NYC Among Best in the Nation on Greenhoue Gasses

In many ways NYC is a big mess. I thought that when I first moved here and I still think that. But both then and now I always recognized that NYC, in its own haphazard ways, sometimes gets it right.

Let's talk some greenhouse gas numbers. The United States is the single largest contributor to global warming. With only 5% of the earth's population we contribute 25% of the human-contributed greenhouse emissions. Per capita that pretty much sucks. Those conservatives who want to say population growth and China are the worst of the problem have to explain those numbers. Not that population growth and China aren't PART of the problem, but the USA is the biggest part of the problem.

According to Salon.com, NYC by itself contributes nearly 1% of America's emissions, making NYC an equivalent contributor to Ireland or Portugal.

Sounds bad, right? A single city contributing 1% of America's entire global emissions or .25% of the emissions of all humans on earth. But then you realize that NYC contains 2.7% of America's population. We in NYC produce only a little more than a third of the emissions as the average American.

So what are we doing right? Well, DUH! We have a mass transit system! Yes it's a chaotic, dirty mess, but it means we don't drive nearly as much as everyone else.

In the not too distant future I want to be working with our local Brooklyn New Democratic Majority group to host a series of talks on a "Green NYC." Among the topics I want to cover is how each individual residential building in NYC (or ANY city, for that matter) can reduce its carbon emissions and energy usage and save money in the process. This is an idea that is precolating among several minds in the city and may, within a few years, start to become mainstream. Let me use this as a chance to ask if anyone out there is interested in speaking in this series. Obviously you would have to be able to come to NYC to speak. We already have a couple of possible speakers and slots will be limited. Meetings are the second Thursday of every month, 7 PM at the Ozzie's on 5th Ave. and Garfield in Park Slope, Brooklyn. Not all meetings will cover "Green NYC," so again, slots will be limited. If we start intentionally greening NYC, we can save money for ourselves, reduce the pressure on the grid at peak times, thus reducing the risk of blackouts, and FURTHER reduce our per capita carbon emissions.

To the rest of the nation let me just say, we got your low carbon footprint right here!


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Data from the 2002 survey indicate that by age 20, 77% of respondents had had sex, 75% had had premarital sex, and 12% had married; by age 44, 95% of respondents (94% of women, 96% of men, and 97% of those who had ever had sex) had had premarital sex. Even among those who abstained until at least age 20, 81% had had premarital sex by age 44. Among cohorts of women turning 15 between 1964 and 1993, at least 91% had had premarital sex by age 30. Among those turning 15 between 1954 and 1963, 82% had had premarital sex by age 30, and 88% had done so by age 44.

Conclusions. Almost all Americans have sex before marrying. These findings argue for education and interventions that provide the skills and information people need to protect themselves from unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases once they become sexually active, regardless of marital status.


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Research Division, The Guttmacher Institute, New York, NY
Trends in Premarital Sex in the United States, 1954­–2003
Public Health Reports / January–February 2007 / Volume 122


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