[ ]      [ ]

Movie rental suggestions & reviews - Netflix or Blockbuster - swell_sailor - May 19, 2013 - 8:41pm
 
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos; Please Limit to 510 ... - Manbird - May 19, 2013 - 8:40pm
 
Baseball, anyone? - bokey - May 19, 2013 - 8:37pm
 
What Did You Do Today? - swell_sailor - May 19, 2013 - 8:33pm
 
Favorite Books from Your Youth - kurtster - May 19, 2013 - 7:52pm
 
Annoying stuff. not things that piss you off, just annoyi... - bokey - May 19, 2013 - 7:44pm
 
How's the weather? - islander - May 19, 2013 - 7:33pm
 
Help!!!!!!!! - bokey - May 19, 2013 - 7:20pm
 
For Jrzy! - JustineFromWyoming - May 19, 2013 - 7:06pm
 
Favorite Quotes - Isabeau - May 19, 2013 - 6:50pm
 
Name The RP Puppy - Manbird - May 19, 2013 - 6:15pm
 
Gotta Get Your Drink On - fuzzy - May 19, 2013 - 6:12pm
 
Regarding cats - Isabeau - May 19, 2013 - 5:31pm
 
Gardeners Corner - Isabeau - May 19, 2013 - 5:23pm
 
Suddenly, a big black bar at the bottom of my screen (on ... - Red_Dragon - May 19, 2013 - 4:26pm
 
RPeep News You Should Know - meower - May 19, 2013 - 4:00pm
 
If not RP, what are you listening to right now? - hobiejoe - May 19, 2013 - 2:58pm
 
Name My Band - Antigone - May 19, 2013 - 2:40pm
 
Counting with Pictures - DaveInVA - May 19, 2013 - 2:26pm
 
OUR CATS!! - MsJudi - May 19, 2013 - 1:59pm
 
What Are You Going To Do Today? - Coaxial - May 19, 2013 - 12:31pm
 
Things You Thought Today - bokey - May 19, 2013 - 10:54am
 
What Did You Have For Breakfast? - triskele - May 19, 2013 - 9:37am
 
Post your favorite 'You Tube' Videos Here - DaveInVA - May 19, 2013 - 9:19am
 
Maps • Google • GeoGuessr - ScottFromWyoming - May 19, 2013 - 8:53am
 
Free Mp3s - fuzzy - May 19, 2013 - 7:27am
 
What are you doing RIGHT NOW? - DaveInVA - May 19, 2013 - 7:13am
 
Birds' nest - Isabeau - May 19, 2013 - 6:48am
 
Things that piss me off - 2cats - May 19, 2013 - 3:06am
 
Radio Paradise Comments - KuriousJo - May 18, 2013 - 9:45pm
 
• • •  What's For Dinner ? • • •  - Alexandra - May 18, 2013 - 8:46pm
 
When Winter is King - DaveInVA - May 18, 2013 - 7:40pm
 
The Dragons' Roost - triskele - May 18, 2013 - 5:47pm
 
Today in History - hobiejoe - May 18, 2013 - 2:17pm
 
Autism Issues - Manbird - May 18, 2013 - 1:24pm
 
What makes you smile? - mutepoint - May 18, 2013 - 12:37pm
 
(Musical) Coincidences - lunar1963 - May 18, 2013 - 11:04am
 
Bug Reports & Feature Requests - mutepoint - May 18, 2013 - 10:45am
 
favorite love songs - Alexandra - May 18, 2013 - 9:40am
 
Coffee - Antigone - May 18, 2013 - 9:35am
 
What Do You Want From RP? - mutepoint - May 18, 2013 - 9:19am
 
What is Humanity's best invention? - fuzzy - May 18, 2013 - 8:25am
 
Amazing animals! - ScottFromWyoming - May 18, 2013 - 7:41am
 
Flower Pictures - fuzzy - May 18, 2013 - 7:39am
 
Obama's Second Term - bokey - May 18, 2013 - 4:27am
 
• • •  BACON • • •  - sirdroseph - May 18, 2013 - 4:19am
 
Cryptic Posts - Leave Them Guessing - samiyam - May 17, 2013 - 9:03pm
 
RPeeps I miss. - buddy - May 17, 2013 - 8:49pm
 
Parents and Children - buddy - May 17, 2013 - 8:42pm
 
Cloud Gazing (Photos You've Taken) - Alexandra - May 17, 2013 - 8:41pm
 
Mixtape Culture Club - ColdMiser - May 17, 2013 - 5:15pm
 
All Dogs Go To Heaven - Dog Pix - Isabeau - May 17, 2013 - 3:59pm
 
Oklahoma Questions and Points of Interest - ScottN - May 17, 2013 - 2:39pm
 
Iraq - miamizsun - May 17, 2013 - 2:11pm
 
Dexter - Manbird - May 17, 2013 - 1:46pm
 
True Confessions - aflanigan - May 17, 2013 - 12:56pm
 
Photography Chat - Isabeau - May 17, 2013 - 12:49pm
 
Squirrels Just Want To Have Fun! - mutepoint - May 17, 2013 - 12:29pm
 
things that make you go hmmmmm - 2cats - May 17, 2013 - 12:22pm
 
• • • KIVA • • •  - Manbird - May 17, 2013 - 12:21pm
 
What Makes You Laugh? - 2cats - May 17, 2013 - 11:48am
 
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •  - sirdroseph - May 17, 2013 - 10:37am
 
What's that smell? - RASPUTIN - May 17, 2013 - 10:20am
 
Graphic designers, ho! - Manbird - May 17, 2013 - 10:07am
 
Celebrity Deaths - MsJudi - May 17, 2013 - 9:41am
 
Thorium Power - cc_rider - May 17, 2013 - 9:30am
 
~ Video Post ~ - aflanigan - May 17, 2013 - 9:09am
 
Kids say the funniest things - jmkate - May 17, 2013 - 9:02am
 
Breaking News - ScottFromWyoming - May 17, 2013 - 7:39am
 
The Voice - lily34 - May 17, 2013 - 7:37am
 
Climate Change - miamizsun - May 17, 2013 - 7:34am
 
Make Scott laugh - Red_Dragon - May 17, 2013 - 7:28am
 
Make Meowie shoot milk out her nose - sirdroseph - May 17, 2013 - 4:12am
 
What Makes You Sad? - BlueHeronDruid - May 17, 2013 - 2:02am
 
Poetry Forum - ScottN - May 16, 2013 - 11:46pm
 
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Index » Radio Paradise/General » General Discussion » The Environment Page: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10  Next
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Red_Dragon
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Posted: Feb 5, 2013 - 10:17am

Pittsburgh Drinking Water Radioactive Thanks To Fracking
Umberdog

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Posted: Dec 3, 2012 - 5:54pm

Finally... addressing the real issue!

Volunteer to Distribute Free Endangered Species Condoms

 


RichardPrins

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Posted: Oct 19, 2012 - 1:33pm

Iron-Dumping Experiment in Pacific Alarms Marine Experts - NYTimes.com
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Posted: Oct 19, 2012 - 11:14am



TransCanada temporarily shuts Keystone pipeline

by Maria Fisher
Associated Press
seven hours and 24 minutes ago

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — TransCanada Corp. has temporarily shut down its existing 2,100-mile Keystone pipeline after tests showed possible safety issues, a federal agency said Thursday...


Red_Dragon
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Posted: Sep 21, 2012 - 8:24pm

 black321 wrote:

How the world’s oceans could be running out of fish

Global fish stocks are exploited or depleted to such an extent that without urgent measures we may be the last generation to catch food from the oceans.

It has been some time since most humans lived as hunter-gatherers – with one important exception. Fish are the last wild animal that we hunt in large numbers. And yet, we may be the last generation to do so.

Entire species of marine life will never be seen in the Anthropocene (the Age of Man), let alone tasted, if we do not curb our insatiable voracity for fish. Last year, global fish consumption hit a record high of 17 kg (37 pounds) per person per year, even though global fish stocks have continued to decline. On average, people eat four times as much fish now than they did in 1950.

Around 85% of global fish stocks are over-exploited, depleted, fully exploited or in recovery from exploitation. Only this week, a report suggested there may be fewer than 100 cod over the age of 13 years in the North Sea between the United Kingdom and Scandinavia. It’s a worrying sign that we are losing fish old enough to create offspring that replenish populations.

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120920-are-we-running-out-of-fish



 
Not to mention the acidification and destruction of the seabeds and coral we've caused.

But hey, let's all vote for mitt because he's not in this to stop rising sea levels or heal the planet!


black321
Lay it down dirty, play it back clean
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Posted: Sep 21, 2012 - 2:31pm

How the world’s oceans could be running out of fish

Global fish stocks are exploited or depleted to such an extent that without urgent measures we may be the last generation to catch food from the oceans.

It has been some time since most humans lived as hunter-gatherers – with one important exception. Fish are the last wild animal that we hunt in large numbers. And yet, we may be the last generation to do so.

Entire species of marine life will never be seen in the Anthropocene (the Age of Man), let alone tasted, if we do not curb our insatiable voracity for fish. Last year, global fish consumption hit a record high of 17 kg (37 pounds) per person per year, even though global fish stocks have continued to decline. On average, people eat four times as much fish now than they did in 1950.

Around 85% of global fish stocks are over-exploited, depleted, fully exploited or in recovery from exploitation. Only this week, a report suggested there may be fewer than 100 cod over the age of 13 years in the North Sea between the United Kingdom and Scandinavia. It’s a worrying sign that we are losing fish old enough to create offspring that replenish populations.

http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120920-are-we-running-out-of-fish


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Posted: Jul 31, 2012 - 10:46pm



The Conversion of a Climate-Change Skeptic
by Richard A. Muller
The New York Times
July 28, 2012

CALL me a converted skeptic. Three years ago I identified problems in previous climate studies that, in my mind, threw doubt on the very existence of global warming. Last year, following an intensive research effort involving a dozen scientists, I concluded that global warming was real and that the prior estimates of the rate of warming were correct. I’m now going a step further: Humans are almost entirely the cause.

My total turnaround, in such a short time, is the result of careful and objective analysis by the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project, which I founded with my daughter Elizabeth. Our results show that the average temperature of the earth’s land has risen by two and a half degrees Fahrenheit over the past 250 years, including an increase of one and a half degrees over the most recent 50 years. Moreover, it appears likely that essentially all of this increase results from the human emission of greenhouse gases...

What about the future? As carbon dioxide emissions increase, the temperature should continue to rise. I expect the rate of warming to proceed at a steady pace, about one and a half degrees over land in the next 50 years, less if the oceans are included. But if China continues its rapid economic growth (it has averaged 10 percent per year over the last 20 years) and its vast use of coal (it typically adds one new gigawatt per month), then that same warming could take place in less than 20 years...




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Posted: Jul 30, 2012 - 6:46pm




Frackers Fund University Research That Proves Their Case

by Jim Efstathiou Jr.
Bloomberg
July 23, 2012

Pennsylvania remains the largest U.S. state without a tax on natural gas production, thanks in part to a study released under the banner of the Pennsylvania State University.

The 2009 report predicted drillers would shun Pennsylvania if new taxes were imposed, and lawmakers cited it the following year when they rejected a 5 percent tax proposed by then- Governor Ed Rendell.

“As an advocacy tool, it worked,” Michael Wood, research director with the non-profit Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, said in an interview. “If people wanted to find a reason to vote against having the industry taxed in that way, that gave them reason to do it.”

What the study didn’t do was note that it was sponsored by gas drillers and led by an economist, now at the University of Wyoming, with a history of producing industry-friendly research on economic and energy issues. The researcher, Tim Considine, said his analysis was sound and not biased by industry funding.

As the U.S. enjoys a natural-gas boom from a process called hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, producers are taking a page from the tobacco industry playbook: funding research at established universities that arrives at conclusions that counter concerns raised by critics...

 


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Posted: Jul 26, 2012 - 12:43pm



The Malthusian Dilemma approaches...


Approaching a state shift in Earth’s biosphere

by Anthony D. Barnosky, Elizabeth A. Hadly, Jordi Bascompte, Eric L. Berlow, James H. Brown, Mikael Fortelius, Wayne M. Getz, John Harte, Alan Hastings, Pablo A. Marquet, Neo D. Martinez, Arne Mooers, Peter Roopnarine, Geerat Vermeij, John W. Williams, Rosemary Gillespie, Justin Kitzes, Charles Marshall, Nicholas Matzke, David P. Mindell, Eloy Revilla & Adam B. Smith
Nature 486, 52–58 (07 June 2012)

Localized ecological systems are known to shift abruptly and irreversibly from one state to another when they are forced across critical thresholds. Here we review evidence that the global ecosystem as a whole can react in the same way and is approaching a planetary-scale critical transition as a result of human influence. The plausibility of a planetary-scale ‘tipping point’ highlights the need to improve biological forecasting by detecting early warning signs of critical transitions on global as well as local scales, and by detecting feedbacks that promote such transitions. It is also necessary to address root causes of how humans are forcing biological changes.

 
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Posted: Jul 24, 2012 - 2:44pm




Global Warming's Terrifying New Math

by Bill McKibben
RollingStone
July 19, 2012


Some context: So far, we've raised the average temperature of the planet just under 0.8 degrees Celsius, and that has caused far more damage than most scientists expected. (A third of summer sea ice in the Arctic is gone, the oceans are 30 percent more acidic, and since warm air holds more water vapor than cold, the atmosphere over the oceans is a shocking five percent wetter, loading the dice for devastating floods.) Given those impacts, in fact, many scientists have come to think that two degrees is far too lenient a target. "Any number much above one degree involves a gamble," writes Kerry Emanuel of MIT, a leading authority on hurricanes, "and the odds become less and less favorable as the temperature goes up." Thomas Lovejoy, once the World Bank's chief biodiversity adviser, puts it like this: "If we're seeing what we're seeing today at 0.8 degrees Celsius, two degrees is simply too much." NASA scientist James Hansen, the planet's most prominent climatologist, is even blunter: "The target that has been talked about in international negotiations for two degrees of warming is actually a prescription for long-term disaster." At the Copenhagen summit, a spokesman for small island nations warned that many would not survive a two-degree rise: "Some countries will flat-out disappear."...

 




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Posted: Jul 23, 2012 - 10:46am




Loading the Climate Dice

by Paul Krugman
The New York Times
July 22, 2012

A couple of weeks ago the Northeast was in the grip of a severe heat wave. As I write this, however, it’s a fairly cool day in New Jersey, considering that it’s late July. Weather is like that; it fluctuates.

And this banal observation may be what dooms us to climate catastrophe, in two ways. On one side, the variability of temperatures from day to day and year to year makes it easy to miss, ignore or obscure the longer-term upward trend. On the other, even a fairly modest rise in average temperatures translates into a much higher frequency of extreme events — like the devastating drought now gripping America’s heartland — that do vast damage...

 


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Posted: Jul 15, 2012 - 9:04pm



ARTISTS AGAINST FRACKING

HOW CAN THEY DO THIS?

ISN'T THIS AGAINST THE SAFE DRINKING WATER ACT?

The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) is the principal federal law in the United States intended to ensure safe drinking water for the public. In 2005, the Bush/Cheney Energy Bill exempted natural gas drilling from the SDWA. It also exempts companies from disclosing the chemicals used during hydraulic fracturing...


Yoko Ono and Sean Lennon are involved in this movement of artists who think fracking is horrific... here are Yoko and Sean on Jimmy Fallon a couple of days ago...  this is beautiful stuff—





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Posted: Jul 14, 2012 - 10:00am




A World Without Coral Reefs

by Roger Bradbury
The New York Times
July 14, 2012

IT’S past time to tell the truth about the state of the world’s coral reefs, the nurseries of tropical coastal fish stocks. They have become zombie ecosystems, neither dead nor truly alive in any functional sense, and on a trajectory to collapse within a human generation. There will be remnants here and there, but the global coral reef ecosystem — with its storehouse of biodiversity and fisheries supporting millions of the world’s poor — will cease to be.

Overfishing, ocean acidification and pollution are pushing coral reefs into oblivion. Each of those forces alone is fully capable of causing the global collapse of coral reefs; together, they assure it. The scientific evidence for this is compelling and unequivocal, but there seems to be a collective reluctance to accept the logical conclusion — that there is no hope of saving the global coral reef ecosystem...

 


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Posted: Jul 11, 2012 - 6:36pm



Oil and gas marauders are destroying our land, water, and communities all over America
Edited by Jim Hightower and Phillip Frazer
Hightower Lowdown
July 2012

What the frack!?!

Whether you're religious or not, seeing flames coming out of your kitchen faucet would be enough to make you fall to your knees, fearing that a cosmic force of incomprehensible evil is loose on our land.

In more and more areas across America, families are discovering to their astonishment that their "water" has turned combustible. Rather than metaphysical, however, the force behind this fiery phenomenon is all too human, and we can even put a name on it: Dick Cheney. His is, after all, the picture-perfect face of snarling political evil, and while you had probably hoped that we'd seen the last of him when he left office three years ago, his presence still looms—including in the form of flaming faucets...

The fracking of America is a health, environmental, economic, and natural-resource issue rolled into one —but it's really much bigger than all of these. It poses the fundamental issue facing our society today: WHO RULES? Moneyed corporations... or the people? Are we to be a democracy of, by, and for the many, or a plutocracy of a bullying, profiteering few?

At present—unbeknownst to the great majority of Americans who've been kept in the dark about this assault on our communities and democracy— the moneyed corporations (and their purchased politicians) are ruling. Both the injury and insult of fracking diminishes who we are and what our country represents. That's why this is everyone's fight, whether or not your water faucet has yet caught on fire.

 


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Posted: Jul 10, 2012 - 6:46pm




New Study: Fluids From Marcellus Shale Likely Seeping Into PA Drinking Water

by Abrahm Lustgarten
ProPublica
July 9, 2012

New research has concluded that salty, mineral-rich fluids deep beneath Pennsylvania's natural gas fields are likely seeping upward thousands of feet into drinking water supplies.

Though the fluids were natural and not the byproduct of drilling or hydraulic fracturing, the finding further stokes the red-hot controversy over fracking in the Marcellus Shale, suggesting that drilling waste and chemicals could migrate in ways previously thought to be impossible.

The study, conducted by scientists at Duke University and California State Polytechnic University at Pomona and released today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, tested drinking water wells and aquifers across Northeastern Pennsylvania. Researchers found that, in some cases, the water had mixed with brine that closely matched brine thought to be from the Marcellus Shale or areas close to it.

No drilling chemicals were detected in the water, and there was no correlation between where the natural brine was detected and where drilling takes place.

Still, the brine's presence — and the finding that it moved over thousands of vertical feet — contradicts the oft-repeated notion that deeply buried rock layers will always seal in material injected underground through drilling, mining, or underground disposal...


(former member)

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Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:34pm




Farmworkers plagued by pesticides, red tape

by Ronnie Greene
The Center for Public Integrity
June 26, 2012

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Laboring in the blackberry fields of central Arkansas, the 18-year-old Mexican immigrant suddenly turned ill. Her nose began to bleed, her skin developed a rash, and she vomited.

The doctor told her it was most likely flu or bacterial infection, but farmworker Tania Banda-Rodriguez suspected pesticides. Under federal law, growers must promptly report the chemicals they spray.

It took the worker, and a Tennessee legal services lawyer helping her, six months to learn precisely what chemical doused those blackberry fields. The company ignored her requests for the information. The Arkansas State Plant Board initially refused to provide records to her lawyer, saying it didn’t respond to out-of-state requests. An Arkansas inspector, dispatched after the complaint, didn’t initially discern what pesticides were used the day the worker became ill, records show.

When answers finally arrived — the fungicide was Switch 62.5WG, a chemical that can irritate the eyes and skin — Banda-Rodriguez had already left Arkansas to follow the season to Virginia and ultimately returned to Mexico. She never learned whether the pesticide sickened her.

The episode is as telling a snapshot today as it was six years ago for one of America’s most grueling and lowest-paying vocations. Pesticides can endanger farmworkers, but thin layers of government protect them and no one knows the full scope of the environmental perils in the fields.

The Environmental Protection Agency administers a Worker Protection Standard meant to regulate pesticides and protect workers and handlers. Yet the agency maintains no comprehensive database to track pesticide exposure incidents nationwide.

In 1993, the Government Accountability Office (then called the General Accounting Office) warned that the lack of data could lead to a “significant underestimation of both the frequency and the severity of pesticide illnesses.”

Nearly 20 years later, the EPA can still only guess at the scope of pesticide-related ailments in an industry where many workers, toiling in the shadows, are reluctant to speak up. The EPA often hands enforcement of pesticide regulations to states, which receive and investigate few formal complaints each year, federal records show...

 


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Posted: Jun 22, 2012 - 11:00am




Injection Wells: The Poison Beneath Us

by Abrahm Lustgarten
ProPublica
June 21, 2012

Over the past several decades, U.S. industries have injected more than 30 trillion gallons of toxic liquid deep into the earth, using broad expanses of the nation's geology as an invisible dumping ground.

No company would be allowed to pour such dangerous chemicals into the rivers or onto the soil. But until recently, scientists and environmental officials have assumed that deep layers of rock beneath the earth would safely entomb the waste for millennia.

There are growing signs they were mistaken.

Records from disparate corners of the United States show that wells drilled to bury this waste deep beneath the ground have repeatedly leaked, sending dangerous chemicals and waste gurgling to the surface or, on occasion, seeping into shallow aquifers that store a significant portion of the nation's drinking water...

There are more than 680,000 underground waste and injection wells nationwide, more than 150,000 of which shoot industrial fluids thousands of feet below the surface. Scientists and federal regulators acknowledge they do not know how many of the sites are leaking...


 


hippiechick
Did you ever grow anything in the garden of your mind?
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Posted: Jun 22, 2012 - 5:53am

Learn about the 5 gyres and take the Plastic Promise
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Posted: Jun 21, 2012 - 8:14pm




Deformed Fish Found Downstream of Tar Sands Mines

by Jason Mark (Follow Jason Mark on Twitter)
Earth Island Journal
June 13, 2012

Chief Allan Adam, the head of the Fort Chipewyan community in the far north of Alberta, has been fishing in Lake Athabasca for all of his life. His father, now 76 years old, has been fishing there even longer. And neither of them has seen anything like what they pulled from the lake on May 30: two grotesquely deformed, lesion-covered fish.

When they caught the sickly fish, each taken from a different part of the lake, the two Indigenous men immediately figured that it had something to do with the massive tar sands oil mines that lie about 300 kilometers upstream along the Athabasca River. “We have been putting two and two together, and raising concerns about the fast pace of (tar sands) development,” Chief Adam told me in a phone interview this week. “The tailing ponds are leaking and leaching into the rivers, and then going downstream to Lake Athabasca.”

Here in the United States, public opposition to the tar sands has centered on the proposed Keystone XL pipeline: how it could jeopardize the fresh water supplies of the Ogallala Aquifer and how it would increase greenhouse gas emissions by keeping us locked into the petroleum infrastructure. For now, those worries remain hypotheticals. But for the people of Ft. Chipewyan — a community of about 1,200 that is only accessible by plane most of the year — the environmental impacts of the tar sands are already a lived reality. According to a 2009 study by the Alberta Cancer Board, the cancer rate in Ft. Chipewyan is higher than normal. Many of the residents there blame the industrial development south of them for the disproportionate cancer rates...




(former member)

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Posted: Jun 18, 2012 - 10:04pm




Stop Public Handouts to Oil, Gas and Coal Companies, Now

by Robert Redford
Huffington Post
June 18, 2012

Every year, around the world, almost one trillion dollars of subsidies is handed out to help the fossil fuel industry. Who came up with the crazy idea that the fossil fuel industry deserves our hard-earned money, no less in economic times of such harsh human consequence? We fire teachers, police and firemen in drastic budget cuts and yet, the fossil fuel industry can laugh all the way to the bank on our dime? Something doesn't add up here.

We should not be subsidizing the destruction of our planet. Fossil fuels are literally cooking our planet, polluting our air and draining our wallets. Why should we continue to reward companies to do that?

As they go after more expensive and harder to access fossil fuels, it is like drilling a hole in our pocketbooks. We pay more at the pump. We pay in taxpayer subsidies to a highly profitable industry. And we pay in the rising costs of climate change in the form of floods, storms and droughts that hurt our homes and communities...

 


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