Monday, September 28, 2009

Recycling at the Next Level

The Hunger Site in partnership with NOVICA and in association with National Geographic, is offering:
. . . artists and artisans around the world a global platform to express their true artistic talents and to spur their creativity. And, we want to provide you with access to unique, hard-to-find items at great values that only the Internet infrastructure can allow.

Pop-Top Purse GOLDEN POWER


I am no fashionista, but I think this purse is beautiful. It is incredible that someone detached all the pop-tops from aluminum cans and then crocheted this beautiful, fully-lined purse. The purse is $189.95. This is just an example of the recycled items you may find on the pages of the Hunger Site.

Depending upon the page from which you buy the purse: your purchase will fund 300 cups of food (Hunger site), six children's books (Literacy site), health services to save or improve the lives of 54 children (Child Health site), six percent of a mammogram (Breast Cancer site), 13,740 SF (Rain Forest site) or 168 bowls of food for animals living in sanctuaries and shelters (Animal Rescue site).

Take a look today at the many recycled and handcrafted items in the Novia/ National Geographic section of the Hunger Site. All items purchased fund help for others in this world.

Namaste.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Poo-Power From Methane

A few years back, the price of milk went way down and some smart dairy farmers supplemented their farm income by making methane from cow manure.

They use anaerobic (without oxygen) digesters. Automatic scrapers send the manure from dairy barns to the methane digesters that are sunk into the ground.

Each digester holds three weeks of manure and is treated with bacteria found in the stomach of a cow. The tank is heated and cooks the manure. The methane produced is piped away to fuel generators or flows directly to the local gas utility pipeline.

What remains is separated into liquid and something like peat moss mulch. The mulch is used as bedding for the cows instead of sawdust, saving the farmers, for example, $50,000 a year. The sawdust "was like gold,"

So instead of poor dairy farmers, we have the story of a sustainable, recycling, methane-producing, prosperous dairy farmers.

Read more here.

Agricultural Runoff Poisoning Water Supply


Feedlots and Dairy Farms Pollute in Waterways and Wells

There are 41,000 dairy cows in Brown County, WI. Each year, these cows produce 260+ million gallons of manure. The manure is stored in ponds and then spread on farm fields as fertilizer. This year, 100+ wells in the Madison area were polluted by agricultural runoff. Residents have suffered from chronic diarrhea, stomach illnesses and severe ear infections.

The Clean Water Act of 1972 regulates chemicals or contaminants that move through pipes or ditches, which means it does not typically apply to sprayed waste that runs off and seeps into groundwater. Agricultural pollutants that contaminate drinking water sources are often subject only to state or county regulations.

To remedy situations like this, EPA has created rules for farms with 700+ cows. However, 1000s of feedlots that should be regulated are basically ignored because farmers never file paperwork. Regulations passed during the previous administration allow many of farms to self-certify that they will not pollute. This is a nationwide problem.

Fifteen percent of wells in agricultural areas of California exceed federal thresholds. Chesapeake Bay has been seriously damaged by agricultural pollution. Arkansas and Maryland have a problem with chicken manure polluting drinking water. In 2005, Oklahoma’s attorney general sued 13 poultry companies, claiming they had damaged one of the state’s most important watersheds.

Want more information? Read the complete article online at the New York Times.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Why Say NO to GMOs?



GreenpeaceVideo

SIGN THE PETITION: http://www.greenpeace.org/rice

Genetic engineering is a threat to food security, especially in a changing climate. The introduction of genetically manipulated organisms by choice or by accident grossly undermines sustainable agriculture and in so doing, severely limits the choice of food we can eat.

Once GE plants are released into the environment, they are out of control. If anything goes wrong - they are impossible to recall.

GE contamination threatens biodiversity respected as the global heritage of humankind, and one of our world's fundamental keys to survival.

From Green Peace International

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Historic Global Warming Regulation



On September 8, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) proposed the first national standards to limit global warming pollution in U.S. history.

The proposal would:
  • Reduce global warming pollution from automobiles by 21% by 2030.
  • Cut carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 950 million metric tons.
  • Save 1.8 billion barrels of oil.
  • Save the average consumer more than $3,000 in fuel costs.
The House passed a bill that would:
  • Caps and reduces global warming pollution
  • Caps and reduces global warming pollution
  • Creates jobs in the U.S.
  • Cuts U.S. imports of foreign oil
  • Improves national security
  • Leads other countries to act
Today's announcement opens a 60-day public comment period before the rule can be finalized. Please take a moment to submit your comments in support of this historic rule.

Also, keep up pressure on your Senators to provide a bill at least equivalent to the House bill. Remind them that writing a climate bill is important. Encourage them to keep the pork on the bill to a minimum.


Adopt a Coral Reef


Right Click Banner to Visit Nature Conservancy
Highlights
  • Through the Conservancy's Adopt a Coral Reef program, you may now help protect 860+ species of reef fish that live in Papua New Guinea's Kimbe Bay.

  • Perhaps you want to help save the vibrant coral reefs of Palau, which harbor an astonishing 585 varieties of hard and soft corals.

  • Provide sanctuary to humpback whales by adopting the largest breeding ground for the North Atlantic humpback whale population off the Dominican Republic coast.

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Wolves In Crosshairs Again


The killing of wolves in Idaho began last week ago. Idaho has already confirmed three wolf kills.
In March, Interior Secretary Salazar approved the Bush Administration's discredited plan to eliminate Endangered Species Act protections for wolves in Idaho and Montana.

So, Idaho will now slaughter 220 wolves this year in the first-ever state regulated hunt of gray wolves in the continental United States. Montana plans to slaughter 75 wolves starting in October.

The very species that was brought back from the brink of extinction under the protection of the EPA is now on its way out again. No other endangered species has ever been delisted (protections removed) at such a low population level and then immediately hunted to even lower unsustainable levels.

This could be the worst wolf massacre in the Lower 48 United States since the 1930s. Hundreds of defenseless wolves will be shot, with many surviving wolf pups left to starve to death. Unless we stop it. Please sign the petition to send your message, then send an email to your friends and post the petition to Facebook. Thank you!

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Western USA Burning


Since 2000, wildfires in the United States have burned an average of more than 7 million acres a year, about double the average acreage for the previous four decades.


Scope of Problem

Intensity of Wildfires

Recently, Harvard University scientists submitted a study to the Journal of Geophysical Research about massive increases in the number and intensity of wildfires in the American West.
. . . areas burned by wildfires in the West could increase by 50 percent by 2050, with even larger increases of 75 percent to 175 percent in the Pacific Northwest and Rocky Mountain West (accepted for publication in the Journal of Geophysical Research — Atmospheres).

Development on Edge of Forest


Climate researchers at Headwaters Economics, predict that climate change and the accelerating movement of western residents to areas near or in undeveloped forests will likely prove to be a devastating combination.
. . . will increase the area burned by seasonal fires in Montana by more than 300 percent and more than double the cost of protecting homes threatened by fire (http://www.headwaterseconomics.org/wildfire.php).

Drought


Temperature increasing, fires blazing and researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego are finding a great shortfall in the amount of water to service this same area.
Scheduled deliveries of water from Lake Mead, created by Hoover Dam, could be missed 60 to 90 percent of the time by midcentury if human-caused climate change continues to make the region drier (http://scrippsnews.ucsd.edu/Releases/?releaseID=977).

Mountain Pine Beetle Infestation

An unchecked epidemic of mountain pine beetles has killed millions of acres of trees from Colorado north into Canada. Dead trees are a fire hazard, warmer winters spare the beetles from low temperatures that would normally kill them off and drought stresses trees.


Feedback Loop


Tom Kenworthy, Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress, reviews these research reports, found related studies of the economic impacts of wildfires, and explored a feedback loop that is frightening.
Destruction of trees by the mountain pine beetle, combined with climate change and fire, makes for a dangerous feedback loop. Dead forests sequester less carbon dioxide. Burning forests release lots of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. More carbon dioxide adds to climate change, which raises temperatures, stresses forests, and makes more and bigger fires more likely (http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2009/09/temperature_increase.html).

Some Solutions

Water on Site

Steps should be taken to build in and retrofit fire protection for homes that edge the forest. Rainwater storage and grey water recycling should be mandated so that homes are protected and firefighters can concentrate on containing the forest fire rather than evacuating people.


fireproof house cover
SAFE Quick Cover (pictured above)

The Department of Homeland Security has been working with a military contractor (Foster-Miller) to adapt a cover used to protect military vehicles from chemical attacks into a system that protects homes. This rooftop system rolls out the fireproof fabric at the flip of a switch, which may be flipped as the homeowner evacuates. If the house is protected, the homeowner will more readily evacuate.


Treat Pine Beetle Infestation

In the western United States, mountain pine beetles have killed 6.5 million acres of forest. Another 5.2 million acres was burned this year in the USA. For a long-term remedy, susceptible stands of pines should be thinned, leaving well-spaced, healthy trees. For short-term control, spray, cover, burn or peel attacked trees to kill the beetles. Preventive sprays can protect green,healthy trees (http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/insect/05528.html).


Plant Trees

Plant hardy, fast-growing, disease-and-pest resistant trees that will live with less water. Change our perspective. Instead of looking at trees and seeing board feet, we should view trees as the amount of CO2 they absorb from the environment.