Monday, November 23, 2009

Black & Veatch's Tarakhil Power Plant: White Elephant in Kabul


by Pratap Chatterjee
CorpWatch
November 19, 09

In a secluded valley a few miles from Kabul's international airport, $285
million in U.S. taxpayer dollars have flowed into a Black & Veatch-built
power plant outside Tarakhil village. But, far from the public relations
coup the project was intended to supply, the plant has run into problems
with planning, cost over-runs and alleged corruption...

Click on Title above for full article

Thursday, November 5, 2009

What Competition?


FINDING A VOICE by Ann Davidow
BuzzFlash
November 3, 2009

...when executives can walk off with multi-million-dollar golden parachutes and retirement packages while union workers are called avaricious consumers of health care and wages, a moment's reflection proves that our present system has deteriorated into a twisted version of free enterprise in which money managers are free to manipulate markets and people at will...

Click on Title above for full article

Sunday, October 25, 2009

A good kind of group think builds sustainable small businesses


Larry Gallagher | September/October 2009 issue
Ode Magazine

Ernesto Sirolli taps into the collective genius of communities.

...By his reckoning, he and his disciples have aided in the start up, expansion or survival of 30,000 businesses on four continents. At a time when businesses around the world are being rocked by the global economic implosion, Sirolli's methods could help struggling entrepreneurs not just survive but thrive. More than bolstering bottom lines, the Sirolli Institute helps communities help themselves, reinventing local networks and building the social capital that's the foundation of true prosperity...

Click on Title above to read article

Monday, August 31, 2009

ExxonMobil: "Green Company of the Year?"


By Josh Harkinson
Mother Jones
August 27, 2009

Editors know that counterintuitive headlines sell magazines. They also know that making wildly exaggerated claims can damage their credibility. Writing a headline is often a balancing act between these two factors. So when you see a magazine like Forbes say that ExxonMobil is "Green Company of the Year," as it did this month, what it's really saying is that it's hurting. With advertising pages way down this year, the magazine feels the need to sell off its long-term credibility with some readers for the short-term gain of boosting page views. That, at least, is my take on what Forbes was thinking. Because there's simply no way that any serious reporter would wrap Exxon in a shroud of green...

Click on Title above to continue

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Web Highlight: Brilliant Earth


Socially responsible jeweler: conflict-free Canadian diamonds, ethically sourced sapphires, and eco-friendly gold and platinum.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Greening Your IT, for Newbies or Experts


By Matthew Wheeland
GreenerComputing
Published July 7, 2009

In this excerpt from a longer interview with IBM data center architect John Lamb, the author walks through the steps companies should take when looking at energy efficiency projects, whether they're just starting out or have picked all the low-hanging fruit...

Click on Title above to continue

Friday, July 17, 2009

Disney (Waste) Land


Elizabeth Royte
ISSUE: Fall 2008, feature stories | August 28, 2008
OnEarth Magazine

What do garbage and public relations have in common? Take a trip to future world and find out...

Click on Title above to continue

Monday, July 6, 2009

How to cut costs and keep your employees


Carmel Wroth | May 2009 issue
Ode Magazine

Like any CEO in this economic climate, Paul Levy, who runs Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, had to find a way to cut costs. He didn’t want to lay people off, so he did something unusual: He asked his 6,200 full-time employees for their ideas on how to avoid layoffs. They responded enthusiastically. Thousands showed up for the brainstorming meetings and, together, they came up with a plan to save about 450 jobs by cutting pay, reducing benefits and trimming other costs. Levy took a 10 percent pay cut and declined a 30 percent bonus for which he was eligible. “Presidents or CEOs often think they have to make all the decisions and control events in their organizations,” Levy says. “You should trust the people you work with because they care about the place and they care about one another. So why not trust them to come up with approaches that make it better?”

At least 4.4 million Americans have lost their jobs since the recession began, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. But some companies are looking for alternatives to downsizing. Toyota and FedEx cut executive pay and bonuses; Gloucester Engineering in Massachusetts organized job shares so people worked less but kept their positions; instead of dismissing junior staff, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, a global law firm with offices in seven cities, paid them a greatly reduced salary to work for needy community organizations; B&W Trailer Hitches in Humboldt, Kansas, which manufactures custom truck beds and trailer hitches, pays employees to work on civic projects when the factory is idle...

Click on Title above to continue

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Taking Sides in Iran


by Robert Parry
Consortium News
June 18, 2009

There are lots of good reasons for wishing that the bombastic Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will be toppled by the political struggle playing out on the streets of Tehran, but there is still that troubling question of whether he actually won the election...

The U.S. news media casts aside objectivity in covering Iran's election despite the real question of who won

Thursday, June 18, 2009

The Free Market's Marked Men: From The Niger Delta To The Amazon



by Amy Goodman
Democracy Now!weekly column
June 10, 2009

Ken Saro-Wiwa and Alberto Pizango never met, but they are united by a passion for the preservation of their people and their land, and by the fervor with which they were targeted by their respective governments. Saro-Wiwa was executed by the Nigerian government Nov. 10, 1995. Pizango this week was charged by the Peruvian government with sedition and rebellion, and narrowly eluded capture, taking refuge in the Nicaraguan Embassy in Lima. Nicaragua has just granted him political asylum. Two indigenous leaders—one living, one dead—Pizango and Saro-Wiwa demonstrate that effective grass-roots opposition to corporate power can take a personal toll...

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Greenpeace Misses the Boat with Its Green IT Campaign


GreenerComputing
By Preston Gralla, June 8, 2009

Greenpeace recently made headlines with its "CoolIT Challenge" in which it issued a scorecard about the green IT actions of top technology vendors such as IBM, Dell, Sun, Intel, and Cisco. Greenpeace concluded all of them were doing a poor job --- but it's Greenpeace itself, not the tech firms, that missed the boat. The Greenpeace campaign, while well-intentioned, is simplistic and misguided...

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Domestic Workers Fight for Bill of Rights


Democracy Now!
June 12, 2009

The Domestic Workers Bill of Rights, if passed, would amend New York state labor law and guarantee the over 200,000 nannies and housekeepers in New York state a living wage, overtime pay, sick leave, severance and health benefits, and protection from employment discrimination. It would be the first such bill in the country to challenge the exclusion of the nearly two million domestic workers countrywide from national labor law and set an important precedent for other states. We speak with a nanny-turned-organizer...

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Who’s Behind the Economic Meltdown?


The Center for Public Integrity

The top subprime lenders whose loans are largely blamed for triggering the global economic meltdown were owned or backed by giant banks now collecting billions of dollars in bailout money — including several that have paid huge fines to settle predatory lending charges. The banks that funded the subprime industry were not victims of an unforeseen financial collapse, as they have sometimes portrayed themselves, but enablers that bankrolled the type of lending threatening the financial system...

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Dark Days for University Presses and Journals


Utne.com
5/18/2009
by Katie Leo

Difficult economic times have caused universities across the country to turn their budget pruning knives on some of the most prestigious journals and presses in history, all in the name of preserving “core” academics...

Thursday, May 21, 2009


DemocracyNow!.org
May 15, 2009

Avi Lewis and Naomi Klein documented the struggles of Argentine workers occupying their factories in the 2004 film The Take. We play an excerpt of the film and speak to Argentine journalist Sergio Ciancaglini, co-author of Sin Patrón: Stories from Argentina’s Worker-Run Factories...

Friday, May 8, 2009

So What Does the Inside of a Factory Farm Look Like Anyway?


TreeHugger
May 8, 2009

At the slaughterhouse, chickens are hung up by their feet fully conscious. Although some slaughterhouses stun the birds by passing them through an electrified bath of water, US federal law specifically excludes chickens from the Humane Slaughter Act mandating that animals be stunned before being killed. However, often times the birds are not rendered unconscious by the shock and proceed, still hung by their feet, to have their necks cut by a mechanical blade. Unfortunately if the bird is not sufficiently stunned, the blade may not actually kill it and the animal proceeds to the next stage in the process while still alive. The birds are then submerged in boiling water to scald them and remove feathers. It's estimated that millions of chickens a year in the US are ultimately killed in the slaughterhouse by this last step, being boiled alive...

Friday, May 1, 2009

May Day Fails its Promise to Workers


Labor is Not a Commodity
The International Labor Rights Forum, STITCH, SweatFree Communities and U.S. Labor Education in the Americas Project work together in a collaborative space for international labor rights solidarity.
May 1, 2009
By Bama Athreya, Executive Director, International Labor Rights Forum

Virtually no one in the US celebrates May Day, International Workers’ Day – yet it all started here, and we continue to export the violence faced by the workers it commemorates. Workers who sew our clothes, our flowers and mine the metals used in our cars and cell phones are still experiencing the same problems confronted by US workers a century ago...

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Tent Villages Spotlight Plight Of Japan's Unemployed



by Anthony Kuhn
National Public Radio
April 28, 2009

The current downturn is shaping up to be the worst since World War II for Japan, the world's second largest economy. Sony, Toyota, Canon and other major exporters have responded by cutting hundreds of thousands of jobs — mostly targeting temporary workers, who now make up one-third of Japan's workforce.

But in recent months, a grass-roots movement has emerged to help the temporary workers and focus public attention on their plight...

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Spotlight on 'Placement Agents' Throws New Light on Fee Racket


The IUF's Private Equity Buyout Watch

New criminal indictments arising from the state of New York's widening investigation into bribes and kickbacks paid to investment funds in return for pension fund investments is throwing a spotlight on the use of "placement agents" to siphon employee pension fund money into private equity deals.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

It's officially a crime


United Farm Workers

Involuntary manslaughter charges were filed today against three top officials of the defunct labor contractor company, Merced Farm Labor, in the case of 17-year-old Maria Isabel Vasquez Jimenez--who died of a heat stroke last May 16.

The UFW applauds the District Attorney's decision to prosecute this as the crime it was. It never should have happened. An innocent young girl never should have died due to grower indifference. (Click to read Maria’s story.)

However, violations occur every day and nothing is done. Last year five other farm workers died of heat-related causes after Maria's death. Complaints regarding lack of drinking water, shade and work breaks to make use of these simple but lifesaving measures are an everyday occurrence for farm workers. (Click to read farm worker stories.) Farm workers can’t afford to wait until such an audacious violation such as Maria’s finally causes the state to react.

That's why farm workers need this bill that will give then the means to protect themselves. It's why SB789 is so vital. SB789, CA Employee Free Choice Act for Farm Workers (Steinberg) will make it easier for farm workers to organize and help enforce the laws that California's government cannot enforce.

SB789 just passed the California state senate yesterday. It will next be heard in the state assembly and then go to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Please e-mail Calif. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and/or your Assemblymembers. Tell them to pass SB789, a bill that will give farm workers the power to protect themselves.

Please take action today. Help protect the men and women who are in the fields working under the sweltering sun working to put food on our tables.

Friday, April 17, 2009

The Ones Who Got It Right


Posted by nimda in In the Public Interest

Why is it that well regarded people working the fields of corporate power and performance who repeatedly predicted the Wall Street bubble and its bursting receive so little media and attention?

Monday, April 13, 2009

The Color of Money: 10 Visionaries Building The Market For Green Consumers


By Dan Shapley
Mon April 13, 2009
The Daily Green

Nominees for a 2009 Heart of Green Award.
Also see nominees in Food, Politics, Media, Parenting and Local Hero categories.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Mar's Chocolate Bars To Use Sustainable Cocoa


National Public Radio

Morning Edition, April 9, 2009 · Mars has announced a plan to buy chocolate that's grown more sustainably. That means making sure the cocoa that goes into its Snickers bars and other candy is grown in a way that doesn't deplete supplies, and allows cocoa farmers to earn a decent wage. Mars says the goal is for all its cocoa to be certified as coming from sustainable sources by the year 2020.

Apartheid cases can proceed - judge


iol news
By Christine Kearney

New York - A US judge ruled on Wednesday that lawsuits seeking monetary damages can continue against five large companies accused of aiding South Africa's former apartheid system of racial segregation.

But US District Judge Shira Scheindlin also dismissed claims against banks UBS AG and Barclays Bank Plc and electronics maker Fujitsu Ltd.

"Corporate defendants accused of merely doing business with the apartheid Government of South Africa have been dismissed," Scheindlin said in her ruling.

The judge allowed at least some claims made by tens of thousands of South African plaintiffs in two lawsuits in US federal court to proceed against automakers General Motors Corp, Ford Motor Co and Daimler AG as well as International Business Machines and Rheinmetall AG.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Pizza Fusion: World’s First LEED Certified Pizzeria


...They’ve just received LEED certifications for two new Florida locations for cutting their water waste by 40% and electricity consumption by 20%. As if that wasn’t enough, the countertops are made from recycled glass bottles collected at other Pizza Fusion restaurants, bamboo floors, 30% reclaimed concrete, recycled blue jean insulation, low voltage lighting, and reclaimed wood furniture. All of their pizzas are delivered by hybrids, and all of the restaurants’ power usage is offset with wind energy credits. Plus they’re organic!...

Monday, April 6, 2009

Tesla Motors: The company we SHOULD give Billions to


If the US Government was serious about "going Green" and building a 21st century transportation infrastructure why not invest in a company which could be scaled UP right now, creating high paying manufacturing jobs and helping the environment in one fell swoop?

Monday, March 30, 2009

Big Ag Writes Michelle Opposing WH Organic Garden


Daily Kos
by Jill Richardson
Sun Mar 29, 2009

OMG, funny stuff. A chemical ag organization (Mid America CropLife Association) got its panties in a twist over Michelle Obama's organic garden. So they wrote her a letter.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Support the Employee Free Choice Act!


What would you say to people who don't support even allowing a debate about leveling the playing field with the Employee Free Choice Act?

To date, Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter and Penn State University President Graham Spanier have not expressed public support for giving employees a free choice at work. But if we're going to get out of our current economic mess, Pennsylvania and other states will need secure jobs now more than ever before! If the Employee Free Choice Act becomes law, it will help almost 1 million Pennsylvanians and pump more than $2 billion into the state's economy every year.

The Employee Free Choice Act is a vital component of the overall recovery plan to restore our economy, an economy that must work for everyone, and lead to prosperity for all, instead of just for a select few. Allowing workers the freedom to join together, free from intimidation and harassment, to bargain for job security, better wages and health care, will stimulate our economy and allow working people to better support their families

Can you believe Senator Specter and President Spanier would work to block something that would do so much to benefit the working people of Pennsylvania and the rest of the United States? Especially in these times, shouldn't they be rushing to support efforts that will help strengthen our nation's economy?

We need our public leaders to act as swiftly on real economic recovery for working people in America. Senator Specter and President Spanier can provide the leadership to bring about change that works, but they need to hear from you now.

Friday, March 27, 2009

The Big Takeover


MATT TAIBBI Mar 19, 2009
Rolling Stone

The global economic crisis isn't about money - it's about power. How Wall Street insiders are using the bailout to stage a revolution

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/26793903/the_big_takeover

Monday, March 23, 2009

Elizabeth Kolbert: Donating to the Deniers





New Yorker, March 18, 2009

There’s green and then, of course, there’s green.

Two years ago, a dozen of the country’s major corporations, including Caterpillar, Duke Energy, and Dow Chemical, banded together with several of the nation’s leading environmental groups to form a group called the United States Climate Action Partnership. According to the group’s Web site, USCAP’s mission is to encourage “the federal government to enact legislation requiring significant reductions of greenhouse gas emissions.” That’s a nice thought and by signing onto it USCAP’s members got a lot of nice press (including in The New Yorker). But a recent analysis of campaign giving by the non-profit group Clean Air Watch suggests that USCAP’s corporate members do not take USCAP’s goals terribly seriously. In fact, they seem to be devoting considerable resources to undermining them...

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS FEED BIOTECH GIANTS, NOT THE POOR


Press Releases

GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS FEED BIOTECH GIANTS, NOT THE POOR



Contacts: Bill Freese, Center for Food Safety, 202-547-9359 (North America); Nnimmo Bassey, Friends of the Earth Nigeria, +234 80 37 27 43 95 (Africa); Helen Holder, Friends of the Earth Europe Brussels: +32 474 857 638 (Europe)

Biotech Companies Exploit Food Crisis by Raising GM Seed and Pesticide Prices, Record Profits Projected

Biotech Propaganda Distracts Attention from Real Solutions for Small Farmers


Washington D.C., February 11, 2009 - A new report released today by the Center for Food Safety and Friends of the Earth International warned that genetically modified (GM) crops are benefiting biotech food giants instead of the worldís hungry population, which is projected to increase to 1.2 billion by the year 2025 due to the global food crisis.

The report explains how biotech firms like Monsanto are exploiting the dramatic rise in world grain prices that are responsible for the global food crisis by sharply increasing the prices of GM seeds and chemicals they sell to farmers, even as hundreds of millions go hungry.

The findings of the report support a comprehensive United Nationsí assessment of world agriculture ñ the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) - which in 2008 concluded that GM crops have little potential to alleviate poverty and hunger in the world. IAASTD experts recommended instead low-cost, low-input agroecological farming methods.

"GM crops are all about feeding the biotech giants, not the worldís poor," said Nnimmo Bassey, executive director of Friends of the Earth Nigeria and chair of Friends of the Earth International.

"GM seeds and the pesticides used with them are much too expensive for Africaís small farmers. Those who promote this technology in developing countries are completely out of touch with reality," he added.

"U.S. farmers are facing dramatic increases in the price of GM seeds and the chemicals used with them," said Bill Freese, science policy analyst at the US-based Center for Food Safety and co-author of the report. "Farmers in any developing country that welcomes Monsanto and other biotech companies can expect the same fate - sharply rising seed and pesticide costs, and a radical decline in the availability of conventional seeds," he added.

GM seeds cost from two to over four times as much as conventional, non-GM seeds, and the price disparity is increasing. From 80% to over 90% of the soybean, corn and cotton seeds planted in the U.S. are GM varieties. Thanks to GM trait fee increases, average U.S. seed prices for these crops have risen by over 50% in just the past two to three years.

Exploitation of the food crisis has been extremely profitable for Monsanto, by far the dominant player in GM seeds. Goldman Sachs recently projected that Monsanto's net income (after taxes) would triple from $984 million to $2.96 billion from 2007 to 2010.

The exorbitant cost of GM seeds is not the only problem. The vast majority of GM crops are not grown by or destined for the world's poor, but instead are soybeans and corn used to feed animals, generate biofuels, or produce highly processed food products consumed mostly in rich countries.

The report documents that nearly 90% of the global area planted GM crops in 2008 was found in just 6 countries with highly industrialized, export-oriented agricultural sectors in North and South America, with the U.S., Argentina and Brazil responsible for 80% of GM crops. The United States alone produced 50% of the world's GM crops in 2008.

Despite more than a decade of hype, the biotechnology industry has not introduced a single GM crop with increased yield, enhanced nutrition, drought-tolerance or salt-tolerance. In fact, the biotechnology industry's own figures show that 85% of all GM crop acreage worldwide in 2008 was planted with herbicide-tolerant crops. Herbicide-tolerant GM crops - chiefly Monsanto's Roundup Ready varieties used with Monsanto's Roundup herbicide - have increased overall use of chemical weed killers. Roundup prices in the U.S. have more than doubled in the past two years.

Meanwhile, biotech propaganda has obscured the huge potential of low-cost agroecological and organic techniques to increase food production and alleviate hunger in developing countries. The report mentions several such projects, such as push-pull maize farming, practiced by 10,000 farmers in east Africa. The enormously successful push-pull system controls weed and insect pests without chemicals, increases maize production, and raises the income of smallholder farmers.

The report "Who benefits from GM crops 2009" is available online at: http://www.foei.org/en/publications/pdfs/gmcrops2009full.pdf

An executive summary is online at: http://www.foei.org/en/publications/pdfs/gmcrops2009exec.pdf



The Center for Food Safety is national, non-profit, membership organization founded in 1997 to protect human health and the environment by curbing the use of harmful food production technologies and by promoting organic and other forms of sustainable agriculture. On the web at: http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org


Friends of the Earth International is the world's largest grassroots environmental network, with 77 national member groups, some 5,000 local activist groups on every continent, and over 2 million members and supporters around the world. www.foei.org



http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/WhoBenefitsPR2_11_09.cfm

Starbucks Blues


Lean times and labor pains are tarnishing the coffee giant’s image.
By Liza Featherstone



http://www.thebigmoney.com/articles/saga/2008/10/29/starbucks-blues

Friday, February 20, 2009

Crop Scientists Say Biotechnology Seed Companies Are Thwarting Research


Biotechnology companies are keeping university scientists from fully researching the effectiveness and environmental impact of the industry’s genetically modified crops, according to an unusual complaint issued by a group of those scientists.

“No truly independent research can be legally conducted on many critical questions,” the scientists wrote in a statement submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency. The E.P.A. is seeking public comments for scientific meetings it will hold next week on biotech crops...

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/20/business/20crop.html?_r=2&ref=business

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Monsanto in Illinois: Homeland Security and USDA plan attacks against animals


Below is a letter to livestock producers in Illinois asking them and others to contact the Governor's office to ask to be allowed to be present at a meeting between Homeland Security and the USDA which involves NAIS and "surge capacity" under Homeland Security to attack and seize and destroy - "depopulate" an area of - animals. This meeting is about what will be done TO THEM but they are shut out.

Many of you already know about Monsanto's "rural cleansing"" in southern Illinois of 200 - 400 farmers for using Steve Hixon as their seed cleaner. One is being sued for $400,000. Do the math. In 2006, Monsanto made $160,000,000 in this Mafia-like extortion...

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Monsanto-in-Illinois--Hom-by-Linn-Cohen-Cole-090212-405.html

Friday, February 13, 2009

Valentine's Day: No Bitter Chocolate!


Child labor continues on cocoa farms in West Africa. Before buying Valentine's Day chocolate, check out ILRF's new chocolate company scorecard and our e-mail action to the bitter chocolate companies!

Click here to take action!

http://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/chocolate

Friday, January 16, 2009

How to Make a Corporate Sustainability Program Work at the Local Level


Having a benchmarked corporate sustainability program does not ensure success at the local facility level. Remember the saying "Think Globally, Act Locally"? It is at the local level where the "license to operate" is earned...