Author: BKessler

  • Who’s the greenest roommate in the land?

    Green Right Now Reports

    Got a rabidly green roommate who times your showers, follows you around turning off lights and has lined all the window sills with edible plants?

    Apartments.com is looking for the Roommate of the Year

    Apartments.com is looking for the Roommate of the Year

    Turn this difficult experience into a winning proposition: Nominate him or her for Environmental Roommate of the Year. They might just win grand prize of $10,000, which should at least allow you to mooching rights to their solar charger.

    Or, if you’re the geekiest green roommate you know nominate yourself and buy offsets with that 10K (maybe). The winner also gets free rent for a year.

    The contest is a promotion by Apartments.com. The green award is one of several offered in their 2nd annual Roommate of the Year Contest.

    You’ll have to put together a video about yourself or your roommatet, and make the deadline of June 14, 2010 at midnight EDT. See the website for details.

  • How the top kill operation works (if it works)

    From Green Right Now Reports

    We’ve had to learn a lot while watching the excruciating efforts to cap the gushing BP oil well deep in the Gulf of Mexico.

    The latest lesson on the chalk board is about deep sea pressures. The water pressure is so great at a mile below the surface  (about 2,640 PSI) that pumping material back into the ruptured oil pipe is an incredibly difficult feat. It calls for a special potion of drilling “mud” of just the right consistency to hold up against the force of the oil gushing out, and yet not freeze before doing its job or collapse at deep sea pressures and temperatures.

    As with all previous attempts to cap the oil well break, this one carries a risk of failure, but also an added risk that it could cause the oil pipe to spring a new leak, unleashing more havoc into gulf waters.

    “The top kill procedure has never before been attempted at these depths and its ultimate success is uncertain,” BP says.

    Here’s a graphic of the “top kill” operation put out by the Deepwater Horizon Response team.

    Bill Nye, the Science Guy, has been on CNN in recent days explaining how this drilling mud can work:

  • Try watermelon limeade from Emeril’s new summer cook (and no-cook) book

    Watermelon Limeade works straight or as a margarita mixer. (Photo: Emeril's Farm to Fork: Cooking Local, Cooking Seasonal)

    Watermelon Limeade works straight or as a margarita mixer. (Photo: Emeril's Farm to Fork: Cooking Local, Cooking Fresh)

    From Green Right Now Reports

    With temperatures hitting the 90s this May even in unlikely places like Connecticut, it’s time to think about slushy drinks.

    (And possible revisit the idea that global warming does exist?)

    The recipe below for Watermelon Limeade comes from food wizard Emeril Lagasse’s newest cookbook, Farm to Fork: Cooking Local, Cooking Fresh.

    You’ll need a healthy sized watermelon to make this one work, and it will help if you’ve got the blender working and the patio cushions plumped.

    After your refreshments, though, you may want to get back to work in the kitchen with Farm to Fork (HarperStudio Paperback Original; $24.99); June 1, 2010),, being released June 1, because it focuses on low-cook and no-cook recipes that make sense in the summer months on many levels. These recipes will help you and your kitchen keep cool, and their focus on fresh and local will make for healthier fare.

    Some of the recipes include Baby Limas, Green and Yellow Beans, and Teardrop Tomatoes with Mint Vinaigrette; Crostini with Ricotta and Spring Peas; and Tomato Tartare and Micro Greens with Shallot vinaigrette.

    Chef Emeril Lagasse is the chef/proprietor of thirteen restaurants across the country. He is a national TV personality, having hosted over 1,500 episodes of his shows on the Food Network, and serves as the food correspondent for ABC’s Good Morning America.

    In Farm to Fork, Emeril recalls his childhood experiences on a farm, and discusses the importance of using fresh, local foods.

    WATERMELON LIMEADE

    Great straight or paired with a premium white tequila.

    8 cups cubed watermelon (seeds removed) or 1 quart watermelon juice

    1 cup freshly squeezed lime juice

    ½ cup sugar, or more to taste

    Lime slices, for garnish, optional

    Place half of the watermelon cubes in a blender and process until smooth. Transfer to a fine-mesh sieve that has been placed over a large bowl and strain mixture into the bowl. (Discard solids.) Repeat with the remaining watermelon cubes; you should end up with about 1 quart of watermelon juice.

    Add the lime juice and sugar to the watermelon juice and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Taste and add more sugar if necessary. Transfer limeade to a nonreactive pitcher and refrigerate until thoroughly chilled. Serve in tumblers with lime slices for garnish.

    Yield: 5 cups watermelon limeade, 4 to 6 servings

  • Bald Eagles nesting successfully off the California coast

    From Green Rigth Now Reports

    Bald Eagles continue to recover from their dangerous decline in the last century, and this week  enthusiasts can celebrate the successful hatching of two bald eagle chicks on Santa Rosa Island off the coast of California.

    Bald Eagle chicks (Photo: US Fish and Wildlife Service)

    Bald Eagle chicks (Photo: US Fish and Wildlife Service)

    The chicks are the first to hatch on that island in more than 60 years, and what’s more they’re one of a record number of successful hatchings in the Channel Islands this breeding season, according to the National Parks Service.

    The last Bald Eagle chicks to be reared on Santa Rosa were hatched in 1950, before the rain of chemicals that nearly wiped out America’s national bird.

    Six bald eagle chicks are expected to leave their nests in the next few weeks in the northern Channel Islands, bringing to 40 the number of bald eagles in that area.

    Biologists were to band and tag two bald eagle chicks in a nest on Santa Cruz Island, off the coast of Southern California (northwest of Los Angeles), an event that was being streamed online at the Channel Islands Live Bald Eagle webcam. (It’s for real. The NPS has a Bald Eagle webcam, where you can hear the Non-Silent Spring sounds of those chicks!)

    The 2010 eagle births in the Channel Island’s breakdown like this:

    • Four chicks, a pair of chicks in two nests on Santa Cruz
    • Two chicks on Santa Rosa, one each in two nests
    • Seven nests with nine chicks on Santa Catalina Island in the southern Channel Islands.

    “We are cautiously optimistic about this trend of bald eagle recovery as the chemicals that contributed to their decline persist in the southern California marine ecosystem,” said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biologist Annie Little. “We hope for a self-sustaining population and a return to historic levels of bald eagle nests on the northern Channel Islands.”

    “Southern Californians can be proud to know that just in this past decade they are seeing recovery of bald eagles to nearly half the historic population on the Channel Islands following their significant decline in the 1960s,” said Russell Galipeau, Superintendent of Channel Islands National Park.

    The Bald Eagle population declined precipitously in the last century because of contamination from PCPs and the pesticide DDT, which was liberally used in the 1950s before officials had adequately studied or considered its toxic impact. The chemicals migrated up the food chain and when ingested by eagles caused them to lay thin-shelled eggs that either cracked or weren’t viable.

    Their recovery can be attributed to the ban on DDT and protection for many years under the Endangered Species Act. Bald Eagles were delisted from the ESA in 2007.

    For more info and a discussion board on the Channel Island eagles see Channel Islands Live!

  • Chicago’s Greenheart Shop promotes eco-shopping with heart

    By Lynette Holloway
    Green Right Now

    Colorful messenger bags and totes created from re-purposed construction netting, recycled rice bags and Cambodian silk. Screen-printed cotton outfits designed by the Chicago- and Cambodia-based Malia Designs. Divine chocolate made from cocoa beans sustainably grown in Ghana.

    These are just some of the finds at Greenheart Shop , a thriving Fair Trade business in Chicago’s trendy Wicker Park neighborhood. Shoppers recently were treated to a fashion show complete with runway models decked in green wear from head-to-toe.

    Greenheart Shop models show off the stores clothing

    Greenheart Shop models show off the stores clothing (Photo: Lynette Holloway)

    Fashions included a stylish red scoop neck maxi-dress with a fitted bust and defined waistline made of hand-woven multi-tonal cotton threads, designed by Mata Traders, a Chicago-based clothing and accessories business that imports clothing made by cooperatives and artisans in India. The Greenheart models also wore Mata-designed bracelets of gold and silver wire cuffs, multi-colored beads and silver squares.

    Artisan crafters in India construct clothing for Mata Traders

    Artisan crafters in India construct clothing for Mata Traders

    “It’s a great way to get people’s attention,’’ said Adra Klopfer, who modeled a red halter dress by eco-fashion designer Indigenous. She and the other models walked a runway and appeared in the window storefront along West Division Street, catching the eye of several passers-by on one of the first warm days of spring and drawing them into the cozy store, a kaleidoscope of green wares.

    “We’re a movement,’’ said Andrea Newman, a manager of the Wicker Park location, one of three in the city. “As people become more aware of green living, stores like Greenheart are becoming more of a destination.’’

    Greenheart is one of Chicago’s premier eco- non-profit stores, carrying both Fair Trade and green products.

    “We provide unique and contemporary products that you can feel good about buying. In choosing products, we are mindful of the entire production process — the resources used to make them, the wages paid to the producers, and the overall social and environmental impact,’’ according to Greenheart literature.

    A Greenheart shirt made through Mata Traders

    A Greenheart shirt made through Mata Traders

    Fair Trade is an international market that is part of Global International, a 22-year-old human rights organization dedicated to promoting environmental, political and social justice. Fair Trade sells items online and partners with stores such as Greenheart across the globe.

    As part of the Fair Trade contract, Greenheart producers receive fair wages for their goods and labor, work in safe conditions, develop longstanding relationships with buyers and wholesalers and exercise environmental best practices. The business transaction is conducted in a transparent, accountable and democratic manner.

    Malia Designs, for example, works with four organizations each with its own social mission. One organization rescues women from human trafficking and teaches them a trade, said Lia Valerio, a founder, who started the business after traveling around Southeast Asia and serving as a volunteer in the Peace Corps in Tonga, a group of islands in the South Pacific. “Once they learn a trade, we help them integrate back into mainstream society so they can support themselves.’’

  • U.S. wind industry full of promise but facing turbulence?

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    It’s clear that America wants wind power. At the WINDPOWER 2010 conference in Dallas this week, industry advocates, governors from three states, energy company executives and even a former president all said it: Bring it on.

    Surveys show it too. A March poll commissioned by the American Wind Energy Association found that nearly 90 percent of Americans want the country to develop more wind energy — an approval rating politicians can only dream about.

    The WINDPOWER 2010 convention this week in Dallas attraced more than 20,000 participants

    The WINDPOWER 2010 convention this week in Dallas attraced more than 20,000 participants

    State governments want wind. Those in the windy plains states, especially, and have shown it by enacting Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS), which set goals or mandates for the state to derive a certain amount of its power from renewable energy. Iowa leads the nation in using the greatest percentage of wind, which accounts for 14 percent of its power. It achieved that by offering loans to wind developers and telling state utilities to buy 105 megawatts of electricity from renewable energy projects. (Farmers had a hand in it, we learned at the WINDPOWER Iowa display, because they were amenable to putting giant wind turbines on their plentiful land and growing corn around them — a harmonic vision that stands in stark contrast to what the oil spill has done to fisherman in the gulf.)

    But it’s not just Iowa or Texas, the state with the most wind farms, that’s knee-deep, or sky-high in wind. By last count, 14 states were in what the AWEA calls the “Gigawatt Club” with more than 1,000 MegaWatts of installed wind capacity.

    States outside the nation’s “wind belt” midsection also stand to benefit. Wisconsin and Pennsylvania have wind-related manufacturing facilities and want more. Coastal states like Maine and Delaware are seeking their own wind operations offshore. Even Ohio’s getting into the act, announcing this week that it will partner with GE to put wind turbines in Lake Erie.

    Wind Platform

    A model of a wind platform (Photo: AWEA)

    Big companies, both U.S. and European, want to develop wind in the U.S. Witness the well-staffed glitzy booths by Siemens, General Electric, Suzlon, Vestas and Gamesa at the WINDPOWER conference; and more importantly their factories and offices on the ground in Colorado, Iowa, Oregon and Pennsylvania. Hundreds of smaller companies that supply everything from nacelle parts to safety harnesses for wind technicians are pushing ahead, building facilities near the big player’s hubs in Kansas, Missouri, Minnesota and West Texas.

    The list goes on. Steelworkers see wind as a way to move into the future by crafting wind blades. Community colleges from Maine to Texas are ramping up programs to train young adults for good-paying, technically skilled wind jobs.

    There’s little apparent downside to this industry that can provide local power and local jobs across the spectrum.

    Consumers stand to win with wind, in spades, by accessing a low-carbon way power their house and their electric cars that won’t skyrocket in price when the base fuel runs out. In fact, considering that wind can reduce carbon pollution, just about everyone is a stakeholder. Compared with coal, it’s night and day – one spews toxic emissions, destroys mountains and buries wilderness in sludge; the other can claim a light footprint. Even the birds killed by wind turbines look like a more tolerable impact (and potentially solvable problem) next to BP’s still-unfolding graphic illustration of the unholy damage wrought by a fossil fuel oopsy.

    Wind even trumps its clean energy competition. It’s more technically evolved than solar power, and doesn’t consume water like solar installations. (Though it’s an eminently compatible buddy for solar, being strong at night while solar pulls daytime duty.) Wind beats nuclear power in many minds because it simply doesn’t carry the risk of environmental catastrophe (You may have seen the Internet spoof about the Massive Air Spill, satirizing the BP situation.)

    And yet, there are clouds on wind’s horizon.

    In America, land of the bargain shopper and the short term gain, wind still costs more than coal power, even with some federal tax incentives in place.

    "Small wind" exhibitors showed wind turbines available to home consumers at WINDPOWER 2010 (Photo: AWEA)

    "Small wind" exhibitors showed wind turbines available to home consumers at WINDPOWER 2010 (Photo: AWEA)

    The difference depends on many factors, not the least of which is how close a customer lives to the windiest parts of the country.

    Wind is new and requires capital investment for turbines. Those turbines are costly to ship, especially when they mostly come from Europe. Wind also faces a host of issues related to getting it from Des Moines to Des Plaines, or Sweetwater to Clear Lake City.

    Billions are needed to update the outdated national grid system – which is most often likened to a horse-and-buggy enterprise in a world of cars and freeways — so that wind can be effectively disseminated. (To read more about the “Smart Grid” see the DOE’s site.)

    Many have said that the energy playing field needs to be leveled by a federal carbon tax or carbon fee, or a cap-and-trade plan, that would put a price on the pollution caused by coal, the nation’s leading source of power for buildings.

    But Congress, it barely needs to be said, has failed to move this ball down that field. Climate bills become mired in endless debates about the methods – Carbon fee? Cap-and-trade? Tax shifting? – as well as the entrenched argument over whether climate change is exaggerated.

    The latest Congressional offering, the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act, doesn’t even include national targets for renewables, an omission that leaves wind industry leaders shaking their heads.

    The view from above, and ahead

    American wind hit its stride a couple years ago. States had incentives in place, climate change was a concern and some consumers were asking for green power. Installations grew throughout the economic crisis. The U.S. became the world’s leading producer of wind power, surpassing Germany, with current wind installations capable of producing 35,000 Megawatts.

    Gabriel Alonso, CEO Horizon Wind Energy

    Gabriel Alonso, CEO Horizon Wind Energy (Photo: GRN-Network.com)

    But the downturn and “lack of long-term market signals” took a toll, according to the AWEA. Installations were down in the first quarter of 2010, compared to 1Q 2007.

    “Utilities are not seeking long term contracts with wind power,” said Gabriel Alonso, CEO of Houston-based Horizon Wind Energy at a panel discussion of wind executives on Tuesday.

    The high price of wind relative to dipping natural gas prices is one reason. Utilities want to make smart buys and must justify to state regulators that they’re looking out for the consumer, a dynamic that can skew choices in favor of established power sources like coal and natural gas.

    To inject a longer viewpoint into this picture, wind industry leaders want a national Renewal Electricity Standard (RES), to help drive utilities and state regulators toward selecting green, renewable power. The power of wind, with its ability to cut carbon emissions, isn’t fully valued by a simple cost comparison, industry executives said in the panel discussion Tuesday.

    “We should not run our long term policy based on short term realities,” Alonso said. “People are talking about (buying) coal, about cheap gas, but where’s this country heading 20 years from now?”

    Even though Americans say they want wind power, their elected leaders haven’t been consistent in supporting the industry.

    Companies building wind projects have benefited from federal Production Tax Credits (PTCs), which provide 2.1 cent per kilowatt hour (kWh) differential to wind producers. PTCs were a big driver in pushing wind capacity forward. But Congress has kept them on a tight leash. They’re up for renewal every couple of years, next in 2012. Each time PTCs come up for renewal, elected officials debate their merits and inject uncertainty into the wind market.

    Wind executives say that volatility threatens not just wind jobs, but the nation’s competitiveness in wind.

    If the future in the U.S. is murky, then companies will install wind turbines in say, Poland instead, where the business makes sense and the capital investment can be supported, Alonso said.

    Finding the RES-ipe for success

    If the U.S. had a strong RES, preferably one calling for 25 percent of its electricity to come from renewable energy by 2025, it could change the game. (The U.S. Department of Energy has suggested that a more modest RES of 20 percent renewables by 2030 is realistic.)

    A strong RES would demonstrate to utilities and global suppliers that the U.S. will stand behind wind development and keep incentives in place, said Ned Hall, executive vice president of AES and president of AES wind generation, based in Arlington, Va.

    Ned Hall, president AES Wind Energy

    Ned Hall, president AES Wind Energy (Photo:GRN-Network.com)

    AES Wind, which develops and operates power projects around the world, would like to do more business in the United States, but without better “clarity” about the future, 80 percent of its development effort is outside the U.S., Hall said.

    Jens-Peter Saul, CEO and president of Siemens Wind Power, echoed those concerns. “The U.S. is our most important market. We’ve invested in faith.” Germany-based Siemens has built a factory in Iowa and is bringing another online in Colorado.

    “But our supply chain is not following us,’’ Saul said. “America could be a much stronger nation with a RES.”

    In the absence of a RES and stronger federal support, wind operations have been buoyed by the PTCs, state incentives and in some instances, federal TARP money. (Wind is “shovel ready” in many states.)

    But without a plan from the federal government indicating that support will be sustaining, financing and justifying big capital investments becomes trickier.

    Michael Sullivan, senior vice president of NextEra Energy Resources, which operates wind farms in Texas, said the industry needs to show it is striving to achieve all possible efficiencies to make renewables more competitive with traditional power sources.

    He disagrees that a RES is necessary for a stable U.S. market. The industry should focus instead on making steady advances, striving to go from providing 2 to 3 percent of the nation’s power to the next rung of providing 4 percent of U.S. power.

    “Focus on the singles and doubles and put the runs on the board,’’  he said. “If we put a product out there that the public wants to buy” the industry will grow to the appropriate size.

    A RES is not realistic or viable in every state (translation: unwindy Southeastern states for instance) so the wind industry would be better served to spend its energy (no pun intended) on fixing the grid so it can carry wind power to urban centers effectively and accommodate wind’s variable output.

    Just getting the grid up to speed is difficult enough, given the multiple stakeholders, which include hundreds of locally controlled utilities across many states, Sullivan said.

    Wind developers do need the U.S. to subsidize and support grid improvements, the other panelists agreed. In addition to Alonso, Hall, Sullivan and Saul, the panel included Martha Wyrsche, president of Vestas Americas, the U.S. wing of the Danish wind giant.

    Alonso noted that the past decade has brought 11,000 miles of new natural gas pipeline, but only 668 miles of new power transmission lines.

    Why can such a major project be fast-tracked for gas, but not for wind? he asked.

    While the RES could send all the right signals to investors, foreign companies and policymakers, a technologically improved Smart grid, that with interactivity and computerized communications, could truly catch the wind, moving it swiftly to urban centers from rural wind farms.

    “We need transmission,” Alonso said. “Once we access the windiest areas of the country. We all win.”

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Coalition of environmental groups calls for a hold on arctic drilling

    From Green Right Now Reports

    As the Obama Administration ponders whether the gulf oil disaster should dictate any changes in the plans for additional offshore oil drilling, a coalition of environment groups is saying no way, baby, no way to drilling in arctic seas.

    They’ve put together an ad campaign that will be running on cable news channels, like CNN and MSNBC, saying that arctic offshore oil drilling is a bad idea and asking the public to weigh in by calling President Obama if they agree.

    Shell Oil plans to put an exploratory well in place off Alaska’s coast this summer, even as the nation’s worst spill unfolds in the gulf. The groups are alarmed because a spill in arctic waters could be worse.

    “Imagine many of the same challenges as the Gulf, plus bitter cold, ice, extreme wind and wave conditions, 24-hour darkness for months out of the year and response equipment for a blowout of this size being weeks away,” notes a statement on behalf of the coalition, which includes the World Wildlife Fund, Defenders of Wildlife, Earthjustice, Sierra Club, National Wildlife Federation, The Wilderness Society, National Audubon Society and the Alaska Wilderness League.

    The ad also has been posted on You Tube:

    Shell says that drilling in the Arctic’s shallow water is less risky than in the Gulf’s deep water. But the coalition notes that at least one report has shown that blowouts are more likely in shallow water; and the cold and ice would make clean up in the arctic extremely difficult.

    “As the Exxon Valdez disaster and the ongoing BP spill have shown us, oil spills devastate environments and communities, and the devastation can last for generations,” said Cindy Shogan, Executive Director for the Alaska Wilderness League. “We need to be sure that we can effectively respond to and clean up an oil spill in the Arctic Ocean before we make this pristine place our next drilling gamble.”

    “The Obama administration needs to know that Americans want a pause on oil drilling in the pristine waters of America’s Arctic Ocean,” said Trip Van Noppen, President of Earthjustice. “…An oil spill in this remote region would have long-lasting impacts for decades, killing whales, seals, fish and birds, and the Native communities that rely on them.”

    When Obama opened several areas of American waters for oil drilling, he included areas in Alaska that many conservationists consider especially sensitive ecologically. Many groups stated their opposition to the exploratory drilling that will be allowed in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas under the Obama offshore drilling policy. Drilling was not authorized for Bristol Bay, a rich source of American seafood.

  • Mingyang Wind Power opens U.S. office in Dallas

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Mingyang Wind Power Industry Group, the third largest wind energy company in China, announced today that it will open a Dallas-based operations office.

    MingyangThe new office will be a hub for the global expansion of the company, which is not government owned. Mingyang is backed by the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, a major shareholder and recently identified as the largest bank in the world.

    The wind company, which manufactures turbines but also provides engineering and financial services, promotes itself as a “total solutions” wind company, offering a start to finish program to wind developers, a news release said. It promotes its services  and equipment as the most technically advanced available; it’s wind blades are built to withstand extreme temperatures.

    Mingyang, which employes 2,000 people at five locations in China, expects to serve customers in North and South America from its office on Central Expressway in Dallas, and anticipates building manufacturing facilities in cities “like Dallas,” the news release reported.

    “Mingyang chose Dallas for our first operations center outside of China because of its strategic location, employment base, and pro-business environment,” said Wang Song, senior vice president, managing director and one of two founders of Mingyang.

    The company will have a formal announcement at the WINDPOWER 2010 convention currently underway in Dallas.

    Dallas Mayor Tom Leppert welcomed the company during an appearance at WINDPOWER 2010 on Monday. “Mingyang’s new operations in Dallas create a win-win relationship,” Mayor Leppert said.   “Its investment over the long term means local jobs, development of more renewable power, and another step toward national security.  We are excited about supporting the company’s leadership team.  We want Dallas to be Mingyang’s U.S. home.”

  • Greenpeace finds use for spilled BP oil

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Many environmental groups responded to the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico by calling not just for the clean up at hand, but also for the U.S. revoke its recent approval of offshore drilling in certain arctic regions.

    The gulf calamity raised the spectre of what could be an even worse outcome in the pristine arctic where rescue crews and supplies could be thousands of miles away when/if a spill occurred.

    Greenpeace raises a question about arctic drilling using spilled oil (Photo: Greenpeace)

    Greenpeace raises a question about arctic drilling using spilled oil (Photo: Greenpeace)

    Today, Greenpeace provided a visual for this so-far unanswered plea. Using oil collected from the BP spill, activists painted “Arctic Next?” on a Shell Oil vessel docked in Houston. The drilling supply ship is scheduled to go to Alaska this summer as part of Shell’s exploratory drilling operations there.

    This environmental moment may have been too renegade for some tastes. But Greenpeace is just one of many environmental organizations raising this question. Mainstream groups such as the Natural Resources Defense Council and the World Wildlife Fund, also oppose offshore arctic oil drilling and protested when the Obama Administration opened certain areas for drilling earlier this year. Drilling in remote waters in the fragile arctic region is folly, they say, because rescue and clean up operations would be extremely difficult in that harsh climate.

    A spill in arctic waters would not just add insult to injury to animals already bearing the brunt of climate change as their habitats melt, it could harm seafood supplies that help feed the world.

    “More than half of the fish caught in the United States each year come from the Bering Sea. And nearby, in Russia, the Kamchatka Peninsula’s river systems host the greatest diversity and concentration of salmonoid fish on Earth and produce up to one-quarter of all wild Pacific salmon,” according to the World Wildlife Fund.

    After the BP blowout in the gulf, WWF called on President Obama to reconsider its decision to allow exploratory drilling off Alaska’s North Slope.

    “We’re asking President Obama and Interior Secretary Salazar to affirm that there will be no new drill bits sunk into U.S. waters until we understand what went wrong in the gulf, and can be certain it won’t happen in the Arctic,” said Tom Dillon, WWF’s senior vice president for field programs in a May 4 statement.

    “The Gulf of Mexico has every technology available to cope with an oil spill that is now threatening to cripple the economic and ecological health of the entire gulf region. By comparison, there is no adequate plan and even less equipment for responding to a blowout in the Arctic Ocean. It would be dangerously irresponsible to allow new drilling until we understand what went wrong in the gulf and have safeguards in place to protect the Arctic.”

    Why worry? The Alaskan offshore sites are some 140 miles off the coast in areas that experience gale force winds, moving sea ice, and  protracted darkness — all of which make both drilling and rescue operations riskier.

    “A spill in the Gulf of Mexico is a bit like having a heart attack in New York City where you have every known resource to try and fix it,” said William Eichbaum, WWF’s vice president of marine and arctic policy. “A spill in the Arctic is like having a heart attack at the North Pole. Unless Santa Claus shows up, you’re not going to get help anytime soon.”

  • Survey shows shoppers want more healthy food, and less packaging

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Mambo Sprouts Marketing, a retail marketing firm that produces newsletters and coupons related to healthy and alternative food choices, recently surveyed 600 consumer to see precisely what they were really looking for in grocery items.

    Quinoa salad, a gluten-free dish (Photo: Mambo Sprouts)

    Quinoa salad, a gluten-free dish (Photo: Mambo Sprouts)

    Given that the 600 adults surveyed online were already interested in organic, alternative and specialty foods, it was no surprise that 8 in 10 of those surveyed reported that they read the labels. This discerning health-conscious group of customers said they were looking for:

    • Organic ingredients (65%)
    • Low sodium grocery items (47%)
    • Low fat/cholesterol foods (39%)
    • Vegetarian items (31%)

    Many also reported that they were seeking calcium-added foods or supplements (44%); Omega 3 oils (44%), anti-oxidants (43%), probiotics/prebiotics (38%), and Vitamin D (30%).

    The findings suggest that these educated customers are well aware of studies showing that extra calcium contributes to bone and neurological health, that Omega oils have positive effects on the circulatory system, that probiotics assist with digestion and help build immunity to disease.

    The surveyors also noted that about 25 percent of the shoppers surveyed were interested in gluten-free products, and that an even higher number, 43 percent, perceived those as healthier for their families. (This is Celiac Awareness month. For more information about this disease that affects millions of Americans consult the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness.)

    All these responses might be expected from health food shoppers. Mambo coupon users would tend to shop at health food groceries or for specialty foods within grocery chains. But apparently this group also was sensitive to environmental concerns. Food makers take note: Four in 10,or 40 percent, of those surveyed said they had recently tried a new brand or switched brands, specifically because it had more earth-friendly packaging.

    Those who had tried a new product with more eco-friendly packaging reported that it had recyclable or recycled packaging or was compostable or biodegradable.

    The Mambo Sprouts Marketing Quick Poll was completed online among 600 MamboTrack health and natural product consumers between April 19th – April 26th, 2010.

  • Western grid can handle extensive wind and solar power, study shows

    From Green Right Now Reports

    A U.S. government study released today is optimistic about bringing wind and solar power onto the western grid.

    The analysis by the National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL) shows that the Western grid can accommodate a large input from wind and solar operations without extensive and expensive upgrades.

    (Photo: WestConnect)

    (Photo: WestConnect)

    With better coordination among utilities using the grid serving states in the mountain west and southwest, it could produce 35 percent of its electricity from wind and solar energy by 2017.

    The key is that operations would have to take into account the strengths and timing of various power sources to even out supply. Utilities would have to coordinate efforts to manage the grid and the timing of power inputs from wind, which is strongest at night. At the same time, the introduction of these renewable power sources could reduce the need for back up power generation, which contributes to the high cost of producing electricity.

    “When you coordinate the operations between utilities across a large geographic area, you decrease the effect of the variability of wind an solar energy resouces, mitigating the unpredictability of Mother Nature,” said Dr. Debra Lew, who coordinated the study by the NREL , which is run by the U.S. Department of Energy.

    The 35 percent target exceeds many other estimates and targets. Many states are aiming to have 20 or 25 percent of their power come from renewable sources by various points in the 2020s. The federal government has previously said that wind alone could provide 20 percent of the nation’s power by 2030.

    The study looked at the impact of integrating wind and solar power — both photovoltaics, and concentrating solar power — into the power system operated by the WestConnect group of utilities in the mountain and southwest states.

    WestConnect is a group of transmission providers, which includes Arizona Public Service, El Paso Electric Co., NV Energy, Public Service of New Mexico, Salt River Project, Tri-State Generation and Transmission Cooperative, Tucson Electric Power, Western Area Power Administration, and Xcel Energy.

    The NREL study, called the  The Western Wind and Solar Integration Study, also reported that if the WestConnect group got 27 percent of its power from wind energy it would  lower carbon emissions by 25 to 45 percent.

    Fuel and emissions costs could decline by 40 percent, depending on the future price of natural gas.

  • Lester Brown: Reclaiming the Streets

    (Lester R. Brown, founder of the Earth Policy Institute, is the author of Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, available at the Earth Policy website. The excerpt here, released this week, was adapted from Chapter 6, Designing Cities for People. Brown’s discussion of reorganizing cities seems increasingly pertinent as the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico worsens, reminding us of the costs of our reliance on oil.)

    By Lester R. Brown

    Lester Brown

    Lester Brown founded the Earth Policy Institute and Worldwatch Institute

    Cars promise mobility, and in a largely rural setting they provide it. But in an urbanizing world, where more than half of us live in cities, there is an inherent conflict between the automobile and the city. After a point, as their numbers multiply, automobiles provide not mobility but immobility, as well as increased air pollution and the health problems that come with it. Urban transport systems based on a combination of rail lines, bus lines, bicycle pathways, and pedestrian walkways offer the best of all possible worlds in providing mobility, low-cost transportation, and a healthy urban environment.

    Some of the most innovative public transportation systems, those that shift huge numbers of people from cars into buses, have been developed in Curitiba, Brazil, and Bogotá, Colombia. The success of Bogotá’s Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system, TransMilenio, which uses special express lanes to move people quickly through the city, is being replicated not only in six other Colombian cities but in scores elsewhere too, including Mexico City, São Paulo, Hanoi, Seoul, Istanbul, and Quito. By 2012, Mexico City plans to have 10 BRT lines in place.

    Beijing is one of 11 Chinese cities with BRT systems in operation. In southern China, Guangzhou officially opened its BRT in early 2010. Already carrying more than 800,000 passengers daily, this system is expected to serve one million passengers per day by the end of the year. In addition to linking with the city’s underground Metro in three places, it will soon be paralleled throughout its entirety with a bike lane. Guangzhou will also have 5,500 bike parking spaces for those using a bike-BRT travel combination.

    In Iran, Tehran launched its first BRT line in early 2008. Several more lines are in the development stage, and all will be integrated with the city’s new subway lines. Several cities in Africa are also planning BRT systems. Even industrial-country cities such as Ottawa, Toronto, New York, Minneapolis, Chicago, Las Vegas, and—much to everyone’s delight—Los Angeles have launched or are now considering BRT systems.

    Some cities are reducing traffic congestion and air pollution by charging cars to enter the city, including Singapore, London, Stockholm, and Milan. In London—where until recently the average speed of an automobile was comparable to that of a horse-drawn carriage a century ago—a congestion fee was adopted in early 2003. The initial £5 (about $8 at the time) charge on all motorists driving into the center city between 7 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. immediately reduced the number of vehicles, permitting traffic to flow more freely while cutting pollution and noise.

    In the first year after the new tax was introduced, the number of people using buses to travel into central London climbed by 38 percent and vehicle speeds on key thoroughfares increased by 21 percent. In July 2005, the congestion fee was raised to £8. With the revenue from the congestion fee being used to upgrade and expand public transit, Londoners are steadily shifting from cars to buses, the subway, and bicycles. Since the congestion charge was adopted, the daily flow of cars and minicabs into central London during peak hours has dropped by 36 percent while the number of bicycles has increased by 66 percent.

    In January 2008, Milan adopted a “pollution charge” of $14 on vehicles entering its historic center in daytime hours during the week. Other cities now considering similar measures include San Francisco, Turin, Genoa, Kiev, Dublin, and Auckland.

    Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoë, who was elected in 2001, inherited some of Europe’s worst traffic congestion and air pollution. He decided traffic would have to be cut 40 percent by 2020. The first step was to invest in better transit in outlying regions to ensure that everyone in the greater Paris area had access to high-quality public transit. The next step was to create express lanes on main thoroughfares for buses and bicycles, thus reducing the number of lanes for cars.

    A third innovative initiative in Paris was the establishment of a city bicycle rental program that has 20,600 bikes available at 1,450 docking stations throughout the city. Access to the bikes is by credit card, with a choice of daily, weekly, or annual rates ranging from just over $1 per day to $40 per year. If the bike is used for fewer than 30 minutes, the ride is free. The bicycles are proving to be immensely popular—with more than 63 million trips taken as of late 2009.

    At this point Mayor Delanoë is working hard to realize his goal of cutting car traffic by 40 percent and carbon emissions by a similar amount by 2020. The popularity of this bike sharing program has led to its extension into 30 of the city’s suburbs and has inspired cities such as London to also introduce bike sharing.

    The United States, which has lagged far behind Europe in developing diversified urban transport systems, is being swept by a “complete streets” movement, an effort to ensure that streets are friendly to pedestrians and bicycles as well as to cars. Many American communities lack sidewalks and bike lanes, making it difficult for pedestrians and cyclists to get around safely, particularly where streets are heavily traveled.

    This cars-only model is being challenged by the National Complete Streets Coalition, a powerful assemblage of citizen groups, including the Natural Resources Defense Council, AARP, and numerous local and national cycling organizations. Among the issues spurring the complete streets movement are the obesity epidemic, rising gasoline prices, the urgent need to cut carbon emissions, air pollution, and mobility constraints on aging baby boomers. The elderly who live in urban areas without sidewalks and who no longer drive are effectively imprisoned in their own homes.

    The National Complete Streets Coalition reports that as of April 2010, complete streets policies are in place in 20 states, including California and Illinois, and in 71 cities. One reason states have become interested in passing such legislation is that integrating bike paths and sidewalks into a project from the beginning is much less costly than adding them later.

    Closely related to this approach is a movement that encourages and facilitates walking to school. Beginning in the United Kingdom in 1994, it has now spread to some 40 countries, including the United States. Forty years ago, more than 40 percent of all U.S. children walked or biked to school, but now the figure is under 15 percent. Today 60 percent are driven or drive to school. Not only does this contribute to childhood obesity, but the American Academy of Pediatrics reports fatalities and injuries are much higher among children going to school in cars than among those who walk or ride in school buses. Among the potential benefits of the Walk to School movement is a reduction in obesity and early onset diabetes.

    Countries with well-developed urban transit systems and a mature bicycle infrastructure are much better positioned to withstand the stresses of a downturn in world oil production than those that depend heavily on cars. With a full array of walking and biking options, the number of trips by car can easily be cut by 10–20 percent.

    As the new century advances, the world is reconsidering the urban role of automobiles in one of the most fundamental shifts in transportation thinking in a century. The challenge is to redesign communities so that public transportation is the centerpiece of urban transport and streets are pedestrian- and bicycle-friendly. This also means planting trees and gardens and replacing parking lots with parks, playgrounds, and playing fields. We can design an urban lifestyle that systematically restores health by incorporating exercise into daily routines while reducing carbon emissions and eliminating health-damaging air pollution.

  • Building a sky-high farm in New York City

    By Sommer Saadi
    Green Right Now

    Five farmers in Brooklyn are out to set a record: to plant the largest commercial rooftop farm in New York City.

    Last week, the Brooklyn Grange team, with the help of volunteers and a rented crane, hauled 1.2 million pounds of a soil and compost shale mix from Pennsylvania to the top of a six-story warehouse building in Long Island City, Queens. The nearly one-acre rooftop space is the first of its kind in the city, and the Brooklyn Grange team hopes it will be the first of many.

    “The long term plan for the Brooklyn Grange is to put a farm on every structurally sound roof in New York City and beyond,” said Gwen Schantz, head farmer at Roberta’s pizzeria in Brooklyn and key player in the Brooklyn Grange project.

    A farm grows in Brooklyn from VideoProfiles2010 on Vimeo.

    Finding a structurally sound roof, and a willing landlord, however proved to be fairly difficult tasks for a project that has been in the works for nearly a year. The team lost a major investor and a roof space in late March pushing back plans to plant seedlings.

    “It’s been difficult for landlords to cope with the idea of putting more than a million pounds of soil on top of the roof,” Schantz explained. “You call a landlord and you say, ‘I want to put a farm on your roof.’ And they say, ‘What? You want to do what on my roof?’”

    The team continued to search for over-engineered buildings that could hold the weight of the soil, and found one that the structural engineer approved of and the team was excited about. With a space confirmed last week and plans to get the seedlings in the ground by the end of the month, Schantz believes they’ll still be able to grow enough for the markets, local restaurants and supper clubs this season.

    Being financially viable is a primary goal for the project, which is estimated to cost just under $200,000. Each of the partners invested in the start-up, and money also was raised through several equity investors, a bank loan and fundraising events, including a page on the fundraising website kickstarter.com.

    “I think that if we can prove to capital investors that the farm can actually generate profits then we can get people with serious money interested in funding these kinds of projects,” said Chris Parachini, project manager for the Brooklyn Grange and co-owner of Roberta’s pizzeria.

    “We really just want to make something that can stand on its own two feet.”

    Brooklyn Grange head farmer Ben Flanner first ventured into urban farming last April in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, when he and Annie Novak, Children’s Gardening Coordinator at The New York Botanical Garden, helped begin a 6,000 square foot rooftop farm. Flanner, 28, previously worked a desk job at E-Trader online.

    Flanner teamed up with Chris Parichini and Brandon Hoy, co-owners of the pizza place Roberta’s in Bushwick, after selling them some locally grown tomatoes. Parichini and Hoy were already venturing into their own version of urban agriculture by starting several greenhouses in the back lot of the restaurant on top of old shipping containers. The three brought on Gwen Schantz who was working in the pizza kitchen of Roberta’s, and Anastasia Cole, an urban-agriculture enthusiast who helps with the public relations of the project.

    “I think all of our skills work well together,” Schantz said. “This is something that we’re all invested in and we’re not going to give up on it. The idea is just too good.”

    Schantz says the team is motivated by the advantages of growing food locally. Farming in the city will remind people where their food comes from and help them better understand how difficult it is to grow. Rooftop farms also absorb rainwater, which helps minimize the amount of water that must flow through the often-overwhelmed city sewage system. Rooftop farms reduce the amount of heat that is absorbed by roofs and released into the city, minimizing heating and cooling costs. The farm’s compost system will help reduce waste.

    For the Brooklyn Grange, the farm in Queens is just the start. The goal is to expand and encourage farms on every rooftop that can carry one.

    “We really are the dream team,” Schantz said. “Not because we’re the dreamiest people that should be doing this, but because we really do have a dream and we want to see it a reality.”

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Report shows UK’s offshore wind power could easily outstrip oil and gas in North Sea

    Green Right Now Reports

    The leading renewable energy trade association in the United Kingdom, Renewable UK, is celebrating a report released today that shows that offshore wind power generation in the North Sea could eclipse the power generated by oil and gas production in the same region.

    Offshore wind in the UK could supercede oil and gas production in the North Sea

    Offshore wind in the UK could supercede oil and gas production in the North Sea

    “This is a hugely exciting piece of research which sets out compelling factual evidence of the huge potential of the UK’s offshore renewable energy resource,” said Peter Madigan, head of Offshore Renewables at RenewableUK.

    “As an association we have long been saying that the North Sea will become the Saudi Arabia of wind energy, and today’s tonne of oil and employment comparisons amply bear this out. Just as 30 years  ago, the North Sea could be our ticket for economic growth. We are looking forward to the new Government putting in place the policy framework to make this happen”

    The report, published by The Offshore Valuation Group, a coalition of government and industry organizations, concluded that using less than one third of the “available offshore wind” could generate electricity equivalent to that of 1 billion barrels of oil — the amount produced annually by North Sea oil and gas production. It defined the wind available as that which could be practically developed using known technologies.

    Job growth also would soar with the robust development of offshore wind, the report found. Using one-third of the wind capability of the North Sea would produce an estimated 145,000 new jobs in the UK.

    Developing about one-third of the amount of “practical” wind power also would enable Britain to export wind by 2050. This would be possible if the EU developed an interconnected super grid and Britain pursued wind aggressively until it had an installed capacity of 169 GigaWatts of wind power.

    “The infrastructure deployment required is similar in scale to that of oil and gas in recent decades. The major expansion of the supply chain this needs will not happen on its own, however, but will take strong and continuing support from government and industry in the coming years,” according to the report, developed by the Boston Consulting Group.

    This degree of wind development also would save 1.1 billion tons of carbon emissions, reducing emissions by 30 percent relative to 1990 levels.

    The Boston Consulting Group developed the analysis in collaboration with the Public Interest Research Centre.

  • One Maine way to keep prescription meds out of the water supply

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Two years ago, an AP investigation found that America’s medicine habit had a boomerang effect. Discarded and excreted medicines — heart and mood drugs, tranquilizers and hormone treatments — that had been flushed down the toilet were turning back up in drinking water. (Yes, that’s how our managed water cycle works.)

    MedsThis invisible problem poses serious health risks. One person’s life-saving nitroglycerin might be another person’s life-threatening disease trigger. None of us want our neighbor’s meds, no matter how tiny the dose, in our morning coffee.

    But while it is easy to see how the problem gets started: Who doesn’t have a medicine cabinet with at least one under-used or unopened prescription medicine that just wasn’t required or didn’t work? It’s more difficult to conjure a solution. How can these medicines be collected and where can they be safely retired?

    Maine, the state with the oldest median-age population, and no doubt a treasure trove of packed medicine cabinets, has found one answer. It piloted a program in which residents can mail back unused meds to the state’s aging agency.

    The pilot project began back in 2007 with a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under its Aging Initiative.

    The state was motivated to try something new because of environmental concerns, but also because prescription drug abuse and related crime is a major problem, according to police authorities.

    The program, called Safe Medicine Disposal for Maine, launched with an education effort first aimed at senior citizens in several counties; telling them about the program and supplying them with return mailers. It partnered with police and health departments, the state environmental department and regional agencies on aging. The University of Maine, Community Medical Foundation for Patient Safety, the National Council on Patient Information and Education and the Rite Aid Corporation all provided support and expertise.

    Eventually, 150 pharmacies in all 16 of the state’s counties participated by distributing return envelopes.

    Volunteer pharmacists and pharmacy students cataloged the returned meds, under police supervision, to track what the program was collecting. This group also sorted the collected drugs into hazardous and non-hazardous substances. About 17 percent of the collected drugs fell into the “controlled drug” categories. They included narcotic pain relievers, tranquilizers and sedatives (which you definitely don’t need in the morning coffee). These drugs, about 250 pounds of them, along with all the other drugs were destroyed using a “high heat incineration” method approved for this type of disposal.

    The total take: 2,300 pounds of drugs were collected from 3,926 returned envelopes.

    Surveys showed that these drugs were no longer needed because the person using them had either been told to stop taking the medicine or had switched to a different one (27.3 percent); had died (19.6 percent), felt better and no longer needed to meds (18 percent) or had an allergic or other negative reaction (11.9 percent).

    The pilot program staff determined that without the program about 80 percent of these drugs would have been flushed down the toilet.

    (The government agencies that organized and participated ii the project: The Maine Drug Enforcement Agency, the Maine Department of Health and Human Services and its Offices of Adult Mental Health Services and Substance Abuse, the Maine Benzodiazepine Study Group, the Maine Department of Environmental Protection, the U.S. Postal Service, the Maine Department of Health, the Maine Office of the Attorney General, the U.S. District Attorney for Maine, and the University of Maine Center on Aging.)

  • Pesticides, ADHD and what we can do about it

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    After reading today’s news about yet another study linking pesticides to yet another health issue, in this case ADHD, I thought maybe this time, we’ll pay attention to this dark undercurrent in modern life.

    Perhaps now, with 3-7 percent of kids affected by ADHD, and the disorder possibly triggered by pesticide exposure, we’ll finally see that it really is something in the water — and the food — that’s causing this crisis.

    Unlike cotton, these man-made chemicals should not be the fabric of our lives, and yet they seem to have networked their way into and onto everything from bug sprays to lawn treatments to the berries, veggies and meat we eat. (Think livestock’s not got pesticides in it? Animals get a dose the same way we do — from the plants they’re fed.) Even cotton gets doused with pesticides, unless it’s grown organically. The t-shirt you’re wearing may have been washed free of the chemicals used to grow the cotton. But then, where did all that malathion go? Into the soil and the water.

    With our ever-growing population and its expanding consumer needs, all taking place on a finite piece of real estate called earth, it would stand to reason that our per person chemical exposure could be increasing, like ADHD has been increasing.

    Tests by watchdog groups indicate it has been. The Environmental Working Group found that there were 287 chemicals present in the blood of 10 people they tested. In fact, these “10 Americans”, as the EWG titled its study, were among the most vulnerable and least culpable. They hadn’t engaged in any risky behavior nor did they work in a chemical industry. They couldn’t have — they were tested at birth.

    (If you’re interested in this topic at all, settle in for talk by EWG founder, which I’ve embedded below.)

    Pesticides are a distinct component of this chemical brew. The breakdown of the findings showed that the chemicals could be traced back to consumer products, industrial chemicals and byproducts, including more than 200 chemical and pesticides that had been banned more than 30 years ago, according to EWG.

    That’s right. Those chemicals tend to hang around, albeit in small amounts, in the water and the soil.

    So EWG’s point is that try as we might — washing our food off, staying away from household pesticides, cleaning up dust — we may not be able to avoid chemical exposure. We live in a polluted world.

    And this accumulation has had real health effects. In his presentation, Cook points to the rise in lymphocytic leukemia, which has increased by 84 percent between 1975 and 2002, and the rise in brain cancer and autism among children.

    ADHD doesn’t steal lives like some of those dreaded diseases, but it’s prevalence is shockingly high.

    EPA records show that the use of organophosphate insecticides actually declined in real numbers, from more than 130 million pounds of “active ingredients” produced a year in 1980 to about 73 million pounds in 2001. (The numbers were taken from Crop Science America, an association representing pesticide makers.)

    But the EPA report doesn’t address the bio-accumulation of these products being applied to crops year after year. Nor has the EPA historically taken an aggressive protective stance toward these chemicals, which also turn up in household products. An EPA chart list the top ten organophosphate pesticides in use at the time:  Malathion, chlorpyrifos, terbufos, diazinon, methyl-parathion, phorate, acephate, phosmet, azinphos-methyl, and dimethoate.

    I don’t know about you, but I recognize some of these. Malathion as the stuff that governments often turn to for mosquito control, even though there are effective non-toxic ways to kill mosquito larvae. (And with West Nile in the offering, communities often demand a good spray over of chemicals.)

    Others from this group, like diazinon, are are used in industrial produce-growing operations. I never use these home products (my grass is green and I’m not worried about what the dogs are getting into). But I do sometimes read the labels and shudder. One I read recently advised that the handler wear goggles and gloves and change clothes and shower afterward. And I need to use this product, why?

    The answers to this pervasive problem of chemical exposure? There are two, and neither are completely easy. First, try to minimize your exposure. Wash  those veggies well. Buy organic. Eat the meat (if you eat meat) of grass-fed livestock. Don’t let your pets run around on a chemically treated lawn (and then cuddle up with junior). Better yet, don’t chemically treat your lawn. Put the bug spray down. Try natural mosquito repellents and for camping adventures, use the harsh stuff on clothing instead of skin.

    Second, support the proposed Safe Chemicals Act of 2010, which would reform the Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976 (TSCA), a law that advocates say has been virtually toothless since inception. (People are already saying this law could get lost amid the higher profile politics of energy and financial bills. So really, send word of your support, if you do support it)

    Under the old law, TSCA, most chemicals submitted for approval are considered safe until shown to be dangerous. The new bill would flip that paradigm, requiring chemical makers to show a compound is safe before it is approved.

    The “Safe Chemicals Act of 2010” would require safety testing of all industrial chemicals, and “puts the burden on industry to prove that chemicals are safe in order stay on the market,” according to a press released from Sen. Frank Lautenberg, (D-N.J.) author of the proposal.

    “Under current policy, the EPA can only call for safety testing after evidence surfaces demonstrating a chemical is dangerous. As a result, EPA has been able to require testing for just 200 of the more than 80,000 chemicals currently registered in the United States and has been able to ban only five dangerous substances,” Lautenberg’s office reports.

    The new legislation will give EPA more power to regulate both chemicals in production and those proposed for market.

    Congressmen Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and Bobby Rush (D-Ill.) have co-authored a House version of the bill.

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • ADHD triggered by pesticides?

    From Green Right Now Reports

    study published in Pediatrics today points to pesticides as a possible cause of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.

    The study’s team of academic researchers sampled the urine of 1,139 kids and found that those with the highest pesticide residues in their urine from organophosphate pesticides also were more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD. Of the sample, 119 of the children had been diagnosed with ADHD, which is in line with the American population, where about 1 in 10 kids has been diagnosed as having ADHD.

    “These findings support the hypothesis that organophosphate exposure, at levels common among US children, may contribute to ADHD prevalence,” the scientists wrote.

    Organophosphates are a type of pesticide commonly used on fruits and vegetables. Organophosphates include malathion, used industrially and in home gardens as well as in mosquito control.

    The researchers, supported by Canadian and U.S. government grants, said more review was needed before the link could be fully explained. The sampling looked at a single point in time, leaving many questions unanswered about the role of continued exposure and the levels of exposure that would alter brain chemistry. Longitudal studies are needed, with multiple urine samplings over time, they said.

    Among their findings:

    • There was a strong “association” — a 55% to 72% increase in the odds of ADHD for a 10-fold increase in DMAP concentration [a metabolite that indicates exposure to certain organophosphates] depending on the
      criteria used for case identification”.
    • “Several biological mechanisms might underlie an association between organophosphate pesticides and ADHD. A primary action of organophosphates,
      particularly with respect to acute poisoning, is inhibition of acetylcholinesterase,” according to the report. Acetylcholinesterase is needed for healthy synaptic messaging in the brain. Or put another way, the same neurotoxic effects deliberately aimed a pests in agricultural fields and on lawns, could be creating brain chemistry disruption in children inadvertently exposed to these chemicals.

    Just as with other toxics, studies have found that genetics can play a role in how susceptible an individual is to a certain pesticide or toxic chemical, as well as finding that kids can be far more sensitive to chemical exposures than adults.

    CropLife America, a national association that represents pesticide manufacturers, issued a statement to ABC News concerning this story. The statement noted that ADHD is “a serious disorder” and that CropLife America “fully supports continuous study to help better understand its cause.”

    “However, our review of the published journal story in Pediatrics, which makes summary of the study, leads us to believe much more research is needed to ascertain if there is a direct link between exposure to organophosphate pesticides and the development of ADHD in children,” CropLife America said.

    Don’t want to wait for the definitive answer?

    Consumers can reduce their pesticide expose by:

    • Buying organic produce, especially berries and certain soft-skin fruits that tend to absorb pesticides. Find out which conventionally grown foods are most likely to contain pesticide residues in the Environmental Working Group’s recent re-release of the “Dirty Dozen”.
    • Using organic control measures to reduce pests on their lawn and gardens
    • Making sure your city or county is not using malathion to control mosquitoes, but using natural larval control methods instead.
    • Using a water filter for drinking and cooking water