March 1981


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National headlines

International headlines

 

NATIONAL HEADLINES

Toronto farmer’s markets face fee exclusion

VANESSA PURDY (read by Tyler Irving): Toronto Farmer’s Markets could be granted a waive in their fees thanks to city councillor Mike Layton. Layton is trying to save farmers’ markets thousands of dollars in parking fees by introducing an annual permit designed solely for selling local produce.

Recently, transportation officials became aware that the traditional street event fee of $81.33 didn’t really apply, as it was intended as a not for profit rate, one that doesn’t technically apply. This has resulted in the application of a daily charge for farmer’s markets, one that could leave them out of business. It could be upwards of $2,000 for parking alone. In general, farmer’s markets have annual budgets of less than $10,000.

Toronto is home to 30 farmers’ markets, in operation from May to October, and a minimum of 5 would be affected by these changes: Trinity-Bellwoods, Withrow Park, Riverdale Farm, East Lynn and Sorauren Park. Councillor Layton has proposed a one-time fee to be enacted annually and with consultation by transportation officials, set at a daily rate of $71.97. [ index ]

ECO Canada announces employer of the year

VANESSA PURDY (read by Tyler Irving): ECO Canada, a group that is part of Canada’s sector council initiative established in 1992 and develops programs to help people build environmental careers, announced their annual Environmental Employer of the Year Award winners. They have picked companies for dedication to environmental human resource excellence. These awards are chosen based on employee evaluation.

The winners this year are SIMS Recycling Solutions, a recycling company spreading 5 continents, in the large company category, and Environmental Dynamics Inc, a western Canadian environmental consulting group, as a small to medium category. Grant Trump, President and CEO of ECO Canada, says: “Well-developed HR practices are the basis for any company’s success, but particularly when you consider the recruitment and retention demands of our industry today,”. And this is the spirit behind the largely employee-driven Environmental Employer of the Year Awards. [ index ]

Council of Canadians calls for the Great Lakes to be a commons

VANESSA PURDY (read by Tyler Irving): The Council of Canadians is calling for significant resources to be allocated toward protecting the Great Lakes as a Commons, a Protected Bioregion and a Public Trust. This announcement cames just as the Federal Government prepared to announce its new budget. The CC describes the how and why of this demand in their report today entitled Our Great Lakes Commons: A People’s Plan to Protect the Great Lakes Forever.

The report is a call to understanding and action on the new demand to designate the Great Lakes as a lived Commons, to be protected, managed and appreciated, especially by those who live around them. The protection would be based on the Public Trust Doctrine, and it must be proven that the lakes are integral to the livelihoods of those plants and animals living near them.

In the water chapter in the Alternative Federal Budget, the CC calls for $3.375 billion in funding throughout five years. This funding would go toward the cleaning of polluted rivers and lakes, and protecting Canada’s waterways from species that are invasive, and toward the Great Lakes clean up.

The long-term goal of CC and other groups is a full treaty between the United States and Canada declaring the Great Lakes to be a lived Commons. [ index ]

 

INTERNATIONAL HEADLINES

Major oil spill in South Atlantic

BRYANT BOULIANNE (read by Danielle Bonnett): A freight ship has broken up on Nightingale Island in the South Atlantic Ocean, spilling as much as 800 tons of oil. Nightingale Island is part of an island chain belonging to the United Kingdom. The M.S. Oliva ran aground near the island last week, and has since broken in two. All of the ship’s crew were rescued safely.

The ship has already released 800 tons of oil, with another 800 tons slowly leaking from the wreck. The spill has washed into penguin habitats, and has coated an estimated 20,000 rockhopper penguins with fuel oil. The island chain is home to large numbers of penguins, including the endangered rockhopper.

One salvage ship has been dispatched from South Africa, with another on its way. The response now will focus on cleaning up the spill, as well as trying to save as many oil-coated penguins as possible. [ index ]

U.S. debate over nuclear waste revived

BRYANT BOULIANNE (read by Danielle Bonnett): The ongoing nuclear accident in Japan is reviving debate in the United States over where to store nuclear waste. A contributing factor to the disaster at the Fukushima plant in Japan has been the large amount of spent nuclear fuel stored on-site. This spent fuel is kept immersed in storage pools, and is meant to be for temporary storage. But Japanese officials failed to find permanent storage sites for the waste, allowing it to accumulate on site. Japanese technicians are now working desperately to keep the on-site waste cool and contained.

The situation has reminded politicians in the United States that many American nuclear power plants are accumulating even larger stockpiles of on-site nuclear waste. This has led to arguing in Congress over the search for a permanent nuclear fuel dump. Debate is now going on over the proposed Yucca Mountain site in Nevada. Though many in Congress support the project, Nevada politicians and even President Obama have been fighting to cancel it. In the mean time, the United States will have to figure out where to permanently store its growing piles of nuclear waste in order to avoid disasters like those in Japan. [ index ]

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #234 – Nuclear Showdown: TGM Roundtable (March 25, 2011)

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

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Spent nuclear fuel, Hanford

Spent nuclear fuel, Hanford by United States Department of Energy

Last week we heard Dr Helen Caldicott call the nuclear crisis in Japan the end of nuclear energy. Not all environmentalists are in agreement on this. Green majority veterans Tyler Irving and Kevin Farmer join us for a roundtable on the issue.

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #234 – Nuclear Showdown: TGM Roundtable (March 25, 2011)

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

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Tim DeChristopher

Tim DeChristopher

Tim DeChristopher is an American environmental activist who made headlines by stopping an auction of land for oil and gas development. Tim has now been convicted and is facing jail for his actions. Prior to the conclusion of the case Mark Brooks caught up with Tim to discuss what happened.

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #234 – Nuclear Showdown: TGM Roundtable (March 25, 2011)

You can download the newscast 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.

National headlines

International headlines

 

NATIONAL HEADLINES

Saskatchewan EnerGuide program extended

VANESSA PURDY: This past Wednesday, the Saskatchewan government announced its plans to extend their program that offers incentives to homeowners making their residences more energy efficient, called EnerGuide. It was set to be finished at the end of March, but is now extended until Oct. 31, 2013. This decision comes after the program met with great success in the province, says Dustin Dunca, the Cabinet Minister responsible for the program.

EnerGuide offers of up to $5,000 to participating homeowners who make improvements such as better insulation, or furnace equipment. It is reported that 38,000 people made use of the program since its start six years ago. The province estimated that the yearly cost of EnerGuide grants will be $4 million and $8 million. The extension of the plan is a positive sign that the province is recognizing the importance of long-term sustainability on the micro level, and is willing to continue to invest in it, for the direct benefit of its population. [ index ]

Mackenzie Valley Pipeline project approved by Ottawa

MELISSA SHAW: The Mackenzie Valley Pipeline project was approved by Ottawa on March 10th. The pipeline will carry 1.2 billion cubic feet of natural gas from the Arctic Beaufort Sea to Northwestern Alberta daily and will cost 16 billion dollars to construct. Also included in the project is the development of three natural gas fields, a gathering system, processing plant, and another 457 km pipeline from Inuvik to the Norman Wells pipeline in the Northwest Territories.

The National Energy Board has issued a certificate of public convenience and necessity which allows construction to begin on the pipeline before December 2015. Several oil companies including Shell, Imperial Oil, and Exxon Mobil are backing the project but would still need to have over 6,000 permits from other boards and agencies to proceed.

Another major obstacle to the pipeline construction is the poor price of natural gas in the market which is forecast to increase by 2015. The project has been in planning stages since the 1970s. [ index ]

Ecojustice calls for Parliament to strengthen the CEAA

VANESSA PURDY: Ecojustice, a non-for-profit environmental law group, has formally called for Canada’s Parliament to strengthen the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act (CEAA). The group submitted a brief to the House of Commons Environment Committee earlier this week, capitalizing on the fact that the Committee is scheduled for it’s seven year review of the CEAA later in March.

The brief calls for stronger legislation regarding the assessment of disaster scenarios such as tar sands dam breaches and nuclear meltdowns. Will Amos, the director of the uOttawa Ecojustice branch, says there is a need to “reverse the Harper government’s systematic dismantling of environmental assessment law,”  As it stands, CEAA often does not adequately assess projects that have important environmental effects—and our protection against such scenarios is not even as good as U.S. law.

Some of Ecojustice’s recommendations in the brief include: focusing assessments towards overall project sustainability, not only adverse environmental effects; increasing and funding public participation in these environmental assessments on a federal level, and establishing an environmental assessment permit system which would prohibit projects from proceeding  without said permits. [ index ]

20th anniversary of the Canada-U.S Air Quality Agreement

MELISSA SHAW: March 14th marked the 20th anniversary of the Canada-U.S Air Quality Agreement. Cross border cooperation has resulted in a decrease in harmful emissions which cause smog and acid rain. According to Environment Minister Peter Kent the emissions that are known to cause acid rain have decreased by half and emissions that cause smog have decreased by one third since 1991. U.S Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson added that these joint efforts have protected American and Canadian families from asthma and other respiratory illnesses.

Canada added the Ozone Annex to the agreement in 2000 which resulted in a reduction of nitrogen oxide emissions by a third in the area of southern Ontario and Quebec. The U.S national Acid Rain Program has effectively decreased sulfur dioxide emissions by 67% from 1990 levels. These changes have also led to a 34% reduction in emissions of particulate matter which has been linked with health problems such as bronchitis, asthma, cardiac arrest, and premature death. [ index ]

U.S. research centre calls for Canada to preserve boreal forest

VANESSA PURDY: The Pew Environment Group, an American research centre, published a report on Wednesday calling on Canada to preserve its boreal forest on the grounds that it provides about $700 billion dollars of global value annually, by absorbing greenhouse gas emissions. The report cites this preservation as a global priority and calls the forest the “World’s Waterkeeper” . Canada’s boreal forest spans 60% of the country’s land mass, and is home to contains 25% of the world’s wetlands, 81 million hectares of surface water and the largest remaining body of unpolluted fresh water, Great Bear Lake.

PEG argues Canada needs to strengthen its controls on developments such as oil and gas extraction, mining, hydroelectric projects and logging in the region. PEG is citing a value figure arrived at by the Pembina Institute, from their 2009 analysis. The $700 billion figure includes its reported $401-billion value as carbon storage, $5.4-billion for natural pest-control provided by birds, and $110-billion for flood control, biodiversity promotion, and water filtering.

PEG is recommending that Canada protect at least 50 per cent of the forests from industrial activity, and mandate high quality sustainability practices on the remaining areas. As well, they call for reformation to mining legislation, the development of a national peatlands stewardship strategy, and a stay on developing new hydroelectric facilities until they are assessed as having minimal impact on ecosystems. [ index ]

Statistics Canada finds increasing number of Canadians going green

MELISSA SHAW: Statistics Canada has released their 2009 Households and the Environment survey which finds that an increasing number of Canadians are going green. Over 14 thousand households across the country were surveyed over the phone about their purchasing decisions and energy consumption.

Saskatchewan scored slightly higher then the national average with 84 percent of households reporting that they purchasing green cleaning products compared to 80 percent of Canadians. Residents of Saskatchewan were also more likely to unplug electronics when leaving home and close the blinds during the hottest part of the day. The number of households in Saskatchewan that were energy audited was 21 percent while the national average was only 12 percent. Gordon Dewis is a research analyst for Statistics Canada and he suggests that an energy efficiency grant program that was being offered at the time of the survey in Saskatchewan could explain the increase in the number of households being audited. [ index ]

 

INTERNATIONAL HEADLINES

Countries question nuclear future

BRYANT BOULIANNE (read by Vanessa Purdy): The unfolding nuclear crisis in Japan is causing other countries to reconsider nuclear energy. Last week’s earthquake and tsunami in Japan have caused catastrophic failures at the Fukushima nuclear plant, where work is ongoing to avert a partial meltdown. This week, German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced that Germany will close its seven oldest nuclear reactors. Germany has also temporarily suspended plans to extend the life of 17 other reactors while it re-considers the decision.

This comes as the EU announced that it will conduct stress-tests of European nuclear reactors. The disaster in Japan has also caused concern in China, where the Chinese State Council has suspended approval for new nuclear plants until further notice. China is also conducting safety checks at its existing power plants. The debate over nuclear energy has split opinion among environmentalists, with some arguing that it is too dangerous and produces too much toxic waste, while proponents argue that nuclear energy is necessary for a carbon-free future. [ index ]

Soot to blame for Himalayan melt: Study

BRYANT BOULIANNE (read by Vanessa Purdy): Black soot from cooking stoves and diesel engines may be a culprit in the melting of Tibetan glaciers, suggests a new study by scientists at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in the United States. The glaciers of the Tibetan Plateau hold the more ice than any other region outside of the poles, and have been affected by increasingly warming temperatures. But to some scientists, the rate at which these glaciers were melting was too quick to be attributed to global climate change alone.

Using computer modelling, the researchers show that black soot can deposit on top of ice and absorb sunlight, thereby speeding the melting of the ice. Scientists caution, however, that the model is only preliminary, and is unable to simulate the effects of black soot and global warming at the same time. Black soot is a major concern in China, where more than half of electricity is generated by coal. [ index ]

You can see the complete episode here: TGM #233 – The End of Nuclear? (March 18, 2011)

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

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Peter Dettling

Peter Dettling

The Will of the Land

  • Bryant Boulianne takes a long walk in some of Canada’s most beautiful spaces with author and photographer Peter Dettling, as they talk about his book “The Will of the Land” which is based on his experience with Banff National Park.

    You can see the complete episode here: TGM #233 – The End of Nuclear? (March 18, 2011)

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