This week:

  • Science Correspondant Sapna Sharma recounts her experiences at the University of Toronto symposium and Al Gore lecture, Moving Canada towards sustainability.
  • Jordan Poppenk speaks with Michael Lewis Johnson from Streets are for People about their new campaign, I’ll quit smoking if you quit smogging.
  • Webhost Ryan Wiseman joins us in studio to speak about green web resources.

The headlines in brief:

  • A group of chemicals widely used as flame retardants are so harmful Environment Canada has added them to the country’s list of toxic chemicals and wants manufacturers banned from making them;
  • 1500 people and a large side-show of activists, rush-ticket seekers and scalpers came to hear Al Gore speak on Wednesday;
  • The University of Toronto is the new site for the Canadian branch of the Jane Goodall Institute;
  • Legislation to stop Great Lakes water from being shipped out of the region is being finalized;
  • Environmental activists gathered in Montreal this week to denounce federal government inaction on climate change;
    Nicholas Stern, an economist known around the world for sounding the fiscal alarm on climate change, visited Canada to speak with Environment Minister John Baird;
  • Canadian researchers have co-authored a biodiversity study on DNA bar-coding;
    The national media are waking up to environmental issues, with major new reporting efforts by the Toronto Star and the Globe & Mail;
  • Nine American states sued the US Government over toxic emissions from cement plants;
  • Hundreds of protesters in Poland expressed their concerns about a new highway construction that would cross a rare peat bog;
  • The government of Australia has announced that it plans to phase out incandescent lightbulbs within the next three years, and Ontario may follow suit;
  • Garbage carried by ocean currents is becoming a new source of friction between China and Taiwan;
  • A 15-year-old British student has built a biodiesel processing system in his family’s barn;
  • A new solar balloon technology might cut the cost of solar energy by 90% in the next few years.

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