Ecoshock News

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Enviro News Nov 17, 2005

This is news from Ecoshock, all environment radio.

Lab tests in Canada found 60 toxic chemicals in the blood of average people. ENS, the environmental news service reports, November 15th, that stain repellants, flame retardants, mercury and lead, DDT, and PCBs are among the 60 contaminants detected by blood tests.

A non-profit called Environmental Defense ordered the blood tests on 11 citizens from across the country. The testing demonstrates that toxic chemicals contaminate Canadians no matter where they live in the country, how old they are or what they do for a living, concludes the report, "Toxic Nation: A Report on Pollution in Canadians."

This mirrors similar tests done recently in Europe. No matter where you live, your blood is accumulating toxic chemicals, in a completely unregulated and unprecedented world-wide chemical experiment. Consumer products from carpets to toys are loaded with carcinogens. Even the air transports chemicals from distant countries, as far as the Arctic Circle. Tight chemical regulations based on the precautionary principle are required. We need natural products.

Doctor Rick Smith, executive director of Environmental Defense said: "If you can walk, talk and breathe, you're contaminated. Canadians are exposed everyday and in incredibly insidious ways to harmful toxic chemicals. We are guinea pigs in a massive, uncontrolled, chemical experiment, the disastrous outcome of which is measured in disease and death."


For more details, go to ens-newswire.com or environmentaldefense.ca.
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Friends of Earth UK announces November 14th that a Federal High Court in Nigeria has ordered energy companies to stop gas flaring in the Niger Delta.

The press release says:

"In a case brought against the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (Shell), Justice C. V. Nwokorie ruled in Benin City that the damaging and wasteful practice of flaring by all the major companies, including ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco, TotalFinaElf and Agip, as well as Shell, in joint ventures with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, cannot lawfully continue and must stop.

Nigeria has been the world's biggest gas flarer, and the practice has contributed more greenhouse gas emissions than all other sources in sub-Saharan Africa combined, as well as poisoning localities with their toxic cocktail. The practice costs Nigeria about US$2.5 billion annually, while about 66% of its population live on less than US$1 a day."

This is a historic decision in Nigeria, where the major oil companies have been accused of widespread pollution and corruption. The Court found that gas flaring violated basic human rights guaranteed in the country's Constitution.

Details at www.foe.co.uk
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On November 16th, ENS environmental wire service reports that grizzly bears will not be protected by the Endangered Species Act. Although grizzly bears are almost extinct in the lower 48 states, Interior Secretary Gale Norton, a Bush Republican appointee, announced the U.S. Fish and Wildlife is planning to remove the Yellowstone grizzlies from protection.

ENS writes:

"Once at least 50,000 grizzly bears, Ursus arctos horribilis, roamed the West, but they were driven nearly to extinction 30 years ago, and, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, just 136 individuals were still alive when the species was listed in 1975."

For details go to ens-newsire.com
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Alertnet.org runs a handy environmental news service. They are running a November 14th Reuters story saying chemicals in California sewage have changed the sex of fish.

Reuters says:

"Researchers have found male fish with eggs in their testes and female sex traits off the coast of Southern California and believe that chemicals in sewage may be the cause, an author of two studies said on Monday.

The two reports found the changes in fish such as English sole and California halibut, both of which are bottom dwellers, in water near where sewage is released, said Dan Schlenk, an environmental scientist at the University of California, Riverside."

The scientists are not sure if high levels of estrogen, or some other unknown chemicals, have damaged the fish. It is even possible that lingering DDT, banned since 1972, is still impacting water species. Doctor Schlenk says the sewage outfall for Los Angeles Country "has probably one of the most contaminated DDT sites in North America, and these responses are fairly consistent with that kind of exposure."

More chemical soup.

The full story at www.reuters.com

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Again, ENS reports from Rome, November 15, 2005:

"The most comprehensive assessment of the world's forests and forestry to date finds that every year about 13 million hectares (32 million acres) are lost due to deforestation. The latest report of the UN agency responsible for monitoring forest lands finds that at the same time, the rate of net forest loss is slowing down due to new planting and natural expansion of existing forests.

The UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) said Monday that forests now cover nearly four billion hectares or 30 percent of the world's land area, but 10 countries - Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, India, Indonesia, Peru, Russia, and the United States - account for two-thirds of all forest area.

Eighty-four percent of the world's forests are publicly owned, but private ownership is on the rise. And more than 300 million hectares of forests are designated for soil and water conservation.

These are some of the key findings of the Global Forest Resources Assessment 2005, covering forested lands, their uses and value in 229 countries and territories between 1990 and 2005.

The FAO has been coordinating global forest assessments every five years since 1946.

The annual net loss of forest area between 2000 and 2005 was 7.3 million hectares per year - an area about the size of Sierra Leone or Panama.

South America suffered the largest net loss of forests between 2000 and 2005 - around 4.3 million hectares per year - followed by Africa, which lost 4.0 million hectares annually, according to FAO."

Asia and Europe have gained some forest cover.

[FAO clip in audio broadcast]

You can find the November 14th FAO press release at:
www.fao.org/newsroom
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Finally, Greenpeace International reports that an activist has been severely beaten in a protest against the construction of more coal-fired power plants in the Philippines.

German volunteer Jens Loewe, 36, was taken to hospital after being beaten with a metal pipe by plant security guards. The violence against peaceful protestors came as Greenpeace warned that more coal burning leads to serious climate change.

Greenpeace Southeast Asia Energy Campaigner Red Constantino said:

"We're outraged that the Filipino plant personnel prefers to protect the interests of a power plant that brings more harm than good to people. Coal is the culprit here, not peaceful protest."

Greenpeace activists were at the plant to draw attention to Australian and Japanese backing of the expansion of climate changing coal dependency in Asia.

Burning coal is one of the primary causes of global warming. Australia and Japan are underwriting global warming at a time when the Philippines and Asia are facing the likelihood of devastating social and economic instability from climate change precisely when the country and the rest of Asia are least able to deal with its impacts.

Here is a clip of a phone call between Australian activist Shannon, and Derek Ou, on board the Rainbow Warrior:

[clip in audio broadcast]

For the full story and video, go to www.greenpeace.org

This has been news from RAdio Ecoshock at www.ecoshock.org
All environment radio, all the time.

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

Nuke Terror Alert

While politicians and pundits push new nuclear power, an American government commission reports a frightening failure to contain nuclear weapons material. And terrorists in Australia were arrested last week, as they plotted to attack that country's only nuclear reactor.

Details released by the Australian prosecutor, in mid-November, reveal a concerted plan to attack the medical materials reactor on the outskirts of the country's capital, Sydney. In the largest ever terror sweep, police arrested at least a dozen Islamic activists, as they collected bomb materials, chemicals, and timing devices, to blow up the nuclear reactor.

An Algerian born Muslim cleric, known as Abu Bakr, has been calling for jihad martyrs, and demanding "maximum damage" in Australia, which has supported US troops in Iraq.

The Australian media has been pushing for more nuclear reactors, in a land brimming with potential solar energy. One pundit on ABC National radio argues the Australian outback should be the site to dump the world's nuclear waste. Now we see that nuclear means target, with a threat that might have irradiated the capital for thousands of years.

Back in America, the members of the 9/11 Commission warn that half of Russia's nuclear weapons stockpile is not yet secured, leaving bomb-grade material available to terrorists on the black market. The bipartisan group blames lack of political will, and bureaucratic in-fighting, for the "unacceptable" response to the threat of nuclear terrorism.

Thomas Kean, the Republican chair of the 9/11 Public Discourse Group said:

"We still do not have a maximum effort against the most urgent threat. The most striking thing to us is that the size of the problem still totally dwarfs the policy response." end quote.

So far, the former Soviet Union has dismantled about 51 percent of their warheads, under treaties with the U.S., and under the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program. That's the good news. The bad news: after his agreement last February with Russian President Vladimir Putin, to complete an inventory and reduction - the Bush administration has let the program slide.

Kean adds, at the current rate... "it's going to take 14 long years to complete this job. Is there anybody, anywhere, who thinks that we really have 14 years?... We have no greater fear than a terrorist who is inside the United States with a nuclear weapon."

The 9/11 group concluded that Osama bid Laden's al-Quaida has been trying to obtain nuclear materials for at least 10 years. The group may have already succeeded, patiently developing their bomb, or bombs, while planning delivery and devastating attacks.

The commission also warned that 100 nuclear research facilities, in 40 countries, do not have even basic security. Each of the 100 sites contain enough material to make a nuclear weapon. The whole nuclear mess ticks like a time bomb, while big business and science pushes more nuclear power.

Only one nuclear bomb in the United States could end the Democracy, and send the world economy into a tail spin. Humanity is not ready for nuclear anything.

This report is from RAdio Ecoshock at www.ecoshock.org

Monday, November 14, 2005

Green News & Tips - Nov 14th

News from RAdio Ecoshock
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One of the quality enviro blogs in the United States is called Nature Noted, by journalist Pat Burns. The November 5th article on major corporate investments in forests is deep and chilling. Money managers are rushing into the woods, buying big chunks in many states. According to Hancock Timer Resource Group, timberlands owned by investment firms has increased to six times their holdings in 1994.

The Boston money managers Grantham, Mayo, and Van Otterloo bought 5 per cent of the state of Maine, just last year. Harvard University has put ten percent of its multi-billion dollar endowments into timber. Yale University is also buying. The Chief executive of Liberty Media Corp owns 75,000 acres, along with his wife. As the baby boomers accumulate pensions and investment cash, their investment funds are buying into hard assets like timber, partly due to insecurity in the bond and stock markets.

These massive purchases may or may not help protect forests. The size of the land holdings might prevent ecologically destructive fragmentation of woodlands - or it may spur a new logging boom.

To get the full report, go to http://naturenoted.blogspot.com
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A PRWEB release dated November 8th has a Green stop during the American tour of Charles and Camilla. His Royal Highness Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, Camilla Parker Bowles will receive an International Center for Environmental Arts (ICEA) award by American Cultural Ambassadors David and Renate Jakupca to commemorate their visit and to highlight the Prince's longstanding interest in the built environment and commitment to designing and creating urban areas with human interests.
Full Story:
http://bc.indymedia.org/newswire/display/6898/index.php
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Indonesia has a long-running environmental radio program called Shabat Alam, meaning Friends of Nature. Spokesman Yon Thayrun says:

"When we talk about sustainable environment, we must include our seas," Yon said. "If we can save the seas, we can save the land, too, from disaster, and the media must become a big player to support this sustainable development. Radio is close to the people; we can use radio to help educate about preserving our coastal environment."

Shabat Alam is distributed through the Internews network, and reaches small power radio stations throughout the Indonesian archipelago. To find out more about the environment in South East Asia, try the Asia Pacific Forum for Environmental Journalists (APFEJ) at www.apfej.org - although the site seems to come alive before and after major conferences.
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Your next purchase could help develop clean renewable energy, according to the program called "Our Energy." Consumers sign up, free, and then access a listing of businesses, in Canada or the USA, which promise to contribute a portion of each purchase to new energy sources. You can pick which energy plan you want to support.
For more information, go to www.ourenergy.us or ourenergycanada.com
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The following news comes from wastenews.com, dated November 14th.
A U.N. study names the five most serious environmental hot spots in Iraq.

Working with Iraq to clean up contaminated sites throughout the country, The United Nations has released the findings of a study of environmental hot spots. There are five top areas of concern.

The most seriously contaminated site found to date is an industrial metal plating facility south of Baghdad that is contaminated with numerous types of hazardous waste, including several tons of cyanide compounds.

U.N. environmental officials have secured $900,000 for the cleanup and hope to use some of the funds for at least one of the other top priority spots.

U.N. officials warn that the five locales identified in their report released Nov. 10 are likely "the tip of the iceberg in terms of environmental hot spots."
The country "has a significant legacy of contaminated and derelict industrial and military sites," the report says.
The report also states that destruction of the Iraqi military arsenal is creating new contamination and hazardous waste problems at scrap yards and munitions dumps that could be better managed through improved working practices.

The U.N. estimates that $40 million would be necessary to address all the issues contained in its report. Unfortunately, this first report doesn't seem to address the problem of radioactive waste from US missiles and munitions carrying so-called depleted uranium, or DU.
For more news on hazardous waste, in America and many parts of the world, check the daily headlines at wastenews.com
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Ecological designer Jim Bell is offering a free downloadable book titled "Creating a Sustainable Economy and Future On Our Planet." The book uses the San Diego and Tijuana area as a case study for planning our way out of the developing ecological crisis.
The book arrives as an Adobe reader file, called PDF. Bell gives permission to print out the pass on the book. To get your copy go to www.jimbell.com
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Listener Danny Gottleib reminds us that Eleven EPA employee unions representing over 7000 environmental and public health professionals of the Civil Service have called for a moratorium on drinking water fluoridation programs across the country, and have asked EPA management to recognize fluoride as posing a serious risk of causing cancer in people. The unions acted following revelations of an apparent cover-up of evidence from Harvard School of Dental Medicine linking fluoridation with elevated risk of a fatal bone cancer in young boys.
When EPA employees go public, saying the government isn't acting on a known toxic tossed into our drinking water, it's time to sit up and listen. To get the full scoop go to the Treasury Employees Union 280 website at www.nteu280.org
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A new law in San Francisco aims to protect Latina and Chinese women from mercury in fish.
The first of its kind in the country, the ordinance will require grocery stores and restaurants to post mercury in seafood warning signs, in English, Spanish, and Chinese, in the city and county of San Francisco.
The San Francisco Department of Public Health will enforce the ordinance during routine health inspections. Proposition 65 requires warnings about toxins, such as mercury in fish, that cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm.
Details at www.GotMercury.Org

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Finally, a reminder of some Green radio programs. In New York State, check out Bob Lebensold's weekly program "Environmentally Sound" in New Rochelle. Web contact is WVOX, AM 1460 - schedule at www.WVOX.com

In the Saint Louis area, listen for "Earthworms" on KDHX, 88.1 FM airing live every Tuesday from 7 to 8 pm. That's full time listener supported radio. The current show is posted at www.kdhx.org/programs/earthworms.htm and its usually packed with on-theme socially aware music from local artists as well - the kind of good sound you don't find anywhere else.

Some of the finest environmental journalism arrives with good soundscapes and major interviews at the non-profit radio program called "A World of Possibilities" Their latest show, ready for your listening pleasure, is at aworldofpossibilities.com It's titled the Wind Will Carry Us, Moving Beyond the Oil Economy.

Dive in to their archives, which are available in the fine Podcast collector offered free by WNYC community radio, at WNYC.org. Click on "Podcasting" on the right hand side of the main page. You will be offered a small, free program that collects non-profit radio journalism not only from the top-rated WNYC, but a lot of other producers in the US, Canada, Britain, and Australia. It's easy to operate, and it automatically grabs the latest programs you select from a list, according to your interests. It's today's best freebie.
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This has been news from Radio Ecoshock. Find us on the Web at www.ecoshock.org.
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