January 1980


You can download this week’s first feature here or listen in the embedded player.

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Sky Garden

A volunteer tends the Sky Garden on the roof U of T's, Galbraith building. Photo by Urban Agriculture Society.

Whether it’s for reasons of sustainability, health promotion, or just for fun, the popularity of urban gardening is on the rise. Tyler Irving speaks to Jason Qu of the Campus Agriculture Project and Heather Wray of the Urban Agriculture Society about what it takes to start growing your own food in the city.

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #173: Urban Agriculturalists (January 22, 2010)

You can download the newscast here or listen in the embedded player.

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National headlines

International headlines

 

NATIONAL HEADLINES

The Canadian government reveals details of clean energy projects

DARYN CAISTER: The Canadian government has announced it will be spending a small fraction of the Clean Energy Fund on green energy projects. Canada’s one billion dollar clean energy fund will be spent mostly on carbon capture and storage projects amounting in $466 million on technology that’s viability has been very heavily debated. A further $146 million has been proposed for a variety of clean energy projects including test project smart grid technology installations that give consumers far more detailed information and control about their energy use in the home to help encourage voluntary reductions as well as improved efficiency such as turning on and off your heating and cooling by internet from work. Other projects will propose tidal and wave energy projects on the east and west coasts and heat recapture projects from energy plants and solar thermal test projects in Ontario. Funding is currently proposed for 19 projects that will be funded between 2.5 and 20 million each, most of which will go to large companies such as Enbridge Gas Distribution in Ontario, but will include some smaller companies and even the city of Yellowknife itself. The majority of the projects will involve bio-energy projects involving recapturing biomass, and many of which will be installed in smaller communities for the pilot periods. None of the deals have so far been finalized, and the government so far has not committed any of the clean energy grant money, only the $466 million for the CCS projects have been confirmed. Lisa Raitt, Canada’s natural resources minister said with the announcement that “Investments in clean energy technologies are a key part of our approach to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving the environment”. [ index ]

Ontario Lawn care companies threaten Lawsuit over Pesticides ban

PETER STOCK: A second lawsuit driven by provincial pesticide bans is heading toward the courts. According to the Canadian Press, a group representing approximately 36 lawn care companies is threatening to sue Ontario Environment Minister John Gerretsen and others wih fraud. The companies assert that peer-reviewed report that backstopped the ban was flawed and that the government’s reclassification of pesticides was based on a methodology that “was not based on regulatory science”. The group’s spokeperson, Jeffrey Lowes, of the kingston ON based-PR firm MREP Communications, claims for instance that one of the scientists listed as a peer-reviwer denies having reviewed the report. She was not even aware that her name was included until the report was issued. The Ontario complain comes on the heels of a $2 million suit filed by Dow Agro Sciences LLC against the province of Quebec. That suit claims that the quebec ban violates trade laws because it prohibits a product without adequate scientific evidence. Ontario’s ban, which took effect last April, prohibits the sale and cosmetic use of more than 80 ingredients and 250 products, as a way of protecting public health and the environment. The Ontario suit will first be heard Feburary 17th in a Kingston court. Geretson’s office said they would not comment until they had reviewed the court filings. [ index ]

British Colombia has begun to mitigate the effects of its destroyed forests

DARYN CAISTER: British Colombia has begun to enter the next phase of its battle with the pine beetle, what to do with the destroyed wood. The pine beetle was reached in peak according to experts, leaving BC with a legacy of not only destroyed hectares of forest, but a natural area that has been turned from a massive natural carbon sink, to a net carbon emitter due to the slow release of the stored carbon from all the dead trees. The tar sands in Alberta generated approximately 38 megatons of carbon dioxide last year, dwarfed by the emissions from dead trees in BC measured at a CO2 equivalent of 74 megaton’s. One of the proposed solutions that is being considered by the province is a new process being employed by Nexterra, by turning the dead trees into “syngas” a relatively pollution light fossil fuel alternative. Nexterra is developing small-scale systems for distribution all over British Colombia, and has installed plants in industrial settings, institutions and residential housing areas despite the relatively newness of the technology. CEO Jonathan Rhone says there’s still much work to be done. Climate change expert Andrew Weaver points out that forests as carbon sinks and emitters have been traditionally overlooked in carbon models, particularly carbon mitigation plans, despite what science now knows about their large impact on the carbon cycle although more recently models have taken the effect seriously and integrated detailed forestry data into newer modelling systems. BC’s pine forests have been measured as a net carbon emitter due to the infestation since 2003. [ index ]

Charest fires back on Quebec Climate change position

PETER STOCK: A political cold front remained stubbornly in place in Quebec, according to a report in the Globe and Mail this week. Relations between the provence and the feds have been frosty since Premier Jean Charest was chastised by environment minister Jim Prentice for Charest’s blunt comments at last December’s Copenhagen climate conference. There Charest described the gap between the Province’s and Federal efforts to reduce green house gases as “a tale of two Canada’s”. Prentice followed that salvo with his own saying that Charest’s “divisive comments” were not helpful in supporting canada’s climate change efforts. Round three was this week, at the opening of an organic waste treatment plant near riviere du loup Standing next to a stoically smiling Prime Minister Harper, Premiere Charest revived the feud, saying : “I think it is important in politics to speak frankly and directly, “I went to Copenhagen to speak to this issue as someone who represents a population, a nation that believes very deeply in this commitment that we made. There is not a single word I would change. Unlike the Federal Government, Quebec subscribes to the Kyoto protocol and has committed to reduce GHG emissions by 20% from 1990 levels by 2020. For his part, Harper stuck to the high road, saying simply:”Our governments don’t always agree but that doesn’t mean we don’t work together when we share objectives,” He pointed to the Cacouna project as a shared initiative to reduce GHG. The organic waste treatment plant will handle up to 20,000 tons of waste annually and generate a renewable fuel called biomethane to be used in the fleet of about 30 municipal vehicles.
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Sierra Club of Canada is continuing its battle for reform on Canadian pesticide laws

DARYN CAISTER: Sierra Club of Canada is continuing its battle for reform on Canadian pesticide laws. This week the Sierra Club called upon the Canadian government to review “spiro-tetra-mat”, a pesticide marketed as Movento or Ultor under concerns it might be a danger to honey bees. The pesticide, produced by Bayer CropScience, was banned in the US by federal court last month as the result of a suit by Natural Resources Defence Council and the Xerces Society. The pesticide has been identified as potentially interfering with honey bees ability to reproduce, and its approval was fast-tracked by Health Canada in 2008 without public consults for its use for vegetables and fruit that is mostly pollinated by honey bees. The Sierra Club is asking for the Canadian government to take the cue from the US court decision and reanalyze its position on the chemical, particularly due to its incomplete assessment and approval in Canada. The Sierra Club also pointed out that honey bees are already under threat from the so called “colony collapse disorder” and that if this chemical is not a contributing factor to the disorder then it may certainly be a compounding factor to the problem. During the 2008-09 seasons the Canadian Association of Professional Apiculturists reported that Canadian commercial beekeeping operation lost more than a third of its colonies over the winter which was more than twice the baseline rate of mortality. Bee-keepers will be discussing the issues at an upcoming Canadian conference, and Sierra Club is optimistic about its pressure on the Canadian government due to recent reform rulings concerning Canadian pesticide regulations over the past couple of years. [ index ]

Consumers must share GHG responsibility with Tar Sands

PETER STOCK: The much maligned Tar Sands got a reprieve this week when the Conference Board of Canada reminded energy users that they shared responsibility for reversing climate change. The report – titled “ Getting the Balance Right: The Oil Sands, Exporting and Sustainability.” — recommends that energy producers continue to seek and implement new technologies to make oil extraction cleaner. At the same time, long term demand for energy must also be reduced. Len Coad, Director, Environment, Energy and Transportation Policy, and co-author of the report along with Glen Hodgson, Senior Vice President and Chief Economist. Said “The perceived Achilles heel of the oil sands is its higher levels of greenhouse gas emissions. But on a wells-to-wheels basis, oil sands are not significantly dirtier than oil from many other global sources. Furthermore, Canada and the United States will continue to rely on oil products for the foreseeable future, and the oil sands offer advantages as a preferred supplier for North America,” The Conference Board noted that while the Oil Sands was responsible for about 5% of green house gas emissions, transportation – fueld by continued demand for light trucks and SUVs – was around 18% in 2007. Though it should be noted too that that 5% figure is expected to rise as production increases. [ index ]

Unions and environmental groups are teaming up to protect BC’s forests

DARYN CAISTER: Unions and environmental groups are teaming up to protect BC’s forests. Ben Parfitt, the new plans author has brought together forestry union leaders and BC environmental groups to promote a plan that urges the BC government to conserve more forest, reduce wood waste and promote more efficient forest product use under what it claims is a directed effort to stave off greenhouse gas emissions. The plan was formed post Copenhagen with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives as a catalyst. Seeing the precarious future of its product, forestry groups have become much more receptive to government interventiuon to protect the longterm value of its industry in BC, and are using the message of reducing carbon emissions as the rallying cry for its message. A report put out by the group entitled “Managing BC’s Forests for a Cooler Planet: Carbon Storage, Sustainable Jobs and Conservation” was released along with the BC Governent and Service Employees Union, the Pulp, Paper and Woodworkers of Canada, the David Suzuki Foundation, the Sierra Club of BC and several other groups. The report calls for longer timeframes between logging periods, increased conservation areas, changing the allowable annual cut rule with a new system based on carbon storage which will be known as the Carbon Cut Calculation and several other progressive policies backed by a wide range of Canadian environmental groups. [ index ]

 

INTERNATIONAL HEADLINES

South Africa To Introduce a New Vehicle Tax to Reduce the Country’s CO2 Emissions

NAOMI JEHLICKA:  This past Wednesday, a South African government official announced his country’s plan to introduce a new tax on vehicles, in efforts to curb the country’s carbon dioxide emissions. In addition to reducing South Africa’s ecological footprint, the tax is a means to increase tax revenues that have declined sharply as a result of the massive 2008 recession.

Not everybody welcomes this tax; some officials and economists worry that while the tax is founded on good green principles, it could severely affect the struggling auto industry – an industry particularly affected by last year’s world wide recession. Popular car manufactures like BMW, Ford, General Motors, and Volkswagen all have manufacturing plants in South Africa and thus provide a major source of employment for South Africans. Higher taxes generally reduce sale volumes and the availability of jobs, and those opposing the tax worry that economic recovery will be slowed as a side effect of this tax.

Not only does this tax pose a considerable threat to the South African motor industry, but the infrastructure to operate enviro-friendly machinery is non-existent in the country. Like many developing countries, South Africa lacks the correct type of fuel to support eco-friendly engines and cannot afford to implement a massive reconstructing of this framework in time for the legislation’s implementation. Currently, South Africa only conforms to Euro 2 engine emission levels. To put this into perspective, other – though more developed- countries have the infrastructure in place to support euro 5 compliant engines. The National Association of automobile Manufacturers suggests that the introduction of the new tax should go hand in hand with the introduction of Euro 4 enabling fuel, since car designs are limited to older models since hybrid cars and other variants of less-polluting engine vehicles cannot be operated in this region. Despite these concerns, the new tax will come into effect in March 2010.
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US Farmers Against Federal Climate Change Legislation

NAOMI JEHLICKA:  This past Tuesday, the largest US agricultural advocacy group officially requested that the US Congress prevent legislation regulating greenhouse gas emission. The American Farm Bureau Federation (or AFBF for short), which represents close to 6 million Americans, voiced its firm opposition to federal legislation designed to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. In a critique of US climate legislation, Phil Nelson, the president of the Illinois Farm Bureau, warns that green house gas regulation “would significantly burden all sectors of the economy in addition to raising the food prices.” The only national greenhouse gas reduction strategy endorsed by the AFBF is a voluntary cap-and-trade system – all other strategies have been greeted with strong opposition from this advocacy group.

While farmers in the United States are sceptical about national legislation curbing green house gas emissions, the same cannot be said for those in Canada. Organizations like the Canadian Federation of Agriculture are active participants in climate-change reduction programs like the federally-run Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Program and many small-scale farmers have joined eco-friendly organizations like Local Food Plus or Ontario’s Own. It is hoped that the CFA will, through its actions, influence other agricultural organizations. [ index ]

Research Confirms Importance of Including Local Input when Designing Conservation Projects

NAOMI JEHLICKA:  According to new research from Purdue University, conservation groups sometimes implement ecological conservation strategies with little or no knowledge about local cultures or micro-economic activity, which results in a subpar environmental enforcement strategy. Dr. Melissa Remis, an anthropologist at Purdue University, studies gorillas, and researches issues specific to animal species, forest fragmentation, ecotourism, local culture and industry in the Central African Republic’s Dzanga-Sangha Dense Forest Reserve.

Home to elephants and gorillas, the reserve also serves as a research and tourism destination, as well as a good place for local hunting and logging. It is also close to the town of Bayanga, which is populated with farmers and logging migrants. While conservation groups chide the locals for endangering animals through their hunting practises, Dr. Remis suggests that conservationists should instead seek to understand how local economies and hunting techniques function, since, in some cases, they serve to better the lives of animals.

An example cited in this research is the selective logging practises undertaken by locals in the Dzanza-Sangha forest. Selective logging opens light gaps that results in herbaceous vegetation growth, which helps sustain the antelope – a primary food source for the locals that has been declining rapidly and because of this, the locals have been substituting antelopes for gorillas – a species that is in greater danger than the antelope. According to Dr. Remis, “this is an example where logging at certain low levels could actually help people sustain higher yields for hunting.” This notion reinforces the necessity of working with the locals when devising plans targeted to improve sustainability rather than working autonomously. [ index ]

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #172: (January 15, 2010)

You can download part one or part two of the feature here or listen in the embedded player.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

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Alternatives Journal

Alternatives Journal cover

Producer Peter Stock speaks with renowned academic, environmentalist and father of the Carbon Footprint, William Rees. The topic is ostensibly his Alternatives Journal New Ecology article “What If Prime Minister Harper and President Obama Led as Though Ecology Mattered”. But the conversation covers much more ground.

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #172: William Rees (January 15, 2009)

You can download the newscast here or listen in the embedded player.

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National headlines

International headlines

 

NATIONAL HEADLINES

Long awaited Mackenzie gas pipeline approved by review panel

DARYN CAISTER: The long awaited Mackenzie gas pipeline review has finally been returned, with an approval. The natural gas pipeline that was proposed to run through the Mackenzie valley has been under a state of a review for more than 5 years, and has been in planning for decades. The project is expected to cost around $16.2 billion dollars and would ship natural gas on behalf of Imperial Oil Company and other natural gas companies from the arctic down to connect with Alberta’s existing natural gas transportations infrastructure. The finished pipeline will be 1197 kilometres and will transport 1.2 billion cubic feet a day of natural gas at capacity. The project was and is feared to interrupt large swaths of previously untouched natural land along the permafrost, as well an animal habitat, and Inuit lands. While the project was ultimately approved, it comes with 176 recommendations from the finished report intended to minimize the environmental and cultural impact of the pipeline, as well as recommendations for staggering the development of associated infrastructure to service the pipeline to avoid what he report calls cumulative effects from the future vast swaths of development. Despite the recommendations, many environmental groups, and locals are frustrated at the news, and some northerners are excited as the prospect of what they see as opportunities for increased prosperity in their communities. Despite the passing of a major checkpoint, the final decision on construction of the project has not been made. The National Energy Board will have to make the final decision, and the companies themselves still may scrap the plan due to changing energy markets and a dispute between the federal government and the energy companies concerning their insistence that the federal government pitch in on the massive project. Alternative transition options have also presented themselves since the submission of the proposal and may also impact the possibility of a final project go-ahead. [ index ]

Pesticide banned in US, cleared in Canada

SHAK HAQ: A pesticide that is toxic to honeybees and was recently declared illegal in the United States, has not been officially banned in Canada. The pesticide, spirotetramat, impairs the bees’ ability to reproduce. Health Canada fast tracked the approval for the pesticide in 2008 for use on fruits and vegetables without public consultations. John Bennett, Executive Director of Sierra Club Canada stated, “we are asking the government to follow through with its strategy of taking its policy cues from the United States and rescind the registration of this pesticide in Canada. There is a crisis in bee populations around the world and pesticide use is considered to be one of the key contributing factors.” According to the Canadian Association of Professional Apiculturists (CAPA), the losses in Canadian commercial beekeeping operations incurred during the winter of 2008-2009 were more than twice the normal rate of mortality. This issue will be on the agenda at the annual beekeepers convention this week as the monetary value of pollination by honeybees is measured in the billions of dollars. [ index ]

Porter Island Airport in downtown Toronto predicts further expansions throughout 2010

DARYN CAISTER: Porter Island Airport in downtown Toronto predicts further expansions throughout 2010. The contentious Toronto Island airport is nearing the end of construction of a $45 million dollar expansion to its terminal and the port authority is already clamouring for further capital expenditures. On top of the already quickly growing terminal the port authority now anticipates to facilitate a further increase of 92 daily flights at the airport by the end of 2010. Porter airlines is currently the sole carrier at the recently renamed Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport which already carries 120 daily slots for flights. Previous estimates for Porters daily traffic was around 25,000 annual passengers which is expected to exceed 750,000 annually by the end of this year. The airport has been a sore issue in some parts of the city, particularly in recent months over its expansion due to fears or rapidly increasing noise and air pollution to the densely populated Toronto downtown core, as well as frustration over the large amounts of public funding that is being funnelled into a private monopoly that serves to benefit on a small portion of the population of Toronto. Fuelling the expansion comes from a very sympathetic Toronto Port Authority and interest from other airlines looking to move in to the new home including Air Canada Jazz which was previously booted from the Island airport, and Continental Airlines. Apparently the only reason the plans for further expansions were released was due to a necessary publicly accessible noise impact study and a capacity assessment, which the port authority decided to release on Christmas Eve The port authority has also purchased a new ferry to shuttle passengers to the airport after plans for a under-water tunnel connecting it to the south end of the city seem to have collapsed. [ index ]

UVic rabbit infestation solutions

SHAK HAQ: The rabbit population at the University of Victoria is out of control. The British Columbia university has given a local wildlife damage-control company named Common Ground a $12,000 contract to humanely remove the rabbits within two months. After that, Richard Piskor, director of occupational health, safety and environment for the university argues, “we would then consider alternatives…[that] may include lethal means.” The rabbit problem began approximately 15 years ago when a species of European rabbit, not native to the area, was set loose and eventually multiplied. With few natural predators, the rabbit population has increased to approximately 2,000 occupying the 150-hectare campus. Although the rabbits do not pose a risk to physical safety, they have become a nuisance. Piskor reports they dig warrens people have tripped over, eat the plants and grass on campus, and occasionally bite humans trying to feed them and yet they are desensitized to human presence as they do not react to passersby. Sara Dubois, manager of wildlife services for the British Columbia SPCA, supports the university’s approach and understands lethal measures may be necessary, but would need to ensure it is done humanely. She notes that part of the problem is that often students find baby rabbits, raise them, and will release them at the end of the school year when they are leaving, which only adds to the problem. Common Ground will test tactics with a sample population of 150 rabbits from the school’s athletic fields, which accounts for about 20 hectares of the campus. According to the Common Ground website, they promise to relocate them to “rabbit sanctuaries” and ensure all rabbits will be spayed or neutered before they are moved. After examining the success of the first batch of rabbit rescues, the strategy for the remaining population will be determined. [ index ]

Ontario joins multi-state lawsuit to protect Great Lakes from invasive species

DARYN CAISTER:  Ontario filed its contribution to a multi-state lawsuit in the US to protect the great lakes. Ontario joined Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Michigan in a US Supreme Court lawsuit to force the state of Illinois to shut down its shipping locks in Chicago to protect invasive species. The Asian carp has been detected outside the Chicago aqua-system and threatens to invade into the great lakes. The invasive Asian carp has been estimated to be a multi-billion dollar threat to the great lakes fishing industry as well as a public health hazard. The Asian carp is an extremely hungry predator which will eat so much plankton as to starve out other species and collapse the great lake ecosystem. The fish can weigh up to 45 kilograms and up to half their own body weight in plankton per day. They also pose public health hazards to boaters as they have been known to commonly jump out of the water when startled or scared and have injured boaters in several cases. Michigan claims that the invasion of the fish would cause $7 billion dollars in damage to its state, and Ontario would be particularly hard hit as it borders 4 of the 5 great lakes. Lake Erie is a particularly exposed lake to the carp as it houses one of the world’s largest freshwater perch and bass fisheries. The Asian carp was first introduced into the US intentionally for fish farming, but escaped from the Mississippi river during flooding in the 1990’s and since moved north. [ index ]

New poll suggests majority of Canadians unhappy with Prime Ministers Copenhagen effort

DARYN CAISTER:  A new poll suggests that the majority of Canadians were unhappy with the Prime Ministers Copenhagen effort. The Angus-Reid poll of more than a thousand Canadians showed that public support for the federal government’s climate change performance is not satisfactory. Just 28 percent of the polled said that they were satisfied with Mr. Harpers leadership at the international climate change talks, while 48 percent said they were dissatisfied. 56 percent of Canadians said they were frustrated with the fact that the final agreement that was reached in Copenhagen was not legally binding. Nearly half of Canadians said that they approved of the idea of creating a global fund to help poor nations adapt to climate change that would eventually grow to $100 billion US dollars, and more than half also liked the idea of reducing vehicle emissions by 50% over 1990 levels by 2020. Respondents were also asked about their feelings about climate change itself, and predictably the results were very similar to many of the other issues. Only 52% reported that they believe that climate change is a fact and mostly caused by industrial factors ie. man-made, 17% said that they believe that climate change is a real phenomenon but that it was mostly caused by natural causes, another 17% said that climate change was a theory and has not been proven, and 13% were not sure. [ index ]

Quebec follows California’s lead in car emissions standards

SHAK HAQ: This month, the province of Quebec will be adopting California’s strict auto-emission standards in an effort to tackle the province’s polluting transport sector, according to the CBC. Quebec will be the first province in Canada to adopt these standards set to take effect January 14. The standards impose limits on the maximum greenhouse gas emissions for light vehicles manufactured from 2010 to 2016 whereby 2016 vehicles may produce no more than 127 grams of greenhouse gas per kilometre. The system in California penalizes vehicles that do not meet the standards, but rewards vehicles that surpass them. This aspect caught the attention of Line Beauchamp, the province’s environment minister who has been observing and adapting the California program for the past two years. The emission caps apply to a manufacturer’s total vehicle fleet so companies coming in below their limit can bank their credits or sell them to others. In Quebec, 40 per cent of the province’s greenhouse gases is generated by the transport sector, half of which is produced by light vehicles. The light vehicle category includes passenger cars and light trucks. California first introduced the standards in 2004 and was met by many challenges from the auto industry and pegged by critics as “controversial.” Since then, however, several states have adopted the standards many of them neighbours to Quebec including Vermont, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Connecticut. The Obama administration proclaimed the intent for all states to adopt the standards by 2012. The Canadian government has yet to make a statement on whether these standards will be adopted nation-wide. [ index ]

Toronto plastic bag fees have reduced usage

SHAK HAQ: It has been more than seven months since Torontonians began paying the five-cent plastic bag fee. Since the by-law came into effect on June 1, 2009, there has been a significant reduction in plastic bag usage, reports say. Officials from the Canadian plastics industry estimate plastic bag profits to be approximately $15 million thus far, which may leave consumers wondering where the money is going. Vince Sferrazza, director of policy and planning for Toronto’s waste management services said, “The money doesn’t come to us, it goes directly to retailers and the city doesn’t have the authority to tell retailers how to spend their money.” Vice-president of environment for the Canadian Plastics Industry Association, Cathy Cirko, stated, “at five cents a bag, a lot of money is being collected and at the end of the day, it’s really the retailer who is benefiting.” Some larger chain retailers have made their figures public. Loblaws implemented the fee last January, before it was mandatory and pledged to give the World Wildlife Fund Canada $1 million a year for the next three years. Sobeys has partnered with Earth Day Canada and gives grants to schools and grassroots organizations for local environmental initiatives giving about $400,000 to 22 different organizations. Metro founded the Green Apple Grants, a charity that will make $2 million available to elementary and secondary schools in Ontario and Quebec. However, these larger corporations are stressing that only part of the plastic bag fees are going to charitable causes. They emphasize that the goal is to reduce the usage of plastic bags and promoting the donation aspect may encourage it. Regardless of where they are allocating their fee money, most major retailers reported a 70 per cent reduction in plastic bag use, which indicates the fee clearly served its purpose. [ index ]

 

INTERNATIONAL HEADLINES

Anti-Whaling Confrontation on the High Seas Destroys Activist Boat

BRYANT BOULIANNE: A confrontation between a Japanese whaling fleet and the anti-whaling activist group Sea Shepherd has resulted in the destruction of an activist boat. The incident occurred earlier this week in the Southern Ocean off Antarctica when the Japanese security ship Shonan Maru No.2 collided with the Sea Shepherd boat Ady Gil. The collision sheared off the bow of the Ady Gil leaving it dead in the water. The six-member crew was rescued by another Sea Shepherd ship, the Bob Barker, shortly after. A video of the incident released by Sea Shepherd appears to show the Japanese ship veer into a stationary Ady Gil before colliding with the front of the boat and then steering away. Sea Shepherd has claimed the attack on its boat was unprovoked. The Japanese fleet contends that the Ady Gil was attempting to tangle their ship’s propeller with rope. Confrontations between the two groups have escalated in the last few years as Sea Shepherd has tried to interfere with what they call illegal whaling by the Japanese fleet. The Japanese contend that their whaling expeditions are purely for scientific and not commercial purposes. [ index ]

Scientific Report Condemns Mountaintop-Removal Coal Mining

BRYANT BOULIANNE: A new report published this week in the journal Science by Margaret Palmer and colleagues highlights the negative environmental and health effects of a common form of coal extraction known as mountaintop mining. Using this method, coal is extracted by removing the vegetation and topsoil from a mountain and then using explosives to remove the mountaintop itself. Broken rock and debris from the explosions are then pushed into adjacent valleys to expose the coal seams underneath. This method is currently being used in West Virginia and Kentucky. The report states that current mitigation techniques fail to adequately restore surface vegetation. Furthermore, it says that the dumping of fill into valleys destroys streambeds and results in toxic compounds leeching downstream and into local groundwater, which may negatively impact human health. The report calls the current situation a failure of policy and enforcement of the U.S. Clean Water Act and recommends that permits for MTM mining should not be granted until effective mitigation methods can be found to restore the damage done by mountaintop mining. [ index ]

Greenpeace Creates New Green Rating for Electronics Companies

BRYANT BOULIANNE: Greenpeace has released its 14th quarterly “Guide to Greener Electronics” which ranks tech and electronics companies based on their environmental impact. The ratings take into account the amount of waste produced by each company, as well as its efforts at recycling and improving efficiency. This new report has added a new criterion, which takes into account whether a company lobbies for industry-wide changes that would have a positive effect on the environment. The newest ranking places Nokia and Sony Ericsson at the top as the greenest corporations, with Lenovo, Microsoft, and Nintendo ranked near the bottom as the least environmentally-friendly firms. The “Guide to Greener Electronics” aims to put pressure on tech companies to improve their environmental performance by allowing green-conscious consumers to select companies which do the most to reduce their impact on the environment. [ index ]

UK Reveals Plan to Boost Domestic Food Production

BRYANT BOULIANNE: The British Government has revealed its new “Food 2030” plan. The plan aims increase the amount of food produced within the country to reduce emissions associated with importing food and to improve domestic food security. The plan also aims to provide land for people to grow their own food, reduce emissions from agriculture, and to encourage people to purchase foods that are seasonal and sustainably farmed. The plan was introduced by Environment Secretary Hilary Benn who stated that a changing climate and a rising population meant that food should not be taken for granted. [ index ]

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #171: (January 08, 2010)

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