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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: carbon footprint + carbon footprints + carbon  Related to the article below (Last Update: 6/5/2008)


PresseBox (Pressemitteilung)(abonnement)
Heidelberg Marks World Environment Day by Offsetting Carbon Footprint
What They Think, KY - 36 minutes ago
Every print product has a carbon footprint, but so does each press manufactured. This is determined by the raw materials used and all the production and ...
Xerox Customers Use Digital and Offset Products at drupa What They Think
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The carbon footprint from tourism
International Herald Tribune, France -
Tourism is a big and important business. It draws on the wealth of people in developed nations and helps transfer some of those resources to businesses and ...

Malaysia Star
?Kick the Habit?, the Slogan to Reduce Your Carbon Footprint
EcoWorldly, San Francisco -
?Our world is in the grip of a dangerous carbon habit,? UN secretary-general Ban Ki-Moon Ban said in a statement to mark the celebration of World ...
Kick the CO2 habit for World Environment Day Los Angeles Times
British Airways committed to reducing its carbon footprint ArabianBusiness.com (press release)
Time to Retire 'Denier FOXNews
Maitland Mercury - New Zealand Herald
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City's carbon footprint is smaller
Kansas.com, KS -
BY JEANNINE KORANDA It's shrinking, but Wichita's carbon footprint is still larger than that of many cities. Wichita ranks in the bottom half -- 66th ...
OPINION LINE Kansas.com
all 3 news articles »

BBC News
Cycling reduces 'carbon footprint'
BBC News, UK -
It is low cost, low maintenance and can help cut traffic congestion and reduce the region's carbon footprint. An increasing number of towns and cities ...
New Study Shows Responsibly Managed Lawns Reduce Carbon Footprint
PR Newswire (press release), NY - 33 minutes ago
"It turns out that you can reduce your carbon footprint right in your own backyard," said Kris Kiser, Vice President, Public Affairs, OPEI. ...
Carbon rationing
CBC.ca, Canada -
A CRAG, or Carbon Rationing Action Group, is a group of people who measure the amount of carbon they consume, their "carbon footprint," and work on ways to ...

The Southern Ledger
El Paso Ranks Ninth For Low Carbon Emissions
KFOXtv.com, TX - Jun 4, 2008
The report showed El Paso's carbon footprint from transportation per person declined 12.7 percent between 2000 and 2005. "Shrinking the Carbon Footprint of ...
Turning Carbon Into Gold Mother Jones
"Carbon Belch Day" promotes un-green actions CNET News
google news commentComment by Dr. Frank Ackerman, Economist Tufts University & Stockholm Environment Institute
South Bend Tribune - All American Patriots (press release)
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Dopplr Tracks Your Carbon Footprint
PC World - Jun 4, 2008
Working with AMEE (Avoiding Mass Extinctions Engine), an open-source, public-data carbon-footprint calculating project and firm, Dopplr can show a good ...

Environment News Service
Kick the carbon habit - UN
Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand -
New Zealand Post asked staff to bring a magazine or book to work and swap it to reduce their carbon footprint. Mr Pachauri said the IPCC's fourth climate ...
Environment day calls for end to CO2 addiction elEconomista.es
Model way of of achieving global change Sydney Morning Herald
Govt taking appropriate measures to protect environment: PM Associated Press of Pakistan
Radio New Zealand
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Source: Google News

Ethanol as Fuel: Energy, Carbon Dioxide Balances, and Ecological Footprint -
ME DIAS DE OLIVEIRA, BE VAUGHAN, EJ RYKIEL JR - BioScience, 2005 - bioone.org
... Ethanol as Fuel: Energy, Carbon Dioxide Balances, and Ecological Footprint. MARCELO
E. DIAS DE OLIVEIRA, BURTON E. VAUGHAN, and EDWARD J. RYKIEL JR. ...

[PDF] The human footprint in the carbon cycle of temperate and boreal forests -
F Magnani, M Mencuccini, M Borghetti, P Berbigier, … - Age (years) - nature.com
Page 1. LETTERS The human footprint in the carbon cycle of temperate and
boreal forests Federico Magnani 1 , Maurizio Mencuccini ...
-

… promoters of the ethanol regulon for the CREA repressor mediating carbon cataboiite repression in … -
P Kulmburg, M Mathieu, C Dowzer, J Kelly, B … - Molecular Microbiology, 1993 - Blackwell Synergy
... to grow on ethanol as a sole carbon source, two a ... and PCR fragments used for footprints
experiments are ... B. Footprint of the Styl-Mlu\ restriction fragment (84 bp ...

Carbon dioxide exchange over agricultural landscape using eddy correlation and footprint modelling -
H Soegaard, NO Jensen, E Boegh, CB Hasager, K … - Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 2003 - Elsevier
... The foot print model was elaborated by Schuepp et ... and those integrated within the
footprint area, especially ... ie the transition period between carbon source and ...

An unusually compact external promoter for RNA polymerase III transcription of the human H1RNA gene -
E Myslinski, JC Am?, A Krol, P Carbon - Nucleic Acids Research, 2001 - Oxford Univ Press
... Evelyne Myslinski , Jean-Christophe Am? 1 , Alain Krol and Philippe Carbon * ... Staf
cons.1, consensus sequence determined by footprint assay of native gene ...

Assessing the eddy covariance technique for evaluating carbon dioxide exchange rates of ecosystems: … -
DD BALDOCCHI - Global Change Biology, 2003 - Blackwell Synergy
... 2) advection and (3) different footprints viewed by ... we will need to quantify how
carbon dioxide fluxes ... underlying vegetation and the flux footprint vary with ...

Staf, a promiscuous activator for enhanced transcription by RNA polymerases II and III -
… Schaub, E Myslinski, C Schuster, A Krol, P Carbon - The EMBO Journal, 1997 - nature.com
... those of vertebrate U6 snRNA genes (Carbon and Krol ... protected regions correspond
to the footprint obtained on ... comparisons of the different footprints (Figure 2B ...

[PDF] … Tool to Study the Temporal and Spatial Variability of Ecosystem?Scale Carbon Dioxide, Water Vapor, … -
D Baldocchi, E Falge, L Gu, R Olson, D Hollinger, … - Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 2001 - nature.berkeley.edu
... micrometeorologi- cal technique, provides a direct measure of net carbon and water ...
Typical footprints have lon- gitudinal length scales of 100?2000 m (Schmid ...
-

Exchange of Carbon Dioxide by a Deciduous Forest: Response to Interannual Climate Variability -
ML Goulden, JW Munger, SM Fan, BC Daube, SC Wofsy - Science, 1996 - sciencemag.org
... Exchange of Carbon Dioxide by a Deciduous Forest: Response to Interannual Climate
Variability ... to 2.8 metric tons of carbon per hectare between 1991 and 1995. ...

The propagation of errors in long-term measurements of land-atmosphere fluxes of carbon and water -
JB MONCRIEFF, Y MALHI, R LEUNING - Global Change Biology, 1996 - Blackwell Synergy
... One possible way to close the carbon balance of a stand would be to measure all
the separate ... eg- stochastic nature of one-point sampling varying flux footprint ...

Source: Google Scholar


Article adapted by Iconocast from original press release.

Leaving our mark

MIT class tracks carbon footprint of different lifestyles; finds even the smallest U.S. footprints are relatively large

David Chandler, MIT News Office
April 16, 2008

Whether you live in a cardboard box or a luxurious mansion, whether you subsist on homegrown vegetables or wolf down imported steaks, whether you're a jet-setter or a sedentary retiree, anyone who lives in the U.S. contributes more than twice as much greenhouse gas to the atmosphere as the global average, an MIT class has estimated.

The class studied the carbon emissions of Americans in a wide variety of lifestyles--from the homeless to multimillionaires, from Buddhist monks to soccer moms--and compared them to those of other nations. The somewhat disquieting bottom line is that in the United States, even people with the lowest energy usage account for, on average, more than double the global per-capita carbon emission. And those emissions rise steeply from that minimum as people's income increases.

"Regardless of income, there is a certain floor below which the individual carbon footprint of a person in the U.S. will not drop," says Timothy Gutowski, professor of mechanical engineering, who taught the class that calculated the rates of carbon emissions. The results will be presented this May at the IEEE International Symposium on Electronics and the Environment in San Francisco.

While it may seem surprising that even people whose lifestyles don't appear extravagant--the homeless, monks, children--are responsible for significant greenhouse gas emissions, one major factor is the array of government services that are available to everyone in the United States. These basic services--including police, roads, libraries, the court system and the military--were allocated equally to everyone in the country in this study. Other services that are more specific, such as education or Medicare, were allocated only to those who actually make use of them.

The students conducted detailed interviews or made detailed estimates of the energy usage of 18 lifestyles, spanning the gamut from a vegetarian college student and a 5-year-old up to the ultrarich--Oprah Winfrey and Bill Gates. The energy impact for the rich was estimated from published sources, while all the others were based on direct interviews. The average annual carbon dioxide emissions per person, they found, was 20 metric tons, compared to a world average of four tons.

But the "floor" below which nobody in the U.S. can reach, no matter a person's energy choices, turned out to be 8.5 tons, the class found. That was the emissions calculated for a homeless person who ate in soup kitchens and slept in homeless shelters.

The analysis was carried out by Gutowski and 21 students in his 2007 class, "Environmentally benign design and manufacturing." They derived a system for making such comparisons, which they call ELSA--environmental life style analysis.

Unlike some other attempts to quantify carbon-emission rates, Gutowski and his students took great care to account for often-overlooked factors, such as the "rebound effect." That's when someone makes a particular choice--for example, buying a hybrid car instead of a gas-guzzler--but then uses the money saved from their reduced gasoline costs to do something else, such as taking a long trip by airplane. The net impact, in such a case, may actually be an overall increase in carbon emissions.

"When you save energy, you save money," Gutowski explains. "The question is, how are you going to spend that money?"

The students looked at the factors within each person's control that might lead to a reduction in carbon output. They found that achieving significant reductions for the most part required drastic changes that would likely be unacceptable to most people. As a result, they said, "this all suggests to us very significant limits to voluntary actions to reduce impacts, both at a personal level and at a national level."

In a continuation of the class this semester, another group of students are exploring this question in more detail, looking at just what kinds of things people really can do to limit their environmental impact. The question they are addressing, Gutowski says, is "can average Americans tighten their belts" in a way that would make a significant difference? Once again, the class will be interviewing people living in a wide variety of ways, including an Amish farming lifestyle. Then, after analyzing the results and possible changes, they will go back to the same people and ask, "Would you consider these alternatives?"

In general, spending money on travel or on goods that have substantial energy costs in their manufacture and delivery adds to a person's carbon footprint, while expenditures on locally based labor-intensive services--whether it's going to a therapist, taking an art class, or getting a massage--leads to a smaller footprint.

But the biggest factors in most people's lives were the obvious energy-users: housing, transportation and food. "The simple way you get people's carbon use down is to tax it," Gutowski says. "That's a hard pill to swallow--politicians don't like to step up" to support such measures. Absent such national actions, he says, it is important to study "what role consumer choices can play" in lowering the nation's carbon emissions.

If nothing else, the members of this class got a whole new perspective. "The students really got into it," Gutowski says. "It raised everybody's awareness about the issues."

A version of this article appeared in MIT Tech Talk on April 16, 2008 (download PDF).

 

 
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