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Local Foods: From Fad To Force And What It Means For The Food Industry

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Across the country, farmers markets with local purveyors plying dirt-dusted produce and artisanal cheeses are a routine and revered part of life during the spring-to-fall growing season. Their regulars advocate eating food produced closer to home, as it tends to be fresher, healthier, tastier and easier on the environment than the shipped equivalents. And buying this way also makes consumers feel good about supporting producers they know, who in turn invest in the local economy.

Not surprisingly, the number of farmers markets rose from 1,755 in 1994 to 8,144 last year, or more than 350 percent, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). And the trend has gone viral, as consumers are voting 'local' with their dollars and having a profound influence on the nation's food systems. Their enthusiasm has led suppliers, grocers and restaurants to change and adapt by adding locally produced goods to their offerings year-round.

Yet as the *local foods movement* grows, is it really better for us--and the environment?

A lot of U.S. consumers think so: 52 percent said buying locally grown produce is more important than buying organics in a 2012 study by Mintel. They're also willing to pay more for locally grown and produced foods, notes research in Ecological Economics, reported in Food Navigator.

So retailers are giving consumers what they want. Now placards that once listed produce by price-per-pound boast detailed descriptions of when, where and how the item was grown. Even Wal-Mart, which had food sales of $150 billion last fiscal year and is the nation's largest fresh produce retailer, according to CNBC, is also going local. In spring 2013, the retailer committed to double its local produce stock by December 2015.

Restaurants are also subject to the trend. The National Restaurant Association found the lust for *local foods* dominated its 2014 "Top Food Trends" survey as "locally sourced meats and seafood" and "locally sourced produce" earned the top two spots on the list. "'Hyper-local' food," including herbs and vegetables garden-grown by restaurants onsite and "farm/estate-branded foods" came in at Nos. 6 and 10 respectively, while "environmental sustainability" and "sustainable seafood" ranked third and eighth respectively, which fits the trend since food production methodology is part and parcel of the *local foods movement*. And national chain restaurants, such as Chipotle and Subway, are committing to buying local.

No wonder agri-lending giant Rabobank called the *local foods movement* a "permanent and mainstream trend" earlier this year, noting that it is "changing the competitive landscape" of the produce industry for the better. There is evidence that buying local can mean healthier and tastier produce since most conventional varieties are chosen for their high yield and durability, which a Harvard Medical School analysis says "come at a cost: nutritional quality." The Harvard study cites an Organic Center report, "Still No Free Lunch: Nutrient Levels in U.S. Food Supply Eroded by Pursuit of High Yields," which notes "farmers producing for a local and direct market...are more likely to prioritize taste and nutritional quality over durability when making varietal decisions."

But whether eating locally is always the better choice for the environment is debatable on some counts.

First, final transportation to market is only 4 percent of food production's overall environmental impact, according to "Food Miles and the Relative Climate Impacts of Food Choices in the United States," a landmark study by two Carnegie Mellon University scientists. They conclude that upstream environmental costs are much higher (83 percent of carbon emissions can be attributed to the production phase), so it's better to grow food where production needs fewer inputs-such as growing tomatoes in a warm, sunny climate further away rather than nearby in a heated, lighted greenhouse.

Also, large farms growing crops sustainably, and suited to their region, are better for the environment because they use less energy per item and grow more food on less land, notes University of Toronto professor Pierre Desrochers, co-author with policy analyst Hiroko Shimizu of "The Locavore's Dilemma: In Praise of the 10,000-Mile Diet," in USA Today. This also offers consumers the economic benefit of lower prices, he adds.

Feasibility is another point to consider. Sub-optimal conditions, such as soil quality, water availability and climate, can make some locales impractical to farm. "That's why Iowa is so good at growing corn and Montana [stinks] at it," says David Swenson, a regional economics researcher at Iowa State University, in USA Today. So it is more economical to grow large quantities of food where the climate is best.

And to be frank, it's not always possible for local foods to be available everywhere year-round. For instance, eating strictly local and fresh would spell a monotonous and nutrient-deficient diet for much of the northern U.S. and Canada for at least half the year.

For these reasons, and given the fact that the *local foods movement* offers consumers so many benefits, sustainably processed and packaged food has an important role to play in supporting the admirable goals of local food advocates and supplementing their needs. So retailers and producers can learn from the *local foods movement* and leverage it--especially since sustainable farming practices, available technologies and contemporary packaging make it possible for processed and packaged foods to deliver on quality, maintain ingredient integrity, preserve food nutrients and accomplish social, environmental and economic good as well.

Example of companies already employing this strategy abound.

On its website, Michigan-based, nationally distributed Eden Foods touts the network it has built of over 360 family farms to source its raw materials, which are mostly grown close to home base. They also note that they pay farms directly to get them more cash.

Truitt Brothers, an Oregon-based bean farmer and processor, also understands the tenets of the *local foods movement*, describing its philosophy as "food manufacturing with a conscience." The website describes its five bean varieties as "sustainably cultivated on family farms in the Pacific Northwest" ... in "earth-friendly Tetra Pak cartons." Consumers far from the Pacific Northwest can appreciate the sustainable nature of the farms and the care with which the beans are processed and packaged, in close proximity to where they were grown-a clever twist on 'local.'

And Oregon-based manufacturer and processor Pacific Foods, founded in 1987 to create healthy, self-stable food and beverage products using ingredients grown with integrity, started its own organic farms when the founders realized there weren't enough local organic producers growing the ingredients the company needed for its products. To date, they've converted 3,200 acres of conventional farmland to organic and own three organic dairies with more than 1,400 cows. And by demonstrating sustainable farming techniques, they've helped other Oregon farmers follow suit, allowing them to develop a local food web.

So clearly, by leveraging these technologies and packaging food in sustainable packaging when and where crops are grown, producers can help reduce environmental impacts, lock in fresh flavor and nutrients, extend products' availability to consumers year-round and still support local growers. But for the advantages of the *local foods movement* to develop, mature and benefit all, everyone involved in the food system--from farmers and producers to retailers and consumers--must carefully and consistently work toward what's best for the food system they want to improve and sustain. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.

Introducing the Earth's Most Abundant Mineral

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Introducing the Earth's Most Abundant Mineral Quick, name the Earth's most abundant mineral. If you got "bridgmanite," that means you're clearly up on your geologic news because the mineral just got its name this month. In fact, that's because scientists finally saw it for the first time. As Live Science explains, the stuff we now know... Reported by Newser 2 hours ago.

Land Degradation: A Pathway to Nourishing the Future Is Found in Africa

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Life on earth hangs on a thin thread. The warming of the earth's climate is taking place in an atmospheric layer which makes up two-tenths of a percent of the radius of the planet. Land degradation, soil erosion, and desertification, problems affecting a growing area around the globe, involves the slimmest of terrestrial layers --about 0.0003 percent of the planet's radius, the thin layer of soils where vegetation grows. On such margins do our lives and livelihoods depend.

Land degradation has long been thought of as a regional environmental problem rather than a global one or, more recently, labeled an offshoot or side effect of climate change rather than a critical environmental issue in its own right. Growing global population, and an understanding of the increase agricultural output that will be needed to feed the planet, is changing that. Land degradation is emerging as one of the major global environmental issues of our time.

Land for crops and livestock already accounts for nearly 5 billion hectares, or 40 percent of the terrestrial surface of the planet. Expanding the land area under food production to match population growth expected to exceed nine billion over the next three decades, and doing so using current cultivation methods, simply will not work. How we manage this crucial resource to meet growing demand for food, fiber, and energy from biomass will determine whether societies can achieve their aspirations for politically stability and a sustainable future.

For at least 2.6 billion people, more than a third of them rural poor, maintaining the productivity of landscapes has become a matter of survival.

Unsustainable land use practices and inadequate or ineffective land use policies are the major drivers of land degradation, leading to the deterioration of ecosystem services flowing from agro-ecosystems and forest landscapes globally. These drivers are strongly influenced by global factors such as population growth, rising land and food prices, expansion of major agricultural commodities, and climate change. Some 2 billion hectares of land (7.7 million square miles, or slightly larger than Australia), a quarter of it drylands, are already affected by land degradation. Desertification is the extreme case of land degradation, which is of particular concern because its consequences are often magnified by climate change and drought.
Pumping water in a rural village in Burkina Faso/GEFLand degradation is a protean problem, doing harm in a number of environmental dimensions beyond the health of the land itself. Climate change, for example, affects the health of the land but is also affected by it, as deforestation increases greenhouse gas emissions. Land degradation leads to loss of biodiversity, reduced soil productivity, and depletion of water resources. It also triggers the loss of millions of tons of topsoil annually, some of which ends up as sediment on the coast or in lakes, causing what are known as "dead zones" -- oxygen-depleted water bodies that trigger the collapse of fisheries.

The good news is that improving land management practices does much more than secure food and other products. It means the safeguarding of multiple ecosystem services for the long-term.

Sub-Saharan Africa is the epicenter of the effort to slow and ultimately reverse the rising tide of land degradation.

The Guinea Savanna zone, covering an area of 700 million hectares from West to Southern Africa, was recently described as "Africa's Sleeping Giant" because of its vast untapped commercial agriculture prospects (FAO and World Bank, 2009). This potential must be tapped if a growing population is to be nourished. But in the absence of sound production practices tailored to the ecology of the region, awakening the giant may unleash other predicaments including massive loss of soil carbon that could turn Africa into a major global source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Emerging trends in Sub-Saharan Africa suggest that considerable opportunity exists to advance sustainable land management that can safeguard ecosystem services in the drylands. In the Sahel region, millions of hectares have been regenerated by smallholder farmers practicing agroforestry, soil and water conservation, soil fertility management, and sustainable forest management. Similar results have been achieved in the Horn of Africa and the Southern Africa region, where the legume tree known as Fadherbia albida is being used for soil fertility management. Most of these technologies and practices are not new, but their application by hundreds of thousands of smallholder farmers has been a major factor in creating impact at scale.

As we celebrate the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought today, successes in the Sahel can spur African countries, with the help of global institutions, to embark on a long-term sustainable land management effort. With support from the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and the World Bank, 12 countries have committed to invest nearly $1.8 billion in the Great Green Wall Initiative to protect the Sahel from desertification and effects of climate change.

Often mischaracterized as a tree-planting campaign, the Great Green Wall effort will promote innovations that address productivity needs in crop, livestock, and forest landscapes, while contributing global environmental benefits. The GEF and its partners hope to replicate these benefits in other parts of Africa and other continents affected by this insidious problem that, left unchecked, will further erode the thin layer on which humanity depends. Reported by Huffington Post 1 hour ago.

The Conflict Between Demands for Two Resources

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Competition for water resources is on the rise in many regions on earth, as supplies become more variable in the wake of climate change and increased demand across diminished quality and quantity.

In the Western United States, for example, there is a debate about water allocation and in California lesser water rights holders are being ordered to shut down their pumps in order to ensure cities and power plants have sufficient water supplies. Yet, sometimes water supplies fall short for all. Just last year, water shortages shut down thermal power plants in India and decreased energy production in power plants in the United States. France was forced to reduce or halt production in nuclear power plants in the past, due to high water temperatures threatening cooling processes during heat waves. Droughts are threatening hydropower capacity in many countries, such as Sri Lanka, China and Brazil.

Producing energy requires a lot of water and as water resources become less reliable, energy production is adversely impacted. In general, most thermal power plants require large quantities of water, primarily for cooling purposes. Water drives energy production in hydropower generation and is also critical in energy development, such as coal, oil, and gas extraction and refining.

The energy sector faces a variety of risks related to water: increased water temperatures, sea level rise and diminished water quality, among others. These changes and increases in demand will be particularly felt in developing countries where lack of infrastructure and institutional capacity often hinders governments' ability to meet these needs. In Africa, electricity generation will grow by 700 percent by 2050, increasing demand for water by 500 percent according to the World Energy Council. As demand for water increases for energy, all sectors will require more water, due to population growth.

Tackling energy and water challenges will only be exacerbated by climate change, due to increased water variability and intensified weather events, such as severe floods and droughts. Already, some 780 million people lack access to improved water and 2.5 billion, more than one-third of global population, does not have access to basic sanitation. And while water is critical for producing power, the treatment and transport of water requires energy too.

*Approaches to Tackling the Water-Energy Challenge*
There are an array of opportunities and technical solutions to reduce water use in power plants and to exploit the benefits of possible synergies in water and energy: Thermal power plants may decrease freshwater needs by using cooling systems that require limited amounts of water, by decreasing the waste heat of the plant and, as a result, decreasing the cooling needs, or using alternative water sources, therefore displacing freshwater needs.

For example, Power Plant Villa de Reyes in San Luis Potosi, Mexico has been using treated wastewater from the Tenorio wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in its cooling towers instead of freshwater for the last six years. This integrated approach, in this case known as Project Tenorio, is the first of its kind in Mexico. Nearly all of the WWTP's operational costs are covered from this revenue stream, and the power plant has a secure water source that is 33% cheaper than groundwater in the area. The power plant's use of reclaimed water has the additional environmental benefit of increasing aquifer sustainability, as it has reduced groundwater extractions by at least 48 million cubic metres over the lifetime of its operations.

While technical solutions play a critical role in addressing these challenges, institutional reform and guidance from policy is critical too. Currently, laws and regulations governing water use are varied around the globe, with some that are quite complex, and others that are vague and inconsistent. Determining what laws govern water can be expensive and time consuming, and consequently prevent certain stakeholders from acquiring all the information they need.

In addition, laws determining water rights may further complicate matters as some may govern an entire region, while others are basin specific. Certain groups hold special privileges of prior appropriation and have a "first right" to water withdrawals. Thus, in basins where water rights are fully allocated, transferring water rights between stakeholders may be difficult or costly.

Sustainable resource management is a question of many factors, including governance, status of infrastructure, and legal frameworks. Projects such as the Bertelsmann Stiftung's Transformation Index (BTI) seek to measure indicators like sustainability, social integration and welfare, in order to determine which transforming countries are implementing reforms to ensure future growth and viability. Such measurements are useful in gauging political will and highlighting areas where management may be improved to ensure continued sustainable development and integrated resource management.

Except for arid regions or hydropower nations, where energy and water's interdependence has been clear since the beginning and Ministries of Energy and Water were created, such as in Afghanistan, Kuwait, or Saudi Arabia, sectoral planning often remains separate and tends to be narrowly focused. Successful planning requires government agencies and stakeholders to participate in coordinated decision-making. Additionally, it is critical that development and expansion plans consider the water needs of competing sectors, and that energy managers ensure their processes and water use reflect the cost of water. Therefore, the World Bank's energy-water planning approach encourages the development of new institutional roles and processes, in addition to strengthening existing planning and analytical tools.

*Making energy modelling "water smart"*
Policy and technical solutions will be made more robust if they are supported by modeling. Projections derived from models can ensure power plants are more strategically located and that they implement technologies to increase energy efficiency.

In South Africa, for instance, a country with important water issues and large energy expansion plans, the World Bank's Thirsty Energy initiative aims to incorporate water allocation quantities by catchment area and marginal costs in energy optimization tools and plans. This enables planners to assess, using economic tools, whether or not, or to what extent, cross-sectoral competition will impact the technology mix in energy generation.

In South Africa, Thirsty Energy will build on the country's existing TIMES (SATIM) model, including its economic costs and emissions. The model is capable of solving for a variety of constraints, though it does not include the cost of water. Thirsty Energy is working with the University of Cape Town to develop the "water smart" SATIM, which will run different scenarios to assess how energy sector development strategies change relative to the reference scenario depending if water is constraint, if water has a price, etc. Additionally, Thirsty Energy will look at how expansion of coal and fracking and imposed greenhouse gas limits will impact water resources.

There are many existing approaches that can help countries and companies prepare for a future of increased competition and ensure that projects are resilient in the face of uncertainty. The question is one of action.

A version was first published on BTI blog Reported by Huffington Post 35 minutes ago.

South Florida Poll Confirms Big Shift in Exile Community on Cuba

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Public opinion about Cuba in South Florida has shifted dramatically. Actually, that's an understatement. Let me illustrate the point this way.

In March of 1991, seventy-three percent of Cuban Americans strongly favored tightening the embargo and 62 percent strongly favored assembling an exile army to overthrow Cuba's government by military force.

These results are drawn from the first Florida International University (FIU) survey of Cuban Americans South Florida, the longest-running research project tracking opinion in the exile community. Their hardline views have shaped the debate and politics around U.S. policy toward Cuba for decades.

These days, exiles are not thinking about making sanctions tighter. In FIU's newly-released 2014 poll, fifty-two percent of respondents support ending the embargo altogether, and the survey is no longer even reporting results about toppling Cuba's government by force. Over time, their views have really changed; but, U.S. policy? Not so much.

This year's survey has data on how the community answered over a dozen questions -from the embargo to immigration, to opening relations with Cuba, to voting for or against candidates who want to reform the policy.

The results, sliced and diced by party affiliation, age and other factors, reveal interesting and diverse contours of opinion. What made the biggest impression on us, however, is the movement that took place on three key questions just since the release of FIU's last poll in 2011.

First, on the embargo: In 2011, 44 percent of respondents favored dropping the embargo while 56 percent wanted to keep it. In 2014, a narrow majority, 52 percent, now supports ending the embargo and 48 percent want to keep it, roughly a 15 percent shift in opinion.

Second, on diplomatic relations with Cuba: By 2011, FIU already reported 58 percent support among Cuban Americans for formalizing relations; in 2014, that figure jumps ten points to 68 percent, with only 32 percent opposed.

Last, and possibly most telling, is the shift on travel restrictions. According to FIU, support among Cuban Americans for unrestricted travel by all Americans -- including travel as tourists -- has been above 50 percent for a decade. In the last years, however, support has moved even higher, from 57 percent in 2011 to 69 percent favoring travel for all in 2014.

Why has Florida's Cuban American community, the Number One source of political support for the harshest possible Cuba policy, shifted its views so markedly? We are not, after all, living in an era known for Enlightenment thinking.

When you consider how our country currently discusses important issues such as climate change or vaccinating children against disease, we are not living in an age of Enlightenment thinking. Much to the frustration of scientists and doctors who know that global warming is real and vaccines are safe, people of all political stripes tend to reach conclusions and stick to them, no matter the facts, often to stay in synch with their peers.

FIU's analysis credits Cubans who arrived from the island after 1995, those more often considered economic rather than political refugees, for shifting the center of gravity in the community. When FIU began incorporating their opinions in the survey, the numbers starting in the year 2000 really moved toward greater openness on Cuba and more flexible policies.

But, we suspect something else is at work. Social scientists now believe that you will measure real movement in people's opinions on difficult public policy issues when they can relate new information about those problems to the most personal and important attributes of their lives.

Under reforms ordered by President Obama in 2009, Cuban Americans can now travel to Cuba as often as they wish to visit and even vacation with their Cuban relatives, something they are doing now in record numbers.

According to recent figures, more than 400,000 Cuban Americans visited their families on the island in 2013. One Miami-based consulting group now projects that a half-million more will take trips to Cuba to see their families in 2014. Many Cuban American travelers return home determined to help their families by delivering more aid and support. They are expressing solidarity with their loved ones breaking with past policies and views based on isolating Cuba.

President Obama policies promoting Cuban American family travel have, we believe, not only helped their kin on the island, but have also created virtual cycles of change at home. Clearly, Secretary Clinton has taken notice. So should the president. With FIU recording majorities in South Florida in favor of dropping the embargo and recognizing Cuba diplomatically, he has created his own political space to speed the process of reform in Washington.

Now that opinion among Cuban Americans, who once offered such strong support for the embargo policies that accomplished so little, has shifted so strongly, what on earth would hold him back now? Reported by Huffington Post 29 minutes ago.

Earth Has Its Warmest May on Record Globally, Spring Could Be Warmest

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Two of the leading centers that track global surface temperatures have reported their data for May, and they both found it to be the warmest such month on record for the planetNASA found that May had an average global temperature that was 1.38 degrees Fahrenheit above average, which would make it the warmest such month, coming out far ahead of May 2012. The Japanese Meteorological Agency's separate analysis also found both May and the meteorological spring months of March through May to be the warmest on record.

These results are preliminary, with the data subject to revision. Later this week, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) will release their global numbers, which typically closely match the other centers, but sometimes differ slightly in rankings. According to the World Meteorological Agency, all but one of the 10 warmest years on record have occurred in the 21st century. Read more...

More about Nasa, Climate Change, Global Warming, Us World, and Us Reported by Mashable 50 minutes ago.

The One World Cup Bet To Make

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Have the bookmakers got this World Cup wrong? Everyone has an opinion, and you can make of mine whatever you want. But after watching Brazil's lacklustre performance against Mexico on Monday, my friends and I turned to each other and asked: "What on Earth...?" The bookies still rate the Brazilian team the [...] Reported by Forbes.com 6 minutes ago.

Stunning Photos Of The Earth From Space

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Amazing views of our pale blue dot. Reported by Forbes.com 4 hours ago.

Paul Rodriguez: Environmentalists 'Have Gone Too Far'

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Paul Rodriguez: Environmentalists 'Have Gone Too Far' Comedian Paul Rodriguez says he isn't against fish or the environment. But the veteran comic has had enough of environmentalists who push their pet causes to the detriment of the working man and woman.

Like, for instance, his own mom.

Rodriguez lamented how his mother’s small farm in Fresno is suffering due to government-mandated water restrictions during an interview with Carl Kozlowski on the Grown-Ass Men podcast.

“Environmentalists have gone too far,” the comedian says. A California region he called the “bread basket” of the world now suffers from an irregular water flow. It’s not Mother Nature's fault but regulations meant to protect certain fish that end up putting pressure on hard-working farmers, he says.

“We need to build a dam ... but the environmentalists won’t let you," he says. “I believe human life is more precious than these fish.”

“We’re willing to meet [environmentalists] half way, but they’re not,” he continues. "They're not living in the real world ... we’re simply saying there’s mom and pop [farmers] with 100 acres ... they want to continue to farm. It’s an honorable thing to do. Why cut them off?"

Rodriguez, who says the radical Earth First! group threatened his life for speaking out on this issue, also bemoaned how our culture protects President Barack Obama from legitimate disagreements.

"Mr. Obama is difficult to criticize without being accused of being some kind of a bigot," he says. "He's not prepared for the job." Reported by Breitbart 5 hours ago.

Most Americans Support Obama's Climate Plan, Even If Their Bills Increase

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A new poll released on Monday shows widespread public support for Barack Obama’s controversial carbon emissions reduction regulations proposed on June 2

The poll, conducted by Hart Research Associates and Public Opinion Strategies for NBC News and the Wall Street Journal, found that 57% of Americans approve of a proposal that would require companies to cut greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming, even if that proposal would increase their utility bills

See also: Earth Has Its Warmest May on Record Globally, Spring Could Be Warmest

The poll also found that a majority of the public — 61% — believe that there is at least enough evidence showing that global climate change is a serious enough problem to warrant taking action (this is up from 54% in 2009). The poll included 1,000 American adults and has a margin of error of 3.1%. Read more...

More about Climate Change, Senate, Carbon, Global Warming, and Epa Reported by Mashable 5 hours ago.

Why Is There A Giant Robotic Giraffe On The White House Lawn?

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Why Is There A Giant Robotic Giraffe On The White House Lawn? There was an unusual item on the White House lawn Wednesday morning: a giant, 17-foot robotic giraffe.

According to a press pool report, the steel contraption is named Russell, weighs 2,200 pounds, and caused quite the spectacle.

"The neck and head undulated slowly. The mouth opened and closed. The neck swayed gently side to side. Ears flapped," the report noted. 

The robotic beast also featured silver horns the report described as "made from lava-lamp type things with sparkles inside."

What purpose could it serve?

According to the White House, the robotic critter was part of the first-ever "White House Maker Faire," an event highlighting "students, entrepreneurs and everyday citizens who are using new tools and techniques to launch new businesses, learn vital skills in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), and fuel the renaissance in American manufacturing."

In remarks at the event, President Barack Obama personally marveled at the various inventions.

"What on Earth have you done to my house?" he said to laughter, according to an official transcript. "I mean, there’s a mobile factory on the South Lawn. There’s a robotic giraffe. There’s a giant red weather balloon in the Rose Garden.  There’s a paper-crafted dinosaur head in the hallway. Over here is a 3D-printed sculpture of my State of the Union Address. ... So, this is not your typical day at the White House."

Obama and his aides appeared to particularly enjoy the giraffe. The White House even temporarily converted their official video website to a "GIRAFFE CAM" showing Russell's view of the world.

"Look at this!" Obama said, according to the pool report. "I like those ears."

"Hee hee. That tickles," Russell said in a British accent after Obama petted it. (An assistant human provided the voice.)

However, don't expect the giraffe to be a permanent guest at the White House.

"Secret Service may not like that," Obama quipped.

Join the conversation about this story » Reported by Business Insider 5 hours ago.

Slow Motion Sssssnake Sssssstrike May Give You Nightmares

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If you ever run into one of the several venomous viper snake species known as puff adders you should turn the other way.

In a recent video from BBC Earth, a camera crew catches the incredible striking speed of a Puff Adder.

While the video may be too much for anyone with Ophidiophobia, it is a fascinating look at the way snakes go after prey.

Typically, snakes like these eat rats, mice, small mammals or ground birds. In this case, it's just a balloon. Reported by Huffington Post 4 hours ago.

Testing Quantum Technology Means Getting Around Gravity

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There is an up-and-coming set of technologies that uses the strange properties of atomic particles predicted by the theory of quantum mechanics, which is the physics of the very small stuff. This technology promises to bring us computers that are faster than all the machines we have ever produced before put together, as well as communication tools no snooping agency can break into and even the capacity to look into the Earth without digging.

At the heart of these technologies is a strange phenomenon called "quantum entanglement". It says that the properties of an atomic particle depend on the properties of another, distant particle, even if there is no physical connection between them. When the properties of one particle change, the twin particle’s properties change too. Read more...

More about Gravity, Future Tech, Tech, Dev Design, and Quantum Mechanics Reported by Mashable 4 hours ago.

Earth's Most Abundant Mineral Now Has a Name

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Earth's most abundant mineral lies deep in the planet's interior, sealed off from human eyes. Now, scientists for the first time have gotten a glimpse of the material in nature, enclosed inside a 4.5-billion-year-old meteorite. The result: They have characterized and named the elusive mineral.

The new official name, bridgmanite, was approved for the mineral formerly known by its chemical components and crystal structure — silicate-perovskite. The magnesium-silicate mineral was named after Percy Bridgman, a 1946 Nobel Prize-winning physicist, according to the American Geophysical Union blog.

The elusive mineral bridgmanite is shown in a shock melt vein inside a 4.5-billion-year-old meteorite found in Queensland, Australia.

Image: Chi Ma via LiveScience Read more...

More about Earth, Us World, World, Meteorite, and Space Reported by Mashable 3 hours ago.

All gone: How erasing billions of birds shocked us

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It was the moment that humanity learned we had the awesome power to erase an entire species off the face of the Earth in the scientific equivalent of a blink of an eye: The passenger pigeon went from billions of birds to extinct before our very eyes. Reported by Miami Herald 3 hours ago.

Teen plane stowaway recalls trip in wheel well

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The California teenager who defied laws and nature by surviving a plane ride to Hawaii as a stowaway in the wheel well says he remembers seeing the ocean from 38,000 feet above Earth. Reported by CNN.com 3 hours ago.

‘Cliffies’ Award to Honor Films About Climate Change and Global Warming (Guest Blog)

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After creating and popularizing the rising new genre of ”cli-fi” (novels and movies about climate change and global warming) and pushing the meme into the pages of the New York Times, Time magazine and NPR, I am now in the process of setting up a new Hollywood film awards event I call the ”Cliffies” for now: ”Cli-Fi movies that matter.”

The informal name of the awards event, to be held annually pre-Oscars, and televised or video-streamed from a Los Angeles venue, is “The Cli-Fi Movie Awards.”

*Also read: *New York Times Rides Growing Wave of Climate Fiction (Guest Blog)

I envision climate-themed movie award categories for director, film, photography, music, sound editing, film editing, actor, actress, supporting actor, supporting actress, costumes, and screenplay, adapted or original. What I need now are some sponsors, some funding, an administrative team, a PR consultant and a venue and a date. I hope to get the Cliffies off the ground in early 2016, pre-Oscars, and with news coverage of the awards ceremony and the presenters carried in the major newspapers and wire services of the world.

The preliminary planning and organizing work is now. I'm 65 and a 1971 graduate of Tufts University (where I  majored in ”world literature”), and I know nobody in Hollywood. So I am reaching out via the Internet and this blog post here in order to find a team to help me plan this new awards event and make it happen on an annual basis.

Patience is my middle name. I've still got some time left on Earth. (I had a heart attack in 2009 and live with a stent now, in addition to popping 10 cholesterol, diabetes and angina pills a day.) Life unfolds day by day, and I am one happy camper, 24/7. But this Earth of ours, old as it is and pristine as it used to be, is running out of time, due to climate change and global warming. So in that sense, I'm in a hurry. A slow, patient hurry!

*Also read:* John Oliver and Bill Nye Slam Climate Change Skeptics: ‘Who Gives a S–t?’ (Video)

I call myself a deep-green climate activist and literary theorist who woke up to the existential threat of a future Climapocalypse in 2006. Before then I wasn't really paying attention. Now I am, seven days a week. I live, sleep and dream cli fi issues and ideas. And this is the most meaningful work I've ever done in my life, even though I don't have a salary or an office for this. I work on my own time out a small Internet cafe and rent the email machines for an hour or two every day.

The debate over climate issues is a war of words, a war of emotions and empathy for future generations. It is my hope that these Cli-Fi Film Awards will serve as important wake up calls every year, not just to the Hollywood film world but also for audiences worldwide. And news reports of the annual event will also play an important role, in addition to the film producers themselves using the PR value of the awards ceremony for their own marketing and an distribution needs.

The funding? Everybody asks me. I don't know from funding and I don't know from money. But I am going by the line from “Field of Dreams” that “if you build it, he will come” — but I am changing the line to “if you build it, they will come,” and by “they” I mean the sponsoring groups and the philanthropists who will back this prize event.

*Also read: *Obama's New Weapon Against Climate Change: TV Weather People

I am hoping that the media attention and publicity surrounding this new Hollywood film awards event will bring people to me who can help make it happen, philanthropists like Pierre Omidyar and Steve Tisch, both fellow alums of Tufts, and political donors like Tom Steyer or Larry Page of Google.

I am now scouting for a jury of academics, scholars and film critics, and a venue to host the awards program.

Do you know anyone who wants to join this dreamer with a dream? Email me at danbloom@gmail.com

Let's make this thing happen. By 2016 or 2017 or even in 2020, if it takes that long to set it up. First baby steps are now.

The post ‘Cliffies’ Award to Honor Films About Climate Change and Global Warming (Guest Blog) appeared first on TheWrap.

*Related stories from TheWrap:*

Neil deGrasse Tyson Uses His Dog to Debunk Climate Change Skeptics in 'Cosmos' (Video)

Pat Sajak Calls Global Warming Advocates 'Unpatriotic Racists,' Sparks Twitter Backlash

Obama's New Weapon Against Climate Change: TV Weather People Reported by The Wrap 2 hours ago.

London Love Match? Lindsay Lohan’s New Man Tim Kilbey Gushes Over ‘Down To Earth’ Lilo

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Now that she’s set up shop in London, Lindsay Lohan has made a new set of friends! She’s been spotted out with actor Tom Bilkey, launching rumors that the… READ ON Reported by Radar Online 3 hours ago.

Jay Leno's Tonight Show and the Madness Behind the Curtain

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The rich, the famous, and the powerful, those on the way up and those on the way down, met at a crossroads known as The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. What the public witnessed each night was a carefully crafted image of what these celebrities and politicos wanted them to see, packaged and sanitized for an audience that was willing to consume the mirage of fame.

But the view behind the curtain was altogether different. This was where the masks were not yet in place, where people's real personas were abundantly clear. Perhaps too clear.

This is the topic of a fascinating new book from Dave Berg, the former producer of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. Aptly titled Behind the Curtain, An Insider's View of Jay Leno's Tonight Show, Mr. Berg reveals celebrities and politicos as they really are. It details events that made Howard Stern untrustworthy as a guest, the challenge in dealing with Teri Hatcher's "double personality," and the shock of discovering that Jesse Jackson can suffer from serious stage fright.

Each and every paragraph of this book is filled with valuable gold nuggets polished to enlighten. And nothing is more enlightening than the way people behave when the public isn't watching. It's also refreshing that some personas are exactly the same off camera as they appear on camera. This includes Paula Abdul's ditzy behavior, Dennis Rodman's unpredictability, and Billy Crystal's good humor. But even when revealing these insights, Mr. Berg provides fresh takes, using incidents both big and small, richly detailed.

Berg is also a deft storyteller. You cannot help but laugh when Berg details the crazy trip he took to Nashville to spy on Dennis Rodman to be sure he got to The Tonight Show on time for his appearance. Berg makes you feel the excitement he experienced when he landed the biggest "get" in late night, that being the first interview with a sitting president named Barack Obama. You can feel the exhilaration when he finally convinced John F. Kennedy Jr. to be a guest, and you can experience the angst in the room when Jay Leno was trying to decide on an appropriate time to return to the air after 9/11. The book also details the fight that took place with NBC executives who wanted Leno out long before the public did. It was a smack down that could only be told by someone like Berg, a man who was in the ring.

Berg's book is stuffed with dozens of stories just like these. Many are no bigger than a paragraph but they contain big insights into people and events. Other tales are a chapter long and take the reader on a roller coaster ride.

But it's easy for the media to highlight the stories of those who behave badly while overlooking something far more important, the down-to-earth persona of Jay Leno. Dave Berg describes Jay as a hardworking, loyal man-of-the-people who means what he says and says what he means, a man who puts the audience and his staff first and himself second. Jay stands in stark contrast with the egos with which he had to contend. And Berg credits Jay's common approach as the reason why Mr. Leno was the #1 ratings champ for many, many years, besting David Letterman where it counted most...audience appeal.

And there's another story here that should not get lost, and it's about Dave Berg. Berg, like The Tonight Show, was at the crossroads of where the famous, rich and powerful met. With never before recounted tales of the Bush vs. Gore campaign to Berg's potential role in Sarah Palin's nomination as John McCain's running mate for the Republican party, Berg was not only a witness to history, but he and The Tonight Show helped shape history. As you read of his herculean efforts to get the biggest movie stars, athletes, and politicos, you also learn something about what it takes to be a great producer in this incredibly chaotic business. It requires both aggressiveness and politeness, patience and impatience, the ability to make peace and to go to war, all at the right time and in the right proportion.

In full disclosure, I must admit that I have known Dave Berg for years, but I never knew the full depth of his experience at The Tonight Show, nor the extent of his writing ability...until now. That speaks to his understated, modest persona.

Mr. Berg states in the book that all great shows start with a great idea, but not all great ideas lead to great shows. Mr. Berg's opus is both a great idea and a great book. A must read. Reported by Huffington Post 2 hours ago.

UMD Hosts Lightning Safety Awareness Workshop for Reporters

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Members of the media are invited to join the University of Maryland and partners on June 24 for an exclusive reporter workshop in conjunction with Lightning Safety Awareness Week (June 22-27). The event will provide fresh leads on stories about how researchers and organizations are building lightning-safe communities in the Mid-Atlantic region.

(PRWEB) June 18, 2014

Members of the media are invited to a Lightning Safety Awareness Week workshop at the University of Maryland’s Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC) in College Park, Md. This workshop will provide fresh leads on stories about how researchers and organizations are building lightning-safe communities in the Mid-Atlantic region. Presenters will describe their innovative steps to help protect people and property from this all-too-common weather hazard. You will have time for interviews with the presenters and can participate in a rooftop tour of the building's lightning protection equipment.

What: On-the-record workshop for media in the D.C. and Baltimore regions with brief presentations and panel discussions that offer potential story leads related to protecting people and property from lightning. This event coincides with Lightning Safety Awareness Week (June 22-28) to maximize its impact and relevance.

Who: Participants will hear from lightning science and safety experts who work at the University of Maryland, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Lightning Protection Institute, Insurance Information Institute, Lightning Safety Alliance, Earth Networks, and Federal Alliance for Safe Homes.

When: Tuesday, June 24, 2014
10:00 am     Welcome and introduction
10:15 am     Short presentations on:
                * The “Building Lightning Safe Communities” Initiative
                * Lightning Safety at Sporting Venues
                * Lightning Losses and Insurance Costs
                * Tracking Dangerous Storms Using Lightning Observations
                * Dispelling Lightning Safety Myths
11:30 am     Break; Speakers available for interviews
12:00 pm    Catered lunch
12:00 pm    Panel discussion – Protecting People
12:30 pm    Panel discussion – Protecting Property
1:00 pm    Rooftop tour (optional)
1:00 pm            One-hour continuing education course (optional)

A detailed agenda with speaker information is available at http://ter.ps/5we.

Where:    University of Maryland Research Park
Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center
5825 University Research Court, Suite 4001
College Park, MD 20740-3823
Directions: http://ter.ps/5q4
Free Parking Available

Please RSVP at http://ter.ps/lightning.

Please contact Abby Robinson at abbyr(at)umd(dot)edu or 301.405.5845 if you have any questions. Reported by PRWeb 3 hours ago.
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