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Showing posts with label ethics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ethics. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Occupy London Get to Stay at St Pauls

Speaking yesterday on the halt of legal action against the camp the bishop of London said "the decision had been unanimous.......today's decision means that the doors are most emphatically open to engage with matters concerning not only those encamped around the Cathedral but millions of others in this country and around the globe."

Ken Costa, investment banker has been asked by the bishop to "spearhead an initiative reconnecting the financial with the ethical," with the support of figures within London's financial world, the Church of England and the public sphere.

The Occupy London protesters said their cause had never been directed at the cathedral staff, but was about "social justice, real democracy and challenging the unsustainable financial system that punishes the many and privileges the few."

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Online Filter Bubbles

The search results you thought were impartial are actually more likely than not filtered for you and without your consent. From Facebook to Google service providers are wrapping you up in a bubble. The question is not what are they showing you, but what are they not showing you? Such an ability to filter ones experience online is inevitably going to attract investors. In this enlightening talk Eli Pariser calls for service providers to take up civic ethics.

"When confronted with a list of results from Google, the average user (including myself until I read this article) tends to assume that the list is exhaustive. Not knowing that it isn't ... is equivalent to not having a choice. Depending on the quality of the search results, it can be said that I am being fed junk -- because I don't know I have other choices that Google filtered out."
Aubrey Pek, commenting on Kim Zetter's "Junk Food Algorithms": http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/03/eli-pariser-at-ted

Eli's new book seeks to lift the lid on secret web filtering. The Filter Bubble: What the Internet Is Hiding from You is available now. Readers in Europe can find it here. The Filter Bubble: What The Internet Is Hiding From You



Online Filter Bubbles
- Watch more Videos at Vodpod.

Thursday, 26 May 2011

Coca Cola Helps a Phoenix Rise From the Ashes


MD Jonathon Short shows off rPET raw product at Hemswell
One of the world‘s most famous brands is joining forces with a UK plastics firm to build a recycling facility. The deal has been described as a step change in plastic reprocessing and is a joint venture of Coca-Cola Enterprises Ltd (CCE) and ECO Plastics which will develop a facility in Lincolnshire, England that will more than double the amount of reprocessed PET (rPET) bottles in Great Britain.

While plastics are notoriously difficult to recycle, especially whem compounded, drinks bottles are a relatively easy and abundant commodity which has long been in need of investment to generate a recycling and re-use stream. Around 35,000 tonnes of PET bottles were reprocessed last year. The two companies said their project will increase this to more than 75,000 tonnes when fully operational. The high-quality rPET will be used for food-grade, sustainable packaging.

ECO's plant at Hemswell, Lincolnshire recently re-opened following a fire in 2009 which completely devastated the original facility, causing a plume of black smoke to become visible 30 miles from the site and was attended by 17 fire engines. "When we do something at AWS we pride ourselves on doing it properly and the fire was no exception," joked  then Chairman Peter Gangsted. With the new development the plant will be among the largest in Europe and is expected to be operational by mid 2012.

This is a first for the British drinks manufacturing industry and will begin to close a loop on PET use and re-use in the UK, since CCE currently sources its food-grade rPET from continental Europe. This plant will supply CCE with enough GB-sourced material to achieve its target of including 25% rPET in all its plastic packaging in GB by next year.

Simon Baldry, managing director of CCE GB, said: "Our investment in this project with ECO Plastics will start to address the recycling challenges in this country. British PET bottles will be recycled for re-use in packaging that will be sold from the shelves of British retailers... The amounts of high quality rPET produced in GB will more than double, enabling CCE to meet our ambitious target of incorporating 25% rPET in all our plastic bottles by 2012. At the same time, we are working with our customers to encourage shoppers to recycle more as part of our wider sustainability efforts."
The company has signed a l0-year joint venture deal with ECO Plastics that guarantees an annual supply of rPET. Coca-Cola Enterprises is making a 1/3 equity investment to support construction of the new £15m facility with ECO Plastics raising the balance.

Independent research has shown that products made with recycled plastic from the ECO Plastics site are 68% less carbon-intensive than packaging made with virgin materials.  By the middle of 2011 the management team expects the plant will be processing (140,000 tonnes) almost half of the UK's national plastics sorting capacity, equivalent to more than two billion bottles a year.

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

Green chemistry in the lab and beyond

UC Berkley has introduced ethics into the Chemistry Department. Students are taught about chemical toxicity from day one and learn that their are ethical and unethical ways to make money out of chemistry.




How many years has ity taken for mankind to wake up to the fact that through chemistry we have been polluting the environment and making the earth a poorer habitat for all to live in. Starting with coal carbonisation, gas manufacture and iron and steel production of the industrial revolution to modern petrochemical and pharmaceuticals we are still catching up with the fact that hundreds if not thousands of chemicals in everday use are toxic and cause many of the diseases to which modern life is subject. Many cancers are caused by chemicals in commercial and industrial products. From food additives to childfrens toys chemicals are all around us. Welcome in the new age in ethical chemical production. It is a hope for the future.

Green chemistry in the lab and beyond