<< Previous Topic | Next Topic >>RETURN TO INDEX  

"Earth" -the film premiers on 22 April 2009 on Earth Day.

April 18 2009 at 7:28 PM
M.Schaus  (Login MagillaSchaus)
ESA - GREAT LAKES DISTRICT CO-DIRECTOR
from IP address 72.88.77.43

See a film and get a tree planted. How easy is that to contribute to making this planet better than we found it?

This offer is good for one week:

http://disney.go.com/disneynature/

 
 Respond to this message   
AuthorReply
M. Schaus
(Login MagillaSchaus)
ESA - GREAT LAKES DISTRICT CO-DIRECTOR
72.88.33.63

EarthDayNet: "Climate Change Fact Sheet"

April 19 2009, 3:36 PM 

Climate Change Fact Sheet


By 2030 the number of automobiles in the world will increase by 50%.
According to Chevron, the world consumes two barrels of oil for every barrel discovered.

It took 125 years to consume the first trillion barrels of oil – the world will consume the next trillion in only 30 years, according to Chevron.

By 2030 the world will consume 47% more oil than it did in 2003.
During the last one hundred years the global temperature has warmed between 0.7-1.5°C.

It is predicted that global temperatures in 2100 will be 1.4-5.8°C warmer than they were in 1990.

The current pace of sea-level rise is 50% faster then in the last century.
Scientists estimate the sea level will rise by 3.5-34.6 inches by 2100.
Much of the United States has already warmed, by as much as 4°F.
The five warmest years over last century have likely been: 2005, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2004. The top 10 warmest years have all occurred since 1990.
Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, carbon dioxide (a green house gas linked to climate change) in the atmosphere has increased by 35%.

Diseases such as malaria are predicted to spread as the world grows warmer, due to the carriers of disease spreading out over a larger geographical area.

Of particular concern is the stability of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. A sudden collapse would raise sea levels 16-20 feet, though the likelihood of such a collapse before the year 2100 is low.

Despite natural emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted by volcanoes, for example, human activities are now adding about 7 billion metric tons of carbon into the atmosphere every year.

New energy discoveries are mainly occurring in places where resources are difficult to extract-physically, technically, economically, and politically.

Oil production is in decline in 33 of the 48 largest oil producing countries,3 yet energy demand is increasing around the globe as economies grow and nations develop.

Oil and gas currently provide more than half of the world’s energy supply, and according to the International Energy Agency, they—along with coal (which also releases CO2)—will continue to be the major sources of energy well into the 21st century unless things are changed.

The International Energy Agency estimates that the world will need to invest $16 trillion over the next three decades to maintain and expand energy supply.

Over half the world’s oil supplies lie in just 5 countries.

Agriculture and biodiversity are already being impacted by global warming. 10% of all known plant species are under threat of extinction.
Over 20 Million Americans, 6.3 million of which are children, suffer from asthma. Public health experts are worries that those numbers will rise with continued greenhouse gas emissions.

People living in cities such as Atlanta, Baltimore, and Cincinnati could by mid-century see a 60% increase in the number of high smog level days.

Diseases such as malaria and West Nile virus will occur in large numbers in the United States as a result of warmer temperatures.

The Arctic ice pack has lost an area about twice the size of Texas since the mid-1970's.

Automobiles count for almost a third of the U.S.'s Carbon Dioxide (CO2) emissions - the largest source after power plants.

Each gallon of gasoline burned creates 20 pounds of CO2.
Vehicles in the United States release more CO2 than all the energy sources (such as heating, electricity, vehicles, and factories) in all of India.

As many as 15-37% of all wildlife species in some regions could be "committed to extinction" by 2050 years because of global climate change.
Salmon, trout, and waterfowl are particularly vulnerable to climate change.

Climate change is having a disastrous effect on coral reefs, including in the Florida Keys, the Bahamas, and Mexico.

Winter temperatures in the Arctic have warmed by as much as 7° F over the last 60 years, a faster rate than in any other region. This affects wildlife such as foxes, caribou, walruses, and polar bears. It also affects the lifestyles of native peoples in the Arctic.

By planting a large tree that creates shade, one can reduce heating and cooling costs annually by up to 40%.



 
 Respond to this message   
M.Schaus
(Login MagillaSchaus)
ESA - GREAT LAKES DISTRICT CO-DIRECTOR
72.88.33.63

Film Review

April 21 2009, 11:20 AM 


 
 Respond to this message   

(Login MagillaSchaus)
ESA - GREAT LAKES DISTRICT CO-DIRECTOR
72.88.33.63

Artvoice-Review: "Earth"

April 23 2009, 10:55 AM 

Earth



You have to give Disney Inc. points for chutzpah. The advertising for this implies that it is a new, original Disney production, a return to the series of acclaimed nature documentaries the company made in the 1950s.

Actually, Earth is re-edited footage from the 2006 BBC series Planet Earth, which has already been broadcast in the US on the Discovery Channel. The directors claim that the feature was commissioned at the same time as the series, so both are derived from the same footage, and the theatrical version contains shots that it was felt would work better on the big screen. I point this out because, while I haven’t seen the series, I know a lot of people have and may not be terribly happy to pay for a movie ticket only to get a wallop of déjà vu. I did see a film a few years ago called An Arctic Tale, from which I would swear this re-uses footage of polar bear and walrus families. (If you can tell one walrus from another, you have a more discerning eye than I.) Pedigree aside, Earth contains a fair share of spectacular nature photography mixed with a lot of anthropomorphized animal scenes, strung together with no particular focus. It’s less gruesome than what you may be used to from cable, with little that might disturb sensitive toddlers. Any enjoyment you get out of the experience, though, will depend on your tolerance for a pompous narration ripe with lines like “This is the circle of life that most of us in our urbanized lives have lost touch with,” delivered by a particularly unrestrained James Earl Jones. (No one intones like James Earl Jones.) Worse is the relentless musical score: The violins weep, the tympani thunder, the woodwinds keen, the French horns bellow victory—it’s like a primer in orchestral clichés. The good news is that the next film in this series, to be released in the US by Disney on Earth Day 2010, will be Oceans, by the French producer Jacques Perrin, who in the past decade reinvented the genre with such visionary epics as Microcosmos, Winged Migration, and Genesis. The bad news is that, unlike those films, it will probably be put though the same Disnification mill.

—m. faust

Distributed without profit to ESA Great Lakes District members for education purposes.

 
 Respond to this message   
Current Topic - "Earth" -the film premiers on 22 April 2009 on Earth Day.
  << Previous Topic | Next Topic >>RETURN TO INDEX  
New Page 3 New Page 2