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In The News /
May 16
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One company is pushing ahead with a proposal to pump enough groundwater every year to supply 100,000 homes and sell it to urban Southern California. If the plan succeeds, it will turn ancient desert groundwater, a public resource, into a fountain of private profit, blazing a new — and some warn ominous — path in the state.
Los Angeles Times
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Without fanfare, the nation’s nuclear power regulators have overhauled community emergency planning for the first time in more than three decades, requiring fewer exercises for major accidents and recommending that fewer people be evacuated right away.
Associated Press
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With encroachment from settlers and speculators, and after a devastating war against Shining Path rebels a decade ago, the indigenous Ashaninkas’ hold is precarious. And they are now facing a new peril, a proposed 2,200-megawatt Pakitzapango hydroelectric dam.
New York Times
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China's radical blue-sky measures during the 2008 Olympics actually improved Beijingers' cardiovascular health -- if only for a few weeks. After the games came to an end, many of the temporary pollution-reducing measures were relaxed, and pollution levels climbed once more.
The Atlantic
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MRSA is among a growing number of bacterial strains that are highly resistant to antibiotics and are very difficult to treat when they cause serious infections. According to infectious disease experts, the increase in the number of superbugs over the past three decades comes from the overuse of antibiotics -- not only in humans but also in farm animals.
ABC News
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The Haitian government is drafting legislation for the newly emerging mining industry to help this impoverished Caribbean nation reap benefits, the new prime minister said Tuesday.
Associated Press
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In a society preoccupied with the struggle for independence from Israel, protecting the environment has often been sidelined — as evidenced by the ubiquitous sight of burning trash and piles of garbage bags on sidewalks in this city of 30,000 north of Jerusalem.
Associated Press
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Abnormally high ocean temperatures off the coast of northern Australia contributed to the extreme rainfall that flooded three-quarters of Queensland over the summer of 2010-11, scientists report.
Melbourne Age, Australia
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The Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency and Tokyo Electric Power Co. were aware at least by 2006 that the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant was at risk of having its power knocked out by massive tsunami, NISA officials said Tuesday.
Kyodo News, Japan
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The idled San Onofre nuclear power plant is facing new scrutiny from Congress as the utility that operates it moves closer to proposing a fix to get the twin reactors back in service.
Associated Press
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Living in the middle of a natural gas boom can be pretty unsettling. The area around the town of Silt, Colo., used to be the kind of sleepy rural place where the tweet of birds was the most you would hear. Now it's hard to make out the birds because of the rumbling of natural gas drilling rigs.
All Things Considered, NPR
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State oversight of gas drilling has been effective at reducing environmental problems in Pennsylvania and will prevent major problems in New York if the state allows drilling to begin, according to a study released Tuesday by the University at Buffalo's new shale gas institute.
Associated Press
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The proportion of Americans with asthma increased from 7.3% in 2001 to 8.4% in 2010, marking the highest level ever, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday.
Los Angeles Times
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By Wes Enzinna
New York Times
16 May 2012
At the entrance to Treece, Kan., something strange happens: Mountains appear on the horizon. Except they’re not really mountains. They’re mounds of toxic stone. Gray, treeless monuments to the town’s more profitable past.
When the minerals started to run out in the 1960s, the largest mining companies went bankrupt or left, and their workers left, too. Only 170 residents still live in Treece with those toxic towers of stone.
more…
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By Jon Hamilton
Morning Edition
16 May 2012
A proposed study of people in northern Pennsylvania could help resolve a national debate about whether the natural gas boom is making people sick. If the study goes forward, it would be the first large-scale, scientifically rigorous assessment of the health effects of gas production.
In recent years, there have been lots of anecdotal reports about people who say they have been harmed by the chemicals associated with gas wells and the drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. The study would look at detailed health histories on hundreds of thousands of people who live near the Marcellus Shale, home to about 5,000 natural gas wells.
more…
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New Science
Understand the latest scientific findings
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Exposure to bisphenol A at levels commonly found in the general population may cut a woman's chance of getting pregnant if she is undergoing fertility treatment, a study from Harvard University finds. Women with higher levels of the chemical, widely used in food can linings and receipt paper, were less likely to get pregnant than women with lower levels. more…
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Women exposed to low levels of cadmium in their food have changes in DNA markers that alter gene regulation and increase their cancer risk. This study for the first time suggests that cadmium may be turning genes on or off in a way that triggers disease. more…
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http://www.environmentalhealthnews.org/frontpage/media_review/inspector.html
Media Notes
Notable media news and reviews
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The lack of scientific information in a Daily Mail article undermines the credibility of a possible link between a cluster of birth defects and the widely used herbicide atrazine. Readers will find it hard to understand the issue based on the incomplete coverage. more…
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A story in the Windsor Star is one of the first to cover a new type of flame retardant that has contaminated the air of U.S. cities and remote areas of the world. The story, though, doesn't mention research that shows these chemicals already have accumulated in mammals and household dust. more…
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Editorials
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Bismarck Tribune
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has decided not to push the issue of charging North Dakota users for water from the Missouri River, at least until it has a national policy. Water in the West has always been a big deal. The state needs to be prepared to eventually take on the corps.
more…
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Hilton Head Island Packet
Efforts to stop the Savannah River dredging project may save a key pollution-fighting tool -- private citizens' right to sue under South Carolina's Pollution Control Act.
more…
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Opinions
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Nassrine Azimi
New York Times
On a recent visit to Fukushima, it was comforting to be reminded that even unprecedented disasters cannot entirely sap Japan’s resolve. People are getting back on their feet, and most of the larger Tohoku area is slowly coming to life.
more…
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Chris Clarke
Los Angeles KCET TV
Climate change is a serious issue, but it may not be the biggest threat to life on Earth as we know it. Instead, it may be loss of biodiversity, which can have dire consequences if it's ignored to focus on climate change.
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By Douglas Fischer
Daily Climate
3 May 2012
With Asia's energy demands pulling more U.S. coal to West Coast ports, rail-line communities across Montana fear the effects: More train traffic, health problems, noise and congestion.
more…
By Peter Dykstra
Daily Climate
1 May 2012
A Fox TV commentator, midgame, links global warming to home runs, and fans on all sides of the climate debate call foul.
more…
By Rae Tyson
Daily Climate
30 April 2012
Snakehead with a side of Kudzu? Washington, D.C.'s Barton Seaver is pushing boundaries in the kitchen, urging restaurants to use menu choice to help sustain diversity – and connect the dots – in a changing climate.
A Climate Query.
more…
By Alan S. Kesselheim
Daily Climate
27 April 2012
The heartbreaking irony is that nothing about the energy debate in Washington or the Keystone XL pipeline fight will bring down gas prices or alter unemployment. It will not free us from foreign oil. These are the WMD equivalents trotted out by politicians and industry. They are lies.
more…
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Hot Topics
From today's news and archives
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In The News (CONTINUED) /
May 16
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Health data released on Wednesday provided the clearest evidence to date of the spread of chronic diseases like diabetes and heart disease from developed nations to poorer regions such as Africa, as lifestyles and diets there change. Reuters
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While sunscreen is important for staying safe from harmful UV rays, there are still enough confusing labels, dangerous ingredients, and misleading SPF designations in many common products. Mother Jones
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Malaria-carrying mosquitoes in Africa and India are becoming resistant to insecticides, putting millions of lives at greater risk and threatening eradication efforts, health experts said on Tuesday. Reuters
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More news from today
>110 more stories, including:
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- Climate: Natural sinks still sopping up carbon; England is stuck in drought despite wettest April on record; Brown coal's allure in new coal economy; When oil and gas talks, Obama team listens more closely
- Consumption, population, and declining Earth: Wake-up call for Rio 20
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- FDA delays deadline for new US sunscreen labels
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- Editorials: Court case shouldn't halt Fox River cleanup; Barking up wrong tree on 'fracking' for gas
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