Category Archives: bamboo

With Arrests, Signs of Justice in Slaying of Costa Rican Turtle Guardian

Eight arrests are made two months after the brutal murder of a young sea turtle guardian in Costa Rica. More:  With Arrests, Signs of Justice in Slaying of Costa Rican Turtle Guardian ; ;Related ArticlesTwo Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming ThreatA Closer Look at ‘Nonhuman Personhood’ and Animal WelfareGoogle’s Science Fellows Challenge the Company’s Fund-Raising for Senator Inhofe ;

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With Arrests, Signs of Justice in Slaying of Costa Rican Turtle Guardian

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Dot Earth Blog: With Arrests, Signs of Justice in Slaying of Costa Rican Turtle Guardian

Eight arrests are made two months after the brutal murder of a young sea turtle guardian in Costa Rica. This article: Dot Earth Blog: With Arrests, Signs of Justice in Slaying of Costa Rican Turtle Guardian ; ;Related ArticlesWith Arrests, Signs of Justice in Slaying of Costa Rican Turtle GuardianOp-Ed Contributors: A Republican Case for Climate ActionDot Earth Blog: Two Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming Threat ;

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Dot Earth Blog: With Arrests, Signs of Justice in Slaying of Costa Rican Turtle Guardian

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Dot Earth Blog: Two Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming Threat

Two global warming researchers say natural gas leaks are a problem, but not a big part of the climate problem. Originally posted here:  Dot Earth Blog: Two Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming Threat ; ;Related ArticlesTwo Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming ThreatOp-Ed Contributors: A Republican Case for Climate ActionGlobal Warming Could Cause 50 Percent Increase in Violent Conflict ;

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Dot Earth Blog: Two Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming Threat

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National Briefing | Washington: President Orders Review of Chemical Plant Safety

President Obama on Thursday ordered federal agencies to review safety rules at chemical facilities in response to the April explosion at a Texas fertilizer plant that killed 15 people. Continue at source –  National Briefing | Washington: President Orders Review of Chemical Plant Safety ; ;Related ArticlesOp-Ed Contributors: A Republican Case for Climate ActionMilestone Claimed in Creating Fuel From WasteClimate Study Predicts a Watery Future for New York, Boston and Miami ;

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National Briefing | Washington: President Orders Review of Chemical Plant Safety

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Op-Ed Contributors: A Republican Case for Climate Action

The United States must move now on substantive steps to curb climate change, at home and internationally. Source article –  Op-Ed Contributors: A Republican Case for Climate Action ; ;Related ArticlesClimate Study Predicts a Watery Future for New York, Boston and MiamiMilestone Claimed in Creating Fuel From WasteNational Briefing | Washington: President Orders Review of Chemical Plant Safety ;

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Op-Ed Contributors: A Republican Case for Climate Action

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Two Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming Threat

Two global warming researchers say natural gas leaks are a problem, but not a big part of the climate problem. This article: Two Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming Threat ; ;Related ArticlesAnother View on Gas Drilling in the Context of Climate ChangeDot Earth Blog: Another View on Gas Drilling in the Context of Climate ChangeDaniel Yergin on George Mitchell’s Shale Energy Innovations and Concerns ;

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Two Climate Analysts Fault Gas Leaks, but Not as a Big Warming Threat

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July 30: Try Out 1,000 Green Products for Free

This seven-piece vegan brush set from Christopher Drummond is one of the 1,000 products available for free on July 30. Image: Courtesy of John Paul Selects

On July 30, 1,000 sustainable and eco-friendly products will be given away free via JohnPaulSelects.com. The website, founded by Paul Mitchell Systems and Patron Spirits Co-Founder John Paul DeJoria, helps visitors identify and purchase sustainable products based on various attributes, such as the use of recycled materials, philanthropic benefits or animal-friendly ingredients or practices.

DeJoria decided to host the giveaway to celebrate his receipt of “The Visionary Award” from the Green Business Bureau (GBB) earlier this month.

“We wanted a way to commemorate our winning the award and to show appreciation to the community for supporting us. This also allows people to test out some products they might be interested in,” he said.

In a blog post, the GBB  stated that DeJoria received the award because he is considered “a perfect role model for our thousands of members who work hard every day to develop their companies and serve their communities.”

Products available via the giveaway range from vegan makeup brushes and rain boots to bamboo toothbrushes and nail polish and are available for free on a first-come, first-served basis.

John Paul Selects works to “to attract, inspire and educate the human spirit on behalf of the best emerging sustainable brands and eco-conscious entrepreneurs who are striving to make a difference, both socially and environmentally.” The website aims to make finding quality, eco-friendly products easier by vetting them in advance using six criteria and also excluding those that contain ingredients or use practices that do not meet the organization’s standards.

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July 30: Try Out 1,000 Green Products for Free

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Taiwan’s most-wanted gang leader ‘White Wolf’ captured at airport after 17 years

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<!– google_ad_section_start –> A Taiwanese gang leader who has been on the island’s most wanted list since he fled to the mainland 17 years ago was arrested on arrival at a Taipei airport on Saturday, police said. Chang An-lo, better known by his nickname “White Wolf”, is a key member of the Bamboo Union – one of Taiwan’s biggest gangs accused of organised crimes including blackmail, extortion, smuggling and money laundering. <!– google_ad_section_end –>

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Taiwan’s most-wanted gang leader ‘White Wolf’ captured at airport after 17 years

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Taiwan’s most-wanted gang leader ‘White Wolf’ captured at airport after 17 years

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Blame Canada: Greedy for oil money, the country is turning into a rogue petrostate

Blame Canada: Greedy for oil money, the country is turning into a rogue petrostate

Forest Ethics

When I recently interviewed Canadian artist Franke James, whose outspoken appeals to her government for climate action landed her on Ottawa’s shit list, I was taken aback to hear her casually refer to her country as a “petrostate.” I knew Canada’s been spending gobs of federal money to promote its tar-sands agenda, but I didn’t realize our mild-mannered northern neighbor was approaching the ranks of Saudi Arabia and Nigeria in its single-minded embrace of oil as the nation’s lifeblood.

An unforgiving article in the latest Foreign Policy magazine lays out how conservative Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been aggressively pursuing development of the Alberta oil sands and remaking the country in the political image of the George W. Bush-era United States:

Over the last decade, as oil prices increased fivefold, oil companies invested approximately $160 billion to develop bitumen in Alberta, and it has finally turned profitable. Canada is now cranking out 1.7 million barrels a day of the stuff, and scheduled production stands to fill provincial and federal government coffers with about $120 billion in rent and royalties by 2020. More than 40 percent of that haul goes directly to the federal government largely in the form of corporate taxes. And the government wants even more; it’s pushing for production to hit 5 million barrels a day by 2030. …

Unsurprisingly, Ottawa has become a master at the cynical art of greenwashing. When Harper’s ministers aren’t attacking former NASA scientist and climate change canary James Hansen in the pages of the New York Times or lobbying against Europe’s Fuel Quality Directive (which regards bitumen as much dirtier than conventional oil), his government has spent $100 million since 2009 on ads to convince Canadians that exporting this oil is “responsible resource development.” Meanwhile, Canada has bent over backward to entice Beijing. Three state-owned Chinese oil companies (all with dismal records of corporate transparency and environmental sensitivity) have already spent more than $20 billion purchasing rights to oil sands in Alberta.

Harper, elected in 2006, is risking his country’s political and ecological security by exploiting what Foreign Policy calls “the world’s most volatile resource.” Mining operations in Alberta have already generated 6 billion barrels of toxic sludge, enough to flood Washington, D.C., and an area of forest six times the size of New York City could be excavated if approved projects proceed. Meanwhile, a secret document leaked to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation last fall reveals a sinister foreign-policy strategy: “To succeed [in becoming an energy superpower] we will need to pursue political relationships in tandem with economic interests even where political interests or values may not align.”

For all of this to pay off, Canada is counting on a global market for its oil. Exports to the U.S., its biggest customer, have declined, and fighting over the Keystone XL pipeline doesn’t help. So, per that leaked memo, Canada is setting aside human-rights concerns in favor of trade deals with China. (Most bizarre detail in the article: “And, perhaps to warm Canadians’ hearts to the Chinese, the government recently lobbied to rent two traveling pandas at a cost of $10 million over the next 10 years.”)

This reckless pursuit of oil wealth requires a heavy dose of climate denial. The Harper government has eliminated or drastically reduced funding for the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, the national park system, the CBC, and the Health Council of Canada; it disbanded Environment Canada’s Adaptation to Climate Change Research Group, eliminated the position of chief science advisor, and gutted the Fisheries Act. Reporters must have questions approved before they can speak with any federal scientists. Oh, and Harper called the Kyoto Protocol a “socialist scheme” — before pulling his country out of the accord altogether.

So if Keystone XL is approved and built and ends up leaking dirty oil into the Ogallala aquifer, if the climate becomes fucked even faster thanks to all that tar-sands oil being burned, we can blame Canada.

Claire Thompson is an editorial assistant at Grist.

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Blame Canada: Greedy for oil money, the country is turning into a rogue petrostate

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Nuclear waste leaking at Hanford site in Washington, again

Nuclear waste leaking at Hanford site in Washington, again

A tank storing radioactive waste at America’s most contaminated nuclear site appears to have sprung a leak, leaching yet more cancer-causing isotopes into soil some five miles from the Columbia River in Washington state.

Crash Zone Photography

The Hanford site and the Columbia River

The Hanford site produced plutonium that was used to manufacture the bomb that blew up Hiroshima. Now it’s home to a different kind of horror: It’s used to store nuclear waste while a plant is built on site to treat that waste. But the Department of Energy treatment plant project has been plagued by delays, and tanks that were designed to hold the waste temporarily keep falling apart.

From the AP:

An underground tank holding some of the worst radioactive waste at the nation’s most contaminated nuclear site might be leaking into the soil.

The U.S. Energy Department said workers at Washington state’s Hanford Nuclear Reservation detected higher radioactivity levels under tank AY-102 during a routine inspection Thursday.

Spokeswoman Lori Gamache said the department has notified Washington officials and is investigating the leak further. An engineering analysis team will conduct additional sampling and video inspection to determine the source of the contamination, she said.

State and federal officials have long said leaking tanks at Hanford do not pose an immediate threat to the environment or public health. The largest waterway in the Pacific Northwest — the Columbia River — is still at least 5 miles away and the closest communities are several miles downstream.

However, if this dangerous waste escapes the tank into the soil, it raises concerns about it traveling to the groundwater and someday potentially reaching the river.

The AP reports that water samples taken beneath the leaking tank “had an 800,000-count of radioactivity and a high dose rate, which means that workers must reduce their time in the area.”

If the leak is confirmed, it is certainly not the first time that the Hanford site has been home to such an accident. From a February editorial in the Tacoma News Tribune:

Hanford hosts 56 million gallons of hot reactor byproducts in 177 steel-walled underground tanks, some dating to the heyday of Betty Grable. Collectively, they’ve leaked an estimated 1 million gallons of waste into the desert soil, creating radioactive plumes that are gradually headed for the Columbia River.

The Department of Energy put a stop to the big leaks years ago by pumping out liquids from the tanks, leaving crusty, gooey, toxic sludges inside. Water has been penetrating one of these supposedly “stabilized” tanks. The lyrically named T-111 has reportedly resumed leaking at a rate of 150 to 300 gallons a year.

This is a reminder that the nation’s largest concentration of nuclear waste is stored under insanely makeshift conditions. The oldest tanks, including T-111, were engineered to last 20 years. They were built in 1943 and 1944.

Even Hanford’s newer, double-walled tanks – built between the late 1960s and early 1980s – are slowly rotting in the ground. One sprang a leak last fall.

News of the latest suspected leak has state officials gravely concerned, yet again. From a statement by Gov. Jay Inslee:

“This is most disturbing news for Washington. It is not clear yet whether that contamination is coming directly from the outer shell of the AY-102 but it must be treated with the utmost seriousness. The discovery was made during a routine pumping outside the tank when pumps are also surveyed for radioactivity. …

“Even before learning of this new development, I told [Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz] I continue to have serious concerns regarding the pace of addressing the leaking tanks. We will be insisting on an acceleration of remediation of all the tanks, not just AY-102. [The U.S. Energy Department] has a legal obligation to clean up Hanford and remove or treat that waste, and we ensure that legal obligation is fulfilled.”

But it’s not clear how the government could treat the waste anytime soon. From TV station KING5:

The [treatment] plant has been delayed for years by continued problems and is not expected to meet a 2019 deadline to be up and running.

So the tank designed to hold the waste until then is now possibly leaking, no longer dependable, and there is no plan we know of for quickly pumping it out to another double walled tank.

That leaves the DOE and its contractors with fewer places to store 56 million gallons of waste and no plant built yet to treat it.

The AP reports that Energy Secretary Moniz toured the facility on Wednesday and promised Washington a new plan this summer for tackling difficulties with the waste treatment project. Don’t hold your breath (unless your visiting the site).

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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Nuclear waste leaking at Hanford site in Washington, again

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