Tag Archives: canadian

Canadian Review Panel Approves Plans for an Oil Pipeline

If built, the pipeline and port project will move oil from Alberta’s oil sands to tankers on Canada’s Pacific Coast. Link:   Canadian Review Panel Approves Plans for an Oil Pipeline ; ;Related ArticlesApplying Creativity to a Byproduct of Oil DrillingApplying Creativity to a Byproduct of Oil Drilling in North DakotaSurge Seen in U.S. Oil Output, Lowering Gasoline Prices ;

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Canadian Review Panel Approves Plans for an Oil Pipeline

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The Supercharged Hormone Diet – Natasha Turner

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The Supercharged Hormone Diet
A 30-Day Accelerated Plan to Lose Weight, Restore Metabolism, and Feel Younger Longer
Natasha Turner

Genre: Health & Fitness

Price: $9.99

Expected Publish Date: December 24, 2013

Publisher: Rodale

Seller: Rodale Inc.


The Hormone Diet taught readers the ins and outs of how and why our hormones play the biggest part in our weight-loss and health woes. In the follow-up to the series, The Supercharged Hormone Diet , Dr. Natasha Turner addresses her patients’ most popular concerns into a fabulous, easy-to-follow condensed 30-day program to begin losing belly fat. Respected naturopathic doctor Natasha Turner took the international community by storm with her phenomenal #1 Canadian bestseller The Hormone Diet, which shows how balancing our hormones is the key to losing weight, feeling better, and staying healthy. Now, by popular demand, there’s an even faster way to fight belly fat and whip your hormones into shape. The Supercharged Hormone Diet is an accelerated program to get your body back on track in just thirty days flat. In no time, you’ll be on your way to an energized, slimmer, stronger you! The Supercharged Hormone Diet includes: The Best Body Assessment for setting your goals The Supercharged Hormone Diet Detox The Supercharged Hormone Diet Exercise Prescription A handy grocery store guide for hormonally balanced shopping The Hormonal Health Profile to identify fat-packing hormonal imbalances Suggested supplements to aid fat-burning and restore optimal health Hormone Diet-friendly food lists and weekly meal plans Recommended blood test to take to your doctor And over 50 delicious, high-protein, hormone-balancing recipes!

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The Supercharged Hormone Diet – Natasha Turner

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Sardines have nearly disappeared off West Coast

Sardines have nearly disappeared off West Coast

Shutterstock

When Canadian fishermen headed out for their annual sardine hunt in the Pacific Ocean earlier this fall, they got a rude surprise. Their nets came up empty.

Sardine numbers have been in severe decline along the entire West Coast this season, prompting U.S. fisheries authorities to slash catch limits. Fears abound that the fishery’s decline will reverberate through the coming years, if not decades. It’s happened before: Monterey, Calif.’s famed Cannery Row turned into a ghost town following a sardine collapse in 1950s.

Fishermen lucky enough to come across schools of sardines off the coasts of California, Oregon, and Washington during the first six months of next year will be allowed to haul in no more than 5,446 metric tons of the baitfish, down nearly 70 percent from the quota this year. The Associated Press reports:

Marci Yaremko of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife says the [Pacific Fishery Management Council] decided to take an even more precautionary approach than management guidelines call for because the current assessment was lacking some information, such as surveys showing too few sardines are being born to replace the ones that are caught or eaten by other fish.

“Nothing is suggesting the biomass is stable,” said Yaremko, who made the motion to cut the harvest. “Everything suggests a decline.”

Harvests are valued at $9 million to $15 million a year. Most of the fish are exported to Asia, where some are canned and others are used as tuna bait.

The sardine population off the west of Canada is in even worse shape. New Scientist reports that its decline could be due to overfishing and to the cooling of waters off the West Coast since the 1990s (yes, the Pacific Ocean is warming, and doing so at a dangerous and alarming rate, but ocean weather varies by geography, just as it does on land):

[T]he vanishing of the Canadian fish is part of a process that could mean they all disappear for decades, says Juan Zwolinski of the University of California at Santa Cruz.

Pacific sardine populations fluctuate with water temperature. Colder water means fewer fish. Temperatures last fell in the 1940s, but heavy fishing continued, devastating the stock and ending fishing until sardines returned when waters warmed in the 1980s.

“We think this is set to happen again,” says Zwolinski, who tracked the population over the past century. He found that sardines have reproduced less since waters cooled in the 1990s. Almost all eggs now come from fish born a decade ago, which are nearly gone.

What’s more, acoustic results show that the fish have become smaller over the past decade, partly because of chillier water.

The Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program still lists Pacific sardines as “best choice” for people seeking sustainable seafood. Might be time to reevaluate that ranking.


Source
Feds slash sardine harvest along West Coast, The Associated Press
Sardine disappearance was foreseen but ignored, New Scientist

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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Sardines have nearly disappeared off West Coast

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Bill Limiting Pesticide Use on Hawaii Island Is Vetoed

The legislation, vetoed by the mayor on the ground that it was flawed, was aimed at seed companies developing genetically modified crops on the island of Kauai. View original article:  Bill Limiting Pesticide Use on Hawaii Island Is Vetoed ; ;Related ArticlesDealBook: Building a Portfolio With a Focus on a Single Sector: WaterLooking for a Way Around Keystone XL, Canadian Oil Hits the RailsActivists Feel Powerful Wrath as Russia Guards Its Arctic Claims ;

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Bill Limiting Pesticide Use on Hawaii Island Is Vetoed

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American company sues Canada over fracking moratorium

American company sues Canada over fracking moratorium

pollyalida

The St. Lawrence River.

Quebec isn’t entirely sure about this whole fracking thing. Amid reports from across the continent of groundwater pollution, air pollution, deforestation, and other environmental side effects of hydraulic fracturing, the Canadian province has placed a moratorium on the practice beneath the St. Lawrence River.

That doesn’t sit well with Lone Pine Resources, a Delaware-based company that has long eyed the gas and oil that’s locked up in the Utica shale beneath the grand waterway. The company claims it spent millions to get the appropriate permits to drill, and now that the fossil fuels seem out of reach, it says Canadians need to pony up more than $250 million in compensation.

The company last month submitted a claim [PDF] to an international arbitration system seeking damages because of “Quebec’s arbitrary, capricious, and illegal revocation” of its “valuable right to mine for oil and gas under the St. Lawrence River.” The claim is based on Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which allows private companies to sue governments when laws hurt their expected profits.

Needless to say, activists who want to protect the St. Lawrence River from reckless frackers are appalled by the legal action. From a Sierra Club press release:

“This egregious lawsuit — which Lone Pine Resources must drop — highlights just how vulnerable public interest policies are as a result of trade and investment pacts,” said Ilana Solomon, Sierra Club Responsible Trade Program Director. “Governments should learn from this and other similar cases and stop writing investment rules that empower corporations to attack environmental laws and policies.”

Meanwhile, Lone Pine Resources has been missing its loan repayments and desperately trying to work with its creditors in a bid to clamor out of a looming financial abyss. Coincidence much?


Source
Notice of arbitration under the arbitration rules of the United Nations Commission on International Trade law and Chapter Eleven of the North American Free Trade Agreement, Investment Treaty Arbitration
Lone Pine Resources files outrageous NAFTA lawsuit against fracking ban, The Sierra Club

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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Climate & Energy

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American company sues Canada over fracking moratorium

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Pebble Mine project in Alaska is on the ropes

Pebble Mine project in Alaska is on the ropes

Friends of Bristol Bay

A waterway that leads to Bristol Bay.

The future of the controversial Pebble Mine, which could excavate 186 square miles [PDF] of pristine Alaskan terrain, is now very much up in the air.

The proposed mine near Bristol Bay would dig up an estimated $300 billion worth of gold, copper, and molybdenum. But it would threaten another treasure: one of the world’s biggest salmon runs, which provides half the world’s supply of sockeye.

One of two global mining giants involved in the project announced Monday that it was walking away from what it regards as a high-risk venture. U.K.-based Anglo American had spent $541 million getting the 50/50 joint-venture project nearly to the point where it could begin applying for state and federal permits. By quitting now, it avoids spending nearly $1 billion more it had agreed to sink into development of the mine. Anglo told shareholders it would write $300 million of intangible assets off of its ledger at the end of the year — the price of walking away from a deal that it once thought would lead to bountiful riches.

It’s too early to say what this will mean for the fate of the project, but environmentalists rejoiced in the news while investors choked on it.

“Anglo American’s decision to pull out of the potentially disastrous Pebble Mine highlights the incredible risks the project brings to Bristol Bay’s local communities and fisheries,” World Wildlife Fund Arctic campaigner Dave Aplin said. “When a company is willing to accept a $300 million charge to walk away from a project, it gives you a sense of just how bad of an idea the proposed Pebble Mine really is.”

Opponents of the mine worry that it would wreck an ecologically rich and remarkable landscape. Local fishermen are particularly concerned, fearing the project could destroy their livelihoods — and the livelihoods of the processors and traders that rely on them [PDF].

The timing of the announcement was interesting: It came just weeks after EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy visited the site, which environmentalists and fishermen are lobbying her to protect using provisions of the Clean Water Act. Results of a recent poll indicated that more than 60 percent of Alaskans would vote in a favor of a proposed 2014 ballot initiative to block the mine.

The announcement also coincides with falling worldwide commodity prices.

In Monday’s announcement, Anglo American said it wants to reduce financial risks and reduce spending on “such projects during the pre-approval phases.”

Northern Dynasty Minerals, a publicly traded subsidiary of Canadian mining company Hunter Dickinson, is now left all alone in trying to push through with the mine. Its chief executive put an optimistic spin on the news during a call Monday with reporters. “We will now be back in possession of 100 percent of the Pebble Project and the beneficiary of something north of $540 million worth of expenditures by Anglo over the past five years,” Ron Thiessen said. He insisted the project would move forward, but acknowledged that he really doesn’t know what lies ahead. The company’s board of directors has not yet met to discuss next steps.

Northern Dynasty might be trying to sound upbeat, but investors were having none of it. The company doesn’t have enough money to develop the mine alone. Shares in the company were being traded at $1.50 on Monday — an all-time low, well below the $5 at which its shares were trading a year ago.

If the project is called off, what’s bad news for the mining company’s investors would prove to be wonderful news for the environment.

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.Find this article interesting? Donate now to support our work.Read more: Business & Technology

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Pebble Mine project in Alaska is on the ropes

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An Ecologist Explains His Contested View of Planetary Limits

An embattled ecologist defends his upbeat view of a human-dominated Earth. View article: An Ecologist Explains His Contested View of Planetary Limits Related Articles Dot Earth Blog: An Ecologist Explains His Contested View of Planetary Limits First Hurricane Brews After Silent First Half to the Atlantic Storm Season From the Fire Hose: Warming Slowdown, Deep-Ocean Waves, Canadian Crude

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An Ecologist Explains His Contested View of Planetary Limits

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Solar’s Future Gets Brighter with New Discovery

University of Alberta researcher Jillian Buriak (center) worked with postdoctoral fellows Erik Luber (right) and Hosnay Mobarok to create nanoparticles that could lead to printable or spray-on solar cells. Photo: University of Alberta

For years, one of the greatest arguments against the implementation of solar power has been that it is expensive to harness. However, a recent discovery by Canadian researchers at the University of Alberta in Edmonton may prove to be a game changer.

Jillian Buriak, senior research officer of the U of A’s National Institute for Nanotechnology, led a team in discovering that materials found in the earth’s crust can be used to create inexpensive nanoparticle-based solar cells. Not only could Buriak’s discovery make solar power more affordable, it also could make solar more accessible to parts of the planet that either face high power transmission costs or are not on the traditional electricity grid.

The team discovered that phosphorus and zinc — two plentiful, natural materials — can be used to build nanoparticles that absorb light and conduct electricity. Their research, which was published in the latest issue of ACS Nano, a journal from the American Chemical Society, indicates that a low-cost mass manufacturing method would allow them to print or paint the solar cells onto surfaces. The process dissolves the particles to create an ink, then the material is processed to make a thin film that is responsive to light.

Based on the success they’ve found with their discovery, Buriak and her team have applied for a provisional patent on the process and have secured funding to allow them to take the next steps toward stepping up manufacturing.

In addition to her work with the Canadian team, Buriak is part of an international research team that includes scientists from Harvard University, the University of Toronto and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

The team is working on a global project involving next-generation solar energy technology.

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Solar’s Future Gets Brighter with New Discovery

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From the Fire Hose: Warming Slowdown, Deep-Ocean Waves, Canadian Crude Inferno

An in-depth analysis of the recent slowdown in global warming finds lots of theories and few firm facts. Read the article:   From the Fire Hose: Warming Slowdown, Deep-Ocean Waves, Canadian Crude Inferno ; ;Related ArticlesFrom the Fire Hose: Warming Slowdown, Deep-Ocean Waves, Canadian CrudeFirst Hurricane Brews After Silent First Half to the Atlantic Storm SeasonA Hurricane Brews After Silent First Half to the Atlantic Storm Season ;

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From the Fire Hose: Warming Slowdown, Deep-Ocean Waves, Canadian Crude Inferno

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Canadian Documents Suggest Shift on Pipeline

Papers released to an environmental group say Canada’s government once viewed Keystone XL as important to oil sands development, in contrast to a United States assessment. Visit source:  Canadian Documents Suggest Shift on Pipeline ; ;Related ArticlesThai Officials Play Down Effects of Oil SpillTexas Tribune: Making Some Effort, but North Texas Continues to Run the WaterNew Rules Would Cut Silica Dust Exposure ;

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Canadian Documents Suggest Shift on Pipeline

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