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 Stephen Hesse

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Stephen Hesse
Stephen Hesse is an educator and writer living in Tokyo. He graduated from Vermont Law School, where he received a JD and an LLM, and is now a professor in the Law Faculty of Chuo University, Tokyo, as well as Associate Director of the Chuo International Center.
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Nov 28, 2002
From oil-dependent past to hydrogen future
Making a global transition from fossil fuels to clean hydrogen-energy systems seems like pure science fiction -- until you meet Amory Lovins.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Nov 14, 2002
Thinking outside the box on fuel
First of two parts Part professor, part engineer and part philosopher, Amory Lovins is perfectly suited for the role of alternative-energy guru. A Lovins presentation is a seamless tapestry of economics, physics and mechanical engineering, sprinkled with corny one-liners, startling insights and revealing...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Oct 24, 2002
Getting up close and personal with global issues
While studying and researching in England several years ago, Eno Nakamura was surprised to find that Japanese and English children had strikingly different views of the future. That contrast convinced her of a critical need for Japanese schools to put more emphasis on "the future," and to get their students...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Oct 10, 2002
Women are the key to conserving Mother Earth
Danielle Nierenberg may work in the shadow of the White House, but she is clearly more enlightened than the man who lives there. At the end of April, the Washington-based Worldwatch Institute released a policy brief written by Nierenberg, a staff researcher. The title of her paper is a succinct statement...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Sep 26, 2002
Ozone hole? Soon it could be . . . 'what hole?'
Despite the international set-to over Iraq and caustic reviews for the recent U.N. Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, there is still some good news on cooperation and the environment.
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Sep 12, 2002
Agreeing to disagree makes no sense at all
The deluge of posters, pamphlets and platitudes that roared out of Johannesburg during the 2002 Earth Summit has ended, though to no one's surprise this summit's conclusions were much the same as those of the first Earth Summit in Rio a decade ago.
ENVIRONMENT
Aug 25, 2002
Your planet needs you!
From the depths of our oceans to our atmosphere's ozone layer, there is little doubt that the global environment is taking a beating. Even so, most of us are still waiting for someone else to take action, which is why the United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development starting this week in Johannesburg,...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Aug 22, 2002
Time to change, or find another planet
First of two parts Next week, tens of thousands of politicians, bureaucrats, activists and policy analysts will descend on Johannesburg, South Africa, for the largest conference in human history: the World Summit on Sustainable Development.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Aug 8, 2002
UNEP envoy strikes the right eco-chord
Tokiko Kato has been popular in Japan for decades as a singer and songwriter who is passionate about people and the planet. Two years ago, when the Environment Ministry asked her to act as a Special Envoy to the United Nations Environment Program it was a natural fit. Since then she has established herself...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Jul 25, 2002
Drive to halt pork 'n' ride tide
The rivers of Nagano Prefecture still flowing as nature intended may yet survive. If they do, it will be largely due to former (and perhaps soon to be re-elected) Gov. Yasuo Tanaka, whose "no more dams" policy directly challenges pork-barrel politicians who for decades appear to have put construction-industry...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Jul 11, 2002
Diving and biking to eco-awareness
Excuse me for a moment if I boast, but I am delighted with the progress my backyard is making in its quest for biological diversity. No doubt my neighbors view my garden as unruly and overgrown, but as it's no bigger than a parking space, I let it have its way.
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Jun 27, 2002
Swimming against the tide of marine good sense
Several years back, the Fisheries Agency of Japan began claiming that whaling is necessary to protect valuable fisheries. The agency argues that if we do not kill whales, they will eat millions of tons of fish that are rightfully destined for human consumption. Since some whale populations are increasing,...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Jun 13, 2002
'Dark Side' proved a lightning rod for readers' ire
Being a columnist can be lonely. Apart from doing interviews, researching and writing are pretty solitary activities and feedback is limited. Getting a handful of e-mails, be they cranky, critical or supportive, marks a successful column.
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
May 23, 2002
Scientists petition Japan to lay down harpoons
Early this week, readers of the New York Times may have been surprised to find among its pages a full-page petition, in English and Japanese, signed by 21 eminent scientists, including Richard Dawkins, E.O. Wilson and Jane Lubchenco, and the Nobel prize-winners Roger Guillemin, Sir Aaron Klug and Alan...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
May 9, 2002
Crafting public opinion to fit fisheries policy
Kind and gentle reader, I have a confession to make that may shock you. It is necessary to tell you this because, unlike many politicians and bureaucrats, I believe truth and transparency are essential. So here it is: I have eaten whale.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Apr 25, 2002
Japan: A land gone to the dogs?
Alex Kerr loves Japan as much as anyone, but he knows much more about it than most. With the publication April 25 of "Inu to Oni" (Kodansha) -- a translation of his book "Dogs and Demons" (Hill and Wang, 2001) -- Japanese, too, will be able to share his insight. As it says on the cover of "Dogs and Demons,"...
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Apr 11, 2002
NGOs and odd bedfellows point the way
Back in the 1960s, plastics were the future. As a result, a significant part of that future will be spent cleaning up after the past. So here is a tip for those of you making plans to help save the Earth: Consider a career in environmental economics. And if you're already working as an environmentalist,...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Mar 28, 2002
Insights from alumni are just one perk of the job
As a university professor, March ought to be a pleasure. There are no classes and few meetings. It is, though, a bittersweet month. Students who have become an integral part of the fabric and rhythm of my life are graduating. Most of the names and faces will fade, but many will be remembered, and a few...
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Mar 14, 2002
You win some and you lose some . . .
Ten years ago, on March 12, 1992, this column began its life on these pages. Though it's still "green," when compared with colleagues who have graced The Japan Times for several decades, Our Planet Earth has now appeared more than 245 times.
ENVIRONMENT / OUR PLANET EARTH
Feb 28, 2002
Bush fiddles figures as the globe warms up
Last June, in the Rose Garden of the White House, President George W. Bush declared the Kyoto Protocol "fatally flawed in fundamental ways," and dubyaed it "unrealistic, arbitrary and not based on science."

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