Skip to content
Grist home
Support nonprofit news today

Articles by Adam Browning

Adam Browning is the executive director of Vote Solar.

All Articles

  • Job opening for the most important job in the world

    The International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) -- the group that's supposed to translate the international scientific consensus on climate change, so the threat can be accurately gauged and appropriately addressed -- is looking for an information officer. The job posting is here (pdf).

    Rightly or wrongly, autopsies of global-warming failures to date often indict scientists for their poor communication skills.

    Regardless, to counter the well-funded counter-intelligence coming out of Exxon-Mobil and the White House, it sure would be nice to have a top-notch professional in the role. It is not much of an exaggeration to say that the future of the world may depend on it.

    So how about helping find one? Know a mercenary PR professional with bulldog instincts who's tired of selling widgets and keeps telling you how they really want to make a difference? Forward the posting: here's their big chance. Job's in Geneva -- a beautiful city. Pay is $80k-$100k. I'll even throw in Vote Solar t-shirts for the whole family if that will make a difference.

  • Correlation does not equal causality, but c’mon already

    The U.N. announced today that global warming gasses have reached record concentrations in the atmosphere:

    "Global observations coordinated by WMO show that levels of carbon dioxide, the most abundant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, continue to increase steadily and show no signs of leveling off," said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud.

    In other news, Canada is reporting the warmest winter since records have been kept.

    Canada has recorded its warmest winter in nearly six decades of record-keeping, with temperatures that a veteran forecaster said on Monday were almost "un-Canadian."

    Environment Canada said temperatures averaged 3.9 degrees Celsius (7 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than normal from the end of November 2005 to the start of March 2006, and broke the previous record for the country's warmest winter by almost a full degree.

    "The entire country was into this balminess. This kind of benign winter, said David Phillips, Environment Canada's senior climatologist in Toronto.

    Alberta, Saskatchewan and the Northwest Territories basked in temperatures that were more than 6 degrees Celsius above norm.

    "We are known as the second coldest country in the world and it was anything but that. It was really quite un-Canadian," Phillips said.

  • If we don’t look, maybe it will all just go away …

    From DailyKos, a cite to an AP story about budget cuts imperiling the satellites that are currently used to study global warming.

    That's one way to deal with the recent uptick in news stories about government inaction in the face of a clear catastrophic threat ...

  • One-stop data shop

    Given that states take the lead on most things electrical, perhaps you are wondering how to find out which state is doing what when it comes to ameliorative policies.

    Wonder no more. The good folks at the Interstate Renewable Energy Council have now added energy-efficiency programs to their popular and invaluable database of state renewable-energy incentives. Check it here.