Be a part of restoring the Colorado River Delta

RaisetheRiver
raisetheriver.org

High up in the Rocky Mountains is the starting point of the Colorado River. For six million years, up until 1960, it cascaded through the southwestern landscape for 1,500 miles before reaching the sea. But the construction of some forty dams siphoning water away from the river and a demand increase in the region, the Colorado no longer makes it to its final destination: the Colorado River Delta in Mexico. The delta is left dry and cracking in the heat of the sun, stripped of its lush habitats and wildlife. This is how it has remained for decades, until four days ago.

On March 23, the Morelos Dam was opened allowing a “pulse flow” of water to begin the historic 70-mile journey down the bone dry Colorado River Delta to the Sea of Cortez, reconnecting the river and the ocean for the first time in forty years. Continue reading Be a part of restoring the Colorado River Delta

Fracking in Pennsylvania: A Personal and Regulatory Nightmare

A Review of Tom Wilber’s  Under the Surface: Fracking, Fortunes, and the Fate of the Marcellus Shale

“The landowners want the money, and I understand that. We all want the money. But gee, we’d like to have fish in our pond.” These words from Ken Ely, a resident of Dimock, Pennsylvania, came soon after natural gas production began on his land. While at first optimistic about his economic prospects that could result from fracking for this increasingly important source of energy, Ken soon became concerned when Cabot, the oil and gas company who owned and operated the fracking wells, began storing untreated wastewater on his land. Continue reading Fracking in Pennsylvania: A Personal and Regulatory Nightmare

The West: From Desert to Oasis

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A review of Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water  by Marc Reisner, Penguin Group, 1986

As droughts are becoming more common and as water demand across the country continues to grow, U.S. water sources are being depleted at an unprecedented rate. This scarcity is leading to water conflicts between cities, states, and even regions. Recently, Georgia asked to “correct” its border in order to have access to the upper bank of the Tennessee River to satisfy the growing demand in the Atlanta region. While this is simply a proposal at the moment, it is far from a simple request, and these conflicts over water are becoming more and more frequent as this natural resource becomes scarcer. Continue reading The West: From Desert to Oasis

Environmental Justice Roots Run Deep

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A Review of Noxious New York by Julie Sze, MIT Press, 2007

On March 22, 1987, a barge called the Mobro 4000 departed from New York with 3,168 tons of trash on board. It journeyed the entire length of the eastern coast of the United States and continued as far south as Belize in search of a dumping destination. Four months later the ship returned to New York with its load still intact, having been rejected by authorities at every stop.

While the journey of the “Gar-barge,” as it was called at the time, may have been a unique incident that embarrassed New York, it also highlights a period of time when garbage began to take on complex cultural, political and economic contexts. In the 1980s, New York and much of the rest of the country were faced with the question of what to do with an ever-increasing amount of waste. The creation of large-scale municipal waste management sites was a solution, but only for some. Indeed, the presence of new industrial facilities in certain neighborhoods helped spark environmental justice activism in New York. Continue reading Environmental Justice Roots Run Deep

Half a century’s worth of nuclear waste later and we still haven’t found a permanent solution.

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A Review of  Too Hot to Touch, The Problem of High-Level Nuclear Waste by William M. Alley and Rosemarie Alley, Cambridge University Press , 2013

 

During a Labor Day 1954 video broadcast, President Eisenhower flicked his “magic wand” in Denver, Colorado and switched on the nation’s first nuclear power plant 1,200 miles away in Shippingport, Pennsylvania. At the time, researchers expected nuclear power would minimize energy costs and curb air pollution. But the nuclear industry has done more than generate clean energy; it has also generated enough high-level radioactive waste to fill over 150 football fields stacked at 20 feet high. Continue reading Half a century’s worth of nuclear waste later and we still haven’t found a permanent solution.

Rich Tastes, Hungry People: How Opposition to GM in Europe is Keeping Billions in Poverty in Africa

StarvedForScience_RPaarlberg

Starved for Science: How Biotechnology is Being Kept Out of Africa
Robert Paarlberg
Harvard University Press, 2008

It’s quite unintuitive, actually. African nations, some of the poorest on Earth, have experienced little to no improvements in agricultural productivity since the dawn of modern agricultural science, yet they maintain some of the tightest restrictions on agricultural biotechnology in the world.  With the exception of South Africa, purchasing or planting genetically modified (GM) seeds, or sometimes even accepting unmilled GM grain as food aid, is illegal in every single African country. Given that many of these same developing countries are comfortable with comparatively loose or no regulations in other categories, this contrast poses some questions. Continue reading Rich Tastes, Hungry People: How Opposition to GM in Europe is Keeping Billions in Poverty in Africa

“Climate Refugees” by Collectif Argos: A Landmark in Humanizing Climate Change

climate-refugees 

Collectif Argos brought the human impacts of climate change into sharp focus in 2007 when they published their book Climate Refugees.  It was the first time the term had been used in print.

Collectif Argos, a group of 10 French journalists and photographers, began researching the social impacts of our changing climate in 2004.  Guy-Pierre Chomette of the Collectif explained, “Our job is to tell stories we have heard and bear witness to what we have seen.  The science was already there when we started in 2004, but we wanted to emphasize the human dimension, especially for those most vulnerable.” Continue reading “Climate Refugees” by Collectif Argos: A Landmark in Humanizing Climate Change

Which affects which: Nuclear energy or climate change?

Image above. Underground tunnel to nuclear repository laboratory.
Photo credit: SKB

Every year, global climate change becomes more pressing. Unlike coal-fueled power plants, nuclear power emits few greenhouse gases and could help counter the effects of global climate change. Nuclear waste disposal is the Achilles heel of the nuclear industry, however. Since 1954, over 70 nuclear power plants across 35 states have contributed to the growing pile of spent nuclear fuel in temporary storage facilities throughout the country. Combined with defense-related spent fuel, this pile amounts to about 70,000 tons of material. Continue reading Which affects which: Nuclear energy or climate change?

Oil is Running Low, but is Fracking the Answer?

A farmer views fracking drills near an almond orchard in Shafter (image: earthjustice.org)

Shafter, CA–They say some things never change. When it comes to this rural California community, they’re right—mostly. People still flock to the same burger joint, grow the same crops, and walk through the same orchards they have for decades. But something is different here today than thirty years ago. Breaks between the fields and orchards no longer just hold dirt fields, but new oil drills, massive flames burning off excess energy, and for some time last year, unlined pits being filled with toxic wastewater.

While Shafter residents are no strangers to oil drilling (it has been happening near here for decades), the new drills are part of a controversial technique—hydraulic fracturing– being used to extract more oil. Fracking, as it is often called, allows drillers to break through the previously inaccessible Monterey Shale, a rock formation estimated to hold 15 billion barrels of oil trapped beneath 1750 square miles of Southern and Central California. Many see a fracking-fueled economic boom, but potential consequences have some farmers and residents worried about their livelihoods. Continue reading Oil is Running Low, but is Fracking the Answer?

You can substitute margarine for butter, but what can you substitute for water?

Image: www.sierranevadaalliance.org

As of January, the Sierra Nevada snowpack is 80% below average. Even following one of the driest years in California’s history, this number is still shockingly low. In an Olympic sized pool this would be like only having one of five lanes to swim in. While it is understandable for California to be concerned with the depletion of the Sierra Nevada, recent research suggests we should be equally concerned about what lies ahead for the Colorado River. Continue reading You can substitute margarine for butter, but what can you substitute for water?