / <em>CNN Money</em>, Eilene Zimmerman</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Tech to make buildings earthquake and tsunami resistant" href="http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/engineering/architecture/earthquake-and-tsunami-resistant-building-tech-5382936" target="_blank">The Tech to Make Buildings Earthquake—and Tsunami—Resistant</a> / <em>Popular Mechanics</em>, Andrew Moseman</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="How the World Failed Haiti" href="http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/how-the-world-failed-haiti-20110804" target="_blank">How the World Failed Haiti</a> / <em>Rolling Stone</em>, Janet Reitman</li>
</ul>
<p>&#8230; and much more (all links become part of the <a title="TrackerNews &quot;search&quot;" href="http://www.trackernews.net/search/" target="_blank"><span style="color:#008000;"><em>TrackerNews</em></span> searchable database</a>)</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">RELATED</span></h4>
<ul>
<li><a title="The Nuke Factor" href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/03/21/the-nuke-factor/" target="_blank">The Nuke Factor: How to Make Disasters Worse and the Implications for Humanitarian Aid</a> / <span style="color:#008000;"><em>TrackerNews Editor&#8217;s Blog</em></span>, J.A. Ginsburg</li>
</ul>
<p><span style="color:#008000;"><em><a title="trackernews on twitter" href="http://twitter.com/TrackerNews"><span style="color:#008000;">— @TrackerNews</span></a></em></span></p>
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		<title>The Nuke Factor: How to Make Disasters Worse and the Implications for Humanitarian Aid</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/03/21/the-nuke-factor/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/03/21/the-nuke-factor/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Mar 2011 17:08:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[agriculture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[air pollution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Diaster relief]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[nuclear meltdown]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[radiation]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Three Mile Island]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[On 400+ aging nuclear reactors, quake-prone countries, food chains, trade networks and what this means for first responders and social entrepreneurs Let&#8217;s get right to the point: What happens the next time a nuclear reactor goes rogue in the wake of a natural disaster? Japan is a worst case scenario in a best case place. [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=2051&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<h4><span style="color:#aa2b2e;">On 400+ aging nuclear reactors, quake-prone countries, food chains, trade networks and what this means for first responders and social entrepreneurs</span></h4>
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<div id="attachment_2058" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 384px"><a href="http://www.TrackerNews.net"><img class="size-full wp-image-2058 " title="trackerblog032111thenukefac" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/trackerblog032111thenukefac.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">TrackerNews link suite on the Japanese nuclear disaster. Links become part of the TrackerNews searchable database.</p></div>
<p>Let&#8217;s get right to the point: What happens the next time a nuclear reactor goes rogue in the wake of a natural disaster? Japan is a worst case scenario in a best case place.</p>
<p>But what if the earth were to quake in Iran, China, Italy or Turkey—all of which are pursuing nuclear-fueled futures? <a title="U.S. to give China a pass on NSG commitments for Pakistan nuclear deal" href="http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/article1554159.ece" target="_blank">Or Pakistan</a>, where the IEAE  and US just gave their respective stamps of approval for two new Chinese-built plants? Each of those seismically-rocking countries floats precariously at (tectonic) plates&#8217; edge. In fact, <a title="Turkey stands by nuclear power plans" href="http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,14917400,00.html" target="_blank">one of two reactors planned for Turkey </a>is just a few miles from a major fault line.</p>
<p>The assurances of political leaders such as <a title="Iran says nuclear plant more modern than Japan's" href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gEUbXSaoJcIUtzRO8dIkiw-J-DFg?docId=CNG.961169f10a28e87bb4d2f09c4f548ce0.ca1" target="_blank">Iran&#8217;s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad </a>are somehow less than reassuring: <em>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think there will be any serious problem&#8230;The security standards there are the standards of today. We have to take into account that the Japanese nuclear plants were built 40 years ago with the standards of yesterday.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Forty years may seem like an eternity to a politician, but is, in fact, a blink in a time-scale defined by nuclear radiation (<a title="Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment  " href="http://books.google.com/books?id=g34tNlYOB3AC&amp;pg=PR5&amp;lpg=PR5&amp;dq=Yablokov+%22Chernobyl:+Consequences+of+the+Catastrophe+for+People+and+the+Environment%22&amp;source=bl&amp;ots=O15TfOZZc9&amp;sig=bJaIPOK47BZD3KVWqwMImqkYP04&amp;hl=en&amp;ei=xZyCTeSTA4rdgQeTg5XRCA&amp;sa=X&amp;oi=book_result&amp;ct=result&amp;resnum=1&amp;ved=0CBwQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&amp;q&amp;f=false" target="_blank">see Chernobyl)</a>. Inspections have a way of getting missed (<a title="Stricken Japan plant missed scheduled inspections -filing" href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/21/japan-nuclear-inspection-idUSL3E7EL0M120110321" target="_blank">see Japan</a>). Human error happens (<a title="Meltdown at Three Mile Island" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLPAigMuBk0&amp;p=937B0E873F58A3D7" target="_blank">see Three Mile Island)</a>.<em> </em></p>
<p>In the meantime, major earthquakes striking all of these countries sometime over the projected lifespans of their reactors<em> is </em>a sure thing.</p>
<p>Beyond the issues of nuclear waste storage, the almost inevitable black market trade and surreptitious weapons programs, what happens when the &#8220;sure thing&#8221; meets the big risk? How does one keep radioactive fall-out from contaminating emergency food rations? Or find safe water? What happens when those best able to help are put in mortal danger if they try?</p>
<p>Is this the kind of border even doctors won&#8217;t cross?</p>
<p>No matter. The radiation will eventually come to them, traveling first through food chains, then trade networks. Some produce is already showing <a title="Japan nuclear crisis: fears over food contamination" href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/japan/8394963/Japan-nuclear-crisis-fears-over-food-contamination.html" target="_blank">levels of radiation several times accepted limits, though authorities insist it is still safe</a>. So far, the milk supply remains uncontaminated. But according the WHO, Japan is a big exporter of baby formula and powdered milk to China and the US. As the crisis drags on and radioactive particles work their way into cattle pastures, that could change.</p>
<p>In short, bad gets worse—much worse—once nuclear is part of the equation.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">WAKE UP CALL</span></h4>
<p>The tragedy in Japan should be a wake up call to NGOs, social entrepreneurs and all those working, as they say, &#8220;for positive change.&#8221; The nuclear issue is not an abstraction to be relegated to politicians, engineers and lobbyists. This threatens <em>your </em>work, potentially reversing years of hard-fought economic gains in poor countries and undoing decades-worth of global public health efforts. This isn&#8217;t just about regional clusters of radiation-related illnesses, but also of the loss of infrastructure for disease surveillance and drug distribution that would tip the balance in favor of infectious diseases outbreaks and pandemics.</p>
<p>Finally, the thorniest of ethical questions:  Who makes the call to send staff into disaster zones so dangerous that not only is personal health at risk, but that of future offspring as well? (As <a title="Aspects of Nuclear Radiation (1950's propaganda) " href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQGdGeP3DT8" target="_blank">a 1950s military film</a> put it: &#8220;the ultimate symptom, death itself&#8221;)</p>
<p>With more than 400 reactors spread across the globe—many now nearing their &#8220;sold-by&#8221; date—the next Japan is more a matter of when, not if. Power plants, of course, are not designed as weapons, but that doesn&#8217;t make their  fall-out any less lethal.</p>
<p>Humanitarian aid workers: Are you ready?</p>
<div id="attachment_2064" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 431px"><a href="http://maptd.com/map/earthquake_activity_vs_nuclear_power_plants/"><img class="size-full wp-image-2064 " title="nudlearquakemap" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/nudlearquakemap.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Global earthquake activity since 1973 and nuclear power plant locations (click through to map web page)</p></div>
<h4><span style="color:#087152;">* Addendum 3/31/11: </span></h4>
<blockquote><p>Hospitals and temporary refuges are demanding that evacuees provide them with certificates confirming that they have not been exposed to radiation before they are admitted&#8230;.</p>
<p>&#8230;The eight-year-old daughter of Takayuki Okamura was refused treatment for a skin rash by a clinic in Fukushima City, where the family is living in a shelter after abandoning their home in Minamisoma, 18 miles from the crippled nuclear plant&#8230;.</p>
<p>&#8230;Prejudice against people who used to live near the plant is reminiscent of the ostracism that survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 experienced. Many suffered discrimination when they tried to rent housing, find employment or marriage partners&#8230;</p>
<p><a title="Japan nuclear crisis: evacuees turned away from shelter" href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/japan/8416302/Japan-nuclear-crisis-evacuees-turned-away-from-shelters.html" target="_blank">—&#8221;Japan nuclear crisis: evacuees turned away from shelters&#8221; / <em>The Telegraph</em></a></p></blockquote>
<p>Discrimination based not on race, creed or color, but on a cruel twist of geographic fate: simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.  It is tragedy compounded, reverberating through generations.</p>
<p>Perhaps we need to add a &#8220;futures wrecked&#8221; column to<a title="Infographic of the Day: Just How Deadly Is Nuclear Energy?" href="http://www.fastcodesign.com/1663489/infographic-of-the-day-just-how-deadly-is-nuclear-energy" target="_blank"> graphs purporting to show the comparative benignness of nuclear energy </a>versus that produced by coal and oil. It is a lobbyist&#8217;s argument, telling a truth, but not the whole truth.</p>
<p>The whole truth? All of these energy sources are fraught in the present and threaten the future. A warming earth with rising seas and wilder weather will send millions of climate refugees fleeing to higher, safer ground—human migrations on a scale unimaginable.</p>
<p>Radioactive refugees have nowhere to go.</p>
<p>We need to get beyond this devil&#8217;s choice fast, to invest in renewables at every scale, macro to micro (e.g., <a title="HomeRenewable EnergyU.S. Embassy Installing Micro Wind Power U.S. Embassy Installing Micro Wind Power" href="http://www.earthtechling.com/2011/03/u-s-embassy-installing-micro-wind-power/" target="_blank">micro-wind</a>). We—as in &#8220;We the people,&#8221; as in our governments—need to support research and innovation and help ideas scale for practical, commercial use.</p>
<p>One the few hopeful stories this past week was the announcement of an &#8220;artificial leaf&#8221; that can create energy from photosynthesis. MIT professor Daniel Nocera has been working on ways that essentially cut out the middleman in energy generation. Unlike coal and oil, which are fossilized sunlight—energy banked in the past—or nuclear power, which requires vast investment to tap, Nocera&#8217;s inexpensive playing card-size solar chip can harvest enough energy from a gallon of water—stored in a small fuel cell—to power a home in a developing country for a day. The water doesn&#8217;t even have to be all that clean, either.</p>
<blockquote><p>The latest version of Nocera&#8217;s technology is of commercial interest because, by integrating the catalyst with the chips, it dispenses with the need for traditional solar panels. That, he says, will cut costs considerably, by eliminating wires, etc. &#8220;The price of the silicon of a solar panel isn&#8217;t much,&#8221; he says. &#8220;A lot of the cost is the wiring. What this does is get rid of all that.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;The real goal here,&#8221; he adds, &#8220;is giving energy to the poor&#8221; – especially, he notes, in rural Africa, India, and China.</p>
<p>Even better, he adds, the device doesn’t need ultrapure water. &#8220;You can use nature water sources, which is a big deal in parts of the world where it&#8217;s costly to have to use pure water.&#8221;</p>
<p>— <a title="MIT scientist announces first &quot;practical&quot; artificial leaf" href="http://blogs.nature.com/news/thegreatbeyond/2011/03/scientists_announce_first_prac.html" target="_blank">MIT scientist announces first &#8220;practical&#8221; artificial leaf /<em> Nature</em></a></p></blockquote>
<p>Recently,<a title="Tata Group" href="http://www.tata.com/" target="_blank"> Tata Group,</a> an international conglomerate best known as India&#8217;s largest automaker, invested $9.5 million in Nocera&#8217;s company, <a title="Sun Catalytix" href="http://www.suncatalytix.com/">Sun Catalytix</a>.</p>
<p>Follow the money. The smart money.</p>
<p>(video: Daniel Nocera explains personalized power / Poptech / 1 of 2)</p>
<p><span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/03/21/the-nuke-factor/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/wAqQZCue3ps/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span><strong><span style="color:#008000;"> </span></strong></p>
<ul>
<li><a title="Daniel Nocera / personalized power / poptech / 2 of 2" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLgO7DaTJt0&amp;feature=related" target="_blank">Daniel Nocera explains personalized power / Poptech / 2 of 2</a></li>
</ul>
<p><strong><span style="color:#008000;">___________________________________________________</span></strong></p>
<h4><span style="color:#087152;">Additional links include:</span></h4>
<ul>
<li><a title="Food Contamination concerns following the Japanese nuclear crisis" href="http://www.wpro.who.int/media_centre/jpn_earthquake/FAQs/faqs_foodcontamination.htm" target="_blank">Food Contamination Concerns following the Japanese Nuclear Crisis </a>/ WHO fact sheet</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Meltdown at Three Mile Island" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLPAigMuBk0&amp;p=937B0E873F58A3D7" target="_blank">Meltdown at Three Mile Island </a>/ <em>American Experience</em>, PBS (video)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="http://www.newscientist.com/embedded/nuclear-reactor-map" href="http://www.newscientist.com/embedded/nuclear-reactor-map" target="_blank">Where are the world&#8217;s nuclear reactors? </a>/ <em>New Scientist</em>, interactive map</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="From moving clouds to sowing crops, Chernobyl can help Japan" href="http://www.terradaily.com/reports/From_moving_clouds_to_sowing_crops_Chernobyl_can_help_Japan_999.html" target="_blank">From moving clouds to sowing crops, Chernobyl can help Japan </a>/ <em>TerraDaily</em>, AFP</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="With Nuclear Power, &quot;No Acts of God Can Be Permitted&quot;" href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/amory-lovins/with-nuclear-power-no-act_b_837708.html" target="_blank">With Nuclear Power, &#8220;No Acts of God Can Be Permitted&#8221;</a> / Amory Lovins, <em>Huffington Post</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Long Shadow of Chernobyl" href="http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2006/04/inside-chernobyl/audio-interactive" target="_blank">Long Shadow of Chernobyl (2006, 20 years out) </a>/ Gurd Ludwig, <em>National Geographic</em> (narrated slide show)</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="China to Sell Outdated Nuclear Reactors to Pakistan" href="http://www.voanews.com/english/news/asia/China-to-Sell-Outdated-Nuclear-Reactors-to-Pakistan-118572049.html" target="_blank">China to Sell Outdated Nuclear Reactors to Pakistan</a> / VOA</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Murky past of Japan's troubled nuclear industry revealed" href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/murky-past-of-japans-troubled-nuclear-industry-revealed-2252469.html" target="_blank">Murky past of Japan&#8217;s troubled nuclear industry revealed</a> / <em>The Independent</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Infographic of the Day: The Best Radiation Chart We've Seen So Far" href="http://www.fastcodesign.com/1663509/infographic-of-the-day-as-fukushima-continues-to-meltdown-another-radiation-graphic" target="_blank">Infographic of the Day: The Best Radiation Chart We&#8217;ve Seen So Far</a> / David McCandless,<em> Fast Company </em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Japan: The Big One" href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/03/14/japanquake/" target="_blank">Japan: The Big One </a>/ J.A. Ginsburg, <em>TrackerNews Editor&#8217;s Blog</em></li>
</ul>
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		<title>Cry Me a River&#8230;and Pass Me a Shovel: On Rain, Snow, Sleet and Ice, Atmospheric Rivers and a World Gone Soggy</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2011/02/01/cry-me-a-river/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Feb 2011 19:32:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[agriculture]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The opening rounds of a potentially record-shattering blizzard swirl outside my office window. It is one thing to report on extreme weather around the globe and quite another to literally be in the howling midst of the story. It is a storm the likes of which has not been seen, at least in the hundred-some [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=1942&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<div id="attachment_1947" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 220px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1947  " title="The Blizzard of 2011" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/weathermap.jpg?w=210&#038;h=156" alt="" width="210" height="156" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Wintry Buffet: Blizzard, Ice Storms, Tornado Watches &amp; Thundersnow  / Feburary 1, 2011</p></div>
<p>The opening rounds of a potentially record-shattering blizzard swirl outside my office window. It is one thing to report on extreme weather around the globe and quite another to literally be in the howling midst of the story. It is a storm the likes of which has not been seen, at least in the hundred-some years since people have been keeping records.</p>
<p><a title="Two thousand mile long colossal storm" href="http://www.weather.com/outlook/videos/thousand-mile-long-colossal-storm-19543" target="_blank">Two-thousand miles across.</a> A hundred million people in harm&#8217;s way. Blizzard warnings in at least nine states. Tornado warnings in others. Ice storms sealing whole cities in shells of slick an inch thick. Snow tallies measured in feet. Snow drifts sculpted into frozen dunes. Winds 30-40-50-even 60 mph driving temperatures into negative double-digit insti-frostbite territory. Twenty-five foot waves on Lake Michigan, powerful enough to turn Chicago&#8217;s Lake Shore Drive &#8220;into an ice-skating rink&#8221; (or, as it turned out,<a title="abandoned cars on Lake Shore Drive (photo) " href="http://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/abandoned-cars-on-lake-shore-drive" target="_blank"> a parking lot</a>&#8230;)</p>
<p>And yet we saw it coming, so it won&#8217;t be quite so bad. For the past couple of days, people have been stocking up on everything from salt and shovels to groceries and fireplace logs. Snow plows have been pre-positioned, and flights, by the thousands, canceled in anticipation by the airlines. Warming shelters have been opened and schools closed. The entire cast and crew of The Weather Channel is &#8220;in position,&#8221; ready to freeze for the camera so we don&#8217;t have to&#8230;</p>
<p>By Thursday, the sun will shine, though won&#8217;t make a dent in the mountains of snow now pushed Himalaya-high by the primal forces of snow plow and dump truck. If we&#8217;re lucky, thoughtful city crews will seize the opportunity to bury and maim much-hated foreign-leased parking meter boxes, giving us all a brief break from extortion-level fees.</p>
<p>Yes, there will be car accidents, stranded commuters, power outages, busted roofs, broken ankles, frostbitten fingers and toes, electric heater fires, and probably a few death-by-shoveling heart attacks. Municipal budgets, already struggling, will buckle under the costs. But mostly we will be alright.</p>
<div id="attachment_1950" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 250px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1950 " title="Cry Me a River Link Suite" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/trackerblog020211crymearive.jpg?w=240&#038;h=201" alt="" width="240" height="201" /><p class="wp-caption-text">TrackerNews link suite on global flooding</p></div>
<p>Not so the victims of floods in Australia, Brazil, Pakistan, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, Germany, Italy, Mexico, England, Costa Rica, the Philippines and so many other places where record rains over the last year have led to tragedy beyond imagining. Normally quiet—or at least predictable—rivers have burst their banks, roaring <a title="The Incredible Hulk" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hulk_(comics)" target="_blank">Hulk-like</a> over the land, submerging crops, stranding wildlife and sending millions of people scrambling for shelter, their lives forever altered, their hopes and dreams literally drowned. And when it wasn&#8217;t rivers on a rampage, it was the saturated ground itself that gave way, unleashing killer mudslides, burying thousands alive.</p>
<p>The future could be even soggier. In the short-term, Australia&#8217;s rain-wracked state of <a title="Bracing for Cyclone Yasi" href="http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/02/02/idINIndia-54591620110202" target="_blank">Queensland is currently bracing for Yasi &#8220;one of the most devastating cyclones on record.</a>&#8221; A little harder to pin down schedule-wise  is something called an ARk storm, due to slam into the California, dumping up to 10 feet of rain over several weeks and <a title="USGS ARk storm scenario overview" href="http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2010/1312/" target="_blank">costing, when all is said and done, three times as much as a big earthquake: an estimated $725 billion</a>.</p>
<p>ARk storms have happened before, most recently 150 years ago when it rained for nearly two months straight. So many livestock drowned, ranchers traded in branding irons for plows in the aftermath and became farmers. In the USGS scenario, one of the world&#8217;s great food baskets, the Central Valley, fills up like a giant bathtub, 300 miles long and 20 miles wide.</p>
<blockquote><p>Serious flooding also occurs in Orange County, Los Angeles County, San Diego, the San Francisco Bay area, and other coastal communities. Windspeeds in some places reach 125 miles per hour, hurricane-force winds. Across wider areas of the state, winds reach 60 miles per hour&#8230; Flooding evacuation could involve 1.5 million residents in the inland region and delta counties.</p>
<p><em>—Overview of the ARkStorm Scenario</em></p></blockquote>
<p>The good news is that an ARk storm is supposed to happen only once ever 500 to 1,000 years. The bad news? A warmer world holds more moisture in its atmosphere, so scientists suspect that those between-storm time frames to shrink. Add in all the <a title="Irrigation's Cooling Effects May Mask Warming--For Now" href="http://www.earth.columbia.edu/articles/view/2726" target="_blank">&#8220;fossil water&#8221; that&#8217;s been pumped to the hydrologic system</a> from slow-renewing aquifers over the last half century and it&#8217;s easy to see that there is more water in Earth&#8217;s atmosphere than there has been for quite a long time. (Although fossil water amounts to a tiny percentage of the overall total, even small changes can eventually lead to much bigger ones: <a title="Chaos theory and the butterfly effect" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly_effect" target="_blank">the &#8220;butterfly effect.&#8221;</a>)</p>
<p>The &#8220;AR&#8221; in &#8220;ARk&#8221; stands for &#8220;atmospheric rivers.&#8221; We know them as the Pineapple Express or the Alberta Clipper—conveyer belts of moisture laden air. Now, with more moisture in the air, they, too, have burst their banks. The floods above our heads beget the floods here on the ground.</p>
<p>An intricate weave of ocean surface temperatures driving global weather patterns—La Nina, El Nino and a slew of acronyms only meteorologists can keep straight—combined with man-made changes to the land—deforestation, development, crumbling, inadequate infrastructure—determine how severe damage will be. But clearly more people are in harm&#8217;s way. And more harm is on the way.</p>
<p>The climate is in shifting. Climate change is a done deal. Umbrellas for everybody&#8230;and some shovels, too.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#008000;">________________________________________</span></strong></p>
<div>Additional links from the aggregator suite include:</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><a title="The Beast Roars" href="http://www.smh.com.au/environment/weather/the-beast-roars-20110202-1adwi.html" target="_blank">&#8220;The Beast Roars&#8221; (Cyclone Yasi slams into Queensland)</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Brisbane Floods Up Close" href="http://www.abc.net.au/news/infographics/qld-floods/beforeafter2.htm" target="_blank">&#8220;Brisbane Floods Up Close&#8221; (slideshow—note—move the center line to compare before / after)</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><em> </em><a title="Our Woes Are Just Begnning (Australia) " href="http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/our-woes-are-just-beginning-20110112-19o66.html" target="_blank">&#8220;Our Woes Are Just Beginning&#8221;</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Heavy Flooding Continues Following Deadly Weekend" href="http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,710867,00.html" target="_blank">&#8220;Central Europe Under Water&#8221;</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="England's uplands 'get more frequent heavy rainfall'" href="England's uplands 'get more frequent heavy rainfall'" target="_blank">&#8220;England&#8217;s uplands &#8216;get more frequent heavy rainfall&#8217;&#8221;</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="California's next big one: massive winter storm to rival a hurricane?" href="http://www.scpr.org/programs/madeleine-brand/2011/01/17/lucy-jones/" target="_blank">&#8220;California&#8217;s next big one: massive winter storm to rival a hurricane?&#8221; (audio / video)</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Sri Lanka: Floods &amp; Adapting to Climate Change" href="http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportID=91611" target="_blank">&#8220;Sri Lanka: Record rains increase urgency of climate change adaptation&#8221;</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Australian IT communities rallies to support flood victims" href="http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/373848/australian_it_community_bands_together_support_queensland_flood_vitcims/?fp=4&amp;fpid=1398720840" target="_blank">&#8220;Australian IT community bands together to support Queensland flood victims&#8221;</a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Trees, Food, Pakistan &amp; the Lessons of Medieval Monks" href="How Ecosystems Thinking Can (Still) Save the World" target="_blank">&#8220;Trees, Food, Pakistan &amp; the Lessons of Medieval Monks: How Ecosystems Thinking Can (Still) Save the World&#8221; (<em>TrackerNews Editor&#8217;s blog</em></a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>and more!</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>All links become part of the <a title="TrackerNews search archive" href="http://www.trackernews.net/search/" target="_blank"><em>TrackersNews’ </em>searchable archive.</a></p>
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		<title>Need, Give, Good: On Philanthropy, Due Diligence, Trends &amp; an Idea Whose Time as Come (link suite overview)</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/12/24/need-give-good/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/12/24/need-give-good/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Dec 2010 19:06:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Diaster relief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mobile devices]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[philanthropy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Acumen Fund]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill and Melinda Gates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brain Pickings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cause marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charity navigator]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Giving Pledge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[global giving]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[groupon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haiti]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[J.A.Ginsburg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jacqueline Novogratz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kiva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[living social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maria Popova]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nicholas Kristof]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pakistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[philantopic]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SOCAP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social enterprise]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[toy libraries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Warren Buffett]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Giving has never been easier, nor need greater. Leveraging donations for impact, how more can be less and the promise of social enterprise “Need, Give, Good&#8221; &#8211; New suite of links on TrackerNews.net According to a new study by Network for Good and True Sense Marketing, 20% of all online giving takes place in the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=1858&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<h4><em><em><span style="color:#ae1e29;">Giving has never been easier, nor need greater. Leveraging donations for impact, how more can be less and the promise of social enterprise</span><br />
</em></em></h4>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-1859" title="givingneedgivegood" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/givingneedgivegood.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a title="TrackerNews.net" href="http://www.trackernews.net/" target="_blank">“Need, Give, Good&#8221; </a> &#8211; New suite of links on<em> <a title="TrackerNews, Afri Can and Does!" href="http://www.trackernews.net/" target="_blank">TrackerNews.net</a></em></p>
<p>According to <a title="Online giving study" href="http://www.onlinegivingstudy.org/charts" target="_blank">a new study by Network for Good and True Sense Marketing</a>, 20% of all online giving takes place in the last 48 hours of the year. So get out your laptops and cell phones, it&#8217;s time to dig into your cyber pockets and spread some love around.</p>
<p>There are plenty of ways to do it, too. This year&#8217;s digital darling,<a title="Kiva Groupon " href="http://www.groupon.com/deals/kiva-national-1" target="_blank"> Groupon, has teamed up with crowdfunded microfinance pioneer Kiva</a> to make your philanthropy dollars go further: 40% further. The coupon site is selling $25 donations for $15, with Groupon and its sponsors making up  the $10 difference up to $500,000, Kiva isn&#8217;t out a dime. The deal ends, along with 2010, on December 31.</p>
<p>Groupon competitor,<a title="Living Social and Global Giving" href="http://www.globalgiving.org/livingsocial/" target="_blank"> Living Social, has a somewhat more complicated offer going with Global Giving,</a> involving percentages of sales, a processing fee, benefiting five charities in Canada, the U.K. and Australia. Today it the last day, so we should know son how well it worked out.</p>
<p>No matter how you send in your dollars (credit card, text, check or &#8220;old timey<strong><span style="color:#008000;">&#8220;<span style="color:#dd2247;">*</span></span></strong> coin in a kettle), be sure to use<a title="Charity Navigator" href="http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=content.view&amp;cpid=518" target="_blank"> Charity Navigator</a> to make sure an organization is as worthy as its cause.</p>
<p>There are plenty of worthy causes, too. But if you&#8217;re stuck, <em>New York Times</em> columnist <a title="Nick Kristof's gift guide" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/19/opinion/19kristof.html" target="_blank">Nicholas Kristof has a few suggestions for lesser-known groups that could use some help</a> (btw, no holiday required—give early, give often&#8230;).</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">WHAT&#8217;S NEXT IN PHILANTHROPY?</span></h4>
<p><a title="Philanthrocapitalism - Amazon" href="http://www.amazon.com/Philanthrocapitalism-How-Rich-Save-World/dp/1596913746" target="_blank">&#8220;Philanthrocapitalism&#8221; </a>co-author <a title="Mark Bishop on philanthropy in 2011 (video)" href="http://audiovideo.economist.com/?fr_story=883907d4b285203218498b374d5fd8ee221ef7f0&amp;rf=bm" target="_blank">Mark Bishop predicts 2011</a> will be &#8220;a year when aid is privatized more than we&#8217;ve ever seen it before.&#8221; Whether that turns out to be good or not remains to be seen. But the trend got a big boost with Warren Buffet and Bill &amp; Melinda Gates&#8217; <a title="The Giving Pledge" href="http://givingpledge.org/#enter" target="_blank">&#8220;Giving Pledge,&#8221;</a> a clever non-binding bit of billionaire peer-pressure designed to buck the &#8220;tax breaks for the wealthiest 2%&#8221; mentality of Washington D.C. Although the pledge calls for the mega-rich to donate half their wealth during their lifetimes, or immediately thereafter, <a title="&quot;Why We Should Dial Down Our Enthusiasm for the Giving Pledge&quot;" href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/aaron-dorfman/the-giving-pledge_b_796159.html" target="_blank">the realities of how much actual cash that boils down to</a> on an annual basis and where the money goes may prove disappointing to some.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, continued global economic gloom, coupled with a pricey uptick in natural disasters, means that governments slashing domestic budgets will have less available for foreign aid just as the need has never been greater. This is already a huge problem.<a title="Spate of Natural Disasters Spurs Record Relief Spending for U.N." href="http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2010/12/06/06greenwire-spate-of-natural-disasters-spurs-record-relief-58500.html" target="_blank"> UN appeals often fall short of their goals.</a> In 2010, the UN asked for a record $5 billion for natural disasters, but received only 60%, a still record $3 billion (the Haitian earthquake and Pakistan flood were each billion dollar-plus catastrophes). A few country-specific appeals failed to generate <em>any</em> donor-country response at all.</p>
<p>Consultant <a title="&quot;Ten for the next 10: 2010 - 2020&quot;" href="http://philanthropy.blogspot.com/2010/12/ten-for-next-10-2010-2020.html" target="_blank">Lucy Bernholz turns her crystal ball on the next decade</a>. Along with the consensus favorites—text-giving will replace credit card donations, better coordination for disaster relief and a shift toward &#8220;impact investing&#8221;—she sees data analysis and visualization becoming key skills for philanthropists, while gaming and game pedagogy become a mainstream tool for problem solving.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">AN IDEA COMES OF AGE</span></h4>
<p>In only 9 years, <a title="Letter from Jacqueline Novogratz – Fall 2010" href="http://blog.acumenfund.org/2010/11/17/letter-from-jacqueline-novogratz-fall-2010/" target="_blank">Acumen Fund has gone from a glimmer in CEO Jacqueline Novogratz&#8217; eye to a social enterprise powerhouse</a>: $50 million-plus worth of &#8220;slow capital&#8221; invested in companies based in India, Pakistan, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. The &#8220;leverage&#8221; effect tops $200 million. Tens of thousands of new jobs have been created, along with new business sectors serving millions of people. The learning curve has been as steep as the growth curve, with Acumen literally writing the book on how this sort of thing is done. Today, there are nearly 200 social enterprise funds, by Novogratz&#8217; count.</p>
<p>In 2011, the U.S. State department will host<a title="SOCAP@State" href="http://www.nextbillion.net/blog/2010/10/25/next-years-socapstate-to-comprise-an-expansive-ecosystem" target="_blank"> SOCAP@State</a>, a conference described as &#8220;the Clinton Global Initiative meets It Takes a Village.&#8221; Clearly, social enterprise is an approach whose time is now.</p>
<p><strong>________________________________________</strong></p>
<div>Additional links include:</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><a title="Novogratz / Acumen Shareholder Meeting 2010" href="http://www.youtube.com/acumenfund#p/c/B0C211232A04CB2C/0/v7Usd50ilKo" target="_blank">Jacqueline Novogratz&#8217; tour de force presentation at Acumen&#8217;s 2010 shareholder meeting </a>(video)</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><a title="Philantopic" href="http://pndblog.typepad.com/pndblog/" target="_blank">&#8220;Philantopic&#8221;: the must-read blog from <em>Philanthropy News Daily</em></a></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="2010 Cone Cause Marketing study" href="http://www.coneinc.com/news/request.php?id=3350" target="_blank">The 2010 Cone Cause Marketing study </a>(video &amp; report / free registration required)</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><a title="Analysis of cause marketing pros &amp; cons" href="http://www.prwatch.org/node/4965" target="_blank">&#8220;&#8216;Cause Related Marketing&#8217;: Why Social Change and Corporate Profits Don&#8217;t Mix,&#8221; by Inger Stole, <em>PRWatch</em></a></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li><a title="Toy Libraries &amp; Toys for Tots" href="http://www.stuartjmurphy.com/vizlearning/2010/12/12/toylibraries/" target="_blank">&#8220;File Under &#8216;Favorite Things&#8217;: Toys! Libraries! Play!,&#8221; by J.A. Ginsburg, <em>vizlearning</em></a> (child-focused philanthropy link) <em> </em></li>
</ul>
</div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>and more!</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>All links become part of the <a title="TrackerNews search archive" href="http://www.trackernews.net/search/" target="_blank"><em>TrackersNews’ </em>searchable archive.</a></p>
<p><span style="color:#dd2247;"><strong>* </strong></span>Here at <em>TrackerNews, </em>we are big fans of Maria Popova&#8217;s stunning work at <a title="Brain Pickings" href="http://www.brainpickings.org/" target="_blank"><em>Brain Pickings</em></a>—<em> always</em> worth a read. Although the term &#8220;old timey&#8221; is one of the lesser gifts of her writings, we have come to adore it.</p>
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		<title>Trees, Food, Pakistan &amp; the Lessons of Medieval Monks: How Ecosystems Thinking Can (Still) Save the World</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/09/13/ecosystemsthinking/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/09/13/ecosystemsthinking/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Sep 2010 08:13:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[agriculture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[climate change]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Diaster relief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[drought]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[energy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[floods]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[On deforestation, floods, global commodity markets and food empires; The lessons of medieval monks; Urbanization and ecosystems thinking; Saved by a worm? Of all the horrifying stories to come out of Pakistan in this long waterlogged summer of raging floods, perhaps the most tragic is why the disaster become a full-blown, future-blighting catastrophe: Deforestation had [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=1571&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<h5><em><span style="color:#993366;">On deforestation, floods, global commodity markets and food empires; The lessons of medieval monks; Urbanization and ecosystems thinking; Saved by a worm?</span></em></h5>
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<div id="attachment_1600" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 279px"><a href="http://tedchris.posterous.com/tag/pakistanfloods"><img class="size-full wp-image-1600   " title="pakfloodchrisanderson" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/pakfloodchrisanderson.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">On the frontlines of Pakistan flood: Chris Anderson&#039;s posts, videos and photographs </p></div>
<p>Of all the horrifying stories to come out of Pakistan in this long waterlogged summer of raging floods, perhaps the most tragic is why the disaster become a full-blown, future-blighting catastrophe: Deforestation had left the country stripped of almost all its forest cover. Trees that would have soaked up rain and slowed the flow weren&#8217;t there to do so. Nor were roots in place to keep land from sliding away.</p>
<p>Adding insult to injury, <a title="deforestation, the Taliban &amp; Pakistan floods" href="http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/floodofmisery/2010/08/201081614111704604.html" target="_blank">according to <em>Al Jazeera</em>, money from illegal logging near the Afghan border in Malakand found its way into the pockets of the Taliban</a>. And in a literal cascade of bad to worse, the ill-gotten timber, stashed temporarily in ravines, magnified the destructive power of the flood-waters, shredding bridges and roads in the hurtle down river.</p>
<p>When the waters eventually recede, an eroded landscape will emerge. Whatever fertility the ground held will have been leached away, much of it to end up as mucky silt, clogging Pakistan&#8217;s over-extended, under-maintained massive irrigation network.</p>
<p>Even without flooding, deforestation means more than the loss of trees: Biodiversity flat-lines. In Pakistan, wild animals and plants that had been a source of food and medicine are no longer there to be hunted or gathered. The people who depended on the forests are out of luck. Another, albeit thin, slice of Eden gone.</p>
<p>Although the scars are local and downstream effects regional,  the impact is actually global.</p>
<p>Take, for example, Pakistan&#8217;s role as the world&#8217;s fourth largest producer of cotton, generating roughly 10% of global supply. Since this year&#8217;s crop is a literal wash out, the 2010 global harvest won&#8217;t meet demand. The situation is that much more serious, considering that even minus Pakistan&#8217;s contribution, the harvest will be larger than last year&#8217;s, coming in at 100 millions bales.  Increased demand from an ever-growing global population will translate to a 4 million bale shortfall, according to analysts. <a title="Pakistan floods &amp; cotton prices" href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032619/ns/nightly_news/#38819216" target="_blank">That means cotton prices are going up for everybody everywhere.</a></p>
<p>Next year, when you pay more for jeans, blame the Taliban&#8230;</p>
<p>(<span style="color:#ff0000;">added 10/4/10:</span><a title="Cotton Clothing Price Tags to Rise" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/03/business/03cotton.html?_r=2&amp;hp" target="_blank"> &#8220;Cotton Clothing Price Tags to Rise&#8221;</a> /<em> New York Times</em>)</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">HOW MORE BECOMES LESS</span></h4>
<p>Global supplies are also tight &#8211; and prices rising &#8211; for other commodities. What began as a season full of bumper crop predictions turned to whole wheat toast in the heat of Russia&#8217;s bumper drought, and mush in the wake of <a title="Canadian Wheat crop " href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-08-20/canada-s-2010-wheat-crop-may-decline-15-percent-after-flooding-on-prairies.html" target="_blank">Canada&#8217;s floods</a>. <a title="Russia: Wheat Export Ban Triggers Worldwide Panic " href="http://globalvoicesonline.org/2010/09/10/russia-wheat-export-ban-triggers-worldwide-panic/" target="_blank">Supplies aren&#8217;t expected to ease until the end of 2011, the earliest a temporary Russian export ban may be lifted.</a></p>
<p>From corn to rice, and fish to fruit, the era of easy surpluses is over. Any glitch almost anywhere in the weather, or disease outbreak, insect infestation, pollinator decline or oil spill can send ripples throughout the global food network.</p>
<blockquote><p>“Despite record harvests beteeen 2000 and 2007, the world ate more food than it produced. Back in 1998, human beings grew 1.9 billion tons of cereals and ate 1.8 billion tons of them. Since then yields have risen, but so have our appetites, and there’s a disjoint between the two. In five of the last ten years, the world consumed more food than farms have grown, while in a sixth year we merely broke even. Reserves are bottoming out. Even without a climate trigger, the ledger shows some unpleasant mathematics.”</p>
<p>- <em>Empires of Food</em></p></blockquote>
<p>So entwined have commodity markets become  that instead of diluting risk, we share consequences. Inevitably, the consequences that are roughest on the most vulnerable: As the need for food aid increases, not only is there less food to go around, it is also more expensive.</p>
<h4><strong><span style="color:#008000;">FOOD / CULTURE</span></strong></h4>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Empires-Food-Feast-Famine-Civilizations/dp/1439101892"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-1604" title="empiresoffood" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/empiresoffood.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a>This is hardly the first time this sort of thing has happened. In their new book,<a title="Empires of Food" href="http://www.amazon.com/Empires-Food-Feast-Famine-Civilizations/dp/1439101892" target="_blank"> <em>Empires of Food: Feast, Famine, and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations</em></a>, Evan D. G. Fraser and Andrew Rimas write with breezy style and depressing detail of how food networks throughout history have crashed for utterly predictable, if not always completely preventable, reasons.</p>
<p>They point to four fraught assumptions:<br />
<strong> </strong></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Soil is fertile:</strong> Unless carefully managed, it won&#8217;t stay fertile. Fertility &#8220;bumps&#8221; from planting on newly deforested areas are temporary. Chemical fertilizers are addictive: The more you use, the more you need. Also, much is lost in farm field run off, which knocks nature&#8217;s balance out of whack as it moves downstream (e.g., algal blooms that lead to marine &#8220;dead zones&#8221;). Fertilizers and pesticides also take a toll on soil&#8217;s natural microfauna, further affecting fertility.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Weather is good:</strong> Civilizations tend to flourish when the weather is predictable, with nice long growing seasons. But climates change, with or without man-made greenhouse gases to goose the process along.  A drop of one degree in Europe&#8217;s average temperature during the 16th century was enough to tip the Little Ice Age. &#8220;While such aberrations may seem piffling, if spring temperatures drop by just half a degree, the growing season can shrink by ten days.&#8221;<strong><br />
</strong></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Specialization is smart business: </strong> Monocultures are more vulnerable to disease and predation. A food network of monocultures is only as strong as its weakest link. &#8220;&#8230;(S)ince all our specialty food patches depend on one another to constitute our food empire, none of them can exist alone.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Energy is abundant and cheap:</strong> From fossil fuels used in chemical fertilizers, to fuel for tractors, trucks, trains, ships and planes and electricity for refrigeration, the cost of modern food is wedded to the cost of energy. Oil prices rise and food prices follow. If they spike, expect food riots, such as those seen in 2008, despite record-breaking harvests. &#8220;The weight of the global breadbasket was 2.24 billion tons, a robust 5 percent increase over the previous year. Yet food prices utterly detached themselves from the fact that we had reaped the best harvest in the entirety of human existence.&#8221;</li>
</ul>
<blockquote><p>To be mistaken in one colossal assumption about our food empire may be a misfortune. To be mistaken in all four seems like something worse than carelessness. It seems like willful disregard for the truth. When we finally shed these assumptions, we&#8217;ll realize the genuine price of the way we produce, distribute, and consume food.</p></blockquote>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">MONKS, MONOPOLIES &amp; TREES (AGAIN&#8230;)</span></h4>
<p>Fraser and Rimas tell a cautionary tale from the Middle Ages that offers particularly striking parallels the present. A thousand years ago, monasteries sat atop a vertically integrated food network that would have been the envy of  any modern transnational conglomerate. The monks had money to invest in innovative technology (the moldboard plow), which provided an unbeatable advantage over small farmers, who found themselves with no choice but to move to cities. The monks also had to clout to control processing (royal licenses for milling) and become gatekeepers for distribution (royal licenses to run market fairs). But even such divinely-blessed productivity wasn&#8217;t to last.</p>
<blockquote><p>More than temporal success, the most striking impact that the Cistercians had on Europe was that they chopped down all the trees. &#8230;(R)eal estate in Europe had gotten expensive. Even marginal land, bits of scrub and hilltop, needed to come under the plow to feed the growing markets in the cities. Since chopping trees and tilling hilly ground is a sure means of exhausting and eroding soil, over time, the harvests worsened. The monks kept pushing their farms outward, even plowing uplands that once pastured sheep and cattle &#8211; animals whose digestive systems had done an effortless job of fertilizing the earth. With the loss of livestock&#8217;s manure and the added cultivation, the ground blew and washed away even quicker&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;By the end of the thirteenth century, margins between supply and demand had thinned to a razor&#8217;s breadth. A decline of 10 percent in a year&#8217;s harvest spelled hunger; a loss of 20 percent of the harvest meant famine.</p>
<p>&#8230;And then the financial system imploded. For centuries, bankers in Siena had loaned heavily to Europe&#8217;s royal houses, financing wars and armies. They overextended themselves on architecture, cavalry, and crusades, so when the harvests dropped and manors or cities defaulted on their loans, the banks collapsed. In 1298, the Gran Tavola bank of the Bonsignori, the Rothschilds of their day, failed. Rents soared as landlords struggled to pay their debts. Work on Siena&#8217;s great cathedral came to stop&#8230;&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>It took a few centuries, but the clever Sienese finally figured out how to turn a giant half-built nave into a tourist-driven profit center offering a one-of-kind-view of the Tuscan countryside. In the meantime, things got worse:</p>
<blockquote><p>For most of Europe. the crisis truly began with a midsummer storm in 1314. It rained too much and for too long, drumming flat the ripening crops and rotting them on the stalk. The grain harvest proved both late and short, and the next year was worse. Dikes collapsed, the sea engulfed the fields and pasture, and an epidemic carried by Mongol raiders, possibly anthrax, managed to snuff out much of the continent&#8217;s livestock. In England, the price of wheat jumped eightfold. In 1316, it rained again, and Europe toppled into the worst famine in its history.</p></blockquote>
<p>Deforestation. Economic collapse. Torrential rains. Burst dikes. Floods. Famine. Disease. Sound vaguely familiar?</p>
<p>By some estimates, 10% of Europeans starved to death that year.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">CENTURY OF THE CITY</span></h4>
<p>Can we learn from the monks&#8217; mistakes? Or is the tragedy of Pakistan a sign of things to come? From Haiti to Guatemala to Borneo, deforestation has amplified the effects of natural disasters, yet planting trees is rarely, if ever, part of comprehensive aid packages.</p>
<div id="attachment_1610" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 276px"><a href="http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/08/16/prime_numbers_megacities?page=0,0"><img class="size-full wp-image-1610 " title="urbanizationgraph" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/urbanizationgraph.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">graph credit: &quot;Foreign Policy&quot; - from a package of stories on global urbanization</p></div>
<p>The disconnect is pervasive. Urbanization may be<em> the</em> defining trend of our time. Over half the population now lives in cities. One billion people live in slums &#8211; a number expected to double with a couple of decades. Collectively, cities are expanding at a rate of 130 people-<em>per-minute</em>. China and India alone will account for 2/5 of global urban growth over the next 20 years. Yet few urban planners, economists, policy-makers or politicians seem to take into account the importance of undeveloped land -  sometimes far beyond city limits &#8211; for the health and safety of cities.</p>
<p><a title="Paul Romer TED talk" href="http://www.ted.com/talks/paul_romer.html" target="_blank">Stanford economist Paul Romer</a> tells of looking out a plane window while flying over Africa and seeing plenty of &#8220;uninhabited&#8221; land, perfect for  <a title="Charter Cities website" href="http://www.chartercities.org/concept" target="_blank">&#8220;charter cities.&#8221;</a> These are settlements built from scratch, based on rules designed to &#8220;provide security, economic opportunity, and improved quality of life.&#8221; These rules of men, however, show a breathtaking obliviousness to the rules of nature. Land empty of people doesn&#8217;t mean it is uninhabited, or that is doesn&#8217;t provide key services. Wetlands, flood plains, forests &#8211; all have great value for people. But their value is tied up in costs avoided (storm damage, pollution-related expenses), which are always more of a challenge to slot into a spreadsheet for investors.</p>
<p>To help make his case, Romer shows a graphic that visualizes all the arable land on Earth as a series of identical dots. The planet&#8217;s 3 billion city-dwellers take up only 3% of the dots. Add another billion living in proposed charter cities and it is 4%. Which sounds like a pretty reasonable deal, but, of course, the dots are not identical. Some land is good for wheat, other for rice. Some is ruined for a season by flood or drought, or just plain marginal. Some dots are former forests that have been slashed and burned to make way for  biodiversity-busting palm oil plantations. More people means we probably need more dots of arable land, not fewer. And as for wildlands that help nourish and provide water for the arable lands that feed the people in cities? Dot-less.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">NODES &amp; NETWORKS</span></h4>
<p>Likewise, the truth behind the much-touted efficiencies of scale that make dense cities &#8220;greener&#8221; than car-dependent suburbs can get a little messy. &#8220;Green-ness&#8221; isn&#8217;t only about whether people walk or drive to stores, but also a function of how &#8220;green&#8221; the products and services they purchase may be, shipping included (which is why hybrid cars, loaded with globe-trotting battery components, aren&#8217;t quite as eco-friendly as billed). A true urban footprint extends as far as the trade routes used to bring in the goods that keep a city going. By that definition, almost every city is now a global city.</p>
<p>Boundaries are further blurred as urban areas merge and sprawl into megacities. In a sense, cities have become nodes of a single globe-spanning &#8220;supra-urban&#8221; network.</p>
<p>It will take systems thinking &#8211; preferably ecosystems thinking &#8211; to fully understand the dynamics of the network, and the keystone roles played by &#8220;undeveloped&#8221; lands.</p>
<p>Still, the connections are are clear enough to merit serious attention in the U.N.&#8217;s first <a title="UN Global assessment on disaster risk reduction" href="http://www.preventionweb.net/english/hyogo/gar/report/index.php?id=1130&amp;pid:34&amp;pif:3" target="_blank">&#8220;Global assessment report on disaster risk reduction,&#8221;</a> published last year. Fast-growing <a title="Slums and natural disasters" href="http://www.citiesalliance.org/ca/node/573" target="_blank">slums are singled out as especially vulnerable to natural disasters</a>. Along with improving urban infrastructure, the report underscores the need to protect ecosystems.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">SAVED BY A WORM?</span></h4>
<p>According to Fraser and Rimas, civilizations are only as strong as their food empires, and our global food empire is fraying badly. The quick fixes of chemical fertilizers, miracle pesticides, massive water projects and genetically modified seeds have either come up short or led to <a title="Scientists call for GM review after surge in pests around cotton farms in China" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/may/13/gm-crops-pests-cotton-china" target="_blank">unintended consequences.</a> Old blights, including <a title="Economist: Rust in the Bread Basket" href="http://www.economist.com/node/16481593?story_id=16481593" target="_blank">Norman Borlaug&#8217;s nemesis, wheat rust</a>, are staging comebacks, wiping out crops with as much ruthless efficiency as our increasingly erratic weather.</p>
<div id="attachment_1613" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 253px"><a href="http://www.growingpower.org/"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1613  " title="growingpower" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/growingpower.jpg?w=243&#038;h=174" alt="" width="243" height="174" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Growing Power&#039;s Will Allen with agricultural gold: vermicompost and worm casings</p></div>
<p>Although the situation appears bleak, ecosystems thinking &#8211; this time  writ small -  may help tide us along. Urban agriculture, from Havana to Brooklyn to Detroit, has gone from  green-hearted curiosity to a movement with the potential to change the dynamics of the global food empire. Small, local, replicable, scalable, flexible &#8211; it offers an alternative that can be adapted to almost any urban configuration.</p>
<p>Incorporate a closed-loop  aquaponics component, as MacArthur genius Will Allen has done at his three-acre <a href="http://www.growingpower.org/" target="_blank">Growing Power farm in Milwaukee</a>, and there is a replenishable source of protein to go with all the fresh veggies. Fish &#8211; perch and tilapia by the thousands &#8211; swim in water filtered through plants grown in compost fertilized by the castings of red wriggler worms that have munched through mounds of garbage.</p>
<p>The worms -  Allen refers to them as &#8220;the hardest working livestock on the farm&#8221; &#8211; are the lynchpin of the operation. They generate the fertility that drives the biomimicked ecosystem, starting with a product that would otherwise end up in a landfill.</p>
<p><a title="Sweet Water Organics" href="http://sweetwater-organic.com/blog/" target="_blank">Sweet Water Organics,</a> the first commercial scale-up based on Allen&#8217;s blueprint, has now been in operation in Milwaukee for about a year. The learning curve has been steep, but the first crops of fish have now been harvested and sold.</p>
<p>Would such an operation work in Pakistan? Possibly. It would not answer the need for grains, which require fields. It would take time and investment. But it could provide a model for a local sustainable food supply. It could be <em>a part </em>of the solution.</p>
<p>So&#8230; If you really want to make a make a difference and help save the world, start by planting trees. Lots of flood-slowing, land-stabilizing, biodiversity-nurturing, CO2-absorbing trees. Then be humbled by the talents of worms. Support urban agriculture. Finally, try very, very hard<em> not</em> to repeat the food mistakes of the past. The story, guaranteed, always ends the same grim way.</p>
<h4><span style="color:#008000;">RELATED READING / VIEWING / LISTENING</span></h4>
<ul>
<li><a title="NPR interview with Evan Fraser" href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129052445" target="_blank">&#8220;How We Eat, Produce Food, Could Bring Down Society,&#8221;</a> interview with <em>Empires of Food</em> co-author, Evan Fraser / <em>All Things Considered</em> <em>- NPR</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Food shortages and investment opportunities" href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/tom-stevenson/7996544/As-prices-soar-give-food-some-thought.html" target="_blank">&#8220;As Prices Soar, Give Food Some Thought,&#8221;</a> op/ed by investment director Tom Stevenson / <em>The Telegraph</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Beyond City Limits - 21st century megacities" href="http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/08/16/beyond_city_limits?page=full" target="_blank">&#8220;Beyond City Limits,&#8221;</a> by Parag Khanna, <em>Foreign Policy</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Pakistan aid appeal / links to foundations, NGOs" href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jacqueline-novogratz/time-to-give-pakistan-nee_b_692806.html" target="_blank">&#8220;Time to Give: Pakistan Needs the World&#8217;s Help&#8221; </a>by Jacqueline Novogratz / <em>Huffington Post</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Mapping the anthrome" href="http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/08/new-anthrome-maps/" target="_blank">&#8220;Maps: How Mankind Remade the World&#8221;</a> by Brandon Keim / <em>Wired</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Unintended consequences of GM cotton in China" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/may/13/gm-crops-pests-cotton-china" target="_blank">&#8220;Scientists call for GM Review after Surge of Pests Around Cotton Farms in China&#8221; </a>by Ian Sample, <em>The Guardian</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="How the Global Food Market Starves the Poor" href="http://www.fastcompany.com/1580712/infographic-of-the-day-how-the-global-food-market-starves-the-poor" target="_blank">&#8220;Infographic of the Day: How the Global Food Market Starves the Poor&#8221;</a> by Cliff Kuang / <em>Fast Company</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="When Tipping Points Collide / TrackerNews Editor's Blog" href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/06/08/when-tipping-points-collide/" target="_blank">&#8220;When Tipping Points Collide: On Oil Spills, Dead Zones, Superweeds, Dead Birds, Dead Bees and Not So Funny Laughing Gas,&#8221;</a> by J.A. Ginsburg /<em> TrackerNews Editor&#8217;s Blog</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="When Weather Becomes Climate  - TrackerNews Editor's Blog" href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/07/27/hot-cold-wet-dry-when-weather-becomes-climate/" target="_blank">&#8220;Hot, Cold, Wet, Dry: When Weather Becomes Climate&#8221;</a> by J.A. Ginsburg / <em>TrackerNews Editor&#8217;s Blog</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Haiti, Reforestation &amp; a Better Answer to Charcoal - TrackerNews Editor's Blog" href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/02/10/treesandcharcoal/" target="_blank">&#8220;Rebuilding Haiti: On Trees, Charcoal, Compost and Why Low Tech, Low Tech Answers Could Make the Biggest Difference (and How High Tech Can Help)&#8221;</a> by J.A. Ginsburg / <em>TrackerNews Editor&#8217;s Blog</em></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><a title="Will Allen, Urban Agriculture &amp; Aquaponics - TrackerNews Editor's Blog" href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2009/09/26/the-farm-next-door/" target="_blank">&#8220;The Farm Next Door: Urban Agriculture, Biomimicry, Aquaponics, Why Worms are Priceless and How Will Allen Aims to Fix the World&#8221;</a> by J.A. Ginsburg / <em>TrackerNews Editor&#8217;s Blog</em></li>
</ul>
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		<title>Rebuilding Haiti: On Trees, Charcoal, Compost and Why Low Tech, Low Cost Answers Could Make the Biggest Difference (&amp; How High-Tech Can Help)</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/02/10/treesandcharcoal/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/02/10/treesandcharcoal/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Feb 2010 02:10:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[agriculture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[charcoal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Diaster relief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[earthquake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[forests]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haiti]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[innovation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reforestation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[soil health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA["Haiti Timber Re-Introduction Project"]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA["Hopital Albert Schweitzer"]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[compost toilets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crisis Commons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CrisisMappers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deforestation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haiti Rewired]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HTRIP]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jared Diamond]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SOIL]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[urban farming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Will Allen]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#160; On the link between environmental health &#38; public health; Rebuilding Haiti from the soil microbes up; A humanitarian aid petri dish; Jared Diamond&#8217;s checklist for collapse &#38; Haiti as vision what could be in store for the rest of us; Charcoal cartels, Amy Smith&#8217;s better answer &#38; Nicholas Kristof&#8217;s compost toilet tour &#160; Five [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=1201&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<div><em><span style="color:#800000;">&nbsp;</p>
<div id="attachment_1215" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 194px"><a href="http://reforesthaitinow.org/treesandhealth.html"><img class="size-full wp-image-1215 " title="htrip" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/htripblog.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Haiti Timber Re-Introduction Project (HTRIP) </p></div>
<p>On the link between environmental health &amp; public health; <em>Rebuilding Haiti from the soil microbes up; </em>A humanitarian aid petri dish; Jared Diamond&#8217;s checklist for collapse &amp; Haiti as vision what could be in store for the rest of us; Charcoal cartels, Amy Smith&#8217;s better answer &amp; Nicholas Kristof&#8217;s compost toilet tour</p>
<p></span></em>&nbsp;</p>
</div>
<div>Five years ago, in a move as practical as it was visionary, the Hôpital Albert Schweitzer (HAS) in Haiti began planting trees &#8211; lots of trees &#8211; in an effort to mend an ailing landscape.</div>
<p><!-- AddThis Button END --></p>
<p>Small farm plots on hilly terrain had been stripped bare of soil-stabilizing cover (2/3 of the the country is on land that slopes 20% or more). No soil means no food means malnutrition means disease, illness, death.</p>
<p>&#8220;Practically every medical problem in Haiti is poverty-related,&#8221; notes Dr. Vehnita Suresh, the hospital&#8217;s CEO. &#8220;The never-ending cycle of deforestation lead(s) to more ecological damage, more compromised farming, more poverty and more hunger. It goes on and on and on.&#8221;</p>
<p>Public health and environmental health are so tied together, you simply can&#8217;t have the former without the latter. &#8220;We can go on giving health-care forever,&#8221; says Dr. Suresh, &#8220;It would never really touch even the brim of the problem here.&#8221;</p>
<p>So they plant trees. The<a href="http://reforesthaitinow.org/treesandhealth.html" target="_blank"> Haiti Timber Re-Introduction Project (HTRIP)</a> has begun to reverse centuries of devastation that literally skinned the country alive, leaving hillsides such as the ones surrounding the Artibonite Valley where the hospital is located barren and bleak.</p>
<div id="attachment_1212" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 410px"><a href="http://reforesthaitinow.org/watchthefilm.html"><img class="size-full wp-image-1212   " title="stepbystep" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/stepbystepblog.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Documentary on The Haiti Timber Re-Introduction Project, the Hopital Albert Schweitzer&#039;s reforestation effort </p></div>
<p>In the aftermath of the earthquake, reforestation has taken a back seat to the urgency of treating the injured (<a href="http://www.hashaiti.org/C1a_w1.html" target="_blank">you can donate directly to support the hospital&#8217;s work</a>). But over the long term, any real &#8220;Hope for Haiti&#8221; means planting trees &#8211; literally rebuilding the country from its soil microbes up.</p>
<h2><span style="color:#008000;">AVOIDING COLLAPSE: LAB HAITI</span></h2>
<p>Haiti has been teetering at brink of breakdown for as long as anyone can remember, but it took the quake to focus  global attention, sparking an unprecedented outpouring of support and a largely spontaneous explosion of technical can-do innovation. From <a href="http://www.crisismappers.net/" target="_blank">CrisisMappers</a> and <a href="http://crisiscommons.org/" target="_blank">Crisis Commons</a> hackers to the collaborative <a href="http://haitirewired.wired.com/" target="_blank">Haiti Rewired</a> network, Twitter hashtag-enabled mash-ups and teams of volunteer architects, engineers, doctors,  veterinarians and other professionals, this has been an all-hands-on-deck emergency.</p>
<p>In a sense, Haiti has become a sort of petri dish for humanitarian action. The stakes couldn&#8217;t be higher. If, somehow, this &#8220;Exhibit A&#8221; for all that <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collapse_(book)" target="_blank">Jared Diamond says spells doom for a culture/country&#8217;s prospects</a> <em>is </em>rescued from the abyss of complete collapse, the implications go far beyond Haiti.</p>
<p>Haiti, in all its deforested, polluted, cartel-corrupted, disease-riddled impoverishment, is a vision of our planet&#8217;s future if we continue to devour natural resources beyond replenishment, downplay the seriousness of climate change, spike efforts at family planning and ignore the integral importance of environmental health. As goes Haiti, so go we all.<span id="more-1201"></span></p>
<p>&#8220;The most important thing we need to do about the world&#8217;s environmental problems,&#8221; says Diamond, &#8220;is trying to forget about there being any most important thing we need to do. Instead, there are dozen things and we&#8217;ve got to get them all right.&#8221;</p>
<h2><span style="color:#008000;">EDEN WRECKED</span></h2>
<p><span style="color:#008000;"> </span></p>
<div id="attachment_1221" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 431px"><img class="size-full wp-image-1221  " title="HDTR" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/hdtr.jpg?w=468" alt=""   /><p class="wp-caption-text">The Haiti/Dominican Republic border; Completely deforested on the Haitian side; &quot;Charcoal cartel&quot; beginning to make inroads on the Dominican side</p></div>
<p>Where did all the forests go? The stats are as numbing as the satellite photos are stark:</p>
<ul>
<li>1492: Columbus stops by. 75% of what would become Haiti covered in trees</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>1664: The French West India Company formed. Millions of trees chopped &amp; harvested to create massive plantations. African slaves by the tens of thousands are imported to provide labor.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>1825: French agree to recognize Haiti&#8217;s freedom, won in 1804, in exchange for 150 million francs (later reduced to 90 million). This puts the country in deep debt from which it never recovers. Much of the country&#8217;s timber wealth (mahogony) ships out for a song.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>1940: An estimated 30% of country still forested</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>1970: Only 10% forested. People depend on charcoal made from wood for cooking. By contrast, government subsidizes gas stoves in the Dominican Republic</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>2010: Less than 1% forested. <a href="http://www.eenews.net/public/Greenwire/2009/12/14/5" target="_blank">&#8220;Charcoal cartels&#8221; start chopping down trees across the Dominican border.</a> Eroded land silts up lake, floods key road to Port-au-Prince. $40 million need to build alternate road.</li>
</ul>
<h2><span style="color:#008000;">LOW TECH / LOW COST: SOLUTIONS IN PROBLEMS</span></h2>
<p>In a twist of dust-to-dust poetry, some of the answers to Haiti&#8217;s most intractable problems can be found in the one thing that Haiti has in abundance: waste.</p>
<p>About 10 years ago, <a href="http://d-lab.mit.edu/" target="_blank">MIT D-Lab</a> founder Amy Smith, took a group of students to Haiti, where they were inspired by a local entrepreneur who had developed a way to make charcoal briquettes from scrap paper.  Smith&#8217;s team improved the process, using agricultural waste as feedstock. In 2006, she presented the results at the <a href="http://www.ted.com" target="_blank">TED conference</a>.</p>
<object width="334" height="326"><param name="movie" value="http://video.ted.com/assets/player/swf/EmbedPlayer.swf"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><param name="bgColor" value="#ffffff"></param> <param name="flashvars" value="vu=http://video.ted.com/talks/embed/AmySmith_2006-embed_high.flv&su=http://images.ted.com/images/ted/tedindex/embed-posters/AmySmith-2006.embed_thumbnail.jpg&vw=320&vh=240&ap=0&ti=2" /><embed src="http://video.ted.com/assets/player/swf/EmbedPlayer.swf" pluginspace="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" bgColor="#ffffff" width="334" height="326" allowFullScreen="true" flashvars="vu=http://video.ted.com/talks/embed/AmySmith_2006-embed_high.flv&su=http://images.ted.com/images/ted/tedindex/embed-posters/AmySmith-2006.embed_thumbnail.jpg&vw=320&vh=240&ap=0&ti=2"></embed></object>
<p>The upsides are stunning: No trees cut. A better product. Makes money for the producers. And since charcoal generates less smoke than wood, fewer cases of cooking fire smoke-induced acute respiratory illness, the leading cause of death for those under 5 years old in developing countries.</p>
<p>The process continues to be improved. Here is a step-by-step DIY field demo by Smith:</p>
<span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/02/10/treesandcharcoal/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/LqI63IEg3MM/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span>
<h2><span style="color:#008000;">SHIT HAPPENS &#8211; THAT&#8217;S <em>GOOD</em> NEWS</span></h2>
<p><a href="http://www.oursoil.org/" target="_blank">SOIL</a>, a small American non-profit operating in Haiti, has a plan for turning one of the country&#8217;s foulest, most intractable public health issues into a plus: transforming smelly poop into fragrant fertile compost. &#8220;Instead of potting soil, potty soil.&#8221;</p>
<p>Composting toilets themselves are nothing new, but developing a sustainable community-supported model for their use is &#8211; and  key to the group&#8217;s over-arching mission to reduce poverty via <a href="http://www.oursoil.org/believe/liberation-ecology" target="_blank">&#8220;liberation ecology.&#8221;</a> With the likes of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Farmer" target="_blank">Partners in Health co-founder Paul Farmer </a>and <a href="http://www.landinstitute.org/vnews/display.v/ART/2000/08/03/378254723" target="_blank">The Land Institute&#8217;s Wes Jackson</a> on their all-star advisory board, they have a better shot than most at getting the plan to work.</p>
<p>In March, 2009, the <em>New York Times&#8217;</em> Nicholas Kristof took a tour with SOIL staffers Sasha Kramer and Sarah Brownell:</p>
<span style="text-align:center; display: block;"><a href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/02/10/treesandcharcoal/"><img src="http://img.youtube.com/vi/Xb9AiHkhg5o/2.jpg" alt="" /></a></span>
<p>SOIL&#8217;s approach parallels <a href="http://www.macfound.org/site/c.lkLXJ8MQKrH/b.4537249/k.29CA/Will_Allen.htm" target="_blank">MacArthur genius Will Allen</a>&#8216;s <a href="http://www.growingpower.org/worms.htm" target="_blank">vermiculture-based</a> urban farms. The flagship 3-acre Growing Power farm, located just a few blocks from Milwaukee&#8217;s largest public housing project, is a stunning example of ecosystem-thinking applied to intensive agriculture. And it all begins with worms chowing down on municipal waste, turning garbage into fertile black gold. Allen also weaves in aquaponics &#8211; a freshwater closed loop fish-operation (perch, tilapia). Plants are nourished by fish-poo water, which filters down back to the fish. Could such a system work in Haiti? It certainly seems worth investigating.</p>
<h2><span style="color:#008000;">HIGH TECH HELP</span></h2>
<p>Tree-planting, briquettes, compost toilets and urban farming don&#8217;t require a lot of complicated moving parts or all that much money. Their simplicity is an essential part of why they might make a real difference. But high tech tools can help make these good ideas even more effective.</p>
<ul>
<li>Mapping: Tools to track and predict deforestation, including illegal logging, and to help identify good sites for reforestation projects.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Communications: Connecting charcoal briquette producers with ag waste sources and with customers; Web-based how-to guides on how to make charcoal briquettes, tree-care tips, etc.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Fundraising: M-giving and other philanthropy tools, e.g., develop a game where players grow a cyber-forest &#8211; download proceeds to support a real forest.</li>
</ul>
<h2><span style="color:#008000;">RELATED READING / VIEWING:</span></h2>
<p><a href="http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/Bright-Green/2010/0120/After-the-earthquake-Haiti-s-deforestation-needs-attention" target="_blank">&#8220;After the earthquake: Haiti&#8217;s deforestation needs attention&#8221;</a> by Moises Velasquez-Manoff (Christian Science Monitor)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.piphaiti.org/overview_of_haiti2.html" target="_blank">&#8220;Agroforestry and sustainable resource conservation in Haiti: A Case Study&#8221;</a> by Nathan McClintock</p>
<p><a href="http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s111-1183&amp;tab=summary" target="_blank">U.S. Senate Bill 1183: Haiti Reforestation Act of 2009 </a>introduced by Senator Dick Durbin</p>
<p><a href="http://www.theglobalist.com/printStoryId.aspx?StoryId=4776" target="_blank">&#8220;Haiti and the Dominican Republic: One Island, Two Worlds&#8221; </a>by Jared Diamond (excerpt from &#8220;Collapse&#8221;)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Collapse-Societies-Choose-Fail-Succeed/dp/0143036556/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1265757741&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank">&#8220;Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed&#8221;</a> by Jared Diamond (book)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/jared_diamond_on_why_societies_collapse.html" target="_blank">&#8220;Jared Diamond on why societies collapse&#8221;</a> (TED talk &#8211; video)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.charcoalproject.org/" target="_blank">The Charcoal Project </a>(website)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.growingpower.org/about_us.htm" target="_blank">Growing Power</a> (website)</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2009/09/26/the-farm-next-door/" target="_blank">&#8220;The Farm Next Door: Urban Agriculture, Biomimicry, Aquaponics, Why Worms are Priceless &amp; How Will Allen Aims to Fix the World&#8221;</a> by J.A. Ginsburg (Trackerblog)</p>
<p><a href="http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0207-google_eath_engine.html" target="_blank">&#8220;Google Earth boosts deforestation monitoring capabilities&#8221;</a> by Rhett A. Butler (Mongabay.com)</p>
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		<title>&#8220;TrackerNews: Haiti&#8221; &#8211; A Special Resources Page</title>
		<link>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/01/26/trackernews-haiti-a-special-resources-page/</link>
		<comments>http://trackerblog.trackernews.net/2010/01/26/trackernews-haiti-a-special-resources-page/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Jan 2010 13:36:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>J.A. Ginsburg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[agriculture]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[A special TrackerNews page with news, info and resources relevant to Haitian relief and reconstruction; A prototype &#8220;sketch&#8221; for a personal aggregation tool; Hi-tech meets What-tech?; Haiti&#8217;s legacy At TrackerNews, we tell stories by collecting and connecting links. Unlike most aggregators  that are driven by by dateline or popularity, we are interested in context, mixing [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=trackerblog.trackernews.net&amp;blog=5409186&amp;post=1178&amp;subd=trackerblog&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
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<p><!-- AddThis Button END --><span style="color:#800000;"><em><a href="http://www.trackernews.net/haiti"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1187" title="haititracker" src="http://trackerblog.files.wordpress.com/2010/01/haititracker.jpg?w=270&#038;h=210" alt="" width="270" height="210" /></a>A special TrackerNews page with news, info and resources relevant to Haitian relief and reconstruction; A prototype &#8220;sketch&#8221; for a personal aggregation tool; Hi-tech meets What-tech?; Haiti&#8217;s legacy</em></span></p>
<p>At<a href="http://www.TrackerNews.net/haiti" target="_blank"> </a><a href="http://www.TrackerNews.net" target="_blank"><em><strong><span style="color:#008000;">TrackerNews</span></strong></em></a>, we tell stories by collecting and connecting links. Unlike most aggregators  that are driven by by dateline or popularity, we are interested in context, mixing news stories and research papers, conference videos and book sites, archived articles and blog posts from the field. Typically, between 4 and 6 story groups about health (human / animal / eco), humanitarian work and technology are on the site at any given time, setting the stage for the alchemy of cross-disciplinary insight. Eventually, everything ends up in a searchable database. Day by day, link by link, a broadly defined beat becomes a richer archive, a deeper resource.</p>
<p>Very occasionally, major breaking news stories  &#8211; a hurricane, disease outbreak, political unrest, climate conference &#8211; have taken over the entire site. But the Haitian earthquake stands apart with its mix of staggering devastation, technological hope, massive global response, cascading threats (disease, looting, hurricanes), ecological horror (the fertile skin of  the land has literally been stripped bare from deforestation) and the glimmering potential to right more than three centuries of unspeakable wrongs rooted in the slave trade.</p>
<p>For two weeks, dozens upon dozens of Haiti-related links have coursed through the <em><span style="color:#008000;">TrackerNews </span></em>columns. More have been tweeted via <a href="http://twiter.com/TrackerNews" target="_blank">@TrackerNews</a>. Now we have created a special permanent<a href="http://www.trackernews.net/haiti" target="_blank"> <span style="color:#008000;"><strong><em>TrackerNews: Haiti</em></strong></span></a><a href="http://www.TrackerNews/haiti" target="_blank"><span style="color:#008000;"><strong><em> </em></strong></span></a>resources page.</p>
<p>As is the <span style="color:#008000;"><em>TrackerNews</em></span> style, it includes a mix of links to news stories, organization websites, web tools, wiki&#8217;s, apps, books, reports, magazines and blogs. It is a work in progress and covers the following categories (to start -more can be added as needed):</p>
<ul>
<li>Aid/Funding</li>
<li>Disaster Tech / Mapping / Mobile</li>
<li>Earthquakes</li>
<li>Food &amp; Agriculture</li>
<li>General News (MSM)</li>
<li>Haiti</li>
<li>Heath: Human / Animal</li>
<li>Human Rights</li>
<li>Humanitarian Design</li>
<li>Light / Power</li>
<li>Money / Microfinance</li>
<li>Reforestation / Charcoal</li>
<li>Shelter / Infrastructure</li>
<li>United Nations</li>
<li>Water / Sanitation<span id="more-1178"></span></li>
</ul>
<p>The drop down box beneath the &#8220;red bar&#8221; is the easiest way to navigate around the page.</p>
<p>As encompassing as the approach may be, this is not intended as a be-all, end-all list. Wherever possible, we link to sources that have more detailing listings on a particular subject (e.g., Charity Navigator, UNHCR&#8217;s List of NGO partners, the ICT4Peace list of mapping sites, etc.).</p>
<p>On the other hand, there are links you likely won&#8217;t find elsewhere, or find easily. For example, last March, the Canadian Foundation for the Americas published<a href="http://www.focal.ca/publications/focalpoint/fp0309/" target="_blank"> a special all Haiti edition of its magazine, <em>Focal Point</em>,</a> which included link to economist Paul Collier&#8217;s report to the U.N. on Haiti&#8217;s development prospects (see &#8220;Rebuilding&#8221; subcategory under &#8220;Haiti&#8221;).</p>
<p>There is also a link to another report detailing<a href="http://www.alnap.org/pool/files/ALNAPLessonsEarthquakes.pdf" target="_blank"> lessons learned from three decades of humanitarian response to earthquake disasters</a>. (This one was gleaned from a tweet by <a href="http://www.TED.com" target="_blank">TED conference</a> director <a href="http://twitter.com/TEDchris" target="_blank">Chris Anderson</a> &#8211; sources are everywhere!)</p>
<p>There are several links about urban agriculture &#8211; a perennial <span style="color:#008000;"><em>TrackerNews</em></span> favorite &#8211; including a couple of stories on nearby Cuba&#8217;s success (see &#8220;Urban Agriculture&#8221; subcategory under &#8220;Food / Ag&#8221;)</p>
<p>From solar cell phones to microwind technology, from crisis-mapping to eco-toilets, <span style="color:#008000;"><em>TrackerNews: Haiti</em></span> covers the gamut. You may not find exactly what you are looking for, but chances are good there will be a link to another site that will get you closer.</p>
<p>Frankly, however, the site isn&#8217;t nearly good enough. It is limited by inevitable editor bias and filter and by language. That&#8217;s why we are working to develop a tool that would allow <em>anyone</em> to curate, aggregate and share groups of links set within a graphically intuitively and flexible template. Imagine creating as many categories and sub-categories as needed, and arranging them however made the most sense to you.</p>
<p>Or imagine if categories prepared in advance of a disaster by experts in various areas of humanitarian response. A special <em><span style="color:#008000;">TrackerNews</span></em> page could be put together within a matter of hours, crowdsourced and customized &#8211; which is just a taste of what we hope to be able to provide in the future.</p>
<p>In the meantime, we hope you find the Haiti page useful, and that in some small way it helps Haiti.</p>
<p><strong><span style="color:#008000;">_______________________________________________</span></strong></p>
<h3><strong><span style="color:#008000;">HI-TECH MEETS WHAT-TECH?</span></strong></h3>
<p>Within hours on the 7.0 earthquake on January 12, space satellite cameras began snapping the ultimate in aerial views, while videos of the enormous dust cloud floating above a crumbled Port-au-Prince began posting to YouTube and CNN&#8217;s Anderson Cooper dashed off to the airport.</p>
<p>Within days, text message philanthropy had bloomed into a national obsession and an <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34276015/vp/34944405#34944405" target="_blank">Israeli team managed set up a best-in-class field hospital</a>, complete with electronic medical records, telemedicine hook-ups and a neonatal unit, while everyone else sat waiting for supplies. Google set up a &#8220;Person Finder&#8221; service in English, Kreyol, French and Spanish.</p>
<p>Within a week, <a href="http://haiti.ushahidi.com/" target="_blank">Ushahidi</a>, a &#8220;crisis mapping&#8221; website born of a corrupt Kenyan election, and Reuters&#8217; newly-minted<a href="http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/126400923428.htm" target="_blank"> Emergency Information Service  (EIS)</a> had launched a sort of &#8220;911&#8243; text service for Haitians to type for help by cell phone (#4636). &#8220;Crisis Camps&#8221; began sprouting up all over the country, attracting candy-fueled, sleep-starved coding crusaders by the hundreds.</p>
<p>Translations into Haitian Kreyol? Crowdsource! Injured, trapped and waiting for rescue? <a href="http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/01/haiti-survivor-iphone/" target="_blank">There&#8217;s an app for that!</a> A global fund-raiser? Call George Clooney and MTV, write a song and sell albums (lots of them) via the iTunes store!</p>
<p>And yet, for all the bountiful, brilliant and sometimes bizarre can-do technical triumphs, the grim reality of Haiti&#8217;s disastrous condition before this latest catastrophe means there will be no quick fixes.</p>
<p>Case in point: food delivery. The never-was-very-good infrastructure of Port-au-Prince is so shredded, <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122867528" target="_blank">the World Food Program had to nix air food drops in the city for fear that wind generated by helicopters would further weaken quake-cracked buildings.</a> Roads are wrecked and hundreds of thousands of people are on the move. What do you do?</p>
<p>Or consider shelter. While aftershocks continue to jangle masonry and nerves, an estimated one million newly homeless sleep outdoors beneath makeshift tents. Aid groups say tens of thousands of real tents are needed. But with hurricane season only a few months away, tents are a short-term solution at best.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-01-25/haiti-premier-seeks-rebuild-help-at-montreal-meeting-update1-.html" target="_blank">reconstruction effort is expected to cost billions of dollars and take at least 10 years</a> &#8211; but that&#8217;s only if there are no more major <a title="Scientists Scramble to Analyze Haiti’s Seismic Risk" href="http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/01/haiti-quake-risk-analysis/" target="_blank">earthquakes</a> or killer storms. Even if Haiti is spared, there will be other disasters elsewhere that will demand the world&#8217;s attention.</p>
<p>Perhaps the legacy of the Haitian tragedy will be that the world didn&#8217;t leave it stranded, that life for Haiti&#8217;s people actually improved and that some of the tech developed and lessons learned from this nightmare were able to help others in the future.</p>
<p>In the meantime, here is<a href="http://pndblog.typepad.com/pndblog/2010/01/haiti-earthquake-relief-and-information.html" target="_blank"> a list compiled by the Foundation Center&#8217;s blog, <em>Philantopic</em>, of who&#8217;s doing what where.</a> They could all use some support.</p>
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