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Metro Vancouver Walk21 Conference

Join Us!
In 2011 the International Walk21 Conference is being hosted by Metro Vancouver. The conference's metropolitan focus involves municipalities in the region, health authorities, Translink, the University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University, as well as the regional government. Metro Vancouver has teamed together to create an innovative conference focusing on the best practices for urban design, transportation mobility, and health promotion to provide the best places to walk to and through.

We invite you to join us in Metro Vancouver, Canada for the 2011 Walk21 Conference, Oct 3-5. We are proud to host the 12th conference in an international series encouraging and inspiring the best possible environments where people choose to walk. Come and walk with us!

Click Here to Register


Upper Beach Tree Tour

Join LEAF and Ward 32 Beaches-East York Councillor Mary-Margaret McMahon as we learn about the the trees in this neighbourhood.  During the tour, led by LEAF's Lauren Brown, we will examine some of the stresses trees face and how to properly care for your own trees. We’ll also learn about the invasive pest, Emerald Ash Borer, and the impact it will have on Toronto’s canopy.

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Cabbagetown Tree Tour

Join LEAF and the Cabbagetown South Residents Association as we explore one of Toronto’s most interesting neighbourhoods. A dense tree canopy blankets this historic neighbourhood, greatly contirbuting to the area's biodiversity.  We’ll visit three special backyard gardens where the homeowners will share personal stories about their trees.  Don't miss this captivating tour through a neighbourhood where the trees are as old as the architecture.

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Alien Invasion Tree Tour

Alien Invasion! How “Global Gardening” has impacted Toronto’s urban forest. Paul Zammit, Director of Horticulture for the Toronto Botanical Garden and Colleen Cirillo of Toronto and Region Conservation and the Ontario Invasive Plant Council will reveal how many of Toronto’s most common plants actually originate from abroad. While plants are neither inherently “good or bad”, we will discuss the impacts both native and non-native plants have on the urban forest and what that means for birds, bees, other pollinators and wildlife.

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WattsNEXT?

Kristopher Stevens and his team have launched a new public education campaign and contest called WattsNEXT? and they need your help to spread the word! 

Show your support for conservation and renewable energy in Ontario! Put yourself on the WattsNEXT? map and check out the ways to enter the bi-weekly draw for cool prizes and the video contest where you can win a $70,000 solar system for your community!

Click Here to participate!


Is nuclear power necessary for a carbon-free future?

The recent devastating earthquake and tsunami in Japan have confirmed the worst fears of nuclear power critics. Governments everywhere are re-evaluating their nuclear plans. But are fears of nukes misplaced? Chris Goodall and Jose Etcheverry are both environmentalists – but stand divided on the nuclear debate.

Every issue we invite two experts to debate a hot button issue in The Argument, and then invite you to join the conversation online - we’ll read all your comments and select the best to print next issue. (We’d prefer you to use your real name, but would love to hear what our readers have to say either way.) If you can’t comment, then you can simply vote in our poll, which you’ll find partway down the debate.

Looking for a previous Argument? See the full list of debates.

Chris

I am looking at a website that tells me how much electricity is coming from various sources around Britain. After a decade of financial incentives, wind turbines are currently producing about two per cent of our electricity. Excluding a small amount of hydro, all our electricity is coming from fossil fuels and nuclear. Britain’s 10 nuclear power stations are now producing 10 times as much energy as comes from 3,000 turbines.

I would love it if we powered our entire economy from renewables but I see no political will to achieve this aim. We would need to invest billions now in renewable technologies. Without nuclear, reducing carbon emissions at high speed is impossible. We might end up keeping old coal power stations open for the next 30 years.

People say that we simply need to work harder to persuade a largely indifferent public to accept huge numbers of turbines and to invest billions in other renewable technologies. Such idealism is irresponsible: if we truly believe that climate change is the greatest threat the world has ever faced, we cannot risk failing to achieve the growth in low-carbon energy sources. However much we may regret this, nuclear is the only technology capable of delivering large amounts of power within the next decade. We in the environmental movement have failed to get the UK to invest in renewables and we now have no alternative but to welcome nuclear power.

Jose

Nuclear plants need to be phased out because they are dangerous, toxic and impede the adoption of the three key options needed to build a carbon-free energy future: conservation, efficiency and renewable energy. Conservation and efficiency (i.e. doing more with less) represent two of the three most profitable opportunities to create new jobs and address climate change. To visualize the potential: Canada and the US use electricity at embarrassingly greater per capita rates compared to leading industrialized nations like Denmark and Germany.

Those two nations have not only minimized the way their citizens use power, they’re also constantly innovating efficient design and they’ve become world leaders in the development of renewable energy sources.

Their success is based on developing pragmatic renewable-energy policies, such as feed-in tariffs, which quickly enable entrepreneurs to innovate in vibrant markets that guarantee easy interconnection, fair long-term prices for all types of renewable energy and investment stability.

Germany’s renewable-energy policies in the last 10 years have become the most important climate-mitigation strategy in Europe and are a strong engine of industrial innovation and employment creation.

Germans and Danes have understood that nuclear plants cannot complement renewable- energy sources, as they cannot be turned on or off easily. Furthermore, they also understand that building nukes forces you to sell vast amounts of electricity, which acts as a clear contradiction to efforts at conservation and efficiency.

These lessons are starting to be understood by 148 other nations that have formed the International Renewable Energy Agency to develop rapidly a new paradigm of energy security and climate protection.

Chris

If we believe that climate change is the world’s greatest threat, we cannot risk failing to achieve the growth in low-carbon energy sources. Nuclear is the only technology capable of delivering large amounts of power within the next decade

Almost all of us welcome the rapid growth in renewables but even in Germany only 17 per cent of electricity comes from these sources. The key question is whether renewables have any prospect of growing fast enough to replace fossil fuel sources completely. In the UK and almost everywhere else, I don’t think anybody pretends that low-carbon sources are increasing at anywhere close to a fast enough rate. That is why nuclear is vital – not because we don’t want renewables.

The second illusion is to believe that energy-efficiency measures can significantly reduce demand for electricity. All independent sources predict a rise in electricity use because of home heating and the need to switch to electric vehicles. Conservation efforts are barely denting the demand for power. Environmentalists can bemoan the lack of interest in efficiency. But we need to deal with the world as it is, not how we want it to be. We may not like today’s consumerist, high-energy use lifestyles but we cannot change the world’s priorities overnight. Nuclear power is necessary to meet people’s demands for electricity.

Jose

I’d like to set the record straight on nukes:

  • Nukes are toxic and pose great dangers to present and future generations (Fukushima is now a level 7 catastrophe, the same as Chernobyl).
  • Nukes take at least a decade to build and are highly context-dependent design projects (i.e. a nuke design from Canada cannot be cut and pasted in seismically active places without major design modifications, which by definition involve higher costs, longer timelines, and trial/error experimentation).
  • Nukes are not cheap and uranium is a finite, non-renewable toxic mineral.
  • Nukes can easily be diverted for atomic weapons – one reason the technology has ‘strong’ fans.

Renewable sources on the other hand:

  • Are much safer, have vastly smaller ecological footprints, and represent strategic assets for current and future generations.
  • Most renewable energy systems are manufactured today in assembly lines and can therefore be deployed and implemented very quickly anywhere suitable.
  • Most renewable energy systems benefit from economies of scale; therefore the more money we invest in them the cheaper they become. Plus they use fuels that are plentiful and cheap (e.g. sun and wind) or can be locally produced at stable prices (e.g. biogas/biofuels).
  • Renewables can promote local resilience and energy autonomy, so diffusing sources of conflict instead of becoming weapons.

Chris

Zhang bin fj / AP / Press Association Images
Carry on regardless: China is pushing ahead with its nuclear power programme, with 13 reactors in operation and 35 more, including this one in southeast Fujian province, under construction. Zhang bin fj / AP / Press Association Images

Fukushima is a horrible disaster but we can reasonably expect that no-one will die as a result of the radiation leaks. Yes, nuclear power is very expensive but so are all low-carbon technologies. Most studies show nuclear costing less than offshore wind. What is more, nuclear will deliver power reliably and throughout the year.

People who live and work near nuclear reactors seem happy to have them as neighbours. By contrast, in Britain at least, onshore wind is widely detested.

I cannot accept that other technologies have ‘vastly smaller ecological footprints’. A new nuclear station will generate the same amount of electricity as about 3,000 wind turbines covering hundreds of square kilometres and requiring far more steel, concrete and disruption to wildlife.

We come back to the core argument. There is no political will anywhere in the world to make renewable electricity happen in sufficient amounts. I deeply regret this. Environmentalists watching the world sleepwalk into multiple ecological disasters have to act responsibly and accept that nuclear power is one of the few ways we have of maintaining standards of living while reducing the CO2 production from electricity generation.

Jose

Nuclear plants need to be phased out because they are dangerous, toxic and impede the adoption of the three key options needed to build a carbon-free energy future: conservation, efficiency and renewable energy

So what do we need to globalize a sustainable energy path?

Massive creativity, courage and political will – plus we need to design global deployment strategies for renewable energy that have tangible local social benefits.

For example, farmers who can own or at least benefit directly from wind turbines see them as a desirable cash crop. Schools with solar roofs see them as versatile teaching tools. Hospitals that can have lower fuel bills and cheap hot water via district energy see biomass CHP technology (combined heat and power) as a smart investment.

Our biggest obstacle to solving climate change with renewable energy, conservation and efficiency is the limited experience that most people have with these options. For all of us the most crucial strategy is to get directly involved in ‘learning by doing’ – and to fully use our creativity, which is itself a renewable and unlimited resource.

 

Goodall, Chris, and Jose Etcheverry. "Is nuclear power necessary for a carbon-free future?." New Internationalist Magazine 1 June 2011: n. pag. www.newint.org. Web. 14 June 2011.


The Sustainable Site: The Design Manual for Green Infrastructure and Low Impact Development

Date:           June 21, 2011
Time:           8:30 am to 4:00 pm (Registration begins at 8:00 am)
Location:      Earth Rangers Building, The Living City Campus at Kortright, Vaughan, ON
Cost:           $195.00 + HST (includes lunch and course materials)

Course Instructor: Dr. Britt Faucette, Ph.D., CPESC, LEED AP

Please click here for instructor bio.

On June 21, The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority will host a one-day interactive workshop based on a new design manual published by Forester Media. The manual is geared toward designers, architects, urban planners, regulators, and technical professionals who require standard specifications and design criteria for sustainable best management practices (BMPs) that can be implemented in the rapidly growing fields of green infrastructure, green building, low impact development (LID), and sustainable site development. The manual provides standard specifications and design criteria for over 20 different organic, recycled, bio-based BMPs for construction and post-construction storm water management. With information on how these BMPs fit into and contribute to LEED Green Building Credits, restore predevelopment hydrology in LID projects and reduce development site carbon footprint, this new design manual will assist today’s professionals in sustainable site development. Dr. Britt Faucette, the course presenter, will review the new manual, including BMPs, and how it can assist project planners and designers meet their design goals, identify quality compost for storm water management applications, and implementation in LEED and LID projects. Participants will also have an opportunity to participate in a field demonstration to see product installation and to discuss product performance and specifications.

This Sustainable Site Workshop is generously sponsored by Filtrexx Canada and the Great Lakes Chapter of the International Erosion Control Association (IECA). Members of IECA will receive a $25.00 discount off the registration fee. To learn more about IECA, or to become a member, please visit their website.

Please note: If you are registering as an IECA member, please ensure that your membership is up to date. Membership status will be verified by TRCA prior to the course

To register for the course click here to go to the events calendar. Click on the workshop title on June 21st.

For more information, please contact Glenn MacMillan at gmacmillan@trca.on.ca.


Work in a Warming World Atlantic Forum Sept. 29-30 – Saving the Planet and Creating Jobs

A forum for workers and their unions, environmentalists, academics, and activists and a chance for coalition-building.

Sept. 29 & 30, 2011
St. Thomas University - Forest Hill Conference Centre
Fredericton, NB

We are holding an Atlantic Forum inviting participants from the four Atlantic provinces and New England to discuss initiatives by labour and government to fight climate change while creating jobs not losing them. We want to focus on “inspiring stories” to encourage those of us here in the Maritimes to pursue this goal much further than we are presently doing, especially in the area of coalition-building between the labour and environmental movements.

It will be a two-day conference with the first day focusing on Atlantic Canada and the second day on New England and cross border initiatives.

On the first day, we will have panels on:

  • national union initiatives with responses from the Federations of Labour in the four Atlantic provinces
  • government representatives from the four Atlantic provinces describing their green jobs strategies
  • a labour panel on initiatives and accomplishments vis-à-vis climate change and environmental challenges

On the second day, we will have panels on:

  • cross border initiatives such as the Eastern Canadian Premiers’ and Governors’ Climate Change Action Plan
  • government and labour initiatives in New England
  • community initiatives on both sides of the border in forestry, the fisheries and agriculture

We will have keynotes from labour and environmental leaders, most notably on the first evening, followed by a reception. Over lunch, we will hear about blue-green or labour-environmental movement alliances on the first day and have a chance on the second day to try to form such alliances in regional groupings.

Professor Joan McFarland
Economics Department, St. Thomas University

Professor Andy Secord
Economics Department and Environment and Society Programme, St. Thomas University

David Coon
New Brunswick Conservation Council

Tom Mann
New Brunswick Union/NUPGE

Further Information

For further information, please contact: workinawarmingworld@stu.ca or 506-452-0634.

Registration information will be posted soon.

Sponsors

Work in a Warming World - SSHRC Community-University Research Alliance Program
St. Thomas University
NBU/NUPGE
ActionNB

Work in a Warming World addresses the challenge of climate change for Canadian employment and work. This Social Science and Humanities Research Council Community-University Research Alliance is affiliated with the Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS) at York University. To learn more, please see the link below.

www.workinawarmingworld.yorku.ca



Ontario’s Biodiversity Strategy, 2011

Please join the Ontario Biodiversity Council as we release Ontario’s Biodiversity Strategy, 2011, The guiding framework for conserving Ontario’s biodiversity over the coming decade.

June 22, 2011
Evergreen Brick Works
Holcim Gallery
550 Bayview Avenue, Toronto
11:00am - 2:00pm

The event will feature:

  • Guest Speakers
  • Networking
  • Lunch Provided

Please RSVP by June 15
Terese.McIntosh@ontario.ca
705-755-5040

Please feel free to extend this invitation to friends and colleagues - everyone is welcome to join the celebration!


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