In Memoriam

Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
Written by Ralph Lombreglia   
Wednesday, 20 February 2008

Jonathan Evan MaslowJonathan Evan Maslow, the founder of this Web site, died yesterday, February 19, 2008, after an eight-month battle with stomach cancer. He was 59 years old.

Jonathan was a brilliant and innovative writer, a world-traveler, a passionate environmentalist, a filmmaker, a newspaperman, and a devoted husband.

As a naturalist and author he was widely praised and awarded (by, among others, the Guggenheim Foundation) for a variety of books including The Owl Papers; Bird of Life, Bird of Death; Sacred Horses; Torrid Zone; and Footsteps in the Jungle: Adventures in the Scientific Exploration of the American Tropics.

I met Jonathan roughly twenty years ago through my then wife-to-be, Kate Bernhardt, who had gone to school with him at Marlboro College in Vermont. His first words to me, on a street in Manhattan, were: “If you're going to get involved with her, you're going to be seeing a lot of me!”

But although I was tremendously fond of Jonathan, I didn't see a lot of him. Not nearly enough. He was sometimes a house-guest if he happened to be in the Boston area, but we weren't pen pals or phone pals, and long stretches went by with no contact at all.

Several years ago, when I hadn't heard from him in quite a long time, I found out from Kate that he had started a personal blog on energy issues and climate change. I praised him for this, and encouraged him to consider doing a full-blown Web site on these topics. He liked that idea, and since he was now making his living as a newspaperman, he conceived of it as a Web-based newspaper combined with an online community.

Close to a year went by before Jonathan visited me in the summer of 2006. We chatted for about three hours before he revealed that he had come to ask me to be his partner in this venture and to build that Web site for him.

I did not have the time to do this. But many of you will smile when I say that it was simply not possible to say no to Jonathan. So I said yes, agreeing to handle the technical side of The Energy Independent, and to leave writing and editorial matters to him.

Despite his great energy and passion, Jonathan, too, found it difficult to give the site enough time. We both felt frustrated by the challenges of creating a serious publication with limited resources, breaking through to a larger audience. We often discussed strategies for expanding the site, recruiting more contributors, hosting events, and eventually using the site as a platform for activism and consulting.

It's not an exaggeration to say that The Energy Independent was one of Jonathan's biggest dreams. He had high hopes for this thing—for using the power of the network to change the world and his own life, too. As Kate said to me today, this Web site made him excited and happy.

That he lost his health so suddenly and so young, before he could see at least some of those ambitions realized, is heartbreaking. Yet his last post to this site is only about two months old. He never stopped dreaming, hoping, believing.

"He disappeared in the dead of winter..." begins W. H. Auden’s elegy for W. B. Yeats, and I feel that way today about Jon Maslow.

He and I last spoke on the telephone nearly three weeks ago, before the sudden downturn that led to his death. He knew by that time that his months of chemotherapy had not put his disease into remission. He was facing more therapies and a most uncertain future. We both knew it would be tough. But he was a fighter and we didn't talk much about illness that day. For about a half-hour, he told me some things about how the newspaper business works. Then he felt tired and needed a nap, and we said goodbye.

I expected many more phone calls and visits with Jonathan. I did not expect him to disappear in the dead of this winter, and I won't pretend I was ready. I miss him terribly.

Jonathan is survived by his wife, Liliya Khobotkova; his stepson, Arseniy Khobotkova; his sister Jane Maslow-Cohen of Austin, TX; and his mother Clara Maslow, of Concord, MA. A public memorial is planned for sometime this summer, in Cape May, NJ.

If you are one of the many people who knew and loved Jonathan, please contribute by adding a comment to this posting. You do not need to register or log-in to do so. If you’d like to write a post of your own on this site, send a note to admin at theenergyindependent dot com.

Update, February 24, 2008: Articles and obituaries:

The Herald News (Passaic) (obituary). Jonathan was assistant city editor and reporter here at the time of his death.

The New York Times (obituary).

The Cape May County Herald (obituary). Jonathan was a reporter here, 1997-2002.

ZineZone interview, “Come Rain or Come Shine” (approx. 1999). Extensive inteview on the occasion of Jonathan’s film “A Tramp in the Darien.”

Request for materials:

Curator and writer Tom Fels knew Jonathan from his stay at Montague Farm, near Amherst, MA, around 1969-1970. Tom had gotten back in touch with Jonathan in recent years, and was planning to include him in an anthology now in development. Tom has a new book on the 1960s, Farm Friends, based upon his four years at Montague Farm. The book is due out in March, 2008, and Jonathan is in the bibliography. Finally, the farm group documented in that book is supported by an archive called Famous Long Ago at UMass Amherst. Jonathan is considered part of that group, and Tom notes that the archive would be very interested in any papers, photos, letters, etc. of Jonathan’s that might be looking for a home.

Read more...
 

TEI Reporting

Canada at odds with key Kyoto principle, risks stalling talks
Thursday, 13 December 2007
Written by Courtney Price
Canadian Youth Delegation to Bali
Special to TEI

UN Climate Change Conference 2007Canada risks stalling the latest UN climate change talks in Bali, Indonesia because it is seen as dodging its responsibilities for the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

In a leaked document, the Canadian government gave instructions to their negotiating team to insist that emissions cuts should be mandated for all countries. This is being perceived as passing the buck to developing countries, like China and India, who are not in as stable a position to reduce emissions.

Read more...
 
 

Latest TEI Blogs

Mr. Johnson’s Dirty Deal
Written by Jonathan Maslow   
Saturday, 22 December 2007

EPA’s rebuff of California waiver to set carbon emissions is as bad as it gets… until next time.

Read more...
 
Benediction for Bali
Written by Jonathan Maslow   
Tuesday, 04 December 2007
Bali rainbow

This week, the nations of the world gather in Bali to frame a global treaty on global warming to follow the Kyoto protocol, when it expires in 2012. The following prayer is offered in the hope of their success.

Read more...
 
New Aussie PM takes the pledge
Written by Jonathan Maslow   
Thursday, 29 November 2007
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd

One of Kevin Rudd’s first moves will be to ratify the Kyoto Treaty. Is he the man to bring China into the fold?

Read more...
 

Carbon Briefing

The lucky country?
Thursday, 20 December 2007

(Guardian ) On an early summer's morning in northern Tasmania, the Tamar valley looks like an Australian slice of Tuscany. There are groves of walnut trees beside white-barked eucalyptus, a lavender farm, apricot orchards and small fields of olives. Vineyards run down to the river and fat black cattle graze the pasture. Yachts are anchored in the winding reaches of the tidal river. The Tamar seems a model of sustainable development - green and welcoming.

Except that the Australian government has just approved the building of one of the world's largest pulp mills in the middle of this scene. A 200-hectare (500-acre) polluting giant by the side of the Tamar river, the factory would accelerate - some say double - the already rapid pace of logging in the mountainous and verdant island state. Turned into woodchip and then exported as chlorine-bleached pulp, much of what remains of Tasmania's native forests may end up as cheap paper for the hungry markets of Asia.

 
A Carbon Cap That Starts in Washington
Thursday, 20 December 2007
(NYT ) THE United Nations conference on climate change wrapped up in Bali, Indonesia, last week without a firm commitment from the United States or China to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. While a binding global agreement would be the best way to cut back on those emissions, a more limited but still useful approach is available, and it is wending its way through Congress.
 
Europe Proposes Binding Limits on Auto Emissions
Thursday, 20 December 2007
PARIS (NYT ) — European Union officials told leading automakers on Wednesday to make deep cuts in tailpipe emissions of the cars they produce or face fines that could reach billions of euros.
 

Innovators

An Engine for Our Time?
Written by Jonathan Maslow   
Monday, 07 May 2007

TEI isn’t in the business of marketing technology, but we recently had correspondence with Darwin Nunley, the Texas inventor of a low-pollution internal combustion engine. Mr. Nunley offered TEI a description of his invention, the Nunley engine, and we’re happy to publish it as an example of the sort of ingenuity we’re going to need to reduce our carbon footprint and get us beyond fossil fuels.

Picture a side view of a steam locomotive common in the early 1900s. They have two cylinders on each side of the locomotive. Each cylinder has a piston which moves from front to rear and back again by steam pressure, produced by burning coal in a boiler. The power from that comparatively small, four cylinder engine moves the locomotive, the coal car, perhaps 20 freight cars and the always present caboose. People see the black smoke, heat and steam spewing from the smokestack. What they don’t see is the potential of the one piston steam cylinder.

Mr. Nunley’s invention consists of taking the one piston steam cylinder, then recreating it as a very low-polluting, low-cost engine for our time.

Read more...
 
 

Communities Briefing

In Alaska’s Far North, Two Cultures Collide
Thursday, 20 December 2007
BARROW, Alaska ((NYT)— Each summer and fall, the Inupiat, natives of Alaska’s arid north coast, take their sealskin boats and gun-fired harpoons and go whale hunting. Kills are celebrated throughout villages as whaling captains share their catch with relatives and neighbors. Muktuk, or raw whale skin and blubber, is a prized delicacy.
 
Trucks Power China’s Economy, at a Suffocating Cost
Thursday, 20 December 2007
GUANGZHOU, China (NYT ) — Every night, columns of hulking blue and red freight trucks invade China’s major cities with a reverberating roar of engines and dark clouds of diesel exhaust so thick it dims headlights.
 
SKorean Oil Spill Worse Than Estimated
Thursday, 20 December 2007
SEOUL, South Korea (AP ) -- Nearly 80,000 barrels of oil were spilled from a punctured supertanker off South Korea's western coast earlier this month -- about 20 percent more than previous estimates, an official said Thursday.
 

Special Report

Report from Europe: Guardians of the Future
Written by Lore Schultz-Wild   
Tuesday, 22 May 2007

The Founding Congress of the World Future Council (WFC) was celebrated at the Hamburg Town Hall in mid-May 2007, together with the spectacular opening of its permanent co-ordinating secretariat in the city’s dynamic “warehouse-city” area.

Fifty prominent founding members and councilors of the WFC became “guardians of future generations,” elaborating solutions for our planet’s problems, both ecological and social, from fair trade and anti-corruption campaigns to peace education. They include human rights activist Bianca Jagger, environmental activist Vandana Shiva, anti-poverty activist Youssou N’Dour, and Prince El Hassan Bin Talal, the president of the Club of Rome.

Read more...
 

Science Feature

Climate-Change Risks to Low Elevation Coastal Zones
Written by Jonathan Maslow   
Tuesday, 08 May 2007

The first global study identifying populations at greatest risk from rising sea levels and more intense weather such as floods, cyclones and hurricanes was published April 14 in the journal Environment and Urbanization. The leading researchers were Gordon McGranahan of the UK International Institute for Environment and Development, and Deborah Balk and Bridget Anderson of Columbia University’s Center for International Earth Science Information Network (CIESIN).

The text points and slideshow in this article are based on the study and an email interview with Deborah Balk.

Read more...
 

First Person

To a young man joining the military
Written by Jonathan Maslow   
Sunday, 15 April 2007

The following letter was written for a nephew on the eve of his departure for military service.

Dear David:

My best arguments having failed to dissuade you from joining the Army at the height of an unjust and illegal war in Iraq, I want to write you a farewell and Godspeed. I would say I am praying for your safety, but I can't believe in a deity that intervenes in personal matters, so I can only say I hope for that with all my heart. Wherever your military service takes you, whether it puts a rifle, a medical kit, an Arabic dictionary or a missile guidance system in your hands, I know you will always do your best and act out of the highest human motive, which is altruism, the desire to help one's fellow human beings.

Read more...
 

World Briefing

Climate Plan Looks Beyond Bush’s Tenure
Thursday, 20 December 2007
NUSA DUA, Indonesia (NYT ) — The world’s faltering effort to cut greenhouse gas emissions got a new lease on life on Saturday, as delegates from 187 countries agreed to negotiate a new accord over the next two years — pushing the crucial debates about United States participation into the administration of a new American president.
 
E.P.A. Says 17 States Can’t Set Emission Rules
Thursday, 20 December 2007
WASHINGTON (NYT ) — The Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday denied California and 16 other states the right to set their own standards for carbon dioxide emissions from automobiles.
 
New US energy bill meets green lobby approval
Wednesday, 05 December 2007
(Guardian) Congressional Democrats finalised an energy bill today that will increase fuel efficiency standards for cars for the first time in decades.
 

Technology Briefing

Proven Fuel Stabilizing Device Cuts Building Heating Costs 30% or More
Saturday, 13 October 2007
Little Falls, NJ (PRWEB) October 6, 2007 -- An innovative, in-line, fuel stabilization device exclusively represented by The Energy Group can cut operating costs in boilers by 10 to 30 percent or more. Dubbed simply, "The Fossil Fuel Stabilizer," the device recently completed three years of successful operation on heating boilers at a government facility in New Jersey funded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
 
Tapping tidal energy: the wave of the future
Sunday, 07 October 2007
( Seattle Times ) -- The future of clean power in the Northwest may look like the 75-foot-tall yellow buoy now bobbing like a cork in the waves off the Oregon coast.
 
Eltek Valere works on cutting the energy lost at power converters
Sunday, 07 October 2007

(Dallas Morning News) -- To say that most Americans ignore power conversion boxes would be overstating their impact. Most of us never even notice those drab metal fixtures that drive global telecommunications. But with energy costs and environmental concerns skyrocketing, power-conscious customers are downright captivated by a new company in Richardson.

  
 

Reader Survey

Do you favor a ban on new coal-burning power plants unless adapted to capture greenhouse gases?
 

Latest Comments

An Engine for Our Time?
Mr Nunley,how is your Patent progressing? Are you still in the pending stage? I am also an engine in...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
Jon came to see us––my late husband, photojournalist Ted Polumbaum and me––before going to C...
10 Principles of Energy Independence
Our war for energy independence and economic growth The US government and other governments are not...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
I knew Jonathan briefly while i was an EA at the Herald News from 2000 to 2003. At the time, he was ...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
Some kind of way Jonathan's passing should have gotten through to me. I wonder that not having heard...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
A sad irony with, perhaps, a bright side: As you might imagine, Jonathan and I had hoped eventually ...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
Misha: Thanks for what you're doing. In this particular commenting software, the button above the te...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
And another link ... Sorry, Ralph, I can't figure out how to hyperlink those. [url]http://www.nj.c...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
Here is a new link to a more recent article from the Herald. The article features links to Jon's co...
Jonathan Evan Maslow, 1948-2008
Misha (or Ralph): Would you please hyperlink those links? Thanks.

Latest Events

There are no upcoming events currently scheduled.
View Full Calendar

Business / Investor Sites

Energy Spin 

Science Sites

Commonground 

Carbon Sites

A Significant Distraction