Author Archives: John Basset

Saturday Supermoon Blogging – 22 June 2013

Mother Jones

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A quick break from work. Here is tonight’s supermoon rising over the dome of the Greek Orthodox church across the street from me. Enjoy.

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Saturday Supermoon Blogging – 22 June 2013

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Grow Great Green Beans!

Shirley S.

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Why Are Eggs Linked to Cancer Progression?

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Organic farmers lose court battle with Monsanto

Organic farmers lose court battle with Monsanto

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“Trust us, we’re Monsanto.”

That’s pretty much all the untrustworthy company had to say to win yet another round in a drawn-out court battle with organic farmers and seed producers.

The U.S. court system is refusing to protect the organic growers from future Monsanto lawsuits in the event that traces of genetically engineered genes accidentally end up in the farmers’ crops. That’s because of a single paragraph on the biotech giant’s website that says it has no such litigious intentions.

Monsanto’s gang of lawyers frequently sues farmers who grow the company’s genetically engineered crops without paying royalties — despite claims by many of the farmers that the seeds and genes ended up in their fields through no fault of their own. They didn’t want the stuff on their land to begin with, so they naturally wonder why they should have to pay royalties for the privilege of growing it. (The danger of rogue contamination was recently illuminated when an Oregon farmer found illegal Monsanto GMO wheat growing on his farm.)

More than 50 organic farmers and seed dealers filed suit against Monsanto in 2011, seeking to block any lawsuits should trace amounts of Monsanto’s altered genes contaminate their crops.

Yesterday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit became the latest court to side with Monsanto in the case. From Reuters:

In its ruling Monday, the appellate court said the organic growers must rely on Monsanto assurances on the company’s website that it will not sue them so long as the mix [of biotech crops into their organic crops] is very slight.

“Monsanto’s binding representations remove any risk of suit against the appellants as users or sellers of trace amounts (less than one percent) of modified seed,” the court stated in its ruling. …

Andrew Kimbrell, a lawyer with the Center for Food Safety, which joined as a plaintiff in the lawsuit, said the decision made no sense.

“It is a very bizarre ruling that relies on a paragraph on a website,” he said. “It is a very real threat to American farmers. This is definitely appealable.”

In its ruling Monday, the court noted that records indicate a large majority of conventional seed samples have become contaminated by Monsanto’s Roundup resistance trait.

Memo to federal judges: Don’t believe everything you read on the internet — and don’t believe anything Monsanto posts on the internet.

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Organic farmers lose court battle with Monsanto

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China’s plastic-bag ban turns five years old

China’s plastic-bag ban turns five years old

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What do you give a plastic-bag ban for its fifth birthday?

In the case of China, which over the weekend celebrated five years of restrictions on plastic shopping bags, officials are showering their ban with accolades and crediting it with keeping tens of billions of bags out of landfills and the environment.

The rules, which took effect on June 1, 2008, ban the manufacture or use of the thinnest types of plastic bags. They also prohibit supermarkets, department stores, and grocery stores from giving away thicker varieties, requiring them to charge customers for the bags.

From Shanghai Daily:

A plastic bag ban launched five years ago has cut consumption by at least 67 billion bags, saving an equivalent of 6 million tonnes of oil, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said Friday.

Since the ban was implemented, use of plastic bags has dropped by more than two-thirds, said Li Jing, vice chief of energy-saving and environmental protection department under the NDRC, China’s top economic planner.

But the English-language website of China News Service points to a study that shows there’s still lots of room for improvement:

[T]he regulation has not been carried out effectively and super-thin bags are still being used, even at large supermarkets, according to a report by the International Food Packaging Association on Thursday to coincide with the fifth anniversary of the regulation.

The organization surveyed 10 chain supermarkets, 10 open-air markets and three wholesale markets as well as roadside stalls, and discovered that supermarkets have done much better than the others in following the regulation.

All supermarkets provided plastic bags for a fee, but only four supermarkets, including Wal-Mart, provided bags equivalent to or thicker than [the required] 0.025 mm, the report said.

In contrast, it added, all open-air and wholesale markets and roadside stalls provided plastic bags for free, and only one out of the 10 open-air markets provided plastic bags thicker than 0.025 mm.

Some Chinese retailers may be ignoring the bag ban, but at least the country is doing better than the U.S. at tackling the problem.

San Francisco became the first American city to impose similar restrictions, in 2007, and a few other U.S. cities and counties have followed in its footsteps, but no plastic-bag rules exist at the federal level. Rep. Jim Moran (D-Va.) has introduced a bill that would impose a five-cent fee on all disposable bags, but it’s about as likely to pass as plastic through a seabird’s intestinal system.

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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China’s plastic-bag ban turns five years old

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A Natural Cleaner that Makes Windows Sparkle

Filomena Correia

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Gluten-Free Eggplant Parmesan

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A Natural Cleaner that Makes Windows Sparkle

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Are You Ready for the Coming of the Drones?

Mother Jones

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Defense cuts have forced commanders at Southern California’s Naval Base Ventura County to idle planes and cancel troop deployments, but you’d never know it from looking at nearby defense contractor Northrup Grumman: Its stock price has risen 9 percent in less than a month, buoyed by brisk sales of drones such as the Fire Scout unmanned helicopter, which will be deployed at the base this summer.

Indeed, lean times in the public sector appear to be helping drone manufacturers, as they pitch unmanned aircraft as cheaper replacements for a wide range of activities involving human labor and/or dangerous conditions. “We can capitalize on this budget-constrained environment to keep this development going,” explained Janis Pamiljans, Northrup Grumman’s head of unmanned air systems.

Pamiljans was addressing a who’s who of manufacturers, hobbyists, and public officials who showed up at the naval base last week during a conference on civilian applications of drones (the industry calls them “unmanned aerial vehicles”), which could constitute a $90 billion market within a decade—or so says the industry’s trade group, the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI). “We are not darkening the skies yet,” said Richard Christiansen, the vice-president of the NASA contractor Sierra Lobo Inc., “but we are poised.”

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Are You Ready for the Coming of the Drones?

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Subaru finally introduces a hybrid; crunchy yuppies rejoice

Subaru finally introduces a hybrid; crunchy yuppies rejoice

Subaru

These crunchy yuppies sure look happy with their Crosstrek Hybrid.

Just 16 years after Toyota first started selling the Prius, Subaru has unveiled its own hybrid.

AP reports:

Subaru is coming out with a gas-electric hybrid crossover SUV for the crunchy-granola crowd that wants to save fuel but still haul kayaks to the river.

The Japanese brand, which specializes in all-wheel-drive vehicles, unveiled the 2014 XV Crosstrek Hybrid on Thursday at the New York International Auto Show.

The company’s first gas-electric hybrid gets somewhat better gas mileage than the conventional Crosstrek and has stop-start technology that shuts down the engine at red lights to save fuel. It has all wheel drive and the same 8.7-inch ground clearance so it can go on trails. …

Subaru expects 28 mpg in the city and 34 mpg on the highway. That’s 3 mpg better in the city than the gas version with an automatic transmission, but only 1 mpg better on the highway.

Prices will be announced closer to the car’s arrival at dealerships this fall.

Wired reports that the Crosstrek Hybrid “stands to be the most fuel-efficient, low-emission, all-wheel-drive hybrid crossover in the United States.”

Therefore: “Urban hipsters and Portlanders, rejoice.”

Lisa Hymas is senior editor at Grist. You can follow her on

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Subaru finally introduces a hybrid; crunchy yuppies rejoice

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Not Just the Bees: Bayer’s Pesticide May Harm Birds, Too

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Once again this spring, farmers will begin planting at least 140 million acres—a land mass roughly equal to the combined footprints of California and Washington state—with seeds (mainly corn and soy) treated with a class of pesticides called neonicotinoids. Commercial landscapers and home gardeners will get into the act, too—neonics are common in lawn and garden products. If you’re a regular reader of my blog, you know all of that is probably bad news for honeybees and other pollinators, as a growing body of research shows—including three studies released just ahead of last year’s planting season.

But bees aren’t the only iconic springtime creature threatened by the ubiquitous pesticide, whose biggest makers are the European giants Dow and Syngenta. It turns out that birds are too, according to an alarming analysis co-authored by Pierre Mineau, a retired senior research scientist at Environment Canada (Canada’s EPA), published by the American Bird Conservancy. And not just birds themselves, but also the water-borne insect species that serve as a major food source for birds, fish, and amphibians.

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Not Just the Bees: Bayer’s Pesticide May Harm Birds, Too

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Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods Won’t Sell GM Salmon

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This story first appeared on the Guardian website.

A number of US supermarket chains pledged on Wednesday not to sell genetically modified salmon, in a sign of growing public concern about engineered foods on the dinner table.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is in the final stages of deciding whether to allow GM salmon on to the market. If approved, AquaBounty Technology’s salmon would be the first genetically engineered animal to enter the food supply.

The company combined genes from two species of salmon with a pouter eel to produce a fish it says it can bring to market twice as fast as conventional salmon.

The GM salmon is the first in some 30 other species of genetically engineered fish under development, including tilapia. Researchers are also working to bring GM cows, chickens, and pigs to market.

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Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods Won’t Sell GM Salmon

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4 Tips On What To Power With A Solar Panel

Every time someone says solar panels the very first thing you probably visualize would be the large solar panels placed on a roof providing environmentally friendly electric power through the day. You’re probably correct nevertheless you can implement these to power almost everything, some of which you probably haven’t known about yet!

The moment your motor vehicle battery loses its power almost instantly when it is not in use you’ll be forced to jump start it or charge up it for a time. Why don’t you power it completely on its own without requiring you even being there. Basically hook up a 12 Volt solar energy trickle charger to the cigarette lighter and if it is bright outside your power supply will be charging constantly.

You can find little solar energy run rotary turntables available in the market that are designed to turn whenever sunlight hits them. These are typically utilized to show little items like jewellery but one idea you would not think about may be to place seedling flowers on them. The moment the seeds mature they won’t grow towards the light since they’re constantly turning around and they will develop upright.

One very well liked application for small solar panels nowadays is to recharge mobile devices. A compact panel is often connected to a battery and utilizing it you can power a cellular phone with plenty of power to utilize it for a little while. What most people do not realize would be that the charger generally has an Universal serial bus connector which means you can just about charge any item that has that connector. Fans, light bulbs, heating units, the list is more or less unlimited.

In case you have a small pond I imagine you’ll like to have a water fountain inside it but they also usually require a substantial amount equipment and energy. You’ll find photovoltaic run water features offered that may work if there is light around, this way if you are up and about you will enjoy a attractive water fountain and at nighttime it will stop when you can’t view it anyhow.

Something similar can be obtained for any fish pond, a water station that will rotate the water around. After sunset fish will not be really energetic so they tend not to require rapidly flowing water.

Clearly there are lots of neat things you can do with small scale solar power equipment. Everything that works with electrical energy could be run on solar panels if you want. The ideas are endless and only restricted by your own imagination.

Want to find out more about Solar Devices, then visit John Basset’s site on how to choose the best Solar Panels for your needs.

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