Tag Archives: water

Dot Earth Blog: Urban Trees as Triggers, From Istanbul to Oregon

When leaders crack down in fights over scarce urban trees, trouble follows. Original post: Dot Earth Blog: Urban Trees as Triggers, From Istanbul to Oregon Related Articles Dot Earth Blog: The End Comes for a Troubled California Nuclear Plant Dot Earth Blog: With CO2 Cuts Tough, U.S. and China Pledge a Push on a Rarer Greenhouse Gas With CO2 Cuts Tough, U.S. and China Pledge a Push on Another Greenhouse Gas

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Dot Earth Blog: Urban Trees as Triggers, From Istanbul to Oregon

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Dot Earth Blog: The End Comes for a Troubled California Nuclear Plant

Is the closure of a troubled nuclear power plant in California an anomaly or a sign of more to come? Read article here: Dot Earth Blog: The End Comes for a Troubled California Nuclear Plant Related Articles Dot Earth Blog: Urban Trees as Triggers, From Istanbul to Oregon Dot Earth Blog: With CO2 Cuts Tough, U.S. and China Pledge a Push on a Rarer Greenhouse Gas With CO2 Cuts Tough, U.S. and China Pledge a Push on Another Greenhouse Gas

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Dot Earth Blog: The End Comes for a Troubled California Nuclear Plant

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Tepco Says Water at Fukushima Is Contaminated

Tokyo Electric Power Company, which had previously said that there were no radioactive particles, indicated that some had been found in water flowing into the plant. Link –  Tepco Says Water at Fukushima Is Contaminated ; ;Related ArticlesSquare Feet: Walgreen Builds a ‘Zero Net Energy Store’Istanbul Protests Started Over TreesMerkel Visits Flood-Stricken Regions of Germany and Offers Aid ;

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Tepco Says Water at Fukushima Is Contaminated

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How Storm Chasers Have Made Tornado Alley Safer

A meteorologist focused on severe weather hails the contributions of storm chasers. Continue at source:   How Storm Chasers Have Made Tornado Alley Safer ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: How Storm Chasers Have Made Tornado Alley SaferDot Earth Blog: A Tornado Chaser Falls Doing Extreme ScienceDot Earth Blog: A New Way to Harvest Wind Energy at Sea ;

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How Storm Chasers Have Made Tornado Alley Safer

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Smithfield, world’s largest pork producer, could be sold to a Chinese company

Smithfield, world’s largest pork producer, could be sold to a Chinese company

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In Smithfield, Va., on Wednesday, locals were shocked to discover that their town’s namesake, Smithfield Foods, founded in 1936 as a single meatpacking plant and now the largest pork producer in the world, is poised to be sold to Chinese meat company Shuanghui International. If approved by federal regulators, the $4.7 billion deal would be the biggest takeover in history of an American company by a Chinese one.

The announcement of the deal immediately provoked skepticism far beyond the town of Smithfield, with a wide range of camps voicing concern about everything from food safety to foreign financial control to increasing corporate consolidation of the food industry. Shuanghui is the biggest meat company in China, and Smithfield already owns more hogs than the next eight largest hog producers combined, according to Food & Water Watch. It’s not necessarily a complete foreign takeover if you consider that Shuanghui is partially owned by Goldman Sachs, but if you’re worried about corporate control of the food system, that’s not exactly cause for comfort.

Why is China interested in owning an American pork behemoth? The New York Times reports:

Smithfield and Shuanghui said that the deal was meant to … increase exports of American products to China, already the nation’s third-largest export market for pork. Meat consumption in China has exploded over the past decade because of a growing middle class and a shift in diet from rice and vegetables to more protein.

China has attempted to meet that rising demand for a middle-class diet by revamping its meat-production system to look more like the industrial one dominant in the U.S. and exemplified by Smithfield. Large, vertically integrated agribusiness operations, supported by policy and investment, increasingly challenge the survival of small-scale Chinese farms, according to a 2011 paper from the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy.

The shift toward industrial agriculture, while successfully ramping up Chinese pork production, has also led to food-safety scandals that have American consumer groups worried about the possibility of China exporting its pork to the U.S., despite the deal’s stated goal of doing the opposite. In 2011, Shuanghui came under fire for selling pork tainted with clenbuterol, an additive banned in the U.S., E.U., and China itself for its serious human health risks. And then there was that whole problem of Chinese hog farmers dumping thousands of dead pigs in a river.

But it’s not like U.S.-produced pork has a stellar safety record. A report earlier this month from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Office of the Inspector General slammed slaughterhouses here for “egregious” safety violations; it found that producers often committed the same human-health and animal-welfare errors over and over without consequence. And American pork producers, including Smithfield, have faced criticism for their use of ractopamine, an additive similar to clenbuterol that’s banned in China but not here. According to Reuters, Smithfield has been trying to phase out the drug; the deal with a Chinese company could speed up that process.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a panel that clears such deals for national security, must review the deal before it can go ahead. Tom Philpott at Mother Jones has this take:

For Smithfield itself, the deal is savvy, because Americans are eating less meat. In order to maintain endless profit growth, the company needs to conquer markets where per capita meat consumption is growing fast, and the China market itself represents the globe’s biggest prize in that regard.

Hmm. Reminds me of U.S. attempts to export another product unwanted by Americans but in high demand in China. Starts with c, rhymes with bowl.

Claire Thompson is an editorial assistant at Grist.

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Smithfield, world’s largest pork producer, could be sold to a Chinese company

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Surfrider college club joins the offshore campaign

College club joins offshore fight. Visit link:  Surfrider college club joins the offshore campaign ; ;Related ArticlesThousands engage in Morocco, the beach is not a garbage canSurfrider Argentina picks up momentumSurfrider’s Beach Manifesto ;

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Surfrider college club joins the offshore campaign

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American meat labeling laws bolstered; Canadians indignant

American meat labeling laws bolstered; Canadians indignant

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Would you eat the bacon from this pig if you knew it was Canadian?

Wee life stories documenting the globetrotting lives of pigs, cows, and chickens raised for slaughter will soon be posted on packages of meat sold in the U.S.

But the new miniature memoirs — such as “Born in Canada, raised and slaughtered in the United States” — have outraged Canadian agricultural officials. They’re mulling a trade war, because the labels will help American grocery shoppers “discriminate” against Canadian-born poultry, swine, and cattle.

Large retailers are also oinking in angry disapproval, saying the labeling rule will be an expensive hassle for them.

In 2009, the U.S. Department of Agriculture directed retailers to put country of origin labels on many types of food, including meat, fruit, and vegetables. That additional information triggered a decline in meat imports from Canada and Mexico, as shoppers opted to buy more American-reared protein. Canada and Mexico complained about the rule to the World Trade Organization, saying the labels were discriminatory, and the WTO ruled in their favor, giving the U.S. until Thursday to update its labeling regulations.

On Thursday, the USDA issued its new rules. To the dismay of the Canadians, the new rules require more detailed labels to be put on meat. They also put an end to the sale of packages containing meat from animals that were born or raised in different countries. The rules take effect immediately, but the USDA is offering retailers a six-month grace period before enforcement begins.

From Reuters:

Canadian Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz said the changes are disappointing, and don’t comply with WTO rules.

Ritz said one of Canada’s options under consideration is asking the WTO to approve retaliation against U.S. products, but he would not say which products Canada would most likely target. In the past, he has said Canada would likely aim at more goods than just U.S. meat.

“We have no intention of backing off or backing down, if the Americans think this is a game of chicken,” Ritz said. “We will do everything within our power to make sure they understand that both Canadian industry as well as American industry (are) totally rejecting what they came forward with today.”

COOL [country of origin labeling rules] was backed by U.S. consumer groups and some U.S. farm groups. It was opposed by trade groups representing U.S. cattle and hog producers and foodmakers.

“People have the right to know where the food they feed their families comes from,” said Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food and Water Watch.

Yo, Canadian officials and WTO peeps: “Discrimination” is a lousy word and you know it. It’s not that Americans are hating on your swine. It’s just that the international livestock trade and the long-distance hauling of meat are both unnecessary and bad for the climate.

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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American meat labeling laws bolstered; Canadians indignant

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Who’s Escaping Climate Change ‘Mire and Muck’?

A radio show tries to find a route around conventional thinking on global warming. Continue reading:  Who’s Escaping Climate Change ‘Mire and Muck’? ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: The Adirondack Park and Conservation on a Crowding PlanetThe Other Climate Science GapDot Earth Blog: The Other Climate Science Gap ;

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Who’s Escaping Climate Change ‘Mire and Muck’?

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Cutting Carbon Dioxide Isn’t Enough

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We have to invest in technology to remove the CO2 already in the atmosphere. ishmatt/Flickr According to data being gathered at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii, which has been monitoring atmospheric carbon dioxide since 1958, the CO2 concentration in the Earth’s atmosphere officially exceeded the 400 parts per million mark last week, a value not attained on Earth since humans were first human. This ominous milestone comes at a time when the evidence that human activity is resulting in unprecedented climate change is now overwhelming. More important, perhaps, even if all greenhouse gas production ceased immediately, this elevated carbon dioxide level would persist in the atmosphere for thousands of years. Indeed, even moving relatively quickly toward a carbon-neutral economy will still result in a net increase in CO2 in the atmosphere for the foreseeable future. But that is moot, because we are nowhere close to moving quickly in this regard anyway. Fossil fuel reserves have effectively increased, due to improved technologies for extraction, and investment in alternative energy sources has been limited due to artificially low prices on carbon-based energy. As a result, 2012 was likely another record year for human-induced CO2 production. To keep reading, click here.

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Cutting Carbon Dioxide Isn’t Enough

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Cutting Carbon Dioxide Isn’t Enough

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Scientist at Work Blog: Empty Nets on the Mekong

On the Mekong, the Opperman family learns how to cast for dinner in a changing river. View original post here:  Scientist at Work Blog: Empty Nets on the Mekong ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: DNA from Tiger Scat Aids Conservation Efforts in NepalPlans to Harness China’s Nu River Threaten a RegionChinese River’s Fate May Reshape a Region ;

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Scientist at Work Blog: Empty Nets on the Mekong

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