Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Calling All Central Arkansas Locavores!



I wanted to pass along this email, which a family member forwarded to me.

December 30, 2008

Hello Locavore’s, we have big news!

It’s finally official. Argenta Market will be located in what is currently Argenta Seafood, at 6th and Main St. in the historic district of Argenta in downtown N. Little Rock.

You all have heard us talking about the new Argenta Market for over a year now, and we are incredibly excited to finally announce the big news of our new location. We hope this will be your favorite new community food source, with the widest and deepest selection of local foods in central Arkansas. We plan to start developing the store in January and open by March.

This all came together when the Isaac brothers (Brian and Eric), owners of Argenta Seafood and Ristorante Capeo, offered the ideal location with ample space for our entire concept(5,500 sq.ft). The Isaac brothers thought that our concept was so powerful and potentially beneficial to the future of Argenta, as well as the local food movement in Arkansas, that they agreed today to allow our group to begin the transition from a sheik seafood restaurant and bar to a model, gourmet-specialty grocery with a local foods mission.

Additionally, we have developed a very special, mutually beneficial relationship with the Isaac brothers over the last month while we discussed the possibility of Argenta Market. They have been most supportive while we’ve discussed ways to help each other, and with their experience and knowledge of food preparation, will all add a new and exciting dimension to the new business.

The New Argenta Group led by John Gaudin, have been instrumental in making this happen, and we are very grateful to them all. Also, the consistent support of Mayor Patrick H. Hayes and many others in the community have made this the most inspiring experience of a life time. With the energy and planning that we have put into this we are very excited to finally know what we will be doing next year, and many more. See you soon at ARgenta Market!

Happy New Year!
And, thanks for your awesome support in 2008. Our successes in 2008 wouldn’t have been possible without you.

Barbara Armstong
Jody Hardin
-Foodshed Farm, All Arkansas Basket A Month CSA (2007)
-Certified Arkansas Farmers’ Market, Inc.(2008)
-Argenta Market, LLC (2009)

P.S. I hope to have more info about our business concept on our web site, www.arkansasfood.net soon!

Monday, December 22, 2008

Better Life Through Science - The End Of Ageing


I've been following the discovery of the role of the SIRT1 protein in mammalian longevity and the ability of the substance Resveratrol to activate SIRT1's role in gene suppression. SIRT1 has also been shown to activate in calorie restricted rats, leading to longer life spans.

New research is showing that SIRT1 serves a dual role, both as a gene suppressor and also in DNA repair. As we get older, the research is showing the protein ignores it's suppressing role as we age.

This article in the New Scientist notes;

This raises the hope that, if gene-suppressing proteins become similarly overworked in ageing people, they could become prime targets for drugs to keep us young.

This possibility is boosted by the team's finding that mice engineered to over-express the gene for SIRT1 were better at repairing DNA, more resistant to cancer, and maintained a more youthful pattern of gene expression.

"The most exciting thing is that this work may unify in a single molecular pathway what we know about ageing in different organisms such as yeast and mammals," says Maria Blasco of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre in Madrid, who works on mechanisms of cellular ageing.

"It opens up the possibility of restoring youth in the elderly by re-establishing a useful pattern of gene expression," adds Sinclair.

There are several organizations promoting research into longevity. One of them is the Methuselah Foundation, which funds through it's SENS research fund which makes direct funding of research and it's Mprize offered to research groups who extend the lifespan mice past the present record.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Obama Appoints Actual Scientists to Science Posts

Hey, I know it's been all the rage the past eight years, to put idealogical hacks over the federal scientific community to make sure they don't say something to upset the "know nothings", but I think this Obama fellow has an idea here that just could work.

Put actual scientists in these positions, and let the science guide our policies, instead of our policies guiding our science. Call me crazy, but I think it's a good idea.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Loose Marbles At Conway's Toad Suck Daze

I was lucky to be introduced to the Loose Marbles last summer, along with the rest of those who wandered past this group of bohemian street performers at Conway's annual Toad Suck Daze festival. The voice of singer Meshiya Lake really knocked me out, and her delivery seemed to be from a ghost of day's gone by.

The group hails from New Orlean according to this article from the New Yorker. It is described as a loose collection of accomplished street performers who travel seasonally between New York City and New Orleans, making their living playing music and dancing on sidewalks and in parks.

A little time on Youtube.com will find videos of this plucky group playing to passerby's as far away as Berlin and Amsterdam. If you are ever in New Orleans for Mardi Gras, or in NYC in the summer, make the effort to look these wonderful performers up and drop some money in a hat. It'll be some the best money you ever spent.

Friday, December 19, 2008

The Crash Course

A couple of weeks ago, I posted a link to a story by the New Scientist about predictions by the Club of Rome made in the 70's about an impending world wide economic and agricultural collapse showing signs of now coming true.

In the vein of that idea, I'm going to spend my Friday's exploring, what I call in the back of my mind, Signs of the Apocalypse.

A friend of mine, suggested I take a look at the work being done by a gentleman named Chris Martenson.

Mssr. Martenson, who according to his bio has a doctorate in neurotoxicology from Duke, along with an MBA from Cornell, arrived at the conclusion that the world was headed towards a likely period of serious economic and enviromental turmoil in the short term of the next 20 years.

I found that on the surface, the arguement he makes to be convincing. He lay's out position in a series of related videos he calls The Crash Course starting with his assessment of what the problems are and proceeds from there to laying out planning guides for considering potential actions a person can take in response to their own individual assessment of the risks.

Below is chapter 19 of the series.



Among the idea's that Martenson champions is the value of relationships and community vs the value of money as having the most importance in dealing with the vagries of a discordant future.

Martenson's focus on the future is primarily financial in scope, and doesn't directly address issues of food security, environment or social discord, though he does make some mention of some of these issues. I get the feeling, that despite the potential disruptions Martenson thinks may be possible, over all he isn't willing to suggest a worst case scenario.

I recommend taking the time to visit his website, www.chrismartenson.com. I'd be interested in your thoughts.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

The Green Team

On Tuesday, President-elect Obama announced his team to focus on green energy and the environment. I have high hopes for Team Obama where US enviromental policy is concerned. I feel that with Obama we have an administration which will be focused more on proactive solutions to our enviromental challanges.

The obstructionist, know nothing approach of the present administration has been very dangerous in my humble opinion, and was more about helping it's energy company constituents take money out of the economy, than it was about promoting the common good.

The transition website, Change.gov, lists the Obama appointments.


The nominees include Dr. Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy; Lisa Jackson, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator; Nancy Sutley, Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality; Carol Browner, Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change; and Heather Zichal, Deputy Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change.


Catch the news conference below...





Of all the things Obama said, what struck me the most was his acknowledgment that he isn't the first incoming President to promise progress on alternative energy and energy independence and his words "This time must be different."

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Solar Tubes Make Great Lighting Alternative


Solar Tubes are a great way to harvest sunlight for indoor lighting.

They produce more light than a simple skylight does. By collecting and then magnifying sunlight using a mirrored tube, the system then uses a multi-faceted lens to diffuse the light through out the room. The system uses zero electricity and provides an amazing amount of light, even on a cloudy day.

A local business, Caldwell Toyota, which recently built a LEED certified retail store uses solar tubes manufactured by Solatube through out the building to reduce it's lighting costs and energy usage.

If you are building a new house or business, or simply remodeling to increase your homes efficiency, you would be well rewarded by this simple, sustainable technology.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

New Technology Tuesday


Technology, particularly the accelerating rate of technological change and the vectors it follows, offer both the promise of hope for our future as a species and a planet, and in the opinions of many carry it's doom. It is industrial technology which has percipitated the climate crisis we face today, and it will be technology which will provides alternatives, along with changed human attitudes and behaviors, to help us steer away from it...hopefully.

I'm not sure if it's fair to say that it's technology (or misapplied technology and science, like say the application of behavioral psychology in marketing and media to promote consumerism for an example) or human behavior which is the culprit in our out of control ride to potential extinction.

I still hold the optimism of better living through science which I acquired as a youth, but I very much understand the menace of unintended consequences, particularly as it has applied to industrial pollution. Many of the wonders of the last century, turned out to be the bane of those who came into contact with them, whether we are discussing the wonderful insulating properties and applications of asbestos, or the insidious lung disease it caused in so many people, just to name one example.

Here are a few of the new developments in technology which I find hopeful. I'd be interested to hear your opinions on any of the items highlighted, or the general role of technology in our future.

* Better control of fusion power offers a lot of promise for escaping our addiction to fossil fuel. Researchers at MIT have developed a method for managing the hydrogen plasma in a fusion reactor. h/t Kurzweilai.com.

MIT's doughnut-shaped fusion reactor, the Alcator C-Mod, uses magnets to confine hydrogen in a turbulent, electrically charged state of matter called a plasma. By infusing large amounts of energy into the plasma, physicists can kick off fusion reactions that, in turn, release large amounts of energy. The MIT reactor is too small to generate practical fusion reactions that generate enough energy to keep themselves going--what's called a burning plasma. But the researchers have been working on ways to achieve this state in larger reactors, such as the planned International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER).


* Australia plans to use market trading to help predict eco-disasters and in the future to help guide government environmental policy.

The Australian Knowledge Exchange works by giving traders A$100,000 (US$65,000) play money and 1000 stocks in each of five reservoirs in New South Wales. The stocks pay out each month according to the level of the dam. If the dam is full, they are worth $100. Traders can profit by buying stocks for less than their final value, or by selling them for more.

..."This approach has huge potential in the environmental sector where there is a lot of uncertainty," says Josh Donlan of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and Advanced Conservation Strategies, a Utah-based NGO.

The incentives are clearly not monetary - the trader who does best wins a paltry A$50 - but Whitten hopes people will be drawn to take part in what is a "public good" enterprise, much like Wikipedia. Although anyone can become a trader, the team's ideal players would be farmers, weather forecasters, people who live close to reservoirs, and computer modellers. The market currently has about 50 traders, and the team hope at least 50 more will join.

Donlan says the market's real value will come from the wide-ranging knowledge of investors. For example, when it comes to biodiversity, rather than rely solely on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, which may not account for all regional variations, markets that capture local knowledge could give a more accurate prediction of the size of bird populations, say.


* The Auto Industry is developing strategies for successful transition to electric plug in vehicles. The industry is considering implementing community out-reach strategies for plug-in electric vehicles first to make sure that they receive adequate support for success.

Car companies intend to target places where governments are willing to provide incentives to purchase plug-in electric cars and install charging stations. Utilities, too, need to be involved so that the grid doesn't become stressed by a rush of cars.

...Nissan will stage (their plug-in) car's initial introduction in the fall of 2010 in region's that have the right infrastructure in place, said Mark Perry, director of product planning for Nissan Americas. That will help it prepare for "mass market" availability in 2012, he said.

It is establishing "public-private partnerships" with governments and utilities in an effort to ensure things like favorable permitting and available inspectors for charging stations, Perry said. So far, it has agreements with Tennessee, Oregon, and Sonoma County, Calif., to set up a network of charging stations in public places.

"As we think about the individual consumer, you don't want it to be an open question--Ok, I want an electric vehicle, what do I do? We want to have those answers," said Perry. "It's not a technical hurdle. It's more a coordination and logistics hurdle."


I really look forward to plug in cars hitting the market. It doesn't address the fundamental problems of sustainability, but it does offer a solution to the contribution of vehicle emissions in climate change. The picture at the top of the post is the chinese battery manufacturer BYD's dual electric/gasoline car, the e6 (h/t treehugger.com)

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Tax and Distribute Our Way To A Healthier Planet


The New Scientist Science and Society writer Michael Le Page has an interesting commentary and suggestion to incoming President Barack Obama. In a plea to Obama to take leadership on Climate Change, Le Page suggests updating Kyoto by creating a direct system of incentives and disincentives for both large economic players and individuals around the world to promote positive changes in our technologies and practices.

Le Page criticizes Kyoto as a joke, rightly pointing out it's fatal flaw, i.e. it's lack of enforcement, and a target setting process which is open to manipulation.

Cap-and-trade schemes might look good on paper but they are doomed to fail when it comes to weaning the world off its addiction to fossil fuels. For starters, without a strong enforcement regime, any cap is meaningless. Under the Kyoto protocol, for instance, countries that do not meet their targets just increase them next time around.


The solution offered represents thinking far outside the box, in my book, and reflects an approach which I believe conservative economists like Milton Friedman would agree with, i.e. the use of taxes as a method for creating disincentive and incentive, as opposed to the creation of a body of legislative regulations and the accompanying bureaucracy to oversee and administer it. It leaves companies and people free to choose solutions and courses of action which best fit their individual situations and interests.

So what's the alternative? In the US, there is growing support for a carbon tax on fossil fuels. Such a tax can be adjusted to reflect the harm done by different fuels: coal would be taxed far more heavily than natural gas, for instance, unless burned in a power station that sequesters the carbon. The tax should be raised each year to make fossil fuels ever more expensive and renewables relatively cheaper.

There are many arguments in favour of this approach, but perhaps the strongest is that a carbon tax will be hard to dodge. It's more difficult to smuggle oil or coal than cigarettes and cocaine. Those who use fossil fuels will immediately pay a higher price.

Your advisers will tell you this is political suicide: the last thing we need in a global financial crisis is higher fuel prices. Well, here's the clever bit that should make this tax popular with most voters: every penny raised from the carbon tax should be divided equally among a country's citizens. This is called the "tax and 100-per-cent dividend" approach, and it is advocated by leading climate scientist James Hansen of NASA.

...People who live in a huge house, drive gas-guzzling cars and fly lots will lose out under this regime. The dividend they receive will be outweighed by what they pay for fuel, flights and heating. Most people, however, will be richer. Families and retired people struggling to make ends meet would gain far more from the dividend than they lose in higher bills.


Did you get that? Tax carbon, and give the money back directly to individual citizens, just as Alaska provides direct disbursements from it's Permanent Fund to residents of that state. Those who act in ways which use less carbon, get taxed at a lower rate, and keep a larger portion of the direct carbon tax distribution.

The tax-and-dividend approach is easier to implement, harder to cheat and provides a stronger, more immediate incentive to change. It applies to everyone, not just big companies, and rewards those who genuinely emit less CO2, rather than lawyers and accountants. It's bold, simple and our best hope of averting catastrophe.


Now maybe, for the sake of argument, we can also consider a scheme by which a portion of the carbon tax receipts go to basic research in alternative energy creation and storage, say 10-25%, and rest directly back to individuals...but regardless, I like the idea, and think it would produce the change we need, as well as a direct benefit to individuals and to the economy as a whole.