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Posts Tagged ‘Atmosphere’

Museum Hosts Exhibit On Climate, Energy

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

NEW YORK - The red line starts low to the ground, showing how much carbon was in the atmosphere before the Industrial Revolution. As the timeline moves forward and the world becomes more industrialized, the line goes up, up and up to modern times, when it’s above visitors’ heads.

Starting with that opening image, a new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History is trying to help viewers understand what people have done to cause global warming, and what impact it is having on the planet and what people can do to fix it.

“Climate Change: The Threat to Life and a New Energy Future” opens Saturday at the museum and runs through August 16.

Museum President Ellen Futter said the exhibit was balanced between making people comprehend what a potentially dire, issue global climate change is and helping them figure out what they, their communities and their countries can do.

“We want them to understand how serious, and urgent really, this problem with climate change is but also that there are solutions to it,” she said.

“What we have to do is convert the ingenuity that created the Industrial Revolution and accidentally caused global climate change and use that ingenuity and apply it to finding solutions.”

The show starts with a section on fossil fuels, and then looks at how the Earth has become warmer as more greenhouse gases have ended up in the atmosphere. Another section lists the kinds of actions people can take on an individual level, from paying bills online to avoid the waste of paper statements to not drinking bottled water to using cold water instead of hot for laundry.

Other parts of the show look at how the atmosphere, polar ice, the oceans and land are all affected, using models and interactive components to make the point. In one section, a model of lower Manhattan is partly flooded to show what would happen if sea levels rise as polar ice melts. Another section has a model of dead coral, bleached white, that shows the risks of ocean warming.

The show ends with a display of some alternative energies, from solar power to nuclear to wind. Visitors are invited to write down their thoughts and reactions before leaving the exhibit.

Ed Mathez, who co-curated the exhibit along with Michael Oppenheimer of Princeton University, said it was a complicated subject to make into an exhibition, but he hoped it would answer any confusion the public had over the issue.

Oppenheimer said the exhibit shows that the response has to come on different levels, from the individual to the government, and that people would be inspired to want their governments to act.

“I hope it would empower people to go out of here and demand leadership,” he said.

The exhibit had a number of American and international collaborators: The Cleveland Museum of Natural History, The Field Museum in Chicago, the Saint Louis Science Center, the Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates, Instituto Sangari in Brazil, Junta de Castilla y Leon in Spain, the Korea Green Foundation, the Natural History Museum of Denmark, and the Papalote Museo del Nino of Mexico.

The show will travel extensively once it leaves New York, including to many of these locations.

Futter said the international collaboration in putting it together reflects the understanding that climate change is a planetary issue. It “really speaks to the fact that this is a shared concern,” she said. “Increasingly, we are beginning to understand that the driving issues of our time are ones that exceed geographical boundaries, that require increased coordination and cooperation.”

Source — MSNBC

Churches Claim Victory With N.J. Housing Law

Saturday, July 19th, 2008 AddThis Social Bookmark Button

MOUNT LAUREL, N.J. (RNS) In the steamy atmosphere of a tent revival meeting, Gov. Jon Corzine on Thursday (July 17) signed what proponents described as landmark legislation to help develop affordable housing.

Surrounded by legislators, clergy and housing activists, Corzine signed the legislation in an open-sided tent at an affordable housing development. Mount Laurel is where a lawsuit began in 1971 that led to a precedent-setting state Supreme Court decision requiring towns to help provide affordable housing.

“Through this measure, we are ending decades of unfair, unbalanced and insufficient provision of affordable housing in New Jersey,” Corzine said. “The fact is this legislation holds much promise for the thousands of New Jerseyans who want to stay in their hometown — to work there and raise their families there — but simply can’t afford to live there.”

Caught up in the shouts of “Amen!” from the audience of 530 people, clergy and state officials alike said they saw God playing a role in the shaping of the legislation.

“Generally, I am for the separation of church and state,” Corzine said, “but I must tell you the spirit of God is moving through this audience.”

The legislation ends a two-decade-old system that allowed upper-income suburban towns to meet at least part of their affordable housing obligations by paying poorer cities to build the housing there.

Those regional contribution agreements, or RCAs, contributed to a form of segregation that kept the poor trapped in the struggling cities and children in poor schools, supporters of the new law said.

Assembly Speaker Joseph Roberts, a Democrat who spearheaded the bill, said it is the climax of a three-decade crusade.

“I was told it would be a cold day in hell when they eliminated RCAs in New Jersey,” he told the crowd. “RCAs have been insidious public policy for this state. To advance as a state, we have to move forward together. We can’t pay people to stay behind.”

David Rusk, the former mayor of Albuquerque, N.M., and a national affordable housing activist, called the New Jersey law “the most important housing reform enacted in the nation in the last two decades.”

Source — The Pew Forum