The end of motoring

Young people today would rather have the latest smartphone than a flashy car. And the number of them who can drive is plummeting. Is Britain’s love-affair with the car really over?

Liz Parle can’t drive. “I did try to learn,” says the 24-year-old, Birmingham-born cafe owner, “but I failed my test a few times.” Then she moved to London, where running a car can be a nightmare. Instead she cycles everywhere. “It’s cheap, keeps me fit, and is of course better for the environment.”

Parle is by no means atypical. In Britain, the percentage of 17- to 20-year-olds with driving licences fell from 48% in the early 1990s to 35% last year. The number of miles travelled by all forms of domestic transport, per capita per year, has flatlined for years. Meanwhile, road traffic figures for cars and taxis, having risen more or less every year since 1949, have continued to fall since 2007. Motoring groups put it down to oil prices and the economy. Others offer a more fundamental explanation: the golden age of motoring is over.

“The way we run cars is changing fast,” says Tim Pollard, associate editor at CAR magazine, “Car manufacturers are worried that younger people in particular don’t aspire to own cars like we used to in the 70s, 80s, or even the 90s. Designers commonly say that teenagers today aspire to own the latest smartphone more than a car. Even car enthusiasts realise we’ve reached a tipping point.”

As hi-tech research and development budgets source to keep pace with the iPhone generation, Pollard says carmakers are also coming to terms with less possessive buyers. “Towards the end of the 20th century, manufacturers cottoned on to the fact that we were owning things for shorter periods.”

This has led to a proliferation of different ownership and rental schemes such as Streetcar, Zipcar and Whipcar. In response, the latest deals from the big carmakers are very unlike your usual forecourt deal.

“Peugeot, for instance, has launched a European project called Mu,” says Pollard. “You become a member and can then rent whichever Peugeot best suits your mobility needs that day. So you can borrow a van to move house at the weekend. Then get into a 308 for the school run, Monday to Friday. Then hop into an electric car to scoot silently around town. Then borrow a Peugeot bicycle to cycle to the pub in the evening. It’s an attempt to second-guess how we’ll run cars in future, and a pilot scheme at present, but you can do this today in London. Other car manufacturers are studying similar ideas.”

Stefan Liske helps shape these ideas. The German entrepreneur once worked as a car designer and mechanical engineer, but now runs PCH, a company that models and plans new developments for companies entering choppy waters – their clients include Mini, Audi, Volkswagen and Daimler. Liske presents a picture of an industry that is being forced to confront major changes at every level: batteries that are so heavy the rest of the car must become lighter and use new materials; environmental pressures that mean current models, in which only 10% of a car is made from natural material, will be junked in favour of parts and interiors using “rattan, coconut wool, bamboo, recycled plastics”.

The most radical change is that “in big societies, there is a huge status shift happening, where we are losing the idea that you use a car to define your status. So the industry needs more flexible leasing, financing and car-sharing models. And second, they have to find new revenue streams.”

The near future that Liske describes echoes the computer industry’s earlier shift from a business model based on hardware to one based on software. “Audi and Toyota have just invested $1bn in wind energy. If you’re leasing a car from them, they can sell you the energy – or they go in a different direction like BMW, who just invested $100m in start-up companies offering transport-related mobile services.”

Underpinning all these innovations and ideas is what Liske sees as a major behavioural shift among the generation of “digital natives”. “They don’t care about owning things. Possession is a burden, and a car is a big investment for most people – not just the vehicle, but the permits, the parking space.”

He points to BMW, which in mid-July announced its investment in parkatmyhouse.com, a UK-based online parking marketplace that matches local drivers with homeowners who have empty garages and driveways. “Really,” Liske says, “it was obvious a long time ago that something had to happen.”

Crucially, these ideas aren’t forming in the ether of maybe/if science fiction, but are based on proven technology that is ready to be rolled out.

“Cities such as London will, in 10 years, [have these vehicles] going along autonomously and you can hop in and out of them,” he says.

A vehicle such as the one Liske describes is operating on the edge of the capital. The ULTra system consists of 21 electric vehicles running on a 4km elevated guideway from Heathrow’s Terminal 5 to two stations in the business parking lot. It replaces shuttle buses, which still serve the airport’s other parking lots. Passengers first boarded the ULTra pods in April, but was it officially launched last week. It’s the first commercial Personal Rapid Transport (PRT) system anywhere in the world, and, as it drifts off from its bay in the terminal, it brings to mind both the Docklands Light Railway in London and Legoland’s Sky Rider train.

“I think it’s terrific,” says David Metz, visiting professor in UCL’s Centre for Transport Studies, as we glide to the parking bays. “It’s obvious. Really, it should be here. Though the big question is what are the long-run costs and what is the feasibility of putting it on to other environments.”

BAA, which helped develop the system and now owns a 70% stake in the company, says it cost £30m, which was spent over six years. While the ULTra cars themselves are simple – using the same tyres and wheels as a Ford Ka – the control-and-command system represents the most costly. This is housed in a single-storey building in the car park’s compound and staffed by ex-Network Rail employees, erstwhile RAF air traffic controllers, as well as a mechanic from the Australian navy.

Though the operation is small, Mark Griffiths, its head, says it is ready for expansion at Heathrow; it is tendering for a project at the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India, and have had interest from the local councils in Bristol and Bath. So could a set-up like ULTra slip into an ancient spa town? “As long as there are planning regulations,” says Griffiths. He outlines a number of scenarios that are currently within their reach: if, for example, a newly arrived passenger wanted to hire a car or book into a hotel, ULTra could present travellers with options on a touch screen, make reservations, and drive them straight into the lobby, where their room key will be waiting. “Zero emissions, you see.”

Metz’s account of underlying transport trends is simple: ultimately, we don’t want to travel more. “Look at the [Department for Transport's] National Travel Survey, an annual poll of 20,000 people, dating back to the early 70s. The average travel time has not changed over that period. The number of journeys that people make in a year hasn’t altered. It’s about 1,000 journeys a year, and about an hour’s travel per day.”

This figure for daily travel is remarkably consistent. Look at Tanzanian villagers in 1986 or Britons today, and we all seem to travel, on average, for about 66 minutes a day. What did rise, in Britain at least from the 70s through to the 90s, was the distance people covered. “In the early 70s, it’s about 4,500 miles per person per year, which includes all modes of travel except international travel by air, which is a different story,” says Metz. “It rose to about 7,000 miles per year by the mid 1990s, and it stayed steady at about that level since.”

Metz also thinks a general satisfaction with the number of places people can go has lead to this levelling-off; he calls this the saturation of demand.

“What is the benefit of travel?” he asks. “It’s about getting more choices of places to go – the choice we have of jobs, doctors, hospitals, schools for our kids. My hypothesis is that the growth of daily travel has come to an end because now we have quite good choice.”

Other analysts agree. “There are these models used by international agencies, and oil companies and the like,” says Adam Millard-Ball, assistant professor at the department of geography of McGill University, Montreal. “They say as we get richer, we’ll want to travel more. There’s no limit. Our hunch was that this might not be the case.”

Working with the late Lee Schipper, a senior research engineer at Stanford University, Millard-Ball examined travel figures dating back to the 70s, from as many industrialised countries as possible. “The data that we have shows fairly clearly that the growth in travel demand has stopped in every industrialised country that we looked at,” he says. Schipper and Millard-Ball published their work last November in the paper Are We Reaching Peak Travel? Trends in Passenger Transport in Eight Industrialized Countries, adding to a growing body of work, all drawing similar conclusions. If these trends continue, it is possibly foresee a decline in car travel and a stagnation in total travel per capita.

Though he doesn’t have any firm evidence to back it up, Millard-Ball thinks infrastructure plays a big part. “During the 70s and 80s we were building a lot more roads, allowing people to go further and faster. That era has come to an end, especially in Britain and America.”

He also suggests that a general satisfaction with travel options also plays a role. “Once there’s a set of places you can get to, it’s less useful to get to any more. If there’s a Sainsbury’s two miles from your house, are you really going to go to the Sainsbury’s four miles away?”

Break down the figures further, and other tendencies arise. Metz says the proportion of men in their 30s who drive has remained steady, while twentysomethings appear to be putting off getting behind the wheel until it’s absolutely necessary. “It’s partly the cost of ownership, the cost of insurance,” he says. “Other factors that are more speculative are that there are more people in higher education, which typically takes place in urban centres where the car isn’t part of the mix. Then people stay on in these urban centres.”

He also says retirees often give up driving once they begin to suffer from minor disabilities.

“If you retire to a place with high population density, then mobility scooters come into their own.” These electric vehicles haven’t been thoroughly researched, and mass production hasn’t quite brought automobile-industry standards. Yet he believes they could become a viable transport option for many people, even if they can only do 8mph, “and that’s a bit fast for pavements”.

Not everyone shares these rosy transport visions. Paul Watters, head of public affairs and roads policy for the AA, cautions against calling time on the car. “We are a small island with a very old road network, and a fairly complicated rail network. We haven’t invested enough in transport for generations. People driving less is good for the environment, but not good for the economy, and we’ve got to find a way to make the economy keep going.”

Though he is willing to admit that the AA might be “late to the party” on more progressive trends such as online car sharing or new hire schemes, Watters says car ownership still matters to its members. He also doubts whether major technological changes will make much difference within the next decade. “We might see bigger penetration of electric and hybrid cars, but it won’t be a shattering change by 2020,” he says.

He also cautions against abandoning the road network. “It’s going to be very hard to maintain the road network over the next few years. As the economy picks up, we could see horrible growth in traffic and horrible congestion.”

Neither the blue-sky visions of ULTra nor the jam tomorrow predictions of Watters are inevitable. Social trends can lead to change, but our travel habits are shaped by government policy too: by road, rail and airport building, most obviously, but also by planning regulations. Greenfield development, or the construction of housing on undeveloped land, is favoured by developers because it’s cheaper to build and easier to sell. Yet this is often low-density, suburban-style housing that is poorly suited to public transport and more or less requires homeowners to drive. Brownfield building, though less profitable and less popular, often raises population density, making public transport more viable.

Metz is unimpressed by the new National Planning Policy Framework, which makes little reference to transport issues, while removing the national priority for brownfield development. There’s nothing wrong with wanting a little house in the country, and a car to get you to and from it. Yet there is something reckless in restricting new buildings to a particular form of transport, especially if that form of transport shows signs of decline.

“There’s this idea of a green metropolis, where land values are high so there’s less space to heat, and where electric vehicles are viable, because the trips taken are shorter. If we’re living in a world that is urbanising globally, this is worth considering.”

It remains a compelling idea, though not everyone agrees its time has come. The car could be reaching the end of the road, or it could idle on for some time to come.

Additional reporting by Justin Quirk

guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Deepwater – We Might Not Have Seen the Worst of It

BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is far from over.

The government has estimated that 600,000 to 1.2 million gallons a day are leaking from the bottom of the sea. Source: BBC.

Of course how much is being contained is questionable.

Coast Guard Adm Thad Allen said in a press conference on Wednesday that the containment operation was now catching up to 630,000 gallons (2,864,037 litres) daily.

He said he hoped the existing containment structure would soon be able to hold 1.17 million gallons per day.

“We’re only at 15 [15,000 barrels] now and we’ll be at 28 [28,000 barrels] next week. We’re building capacity,” said Adm Allen. Source: BBC.

Which really leaves us none the wiser – is oil still leaking into the gulf? Of course it is – how much? No one is saying – When will it stop? Now there’s a question?

Over at The Oil Drum a comment by dougr describes what we hope is a worst case scenario.

Before reading have a look at this diagram – click it to enlarge.

This diagram relates to an investigation of Deepwater’s cement linings but gives you a good of the design, equipment and workings of the Deepwater oil well

This diagram relates to an investigation of Deepwater’s cement linings but gives you a good of the design, equipment and workings of the Deepwater oil well.

Diagram source: Nola.com.

As you have probably seen and maybe feel yourselves, there are several things that do not appear to make sense regarding the actions of attack against the well. Don’t feel bad, there is much that doesn’t make sense even to professionals unless you take into account some important variables that we are not being told about. There seems to me to be a reluctance to face what cannot be termed anything less than grim circumstances in my opinion. There certainly is a reluctance to inform us regular people and all we have really gotten is a few dots here and there…

First of all…set aside all your thoughts of plugging the well and stopping it from blowing out oil using any method from the top down. Plugs, big valves to just shut it off, pinching the closed, installing a new blow out preventer (BOP) or Lower Marine Riser Package (LMRP), shooting any epoxy in it, top kills with mud etc etc etc… forget that, it won’t be happening… it’s done and over. In fact actually opening up the well at the subsea source and allowing it to gush more is not only exactly what has happened, it was probably necessary, or so they think anyway.

So you have to ask WHY? Why make it worse? There really can only be one answer and that answer does not bode well for all of us. It’s really an inescapable conclusion at this point, unless you want to believe that every Oil and Gas professional involved suddenly just forgot everything they know or woke up one morning and drank a few big cups of stupid and got assigned to directing the response to this catastrophe. Nothing makes sense unless you take this into account, but after you do…you will see the “sense” behind what has happened and what is happening. That conclusion is this:

The well bore structure is compromised “Down hole”.

That is something which is a “Worst nightmare” conclusion to reach. While many have been saying this for some time as with any complex disaster of this proportion many have “said” a lot of things with no real sound reasons or evidence for jumping to such conclusions, well this time it appears that they may have jumped into the right place…

They will never cap the gusher after the wellhead. They cannot…the more they try and restrict the oil gushing out the BOP…the more it will transfer to the leaks below. Just like a leaky garden hose with a nozzle on it. When you open up the nozzle…it doesn’t leak so bad, you close the nozzle…it leaks real bad, same dynamics. It is why they sawed the riser off…or tried to anyway…but they clipped it off, to relieve pressure on the leaks “down hole”. I’m sure there was a bit of panic time after they crimp/pinched off the large riser pipe and the Diamond wire saw got stuck and failed…because that crimp diverted pressure and flow to the rupture down below.

What is likely to happen now?

Well…none of what is likely to happen is good, in fact…it’s about as bad as it gets. I am convinced the erosion and compromising of the entire system is accelerating and attacking key structural areas of the well, the blow out preventer and the surrounding strata holding it all up and together. This is evidenced by the tilt of the blow out preventer and the exposed well head connection. What eventually will happen is that the blow out preventer will literally tip over if they do not run supports to it. I suspect they will run those supports as cables tied to anchors very soon, if they don’t, they are inviting disaster that much sooner.

Eventually even that will be futile as the well casings cannot support the weight of the massive system above without the cement bond that is being eroded away. When enough is eroded away the casings will buckle and the BOP will collapse the well.

All of these things lead to only one place, a fully wide open well bore directly to the oil deposit…after that, it goes into the realm of “the worst things you can think of” The well may come completely apart as the inner liners fail. There is still a very long drill string in the well, that could literally come flying out…as I said…all the worst things you can think of are a possibility, but the very least damaging outcome as bad as it is, is that we are stuck with a wide open gusher blowing out 150,000 barrels a day of raw oil or more. There isn’t any “cap dome” or any other suck fixer device on earth that exists or could be built that will stop it from gushing out and doing more and more damage to the gulf. While at the same time also doing more damage to the well, making the chance of halting it with a kill from the bottom up less and less likely to work, which as it stands now?….is the only real chance we have left to stop it all.

It’s a race now…a race to drill the relief wells and take our last chance at killing this monster before the whole weakened, wore out, blown out, leaking and failing system gives up its last gasp in a horrific crescendo.

We are not even 2 months into it, barely half way by even optimistic estimates. The damage done by the leaked oil now is virtually immeasurable already and it will not get better, it can only get worse. No matter how much they can collect, there will still be thousands and thousands of gallons leaking out every minute, every hour of every day. We have 2 months left before the relief wells are even near in position and set up to take a kill shot and that is being optimistic as I said.

Over the next 2 months the mechanical situation cannot improve, it can only get worse, getting better is an impossibility. While they may make some gains on collecting the leaked oil, the structural situation cannot heal itself. It will continue to erode and flow out more oil and eventually the inevitable collapse which cannot be stopped will happen. It is only a simple matter of who can “get there first”…us or the well.

We can only hope the race against that eventuality is one we can win, but my assessment I am sad to say is that we will not.

The system will collapse or fail substantially before we reach the finish line ahead of the well and the worst is yet to come.

Sorry to bring you that news, I know it is grim, but that is the way I see it….I sincerely hope I am wrong.

We need to prepare for the possibility of this blow out sending more oil into the gulf per week then what we already have now, because that is what a collapse of the system will cause. All the collection efforts that have captured oil will be erased in short order. The magnitude of this disaster will increase exponentially by the time we can do anything to halt it and our odds of actually even being able to halt it will go down.

The magnitude and impact of this disaster will eclipse anything we have known in our lifetimes if the worst or even near worst happens… Source: The Oil Drum.

Is dougr right? He’s certainly made a very plausible argument but let’s hope not – because with that much oil in the sea where else will it turn up? It could be carried by the Gulf Stream and North Atlantic drift to European shores – somehow a beach holiday might not be so appealing and we can forget eating seafood it’ll be dead or polluted.

Hat Tip: Madam Miaow.

Nuclear Madness

Out of all the things New Labour has done this is the one that tries my patience the most.

A new fleet of nuclear power stations was today backed by the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, as he outlined the UK government’s plans to fast-track major energy infrastructure projects, also including “clean coal” power stations and wind farms. Adam Vaughan, The Guardian.

What makes Miliband and his cohorts think it a sensible idea to try and solve global warming by creating a vast amount of highly toxic waste for which our best and only solution appears to be digging a hole and burying it. Further, how much of a solution to global warming is nuclear power? By the time initial construction of the plant, extraction, processing and transportation of uranium ore to the plant and then storage and transportation of nuclear waste a plus many other activities have been considered how much of a CO2 saving might their actually be?

Clean coal is another farce there’s nothing clean about coal, again we’ll be digging holes and attempting to bury gas – that’ll work well – it’ll leak out into the atmosphere but only after we have wasted a huge amount of energy trying to prevent it happening – we might as well save ourselves the trouble and just burn the coal without capture – OK I made that up because as it stands no-one has any idea how clean coal will work – plenty of theories but no commercially viable working examples – coal is not the answer.

And no wind-farms aren’t the answer either – to be effective wind turbines ideally need to be close to the point of consumption – this means turbines in our parks, green spaces and back gardens or the hills overlooking our cities, towns and villages – not massive great farms miles from anywhere.

Still instead of spending billions of pounds of taxpayers money on these schemes what about spending the money on retrofitting the countries aging housing stock with green technologies – not only would we greatly reduce our energy needs and CO2 emissions but it would also provide much need employment and a welcome boost to our fractured economy – still it seems I’m whistling in the dark.

357 Loonies and Counting

Watch this

Now what’s wrong?

There is no scientific evidence of climate change or there is a division of scientific opinion on the issue and the ad should not attribute global warming to human activity or how about the dog drowning is inappropriate for children because it will upset them and is scaremongering. Source: The Guardian

Just some of the complaints the Advertising Standards Agency received.

You know there’s always going to be division in scientific opinion, however the vast majority of scientific evidence points to climate change – just type “climate change evidence” into Google. As for upsetting children has the complainant read any of the Brothers Grimm’s fairy tales? Lunatic in chief Steve Green has even set up a petition.

We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to Stop wasting taxpayer’s money on climate change propaganda designed to frighten our children. Number 10.

I think it’s designed to shame parents not frighten children, but that’s nitpicking, you know the scientists could be wrong – lets hope so – but I repeat – the reality is that the weight of scientific evidence suggests if we don’t do something now then those of us who survive are doomed to a miserable future.

Amazingly the petition has 489 signatures – lunatics every one of them.

Food Waste It’s Killing Us

For most of us, food shopping involves the local supermarket and in that respect Tristram Stuart isn’t any different, except you won’t find Stuart at the checkout instead he’ll be round the back rummaging through the supermarkets bins for his food. Stuart is one of a growing band of freegans who protest against global waste – Stuart’s got a point about waste:

Most people would admit that wasting food is not good. But surely, they’d say, the problem can’t be that serious? Isn’t rooting around in rubbish bins a somewhat extreme – and unpleasant – reaction? Stuart would disagree. In his new book, Waste: Uncovering the Global Food Scandal, he sets out in forensic detail exactly why we should all be worried by the problem. In his view, food waste is the big unspoken environmental crisis of our times, right up there with more familiar concerns such as deforestation, water scarcity, even global warming.

Addressing food waste, he says, is a vital step when it comes to sorting out many of these other problems, and it’s hard to disagree with his logic. If we waste less food, we’ll need less land to grow it on, and hence will cut down fewer trees; we’ll use less water to irrigate that land and less carbon to transport and process the food it produces. On a more basic level, food waste is an issue of equality. If we didn’t waste so much food, there would be more available, which means fewer people in the world would go hungry.

Much of the evidence that Waste uncovers is startling. In Britain, we are remarkably profligate with our food. Most of us are probably used to laughing about our personal failings – that packet of pre-washed lettuce turned to mulch in the fridge, that half-eaten loaf gone mouldy in the bread bin. But when such individual wastefulness is aggregated, the figures become less amusing. A 2008 survey by the waste organisation Wrap, based on studying a sample of household bins, found that we collectively throw away 6.7m tonnes of food each year. (Stuart, in fact, says that the Wrap figure is too high, because it includes things like orange peel, but his estimate for “avoidable food waste” is still 5.4m tonnes.)

An easier way to get a handle on this is to think in terms of individual items. As a nation, we chuck away 484m unopened yoghurt pots each year, 1.6bn untouched apples (or 27 per person) and 2.6bn slices of bread. That doesn’t even include the food we waste at work or leave on our plates in canteens and restaurants. All in all, we chuck away roughly a quarter of the food we buy.

What many of us don’t properly realise is that this consumer waste represents just the tip of the iceberg. Although individuals contribute a massive amount to food waste, even more occurs further back along the supply chain. A huge amount is wasted during or immediately after harvesting, especially in developing countries, where poor transport and other infrastructure mean that food often perishes before it gets to market.

Then there are the unwieldy and complex workings of the global supply system: to get from its source to our plates, much of the food we eat undertakes a journey of epic proportions, involving carts, ships, planes and lorries, warehouses, processing plants and supermarket distribution centres. At each stage of this journey – inevitably, perhaps – a proportion gets wasted. When all this is added together, Stuart says, it is possible to estimate that more than a third of global food supplies is wasted (with the proportion in rich countries being as much as 50%). At the same time, nearly a billion people on the planet live close to starvation. William Skidelsky, The Observer.

See food waste is killing us – still I couldn’t rummage through the bins like Stuart.

Too Coal and Nuclear Focused

“The government’s disjointed approach is deterring the private sector investment needed to get our energy system up to scratch, bolster security and cut emissions,” said CBI deputy director general John Cridland.

“While we have generous subsidies for wind power, we urgently need the national planning statements needed to build new nuclear plants.

“If we carry on like this we will end up putting too many of our energy eggs in one basket.” BBC.

However, if the CBI is right and we’re too wind focused then the alternatives are surely be solar and wave power, not toxic nuclear power or the fantasy that is coal and carbon capture. We have to move away from burying our waste in holes in the ground, because these dumps will come back to haunt as when they inevitably start to leak. Unsurprisingly the CBI is in thrall to the big business’ of coal and nuclear power – too coal and nuclear focused.

Supermarkets Deforest Amazon

The Greenpeace report, Slaughtering the Amazon, describes how ranches responsible for illegal deforestation sell cattle to slaughterhouses controlled by a handful of Brazilian companies. These ship beef or hides to facilities in the south of Brazil and process them for export. They are often processed again in the importing country.

Greenpeace says records show that cattle from hundreds of farms across the Amazon are mixed and processed in this way, making it currently impossible to trace the origins of products. “In effect, criminal or ‘dirty’ supplies of cattle are ‘laundered’ through the supply chain.”

The investigation focused on three Brazilian companies, Bertin, JBS and Marfrig, which operate slaughterhouses and together control a third of Brazilian beef exports. Greenpeace says satellite images and trade records show that all three companies – part-owned by the Brazilian government– source cattle from farms that have carried out illegal deforestation in the Amazon. It says exports from the south of the country near São Paolo are “polluted” with products from animals raised on deforested land.

Britain is the second largest importer of processed Brazilian beef after the US, taking 50,000 tonnes last year.

Greenpeace says Marfrig facilities export processed beef to Green Isle Foods, an Irish subsidiary of Northern Foods. Product labels show Northern Foods supplies convenience foods that contain the Marfrig meat to Sainsbury’s, Asda and Morrisons, the report says. It says Tesco and Marks and Spencer sell tinned Brazilian beef supplied separately by JBS.

Tesco and Marks and Spencer denied the meat came from the Amazon. Marks and Spencer said: “We do not accept and have never used any beef from the Amazon region. We have been working with our Brazilian beef supplier for over 20 years and through the traceability measures we have in place we can ensure that all the product supplied to us by them is from the exact location we specify.”

Sainsbury’s said it used “a small amount of Brazilian beef in our frozen and canned range”. Morrisons said its suppliers provided documents to prove beef was not linked to Amazon deforestation. Asda said it was confident its beef did not come from the Amazon. It said: “If that isn’t the case we’d take that very seriously indeed.”

A Tesco spokesman said: “Our canned beef is sourced from São Paolo, which is about 3,000 km away from the Amazon. I have also been informed that the cows cannot travel more than 300km.”

The report says: “While the blue chip companies behind reputable global brands appear to believe that Amazon sources are excluded from their products, Greenpeace investigations expose for the first time how their blind consumption of raw materials fuels deforestation and climate change.”

Northern Foods said: “The only Brazilian beef we buy for our Green Isle business is cooked beef from a single site in São Paulo state, not in or near the Amazon basin, and not sourcing materials from sites in or near the Amazon basin. The supplier we use, Marfrig, provides certificates to verify the farm source for this plant.”

Marfrig said it only bought cattle from farms not included on a Brazilian government prohibited list. “We have not been informed of any such violations by Greenpeace so cannot comment.” David Adam, The Observer.

Don’t’ they talk rubbish, for instance the Tesco’s spokesman’s “cows can’t travel more than 300km” – a derisory reason for assuming Tesco products don’t contain beef from farms on illegally deforested Amazon rainforest – how far is Brazil from the UK – São Paulo to London is 9,470km considerably greater that the 3,00km the Tesco spokesman quotes. Just using Brazilian beef makes a mockery of Marks and Spencer’s slogan Plan A, because there is no plan B let alone beef from farms on deforested rainforest.

The First of Many Evacuations

The evacuation of the Carteret Islands have begun. This morning I stood on black volcanic sand, pressed up right against the jungle, and watched a small white boat powered by a single outboard engine run in against the shore. On board were five men from the Islands, the fathers of five families, who have come to finish building houses and gardens already begun in a cleared patch of jungle at Tinputz, on the east coast of Bougainville. When these homes are ready the five will return to the Carterets, to fetch their wives and children back. Life, they hope, will be better for them here. On the Carterets, king tides have washed away their crops and rising sea levels poisoned those that remain with salt. The people have been forced to move. Dan Box, The Ecologist.

And so almost without note by the world’s press the entire population are forced from their homes by rising sea levels – the climate change disaster has begun.

Biodegradable Gum

I don’t know what your towns like, but I guess it’s like mine – the pavements are blighted with chewing gum. Chicza have produced the world’s first organic biodegradable chewing gum.

Unlike conventional chewing gum, which contains petrochemicals, the organic chewing gum does not stick to clothing or pavements. And once disposed of, it will crumble to dust in about six weeks, dissolving harmlessly in water or being absorbed into the soil. Rebecca Smithers, The Guardian.

Personally I don’t much like chewing gum, and haven’t tried it so I can’t comment how it compares to more traditional chewing gum. Currently Chicza is only available in Waitrose so it’s not going to challenge the leading brands quite yet – still it’s a start and if it’s successful then maybe all gum will become biodegradable.

Now what are we going to do about the remaining mountains of litter on our streets?