Those Apple stores are so beautiful. All pale and linear - clean clean clean. The irony is poignant. As we pointed out in our report, How Clean is your Cloud, Apple is in fact powering their iCloud with coal. Coal which is coming from Duke Energy, a utility that uses mountaintop removal coal - literally blowing up mountains and destroying the landscape to produce more dirty energy.
It's a no brainer - the people that use the super sleek iPad could do without thinking that each time they upload a photo of their daughter or their mother to the iCloud, they are using fossil fuels to do so. Because fossil fuels are antiquated and filthy - they don't go with this year's iPad.
In those pristine Apple stores around the world today, customers heard the dirty truth - In Regent Street, London, a team of 25 activists from Greenpeace UK arrived at the flagship store and set to work redressing the minimalist window, plastering it instead with an alternative advert for Introducing iCoal, an internet spoof which parodies Apple's latest advert for the iCloud. Others headed into the store and handed out perfectly formed Apples, shaped from coal, to let the customers know that Apple isn't as pure as the driven snow after all.
Hours earlier in San Francisco and New York, Greenpeace US activists had arrived at stores with hundreds of black balloons, which they released up to the clear glass ceilings. At the same time a second team arrived, dressed as a super cool cleaning crew, there to clean up the cloud. And then yet more teams, from Greenpeace in Hungary, Hong Kong and Holland (the alliteration was accidental). The staff weren't thrilled, of course, but by and large they were open to Greenpeace's concerns and acknowledged that Apple, of course, should be green. Particularly when we highlighted that Google, Facebook and Yahoo! are all doing better.
With $110.2 billion in the bank, as Apple announced yesterday, if they can't afford to think different, no one can.
Apple WWDC 2012: iOS 6, iCloud, OS X and Macs
Google Drive Vs. iCloud, Skydrive And Dropbox: Where Would Your Personal Data ...
Get the facts.
Google "Benefits of Nuclear Power - NYTimes.com"
We know coal kills Earth's ecosystems, but what of entombing ecosystems with dead fields of solar panels and deadly windmills? This is the new green, but killing ecosystems for all the whatevers, is still brown and dead. Killing our terrestrial ecosystems for solar and windmills is comparable to draining the oceans of their waters.
Greenpeace, you require a refresher course in the science of ecology.
Erik
http://eaprince.blogspot.com
A smaller version of a windmill with a protective metal cage over the slicing blades; a shopping center recently placed house sized solar panels in its parking lot. A medical center installed solar on its roof. Today, they even have solar roofing tiles or shingles. A school in Iowa placed geothermal under the existing school building without raping the planet.
Nuclear energy consumes the least of the body of Earth with high energy yield; however, many are fearful of nuclear. Ecologists claim, however, that pushing extinct biodiversity is about as safe for mankind as thermonuclear war.
No easy answers exist, but I've heard many times, energy conservation, alone, would help sustain our Earth immensely. I would like to see energy conservation more in the limelight and ideas to help us conserve energy.
Climate regulation and moderation are listed as a natural ecosystem function, and all ecosystems, altogether create the very life zone of the Earth, her biosphere/ecosphere. And, all integrated ecosystems have loops and feedbacks to the climate and the very atmosphere as well as release oxygen, exhale fresh water and are the natural sequestration of the climate warming, heat trapping gases and a long list of all the reasons man exists.
"I'ld like to focus on a related and arguably more urgent issue: land use and land change."
This must be the sort of thing my mom referred to as riding (a) buggy without a top. PRETENDING to be something it isn't. Something does not compute in this scenario. I didn't know about the coal, but I was put off by the cocooning excesses of the....damn Apple products. They always struck me as missing the point, and being just an escalation of shiny plastic stuff in an already overstuffed world.
I don't mean to be abrasive, but if you own a cell phone or computer, of any kind, you are still buying from a company that relies on fossil fuels. Singling out Apple may make you feel good, but is not much of a statement.
Erik
http://eaprince.blogspot.com
Blame you GOP and conservative Dems to giving coal huge breaks and subsidies, 100 times the total for green energy.
What a pointless article.
Maybe it would be a good idea to give them, and others, credit when it is due. Doesn't mean you don't make the point that they should do better still, but perhaps some positive feedback would be a nice change from the constant pronouncements of doom. Just a thought.
Erik
http://eaprince.blogspot.com