Anvil Knitwear Named Official T-Shirt And Knitwear Partner of Earth Day Network

Earth Day Network was founded by the organizers of the first Earth Day in 1970 to promote environmental citizenship. Earth Day Network now encompasses more than 17,000 partners and organizations in 174 countries, and more than 1 billion people participate in Earth Day activities.

Providing eco-friendly apparel is essential for our organization and for people who believe in Earth Day and the issues we stand for, said Kathleen Rogers, President of the Earth Day Network. Anvils commitment to eco-friendly products and business practices that are both environmentally and socially responsible speaks directly to our mission and to our supporters.

As Earth Day Networks t-shirt and knitwear partner, Anvil, a leader in eco-friendly apparel and the worlds sixth largest purchaser of organic cotton, will design and develop knitwear made from organic, recycled, transitional and RPET fibers for the organizations apparel line. The line will be sold online and through retailers as early as the 2009 holiday season. The line will also be made available directly to consumers at all of Earth Day Networks events, including Earth Day on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., the global Earth Day 40th anniversary in April 2010, and celebrations in 40 cities around the world to commemorate Earth Day Networks 40th year milestone.

Anvil is also working with Earth Day Network to develop an exclusive new product line for The Green Generation TM campaign, which mobilizes people worldwide to find solutions to urgent national and international issues, such as climate change and the global water crisis. The Green Generation TM line will feature AnvilSustainable™, AnvilOrganic° and AnvilRecycled° apparel, which will be available online as well as at 2010 Earth Day Network events at the beginning of 2010.

Anvil shares Earth Day Networks mission to create a more sustainable future for our planet, said Anthony Corsano, Chief Executive Officer of Anvil Knitwear. The Green Generation™ is a movement that we believe spans all generations, all countries and all people. The Green Generation™ apparel line will feature eco issues, solutions and events.

About Anvil Knitwear

Anvil Knitwear, Inc., a socially and environmentally responsible manufacturer of sportswear and accessories, is a leader in the sustainable apparel industry with its AnvilOrganic°, AnvilRecycled™ and AnvilSustainable™ brands. Anvil was recently ranked the worlds sixth-largest organic program and the largest domestic purchaser of U.S.-grown certified organic cotton. Anvil offers 16 affordable eco styles made from a variety of fibers such as certified organic cotton, transitional cotton, recycled cotton, and recycled PET bottles and blends, as well as more than 90 traditional styles. Anvil recently launched TrackMyT.com, an interactive Web site that chronicles and brings to life the complete journey and environmental impact of a t-shirt, from cotton-seed to consumer.

For more information, please visit www.anvilknitwear.com and www.anvilcsr.com.

About Earth Day Network

Earth Day Network was founded on the premise that all people, regardless of race, gender, income, or geography, have a moral right to a healthy, sustainable environment. Earth Day Networks mission is to broaden and diversify the environmental movement worldwide, and to mobilize it as the most effective vehicle for promoting a healthy, sustainable environment. They pursue this mission through a combination of education, public policy, and consumer activism campaigns. Earth Day Networks campaign and programs are predicated on the belief that an educated, energized population will take action to secure a healthy future for itself and its children. Earth Day Network grew out of the original Earth Day in 1970 to promote environmental citizenship. Earth Day Network now encompasses more than 17,000 partners and organizations in 180 countries, and more than 1 billion people participate in Earth Day activities globally making it the largest secular civic event in the world.

For more information, please visit http://www.earthday.net/.

University of Chicago Climate Scientists Share Concerns About Global Warming at EPA Hearings

Two University of Chicago scientists last week appeared at EPA hearings in Rosemont, Ill., to offer support for proposed new regulations on carbon-dioxide emissions from large power plants.

The comments of David Archer, Professor in Geophysical Sciences, and Pamela Martin, Assistant Professor in Geophysical Sciences, came Nov. 19 at hearings on the EPAs proposed Tailoring Rule, which would require industrial facilities that emit at least 25,000 tons of greenhouse-gas pollution annually to obtain permits covering their emissions.

Permit recipients would have to demonstrate their use of the best-available control technologies and energy-efficiency measures to minimize emissions when facilities are built or significantly modified.

The complete statements of Archer and Martin appear below.

David Archers statement:

My name is David Archer, and I am a professor at the University of Chicago in the Department of the Geophysical Sciences. Ive published 80-some peer-reviewed papers and five books on the carbon cycle of the Earth and its interaction with global climate.

I teach a class as part of our core science curriculum about the physics and chemistry of the global warming forecast. It has become the most popular class on campus, even bigger than the class about pirates, which shows the concern that young people have about what business-as-usual is doing to their futures.

One of the books I have the students read is called Six Degrees, Our Future on a Warmer Planet, by Mark Lynas.

The first chapter describes potential impacts of one-degree centigrade average global warming, all the results taken from the mainstream, peer-reviewed climate impacts literature.

Chapter 2 is about two degrees, and so on up to six degrees, the high end of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projection range for the year 2100. Its a good book, well-researched and clear.

The Earth today is already deep in Chapter 1, one degree. In my opinion, the most profound climate impact of global warming in this country is the ongoing drought in the Southwest.

The climate impacts in later chapters of the book get truly horrific, including droughts and desertification that make the Dust Bowl seem mild. Nebraska used to be a dune field in a warmer climate a few thousand years ago; now we grow wheat there, but it could go back to how it was.

You can imagine mass migration of people, and wars about water and other resources, and failed states. The population of the Earth depends on the infrastructure of our complex society, and if this breaks down, the carrying capacity of the Earth could collapse.

This happened to the Mayans, the most advanced civilization of their day, as a result of extended droughts during the medieval warm time. How many of us would survive if there were no food in the grocery stores?

I come away from the book thinking that ultimately, humankind is better than this. Humans have done amazing things, and this challenge, technologically, isnt even really all that hard. Coal is by far the most abundant fossil fuel, and the future of climate depends on what we decide to do with the coal.

If hypothetically there were no more coal in the ground, we wouldnt be going back to the Stone Age, wed figure out another way to keep things running, no problem. And if the climate starts to bite harder in the future, humankind will figure out ultimately how to leave the coal in the ground.

Since dangerous climate changes are already under way, really fixing the climate means preventing the Earth from getting any warmer than it already has. Our understanding of the physics of Earths climate tells us that to do this would require an atmospheric CO2 concentration of 350 parts per million.

The atmosphere already has more CO2 than this, 387 ppm. Even if the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere stopped rising, the Earth would continue to warm for a few decades as the oceans warm up.

This is what they call committed warming. Avoiding that committed warming is where the target CO2 concentration of 350 ppm comes from.

My optimistic opinion is that ultimately, humankind, in the coming decades, will begin to actively scrub CO2 from the atmosphere, as part of an effort to get back to 350 ppm.

Someday someone will clean up the mess. In the larger scheme of things, this wouldnt be that hard to do. But if this is the ultimate tide of history, there is an easier way to get there, and a harder way.

As with many environmental messes, it would be much cheaper in the long run to avoid emitting so much CO2 to the atmosphere in the first place.

Climate change is more difficult than other challenges humans have faced, only in that it is global, and the tragedy of the commons effect is particularly strong. The people who benefit from using coal are not the same people as pay the price, mostly people in the future and in the developing world.

Will humankind plan intelligently for our collective good, or are we just another out-of-control weed species like so many others in Earth history, doomed to bloom and collapse? This is the decision youre making.

Pamela Martins statement:

My name is Pamela Martin. I am an assistant professor at the University of Chicago. I teach classes in past climate change paleoclimatology chemical oceanography and the science of sustainability.

Looking back into the paleorecords, the records of past climate change, we see abrupt changes, tipping points, changes we cant fully explain or dont fully understand. We must look back millions and millions of years to find carbon dioxide levels as high as we have today.

This past fall I have been participating in a seminar with other scientists such as David Archer, who is here today and one of the top experts on the carbon cycle, climate dynamicists who study interactions among components of the climate system, atmospheric chemists and biologists who study the nitty-gritty of photosynthesis.

We have been studying the details of the fate of carbon dioxide that we have emitted into the atmosphere, looking for the natural sinks of the CO2 that has cycled through the air. One of the clear sinks for this carbon dioxide is in the oceans, where carbon dioxide acts as an acid and lowers the pH. Some of the other sinks and effects of elevated CO2 are not so clear.

While understanding the sinks of carbon dioxide requires detailed sleuthing, understanding the anthropogenic sources, the major emissions sources, does not. A relatively small number of polluters emit over half of the point-source greenhouse-gas pollution.

And, by starting with the biggest polluters, the EPA is taking an important first step inaddressing greenhouse-gas pollution under the Clean Air Act.

I commend the EPAs commitment to hold the big polluters responsible first, but I also urge the EPA to work quickly to address the emissions from facilities that emit less than 25,000 tons per year.

I urge the EPA to shorten the proposed timescales of five and six years to address the sources under 25,000 tons.

The longer we wait to take action, the more we are committing to future warming and the more it will cost to address the problem.&/

Source: Chicago Press Release

‘Keys’ to GOCE satellite handed over

ESA’s GOCE gravity mission has achieved another major milestone as control of the satellite is transferred to the operations teams, marking the end of its commissioning and calibration phase.

The ‘Gravity field and steady-state Ocean Circulation Explorer’ (GOCE) satellite, launched in March, will map Earth’s gravity field with unprecedented accuracy, providing insight into ocean circulation, sea-level change, climate change, volcanism and earthquakes.
Mission responsibility was formally transferred from ESA’s GOCE Project Manager Danilo Muzi, responsible for the development phase, to ESA’s GOCE Mission Manager Rune Floberghagen, responsible for the exploitation phase, at a ceremony held at ESA’s Centre for Earth Observation (ESRIN) in Frascati, Italy, on 23 November.
The development phase included the design, building and testing of the satellite, the ground segment facilities and launch services, while the exploitation phase, which will be managed from ESRIN, includes GOCE operations and maintenance, data processing and scientific data exploitation. The satellite will be monitored, operated and controlled by the Flight Operations Segment at ESA’s European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany.

Speaking at the ceremony, Volker Liebig, ESA’s Director for Earth Observation Programmes, said: I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate Danilo on a job well done and extend my best wishes to Rune, as the captain on board
I am very grateful to all of the colleagues who have worked with me on this fantastic project during all of these years Mr Muzi said. From now on the ’baby’ will be in the capable hands of Rune, and we are all looking forward to the release of the first GOCE Earth gravity field and geoid models
The handover followed an In-Flight Test Review of the satellite’s status, completed on 15 October, and a Payload Data Ground Segment Operations Readiness Review, completed on 11 November.
The reviews concluded that all elements of the mission are in an excellent shape Mr Floberghagen said. All instrument data are of excellent quality, and the data processing is going according to plan
All ESA Earth observation missions undergo a similar handover, but this is the first mission handover of this type since Envisat completed its commissioning and calibration phase in December 2002 and responsibility was transferred from Project Manager Jacques Louet to Mission Manager Henri Laur.

The other major milestones in the commissioning of GOCE have been the successful start-up of its electric propulsion system and the switching-on of the sophisticated gradiometer instrument.
Since October, GOCE has been in ’measurement mode’, mapping tiny variations in Earth’s gravity in unprecedented detail. The data being received will lead to a better understanding of Earth’s gravity, which is important for understanding how our planet works.
Scientists world-wide are now eagerly awaiting the new GOCE data Mr Floberghagen said. We expect to present the first GOCE gravity field and geoid model at ESA’s Living Planet Symposium in Bergen, Norway, in June 2010

GOCE belongs to a new family of ESA satellites, called Earth Explorers, designed to study our planet and its environment in order to improve our knowledge and understanding of Earth-system processes and their evolution to enable us to address the challenges of global climate change.
GOCE was the only Earth Explorer in orbit until 2 November, when ESA launched SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) to map sea-surface salinity and monitor soil moisture on a global scale. Another Earth Explorer satellite, CryoSat-2, is scheduled to be launched next February to monitor changes in the thickness of the polar ice sheets and floating sea ice.

Source: WEBWIRE

Help SC Johnson Help Team Earth

We know the families who buy our products also care about the environment and are trying to make a difference in their homes, such as by recycling. We wanted to team up with these consumers to make a difference, together, explained Kelly Semrau, Vice President of Global Public Affairs and Communication for SC Johnson. Knowing the average mom spends 12 hours online each week* researching, connecting with friends and family, and sharing information – we knew an online program would be a fast and easy way for her to participate.

The new blog, at www.scjohnson.com/TeamEarthTips, invites families to share stories about how they minimize their impact on the earth. From now through November 18, for every tip or tactic posted on the blog, SC Johnson will contribute $1 to Conservation Internationals Team Earth effort aiming to raise $25,000 by the end of the program on the 18th.

Team Earth is a worldwide sustainability effort uniting businesses, non-profit organizations, scientists, educators and individuals to address the most pressing environmental issues facing humanity. SC Johnson is a founding member of Team Earth, and was proud to kick off the initiative with actor Harrison Ford, the CEOs of Starbucks and Harrahs Entertainment, and others. More information is available at the Team Earth website: www.teamearth.com

Conservation International says that every year, the earth loses 32 million acres of tropical forests – an area the size of England. We want to help, and to engage our consumers as we do so. Online efforts like our Team Earth Tips are one small way to get the dialogue started, said Semrau. Facebook has over 300 million active users. One in five Internet users now Tweets or uses other tools to share updates about themselves.** We can all do a lot of good if we put the power of these tools into spreading and supporting Team Earth and other sustainability initiatives. Together, we can do so much more.

About SC Johnson:

SC Johnson is a family-owned and managed business dedicated to innovative, high-quality products, excellence in the workplace and a long-term commitment to the environment and the communities in which it operates. Based in the USA, the company is one of the worlds leading manufacturers of household cleaning products and products for home storage, air care, and insect control. It markets such well-known brands as GLADE°, OFF!°, PLEDGE°, RAID°, SCRUBBING BUBBLES°, SHOUT°, WINDEX° and ZIPLOC° in the U.S. and beyond, with brands marketed outside the U.S. including AUTAN°, BAYGON°, BRISE°, ECHO°, KABIKILLER°, KLEAR°, and MR. MUSCLE°. The 123-year old company, with more than $8 billion in sales, employs approximately 12,000 people globally and sells products in more than 110 countries. www.scjohnson.com

* Source: Yankelovich MONITOR 2009.

** Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project