Author: Grist – the Latest from Grist

  • Hardcore hip hop for vegans

    by Ashley Braun

    Dis’ hip hop duo thinks it’s ridonkulous not to ditch dairy and meat ‘cuz they be eatin’ “only ripe vegetables, fresh fruit and whole wheat.” Whole foods, fo’ realz.

    Apparently, the all-natural life prescribed in this song precludes drinking tap water but not smoking weed.

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  • Nestle to save orangutans, tropical forests, and our climate

    by Phil Radford

    Photo courtesy Frank Peters via FlickrFinally … some good news! Today, Nestle, the world’s
    biggest food and drinks company, announced that it will cease using products
    that drive the tropical rainforest destruction.

    This is great news for our environment in what has otherwise
    been a bleak few weeks. President Obama continues to dig in (or drill in) and stand firm behind
    his plans to increase offshore oil drilling
    despite the BP Deepwater oil disaster and continues to work to lift the ban on commercial whaling.

    In the midst of it all, Nestle’s recent act is a refreshing
    act of leadership.

    Here is why this matters: 17 percent of global-warming
    pollution comes from deforestation. Brazil and Indonesia are among the four
    most polluting countries (with China and the U.S.) because cutting trees
    releases carbon pollution.

    To address the main driver of deforestation in Brazil—cattle ranching—Greenpeace worked with Nike,
    Wal-Mart, Timberland,
    and other companies to pressure their suppliers to stop grazing cattle on
    recently deforested land.

    In Indonesia, palm oil and pulp plantations are both driving
    deforestation and pushing orangutans to the brink of extinction. After
    being caught red-handed
    , Nestle has committed to identify and exclude
    companies from its supply chain that own or manage “high-risk plantations or
    farms linked to deforestation.” This exclusion would apply to companies such as
    Sinar Mas, Indonesia’s most notorious palm-oil and pulp-and-paper supplier, if
    it fails to meet the criteria set out in the policy. It also has implications
    for palm oil traders, such as Cargill, which continue to buy from Sinar Mas.

    Palm oil:
    Cooking the planet

    Palm oil is used in a huge range of products—from
    chocolate, toothpaste, and cosmetics to so-called “climate-friendly” biofuels.
    Global demand for both palm oil and paper is increasing, with companies like
    Sinar Mas expanding into Indonesia’s forests and peatlands. As a result, the
    country has one of the fastest rates of forest destruction on the planet and is
    the world’s third-largest greenhouse-gas emitter, after China and the United
    States.

    A Greenpeace report, “Caught Red-Handed: How Nestle’s Use of Palm Oil is Having a
    Devastating Impact on Rainforest, the Climate and Orangutans
    ,”
    exposed how Nestle’s growing use of palm oil is linked to companies involved in
    the destruction of forests and peatlands in the Paradise Forest region of
    Southeast Asia.

    The Paradise Forest region is one of the most important, but
    highly threatened, tropical forest regions on the planet. With world-renowned
    wildlife diversity, the rainforest islands of Paradise are home to critically
    endangered orangutans, Sumatran tigers, and spectacular birds that exist
    nowhere else on Earth. But with a world-record-breaking deforestation rate,
    there’s not much time to protect their habitat.

    An anatomy of
    a Greenpeace campaign

    Long past are the days when all it took were a few
    courageous people in a boat blocking nuclear tests or grenade-tipped harpoons
    to pass global bans on nuclear testing or commercial whaling. But this does not
    mean that modern campaigns, with social media, global coordination, public
    mobilization, and deep research, don’t still depend on individuals taking
    principled, peaceful, courageous action to make change that few thought was
    possible.

    The Nestle announcement is a step toward such significant
    change—the end of tropical deforestation.

    Of course, it took quite a bit of work to provide support
    for the champions in Nestle who were working to make the company a force for
    good. The release of the “Caught Red-Handed
    report was just the beginning. Add thousands of canvassers on the street in as many
    as 24 countries telling millions of people about Nestle and deforestation.
    Layer on the video spoof of Kit Kat, a Nestle brand in most countries but the U.S. (where Hershey’s
    distributes Kit Kat), which was seen by millions around the globe within just a
    few hours of its release.

    Then imagine tens of thousands of Greenpeace’s 2.9 million
    members becoming your Facebook friend, only they’re not really your friends …
     So many activists flooded Nestlé‘s
    Facebook page that its overwhelmed moderator began to engage with them in some
    very unfriendly ways. The media took note, including The Wall Street Journal, which chronicled the firestorm in the
    article “Nestle Takes a Beating on Social-Media Sites.”

    On March 17, good-humored protests took place across Europe and disrupted the Nestle shareholder
    meeting
    , calling for an end Nestle’s “Kit Kat-astrophic
    policies.”

    Today, Nestle announced that it will “focus on the
    systematic identification and exclusion of companies owning or managing high-risk
    plantations or farms linked to deforestation” and “ensure that its products
    have no deforestation footprint.” And
    for today, Greenpeace will commend Nestle on its commitments. Now comes the
    real work—changing its practices.

    Related Links:

    Tools for supporting international action on global warming: American Power Act

    What’s in your food that’s destroying orangutans?

    Raiding rainforest funds in climate legislation will turn cost projections into fantasy






  • Scientists link ADHD in kids to routine pesticide exposure

    by Tom Laskawy

    Writing in The Omnivore’s Dilemma, Michael Pollan detailed how, following World War II, nerve-gas factories were converted en masse into synthetic pesticide factories. These weapons reborn as pesticides are organophosphates, as are both Sarin and VX gases. For farmers, they work by, as Wikipedia tastefully puts it, “irreversibly inactivating” an essential neurotransmitter within insects—just as they worked for military generals by irreversibly inactivating the same equally essential neurotransmitter within soldiers.

    The dangers of organophosphates are thus nothing new, though industrial agriculture continues to drop tens of millions of pounds of them on fields across the country every year. The argument in favor of their use has always been that, whatever their devastating effects at high doses, general exposure through the environment was far too low to do any harm.

    The BPA fiasco has, of course, taught us that low-level exposure to supposedly “nontoxic” doses can indeed be a problem. And now researchers from Harvard and the University of Montreal report in the Journal of Pediatrics that low-level exposure to organophosphates may significantly increase the risk of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children. “The findings are based on data from the
    general U.S. population, meaning that exposure to the pesticides could
    be harmful even at levels commonly found in children’s environment,” says Reuters.

    The sample included
    1,139 children 8 to 15 years old, of which about one in ten met the
    criteria for ADHD, matching estimates for the general
    population. Researchers then measured the level of organophosphate “metabolites,” i.e. the chemicals that these pesticides break down into within the body, in these children’s urine. What they found was that as exposure increased, ADHD risk increased; a tenfold increase in exposure was associated with a 50% increase in risk of ADHD, which is considered very large. Again, the children in this study are not the children of farmworkers or residents of agricultural areas—they are “representative of the general US population.”

    The Reuters article included an appropriately lame response from pesticide maker Dow:

    Garry Hamlin of Dow AgroSciences, which
    manufactures an organophosphate known as chlorpyrifos, said he had not
    had time to read the report closely. But, he added, “the results
    reported in the paper don’t establish any association specific to our
    product chlorpyrifos.”

    Researchers were, as I said, only looking at the metabolites of these pesticides. I’m not chemist enough to know if Hamlin is touting the fact that chlorpyrifos’ metabolites weren’t found or if he’s trying pull a logical fast one by touting the fact that chlorpyrifos itself wasn’t found. Either way, to argue that a study implicating an entire class of chemical, of which your product is a member, somehow doesn’t apply to you is the height of shamelessness.

    To summarize:

    1) Some of the most common pesticides on the planet may very well cause ADHD in children whose only exposure comes from their use on food and in household products (although further study is needed to establish a causal link)

    2) Some exposure to these chemicals can be avoided by buying organically grown fruits and vegetables

    3) If you must buy conventionally grown fruit and vegetables, wash them well. A cheap and easy way to make your own vegetable wash involves filling a spray bottle with water and adding a dollop of 100% natural dish soap along with a tablespoon of distilled white vinegar.

    Related Links:

    What the Kerry-Lieberman climate bill means for farmers

    Ask Umbra’s Book Club: Time to take action

    Grass That’s Truly Greener






  • Oil now threatening Gulf’s cradles of biodiversity, its reefs

    by Tom Philpott

    As corals are particularly susceptible to oil detergents and dispersed oil, the results of these assays rules out the use of any oil dispersant in coral reefs and in their vicinity.
    —From a 2007 paper by Israeli researchers, published in The Journal of Environmental Science

    (USGS photo)After reading those words a few days ago, I became concerned about the deep-water reefs of the northern Gulf of Mexico, known as the Pinnacles. They lie just 25 miles north of the Deepwater Horizon leak, at depths of 230 to 400 feet along the edge of the continental shelf running from the Mississippi Delta to the DeSoto Canyon. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) describes them as a broad band of “drowned reefs” or “fossil reefs,” but while the reefs may be “fossil”—formed several millennia ago, when sea levels were lower—they remain ecologically vital. Says NOAA:

    The Pinnacles are part of a shelf-edge reef complex throughout the Gulf of Mexico and southeastern United States that is considered to be critical spawning habitat for many commercially important species of groupers and snappers, and are home to many species that do not occur on shallow coral reefs such as the Spanish flag and roughtongue bass.

    Well, vast plumes of dispersed oil are now hovering over these cradles of biodiversity. Associated Press reports that the dispersed oil is now over the western edge of the Pinnacles.

    The reefs face two threats from the oil plumes. The first is oxygen depletion. “These plumes are being eaten by microbes thousands of feet deep, which removes oxygen from the water,” AP reports. The article quotes Samantha Joye, a professor of marine sciences at the University of Georgia who says that the abundant deepwater coral in this area “need oxygen. Without it, they can’t survive.”

    The second threat is poisoning from direct contact:

    Oil mixed with the chemical agent can disperse into the water more easily, rather than it staying on the surface, where it could bypass deeper banks like Pinnacles, said Edward Van Vleet, a chemical oceanography professor at the University of South Florida.The downside is that it causes oil to sink, coating corals and other reef organisms and smothering them, he said. When the dispersed oil is broken into smaller globules, he said they are more easily eaten by smaller reef organisms and can kill them or cause tumors or something else harmful.

    And the Pinnacles aren’t the only reefs threatened by the underwater plumes. The Gulf loop current could carry them to the shallow-water corals off of the Florida Keys, AP reports.

    The situation starkly illustrates the brutal dilemma faced by cleanup crews as they fight to limit damage from the ongoing spill. Use of chemical dispersants is no doubt reducing the size of surface slicks, limiting the potential for catastrophic damage along the Gulf’s environmentally sensitive shores. But dispersants also add to the size of underwater plumes, expanding the potential for catastrophic damage along the Gulf’s environmentally sensitive sea bottom.

    The situation doesn’t clarify much about the wisdom of using dispersants. But it highlights the tremendous risks of deep-water oil drilling. And until we learn to use significantly less oil, deep-water drilling will only become a more entrenched practice.

    Related Links:

    The real trouble from the oil spill is brewing deep under the sea

    MMS goes under the spotlight

    Tube is suctioning one-fifth of spewing oil, says BP executive






  • The real trouble from the oil spill is brewing deep under the sea

    by Randy Rieland

    It’s been almost a month since the Deepwater Horizon exploded and began spewing oil into the Gulf of Mexico.  But it’s not your typical oil spill; because of its depth and distance from shore, it has so far brought no images of fouled beaches or blackened, dead sea birds.

    Whatever damage is being done by the viscous soup floating under the sea is still largely unknown.  But more and more scientists are fearing the worst, reports Justin Gillis in The New York Times. The researchers who’ve had the closest look beneath the surface ratcheted up the anxiety when they described giant underwater plumes of oil as large as 10 miles long and three miles wide.  Said scientist Samantha Joyce: 

    There’s a shocking amount of oil in the deep water, relative to what you see in the surface water. There’s a tremendous amount of oil in multiple layers, three or four or five layers deep in the water column.

    What the oil spill and the dispersants being used to break it up mean for marine life in the Gulf—short term and long term—is anybody’s guess. But it has all the makings of an ecological disaster.  Writes Joel Achenbach in The Washington Post:

    The millions of gallons of crude, and the introduction of chemicals to disperse it, have thrown this underwater ecosystem into chaos, and scientists have no answer to the question of how this unintended and uncontrolled experiment in marine biology and chemistry will ultimately play out.

    In fact, as Bettina Boxall and Alana Semuels point out in the Los Angeles Times, the chemicals being dumped into the sea to break up the oil may only be making things worse under the surface. 

    The widespread spraying of chemical dispersants on the surface slick may be compounding exposure and speeding oil uptake into the food chain, scientists warned. The problem, said George Crozier, executive director of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab, is that it is easier for particle-munching microorganisms to ingest the broken-up bits of oil.

    Grist’s Tom Philpott has also been digging up the ugly story behind the dispersants.

    And the Christian Science Monitor‘s Mark Sappenfield goes a step farther, raising the specter of huge dead zones created by lack of oxygen in the water. 

    … serious environmental degradation could take place in the open ocean, creating massive “dead zones” where no creature can live because of the lack of oxygen in the water. The spread of oil at all levels of the Gulf also could become a concern for shore communities in hurricanes, which stir up the water column as they come ashore.

    Thar she blows

    Meanwhile, in a galaxy far away, aka Wall Street, experts can also only speculate as to how this disaster will play out in their world.  It may come down simply to which way the wind blows. Worst-case scenario, according to investment adviser David Kotok, is that the slick moves west, where the majority of oil-producing wells in the Gulf are located, which might lead to fire hazards. If drilling platforms in the area have to be abandoned, “[a]bout 31 percent of our domestic oil supply will be shut off,” he says. “You can imagine the impact on fuel prices.”  But if the slick moves east, well, that’s not so great either. Here’s the take from FireDogLake.

    Related Links:

    MMS goes under the spotlight

    Oil now threatening Gulf’s cradles of biodiversity, its reefs

    Tube is suctioning one-fifth of spewing oil, says BP executive






  • MMS goes under the spotlight

    by Randy Rieland

    Last week, execs from BP, Transocean, and Halliburton took their Capitol Hill beatdown.  This week, federal regulators will be led into the ring.  With Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar at the front of the line, they’ll appear before three Senate committees tomorrow and then a House committee on Wednesday, at which members of Congress can be expected to express equal measures of shock, dismay, and disgust.

    The bull’s-eye will be on Minerals Management Service (MMS), the Interior Department agency that’s responsible for overseeing offshore drilling but has developed more of a reputation for its staffers deferring to and partying with its oil industry buds.  

    AP’s Justin Pritchard reveals the latest example of MMS’s diddling.  During the past five years, the agency became increasingly lax about making monthly safety inspections of the Deepwater Horizon rig that exploded.  Which explains why since January 2005 inspectors had issued just one minor infraction for the rig. Which explains why last year MMS was able to single out the Deepwater well as an industry model for safety. 

    A case of Bush reflux

    One person who won’t be anywhere near Washington this week but deserves to take heat for the MMS mess is none other than George W. Bush, says Matthew Yglesias, writing for The Daily Beast.  The MMS became a poster child for the Bush policy of hands-off regulation, or as Yglesias puts it:

    [The MMS developed] a culture of indifference to the substantive missions of government agencies. This, of course, was the very essence of the Bush administration approach to government. When a regulator could be staffed by shills for the industry it was supposed to oversee, it was. When no industry particularly wanted to own an agency, like FEMA, it was handed over to a random crony. The results were disastrous and we’re still paying the price today.

    Andrew Sullivan, in his Daily Dish blog for The Atlantic, fingers a different culprit.  “The BP disaster is not Obama’s Katrina; it’s Cheney’s delayed Katrina,” he writes. He also points out how enthusiastically Sarah Palin was waving her pom-poms for “Damn the permits, full speed ahead!” in a column for The National Review just weeks before Deepwater went down.  Among her comments:

    What we need is action—action that results in the job growth and revenue that a robust drilling policy could provide.  And let’s not forget that while Interior Department bureaucrats continue to hold up actual offshore drilling from taking place, Russia is moving full steam ahead on Arctic drilling, and China, Russia, and Venezuela are buying leases off the coast of Cuba.

    She hit the trifecta: China and Russia and Chavez, oh my!  Plus Cuba.

    Enough , already

    Not surprisingly, newspapers along the Gulf Coast have joined the MMS whipping party.  From an editorial in the New Orleans Times-Picayune

    For South Louisianians, the Minerals Management lapses are painfully reminiscent of the shoddy work by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that led to the deadly collapse of federal floodwalls during Katrina … It is already clear, though, that federal oversight was virtually nonexistent, and safety suffered because of it.

    And from the Pensacola News Journal:   

    To ensure that regulatory agencies didn’t regulate well, Bush stocked them with former industry officials and even lobbyists, who worked from inside to loosen regulation.

    Finally, Reuters reports that the Center for Biological Diversity plans to sue the Interior Department for failing to get environmental permits for many offshore drilling activities, as required by two environmental laws, the Marine Mammal Protection Act and the Endangered Species Act.

    “The Department of the Interior and the Minerals Management Service are creating a lawless zone in the Gulf of Mexico when it comes to these environmental laws,” said Miyoko Sakashita, the center’s oceans director. “The oil companies really get to call the shots.”

    For MMS, the party’s over.

    Related Links:

    The real trouble from the oil spill is brewing deep under the sea

    Oil now threatening Gulf’s cradles of biodiversity, its reefs

    Tube is suctioning one-fifth of spewing oil, says BP executive






  • What the Kerry-Lieberman climate bill means for farmers

    by Meredith Niles

    Thus far the
    majority of analysis of the Kerry-Lieberman climate bill has focused on the energy components of the bill,
    including an extension of nuclear power, “clean coal” from carbon storage and
    sequestration, and offshore drilling expansion. The bill also provides
    unprecedented programs for agriculture and food systems in the U.S. and
    internationally. Unfortunately, while the bill contains strong language
    promoting sustainable agriculture, it also offers support for troubling agricultural
    practices that have yet to significantly prove their capacity to reduce
    emissions.

    I was at a meeting recently where someone said, “Agriculture
    is a culprit, a victim, and a solution,” which poignantly encapsulated the
    challenges and promise of agriculture in the future. Agriculture is responsible for problematic
    emissions—particularly methane and nitrous oxide, which
    are generated by manures, livestock, and soil management, including nitrogen
    additions, and are considerably more potent than carbon dioxide. Agriculture stands to
    be greatly affected by climate change, from crop ranges to yields and water
    allocation. Yet farmers can do more than minimize their impact.

    So, what does this climate bill ultimately mean for farmers, for the role of agriculture in the climate debate, and ultimately for
    reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions?

    First and foremost, the K-L bill follows in the footsteps of
    the Waxman-Markey legislation, passed last summer, by establishing an
    agricultural and forestry offsets program. Last year, the Environmental Protection Agency predicted
    that such a program could provide annual net benefits to farmers as high as $18
    billion—an amount that could fundamentally change the way America
    farms. Yet, while these benefits
    are attractive, achieving true GHG reductions must mean that legislation is
    incentivizing effective and real practices.

    Under the K-L bill, the offsets program is run under the
    USDA with significant input from an advisory committee that could be made up of
    academics, business representatives, NGOs, and government officials. Though the projects that will be
    eligible for the offsets program are not officially set in stone, the bill does
    outline a “minimum number of practices” which must be considered for inclusion
    by the advisory committee. The list of practices is largely similar to the one revealed
    in the Waxman-Markey bill last year after House Agriculture Committee Chairman Colin
    Peterson added a 50-plus page markup to the bill. The full list of “potential practices” is a diverse array,
    including altered tillage, cover cropping,
    nitrogen fertilization efficiency, farming methods used on certified organic
    farms, pasture-based livestock systems, reductions in animal management
    emissions, rotational grazing,
    crop rotations, and methods for increasing carbon sequestration in soils. 

    One notable difference, absent from the Waxman-Markey bill
    and other earlier versions of the Senate bill, is the inclusion of certified
    organic agriculture practices. A variety of research has found organic
    agricultural practices can increase carbon storage and decrease fossil fuel energy
    requirements
    and GHG emissions.

    The K-L bill also goes one step further than just a carbon
    offset program. It establishes a “Carbon Conservation Program” designed to
    encourage GHG reductions and sequestration activities for landowners and others
    with grazing contracts not eligible for the offset program. The CCP does what a lot of farmers wanted:
    it provides a way to reward the early adopters of beneficial practices. It will provide incentives for farmers
    already practicing organic practices—or cover cropping or reduced tillage—to continue to do so. This is
    vital, but also has the potential to backfire if the practices being rewarded are
    not actually providing climate change benefits. 

    The bill’s list includes several practices that have questionable
    benefits to the climate and that could create additional environmental problems.
    Featured prominently is no-till agriculture, which is widely associated with
    Roundup-Ready genetically modified crops and often accompanied by increased herbicide use to control weeds in lieu of tilling. Biofuels are also weighted heavily in the
    bill, even though certain kinds have been
    shown not to reduce greenhouse gases
    . The inclusion of composting in the
    bill ought to be positive, but “compost” can sometimes be a cover word for
    chemical-laden sewage sludge.

    Close board oversight and quality methodologies will be
    crucial to verifying that any practices promoted by an offset program actually
    have the science to back up their measurable net reductions in GHG
    emissions. If a practice such as no-till
    agriculture reduces carbon dioxide emissions by limiting the number of tractor
    passes on a field, but simultaneously increases emissions of nitrous oxide—a
    greenhouse gas 300 times as strong as carbon dioxide—and use of herbicides, the
    overall benefit to the climate could be nil or worse. Technical assistance and outreach for farmers and landowners
    will also be incredibly important, but thus far, little research exists to
    understand the types of farms and farmers willing and able to participate in offset
    initiatives.

    A climate bill that establishes a carbon offset program in
    agriculture and forestry is only going to be effective if those offsets are
    legitimate and if they are accompanied by strong efforts in other sectors. Unfortunately,
    the offshore drilling, expansion of carbon sequestration and storage practices,
    and nuclear power touted in the K-L bill not only have questionable benefits
    for reducing GHG emissions, but carry serious environmental risks such as has
    been clearly demonstrated by the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Agriculture can and
    should be part of the solution by reducing its own emissions and sequestering
    carbon with proven techniques, but it’s not the only solution, and it cannot
    stand alone in a climate bill that falls so short of true environmental
    progress.

     

    Related Links:

    American PRIDE Alternative to Lieberman-Kerry Climate bill -short executive summary

    Climate Change: Four Futures

    Solid at the core: the integrity of the emission limits in the American Power Act






  • Tube is suctioning one-fifth of spewing oil, says BP executive

    by Agence France-Presse

    NEW ORLEANS, La. – The tube inserted by BP into a ruptured oil pipe is sucking up about one-fifth of the crude spewing into the Gulf of Mexico, a top company official said Monday.

    BP’s Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles told CNN that about 1,000 barrels of oil per day are being suctioned up by the tube, out of about 5,000 barrels that the company believes is gushing out daily.

    “I’m really pleased we’ve had success now. We’ve actually had what we call this rise insertion tube working more than 24 hours now,” he told CNN. “This morning we were producing over 1,000 barrels of oil into the drill ship. So it’s good progress.”

    Suttles acknowledged that most of the oil continues to spill into the open Gulf waters, but said he hoped to be able over time to increase the ratio of captured oil.

    “This doesn’t capture all of it. There’s still oil coming out. But what we hope to do over the next 24 hours is continue to raise the rate, increase the rate coming out of that insertion tube and capture more and more of the flow,” Suttles said.

    The tube insertion was the first tangible sign of success in more than three weeks of efforts to prevent at least 210,000 gallons of oil from spewing unabated into the sea each day and feeding a massive slick off the coast of Louisiana.

    The four-inch-diameter tube was inserted into the 21-inch leaking pipe using undersea robots over the weekend and finally managed to begin siphoning oil after some early glitches.

    BP estimates that 5,000 barrels of oil each day are gushing into the Gulf, but independent experts have said that the amount could be as much as 10 times higher.

    The bigger estimate, if accurate, would mean that the tube has only managed to corral a small fraction of the oil flowing into the Gulf, rather than the 20 percent that BP officials suggest is being siphoned off.

    Company officials also are weighing the possibility of drilling a relief well that would divert the flow and allow the well to be permanently sealed, but it was not expected to be ready until August.

    Related Links:

    The real trouble from the oil spill is brewing deep under the sea

    MMS goes under the spotlight

    Oil now threatening Gulf’s cradles of biodiversity, its reefs






  • BP has numerous safety violations at refineries, study finds

    by Agence France-Presse

    WASHINGTON – British energy giant BP, which is battling a gigantic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, also has a record of flagrant safety violations at its U.S. refineries, according to a Washington-based investigative group.

    The Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit investigative journalism organization, said its analysis showed two refineries owned by BP account for 97 percent of all flagrant violations found in the U.S. refining industry by inspectors over the past three years.

    Most of BP’s citations were classified as “egregious willful” by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the group said in its release Sunday. It noted that BP has been under scrutiny from the federal worker-safety monitor since its refinery in Texas City, Texas, exploded in March 2005, killing 15 workers.

    The report said refinery inspection data obtained by the center under the Freedom of Information Act showed that BP received a total of 862 citations between June 2007 and February 2010 for alleged violations at its refineries in Texas City and Toledo, Ohio.

    Of those, 760 were classified as “egregious willful” and 69 were classified as “willful,” according to the report, which said BP accounted for 829 of the 851 willful violations among all refiners cited by OSHA during the period.

    OSHA officials told the center in an interview that BP failed to correct the types of problems that led to the 2005 Texas City accident even after OSHA pointed them out.

    BP, which operates five U.S. refineries that collectively process about 1.5million barrels of crude oil per day, was hit last year with a proposed $87 million fine from OSHA for violations at the Texas City refinery with another fine of $3 million for violations in Toledo, Ohio, according to the report. BP is contesting both penalties.

    Contacted by AFP, BP had no immediate response to the report.

    Related Links:

    The real trouble from the oil spill is brewing deep under the sea

    MMS goes under the spotlight

    Oil now threatening Gulf’s cradles of biodiversity, its reefs






  • How green are the ‘childless by choice’?

    by Lisa Hymas

    Laura S. Scott has surveyed and interviewed more than 170
    people for her Childless by
    Choice Project
    .  “I’m
    keenly interested in the process of decision-making,” she says. “How
    do we get from assuming parenthood for ourselves to the point where we’re
    saying, ‘No kids, thank you!’?” 
    She shares what she’s learned in a new book, Two
    Is Enough: A Couple’s Guide to Living Childless by Choice
    , and in a forthcoming
    documentary
    .

    I called Scott to find out whether environmental concerns
    were a factor for many of the people she spoke with—and we also got to
    talking about whether the feminist movement is supportive of childfree women,
    how a nurturing instinct is different from a maternal instinct, and why we
    shouldn’t try to save Social Security as we know it.

    ——-

    Q. How many of the people you talked to mentioned
    environmental issues as a reason not to have kids?

    A. I was trying to find the top six most compelling motives to
    remain childless. The environmental motive was not among that top six, but it
    showed up fairly regularly in the mix of motives.  In a questionnaire, I asked people an open-ended question:
    “I remained childless by choice because I believe ___.” The motive that was
    most frequent was, “I don’t feel the desire. I believe you shouldn’t have a
    child unless you feel a desire to have a child.” Then other frequently cited
    belief systems included, “The world is already overpopulated. I believe that
    the world does not need another child.”

    Even though [the environment] didn’t come out as the most
    compelling motive for the group, it was the most compelling motive for a number
    of people.  I interviewed people
    who felt very strongly that if they were going to be responsible global
    citizens, they needed not to have children. I talked to a couple in Canada and
    [the woman] said to me, “As much as I love the potentiality of a newborn,
    I don’t think the planet needs another garbage-producing human.” Her partner
    actually wrote himself a letter the week he was going to get a vasectomy,
    making a list of reasons why he got snipped. The No. 1 reason was that the
    world is overpopulated and Mother Earth’s problems are a result of too many
    humans.

    Q. When a person is thinking about whether or not to have a
    child, environmental concerns might break down in two ways: There’s concern
    about overpopulation and that a child will cause environmental damage and use
    resources and worsen climate change. And then you might be concerned about
    bringing a child into a polluted and crowded world that’s going to be a less
    pleasant place to live. Did you hear from people on that latter point?

    A. There is that too. There was worry that we’ve messed up this
    planet so badly, is it really fair to bring this little person into it? And I
    think “environmental,” more broadly, is not just a distressed planet, but also
    the social ills that might threaten the environment [in which you raise] a
    child, whether it be crime or drugs or sexual promiscuity.

    But it was more of the former that I heard about. There was
    a guilt aspect. Some people said, “You know, we really messed up this planet
    and I feel guilty bringing a child into this place.”

    People who I interviewed thought long and hard about what
    it would be like to be a parent in this day and age, and it didn’t look like a
    pretty picture to them. They didn’t have a lot of faith that they would be the
    parent they really wanted to be based on the stressors that were out there for
    parents.

    Q. Were people who cited the environment as a reason younger
    or older?

    If you like this article, you’ll love my piece on being a GINK: green inclinations, no kids

    A. I got it across the board. I saw slightly more of the 20- to
    29-year-olds expressing concerns about the environment, but only slightly. I
    anticipated that I would see more people concerned about the environment who
    were children of the ‘70s, when we had that zero-population-growth movement.
    There was a time, in the ‘70s and even in the early ‘80s, when it was totally
    cool to be childfree, particularly if you were in environmental-activist
    circles. But I think this next generation, anyone born after 1980, is
    going to be much more aware of environmental concerns because we’re doing a
    better job of educating children about global sustainability.

    I was influenced after the fact. I made the decision not to
    have children in my late teens, early 20s, and environmental motives were not
    among my primary motives. However, as I grew to be an adult, I became much more
    conscious about environmental concerns. I read Bill McKibben’s book Maybe
    One
    and was incredibly influenced by
    it, to the point where I felt myself nodding on every page, saying, “This guy
    is so right!” and thinking, “Wouldn’t it be great if everyone had a chance to
    read this book and really think long and hard about how many children they
    bring into the world?”

    Q. In your book, you mention meeting an older woman who asks
    you whether you have kids, and you tell her you’ve chosen not to, and she
    responds, “Back in my day we didn’t have a choice.”

    A. The choice to remain childless didn’t really exist even 50
    or 60 years ago. Birth control methods were really dodgy and not particularly
    safe or accessible or widely available to most people. And there were laws on
    the books against using contraceptives if you were married, even until the
    1960s in the United States and Canada. The fact that you can as a couple choose
    to remain childless and you can take the steps to ensure that you do not have
    children and you can do it safely and you can do it legally—this is new!

    Q. Maybe the culture hasn’t caught up with this dramatic
    shift?

    A. That’s very true. The assumption that everyone will have a
    child at some point in their life and it will all be good and happy—that still
    has a lot of power. People who make the alternate choice are really swimming
    against the tide, and their decision-making is not endorsed or understood or
    accepted in a lot of communities. 

    It used to be
    that you went from high school to marriage to children and the question was,
    “How many children are we going to have?” And that question has
    morphed into, “Should we have children?” As you delay marriage and
    child-rearing into your 30s and perhaps even your 40s, you come to appreciate a
    childfree life. Then that fertility deadline hits, particularly for women, and
    you go, “OK, gosh, if I’m going to have kids, I really need to think about it.
    Do I need to look at my partner as a possible father for my children? Am I going
    to find a new house that I can raise a family in? Or am I going to refill that
    birth-control prescription?” And then you are a decision-maker—you’re no
    longer assuming kids for yourself.

    Q. Do you think there’s more pressure on women than on men
    to become parents? Or do women feel it more acutely?

    A. I think females do feel it more acutely, and the reason is
    that having children, being a mother, is so tied to the female identity, more
    so than to the male identity. People I interview will say, “People don’t think
    you’re a real woman unless you have a child.” There’s that sense that others
    are thinking, “Well, she’s not really going to be fulfilled as a woman, or
    empowered as a woman, or empathetic as a woman if she doesn’t experience
    parenthood.”

    Studies have clearly shown that voluntarily childless women
    do experience incredibly good well-being and do have a great quality of life
    and are experiencing the full range of Maslow’s
    hierarchy of needs
    —that self-actualization that we all hope and pray for.
    But then there’s that niggling suspicion, especially from women who have
    children, that this can’t be legit, that childfree women are in denial and are
    going to regret it and are going to feel lonely and isolated and have a very
    poor quality of life. I think there’s a sense that a man in the world will do
    fine without children, but a woman in the world without children is going to
    face some tragic end.

    Q. Do you feel like the feminist movement—not that
    there’s some monolithic movement that you can pin down—but do you feel like
    it’s supportive of the choice not to have children? Or is it really focused on
    helping women balance work and children?

    A. Women who choose to remain childless really haven’t been
    embraced in that umbrella of modern feminism. Maybe earlier, in the ‘70s, when
    we did have a very strong environmentalist movement, the childfree choice would
    have been embraced within the feminist movement. But I don’t see that in this
    sort of neo-feminist movement that we have now. The focus really is on working
    moms. I think that will change as the numbers of women who remain childless
    increase.  Now, in 2010, close to 20
    percent of women don’t have children and will never have children.

    Q. A number of the people you interviewed in your book work
    with or volunteer with kids. Do you think it’s a disproportionately high number
    compared with the rest of the population?

    A. Maybe, because we have time. Frankly, I don’t think I would
    have mentored had I been a parent—I just wouldn’t have had the time nor the
    interest. When you parent, your focus is justifiably on your own children;
    they tend to consume a large portion of your disposable income and
    discretionary time. The reason why I think so many of the childfree are engaged
    in volunteerism, and especially volunteering with youth, is because they can.
    Many of the people I’ve interviewed emphasize that just because we’re childless
    by choice doesn’t mean that we’re without children in our lives. Our choice is
    to have nieces and nephews in our lives, to be able to mentor and to be able to
    volunteer in the community with children.

    I was quite surprised when I was doing the research for the
    book how many people I came across who were teachers. These were people who had
    chosen careers that would put them in daily contact with children, and they
    loved their jobs. But on the other side, they’re saying, “I’m so glad I’m
    childless by choice, because I don’t know how, after spending eight hours with
    30 kids, I could come home to a houseful of children. I would be overwhelmed.”

    I think there’s an understanding among the childfree that
    if you choose, you can have children in your life, and if you don’t choose, you
    don’t have to. There’s that incredible freedom to create a family of affinity
    versus a family of blood—what we call the tribe. The childfree are very adept
    at creating tribes because they know that if they want to have a good quality
    of life surrounded with people who love them and who they love, they need to
    seek out people who can function as a de facto family, and some of those people
    might be little people.

    Just because you’re childless by choice doesn’t mean you
    don’t have a sense of nurturing. I’ve had a lot of people tell me, “I don’t think
    I have a maternal instinct, but I have a nurturing instinct.” That nurturing
    instinct could be expressed by nurturing my community or nurturing my pets or
    nurturing my spouse.  I think
    there’s an assumption that if you don’t have children, you must be this
    cold-hearted, isolated, curmudgeonly person. I don’t see evidence of that with
    the people that I’ve interviewed.

    Q. How do you respond when someone says it’s selfish not to
    have kids?

    A. I question how they define selfishness, because to me,
    selfishness implies a victim. So who am I victimizing if I don’t have a child?
    Unless my parents anticipated a grandchild and didn’t get one, I don’t see that
    my choice not to have a child negatively impacts anyone else.

    I think people see a lifestyle that maybe involves travel or
    time alone and hobbies, and parents might look upon that and go, “Well, you’re
    self-indulgent or you’re selfish because your activities are more
    self-oriented.” And that might be true. Some people think it’s a bad thing to
    take that time for yourself in isolation or go on a hike.

    But I don’t see selfishness played out in the sense of, “I’m
    childless by choice because I want to go out to clubs until 3:00 in the
    morning,” or “I want to save every penny I make and not have to spend it on anyone
    else.” In fact, I see a lot of volunteerism, I see a lot of people donating
    time and money to charitable organizations, and I see a lot of people chipping
    in to help their nephew go to college. That selfish label just really doesn’t
    stick.

    Q. There’s an argument that we need to have kids in order to
    keep Social Security going, that we need more young people to support all the
    older people. There’s all this worry about demographic shifts in Europe, that
    they don’t have enough children being born.

    A. It’s like breeding workers. That kind of thing [is] a very
    scary assumption, that we can breed our way into well-being as a nation. I
    don’t think the evidence supports that. To save Social Security, we would have
    to have, according
    to Bill McKibben
    , at least three kids on average, which would, in a few
    generations, produce a population approaching China’s. From all I’ve read, it
    just doesn’t make any sense.

    It’s ridiculous that we’ve been able to double the [world]
    population in such a short span of time. But certainly we can’t afford to
    double the population again. I don’t think the earth will support that. I think
    it’s in everyone’s best interest if we find a way to plateau our population so
    that we do have a good quality of life. It may not include Social Security
    benefits. But it will be a world in which we might be able to feed ourselves
    and might have enough fresh water on the planet for everyone. That would be a nice
    world to live in.

    Related Links:

    Birth-control opponents greenwash their message

    Al Gore, Bill McKibben and the urgency of now

    50 years after the Pill and this is the best we can do?






  • Healthy breakfasts buy lunch in Berkeley schools

    by Ed Bruske

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    Part 4 of Cafeteria Confidential: Berkeley, in which Ed Bruske reports on his recent week-long, firsthand look at how Berkeley, Calif., schools part ways from the typical school diet of frozen, industrially processed convenience foods. Cross-posted from The Slow Cook. And check out the rest of the Cafeteria Confidential series.

    Breakfasts for Berkeley schoolkids are simple, healthy—and cheap.(Ed Bruske photos)Around 8:30 each morning, students at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Middle School in Berkeley, Calif., cross an asphalt playground behind the main school building and begin drifting into a cafeteria and kitchen complex known as the Dining Commons to pick up breakfast for themselves and their classmates. They head for a set of rolling metal shelves holding gray, plastic bins, and carry one back to their classroom, where they dole out the food and fill out a roster indicating which students took the meal.

    One morning during my recent “internship” with the school’s central kitchen, I was assigned to load the bins. That day, the bins’ contents were a sliced loaf of homemade banana bread, kid-size Fuji and Golden Delicious apples (that I sealed in plastic bags), and cartons of plain organic milk.

    I couldn’t believe how simple it was. Here in the District of Columbia, where my daughter attends fourth grade at a public elementary school, kids eat in cafeterias and get to choose hot items like breakfast pizza, eggs, or egg-and-cheese patties with bagels, in addition to brand-name cereals and a choice of four different milk varieties, including chocolate and strawberry.

    The Berkeley breakfast seemed downright spartan by comparison. Yet those gray bins hold the key to the success of Berkeley’s cook-from-scratch program.

    Mealing and dealing

    When chef Ann Cooper was hired five years ago to help transform the Berkeley meal program from industrially processed convenience foods to meals cooked fresh from raw ingredients, one of the first things she did was examine the program’s finances. And there in the school system’s general budget she found certain “Meals for Needy” funds provided by the State of California. The state allocates $1.24 for each breakfast the school district serves to students who qualify for free or reduced-price meals, and that’s on top of the $1.46 the federal government pays for students who meet the subsidized breakfast criteria. But California does not require that “Meals for Needy” money actually be used for food. It can be directed anywhere in a school district’s budget. Cooper insisted that it be dedicated to her food operation.

    “The ‘Meals for Needy’ money wasn’t going into meals, it was going into the general fund for other programs. Food services was running a negative balance,” Cooper recalls. “Ethically, I thought the money should go into school food. I said, ‘If you want us to grow the program and make it sustainable, you’re actually penalizing us if we don’t get this money.’”

    In Cooper’s second year, the ‘Meals for Needy’ funds were reassigned to food services. It was a virtual bonanza of extra cash—$879,000 this year alone, out of a $3.7 million food budget.

    But to really turbo-charge the deal, Berkeley schools decided to start serving breakfast in the classroom only for all its students except those in high school, who take breakfast in the cafeteria. To top it off, breakfast is universally free. There’s no reason for any student not to take it. Consequently, participation in the breakfast program exploded, from less than 9 percent of the district’s 9,100 students in 2005 to 61 percent this year. The figure might be much higher if high-schoolers participated, but shifting class schedules and the absence of home rooms in high school pose barriers, says Cooper. Only 4 percent of high school students take breakfast, compared to 96 percent of elementary- and middle-schoolers.

    By comparison, barely 30 percent of students in the District of Columbia take advantage of the free breakfast the public school system offers, although a recently passed “Healthy Schools” bill would require the city’s schools to offer breakfast in classrooms where there is a high percentage of needy students.

    “With current federal funding for the School Breakfast Program ranging from $1.16 to $1.74 for every breakfast served to students eligible for free and reduced meals, a Breakfast in the Classroom program—in which every child is served breakfast every day—can be a financial goldmine for severe-need school districts,” says school-food consultant Kate Adamick, citing the relatively low food and labor costs associated with producing that meal. “The net revenue generated by the breakfast program can then be used to help supplement the cost of providing a healthier school lunch.”

    Since the average cost of making a school breakfast like the one I packed is only around $1.31 in Berkeley, the multiplier effect of receiving both state and federal funds, coupled with a captive audience created by serving breakfasts only in classrooms—and having students and teachers reduce labor costs by distributing the morning meal—makes breakfast a cash cow that is the envy of every administrator in Berkeley schools.

    “There are lots of people who would love to get their hands on that ‘Meals for Needy’ money,” said Bonnie Christensen, the school district’s executive chef. “I tell them, take away our ‘Meals for Needy’ money and you won’t have a meals program any more.”

    The extra funds go a long way toward compensating for what may have been over-exuberant expectations for the lunch program. Eric Weaver, one of the original parent activists behind the switch from processed to fresh food in Berkeley (see my last post, about the history of Berkeley’s school food revolution), said organizers knew that cooking from scratch would be more expensive, but they believed better food would induce more kids to participate. “The food cost is high. But if you’re selling twice as many lunches, the marginal cost is lower,” Weaver said.

    In fact, student participation in the revamped lunch program has changed little since it started five years ago. The latest data show that 25.6 percent of Berkeley students took the federally subsidized lunch this year, compared to 24.5 percent in 2005, an increase of a little more than 1 percent. Participation among the 3,355 students at Berkeley High School has actually declined by nearly 16 percent, from a rate of 8.3 percent to 6.4 percent. Most high school students leave campus for lunch.

    The extra revenue from breakfast helps pay for better food at lunch, as well as the additional labor it takes to prepare it. The average food cost for lunch meals in Berkeley schools is around $1.40, compared to $1 or less at most other schools around the country. Berkeley will feel a bit of a pinch in the fall, however. Because of California’s ongoing budget meltdown, the per-student grant of $1.24 for each breakfast under the “Meals for Needy” program is scheduled to drop to $1.17.

    If Berkeley’s financial approach to breakfast sounds devilishly clever, it gets even better where student well-being is concerned. One of the reasons for moving breakfast to the classrooms was to remove the stigma students might feel standing in line for free meals. Even the truly needy will sometimes skip meals if it means revealing themselves as falling into the free or reduced-price category. About 41 percent of the Berkeley’s children qualify for either free or reduced-price meals based on family income.

    “We want all of the kids to sit down and eat breakfast together,” says Christensen. “We don’t want the stigma. The way to make that happen is to have kids take breakfast as a whole.”

     

    So much goodness in a small serving

    Making breakfast simple also helps hold down costs and satisfies the environmental concerns of Berkeley parents by minimizing waste. I just wasn’t quite prepared for how pared down these breakfasts would be. In D.C., kids routinely load their trays with cereal, graham crackers, cookies or muffins, juice of one kind or another, and milk. The cereal comes in plastic tubs, into which kids can pour a carton of milk. When they’re through eating, the milk carton, the juice carton, plastic wrappers, the plastic tub, and the Styrofoam serving tray all are thrown in the trash, creating a mountain of waste for the landfill every day.

    In Berkeley, the 1-ounce servings of cereal come in little plastic packets. It’s plastic, for sure, but nowhere near as much as a tub. I asked Christensen how the students were supposed to eat the cereal if they didn’t have anything in which to mix it with the milk. She motioned with her hands to indicate eating the cereal hand-to-mouth, then drinking the milk out of the carton. Or, the kids can pour the cereal directly into the mik carton. It sounded a little like camping to me—but it seems to work.

    Something that also struck me immediately about the contents of the breakfast bins was the lower sugar content. One of the original goals of parents who led the fight to reform Berkeley school meals was to eliminate the use of high-fructose corn syrup in school food. Corn-derived HFCS has become a lightening rod for those who oppose industrial agriculture and the culture of subsidizing with tax dollars a style of farming that rewards the heavy use of artificial fertilizers and pesticides to raise commodity crops on a grand scale and penalizes small family farmers who struggle to provide local communities with sustainably grown produce—and there are plenty of those people in Berkeley.

    Aside from its environmental impact, HFCS has also come under increasing scrutiny as an agent in the current epidemic of obesity. And fructose has been linked to an alarming rise in the incidence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. High-fructose corn syrup is the sweetener of choice in the chocolate- and strawberry-flavored milk that’s offered to District of Columbia schoolchildren at breakfast and lunch. Berkeley schools, by contrast, have eliminated flavored milk entirely, opting for plain milk instead—organic, to boot.

    A breakfast recently served to DC public schoolchildren, including my daughterKids in the District of Columbia sometimes consume 50 or 60 grams of sugar at breakfast alone, almost 15 teaspoons of sugar. From what I saw in the breakfast bins in Berkeley, I calculated that students there weren’t getting half that much. For instance, a 1.25-ounce tub of Raisin Bran cereal recently being served for breakfast at my daughter’s elementary school in D.C. contains 11 grams of sugar. That compares to 5 grams of sugar in the 1-ounce packet of Nature’s Path Organic Oaty Bites served in Berkeley. An 8-ounce carton of plain low-fat milk in Berkeley had 15 grams of sugar in the form of naturally occurring lactose, compared to 28 grams of sugar in the strawberry-flavored milk so many of the kids pour on their cereal in D.C.

    In fact, milk consumption is optional under the “offered versus served” scheme that both Berkeley and D.C. use in their food service. “There is no documented case of any kid dying for lack of chocolate milk,” says Cooper.

    “Sugar is an addictive substance. We don’t want to add calories with sugar,” explains Christensen. “Calories from sugar are not healthy. They provide no nutrition and the kids are just wired.” Fruit juice, because of its sugar content, is served only occasionally in Berkeley schools and as a substitute for milk, Christensen said. In D.C., juice is offered almost every day along with chocolate- and strawberry-flavored milk.

    I also noticed there were no big-brand cereals in the Berkeley breakfasts. Most of the cereal served in D.C.—Apple Jacks, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, chocolate-flavored Little Bites Mini-Wheats—are made by General Mills or Kellogg’s.

    “Kellogg’s is a big no, no for the parents around here,” says Christensen. “Marketing to kids is a big no-no.”

    Big food companies give hefty “discounts” (some prefer to call them “kickbacks”) in order to have their products placed in school meal programs. It is widely assumed that for a huge school-food service company such as Chartwells, which contracts with more than 500 school districts around the country, including D.C. Public Schools, those discounts can add up to millions of dollars every year and grease the wheels for imprinting popular, sugary brands in the minds of schoolchildren nationwide.

    It’s a murky area of the school food service business. A March 2009 article in In These Times magazine calculated that the big food service companies—Chartwells, Sodexo, Aramark—were taking in hundreds of millions of dollars in discounts annually in ways that ended up costing customers money by focusing food purchases on the large, national brands that can afford to give hefty discounts, rather than smaller, local companies that sell their goods more cheaply.

    A 2002 audit by the U.S. Department of Agriculture found that in a sample of Midwestern school districts, food-service companies routinely were ignoring a rule that requires them to pass on any discounts they receive to the schools. They were just pocketing the money. In 2003, Robert Pritsker, a former New York City restaurateur living in Connecticut, independently filed suit against Chartwells, Aramark, and Sodexo in federal court in Philadelphia, claiming they had withheld from schools $1 billion going back to the 1990s, causing the schools to falsely claim they were complying with the federal rules. Pritsker’s suit recently was dismissed by a federal appellate court after a seven-year battle.

    In 2008, the USDA beefed up its rule on discounts, requiring that school contracts with food service companies clearly state that any discounts received by the companies will be passed on to the schools. Still, the discounts act as a juicy incentive to choose mass-marketed products over healthier alternatives from smaller companies that can’t play the discount game. Pritsker believes the school food service giants operate on such a huge scale, they have ways to work around the USDA rules. Apparently, discount practices have caught the attention of some attorneys general in individual states.

    “This is a huge, huge issue because it’s one of the reasons we’ll never make any progress in these districts that have food service contracts,” argues nutritionist and school food activist Susan Rubin. “These volume discounts are another insidious way that our kids get marketed to. Basically, we’re now saying that money is more important than our kids’ health.”

    Coming next: Hold the beans, please! What kids want to eat

    Related Links:

    Two Berkeley chefs make healthy food that kids will eat

    New report from Childhood Obesity Task Force has something for everyone

    Berkeley school food revolution’s secret ingredient: parents






  • Ask Umbra on pasta, Clorox wipes, and a satisfied customer

    by Umbra Fisk

    Send your question to Umbra!

    Q. Dear Umbra,
    I am a fairly active, athletic person; that being said, I love my pasta. When I
    boil the water for my pasta, I run the tap water for about 5–10 seconds until
    the water becomes very hot, then fill up my pot, and set it on my glass-top
    stove to boil. The water seems to boil almost instantaneously when I fill it up
    with hot water, and when I fill it up from the tap right away with cooler
    water, it takes longer. So, my question is: Is it more wasteful to let the
    precious water run to get hot for 5–10 seconds, reducing the boiling time? Or
    is it more wasteful to fill it up with cooler water, not wasting any water, but
    using more electricity to boil the water? One other consideration is that I
    live at high altitude, and water takes longer to boil here. Thanks so
    much!

    Nate W.
    Redmond, Ore.

    A. Dearest Nate,

    Photo: lucadea via FlickrYou know, I actually dropped a few pounds on a pasta diet
    once. I just had to walk pasta the refrigerator, pasta the bakery, and pasta
    the ice cream shop. A 3-year-old told me that joke.

    But you know what’s really nothing to laugh at (besides my
    pasta joke)? Wasting our precious resources. Cooking noodles is one of those
    small things I’m always telling you not to sweat; but conserving water and
    energy is a big honking thing to sweat, so I’m happy to fill you in. Plus, it
    gives me a chance to play around in the Grist test kitchen.

    Since I have some better solutions to come, let’s go ahead
    and take the letting-water-run-until-it’s-hot option off the table right now.
    After space heat—that is, heating your entire home—water heaters are the
    largest household energy consumers. And there are more efficient means of
    heating such a small amount of water that also don’t let natural resources just
    run down the drain (I don’t suppose you had a bucket there each time to catch
    excess water?).

    So does that just leave us waiting for the recommended six quarts of cooler tap water to
    boil on the stovetop before adding our pasta? Not necessarily. First off, you
    do not—I repeat, do not—need six
    quarts of water to make a bowl of pasta. Yes, I know that’s what it says on the
    box. Grist’s own food guru, Tom Philpott, and
    food-science writer Harold McGee both concur that six quarts are overkill. About a quart and a half should do
    the trick (I actually used even less for mine).

    Secondly, here’s the real coup: You can put the pasta right
    into the cold water! That’s right. You don’t need to boil the water first. Pop
    your pasta in, put a lid on the pot (contains the heat), and stir as needed to
    prevent sticking. This method produced the same delectable rotini for me as the
    boil-first method, saving water (ta-ta, six quarts) and energy, and it was
    really no extra effort.

    I wasn’t satisfied to stop there, though, as I wanted to
    give you options, plural. I’m not
    sure how the cold water method works at high altitude, or if there’s any
    difference at all, but let’s say you decide to stick with the boil-first
    method. We know from my previous column
    on boiling water for tea
    that the electric kettle is No. 1 in water-heating
    efficiency. Thusly, how about getting your pasta water started in an electric
    kettle? Once it’s boiling (or nearly boiling) pour it over your pasta in a pot,
    and then pop the lid on. Turn the burner on to keep the water’s momentum going,
    and voila. Cooked pasta in 10 minutes (or however long your particular type of
    pasta takes)—which reminds me of yet another energy-saving tip: You don’t have
    to leave the stove on for the duration of the cooking time. Turn off the burner
    a few minutes before the pasta is finished, leaving the lid on. The pasta will
    continue to cook in the pot.

    And don’t just toss that water post-cooking. Pasta water in
    restaurants is liquid gold—used as a sauce thickener. While you may not be able
    to replicate the starchy water made from boiling order after order of
    spaghetti, you can still try mixing some pasta water in with your next batch of
    homemade tomato sauce. Or you can just let the water cool to room temperature
    and use it to give your houseplants a little hydration.

    Saucily,
    Umbra

    Other helpful links:

    Ask Umbra on
    water conservation

    Ask Umbra on
    boiling water for tea
    Ask
    Umbra on water heaters

    Ask Umbra on
    waiting for warm water

    Q. Dear Umbra,
    My granddaughter uses Clorox Disinfecting Wipes constantly on everything. She
    has a 2-year-old son, who is asthmatic and seems to have a somewhat compromised
    immune system. The least little trigger can set him off into an asthma
    attack, which on occasion has developed into pneumonia and resulted in hospital
    stays. She is obsessed with certain hygiene, and I tend to think she overdoes
    it. Plus, she tends not to wipe off the kitchen counters with a dishrag before
    she uses the wipes, which leaves scum on the counters. Please help me with
    recommendations I can pass on to her. Thanks!

    Carol J.
    Scottsdale, Ariz.

    A. Dearest Carol,

    Advising loved ones on child-rearing or cleaning techniques is
    a slippery slope indeed, as is giving this question a definitive answer.

    Let’s first start by breaking down what exactly is in these
    wipes. A couple of the key ingredients are alkyl dimethyl benzyl ammonium chloride and alkyl dimethyl ethylbenzyl
    ammonium chloride (whew, glad I didn’t get those words in my fourth grade
    spelling bee). The production of these compounds results in harmful dioxins,
    which can cause cancer, immune system problems, and reproductive issues.
    Additionally, the ingredients themselves can cause skin irritation, headaches,
    and respiratory issues. In short, these chems are not a good thing to have around a child who’s
    already having his share of breathing problems, methinks.

    Plus, these wipes are utterly disposable, equaling a lot of unnecessary
    waste. One swipe, and then into the trash bin—sad. Not to mention the fact that
    they are packaged in a plastic bottle, which is a big petroleum-sucking no-no
    in my book.

    I’m not a doctor and don’t even pretend to play one in this column
    (though I do look mighty authoritative wearing a stethoscope), so I’m not going
    to try to diagnose whether your great-grandson’s condition warrants the kind of
    disinfection these wipes offer, harsh though their ingredients may be. Try
    referring his mom to my April
    12 column
    on sanitizing counters with white vinegar and hydrogen peroxide
    (in two separate bottles). The combo kills almost all Salmonella, Shigella, and
    E. coli bacteria. However, if whiter,
    grime-free surfaces are all your granddaughter is after, then our friends vinegar,
    baking soda, and castile soap
    along with a reusable dishcloth and a little
    elbow grease should do the trick.

    Spotlessly,
    Umbra

    Other helpful links:

    Ask Umbra
    on bleach

    Ask
    Umbra on green cleaning

    Ask Umbra
    on having kids

    Ask
    Umbra on mini-dilemmas

    In my April
    5 column
    , I responded to 9-year-old Ian’s question about eco-friendly
    packaging for his newly designed card game. In return, I received a package
    this week with a handmade thank-you card from Ian, a lovely letter from his
    mom, and pictures of Ian and his completed product, which I wanted to share
    with you guys.

    Ian, rocking a rad fedora and showing off his upcycled game packaging.Hello! I wanted to say thanks, because your ideas really
    helped! My updated format looks great, and it’s eco-friendly, not to mention
    cheap. Here are some pictures for you to enjoy.

    Ian

    Dear Umbra,

    Several weeks ago, you answered my 9-year-old son’s question
    about creating eco-friendly packaging for a game he’s invented. Your reply
    thrilled him—
    he was surprised that he got a reply. It made his day. He ended up
    rethinking his packaging and created drawstring bags out of a variety of
    leftover fabrics. It significantly lowered his costs, taught him sewing skills,
    and added an element of personalization to each game. And eco-friendly to boot!

    Many thanks from a grateful mom,
    Gwyn R.

    Related Links:

    Recycling exhibit helps New Yorkers let go, get smashed

    Ask Umbra’s DIY shampoo and conditioner video

    Ask Umbra on the word “green,” DIY laundry detergent, and computer batteries






  • BP cagey as oil tube registers ‘some’ success

    by Agence France-Presse

    NEW
    ORLEANS, La. – BP succeeded Sunday in capturing “some” oil and gas by
    inserting a mile-long tube into the main Gulf of Mexico leak, but would not say
    if it was a significant percentage of the gusher or just a few drops.

    Despite
    the uncertainty, it was still the first tangible sign of success in more than
    three weeks of efforts to prevent at least 210,000 gallons of oil  (and maybe
    much more
    ) from spewing unabated into the sea each day and feeding a
    massive slick off the coast of Louisiana.

    BP
    Senior Executive Vice President Kent Wells refused to be specific on quantity,
    but confirmed that after a temporary hitch in which the tube became dislodged
    overnight, siphoning operations were up and running once again.

    “We
    will look to … capture as much of the oil as we can,” he told reporters
    in Houston, Texas. “At this point, we don’t know what percentage we will
    capture” by the process, in which the oil is sucked up as if through a
    straw to a giant ship.

    A
    BP statement said simply that the four-inch-diameter tube inserted into the
    21-inch leaking pipe using undersea robots had captured “some amounts of
    oil and gas.”

    Wells
    added that the BP crews “don’t have any idea at this point” how much
    crude is being collected and would only have a better estimate in coming days.

    “The
    oil was stored on board the Discoverer Enterprise drill ship 5,000 feet above
    on the water’s surface, and natural gas was burned through a flare system on
    board the ship,” the statement said.

    The
    Obama administration seemed unimpressed, however, pointing out that BP’s latest
    efforts, even if they manage to slow the leak, would not permanently stop the
    underwater geyser.

    “This
    technique is not a solution to the problem, and it is not yet clear how
    successful it may be,” said Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano
    and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said in a statement. “We are closely
    monitoring BP’s test with the hope that it will contain some of the oil, but at
    the same time, federal scientists are continuing to provide oversight and
    expertise to BP as they move forward with other strategies to contain the spill
    and stop the flow of oil.”

    Engineers
    are mulling several different options to seal the main leak, which has spewed
    out an estimated 5 million gallons so far, according to the most conservative
    estimates, and prevent the giant slick from destroying ecologically fragile
    wetlands and nature reserves.

    A
    relief well that would divert the flow and allow the well to be permanently
    sealed may not be ready until August.

    Fresh
    analysis of enormous plumes of oil under the surface suggest the spill may be
    far worse than previously estimated. One was reported to be 10 miles long,
    three miles wide, and 300 feet thick.

    Researchers
    from the National Institute for Undersea Science and Technology said the plumes
    were “perhaps due to the deep
    injection of dispersants
    which BP has stated that they are
    conducting.”

    Response
    crews have so far used some 560,000 gallons of the controversial
    chemical dispersants
    , spraying them onto surface oil and also directly into
    the leak in a bid to break up the oil.

    “The
    oil still exists, it’s just spread in smaller pieces,” Aaron Viles,
    campaign director for the Gulf Restoration Network, a coalition of
    environmental groups, told AFP. “It could have a significant impact on the
    marine life of the Gulf of Mexico.”

    University
    of Georgia researcher Samantha Joye, who is on a scientific mission to gather
    details about the looming environmental disaster, told The New York
    Times
    that oxygen levels have dropped 30 percent near the plumes, in an
    “alarming” trend that is endangering marine life.

    But
    Andrew Gowers, head of group media for BP, dismissed reports that
    “speculate” on the giant plumes. He said officials “had no
    confirmation” of oil clumping together in mid-ocean areas.

    On
    Sunday, a large concert in New Orleans drew crowds to support Gulf fishermen,
    whose livelihoods are threatened by the oil spill, with rocker Lenny Kravitz
    heading the line-up.

    “This
    is a catastrophe,” Kravitz told CNN television. “I love this place.
    And this place has been through so much in the last several years,” he
    said, referring to the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. “Here we are,
    getting hit again.”

    Officials
    said some 19,000 personnel and more than 650 vessels have been deployed to try
    to mitigate the negative effects of the spill on the Gulf shoreline and
    wildlife.

    Meanwhile,
    the U.S. Coast Guard told AFP that oil was washing ashore in at least two new
    locations—Whiskey Island, La., and Long Beach, Miss.

    Engineers
    are mulling several different options to seal the main leak, which has spewed
    out an estimated 5 million gallons so far, according to the most conservative
    estimates, and prevent the giant slick from destroying ecologically fragile
    wetlands and nature reserves.

    A relief well that would divert the flow and
    allow the well to be permanently sealed may not be ready until August.

    Related Links:

    U.S. approves use of subsea dispersants to battle oil slick

    Obama’s uninspiring ‘anger’ at BP and lax regulators

    Living Buildings, Living Cities, and $125,000 up for grabs






  • Oil rig disaster could soon be worse than Exxon Valdez

    by Brad Johnson

    Photo: U.S. Coast Guard

    Cross-posted from Wonk Room.

    The catastrophic gusher of oil unleashed by the explosion of BP’s Deepwater Horizon rig last week is on track to quickly exceed the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill, an independent expert warns. An explosive burst of oil destroyed the exploratory rig 41 miles off the Louisiana coast on the eve of Earth Day, killing 11 workers. After the shattered hulk of the rig sank to the ocean floor a mile down, the pipeline continues to spew oil that has now reached shore, with an end weeks or months away. John Amos, the president and founder of the nonprofit firm SkyTruth, “which specializes in gathering and analyzing satellite and aerial data to promote environmental conservation,” estimated from satellite photos that the calamity is increasing at a rate of 850,000 gallons (20,000 barrels) a day:

    That’s right: more than 6 million gallons spilled into the Gulf of Mexico so far. This, and other radar images that SkyTruth is getting, confirm what we’ve seen on the NASA/MODIS images so far, and support our conservative calculations showing that in the first week of this spill at least 6 million gallons have entered the Gulf. That’s a spill rate of at least 850,000 gallons (20,000 barrels) per day, 20 times larger than the official Goast Guard estimate of 42,000 gallons per day.

    By today, about 7 million gallons will have been spilled, taking the Deepwater Horizon disaster more than halfway to the 1989 wreck of the Exxon Valdez, which dumped 11 million gallons into Alaska’s Prince William Sound — one of the nation’s worst environmental disasters. This catastrophe — which occured as Halliburton was cementing the well — will exceed the scale of the Exxon Valdez within a week.

    The sea of oil spewing from the mangled pipeline is already larger than 31 nations. After the Montara oil platform blew up in Australia’s Timor Sea last August, it took 10 weeks to stop the flow of oil. If recent history is any guide, it may be months before the sea of oil stops growing.

    On April 22, the U.S. Coast Guard estimated the flow rate to be 336,000 gallons of crude a day, but BP officials claimed on Sunday that the rate was only 42,000 gallons a day.  By Thursday, officials admitted that the disaster is increasing at least 210,000 gallons a day, much closer to the Coast Guard’s original estimate. Amos called that estimate a “bare-bones limit.”

    Update: On ABC’s Good Morning America, White House adviser David Axelrod makes it clear that the White House will not support new domestic drilling until this disaster is resolved:

    No additional drilling has been authorized and none will until we find out what happened here and whether there was something unique and preventable here. No domestic drilling in new areas is going to go forward until there is a adequate review of what’s happened here and of what is being proposed elsewhere.

    Related Links:

    Wake up, Obama. The Gulf spill is our big chance

    Big Oil continues to see big profits, pollution while Americans get robbed at the pump

    Obama puts offshore drilling on hold as Gulf of Mexico oil slick reaches U.S. coast






  • Big Oil continues to see big profits, pollution while Americans get robbed at the pump

    by Daniel J. Weiss

    This post was co-authored by Susan Lyon.

    I was out
    driving/just a taking it slow
    Looked at my tank/ it was reading low
    Pulled
    in a Exxon station/out on Highway One
    Held up without a gun
    Held up
    without a gun

    Bruce
    Springsteen

    Springsteen’s
    song could not be more true today. Big Oil is once again riding high oil prices
    to large profits (see below) while American consumers get stuck with a $2.7
    billion gasoline bill
    in the first quarter of 2010 due to higher oil prices.
    But the problems with oil go beyond these companies’ profits. Rising oil prices
    also add more filthy lucre to the coffers of
    hostile regimes, including Iran
    .

    Meanwhile,
    the Gulf of Mexico is suffering a huge oil
    spill
    while taxpayers spend billions of dollars paying for tax
    loopholes for Big Oil
    . And Big Oil spends record
    amounts
    of money to pressure Congress to cement these loopholes in place and
    defeat clean energy legislation. Adding injury to insult, big oil opposes energy
    and global warming legislation that would reduce our reliance on
    oil.

    Enough is
    enough. We need Congress to stand up to Big Oil and pass legislation that
    addresses the problems with oil profits and oil use. Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.),
    Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) are working on legislation that
    would reduce oil dependence and put a declining limit and rising price
    on carbon
    . These measures would reduce our dependence on oil, increase
    national security, create jobs, and cut pollution.

    Mo’
    prices, mo’ problems

    U.S. crude
    oil prices rose from $31.76 per
    barrel in January 2009 to $85.17 by April 29, 2010
    after a price slump at
    the end of 2008. This is an increase of nearly 160 percent over a 15-month
    period. The Energy Information
    Administration
    recently predicted that oil prices will rise to above an
    average of $81 per barrel by this summer while average gasoline prices will
    likely exceed $3.00 per gallon this spring. Drivers will pay 17 percent more for
    gas compared
    to summer 2009
    —$174 million per day, or an average of $602 per household
    annually. Energy price volatility like this hurts
    consumer and business investments
    , causing families to delay buying a car
    and spend less on buying or upgrading their homes. Businesses also cut
    investments, while profits surge in the oil and gas
    industry.

    While higher
    prices brought higher profits to Big Oil, they also brought higher gasoline
    prices that cost American consumers millions during the first quarter. A CAP
    analysis determined that higher oil and gasoline prices forced Americans to
    spend $2.7
    billion more
    on gasoline during the first quarter compared to what they
    would have spent had prices remained steady after the first
    week.

    Big Five:
    We’re in the money

    Much of the
    U.S. economy is slowly recovering from a deep recession, but oil companies
    continue to prosper. The big five oil companies—BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips,
    ExxonMobil, and Shell—announced huge first quarter profits—four of the five
    companies announced profits larger than analysts predicted.
    As the chart below shows, big oil saw profits in the first quarter of 2010 that
    far eclipse analysts’ projections and are significantly higher than 2009 profits
    as well.

    Big five
    oil company profits for the first quarter of 2010 vs. first quarter
    2009

    bp’s quarter report

    BP’s
    2010 first quarter profits were $5.6 billion, a 135 percent increase
    over
    the first quarter of 2009. This profit was 50 percent higher than predicted by
    The Financial Times. Shell announced that its profits had risen by 49 percent since the first quarter of
    2009. Chevron’s profit was $4.6 billion, a 156 percent increase, while
    ConocoPhillips had $2.1 billion in profits. The world’s largest private oil
    company, ExxonMobil, had a first quarter profit of $6.8 billion, which was 38
    percent more than 2009.

    Iran:
    Thanks for high oil prices

    Higher oil
    prices also benefit nations that are hostile to U.S. interests—even if we don’t
    purchase any oil from them—such as Iran. Every $1 increase in the price of oil
    provides an additional $1.5 billion to Iran annually.

    Conversely,
    adoption of a shrinking limit on carbon pollution that reduces it by 80 percent
    by 2050 would reduce the use of oil and lower its price, costing
    Iran approximately $1.8 trillion in lost oil revenues
    over the next 40
    years—over $100
    million a day
    . These petrodollars fund and prop up unfriendly
    regimes
    , enabling them to support
    terrorists
    in other nations.

    Sea of
    fire

    Oil companies
    deserve to earn a profit since oil exploration and development can be
    financially and technically risky business. At the same time, though, they must
    produce this oil in a safe and environmentally sustainable manner. Yet despite
    rhetoric
    to the contrary
    about advances in environmental safeguards, the spill off
    the Louisiana coast shows that offshore oil development still poses a threat to
    its workers and risk to the ocean and coastal
    environment.

    BP owns the
    oil rig that exploded and sunk in the Gulf of Mexico last week, causing what CNN reports officials say “could become one of worst spills in U.S. history.”
    Tragically, there are 11 missing rig employees who are presumed dead. The well continues to
    leak 210,000 gallons of oil per day into the Gulf of Mexico—five times the original
    estimate
    . This growing oil slick already covers an area
    larger than West Virginia
    and oozed
    onto the Louisiana shore early this morning
    . A major portion of the oil
    slick looms only five miles offshore. This major oil spill could be the worst
    environmental disaster since the Exxon Valdez
    spill in 1989
    , and it is a tragic reminder that we must dramatically reduce
    our oil use.

    The Exxon
    Valdez spill cost Alaska’s fishermen an estimated $800 million in damages to
    their livelihood. This oil spill could bring an economic Armageddon to the gulf
    coast seafood industry. Bloomberg
    reports
    :

    Louisiana is
    the largest seafood producer in the lower 48 states, with annual retail sales of
    about $1.8 billion, according to state data. Recreational fishing generates
    about $1 billion in retail sales a year, according to the
    state.

    BP should be
    required to place its first quarter profit of $5.6 billion in an escrow account
    to provide compensation to the fishermen whose livelihoods are threatened. These
    funds should also be used for cleaning up the soon to be blighted
    shores.

    Oil tax
    loopholes: More money for the misbegotten

    Despite high
    prices and profits, big oil companies still want taxpayer-funded loopholes even
    though some conservative oil men believe they are unnecessary. In 2005, former oil man
    and President George W. Bush
    noted that with higher oil prices big oil does
    not need tax breaks to explore and develop oil
    fields.

    I will tell
    you with $55 oil we don’t need incentives to the oil and gas companies to
    explore. There are plenty of incentives. What we need is to put a strategy in
    place that will help this country over time become less
    dependent.

    Yet even with
    today’s prices more than 50 percent higher than $55 per barrel, Big Oil
    companies want
    to maintain tax loopholes
    that siphon additional billions of dollars from
    U.S. taxpayers. Taxpayer money pays for the tax breaks claimed by Big Oil, but
    the industry claims that closing these loopholes is really a new energy tax on
    them. American Petroleum Institute President Jack
    Gerard
    stated:

    With America
    still recovering from recession and one in ten Americans out of work, now is not
    the time to impose new taxes on the nation’s oil and natural gas industry. New
    taxes would mean fewer American jobs and less revenue at a time when we
    desperately need both. A robust U.S. oil and gas industry is essential to the
    recovery of the nation’s economy.

    Contrary to
    this assertion, cutting the subsidies to Big Oil would help our economy while
    shrinking the federal budget deficit. In fact, a state-by-state
    analysis
    indicates that taxpayers would actually save money if the
    subsidies and tax breaks were lifted. A recent CAP analysis found that the effective
    federal income tax rate
    in the United States for major oil companies is
    lower than the effective tax rates they face abroad—sometimes close to 50
    percent lower. The report also determined that subsidies to the oil industry
    will cost the U.S. government about $3 billion in lost revenues next year and
    nearly $20 billion over the next five years.

    These
    estimates are only the initial assessment—they still vastly underestimate the
    help that the oil industry receives from the government via extensive hidden tax
    code benefits
    as well.

    Big Oil
    squeezes the Capitol

    Given the
    generous subsidies Big Oil receives, it should come as no surprise that this
    industry is fighting hard to keep their loopholes and block reform. There was record
    oil and gas industry lobbying
    in 2009. These companies spent at least $154
    million on squeezing Congress that year-more than 16 percent higher than 2008.
    Big Oil’s lobbying and political arm—the American Petroleum Institute—alone
    spent at least $7.3
    million on lobbying
    in 2009 and another $1.3 million more in 2010 to kill
    legislation. API has also spent millions of dollars running expensive print, TV, and radio ads to do the
    same. The American Petroleum Institute alone “doled out $75.2 million for public relations and advertising” in
    2008.

    Congress
    must act

    In short, Big
    Oil’s profits climb higher and higher as American consumers feel more and more
    pain at
    the pump
    . This needs to stop.

    Sens. John
    Kerry (D-Mass.), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) are developing
    bipartisan comprehensive energy legislation that would reduce oil dependence and
    put a declining limit and rising price
    on carbon
    . These provisions would increase American energy independence (and
    our national
    security
    ), create jobs, produce “Made in the USA” clean energy technologies,
    and cut pollution. The bill should also establish much stricter safeguards for
    existing offshore oil production.

    Additionally,
    Congress should cut subsidies
    to big oil
    and level the playing field for safe, clean energy sources.
    Further, we need to curb the economic, social, and environmental damage that our
    consumption of dirty fuel causes. To achieve these many goals, Congress must act
    swiftly to pass bipartisan comprehensive energy and climate
    reform.

    Methodology

    We used the
    weekly price and quantity data supplied by the EIA’s U.S. prices and consumption
    database to calculate how much more Americans spent on gas in the first quarter of 2010
    relative to what they would have spent had prices remained steady after the
    first week of January 2010. Using their data from the “Finished Motor gasoline
    product supplied” and “Conventional retail gas prices” sections, we multiplied
    the average weekly product supplied value times that week’s recorded price,
    doing this separately for each week of the first quarter. From here, the initial
    week’s value was subtracted from each other weeks to obtain how much more was
    spent each week relative to the first. Aggregating this column resulted in the
    final figure.

    See
    also:

    Big Oil
    Awash in Profits
    by Daniel J. Weiss and Susan Lyon
    Quenching
    Our Thirst for Oil
    by Susan Lyon, Rebecca Lefton, and Daniel J.
    Weiss

    Related Links:

    Wake up, Obama. The Gulf spill is our big chance

    Oil rig disaster could soon be worse than Exxon Valdez

    Obama puts offshore drilling on hold as Gulf of Mexico oil slick reaches U.S. coast






  • The worst week ever, brought to you by the fossil-fuel industry

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    It’s a week to remember—or better yet, forget.  Who could have
    imagined such a confluence of terrible, horrible, no-good, very-bad events,
    rounding up what has to be the most disheartening “Earth Month” ever? 

    In what may soon be the worst oil spill in U.S. history, crude is gushing into the Gulf of
    Mexico and bleeding into Louisiana
    wetlands
    . The situation is so dire
    that our best environmental option is to set
    it ablaze
    . Eleven workers died when
    the rig blew up. Economic disaster may
    follow ecological and human disaster, with the fishing, shrimping, and tourism industries likely to take a body blow. Remember when President
    Obama called for a major
    expansion of offshore drilling
    four weeks ago and said “oil rigs today generally don’t cause spills”? How comforting.

    Two coal miners
    were crushed to death
    in Kentucky while working for a company
    with
    a long history
    of endangering its workers.
    This story should have shocked the nation, but coming in the wake of 29
    miner deaths earlier this month and in the shadow of the oil spill, it got
    barely of blip of attention.

    The Chinese
    coal freighter that crashed into the Great Barrier Reef
    a few
    weeks ago remains stuck and Australian authorities say the best option may
    be to sink it
    .

    Even the week’s good news—the Obama administration’s
    approval of Cape Wind
    , which would be the nation’s first
    offshore wind farm
    —feels pretty bad.
    While offshore oil drilling proceeds merrily along with bipartisan
    support, it’s taken nine years of torturous wrangling to get this far with
    Cape Wind. Environmentalists continue to
    spar over it, and still more litigation and stalling will follow before a
    single turbine goes online along a U.S. coastline. “I’m worried about all those
    wind turbines blowing up & leaving a wind-slick on the coast of Cape Cod,” quipped one
    climate reporter.

    That’s just this week. Looking
    back at the whole month of April, we had Massey’s Big Branch mine disaster,
    another coal miner death in
    West Virginia, an oil refinery explosion in Washington state that killed
    five workers, an 18,000-gallon oil spill
    from a Chevron pipeline
    into the Louisiana Delta, and, as mentioned above, a big oil spill at the world’s largest continuous coral reef.

    The connection running
    through every one of these disasters, of course, is dirty energy—oil and
    coal. Only a fool would refuse to see the need to end our addiction.

    Speaking of which, the U.S. Senate looks
    likely to turn its back on the problem for the year. Plans to introduce a climate
    and energy bill this week—albeit one that’s disturbingly friendly to the
    fossil-fuel industry—are on the skids because
    of a spat
    between Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Harry Reid (D-Nev.).

    Leave it to a business
    professor to find a “silver lining” in the week’s terrible news:  “I think it may create some temporarily
    spikes in employment if the companies hire some local labor to clean up the
    spill,” Rajesh Narayanan, professor of finance at Louisiana State University’s business
    school, told The New York Times.

    The craziest part is
    that our leaders continue pledging their tender loving care not to the natural world
    but to the GDP. 

    “Think of the language
    our politicians use,” author and global organizer Bill McKibben said in a
    recent conversation. “‘The economy is ailing.’ ‘It’s hit a rough patch.’ Or ‘It’s
    healing.’ Or ‘showing signs of healing.’ I mean, we talk about it like you
    would your great aunt. But with the planet, it’s ‘natural cycles’ and ‘pay no
    attention.’ ‘The Arctic melted: must be a natural cycle someplace.’”

    We’re still acting as
    if the economy is the thing that’s real, the thing with physical weight and
    force. We’re acting as if the natural world is the abstraction, the intellectual
    concept that we can adjust to better suit our needs. That confusion will be the
    root of more disasters.

     

    Related Links:

    Wake up, Obama. The Gulf spill is our big chance

    Obama puts offshore drilling on hold as Gulf of Mexico oil slick reaches U.S. coast

    The Climate Post: Mighty winds a-blowin’






  • Obama puts offshore drilling on hold as Gulf of Mexico oil slick reaches U.S. coast

    by Agence France-Presse

    The White House said new domestic offshore oil drilling was on hold until the disaster had been fully investigated.

    VENICE, Louisiana—Oil from a giant Gulf of Mexico slick
    washed onto Louisiana shores Friday, threatening an environmental calamity as
    President Barack Obama called for a “thorough review” of the
    disaster.

    With up to
    200,000 gallons of oil a day spewing into the Gulf of Mexico from a ruptured
    well, the accident stemming from a sunken offshore rig may soon rival the Exxon
    Valdez disaster as the worst oil spill in U.S. history.

    Strong southeast
    winds blew the first oily strands of the slick directly onto the coastal
    wetlands of South Pass near the mouth of the Mississippi river late Thursday,
    Billy Nungesser, president of Plaquemines Parish, where oil washed ashore, told
    AFP.

    Hundreds of
    miles of coastline were under imminent threat in Louisiana, Mississippi,
    Alabama, and Florida, a region that amounts to more than 40 percent of
    America’s ecologically fragile wetlands.

    A massive
    deployment of Coast Guard and private crews scrambled to contain the oil,
    fighting choppy seas that made the task more difficult.

    Obama said some
    1,900 federal response personnel are in the area with 300 boats and aircraft to
    combat a slick measuring at least 600 square miles. “We’ve laid 217,000
    feet of protected boom and there are more on the way,”

    Obama said in Washington.

    The president
    said he asked Interior Secretary Ken Salazar “to conduct a thorough review
    of this incident and report back to me on 30 days” on precautions required
    to prevent a recurrence of such a disaster.

    Obama said the
    government had dispatched teams to the Gulf Coast “to inspect all
    deep-water rigs and platforms to address safety concerns.”

    British energy
    giant BP meanwhile said it is “taking full responsibility” for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and will pay for
    “legitimate claims” stemming from the disaster.

    Company
    spokeswoman Sheila William told AFP the energy firm was ready to assume costs
    related to the cleanup and to reimburse damages suffered from what could become
    one of the worst oil spills in history. BP is “taking full responsibility
    for the spill and we will clean it up and where people can present legitimate
    claims for damages we will honor them,” she said.

    BP, which leased
    the wrecked rig, no closer to capping the ruptured well.

    The region is a prime spawning ground for fish, shrimp, and crab,
    home to oyster beds and a major stop for migratory birds.

    “For birds,
    the timing could not be worse; they are breeding, nesting, and especially
    vulnerable in many of the places where the oil could come ashore,” said Melanie Driscoll of the Audubon Society.

    The Coast Guard
    was coordinating vessels including skimmers, tug boats, and robotic submarines,
    which are investigating the underwater damage.

    The White House
    has gone into emergency response mode to better coordinate resources and try to
    avoid the kind of disaster that Hurricane Katrina brought to the region in
    2005.

    U.S. officials called the event a disaster of
    “national significance,” as Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) meanwhile declared a
    state of emergency and called for urgent help to prevent “catastrophic
    loss” of vital spawning grounds and fishing communities from pollution on
    a massive scale. Jindal also sought the mobilization of 6,000 National Guard
    troops to respond to the crisis. Florida Gov.
    Charlie Crist (R) also declared a state of emergency on Friday.

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates ordered two Air Force C-130 aircraft to the area to start dropping chemicals in a bid to contain the spill, the Pentagon said.  The U.S. Navy meanwhile sent in 66,000 feet of inflatable oil boom, seven skimming systems, and about 50 contractors to Gulfport, Miss., said spokesperson Lieutenant Myers Vasquez.

    Top commanders and Gates were continue to confer with the White House and the Department of Homeland Security on how the military can assist the effort to contain the spill.

    Despite frantic
    efforts to stave off an environmental calamity, many of those dependent on the
    region’s vital fisheries and nature reserves had already given up hope due to
    strong onshore squalls forecast for several days to come.

    Brent Roy, who
    charters fishing boats off the coast, said rough seas through Saturday would
    make it nigh on impossible for rescue teams to contain the spill offshore.

    “As it gets
    into the wildlife management area it is going to kill us,” he told AFP
    after returning to the small coastal hub of Venice from the Pass a Loutre
    nature reserve.

    At least two
    lawsuits were filed on behalf of fishers and shrimpers, in what is expected to
    be a flood of litigation from the disaster.

    Oil continues to
    gush unabated from near the Deepwater Horizon platform, which sank on April 22,
    two days after a huge explosion that killed 11 workers. Officials revealed late
    Wednesday that 200,000 gallons per day—about five times as much oil as previously
    estimated—was now pouring from the leaks.

    Crews conducted
    a controlled “trial” burn Wednesday of one of the thickest parts of
    the slick, but such operations were suspended indefinitely as the heavier winds
    blew in.

    BP, which leased
    the rig from Houston-based contractor Transocean, has been operating 10 robotic
    submarines in a so-far-unsuccessful bid to cap the ruptured well on the seabed
    some 5,000 feet below the surface.

    At the
    Gulf well’s current estimated rate of leakage, it would take 54 days for the
    amount of spilled toxic crude to surpass the 11 million gallons of oil that
    poured from the grounded Exxon Valdez tanker in Alaska in 1989.

     

    Related Links:

    Wake up, Obama. The Gulf spill is our big chance

    Oil rig disaster could soon be worse than Exxon Valdez

    Big Oil continues to see big profits, pollution while Americans get robbed at the pump






  • Ask Umbra’s pearls of wisdom on biking

    by Umbra Fisk

    Dearest readers,

    Ready to shed the chill of winter and dust off your
    10-speed? (Yes, cold-weather bike warriors, I’m aware that your bike never
    collects dust.) We all know biking is better for the environment than jumping
    behind the wheel (not to mention less expensive and healthier, assuming you follow the rules of the road). So I
    cruised through the Ask Umbra archives in search of some inspiration to offer the
    bike-curious among you. Where does your bike take you? Let me know in the
    comments below.

    Appetite for
    destruction.

    Sounds nutty to me, but even biking can get a bad rap sometimes—including complaints
    about biking being a dirty industry and bikers gobbling more calories, thus
    increasing their carbon forkprint. Let’s start with the charge that biking is a
    dirty industry. Based on the Carnegie-Mellon Economic Input-Output Life Cycle Assessment model, which calculates the environmental impacts of different manufacturing
    sectors by dollar value, the production of bicycles is more carbon intensive
    than the production of cars (0.912 metric tons of carbon equivalent, OR MTCO2E,
    versus 0.628 MTCO2E per $1,000 of manufacturing costs). However, when we look
    at the total value of bikes versus cars, hands down, bikes win. Next up: that problem of a hearty cyclist’s
    increased caloric intake and the greenhouse gases associated with
    meat production
    , which we can neatly sidestep this one. Why would you improve
    your fitness and overall health by biking 20 miles a day, and then eat four
    steaks? Don’t eat more meat. It’s not good for your health, and it’s not good
    for the planet. If you must add foods due to your insatiable bike-derived
    hunger, let them be vegetable-based. Even on a 100 percent ground beef diet (ick),
    a person driving a car emits 730 kilograms of carbon equivalent per 1,000
    miles, while a cyclist will emit 410 kg over the same distance. More
    reasonably, if the person is fueled by the typical American diet, those
    emissions shift to 670 and 87, respectively. Get the full Ask Umbra
    answer
    .

    Highway to helmet.
    Indeedy, most bike helmets are made of petroleum-based plastics, but please continue to wear your helmet and
    replace it after each crash. Cut the straps of your old helmet and write
    “crashed” on it with a permanent marker, and then throw it in the
    garbage. A lightweight helmet made out of plastic is a fairly innocuous object
    on the environmental scale. As we have learned over the years, plastic is evil
    due to the raw materials from which it is made and the eons that will pass ere
    it degrades. On the bright side, helmets are light, and hence do not require
    overly much fuel on their trip to the bike store or the landfill. Some
    companies are even tinkering with eco-friendly
    helmets
    . And you could always save your used helmets for some kind of trash
    sculpture. A hospital visit has the potential for much more ecological impact
    than your discarded helmet. Your fitness level keeps you (hopefully) from
    general ill health, and hence reduces the need for greenhouse-gas emitting
    trips to the doctor. More important, of course, the helmet protects you from
    serious head injury and/or death, both of which are far more environmentally
    costly than a piddling nine-ounce helmet. Get
    the full Ask Umbra answer
    .

    Xtra-ordinary.
    Even people who have much to haul and live in fickle-weather places are able to
    shed their cars and replace them with bikes. It just requires planning ahead and buying a
    bike like the Xtracycle in a design
    suited to your needs. It may be a tad expensive, but certainly cheaper than a
    car in the long term. And handy: The rear tire on the Xtracycle is farther back
    and lower than on a traditional bike, configured for a long, hearty rack able
    to hold people, four panniers, musical instruments—basically whatever you
    might imagine. Xtracycle offers a conversion kit for traditional bikes, too.
    The best news, though, is not that the Xtracycle exists and is apparently
    great, but that it is not the only specialty bike out there. Bikes are a form
    of transport, and bike hauling is its own established transport activity with
    appropriate technology to suit. It’s not that we must weigh down our inner
    Lance Armstrong with unwieldy baskets and trailers; rather, we are updating the
    rickshaw. If you want to haul stuff on a regular basis, there is a bike or
    bike-expanding attachment for you. Get the full Ask
    Umbra answer
    .

    Skirting the issue.
    Want to don your best skirt, dress, or utilikilt but still commute by bike? Not a problem, ladies and gents. You should be able to hunt down a small-scale
    bike fabricator or repair shop that could build custom skirt and chain guards.
    I would start by looking for a few small bike shops with that punkish, bike
    messengerish attitude and asking them what the options are around town. It
    might be that these stores actually know where to buy pre-made guards. You may
    already have come across my second manufacturing-related suggestion, which
    seems to be all over the web: Make your own skirt guard out of fabric, cable ties or wire, and
    a pair of scissors. Get
    the full Ask Umbra answer
    .

    Banana seatly,
    Umbra

    Related Links:

    Take note, companies: Young workers want urban jobs

    Shape shifting bike trailer-cart-strollers.

    Ask Umbra on fertility awareness, grilling, and Earth Day pledges






  • The Climate Post: Mighty winds a-blowin’

    by Eric Roston

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    First things first: A high-stakes political drama unfolded after the Senate Majority Leader announced the body would consider immigration reform ahead of anticipated climate legislation. The surprise political move caused a key Republican to bolt the tri-partisan effort to craft a federal climate program. The episode has greatly intensified doubts that the U.S. will pass a climate bill this year.

    Two developments in offshore energy this week competed for both attention and nothing less than–cue Carmina Burana–the future itself.

    Tough climate in ‘battle born state’: Nevada state politics sometimes have an outsized influence on federal energy debates. That’s been true since at least 1987, when Congress designated Nevada’s Yucca Mountain as the geological storage site for America’s nuclear reactor waste.

    With Nevada Sen. Harry Reid in charge of the U.S. Senate, and now embroiled in a competitive re-election campaign, Nevada’s voice is speaking louder than ever. Last year, the White House eliminated funding to develop the Yucca Mountain facility. And state political pressures led to Reid’s announcement last week that the Senate will undertake an immigration overhaul before parsing climate legislation.

    In response, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) threatened to pull out of intense, months-long work on climate policy with colleagues Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.). Reports up to last weekend had cast the trio as upbeat, with momentum, as they negotiated with business and advocacy groups to support their effort.

    Things fell apart Saturday when Graham released a blistering public letter on the matter, charging that the Democratic leadership put the immigration issue forward in “a hurried, panicked manner”:

    This has destroyed my confidence that there will be a serious commitment and focus to move energy legislation this year. All of the key players, particularly leadership, have to want this debate as much as we do. This is clearly not the case. I am very disappointed with this turn of events and believe their decision flies in the face of commitments made weeks ago to Senators Kerry, Lieberman and me. I deeply regret that election year politics will impede, if not derail, our efforts to make our nation energy independent.

    Graham pulled out of a Monday press conference when he would have released the bill he co-wrote with Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.).

    Strike that. Reverse it: Reid reversed himself on Wednesday, pointing out that it makes sense to pursue climate legislation first since there’s already a bill. That’s not the case for immigration, which exploded onto the scene after a new Arizona law empowered police to ask anyone for U.S. residency documents.

    Despite the potentially mortal political damage inflicted on their effort, the three senators have released a description of their bill to the Environmental Protection Agency, where researchers will perform economic analysis on it in the next several weeks. The Los Angeles Times’ Jim Tankersley sees two implications for this move: It will provide useful input for senators, who need such an assessment before considering the bill; and it suggests that, in the absence of any other signals, it’s theoretically possible for the legislators to resolve their differences and get back to work. An energy-industry funded think tank, the Institute for Energy Research, has filed a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain the bill from EPA, since it has not been released publicly.

    Getting down to business (or at least trying): The legislative stasis frustrates new markets and companies deciding whether they should or must participate in said markets. Some investors have been hoping a federal bill will define a voluntary market for carbon credits. It works like this: There would be many opportunities for emission reductions beyond mandatory efforts. Voluntary actions would generate carbon credits that large industrial companies can buy to offset their emissions (hence the name “offsets”).

    With the climate bill comatose, high-profile news media are beginning to, uh, focus in depth on what the policy actually is and how long it has been around (NYT, NPR).

    A world of indecision: Clearly, the U.S. Senate is currently having trouble introducing legislation, to say nothing of passing it. And enacting legislation may not be the only hurdle, if California is an example. A ballot initiative would, if passed, suspend the bill until unemployment, currently 12 percent, falls below 5.5 percent and stays there for a year. The leading gubernatorial candidate, Republican Meg Whitman, has said she would put central elements of the state’s 2006 climate law on hold for a year. (Democrat Jerry Brown would let it be.)

    International negotiations look no more productive. Officials from the BASIC countries–Brazil, South Africa, India, China–met in Cape Town this week. They called for the completion of a legally binding global climate treaty by this year’s 16th Conference of Parties (COP) meeting in Cancun, Mexico, or at the latest COP-17 in Cape Town. The German news magazine Der Spiegel reported this week that “Chancellor Angela Merkel is quietly moving away from her goal of a binding agreement on limiting climate change to 2 degrees Celsius.” Climate Post doesn’t like to make predictions, but will offer the observation that the COP-16 website is still under construction.

    Anyone looking for a sign of tranquility this week in the energy and climate space might have to look up the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The oversight agency identified more than half a dozen kinds of contracts that deserve additional regulatory scrutiny–but the Chicago Climate Exchange’s contract for carbon credits wasn’t one of them.

    American companies offshoring jobs: Nine years after it was first proposed, Cape Wind Associates has won federal approval to build 130 wind turbines about five miles off the coast of Cape Cod. The fight pitted seaside private landowners and Indian tribes against developers and environmental activists. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said the project will usher in wind power development all along the East Coast.

    The specter of windmills rising in Nantucket Sound offers an alternative image to those of an oil rig collapsing into the Gulf of Mexico. Federal and BP company officials upped their estimate of the oil leaking from the wreck, from 1,000 barrels a day to as much as 5,000 barrels. Satellites have captured dramatic images of the spill heading toward the ecologically delicate Mississippi Delta.

    Dept. of Bad Timing: The Minerals Management Service, an office in the Interior Department, postponed its 2010 Offshore Industry Safety Awards event, planned for next week.

    Breakthrough in commuter transportation policy?: Big legislative initiatives mean one thing to Hill staffers and the armies of lobbyists, journalists, and other observers peeking over their shoulders: Togetherness. No one wants to miss anything important. Reporters can be particularly conscientious, like Darren Samelsohn of Greenwire, who is as close as any journalist to ticking climate-related events in the Capitol.  Wednesday John Kerry posted to his Twitter stream: “Maybe Darren Samuelsohn and I should start carpooling, he’s my shadow in capitol [sic].”

    Climate Post readers, meet Climate Desk readers…: Several weeks ago, a consortium of publications launched The Climate Desk, a collaborative exploration of “the impact–human, environmental, economic, and political–of a changing climate.” The project brings together journalists from the Atlantic, Wired, Slate, Grist, Mother Jones, the Center for Investigative Reporting, and PBS’s Need to Know. The Climate Desk will now also pick up Climate Post when it publishes “Thursdays at three.”

    Climate Post (about), just shy of its first birthday, began as an attempt to reconcile two realities: People like to be informed but have very little time, and climate change is a monstrously vast sea of complexity involving many overlapping, interlocking scientific disciplines, technologies, economics, human behaviors and social systems, diplomacy, and heaven knows, politics. We try to be one-stop shopping for all you interested-but-busy people.

    We’re a project of the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions at Duke University. Click for more on Climate Post, the Nicholas Institute, and Duke University.

    Eric Roston is Senior Associate at the Nicholas Institute and author of The Carbon Age:  How Life’s Core Element Has Become Civilization’s Greatest Threat.  Prologue available at Grist. Chapter about Ginkgo biloba and climate   change available at Conservation.

    Related Links:

    Gulf of Mexico: from magnificent resource to industrial sacrifice zone

    Something’s wrong when our best option is burning an oil slick

    Tragic oil spill = smarter climate bill?






  • Gulf of Mexico: from magnificent resource to industrial sacrifice zone

    by Tom Philpott

    Fire and a vast oil spill, on top of one of the globe’s most productive fisheries. Photo: U.S. Coast Guard

    The Gulf of Mexico is a magnificent resource: a kind of natural engine for the production of wild, highly nutritious foodstuff. Here’s how the EPA describes it:

    Gulf fisheries are some of the most productive in the world. In 2008 according to the National Marine Fisheries Service, the commercial fish and shellfish harvest from the five U.S. Gulf states was estimated to be 1.3 billion pounds valued at $661 million. The Gulf also contains four of the top seven fishing ports in the nation by weight. The Gulf of Mexico has eight of the top twenty fishing ports in the nation by dollar value.

    According to the EPA, the Gulf is the home of 59 percent of U.S. oyster production. Nearly three-quarters of wild shrimp harvested in the United States call it home. It is a major breeding ground for some of the globe’s most prized and endangered fish, including bluefin tuna, snapper, and grouper.

    It would be a wise policy to protect the Gulf, to nurture the health of its ecosytems, to leave it at least as productive as we found it for the next generations. As climate change proceeds apace and population grows, sources of cheap, low-input, top-quality food will be increasingly precious.

    So, how are we doing? As I write this, oil is gushing into the Gulf at the rate of 5,000 barrels per day, 5,000 feet below the water’s surface, The New York Times reports.  Above the surface, an oil slick with a circumference of 600 miles is lurching along, lashed by wind toward the coasts.

    By Friday, it will have reached Louisiana’s wildlife-rich coast. And according to MarketWatch, “Beaches in Alabama and Mississippi are also threatened, and, if the spill spreads into the Gulf’s ‘Loop Current,’ it could devastate coastlines as far away as southeastern Florida.”

    For fisheries, the situation is atrocious. Direct contact with high oil concentrations kill fish quickly. But low-concentration contact can have horrible impacts, too. According to Greenpeace:

    Even when the oil does not kill, it can have more subtle and long-lasting negative effects.  For example, it can damage fish eggs, larva and young—wiping out generations.  It also can bio-accumulate up through the food chain as predators (including humans) eat numbers of fish (or other wildlife) that have sub-lethal amounts of oil stored in their bodies.

    Tragically, now seems to be a particularly awful time for a massive spill. On the Oceana blog, Matt Niemerski writes:

    [S]cientists say this is a critical time for bird life in the region because it is peak nesting and migration time for hundreds of species. Endangered sea turtles are beginning to lay their eggs along beaches in the area and bluefin tuna are spawning right now. Whales, dolphins and sea turtles are also at risk because they could inhale oil when they come to the surface to breathe.

    What started with a human tragedy and suspected tragic loss of 11 lives on April 21, now appears to be unfolding into one of the worst environmental disasters in U.S. history.

    And that’s not all

    A satellite view of the Gulf. In the red areas, a vast, nitrogen-fed algae bloom has risen, blotting out most sea life underneath.Photo: NASA

    It should be remembered that oil drilling is not the only human activity that imperils this vital ecosystem. Every year, millions of tons of synthetic nitrogen and mined phosphorous leach from Midwestern farm fields and into streams that drain into the Mississippi. The great river deposits those agrichemicals right into the Gulf, where they feed a 7,000-square-mile algae bloom that sucks up oxygen and snuffs out sea life underneath.

    The bulk of this vast Dead Zone’s rogue nutrients come from the growing of corn, our nation’s largest farm crop. Half of the corn crop ends up in feedlots, feeding cows, chicken, and pigs stuffed together in pollution-spewing, factory-style feedlots.

    The federal government has mounted an effort to stem the flow of fertilizer from farms to the Gulf. But policies that encourage maximum production of corn—including mandates and tax breaks for corn ethanol—overwhelm those gestures. Thus the Dead Zone has become a routine fact of life in the Gulf, the cost of doing business for a food system that prizes cheapness and industry profit above all else. As the writer Richard Manning puts it in the winter 2004 American Scholar (unavailable online):

    Already, the Dead Zone has seriously damaged what was once a productive fishery, meaning that a high-quality source of low-cost protein is being sacrificed so that a source of low-quality, high-input subsidized protein can blanket the Upper Midwest.

    The government-generated boom in corn-based ethanol plays its role, too. Five years ago, just 13 percent of the corn crop went into ethanol factories. Today, a third does; by 2015, if government mandates hold, fully one-half will. Already, increased demand from ethanol is taking its toll on the Gulf.

    Back in 2008, after ethanol production had soared, the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium reported, “The nitrogen loading to the Gulf of Mexico in May of this year was 37 percent higher than 2007 and the highest since measurements began in 1970.” The group added: “The intensive farming of more land, including crops used for biofuels, has definitely contributed to this high nitrogen loading rate.”

    Thus like the oil spill, the Dead Zone owes some of its existence to our reliance on auto transportation.

    At this time of year, fertilizer runoff is streaming into the Gulf, and the algae bloom is just beginning to do its dirty work. Now, adding to the routine depredations of the agricultural runoff, we have what’s looking likely to emerge as the nation’s largest oil spill ever.

    Rather than protect the Gulf, we seem determined to destroy it in pursuit of cheap car fuel and cheap meat. Is it too late to reverse course?

    Related Links:

    The Climate Post: Mighty winds a-blowin’

    Take note, companies: Young workers want urban jobs

    Something’s wrong when our best option is burning an oil slick