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In The News /
Sep 9
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While Oregon works to shut its only coal-fired electricity plant and reduce the state's greenhouse gas emissions, global mining companies are increasingly bullish about exporting that very same coal through Northwest ports to China.
Portland Oregonian, Oregon
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Until very recently, Hunan Province was known mainly for lip-searing spicy food, smoggy cities and destitute pig farmers. Now, Changsha and two adjacent cities are emerging as a center of clean energy manufacturing.
New York Times
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As debate over natural gas drilling in the Marcellus shale reaches a fever pitch, state and federal authorities are warning Pennsylvania law enforcement that "environmental extremists" pose an increasing threat to security and to the energy sector.
ProPublica
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In the rush to develop America's biggest new source of domestic energy in the Marcellus Shale, one community is fighting to protect its rural way of life from the environmental strains that accompany shale gas drilling.
Reuters
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Rain coats, hair barrettes and jewelry seem harmless. But Consumer Reports magazine says a series of tests uncovered "worrisome levels" of potentially hazardous metals in such children's products currently on store shelves.
CNN
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Called the most comprehensive and prohibitive legislation of its kind in the nation by supporters and opponents alike, a bill making its way through Trenton would ban many lawn care products on the shelf today.
Bergen County Record, New Jersey
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A new study says birds are likely dying in oilsands tailings ponds at least 30 times the rate suggested by industry and government, adding weight to arguments that depending on industry to monitor its own environmental impact isn’t working.
Canadian Press
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While Deepwater Horizon may have attracted the lion's share of media attention this past Spring and Summer, there are a number of other toxic projects still going on. Below, we look at some of the worst.
Fast Company
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The oil giant BP said Wednesday in its internal report that a series of failures involving a number of companies ultimately led to the huge oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
New York Times
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Millions of barrels of crude spewed by BP's blown-out well have reduced deep-sea oxygen levels - but nowhere near enough to create another of the "dead zones" that periodically plague the Gulf of Mexico, a federal study said Tuesday.
McClatchy Newspapers
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The U.S. National Institutes of Health said on Tuesday it would use $10 million from BP to start a multiyear study to look at the potential health effects from the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Reuters
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By David Biello
Daily Climate
9 September 2010
In the carbon market, a good deal for the environment needs to also be a good deal for the bottom line. Vouching for environmental credibility isn't easy: Who verifies the verifiers?
Trading allows the market to work its efficient magic on the reduction of air pollution, from traders' perspectives - and that remains the national negotiating position of the United States. (Third of three parts.)
more…
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By Mason Inman
National Geographic News
9 September 2010
A new study seeks to shake up the assumption that use of coal, the most carbon-intensive fossil fuel, is bound to continue its inexorable rise. In fact, the authors predict that world coal production may reach its peak as early as next year, and then begin a permanent decline.
The study predicts that by mid-century, the world's coal mining will supply only half as much energy as today.
more…
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http://environmentalhealthnews.org/frontpage/new_science/inspector.html
New Science
Understand the latest scientific findings
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A large, multi-lab endeavor has identified the most common byproducts formed during drinking water disinfection and developed methods to study and understand their health impacts. Scientists identified more than 100 chemical byproducts and measured the levels of 75 of the most harmful and highly regulated ones. It was the first time many of the chemicals had ever been detected. more…
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Minute silver nanoparticles-- widely used in consumer products as antimicrobial agents-- can cause sperm cells to stop growing, according to a new study. The nanoparticles interrupt key cell signaling within the sperm cells as they develop. The biggest effects were caused by the smallest-sized nanoparticles tested. more…
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http://environmentalhealthnews.org/frontpage/media_review/inspector.html
Media Review
Scientists critique media coverage
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A Los Angeles Times article mistakenly interprets research findings, claiming that exposure to bisphenol A increases testosterone levels in men. more…
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The Syracuse Post-Standard article mixes fact with fiction when including PBDE flame retardants as chemicals that are found in mattresses. more…
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A very comprehensive report accurately summarizes several recent studies about BPA in cash register receipts and, to be improved, only needs a discussion of the large body of research showing adverse effects of BPA at low levels. more…
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http://environmentalhealthnews.org/frontpage/editorials/inspector.html
Editorials
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By the Sacramento Bee
It is folly to think Sacramento can indefinitely hold off demands to clean up its wastewater. Sacramento can't march into the 21st century clinging to the mantra that "dilution is the solution to pollution."
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By the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
An agreement between Wisconsin and Michigan to cooperate on climate change has much potential, especially if other states join the effort.
more…
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http://environmentalhealthnews.org/frontpage/opinions/inspector.html
Opinions
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By Andrew C. Revkin
New York Times
In the end, there are two climate threats: one created by increasing human vulnerability to calamitous weather, the other by human actions, particularly emissions of warming gases, that relentlessly shift the odds toward making today’s weather extremes tomorrow’s norm.
more…
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By Brian Palmer
Washington Post
Working from home is a win-win situation for workers and employers.
Unfortunately, the environmental benefits aren't quite as clear. How much carbon dioxide you save, if any, depends on how far you live from work and how you get there, among other things.
more…
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http://environmentalhealthnews.org/frontpage/syndicated/inspector.html
By David Biello
Daily Climate
8 September 2010
The market for greenhouse gas emissions is a bazaar dependent entirely on government regulation. But can it reduce emissions?
The answer so far: Not yet.
(Second of three parts.)
more…
By David Biello
Daily Climate
7 September 2010
What does it take to trade in a commodity that cannot be seen or touched - and isn't even a commodity in the United States? First of three parts.
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By Douglas Fischer
Daily Climate
23 August 2010
Daily Climate's weekly compilation of news tidbits. This week: Lost love - er, carbon - on the Brazos; $120 million for weatherization efforts; and two books look why consensus on climate policy is so elusive.
more…
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