Simran Sethi is a sustainable business contributor to CNBC News and the Lacy C. Haynes Visiting Professional Chair at the University of Kansas School of Journalism and Mass Communications, where she currently teaches courses on environmental communications. Sethi is writing a book on environmental justice for Harper Collins and is the contributing author of Ethical Markets: Growing the Green Economy, winner of the bronze 2008 Axiom Award for Best Business Ethics book. Sethi is the host/ writer of Sundance Channel's environmental programming The Green and the creator of the Sundance web series The Good Fight, highlighting global environmental justice efforts and grassroots activism.

Blog Entries by Simran Sethi

Lifting the "Body Burden": How to Fight Toxic Exposure and Keep Chemicals Out of Your Home

2 Comments | Posted November 6, 2008 | 11:25 AM (EST)



From Seventh Generation's discussion on "Children and Chemicals," featuring Jane Houlihan of the Environmental Working Group, pediatrician Dr. Alan Greene, Courtney Loveman of Seventh Generation and moderated by Simran Sethi.


We can thank WWII for...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Burn, Baby, Burn (The Eco Impact of Candles)

15 Comments | Posted October 23, 2008 | 11:35 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series about the stories of our stuff.

2008-10-23-candle.png

It's been a long day. The wine has been uncorked. Now, a shoulder rub, perchance? With candles, please.

Candles are sort of deceptive, in environmental terms, because they seem so...well, good....

Read Post

Rabbi Dennis Shulman: Battling an "Enemy of the Environment"

5 Comments | Posted October 20, 2008 | 10:51 AM (EST)


A portion of this interview first appeared in Heeb.

2008-10-20-thumb11.jpg

Governor Sarah Palin has demonstrated that anyone can run for office. This is both good and bad. This mini-series of posts is about what it means to be green in blue and red...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Green Wine

9 Comments | Posted October 17, 2008 | 08:24 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series about the stories of our stuff.

Shall we raise a glass to the fact that no other item in our Life Cycle series achieves such praise for traveling long distances, in heavy glass bottles, by way of fossil fuel powered planes, boats and automobiles,...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Pop vs. Soda? Either Way It's Made with (GMO) Corn.

7 Comments | Posted October 10, 2008 | 11:36 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that looks at the environmental impacts of everyday things.

2008-10-10-soda.png

Last week we talked about popcorn. Chemically flavored, over-packaged, jacked-up-corn-crop-derived popcorn. Now we reach for one more corn-related product to round out our Blockbuster night: soda.

...
Read Post

No Nukes: Obama and McCain Weigh in on Nuclear Energy

8 Comments | Posted October 8, 2008 | 01:02 PM (EST)


2008-10-08-Picture1.png

The incongruous convergence of our fiscal meltdown, an energy crisis and the alarming velocity of climate change is challenging and scary. It requires immediate action. But some options come with too high a cost. Nuclear energy is one of them. In last night's debate,...

Read Post

The Oxymoron of Clean Coal (Joe Biden Had it Right Before He Had it Wrong.)

32 Comments | Posted October 6, 2008 | 12:30 PM (EST)


2008-10-06-bidenfinger.png

Sarah Palin and John McCain have always been for it. Joe Biden was sort of against it before he was for it and Barack Obama embraces it. To what am I referring? The alleged panacea of clean coal....

Read Post

Life Cycle: Kernels of Wisdom about Popcorn

7 Comments | Posted September 30, 2008 | 11:38 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that looks at the environmental impacts of everyday things.

2008-09-30-lincoln.png

Fall is upon us, and you've decided to make it a movie night. Footloose on the screen, popcorn in a Tupperware bowl. You're living a very American...

Read Post

Life Cycle: The Birth and Death of Your Bootleg DVDs

Posted September 23, 2008 | 10:47 PM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that looks at the environmental impacts of everyday things.

2008-09-24-potter.png

Oh baby, it's been quite a day. You did your time in your cube, got in a little vinyasa, grabbed some take-out , and...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Styrofoam: Mark of the Plastic Beast

Posted September 18, 2008 | 11:54 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that looks at the life and death of everyday things.

2008-09-18-styrofoam.png

Your Styrofoam lunch container of Mooshu pork is labeled with the recycling number 6, a digit with evil connotations. Coincidence?

Styrofoam is one of the...

Read Post

Congress Weans Us Off the Teat of Foreign Oil with Concessions to Offshore Drilling

Posted September 15, 2008 | 12:52 PM (EST)


2008-09-15-rig.png


The Republican mandate to "drill, baby, drill" is shortsighted and unsustainable, yet even the most rational of Dems is now kowtowing to this call. On September 16, the House of Representatives debated a bill House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) unveiled last week....

Read Post

Life Cycle: Zen and the Art of Producing Chopsticks

Posted September 11, 2008 | 10:41 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series that looks at the birth, life and death of everyday objects.

2008-09-11-sticks.png

"Apply a firm but gentle pressure on the food, just enough to keep the food from falling from the chopsticks. Too much pressure is more likely...

Read Post

Sarah Palin's Empty Promise

Posted September 9, 2008 | 11:09 AM (EST)


2008-09-09-palinwave.png

Congress returns to Washington this week, in the wake of Republican chants to "Drill, Baby, Drill." With gas hovering around $4 per gallon, energy policy and offshore drilling continues to be a red-hot issue.

Arguments over offshore drilling intensified last month when...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Greening the Other White Meat

Posted September 4, 2008 | 05:32 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that looks at the life and death of everyday things.

2008-09-04-suicidepig.png

In our blogging journey through everyday things, we've covered your morning routine--from workout to shower, from coffee to cubicle.

Now it's lunchtime, baby. Panda Garden....

Read Post

Life Cycle: The Hidden Cost of $40 "Bling Water."

Posted August 26, 2008 | 11:04 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that looks at the life and death of everyday things.

2008-08-26-Picture2.png

Fool me once, shame on me. Fool me twice, shame on you.

In the United States, we pay for our tap water (either through a...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Green Shoe Fetish

Posted August 18, 2008 | 11:23 AM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that looks at the life and death of everyday things.

2008-08-18-shoes.png

Last time, we learned that your yoga mat may be messing with Earth's Zen. Today, we look at another staple of the American workout: tennis shoes.

...
Read Post

Life Cycle: Think Yoga is Healthy? Not on a PVC mat.

Posted August 11, 2008 | 07:32 PM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that takes a closer look at the stuff we use and love.

2008-08-11-mats.png

It's the end of class. You're breathing deeply, surrendering the weight of your body into your yoga mat. Breathing in...and out. Letting yourself go....

Read Post

Life Cycle: E-Wasted

Posted August 4, 2008 | 10:12 PM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts that follows the secret lives of your stuff.

2008-08-05-ewaste.png

Take a good look at this photo, in which a Chinese child dismantles wires and other toxic "e-waste" for money. It's one serious result of our giddy hunger...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Life After Desk

Posted July 28, 2008 | 03:26 PM (EST)


Life Cycle examines the birth, life and death of the products in our lives.

2008-07-28-landfill.png

How can a mahogany desk, made of slow-growing hard wood plundered from the Amazon, be eco-friendly?

When it's re-used.

Often, the greenest consumer route is not buying new products...

Read Post

Life Cycle: Look into the Light

Posted July 20, 2008 | 11:36 PM (EST)


Life Cycle is a series of posts addressing the impacts of everyday things.

2008-07-21-bulb.png

If you ask Simran about compact florescent light bulbs, she may crack one open and cut you. Not really, that would scatter mercury, but she is loca for the light bulbs.

...
Read Post

 
 
Bloggers Index›