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** http://www.youtube.com/movie?v=JxSIQoKe1Cg&ob=av1n&feature=mv_sr - available on YouTube as a pay per view movie<ref name="YouTube_pay_per_view">Presumably YouTube will eventually clear out all its copyright violation uploads and convert them all into pay per view movies like this.</ref> | ** http://www.youtube.com/movie?v=JxSIQoKe1Cg&ob=av1n&feature=mv_sr - available on YouTube as a pay per view movie<ref name="YouTube_pay_per_view">Presumably YouTube will eventually clear out all its copyright violation uploads and convert them all into pay per view movies like this.</ref> | ||
** [http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_11th_Hour/70075048?locale=en-US The 11th Hour 2007] on Netflix - not viewable online | ** [http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_11th_Hour/70075048?locale=en-US The 11th Hour 2007] on Netflix - not viewable online | ||
** [http://www.myspace.com/video/tha-mad-scientist/the-11th-hour-with-leonardo-dicaprio/62672191 Full movie on Myspace] - aspect ratio looks corrupted | |||
=== Blue Gold: World Water Wars === | === Blue Gold: World Water Wars === |
Revision as of 22:59, 6 November 2012
Template:ShortcutTemplate:Under construction This is a user subpageW of notes about video files. Most are documentaries or lectures relating to climate change, renewable energy, or other environmental or related scientific scientific concepts or technologies.
Introduction
00:32, 4 November 2012 (PDT): This is a working page of notes that eventually I may copy or refactor to a list article in article space.
Motivation
The vast bulk of commercial broadcast television programming is mostly useless for promoting the kinds of pro-social and pro-environmental skills and behaviors that are central to sustainability and appropriate technology. However, television (and more generally, video) as a medium remains exceedingly useful for this.
- Imparting skills. Video can be an excellent medium for showing people how to grow food, compost their yard waste, eliminate energy waste, and otherwise reduce their carbon and environmental footprints. Particularly for manual skills, sometimes a visual demonstration conveys things that are hard to get across only with text and still photographs or diagrams. Videos may engage and inspire the viewer in ways that text alone may not.
- Promoting environmental awareness. Environmental problems often have a large behavioral component, such that solving the problem may require changing behavior on a large scale. This is true for example of man-made climate change, for which there is no comprehensive technological solution that can be brought to scale quickly. While some low-carbon technologies are reasonably mature and ready for large-scale deployment, other large sources of greenhouse gas emissions (including transport and meat production) cannot be reduced quickly while consumption persists at the current levels. The fastest and cheapest potential way to reduce emissions is often to persuade consumers to consume less of the things that produce emissions. Unfortunately persuasion is difficult, but few technologies of persuasion are more effective than television, which is why advertisers exploit it with a skill that the green movement would do well to emulate.
- Persuading the unpersuaded. Many if not most people tend to exhibit what Robert Gifford calls "environmental numbness".[1] They may not be actively opposed to pro-environmental behaviors and policies, but they are generally indifferent to them. An individual who is concerned about the environment should strive to reduce his or her harmful impact, for example by minimizing consumption of goods and services that burn fossil fuels, but to be maximally effective at protecting the environment the individual must go on to persuade other people to minimize their harmful impact as well. Thus anyone with an interest in protecting the environment needs to be in the persuasion business - we must persuade people who don't think much about their impact on the environment to start thinking about it, and minimizing it, both through individual behavior change and by demanding and supporting collective solutions by governments. While it may be difficult for every individual to become articulate and persuasive directly, anyone can direct others to documentary films that record the most persuasive people the environmental movement has produced.
There are a surprising number of documentary films and programs on environmental issues, but they are buried in a vastly greater avalanche of mainstream television programming, much of which promotes environmentally destructive behaviors and is thus part of the problem. To use television effectively, environmentalists need the following tools:
- Video on demand - we cannot rely on broadcasters, particularly the major networks, to schedule ("push") uplifting content for us. Instead we have to pro-actively seek out and "pull" the content we want.
- Social recommendation - we must find suitable video content available for viewing online, which we can then propagate by linking to it on social Web sites.
- Public exhibitions - it can be useful to show environmental documentaries at social gatherings and then discuss them.
Organization
This page lists videos by creator and topic. It is useful to group videos by the same creator together, because accessing a video is often a function of who created it. Some creators post many or all of the videos on their own Web sites. Others do less to facilitate on-demand viewing, instead expecting viewers to watch everything they put on their channels, or to view their films in a theater.
For each video I give links to such information as I can find about it, including (if available):
- The creator's official page about the film or program
- A link to the video viewable online at the creator's site, if available
- A link to the video on a commercial video service such as wikipedia:Netflix
- A link to the program's IMDB page
- A link to the program's Wikipedia article, if any
- (Someday) a link to the program's Appropedia article
A note about copyright
Unfortunately nearly all the better films and videos about the environment are under copyright, as is typical with most professionally-made video content. While the need for content creators to get paid is understandable, any approach that achieves less than the widest possible viewing audience would seem highly counterproductive to the environmental cause. Climate change threatens the very survival of civilization, if not the human species, and someone is trying to prevent their warning from reaching the maximum number of people? That doesn't make sense to me. It would be useful for a philanthropist to buy rights to all these films, perhaps after they finish their theater or broadcast runs, and make them freely available to everyone.
Content creators who do put some or all of their videos online for free viewing, such as PBS, should be rewarded. Consider donating to them.
Save the planet: watch TV!
TV watching doesn't get a lot of respect, and deservedly so. But watching videos about environmental issues can be surprisingly informative. It does not replace the written word for detailed technical content, but watching video is a useful way to augment and reinforce knowledge from reading. Watching video is also easier than reading dense technical prose, so it is a handy way to unwind at the end of the day without completely throwing one's time and mind away on vapid entertainment.
The many videos available on climate change, for example, provide a comprehensive (if necessarily somewhat shallow) overview of the major issues: the causes of climate change, potential solutions, and barriers to individual and collective action. A person who watches all the climate change videos (soon to be) on this page will certainly know more about the subject than the average person.
But to repeat from a previous section: if you're motivated enough to read this page, you're probably already at least persuaded climate change is a serious problem, and you're probably well ahead of the average person in terms of making some sort of response to it. Thus a big part of the value this page can add for you is to provide resources you can use to generate interest and action from the people around you. Unless you live in some sort of an eco-village where everybody is already living as cleanly as Joan Pick,[2] you're possibly surrounded by people who are taking less action on climate change than you are. What you need is a way to show them why they should act. The videos on this page might help you make your strongest case.
The future of this page
20:53, 5 November 2012 (PST): initially I'm editing this as a user subpage. By convention on most wikis including Appropedia, user pages and user subpages are only edited by the user whose username they are under. The user does not "own" the page, since it is on a wiki, and wikis are inherently collaborative, but it is customary for users to refrain from editing pages in another user's space.
If you see a typo or a broken link, feel free to fix it. For any large-scale additions or rearrangements, please suggest them first on my user talk page, and if detailed discussion is necessary we can continue it on User talk:Teratornis/List of environmental videos.
If demand warrants, we can move this page to article space as a list article. That would facilitate collaboration - i.e., the editing community could update it as they find more environmental videos.
It might also be nice to make separate articles about each notable film or program series mentioned on this page (many of them already have articles on Wikipedia). That would allow this page to be more compact, as the page would only need to list one link per film or program, with perhaps a one-line description (which is more in keeping with the style for list articles on Wikipedia). Ultimately Appropedia should have a comprehensive directory of documentary and instructional films, television programs, and videos (professional and amateur) relating to Appropedia's remit (sustainability and appropriate technology).
Public Broadcasting Service
PBS puts many videos online, as clips, previews, and full episodes.
How to search for videos on PBS
There are several ways to search:
- By using the search feature on PBS, for example: Search PBS site for climate change
- By browsing from lists of videos: 472 full episodes online under Science and Nature.
- By using Google video search, for example: Google site:pbs.org climate change
- From the search options on the left column, select Videos. That produces a long URL like this:
- You can also search from Google Video search pages such as:
- http://video.google.com/ which redirects to:
- http://www.google.com/videohp
- You can specify a date range (such as videos less than 1 year old) and a size range (to find shorter or longer videos). I don't see a way to put these options into Google search operators. Here are some other sites that document some Google search operators but I don't see any operators corresponding to Google search filtering options:
- Search pbs.org for "climate change" videos having a long (20+ minutes) duration, uploaded within the last year:
To-do: find the good ones.
PBS Nova
- wikipedia:Nova (TV series)
- wikipedia:List of NOVA episodes
- Search Results for “carbon” - on the PBS Nova Beta site; produces some video clips to poke through
- IMDB page - Nova (1974– ) - TV Series Documentary - 4 min - Documentary | Biography
The wikipedia:Equinox (TV series) article says: "Nova (TV series) ... often bought in and re-voiced Equinox and Horizon films."
What's up with the Weather? - 2000
- IMDB page - Season 27, Episode 19 - What's Up with the Weather? (18 Apr. 2000) - TV Episode - 54 min
- Netflix page - not viewable online
Shackleton's Voyage of Endurance - 2002
While this video is not specifically about climate change, much of climate change research occurs at the poles, where the climate is responding the fastest to man-made forcing. The early polar explorers opened the regions to the scientific research going on there today. Shackleton's story is also a uniquely inspiring example of never giving up in the face of great difficulty. Solving climate change will require at least that much determination.
- IMDB page - Shackleton's Voyage of Endurance - Nova: Season 29, Episode 15 - (26 Mar. 2002) - 118 min
- NOVA Online | Shackleton's Voyage of Endurance | (QuickTime) | PBS
03:14, 29 October 2012 (UTC): This episode does not seem to be available on Netflix, YouTube, or anywhere else I looked online.
World in the Balance - 2004
- IMDB page - Season 31, Episode 16 - World in the Balance: The People Paradox (20 Apr. 2004) - 54 min
- IMDB page - Season 31, Episode 17 - World in the Balance: China Revs Up (15 Apr. 2004) - 54 min
- Original PBS Broadcast Date: April 20, 2004 - I don't see a copy of the video on PBS.org.
- NOVA site page - it's about the population explosion mostly, and environmental threats.
- Netflix page - not viewable online.
- I don't see a copy on YouTube.
Storm that Drowned a City - 2005
- NOVA site page - it's about New Orleans.
- IMDB page - Season 33, Episode 7 - Storm That Drowned a City - 54 min
Dimming the Sun - 2006
- the PBS version
- Global Dimming - the BBC version of the above video
- 49:05 - full episode
Saved by the Sun - 2007
- Saved by the Sun; Season 34: 2006–2007
- Saved by the Sun - Duration: - Premiere Date: 04/24/2007
- As the Earth heats up at a dangerous rate and fossil fuels become scarcer, ordinary citizens and businesses are bypassing the federal government to lead the way in exploring a clean, renewable source of power: the sun.
- Saved by the Sun - Duration: - Premiere Date: 04/24/2007
The Big Energy Gamble - 2009
- IMDB page - Season 36, Episode 9 - The Big Energy Gamble (20 Jan. 2009) - TV Episode - 54 min
- The Big Energy Gamble Can California's ambitious plan to cut greenhouse gases actually succeed? Aired January 20, 2009 on PBS
- Full episode on PBS - Premiere Date: 01/20/2009 - Episode Expires: Thu 08 Nov 2012
Making Stuff - 2011
- Watch Making Stuff: NOVA Online | Netflix - the whole four-part series appears to be viewable online at Netflix
- IMDB page - Season 38, Episode 9 - Making Stuff: Stronger (11 Jan. 2011) - 54 min
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:07) - Premiere Date: 01/18/2011
- David Pogue tests his mettle against the world's strongest stuff, from steel and Kevlar to bioengineered silk.
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:07) - Premiere Date: 01/18/2011
- IMDB page - Season 38, Episode 10 - Making Stuff: Smaller (26 Jan. 2011) - 54 min
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:07) - Premiere Date: 01/25/2011
- See the future of tiny stuff --from from silicon chips to micro-robots that probe the body.
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:07) - Premiere Date: 01/25/2011
- IMDB page - Season 38, Episode 11 - Making Stuff: Cleaner (2 Feb. 2011) - 54 min
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:07) - Premiere Date: 02/01/2011
- Can innovative materials help solve the energy crisis and lead to a sustainable future?
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:07) - Premiere Date: 02/01/2011
- IMDB page - Season 38, Episode 12 - Making Stuff: Smarter (12 Feb. 2011) - 54 min
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:08) - Premiere Date: 02/08/2011
- Explore a new generation of ingenious materials, including real-life invisibility cloaks.
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (53:08) - Premiere Date: 02/08/2011
- Making Stuff Cleaner
- Making Stuff: Series Overview
- PBS site video page - evidently requires purchase
- Making Stuff: Cleaner full episode on Hulu - contains frequent commercials (ugh)
- NOVA _ Making Stuff: Cleaner on DailyMotion, but powered by Hulu
- Short (and therefore largely useless) clips:
- Season 38: 2010–2011; promo clip
- Making Stuff Smaller
- promo clip
Power Surge - 2011
- IMDB page - Season 38, Episode 17 - Power Surge (20 Apr. 2011) - 54 min
- NOVA: Power Surge Airs Wednesday, April 20, 2011 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV
- Full episode on PBS.org
- Short clips:
- shows archival footage of Jimmy Carter mentioning that his solar panel on the White House could be just a museum piece, then shows the actual museum in China that now displays the very solar panel.
Extreme Ice - 2011
- IMDB page - Season 36, Episode 13 - Extreme Ice (16 Feb. 2010) - 54 min
- Extreme Ice - An acclaimed photographer teams up with scientists to document the runaway melting of arctic glaciers. Aired December 28, 2011 on PBS
- Full episode on PBS.org - Premiere Date: 03/24/2009
- promo clip
- James Balog whose work appears in this episode also gave a TED talk:
Secrets Beneath the Ice - 2011
- IMDB page - Season 38, Episode 7 - Secrets Beneath the Ice (28 Dec. 2010) - 53 min
- Secrets Beneath the Ice - Is Antarctica headed for a catastrophic meltdown? New evidence of ancient climate change may hold clues. Aired December 28, 2011 on PBS
- Full episode on PBS.org - Premiere Date: 12/28/2010
PBS Nova ScienceNOW
- wikipedia:NOVA scienceNOW - covers several unrelated topics per episode
- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/
- http://video.pbs.org/program/nova-science-now/ - many episodes and previews online at PBS - To-do: list some of the interesting episodes.
- Season 3, episode 2 - Carbon capture
- Season 4, episode 4 - Carbon capture
- The Science of Picky Eaters, Smart Marine Mammals, Sangeeta Bhatia, Capturing Carbon Season 4: Episode 4 - full episode on PBS site
- Season 4, episode 6 - Algae fuel
- Season 4, episode 4 - Carbon capture
- clip
- Public Genomes, Algae Fuel, Mystery of the Gakkel Ridge, Yoky Matsuoka Season 4: Episode 6 - full episode on PBS site
- Smart Grid - Posted 02.23.11 NOVA scienceNOW
- Program: NOVA scienceNOW Episode: Smart Grid
- Our electric grid is inefficient and shows signs of strain. Can a "smart grid" help? - Duration: (8:53) - Premiere Date: 02/23/2011
- search for more videos about "smart grid"
- Toward a Smart Electric Grid - interview with Vijay Vaitheeswaran (text)
- Cars That Power the Grid - Duration: (2:11) - Premiere Date: 02/15/2011
- Electric cars may play a critical role in a future "smart grid."
Victory Garden
- wikipedia:The Victory Garden (TV series) - about gardening
Nature
- wikipedia:Nature (TV series) - about wildlife; no recent episodes appear to be primarily about threats to wildlife
The Prize
Adapted from wikipedia:The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power by wikipedia:Daniel Yergin
Frontline (U.S. TV series)
PBS has some episodes online for free viewing. These relate to energy and climate change.
Frontline 2008 episodes
- HEAT - full episode on PBS site
- Duration: (1:56:19)
- Premiere Date: 10/21/2008; IMDB listing: season 26, episode 12
- An investigation into America's energy landscape and what can be done to save our planet.
- Description page which references the earlier Frontline episode about climate change, What's up with the weather? which aired in 2000 (season 18, episode 8).
Frontline 2012 episodes
- Inside Japan's Nuclear Meltdown - Duration: (54:40) Premiere Date: 02/28/2012 (another PBS page for this episode with different layout and links)
- In the desperate hours and days after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, the fate of thousands of Japanese citizens fell into the hands of a small corps of engineers, firemen and soldiers who risked their lives to prevent the Daiichi nuclear complex from complete meltdown. This is their story, with rare footage from inside the plant and eyewitness testimony from the people on the frontlines.
- Climate of Doubt - Duration: (53:47) Premiere Date: 10/23/2012
- Four years ago, climate change was a hot issue and politicians from both sides seemed poised to act. Today public opinion on the climate issue has cooled considerably. Politicians either ignore it or proclaim their skepticism. What’s behind this massive reversal? FRONTLINE goes inside the organizations that fought the scientific establishment to shift the direction of the climate debate.
Earth: The Operators' Manual
A three-episode series about climate change science and mitigation.
- wikipedia:Richard Alley - the presenter
- Video clips on YouTube
- Watch and share
Planet Forward: Fossil Fuels & Beyond
- Fossil Fuels & Beyond - Duration: (55:23) - Premiere Date: 04/15/2009
- It's web to television and back online again for Planet Forward's ongoing conversation between citizens, experts and policymakers on the formula for our energy future. Instead of experts expounding to voiceless viewers, Planet Forward's emphasis is bottom-up, with the best online submissions from citizens - videos, essays, poems, and more - leading and driving the conversation.
Now on PBS
NOW was a Public Broadcasting Service newsmagazine that focused on social and political issues.
- wikipedia:NOW on PBS
- Search NOW episodes for Global Warming - 05:28, 19 June 2012 (UTC): there are some more I have not listed below yet, which seem to be older episodes not (yet?) available on the convenient video.pbs.org site.
- Sea Change, January 9, 2009.
- A rise in sea levels isn't the only impact global warming is having on the world's oceans. A growing body of evidence suggests that climate change is also affecting ocean currents and the chemistry of the seas, with potentially catastrophic results.
- The Ocean Tipping Point episode (see below) seems to supersede this episode.
- Water World, Duration: (25:35), Premiere Date: 10/23/2009
- Is climate change turning coastal countries into water worlds? NOW travels to Bangladesh to examine some innovative solutions being implemented in a country where entire communities are inundated by water, battered by cyclones, and flooded from their homes.
- Climate Crisis, Duration: (21:38), Premiere Date: 11/27/2009
- The Maldives, a nation of roughly 1200 low-lying islands in the Indian Ocean, could be underwater by the end of this century if climate change causes ocean levels to rise. On the eve of the big climate summit in Copenhagen, the country's president, Mohamed Nasheed, is warning of a massive exodus from the Maldives if drastic global action is not taken.
- Electric Car Dreams, Duration: (23:50), Premiere Date: 10/30/2009
- NOW investigates how the Danish government and Better Place are working together to put electric cars into the hands of as many Danish families as possible. The idea is still having trouble getting out of the garage here in America, but Denmark could be an inspiration.
- Power Struggle, Duration: (22:58), Premiere Date: 08/07/2009
- NOW travels to California, which has the most ambitious clean energy plan in the nation. But the state's efforts face stiff opposition from property owners and conservationists who prefer renewable energy from "local sources," such as photovoltaic rooftop solar panels.
- Ocean Tipping Point?, Duration: (13:40), Premiere Date: 07/03/2009
- NOW looks at a growing body of evidence that suggests climate change is affecting the chemistry of the seas, which could have potentially catastrophic results on the way we live. NOW travels deep into our oceans with a scientist from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and help from other researchers for a first hand look at this stunning sea change, and what we can do about it.
- Food, Inc., Duration: (24:10), Premiere Date: 06/05/2009
- Americans have a longstanding love affair with food -- the modern supermarket has, on average, 47,000 products. But do we really know what goes into making the products we consume? David Brancaccio talks with filmmaker Robert Kenner, the director of Food, Inc., which takes a hard look at the secretive and surprising journey food takes on the way from processing plants to our dinner tables.
- Green Jobs: Hope or Hype?, Duration: (24:10), Premiere Date: 05/22/2009
- NOW on PBS talks with environmental activist Van Jones, founder of "Green For All," a group dedicated to bringing green jobs to disadvantaged Americans. In March, Jones was appointed Special Advisor on Green Jobs at the President's Council for Environmental Quality. Now that he has the President's ear, will Jones be creating a new career frontier for America?
- On Thin Ice, Duration: (56:46), Premiere Date: 04/17/2009
- In a special one-hour NOW on PBS, David Brancaccio and environmentalist Conrad Anker -- one of the world's leading high altitude climbers -- adventure to the Gangotri Glacier in the Himalayan Mountains, the source of the Ganges River, to witness the effects of global warming first-hand.
- Race, Class, and Katrina, Duration: (22:47), Premiere Date: 09/05/2005
- In the aftermath of Katrina, NOW on PBS Senior Correspondent Maria Hinojosa reported from the devastated Mississippi coast, where tens of thousands were without essential services like power and water.
Need to Know
Need to Know is an American public television news program produced by WNET, New York City and broadcast weekly on all Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) stations in the United States. Many or most episodes cover several topics. PBS breaks out some (all?) of the individual segments, but you may have to search the video.pbs.org site for the segment you want.
- wikipedia:Need to Know (PBS)
- Need to Know topics list: Environment, and Climate Desk
- David vs. Goliaths, Duration: (25:02), Premiere Date: 08/10/2012
- Need to Know reports from the Pacific Island nation of Palau about its effort to hold the world’s leading industrial powers legally responsible for the environmental damage their greenhouse gas emissions are causing.
- Interview: Matthew Pawa, Premiere Date: 08/12/2012
- Bringing climate change to court - page with more text description
- Maria Hinojosa talks with environmental lawyer Matthew Pawa, who has become a pioneer in bringing lawsuits based on damage allegedly caused by greenhouse gas emissions.
- Rising tide, Duration: (13:02), Premiere Date: 04/27/2012
- This week on Need to Know: how the city of Norfolk, Virginia is grappling with massive flooding caused by sea-level rise.
- Green jobs, volunteerism, Duration: (25:08), Premiere Date: 05/25/2012
- Need to Know correspondent Mona Iskander updates her report from Greenville, Mich., about a town that tried to reinvent itself by bringing in a solar panel manufacturing company.
- Nuclear energy in the US, Duration: (25:11), Premiere Date: 10/21/2011
- Is nuclear power a safe, cost-effective alternative to our current energy sources, or do the risks outweigh the benefits? Maria Hinojosa hosts.
- Regulation and the EPA, Duration: (24:59), Premiere Date: 09/30/2011
- Need to Know visits a small town in upstate New York that has been plagued by chemical pollution and disease, and FreedomWorks' Matt Kibbe discusses the EPA. Ray Suarez hosts.
- Green jobs in Michigan, garage sales, Duration: (24:54), Premiere Date: 09/23/2011
- Need to Know visits a town in Michigan for a first-hand look at the challenges faced in creating a new economy for "green jobs." Also: The changing nature of the American garage sale. Maria Hinojosa hosts.
- Extreme weather and climate change, Duration: (4:27), Premiere Date: 08/26/2011
- As the first major hurricane of the season threatens the Eastern Seaboard, Need To Know investigates the links between extreme weather and climate change.
- Seeds of progress, Duration: (10:16), Premiere Date: 08/19/2011
- Detroits urban farming movement is thriving, supplying fresh produce, jobs and revived communities. Large scale industrial farms are now knocking at Detroits door with their own plans. Desiree Cooper examines this new food-based economy and the issues holding it back.
- California nuclear safety, over-population., Duration: (53:56), Premiere Date: 07/15/2011
- Are California's nuclear plants disaster ready? A look at the over-population fears of the 1960s and 1970s. Gloria Steinem on the women's movement's gains.
- Tornadoes, Duration: (53:43), Premiere Date: 05/27/2011
- We explore whether climate change has played a role in this deadly season of tornadoes.
- Climate change, cyber-security, Arab Spring, Duration: (53:42), Premiere Date: 05/20/2011, climate change segment begins at 20:12
- The threats climate change poses to human health.
- Climate change, pirates, corruption, Duration: (53:38), Premiere Date: 02/25/2011 (climate change segment starts at 16:10 (the Rising Tide episode that aired later on 04/27/2012 may supersede it)
- We go to Norfolk, Virginia, where climate change is causing flooding.
- Nuclear waste and the problem of obesity, Duration: (53:13), Premiere Date: 09/24/2010 (nuclear waste segment starts at 40:57)
- Disappearing Delta, Duration: (7:47), Premiere Date: 09/02/2010
- Need To Know examines the history of Louisiana's disappearing coastline.
- The anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, Duration: (17:12), Premiere Date: 08/27/2010
- Harry Shearer, the writer comic Simpsons voice actor/radio host and longtime resident of New Orleans, wants to puncture the myths and misperceptions about Hurricane Katrina on its five-year anniversary.
- The David and Goliath story of Crude, Duration: (7:32), Premiere Date: 07/14/2010
- Over the course of three years director Joe Berlinger followed one of the largest and most controversial class-action environmental lawsuits in the world, which pits 30,000 rainforest dwellers from the Amazon jungle in Ecuador against the oil giant Chevron.Then Berlinger was dragged into his own battle with Chevron when they subpoenaed him to turn over 600 hours of his unused outtakes.
Journey to Planet Earth
- IMDB page
- Journey to Planet Earth (2003 - 2011) TV Series Documentary - 60 min
- a program about the filmmakers behind the series
2003 episodes
The wikipedia:Brisbane Times site appears to have some episodes online, but none of them play for me; for example:
- On the Brink
- On The Brink focuses on case studies that link armed conflict and political crises with environmental issues such as the loss of grasslands, spreading disease, deforestation, soil erosion, water scarcities, surging populations and global climate change. The program features the work of scientists, community organizers and political leaders, as they grapple with the fact that the world's political security may be bound up with the quality of the land, air and water.
2009 episodes
- State of the Planet's Oceans - IMDB episode description page
- PBS episode description page
- Google "state of the planet's oceans"
I cannot find the full video online, but here are some excerpts:
- length: 2:47
- length: 5:41
- length: 4:37
- length: 4:36
- length: 4:13
- length: 2:35
- length: 1:59
- Contains a narration error: Matt Damon says the Andes rise to over 25,000 feet. In reality, the tallest mountain in the Andes (and in the Americas) is wikipedia:Aconcagua at 22,841 ft.
- length: 4:03
- length: 1:32
- length: 2:48
- length: 8:26
- length: 1:28
2011 episodes
- Episode: Plan B: Mobilizing to Save Civilization - Duration: (1:24:10), Premiere Date: 03/30/2011
- "Plan B" provides a glimpse into a new and emerging economy based upon renewable resources as well as strategies to avoid the growing threat of climate change. As prices rise, oil insecurity deepens, and concerns about carbon emissions cast a shadow over the future of fossil fuels, wind, solar, and geothermal energy are replacing fossil fuels at a pace and on a scale previously unimagined.
PBS NewsHour
2010 episodes
- Scorching Heat Wave Waylays East Coast States - AIR DATE: July 7, 2010
- Green Tech Demands Scarce 'Rare Earth' Minerals - Duration: (10:01) - Premiere Date: 06/14/2010
- Correspondent Kira Kay reports on the hunt for "rare earth" minerals, elements that are key to manufacturing many high-tech devices.
2011 episodes
- Heat Wave Has Midwest Agriculture Melting, Food Prices Rising - Duration: (5:56), Premiere Date: 07/28/2011
- Agriculture has been suffering as farmers across states such as Kansas, Texas, and Oklahoma have seen their crops decimated in a summer filled with drought and heat waves. Hari Sreenivasan talks with Harvest Public Media reporters Frank Morris and Eric Durban about the troubles local farmers are facing with can eventually translate into problems in consumers' wallets.
- Heat Wave, Drought Create 'Grim' Crop Yields for Farmers in Plains, South - Duration: (6:33), Premiere Date: 08/03/2011
- New research by the National Drought Mitigation Center shows 12 percent of U.S. land is in the midst of an exceptional drought, which is the largest contiguous area to suffer such difficult conditions in 12 years. Ray Suarez discusses how the drought has punished American farmers with Harvest Public Media's Frank Morris.
- Sweltering Heat Wave Roasts 24 States, Feeds Wildfires - Duration: (2:46), Premiere Date: 07/12/2011
- A heat wave blasted half of the U.S. Tuesday and triple-digit temperatures roasted Americans in cities in the Midwest and South. Gwen Ifill reports on the unrelenting hot weather, which broke a series of records and triggered heat warnings and advisories in multiple states.
- Ariz. Wildfire Spreads as Record-Breaking Heat Wave Grips Eastern U.S. - Duration: (8:27), Premiere Date: 06/09/2011
- Tanker airplanes on Thursday swooped over the mountains of Eastern Arizona, dropping clouds of retardant in hopes of containing the so-called Wallow wildfire. Also, much of the Eastern U.S. suffered temperatures reaching well into the 90s. Ray Suarez discusses the extreme weather with AccuWeather's Evan Myers.
- Worst Drought in Texas History Ravages Crops, Livestock - Duration: (7:44), Premiere Date: 08/31/2011
- Texas is caught in the grip of a devastating heat wave that has created the worst year of drought in the state's history. Gwen Ifill discusses the extreme conditions and their toll on crops, livestock and homes with NPR correspondent Wade Goodwyn.
2012 episodes
- Skeptic No Longer Doubts Human Role in Global Warming - Duration: (10:25) - Premiere Date: 09/17/2012
- Physicist Richard Muller was one of the scientists who denied climate change and humans' role warming the earth. But after spending years researching and analyzing countless studies, Muller concluded climate change scientists were right, that humans had contributed to the rise in the earth's temperature. Spencer Michels reports.
- Activists Want Smart Meters Gone, Say They're Bad for Health - Duration: (8:50) - Premiere Date: 07/20/2012
- Within the next five years, it is expected that nearly 65 million homes in the U.S. will have wireless smart meters. But some California environmentalists, liberals, Tea Party supporters and other activists are not enthused by this. At the heart of the debate is whether smart meters can cause illness. Spencer Michels reports.
- Miles O'Brien Risks Safety While Talking Smart Power - Duration: (6:18) - Premiere Date: 07/13/2012
- Last week, a powerful "derecho" storm hammered the mid-Atlantic, snuffing out power during the peak of a sweltering heat wave for nearly a week in some homes. Days later, our science correspondent Miles O'Brien traveled to Austin, Tex. to look at a neighborhood that operates on a smart grid. We spoke to him about his report on that project, as he cruised the neighborhood in a borrowed Chevy Volt.
- In Austin, Charged up About Smart Power - Duration: (8:05) - Premiere Date: 07/13/2012
- Miles O'Brien examines power grid reliability in a neighborhood near Austin, Texas that uses "smart grid" technology to track - and control - its energy consumption.
- From Wildfires to Heat Wave, Extreme Weather Batters U.S. - Duration: (10:53), Premiere Date: 07/02/2012
- The continuing U.S. heat wave has killed at least 22 people, while states try to grapple with storm-driven power outages on the East Coast and wildfires in the West. Tom Bearden reports on the experiences of families in Fort Collins, Colo., who returned to their homes after the wildfires to see what treasures had survived.
- What's Causing Unusually Hot Temperatures in U.S.? - Duration: (6:00), Premiere Date: 07/02/2012
- Lack of water, "the great air conditioner", is causing unusually high temperatures and extreme weather events in the United States, Kevin Trenberth with the National Center for Atmospheric Research tells Judy Woodruff.
- Obama Visits Colorado's Wildfire Sites - Duration: (3:28), Premiere Date: 06/29/2012
- President Obama traveled to Colorado to assess the damages wreaked by record-breaking wildfires. One person has died in the fires and more than 300 homes were destroyed.
America Revealed
- Smart Grid Solutions - Duration: (5:39) - Premiere Date: 02/14/2012
- At Mission Produce’s avocado processing facility, their average electricity bill ran about $50,000 a month. By redesigning their system to account for each and every kilowatt, they can now monitor energy consumption in real time. It’s all part of the smart grid system. Mission’s system manager enthusiastically explains how it works and why their monthly utility bill is only half of what it used to be.
e2: The Economies of Being Environmentally Conscious
e2 is a series of environmental documentary episodes narrated by Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman. It aired on PBS from 2006-2009.
- Episode list on IMDB - some episodes are viewable on Hulu.com from IMDB
- 10 episodes viewable online at PBS.org
- Google site:netflix.com e2: The Economies of Being Environmentally Conscious
The director is Tad Fettig who has uploaded several episodes on Vimeo. PBS uploaded some episodes to YouTube, and other episodes are viewable on the PBS site.
2006 season 1 e2 episodes
- Watch e2 Online | Netflix - season 1 with 6 episodes
PBS appears to have uploaded season 1 YouTube:
2007 e2 season 2 episodes
- Season 2 episode list on IMDB (12 episodes)
- Season 2, Episode 1 Harvesting the Wind (19 Oct. 2007)
- Season 2, Episode 2 Energy for a Developing World (26 Oct. 2007)
- Season 2, Episode 3 Paving the Way (2 Nov. 2007)
- Season 2, Episode 4 Growing Energy (9 Nov. 2007)
- Season 2, Episode 5 State of Resolve (16 Nov. 2007)
- Season 2, Episode 6 Coal & Nuclear: Problem or Solution? (23 Nov. 2007)
- IMDB page
- Podcast video on Vimeo
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:29) Premiere Date: 11/22/2007
- Program: e2 Episode: Coal & Nuclear: Problem or Solution?
- Renewables, biofuels, solar, wind and other energy sources may be alternatives to fossil fuel, but it is impossible to ignore the ubiquity of coal and the power capabilities of nuclear, despite their many drawbacks.
- Season 2, Episode 7 The Druk White Lotus School: Ladakh (30 Nov. 2007)
- IMDB page
- Full video on Vimeo
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:13) Premiere Date: 01/06/2009 (?)
- Ladakh, India is one of the most remote regions on earth. Beset with religious, political and cultural strife, it is also one of the most tumultuous. Enter the Druk White Lotus School, which intends to equip Ladakhi children for living in the modern world while simultaneously embracing Buddhist traditions.
- Season 2, Episode 8 Greening the Federal Government (7 Dec. 2007)
- IMDB page
- Full video on Vimeo
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:13) Premiere Date: 01/13/2009
- Government buildings are not historically associated with sustainability or exquisite design. But the U.S. General Services Administration's (GSA) Design Excellence program is changing that perception. The program commissioned Pritzker Prize-winning Architect Thom Mayne to design the San Francisco Federal Building, a structure that aims to be the prototype for tomorrow's workplace.
- Season 2, Episode 9 Bogota: Building a Sustainable City (14 Dec. 2007)
- IMDB page
- Full video on Vimeo
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:13) Premiere Date: 03/07/2008
- Enrique Penalosa, former mayor of Bogota, Colombia, transformed one of the most chaotic cities in the world into a shining model of urban planning. He reformed public transport, added greenways, built mega-libraries and created the longest stretch of bike-only lanes in the world, but along the way he met tremendous opposition from the very people he was attempting to help.
- Season 2, Episode 10 Affordable Green Housing (21 Dec. 2007)
- IMDB page
- Full video on Vimeo
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:12) Premiere Date: 03/14/2008
- New York City is known for its diversity, but that quality isn't always reflected in its public housing developments, which often ignore the social and cultural characteristics of the communities who live in them. This episode follows developer Jonathan Rose through Irvington, Harlem and the Bronx - communities where Rose is putting sustainability within reach of public housing residents.
- Season 2, Episode 11 Adaptive Reuse in the Netherlands (28 Dec. 2007)
- e2: Energy | Netflix - not watchable online on Netflix
2008 e2 season 3 episodes
- e2: Transport | Netflix - not watchable online on Netflix
- Season 3, Episode 1 A Garden in Cairo (2 Sep. 2008)
- IMDB page
- Full video on Vimeo
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:28) Premiere Date: 07/11/2009
- Cairo is one of the most densely populated in the world, with only one footprint of green space per person prior to 2005. His Highness the Aga Khan, the spiritual leader of the Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims, saw the need to relieve this congestion. The result is Al-Azhar Park: a 500-year-old dump-turned-"urban lung" that provides much-needed green space and a source of civic pride.
- Season 3, Episode 2 The Village Architect (9 Sep. 2008)
- Season 3, Episode 3 Melbourne Reborn (16 Sep. 2008)
- Season 3, Episode 4 The Art and Science of Renzo Piano (23 Sep. 2008)
- Season 3, Episode 5 New Orleans: The Water Line (30 Sep. 2008)
- Season 3, Episode 6 Super Use (7 Oct. 2008)
2009 e2 season 4 episodes
- Season 4, Episode 1 London: The Price of Traffic (25 Nov. 2008)
- IMDB page
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:27) Premiere Date: 11/25/2008
- London's congestion charge challenges the 20th-century notion that cities should be designed around cars and asks drivers to pay for access to public roads and parking spaces. Thanks to Deputy Mayor Nicky Gavron, this plan is the core of a sweeping push to transform London into a transit-efficient and pedestrian-friendly mega-city in time for the 2012 Olympic Games.
- Season 4, Episode 2 Paris: Velo Liberte (2 Dec. 2008)
- IMDB page
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:28) Premiere Date: 12/01/2008
- Paris' ambitious public-private "Velib" bike initiative encourages residents to forgo cars for bikes and public transportation.
- Season 4, Episode 3 Food Miles (9 Dec. 2008)
- IMDB page
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:28) Premiere Date: 12/08/2008
- In the 21st-century global food economy, by the time it's been grown, processed and distributed, most food has traveled an average of 1,500 miles before reaching the plate. AS renowned author Michael Pollan elaborates, the effects of this fossil fuel-driven system are detrimental to the environment, to health and to social well-being.
- Season 4, Episode 4 Seoul: The Stream of Consciousness (16 Dec. 2008)
- Season 4, Episode 5 Portland: A Sense of Place (6 Jan. 2009)
- Season 4, Episode 6 Aviation: The Limited Sky (13 Jan. 2009)
- Season 4 (?), Episode {?): Architecture 2030
- Not listed on IMDB
- http://www.pbs.org/e2/episodes/212_architecture_2030_trailer.html - this page says: design | architecture 2030 | season II | episode 6, which does not agree with IMDB's episode list.
- Full video on PBS Duration: (25:13) Premiere Date: 02/10/2009
- Buildings are responsible for almost half of all greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. Can a collaborative effort - government leaders, architects, regulatory agencies and building suppliers - avert a climate crisis through policy change and education? Architect-turned-activist Ed Mazria may have the answer.
Miscellaneous episode
09:25, 20 October 2012 (UTC): I don't see this one viewable online anywhere.
- e2: Intervention Architecture DVD - page for ordering the DVD from PBS
- e2: Intervention Architecture tracks the five projects that have won the prestigious Aga Khan Award for Architecture, which embrace the ethical and philosophical criteria that the awards represent. Within one hour, e2 traverses the globe visiting the diverse projects that are as far-ranging as a wetlands restoration project in Saudi Arabia, the revitalization of a French Colonial heritage site in Tunisia, all the way to a Bridge School in Xiashi, China, that reconnected a community and became the cultural center of the village. At the end of our travels we understand that we are all one world, facing the same challenges in a shared future with the belief that the future can be made better.
Global Warming: Rising Storm
- on Netflix - not viewable online
- maybe the DVD order page on PBS for this video
Global Warming: The Signs and Science - 2005
- IMDB page - Global Warming: The Signs and Science (2005) - TV Movie
- wikipedia:Global Warming: The Signs and The Science
- Global Warming: The Signs and The Science is a 2005 documentary film on global warming made by ETV, the PBS affiliate in South Carolina, and hosted by Alanis Morissette.
- 55:28 full episode
- At 22:18 Alanis says "Recent studies warn that all of New York's subways and tunnels could flood." Which of course is what then happened during wikipedia:Hurricane Sandy, seven years later, and is likely to happen again with increasing frequency in the future, unless New York City invests massively in flood protection. Or if (as is unfortunately less likely to happen) humans in general and the richest billion humans in particular decide to get serious about eliminating their individual contributions to man-made climate forcing.
- Netflix page - not viewable online at Netflix
Scientific American Frontiers
- wikipedia:Scientific American Frontiers was a show on PBS about science that aired from 1990 to 2006.
- http://www.pbs.org/saf/
Hot Planet – Cold Comfort
- IMDB page - Season 15, Episode 5 - Hot Planet: Cold Comfort (16 Feb. 2005)
- Alan Alda in Scientific American Frontiers Full Episode (Hot Planet – Cold Comfort)
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (25:29) - Premiere Date: 05/12/2006
Hydrogen Hopes
- IMDB page - Season 15, Episode 6 - Hydrogen Hopes (23 Feb. 2005)
- Full episode on PBS - Duration: (25:35) - Premiere Date: 05/19/2006
Documentary films about environmental issues
These are documentary films and videos not associated with a particular broadcaster such as PBS, Discovery, BBC, etc. These include films by studios for theatrical release, and films by local TV stations or advocacy groups.
America's most polluted river
Entomophagy
I'm not sure I'm ready for this.
The 11th Hour - 2007
- wikipedia:The 11th Hour - IMDB page
- http://www.youtube.com/movie?v=JxSIQoKe1Cg&ob=av1n&feature=mv_sr - available on YouTube as a pay per view movie[3]
- The 11th Hour 2007 on Netflix - not viewable online
- Full movie on Myspace - aspect ratio looks corrupted
Blue Gold: World Water Wars
I disagree with the film's premise that future wars will be fought over water "like wars are fought over oil today". There might be some regional scraps over water, but water is not a portable concentrated source of wealth. Water cannot be shipped long distances very effectively. It has to be used close to where it occurs naturally. For water to be useful it has to be very very cheap. Fighting wars over water would be too expensive. Water wars would also be un-winnable, since if you wanted to steal someone's water you would pretty much have to obliterate them from the whole watershed. There is no international trade in water like there is in oil. Every major landmass has to be nearly 100% self-sufficient in water, so you aren't going to have the US invading Africa for water. There could be some local conflicts, of course, and these will be important to the people involved in them. But I don't see it igniting the kinds of wars we've had over oil. Instead I think it will mostly be about the rich pricing the poor out of getting any.
Flow: For Love of Water
Ocean acidification
- AIMS scientist Dr Katharina Fabricius has led two research expeditions to study natural carbon dioxide seeps in Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea - the only presently known cool, carbon dioxide seep site in tropical waters containing coral reef ecosystems. The study has given scientists unprecedented insights into what coral reefs would look like if greenhouse gas emissions and resulting ocean acidification continues to increase at present rates.
The Future of Food
Shipbreakers
- wikipedia:Shipbreakers - explores the practice of ship breaking decommissioned vessels in Alang, India.
A Sea Change (2009)
- IMDB page
- A Sea Change - full video on Vimeo
- A Sea Change on Netflix - not viewable online
- "Award-winning filmmaker Barbara Ettinger puts a human face on the realities of global warming and ocean acidification in this eye-opening document of one man's quest to learn more about his generation's environmental legacy. Although he's an environmentalist, native Norwegian Sven Huseby is a grandfather, too. And he's increasingly concerned about the kind of world his 5-year-old grandson, Elias, will inherit."
- Facebook group
The Antarctica Challenge: A Global Warning
- link does not work
- film in English despite Russian title
- IMDB page
- An up-to-date look at the climate change research currently being done by the scientists stationed in Antarctica.
- Facebook page
- Official site
Carbon Nation
- Watch Carbon Nation Online | Netflix
- IMDB page
- An optimistic (and witty) discovery of what people are already doing, what we as a nation could be doing and what the world needs to do to prevent (or at least slow down) the impending climate crisis.
- full video on Hulu
- Facebook page
Chasing Ice
- Netflix page - not viewable online
- IMDB page Chasing Ice (2012) 76 min - Documentary | Biography
- 'National Geographic' photographer James Balog was once a skeptic about climate change. But through his Extreme Ice Survey, he discovers undeniable evidence of our changing planet. In 'Chasing Ice,' we follow Balog across the Arctic as he deploys revolutionary time-lapse cameras designed for one purpose: to capture a multi-year record of the world's changing glaciers. Balog's hauntingly beautiful videos compress years into seconds and capture ancient mountains of ice in motion as they disappear at a breathtaking rate. Traveling with a young team of adventurers by helicopter, canoe and dog sled across three continents, Balog risks his career and his well-being in pursuit of the biggest story in human history. As the debate polarizes America and the intensity of natural disasters ramp up around the world, 'Chasing Ice' depicts a heroic photojournalist on a mission to gather evidence and deliver hope to our carbon-powered planet.
- Facebook page
21:57, 20 October 2012 (UTC): I can't find the film viewable online anywhere yet.
Waterlife
- Netflix page - not viewable online
- IMDB page Waterlife (2009) 109 min - Documentary
- A look at the natural beauty and environmental crisis surrounding the Great Lakes.
- Official site (?)
- WATERLIFE follows the epic cascade of the Great Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean. From the icy cliffs of Lake Superior to the ornate fountains of Chicago to the sewers of Windsor, this feature-length documentary tells the story of the last huge supply (20 per cent) of fresh water on Earth.
- The source of drinking water, fish and emotional sustenance for 35 million people, the Great Lakes are under assault by toxins, sewage, invasive species, dropping water levels and profound apathy. Some scientists believe the lakes are on the verge of ecological collapse.
- Filled with fascinating characters and stunning imagery, WATERLIFE is an epic cinematic poem about the beauty of water and the dangers of taking it for granted.
- The film is narrated by The Tragically Hip’s Gord Downie and features music by Sam Roberts, Sufjan Stevens, Sigur Ros, Robbie Robertson and Brian Eno.
- Another site about the film that does not load for me.
- a five minute excerpt.
22:32, 20 October 2012 (UTC): I can't find the film viewable online anywhere yet.
Trashed
- IMDB page Trashed (2012) 100 min - Documentary
- Jeremy Irons sets out to discover the extent and effects of the global waste problem, as he travels around the world to beautiful destinations tainted by pollution. This is a meticulous, brave investigative journey that takes Irons (and us) from skepticism to sorrow and from horror to hope.
- Netflix page - not viewable online
Garbage Warrior
- IMDB page Garbage Warrior (2007) - 86 min - Documentary
- Garbage Warrior is a feature-length documentary film telling the epic story of maverick US architect Michael Reynolds and his fight to introduce radically sustainable housing. An extraordinary tale of triumph over bureaucracy, Garbage Warrior is above all an intimate portrait of an extraordinary individual and his dream of changing the world.
- Netflix page - not viewable online
Manufactured Landscapes
- IMDB page Manufactured Landscapes (2006) - 80 min - Documentary
- Photographer Edward Burtynsky travels the world observing changes in landscapes due to industrial work and manufacturing.
- Watch Manufactured Landscapes Online | Netflix
- TED talk by Edward Burtynsky
- this film looks incredibly boring.
Transforming Energy
This is another documentary about renewable energy. I can't find it on Netflix nor on IMDB. It features some familiar talking heads.[4] It came out in 2006.
- 2:39 clip
- "An Electric Lodge and Throughline Production"
- Summary page on Aboutus.org
- Worldcat listing
- http://www.electriclodge.org/environment/downloads/Transforming_Energy.pdf - a reprint of a review from some magazine.
- Transforming Energy - a page about the film on Throughline Productions.
Sprawling From Grace: The Consequences of Suburbanization
- IMDB page Sprawling from Grace (2008) - 82 min - Documentary
- Watch Sprawling From Grace: The Consequences of Suburbanization Online | Netflix
The Electric Revolution
The film is by Renault S.A.S. I cannot find any information about the film on IMDB or Netflix. But Renault appears to have uploaded a copy to YouTube. The film covers the history of the electric automobile, from the early 1900s to the modern day. The last part of the film is an infomercial about the wikipedia:Renault Z.E. electric car lineup, and demonstrates the wikipedia:Better Place battery-swap technology allowing unlimited-range electric driving (provided swap stations exist on the desired route).
- The Electric Revolution on the Renault TV site
- full video
See also
Notes and references
Interwiki links
External links
- Search Facebook for: climate change documentaries - as of 20:39, 7 October 2012 (UTC) this finds only Web results, but some of them look interesting
- List of documentaries on the Subject of Climate Change & Global Warming
- 5 Best Global Warming Documentaries
- The Green Screen: Eco Documentaries - a list on IMDB
- ↑ Gifford, Robert (2008). "Psychology’s essential role in alleviating the impacts of climate change" (PDF). Canadian Psychology 49 (4): 273-280. doi:10.1037/a0013234. Archived from the original on 2011-04-09. "Climate change is occurring: where is psychology? The conventional wisdom is that amelioration of the impacts of climate change is a matter for earth and ocean science, economics, technology, and policy-making. This article presents the basis for psychological science as a key part of the solution to the problem and describes the challenges to this from both within psychology and from other points of view. Minimising the personal and environmental damage caused by climate change necessarily is a multidisciplinary task, but one to which psychology not only should, but must contribute more than it has so far.".
- ↑ Saner, Emine (2008-11-13). "The woman with a tiny carbon footprint". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2012-11-04. "Forget planes, trains or automobiles - if Joan Pick wants to go anywhere, she runs. And she eats nothing but raw food. Is her lifestyle extreme or the future we must all face up to? Emine Saner meets her"
- ↑ Presumably YouTube will eventually clear out all its copyright violation uploads and convert them all into pay per view movies like this.
- ↑ Hunter Lovins, William McDonough, Jeremy Rifkin and James Howard Kuntsler.