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Confessions of a greenpeace dropout by patrick moore
Confessions of a greenpeace dropout by patrick moore













Moore published Trees are the Answer, a photo-book that provides a new insight into how forests work and how they can play a powerful role in solving many of our current environmental problems. He also served as Vice-President, Industry and Government Affairs for NextEnergy Geothermal, the largest distributor of geothermal systems in Canada.Īs Chair of the Sustainable Forestry Committee of the Forest Alliance of BC from 1991 – 2002, he led the process of developing the “Principles of Sustainable Forestry” which were adopted by a majority of the industry. Moore served for four years as Vice President, Environment for Waterfurnace International, a manufacturer of geothermal heat pumps for residential heating and cooling with renewable earth energy. Moore founded and chaired the BC Carbon Project, a group that worked to develop a common understanding of climate change.ĭr. He was a member of British Columbia government-appointed Round Table on the Environment and Economy from 1990 – 1994.

confessions of a greenpeace dropout by patrick moore

Moore has been focused on the promotion of sustainability and consensus building among competing concerns. Moore was a driving force shaping policy and direction for 15 years while Greenpeace became the world’s largest environmental activist organization. He is a co-founder of Greenpeace and served for nine years as President of Greenpeace Canada and seven years as a Director of Greenpeace International. Patrick Moore has been a leader in the international environmental field for over 40 years. Leader, Campaign to Allow Golden Rice Now.ĭr. Chairman and Chief Scientist, Ecosense Environmental. He is co-founder and 15-year leader of Greenpeace (1971-1986). served as Chair of the CO2 Coaltiion in 20. #hottakeoftheday podcast episode #115 w/Patrick Moore are we sure life can’t adapt? In a world of narratives, it’s nice to hear the counter point every once in a while. This week, we talk about the miracle gas that is CO2 and discuss- is it bad? Why isn’t it bad? Where did narrative take over logic? Why don’t we consider things before 1850? We know the CO2 concentration was 2800 ppm, 7x higher than today.

confessions of a greenpeace dropout by patrick moore

The reason I love podcasting is some topics are like a dinner with wine: you need time, conversation and thought. This week, the #hottakeoftheday podcast returns with Patrick Moore, the Director of the CO2 coalition.















Confessions of a greenpeace dropout by patrick moore