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WEEKLY GRIST, 17 Aug 2004

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WEEKLY GRIST

11 Aug - 17 Aug 2004

Environmental news from GRIST MAGAZINE

<http://www.gristmagazine.com>

 

 

1.

POLLUTING THE VILLAGE TO SAVE IT

Bushies Cite " National Security " as Reason to Skirt Enviro Rules

 

While the Bush administration doesn't want to ask Americans to make

any economic sacrifices for the war on terrorism, it doesn't seem to

think twice about asking for environmental sacrifices. The

Department of Homeland Security recently proposed exempting a raft of

agencies under its control from environmental review requirements.

If the feds log more trees and spray more pesticides, will we be

better protected from terrorists? Muckraker wonders -- this week on

the Grist Magazine website.

 

this week in Grist: DHS pushes for environmental exemptions -- in

Muckraker

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/muck/muck081204.asp?source=weekly>

 

sign up: Receive word by email each time a new Muckraker column hits

the scene

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/signup/subgrist.asp?source=weekly>

 

 

 

2.

HEAVEN CAN'T WAIT

Climate Stability Possible with Current Technology, Researchers Say

 

Stabilizing global emissions of carbon dioxide and forestalling the

worst consequences of global warming are possible with current

technology, said Princeton researchers last week in the journal

Science. While the Bush administration has stressed the need for

" revolutionary technologies ... to transform the way we produce and

consume energy, " as Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham put it last

year, the new study " proves we have the technology several times

over, and the marketplace can decide which ones to use, " said study

coauthor Stephen Pacala. The study recommends widespread use of a

portfolio of some 15 approaches ranging from solar and wind energy to

energy efficiency to carbon sequestration to nuclear energy. While

they stress that the search for new, transformative technologies

should continue, the researchers' central message is simple: There's

no need to wait. Let's get started.

 

straight to the source: The Christian Science Monitor, Peter N.

Spotts, 13 Aug 2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2835>

 

straight to the source: The Star-Ledger, Kevin Coughlin, 13 Aug 2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2836>

 

 

 

3.

THE ROCKFISH FILES

Marine Defender Peter Huhtala InterActivates

 

At the Pacific Marine Conservation Council, Peter Huhtala dedicates

himself to, among other things, saving rockfish. Rockfish, which

inhabit the waters off the West Coast of the U.S., can live up to 200

years -- unless they're caught up in fishing nets, that is. The fate

of these fish rests to some extent in the hands of a federal fishery

management council that is staffed almost entirely with folks from

the fishing industry, so Huhtala's got his work cut out for him.

Still, he finds time to canoe Oregon's waterways, worry about

liquefied natural gas, and feel guilty about his Subaru Legacy.

Check out his answers to our questions, and send him a question

yourself -- only on the Grist Magazine website.

 

only in Grist: Peter Huhtala answers Grist's questions -- in

InterActivist

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/interactivist/huhtala081604.asp?source=weekly>

 

 

 

4.

LOOK, OVER THERE! A WAR!

With Public Attention Elsewhere, Bush Rolls Back Regulations

 

The Bush administration, critics say, has taken advantage of the

public's distraction since 9/11 to govern via regulatory initiatives

and rollbacks -- which, unlike new laws, do not require congressional

approval. Pro-business measures enacted by the Bushies include a

rule allowing Forest Service managers to circumvent environmental

reviews on logging projects and the rollback of new-source review

rules for power plants. Some rule changes have been blocked in

court, but with a steady flood, most get through. A budget office

official brags of " cut[ting] the growth of costly business

regulations by 75 percent, " while Rep. David R. Obey (D-Wis.) calls

it " tak[ing] a lot of loot out the back door without anybody

noticing. " Sierra Club Executive Director Carl Pope says, " Now, when

I hold focus groups with the general public and tell them what has

been done, they exclaim, 'How could this have happened without me

knowing about it?' "

 

straight to the source: The New York Times, Joel Brinkley, 14 Aug 2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2842>

 

 

 

5.

GROW WITH THE FLOW

Umbra Reveals the Mysteries of Hydroponics

 

Hydroponic plant cultivation is the subject of almost cultish

devotion among individuals involved in ... er... a sector of the

economy that is, shall we say, frowned upon ... well, let's just call

them entrepreneurs. A reader writes in to ask, if hydroponics is so

great, why isn't it more widespread? Umbra talks to a farmer (no,

not that kind) and brings back the straight dope (again, not that

kind) -- in Ask Umbra, only on the Grist Magazine website.

 

only in Grist: Ask Umbra on hydroponic cultivation -- in Ask Umbra

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/ask/ask081604.asp?source=weekly>

 

sign up: Receive word by email when new Ask Umbra columns hit the

scene

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/signup/subgrist.asp?source=weekly>

 

 

 

6.

WELCOME TO THE MO' HELL CALIFORNIA

New Study Predicts Hot, Dry Future for California

 

According to a new study, global warming will leave California either

really hosed or just moderately hosed, depending on the choices the

world makes in coming years. Conducted by 19 prominent

climate-change scientists, the study -- published this week in the

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences -- models two

different scenarios. The first, a " business as usual " scenario

involving no substantial change in the burning of fossil fuels or

emission of greenhouse gases, would yield a rise in the average

temperature of 7 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the century.

Snowpack in the Sierra Mountains, one of the state's primary water

sources, would be reduced by 89 percent. Heat waves would be more

severe. The dairy, wine, and skiing industries could be devastated.

Luckily, if substantial moves toward renewable energy are undertaken

immediately -- the second scenario -- the average temperature will

rise by only 4 to 6 degrees, and though the same effects will ensue,

well, at least they'll be less severe.

 

straight to the source: The Sacramento Bee, Edie Lau and Stuart

Leavenworth, 17 Aug 2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2846>

 

straight to the source: Los Angeles Times, Miguel Bustillo, 17 Aug

2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2847>

 

straight to the source: San Francisco Chronicle, Carl T. Hall, 17 Aug

2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2848>

 

 

 

7.

WHEN PAUL'S SAID AND DONE

Paul Ehrlich on Bush, Population Growth, Hope, and More

 

Not surprisingly, readers sent in heaps of questions for renowned

ecologist Paul Ehrlich. They quiz him about the predictions he made

in his groundbreaking book " The Population Bomb, " subsequent

population and consumption trends, the earth's carrying capacity, the

fate of humanity, and oh yeah, how to pronounce his name (FYI: it's

" air-lick " ). He assesses reactions to his previous work, the current

state of the world, and our collective future in InterActivist --

only on the Grist Magazine website.

 

only in Grist: Paul Ehrlich answers readers' questions -- in

InterActivist

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/interactivist/ehrlich081304.asp?source=weekly>

 

 

 

8.

IF NOT FOR YOU MEDDLING KIDS ...

Judge Spanks Commerce Secretary Over Dolphin-Safe Rules

 

In a ruling made public last week, a federal judge resoundingly

rejected the efforts of Bush administration officials to relax

" dolphin-safe " standards for tuna. U.S. District Judge Thelton

Henderson's ruling was, to put it mildly, strongly worded. " The

record is replete with evidence that [Commerce Secretary Donald

Evans] was influenced by policy concerns unrelated to the best

available scientific evidence, " read the 51-page ruling. " This court

has never, in its 24 years, reviewed a record of agency action that

contained such a compelling portrait of political meddling. " The

Commerce Department had proposed rewriting the rules to certify tuna

as dolphin-safe even if dolphins were swept up in fish nets, as long

as observers certified that the dolphins were unharmed. (Mexican

observers are regularly bribed to overlook dead or injured dolphins.)

Henderson called the decision " arbitrary and capricious. " Government

officials are reviewing the decision and, one suspects, applying

salve to their stinging rear ends.

 

straight to the source: MSNBC.com, Associated Press, 11 Aug 2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2820>

 

straight to the source: The Sacramento Bee, Claire Cooper, 11 Aug 2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2821>

 

straight to the source: San Francisco Chronicle, Bob Egelko, 11 Aug

2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2822>

 

 

 

9.

DO GOOD

Take Action to Preserve Wyoming's Wildlands

 

Wyoming's Bighorn National Forest -- encompassing tall peaks, big

swaths of prairie, and a whole lotta trees -- is poised to get a new

management plan, which will determine how much logging will be done,

how many miles of roads will be bulldozed, and what sort of

protections will be afforded to wildlife. Five management options

are on the table. The Wilderness Society and Sierra Club are putting

their energy behind the option that would protect the most land; the

timber industry is pushing the option that would open the most areas

to logging. Submit a comment and tell the U.S. Forest Service which

option you favor.

 

do good: Take action protect the Bighorn National Forest

http://www.care2.com/go/z/16305

 

 

 

10.

REGULATUS INTERRUPTUS

Rule Helps Industry Weasel Out of Regulations, Enviros Say

 

The Data Quality Act -- written by an industry lobbyist and tacked

onto a massive appropriations bill in 2000 -- has become a tool used

by industry to forestall regulation, critics charge. The DQA

instructs the federal Office of Management and Budget to ensure that

all information disseminated by the feds is reliable, and it allows

companies and individuals to challenge info they say is inaccurate.

It sounds innocent, but public-safety and enviro groups claim that it

places scientific decisions in political hands; any industry, they

say, can buy enough friendly scientific studies to muddy the waters

and fight off regulation. In the last two years, industry has filed

dozens of petitions under the DQA against regulations on everything

from the herbicide atrazine to playground wood treated with arsenic.

Environmental regulations have come under particularly furious

attack. Says Jim J. Tozzi, the industry flack who wrote the rule,

" Was it something that did not have hearings? Yes. Is it something

that keeps me awake at night? No. ... Sometimes you get the monkey,

and sometimes the monkey gets you. "

 

straight to the source: The Washington Post, Rick Weiss, 16 Aug 2004

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/cgi-bin/forward.pl?forward_id=2841>

 

--------------------------------

 

Also in GRIST MAGAZINE this week:

 

The chem reaper -- and more environmental news of the week

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/daily/daily081704.asp?source=weekly>

 

 

Pulling a fast-track one -- New Jersey's Democratic governor takes

tricks from Bush's book -- by Glenn Scherer

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/maindish/scherer081104.asp?source=weekly>

 

 

Olympics don't go for the green -- a cartoon by Suzy Becker

<http:/www.gristmagazine.com/ha/ha080904.asp?source=weekly>

 

 

Brower power -- a spotlight on young enviro activists -- by Michelle

Nijhuis

<http://www.gristmagazine.com/maindish/nijhuis081004.asp?source=weekly>

 

--------------------------------

WEEKLY GRIST is published by GRIST MAGAZINE, an online source for

environmental news and commentary. Gloom and doom with a sense of humor:

<http://www.gristmagazine.com>.

 

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organization: <http://www.gristmagazine.com/about/support.asp?source=weekly>.

 

 

http://pets.care2.com/

 

http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com

 

" It is impossible to defeat an ignorant man in argument. " -- William G. McAdoo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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