Showing posts with label Sane Energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sane Energy. Show all posts

Monday, June 2, 2008

If You Can't Beat 'Em, Eat 'Em


I couldn't help passing on this article, which a lot of people have probably seen because it was posted on the Druge Report today. It's about the idea of eating nutritious insects as an alternative source of protein. Though I was aware the practice is widespread in many parts of the world, it seems like with the right kind of marketing campaign, insect-eating could really catch on in certain niche markets in America as well.

Here is my favorite little bit:

"As for pesticides, some experts have pointed out the irony of using chemicals to get rid of bugs that are more nutritious than the crops they prey on.

In Thailand when pesticides failed to control locusts, the government urged locals to eat them and distributed recipes."

In essence, Thailand adopted the, "if you can't beat 'em, eat 'em," approach. Take notes rest of world, because this is creative problem solving at its finest.

Maybe one day we'll just have a couple token crops in a field to lure in all those tasty bugs. Come harvest time, we'll kill off the few worthless, bug-damaged plants, leaving a large bounty of delicious critters to harvest and devour. Something to think about.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

A Follow Up on Meat from a Tube

William Saletan over at Slate just sounded off on the NYT article about meat in a tube. The article, if you're interested, can be found here.

Enjoy.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Earth Day Special: A Lazy Person's Guide to Being an Environmentalist. Plus, PETA's New Strategy









Every once in a while I have a recurring conversation with friend X that goes something like this:


Friend X: “Have you heard about widespread abuse of animals in food industry Z?”

Me: “No.”

Friend X: “It’s really awful, you should read about it.”

Me: “I’m sure it is awful. But I’m playing Scrabble. If it’s something that keeps you from getting sleep at night, there’s one really great, fool proof way to ensure you have a clean conscience. Stop eating meat.”
(Author’s Note—obviously this isn’t “fool proof” in the strictest sense. There may be other indirect ways you are supporting the industry: owning stock, supporting legislators, etc. . . but let’s keep it simple).

Friend X: “I like meat. I just want to make sure that the practices are humane.”

And then that’s it. We go on with our lives. Friend X gets to be concerned with animal suffering, AND she gets to eat her meat with a clean conscience because she says “Yeah, it should definitely be done humanely.” Essentially, she gets to have her meat and eat it too.

I’ll have a similar discussion with friend X about substitutes for meat. It goes something like this:

Friend X: “I wish I could stop eating meat, I think it’s a good idea for (insert reason here: health, environment, responsible management of resources, waste, animal treatment concerns, etc), but I just love eating steaks. I couldn’t live without my steak.”

Me: “I agree. Meat is tasty. But what if scientists were able to create a meat substitute that was indistinguishable, not just to your senses, but molecularly as well, from that steak you’re eating now. Surely you’d choose the substitute because of concerns ( health, environment, animal treatment, etc.) that you cited above, right?”

Friend X: "I don’t think that would be possible."

Me: "Ok. But assuming it was, surely because of the considerations above you would choose the substitute, right? Keep in mind that it is molecularly indistinguishable. The ONLY difference is that we didn’t use a shit-ton of feed (usually around a 10 to 1 calorie ration) and loads of land and water, and that there was never an animal alive to feel pain, to be slaughtered, or even, admittedly, to feel happiness." (For those of you who disagree with that last bit, I doubt you’ve spent any significant amount of time in a pasture in Spring, hanging out with your best friends, chewing away on a big old mouthful of cud as the sun warms your hindquarters. It’s absolute HEAVEN).

Friend X: "I don’t think that’s possible. I can’t imagine a substitute like that."

I swear to God I’ve had this conversation with people. I won’t say who (my mother), but this exact conversation has taken place. That’s what’s kind of weird, even people who are sympathetic to the cause are reluctant to concede that “given an indistinguishable substitute” they would prefer it.


Now, I’ve never been convinced that a real, indistinguishable--molecularly or otherwise-- substitute would be available, so it was with a great deal of interest that I read in the NYT today, that PETA is offering 1 million dollars to the first company to come up with commercially viable fake meat at competitive prices by 2012.


This article was insane. I figured when it came around, this indistinguishable fake meat would be the product of soy, red food coloring, lots of taste scientists working their magic, and maybe an atomic hyperaccelerator somewhere on the West Coast. It turns out I’ve got a lot to learn about the fake meat industry. Here’s a paragraph from the NYT article:

“For several years, scientists have worked to develop technologies to grow tissue cultures that could be consumed like meat without the expense of land or feed and the disease potential of real meat. An international symposium on the topic was held this month in Norway. The tissue, once grown, could be shaped and given texture with the kinds of additives and structural agents that are now used to give products like soy burgers a more meaty texture.”

Tissue cultures. I should have known all along. Here’s another quick quote from someone who appears to be engaged in a reasonable search for the truth:

“Henk P. Haagsman, a professor at Utrecht University in the Netherlands and an in vitro meat research pioneer, said he welcomed the prize competition.

But he said he would not like to see the field dominated by the animal welfare issue, since environmental and public health issues are such important ‘drivers for this research.’ The Netherlands has put $5 million into in vitro meat studies.”

Right on, Professor Haagsman.

If all goes well, being environmental might just get a whole lot easier, and tastier, for those of use who try not to eat meat.

Now, my views aren’t completely in alignment with PETA. For example, I don’t think that animal suffering should be the driving force behind a push for a less meat heavy diet. Sure, there’s an argument to be made there. If I have the option between kicking the shit out of a dog. . . and not doing that. . . . I tend to opt for the latter. Most people I speak to tend to be in agreement on this point. So at least at some level, when given the option between inflicting pain and not, humans think that the unnecessary infliction of suffering is at the very least, less preferable than the alternative.

But protecting animals just isn’t my number one priority. Why? Like I told friend X, I’ve got other stuff to do. Like what? Well, like playing video games, for one. Or (God forbid) studying for finals. Or, here’s one that’s pretty appropriate for Earth Day: deciding how we humans want to manage OUR own resources to ensure the comfortable survival or OUR species. At its heart, I believe that the argument for reducing the meat that we consume should be framed like this “What can we humans get out of it to make sure that our lives are comfortable?”

You see, deep down inside, I’m a speciesist. I love humans. I count some of them among my dearest friends, family, and neighbor acquaintances. If I’m sitting in a lifeboat in the middle of the Pacific Ocean with two buddies and a dog. The dog goes overboard. Did I say overboard? I meant eaten. No questions asked. He doesn’t get a seat at the table, he doesn’t draw straws with that non-opposable thumbed paw of his. He gets, IF HE’S LUCKY, the least painful vicious murder we can give him.

If it’s me, one buddy, my arch nemesis (Hi Jerry!), and a dog are in the raft? The dog still goes. But it’s a closer call.

So, no, I agree with Professor what’s-his-name from above, animal suffering should not be the primary force compelling humans to consider a less meat-heavy diet.

So what should be? Should health concerns be the driving force? Well, it’s true that there are substantial benefits to be had, but those aren’t really my main concerns either. If they were, I would have given up binge drinking long ago.

In fact, the driving force behind my own efforts to cut down on meat eating (a practice I prefer to call “intermittent vegetarianism," or "doing my best"), is based on two important reasons: 1) I suffer from a severe guilt complex of the Woody Allen variety, and 2) I’m lazy.

If you suffer from either of these symptoms, you might find this rationale helpful. Let’s start with,

GUILT COMPLEX


Here is a basic syllogism

1. Our Earth has a finite amount of resources.
2. To ensure our present and future comfort, we should manage these resources in a responsible way with an eye toward global sustainability and an ever-increasing population.
3. Meat, being about the most inefficient, soil eroding, waste producing, resource eating (literally), rain forest destroying, pollutant emitting way imaginable to produce food, does not ensure that we are managing our resources responsibly.
4. Therefore, people should try to eat less meat.

So, back to our lifeboat example:

This time I’m in a lifeboat with my friend, a dog, and about 100,000 calories worth of sandwiches. My friend requests one of the sandwiches. I say I would prefer to give them to the dog to “beefen” him up and eat him at a later date. My friend, aware that this is a horrible calorie trade off, and unwilling to use our limited resources in this way, scoffs and begins to gnaw on the most supple part of my calf. Do you see the tragedy here? The choice to feed the sandwiches to the dog would be stupid because, even if we survived, I’d never play basketball again.

Now, let’s change that hypothetical just a bit. Let’s pretend that the lifeboat, instead of being in the Pacific Ocean, is in the Milky Way. And instead of me and my friend and a dog on it, there are billions and billions of people and livestock on it. Oh, and we’re pretty sure we’re not going to be picked up by an ocean liner any time soon. We need to start deciding what we want to do with those sandwiches.

So there's the guilt complex bit.

Now, we move on to,

LAZINESS AND LETHARGY


Having accepted the above premises as being true, but generally lethargic and unmotivated, what am I to do? I’ve taken the one step that takes absolutely no effort on my part to do; I’ve tried to reduce the amount of meat that I eat. Does this make me better than you? Probably. But that’s only part of the reason that I do it. The fact is that it happens to be the most effective legal environmental non-action that any single human being could do is a nice little perk too.

PARTING THOUGHTS


Pursuant to this lazy, guilty mentality, long ago I made a studied, conscious decision to do two things that I would urge all lazy/environmentally concerned people to do to both maximize their environmental impact and assuage the dirty, guilty conscience that comes with living in a modern, resource hungry world:


1. Reduce the amount of meat you eat.


2. Only have one child each for you and your life mate/cosmic partner.


Go for it; do everything you want, recycle, clean up trash, plant a couple trees in your yard, lobby your congressman, write letters to the EPA, march in green protests, ride your bike to work every day, join the sierra club, spend more money on a hybrid. There is no way you will be able to match the enormous impact that these two non-activities have in reducing your carbon, environmental, resource use, etc footprint. It just can’t be done. You could spend every waking hour recycling every little piece of plastic that you’ve ever used, and you know what? If you have that 9th kid it’s all wasted. That’s one more mouth to feed, one more body to heat, Nintendo controller to be used, refrigerator to power, gas guzzling car to fill, and so on. . . for an average or 77 YEARS. How much did you say they gave you the last time you took your cans back? $2.35?

I thought so.

And do you know what these two non-acts take? Nothing. No affirmative act on your part at all. It takes two sacrifices:



1) Eating meat with less frequency. This is obviously a sacrifice because meat is tasty.


2) Not having that one extra bundle of joy you thought you were going to have. This, depending on your view of bundles of joy, isn’t even a sacrifice at all.

See how easy it is to be environmental? Eat great pasta and get an appropriately timed vasectomy. That’s it. You’re already doing a lot better than most other humans. And you’re probably doing a lot, lot better than most other Americans.

And on last note,

FOR THE CYNICS


Obviously, if you don’t have a raging guilt complex, this advice might not be very useful to you. I’ll admit that the alternative philosophy, “Why do I care what happens to the Earth after I’m gone. . .Let’s Party!” is an appealing one. Doubly so considering that I am expecting no moral evaluation at the end of my life by God or Zeus or the EPA or my offspring. If I was a bigger man, perhaps it’s the route I would choose.



But for some reason I can’t do that. I think in the end it comes down to my trouble with waste. Maybe it was the fact that my parents always had me clean my plate or were always encouraging me to turn off the lights, or turn off my stereo when I wasn’t in the house. Maybe deep down I just can’t stop hearing my mother’s voice. But that’s probably a good thing. After all, to ignore all that advice, to forget all those words, to not hear that voice telling me to turn off the lights, well. . .

That would just be a waste.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Start Saving Your Cooking Oil Now, Reap the Benefits Later


It started this morning when I read an article in the Des Moines Register about the ecovillage outside of Fairfield. According to the article, the residents of the village harvest sun, wind, and rain for energy and grow grapevines, kiwis, gooseberries, and plums in their yards to eat. At night, everyone holds hands in a circle and lollipops and sugarplums fall from the skies.

More importantly, I discovered that the founder of the ecovillage powers his Mercedes-Benz with massage oil from the spa in Vedic City.

Massage oil. Interesting, I thought. Mistakenly thinking that the oil powering the car had something to do with oil used for massages, I quickly took out some cooking oil, slathered it onto my entire body, and then scraped it directly from my body into a jar to be fed to my automobile.

Boy was my face red and oily when I unintentionally stumbled upon another article about oil powered vehicles. Turns out, it doesn't have to be massage oil after all.

The Economist was nice enough to inform me that McDonalds is going to start powering their entire British fleet with recycled cooking oil from their restaurants. I couldn't find the Economist article online, but here is a brief summary of the story in the International Business Times.

First the Fairfield guy, then the largest fast food chain in the world? It was as if everywhere I turned people were jumping onto the biodiesel bandwagon (the bandwagon itself, were it not a figurative vehicle, would no doubt also be powered by biodiesel).

Twp articles in one day? I see this as a sign. As soon as I buy a fast food franchise or a massage parlor, I'm going to get myself a diesel car and never look back. So long suckers. . .

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Want to save 90 dollars fast? Become a gas smuggler.


Foreign Policy magazine has a pretty cool feature comparing different gas prices around the world. The low is Turkmenistan, where it costs $1.06 to fill up a Honda Civic. The high is Turkey, where you'd be paying $93.98 to fill up that same Civic. In the U.S. it costs around $31.42 .

There's also an interesting map that highlights the biggest differential between gas prices in neighboring countries. If, for example, someone from Turkey were to drive into their neighbor Iran to gets gas, they would be saving $89.49 each time they filled up the tank. (Iran $4.49 vs. Turkey $93.98).

The U.S., by the way, consumes more oil than the next highest 20 countries combined. Wow. The next five are Japan, China, Canada, Russia, Germany.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Negative Externality and The Case for Higher Gas Prices. Or, Why Salesmen Love My Mother



I went out car shopping with my mother yesterday and realized that she is the ideal client for any car salesman.

Why? Not only is she polite and inquisitive, but she is also very easily impressed. Any car she gets into she finds something to like. If the salesman says that the contoured seats provide extra support, she starts wriggling around a little bit and then exclaims "I really like these seats." Later that night she will be on the phone with my dad extolling the virtues of the contoured, supportive seats of the Honda Civic and how they are vastly superior to those of the Dodge Neon. You can easily change the volume from the steering wheel? Ingenious. Imagine all of the accidents that will save. She'll take it.

Here is just what a typical conversation with the salesman was like:

Salesman
-- As you can see the wheel has the tilt function, allowing you to tilt it up or down to comfortably handle the vehicle.
Mother--Oohh. Yeah, I like that. That can sometimes be tiring if it's not adjusted correctly. Probably even a little bit dangerous, arthritically speaking.
Salesman
, pushing button
-- Here is the button for the wipers. . .
Mother-- Does it have a rear wiper?
Salesman
-- You bet
Mother, exceedingly happy-- I really like rear wipers.

That's what you need to sell a car to my mother. A rear wiper. Nothing more important than a rear wiper.

So the best thing about all of this is that I think my mom wants to get a Prius (because of the ample glove compartment space), which gets around 60 mpg according to
Toyota.

Why is this good? Well, not only do I feel that the price of gas will continue to increase, but I feel that it should continue to increase. When this happens, they'll be set.

So why should the price of gas continue to increase? One reason is negative externality. Say it. Don't you love the way that it rolls off your tongue? Negative externality.

I originally ran across this freakonomics post at the John Deeth Blog (a fellow Iowan) and liked it so much I figured I'd pass it on. Here's a taste of the reasoning:

The reason we need high gas taxes is that there are all sorts of costs associated with my driving that I don’t pay — someone else pays them. This is what economists call a “negative externality.” Because I don’t pay the full costs of my driving, I drive too much. Ideally, the government could correct this problem through a gas tax that aligns my own private incentive to drive with the social costs of driving.

I've always understood this as a concept but didn't know that it had such a cool sounding name. Negative externality. It might not cost me much to buy a bottle of bleach and dump it in my friend's milk, but it's sure going to cost my friend a lot. The "tax" to discourage this kind of behavior is called "life in prison."