Archived Articles

Snapshot Articles
Written by Guest Authors

Oct. 1, 2008
Green Zoning
By: Caroline G. Harris

Aug. 1, 2008
International Influences on City Sustainability Plans
By: Gail Karlsson

Jul. 2, 2008
Growing Green Collar Jobs in NYC
By: Joanne Derwin

Jun. 5, 2008
USGBC to Accredit Green-Building Certifiers
By: John Tepper-Marlin

May. 2, 2008
Sustainability In Commercial Buildings–Bridging The Gap From Design To Operations
By: Michael Bobker, Adam Hinge, Om Taneja

Apr. 7, 2008
Energy Efficiency in NYC: The Problem of Split Incentives
By: Kate Bashford

Feb. 1, 2008
Contractors Wanted
By: Wendy Fleischer

Dec. 3, 2007
The Status of LEED in NYC-Positive Lessons
By: John Tepper-Marlin

Oct. 1, 2007
The Healthy School and the Sustainable City
By: Stephen Boese

Jul. 31, 2007
The Green Manufacturing Scene
By: Sara Garretson

May. 30, 2007
Energy & Environmental Reality Check
By: Peter Fusaro

Apr. 16, 2007
Plant-Based Heat for Your Home
By: John S. Nettleton

Mar. 1, 2007
The Color of Money
By: Jon Lukomnik

Jan. 4, 2007
Saving Energy in Existing Residential Buildings
By: Richard Leigh, P.E. & Eduardo Guerra

Nov. 1, 2006
1400 on Fifth - Birth of 21st Century Construction in Harlem
By: The Full Spectrum Team

Sep. 27, 2006
To Move Mountains, Fix Markets — An Economist's Agenda for Sustainable NYC
By: Charles Komanoff

Aug. 29, 2006
Make Room for Green Work
By: Jenifer Becker

Jun. 30, 2006
What is DG and Why Should We Care?
By: Michael Bobker

May. 24, 2006
Beyond Pilot Projects: Mainstreaming High Performance Building at the City of New York Department of Design and Construction
By: City of New York DDC

Feb. 27, 2006
Transatlantic Energy
By: Stephen A. Hammer, Ph. D

Jan. 2, 2006
Transparent Green
By: David Bergman

Nov. 1, 2005
Soft Energy Stasis
By: Charles Komanoff

Aug. 9, 2005
A New Normal for NYC: Mainstreaming High Performance Buildings
By: Jeremy Reiss



Torchlight Articles
Written by Nancy Anderson, Ph.D.

Aug. 26, 2008
Memories of Next Summer

Jun. 26, 2008
Can't Wait

Apr. 30, 2008
If Climate's The Question, Is Sticky the Answer?

Feb. 28, 2008
When Starting Over Is Not An Option

Dec. 28, 2007
Knocking At Our Door

Oct. 31, 2007
Possible But Not Probable

Aug. 31, 2007
Rolling Up Our Sleeves

Jun. 29, 2007
“If We Don't Act Now, When? And If We Don't Act, Who Will?”

May. 2, 2007
In Dreams Begin Accountability

Mar. 9, 2007
How To Get What We Pay For

Jan. 4, 2007
Giant Steps

Nov. 29, 2006
Waiting for Godot in NYC

Oct. 18, 2006
Countdown for NYC's Green Building Law

Aug. 16, 2006
Measuring Up to Lord Kelvin

Jun. 30, 2006
Greener With Envy

Apr. 17, 2006
NYC.gov - A Modest Proposal

Feb. 24, 2006
"Que Sera" is Not the Answer

Jan. 3, 2006
Lost in Translation

Nov. 23, 2005
A Green Pulse Beats in NY

Sep. 26, 2005
A Closer Look at NYC.gov

Aug. 2, 2005
How Sallan Fits In

News & Views Archive

| News & Views Home

In the News
By: sallanFnd

New York Times Blog

Dot Earth

Andy:
You're right. I didn't pose the right questions in my February 6 post (#21). So here goes with a first few that the Presidential candidates should be asked and asking: (April 4th post #76)

1. High energy prices are here to stay, along with the tense geo-politics of access to oil and natural gas. What would your Administration do to face these realities and keep them from sapping our economy, putting our soldier and Marines in harm's way, and biting into our hip pockets? (See the James Woolsey video clip)

2. As President Truman said about his office, "The buck stops here". Candidates should show that they would be climate leaders by framing issues and challenges. Each of them should be asking the public, "Why should Americans demand government accountability on climate change now when there are so many other profound and pressing problems pressing in on us?" (Iraq, the economy and health care just being the most talked about.) Then each of them should answer the question again and again until it becomes part of what Americans expect to hear about in the 2008 race.

3. What would your Administration do to stimulate innovation in the next generation of technical, financial and consumer climate developments?

4. Is Tom Friedman right when he says, "Green is the new red, white and blue?"


[ANDY REVKIN belatedly says: You stopped too soon. What are the right questions?]


Sallan says Andy Revkin's "Endless Pursuit of Unnecessary Things" asked the wrong questions.

This Presidential election season is a good time to ask the right ones. Read Nancy's comment #21 in response to Revkin's Feb 6 Posting.

By asking about the sustainability of our collective future in terms of “how many people” and “how much will they consume”, I hear Four Horsemen in Hair Shirts clattering toward us to save the planet! But when they arrive, will Americans, Chinese and everyone else mend their “too many and too much” ways in the face of war, famine and disease? Fear and want rarely bring out the best in us and dire conditions can turn anyone into an immigrant or a case of population excess. Perhaps this Hair Shirt foursome will make us profligates mend our ways and emulate the environmentally virtuous, but don’t count on it.

Today, sustainability and climate aren’t make the cut of top issues in the US Presidential race. The fact is that by casting these critical issues as a matter of consumer choice and lifestyle is deeply apolitical and it means that they won’t make the cut. But it’s not too late to find the public and collective aspects of a path toward sustainability, but we have to start by asking the right questions.

Posted on April 8, 2008 10:50 AM