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Hummer Bummer (Hooray!)

Posted in Environment, News, Politics, Transport by Gone Green on June 26th, 2009

Wrecked HummerGM’s Hummer, the 2.5 ton 12 MPG Ego Carrier, has long been an icon.

On the one hand it has been a “status” symbol – an extra 2,700 kg of perceived self-importance, a sign of machismo, being unstoppable, oozing with attitude, couldn’t-care-less gas-guzzling excess and having a tiny penis.

On the other hand the Hummer has represented everything worthy of contempt – all of the above, the death to other drivers in a road traffic accidents and the inspiration behind FUH2.

When oil prices shot up over the last few years it spelled the end of the Hummer. Even in the land of plenty U.S. gas prices, even though a gallon of petrol was still less than half the price it was in the U.K., were too much for American Hummer owners to handle and the brand’s popularity declined.

So with car maker GM in huge financial trouble, facing bankruptcy and wishing to offload the excess baggage of the world’s most hated vehicle and other “assets”, along comes China’s Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery Company with an offer to buy the Hummer brand for around $100 million.

Today however, according to the BBC, it is reported that China is “to block” the Hummer takeover.

A Chinese firm’s bid to buy the gas-guzzling Hummer car brand will be blocked on environmental grounds, according to Chinese state radio.

Now that is a turn-up for the books. It seems that China is increasing efforts to cut pollution and the Hummer brand and product are completely at odds with this new green direction of the Chinese state.

For the Chinese authorities to be purportedly turning down Hummer on “environmental grounds” brings a smile to anyone who has gone green. Doesn’t that just prove what a bunch of eco fascists we are?!


Eco Faciscm

Posted in Commentary, Environment, Politics, Rant by Gone Green on June 25th, 2009

You drive your car less, you cycle more, recycle more, use less packaging, re-use your grocery bags, use low-powered bulbs, switch to wind-powered electricity and remember to switch everything off when you go to bed or leave the house.

You use both sides of the paper, you only ever wash at 30°c or 40°c, you use biodegradeable washing liquid or eco balls, you let nature dry things and the tumble dryer gather dust, you walk wherever possible, buy local goods from local people, you shower rather than bath and turn your thermostat down. The gas is turned down to a minimum, the loft is lagged, you used hemp insulation, and the DIY was done with only FSC timber.

Everything is natural where possible and you donate to good causes, you go green, you vote green and environmental, you think ecological, you’re efficient, you’re kind and considerate, your books are second-hand and you prefer the packaging when it has been reused… preferably not just once but twice… or more!

You care and you like to see that quality in others, you learn and you share and you wish that the world would be better place and you pay a slight premium to have food without chemicals and meat without steroids, compassion in world farming and fair trade on your table.

Ethics, sustainability, care and attention. Down with obsessive consumerism, up community projects. At one with nature, respect it and the planet.

Eco FascismAnd then someone says… that’s Eco Fascism.


I was only entering the book A Blueprint for Survival into my Facebook page when I spied the mere two star rating and a short review;

My copy dates from 1972, interesting to revisit over thirty years on, we are all still here! My note on the inside back cover still stands, ECO FASCISTS.

Well, I’ve not read the whole book yet as I’ve only just started. I shall make a judgement at the end as to whether I think they are “Eco Fascists” and whether I, a green and a moderate, might also be an “Eco Fascist” and I shall make more than a 2-line judgement or review as I think the subject deserves better than that.


A Blueprint for Survival

Posted in Books, Environment, Politics by Gone Green on June 24th, 2009

After thumbing through the last ever printed edition of The Ecologist the other day there was a mention of the book A Blueprint for Survival, written in 1972 by the then editor of The Ecologist, Edward Goldsmith. A Blueprint for Survival is an extremely important work as it was the book that inspired the manifesto of the Ecology Party which eventually became the UK’s Green Party.

Despite the already overflowing bookshelf of unread tomes such as George Monbiot’s Heat and The Age of Consent to E.F. Schumacher’s Small is Beautiful: A Study of Economics as if People Mattered a used copy of A Blueprint for Survival was purchased for the princely sum of 1 new pence (plus post & packaging).

Arriving in reused packaging (we like that) the book that inspired a political party’s manifesto is now eagerly awaiting a read and as soon as this 35 year-old pearl of wisdom is digested we’ll give you an update.

Until then Shhh, we’re reading… ;)


The Last Ecologist

Posted in Books, News by Gone Green on June 22nd, 2009

The Last Ecologist

It arrived this morning and was waiting there on the doormat when I got home – the very last, the ultimate, the final print edition of The Ecologist, “the world’s leading environmental magazine”.

I subscribed to The Ecologist only a few years ago, probably around the time this green blog was launched at the start of 2006, but the magazine has been going for nearly four decades!

Started in 1970 by environmentalist and eco-philosopher Edward Goldsmith the magazine was run by his nephew Zac Goldsmith who, whilst no longer the editor, remains the Chairman & Director of The Ecologist.

Despite all the huge positives over the years such as publishing a special edition that inspired the formation of what is now the Green Party, the constant, often controversial & deeply inquiring investigative journalism, being printed on 100% recycled paper with environmentally-friendly inks and being stuffed with the most useful information, news, ads, goods, services & even the “flyers” – The Ecologist, even with its 20,000 circulation, has called it a day on the printed edition.

However, all is not lost. In a time when advertising revenues are taking a hit, newspapers & magazines are shutting their doors for good, The Ecologist is making the most of its online presence. So from now on you’ll be able to get your fix of ecological goodness online anytime and the audience is limitless. What the cost & carbon footprint of a copy of the magazine is compared to the online edition, we don’t know, but here’s to The Ecologist and to another 40 years of environmentalism. Cheers!


Westmill Windfarm

Posted in Energy, Environment, Technology by Gone Green on June 20th, 2009

Westmill WindfarmI was in Oxfordshire the other week taking a look at the Uffington Horse, a huge prehistoric horse figure marked on a hillside in chalk, when I looked down from the ancient slopes and spotted three wind turbines.

Being in Farnborough, Hampshire, we don’t have any wind turbines down here, although there is one powering a business park about 10-15 miles away at Reading in Berkshire. So you can imagine my delight at knowing I was not far from seeing my first wind turbines close-up. What’s more, I was wearing my favourite Mono Turbine t-shirt, so it was almost as if I was destined to see these great pieces of engineering.

I drove a little way from the Uffington Horse in search of the wind generators and found them in a field which was nicely marked with an informative sign. I was standing before Westmill Windfarm and took a stroll nearer to satisfy my curiosity.

No, these windfarms are not noisy. The periodic “swoosh” as the blade spins past was all I could hear with the faint hum of the equipment at the base of the tower. The main tower was 50 metres high and the blades are 30 metres in length, so when the blades are pointing straight up the whole setup is 80 metres or approximately 240 feet high. That’s impressive.

It was genuinely awe inspiring to see these wind turbines and I think it would be even more impressive to see a huge windfarm, but we’ll have to wait for that one :)