California's Green Election

One of the better kept secrets of this election season can be found here in California, where voters will decide whether or not America throws in the towel on global warming and energy independence. And no, I'm not referring to the unprecedented amounts of hot air being pumped into the atmosphere by the most expensive yet least informative gubernatorial campaign in history (though you can read my profile of Jerry Brown for a little background.)

It's California's Proposition 23 that's the sleeper star of these elections. The goal of this oil industry-backed ballot measure is to kill Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's signature achievement, the 4-year-old Global Warming Solutions Act and its mandate to reduce the state's carbon emissions by 2020 by 33%.

The tragedy is that the law has in the past four years created, not killed, green tech jobs (which have increased 5.5% during the recession while overall employment fell), and attracted billions in new investments in renewable energy, mostly in the form of big solar projects in the sun-drenched Mojave Desert. Since 2005, California has attracted more renewable energy investments than all other states combined, which are expected to result in a $20 billion, 112,000-job boost to the state economy by 2020, according to a University of California study. Conversely, the study finds that passage of Prop 23 will cost the state up to $80 billion and a half million jobs from rising fossil-fuel energy prices over the next ten years.

So the future of green energy and carbon reduction in America is, for the most part, in California voters' hands. Stay tuned.

POST-ELECTION UPDATE - The voters rejected Proposition 23 handily, 61% to 39%, a clear mandate for California to continue ramping up renewable energy and reining in carbon emissions. Now the next looming question is whether Congress will renew critical investment and tax incentives that have encouraged California's solar boom.


Energy Innovations & Flops - My Latest from Sierra

I've been enjoying writing for Sierra Magazine this year. My latest pieces reveal some promising university research on alternative energy and transportation, from cow-powered cars to microbes that produce biofuel while absorbing carbon (an ultimate win-win).

I also survey our worst energy energy flops, from cold fusion to corn ethanol, along with a couple other surprising failures. Read all about it here.

Razing Biloxi's Infamous Murder Scene

They're tearing down the Gulf Coast site of the Sherry murders. Fox News and the Sun Herald out of Biloxi, Mississippi, have the story -- and did it bring back some shivery memories. I spent a lot of time in and around that comfortable old house near Biloxi's Back Bay, working on Mississippi Mud, my book about the murders of Judge Vincent Sherry and his mayoral candidate wife, Margaret. Simon & Schuster just released an updated edition of Mud this summer.

A conspiracy of Dixie Mafia killers, con-men, and the man who won the mayor's office in Margaret's stead was eventually uncovered, thanks largely to the efforts of the Sherry's daughter, Lynne Sposito. But the house where the Sherrys were shot to death in 1987 has stood empty all these years, a decaying monument to the civic corruption and violence that ended two lives and ruined many others. Hurricane Katrina severely damaged the old house, and city officials have finally decided to finish the job.

It would be tempting to think of this as wiping the slate clean, closing a dark chapter in Gulf Coast history. But I'm not so sure.

Monkey Girl at HBO

Monkey Girl: Evolution, Education, Religion, and the Battle for America's Soul, my book about a modern day Scopes Monkey Trial, is being developed for film by HBO. Academy Award nominee and Emmy-winner Jeffrey Blitz is directing and writing the screenplay.

The book is based on the Kitzmiller case that divided the small Pennsylvania town of Dover. School board members there had sought to counter the teaching of evolution with a creationism-derived alternative known as Intelligent Design. The school board's actions brought national attention and drew scientific and religious leaders to town, culminating in an epic battle over constitutional questions of faith, science and freedom of religion.

Browse Monkey Girl here. Or listen to my discussion with the judge on the case, U.S. District Court Judge John E. Jones III, during a Darwin Week event at the Santa Barbara Museum of History.