Tag Archives: river

Facebook Petition to Save Lake Skadar Made a Dam Difference

Image: chrn, Flickr TreeHugger joined our friends at Wild Wonders of Europe in putting out the call for signatures on a FaceBook petition to Save Lake Skadar . Thanks to all of you who signed, the strategy is bearing fruits. WWF has announced that the Montenegrin government has decided to call off the original plans to build 4 dams on the Morača River in Montenegro! It is reassuring to know that the voice of the people can still influence the inexorably grinding gears of … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Facebook Petition to Save Lake Skadar Made a Dam Difference

The Week in Pictures: 17 Nations Beat All-Time Heat Records, NASA Launches Google Phones Into Space, Fans Power Up Lollapalooza, and More (Slideshow)

Here is a sweaty stat to start your weekend off right: This summer 17 nations have already set or matched their all-time heat records; not to mention an all-time hottest temperature for Pakistan, and possibly all of Asia. In other green news, NASA has launched Google phones into space as cheap satellites; GOP candidate for governor in Colorado thinks a successful bike-sharing program in Denver threatens personal freedoms. We find out how an American ghost town ended up in the heart of the Amazon, and more, in our photo roundup of the top green news stories, below.

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The Week in Pictures: 17 Nations Beat All-Time Heat Records, NASA Launches Google Phones Into Space, Fans Power Up Lollapalooza, and More (Slideshow)

World’s Sixth-Largest River Discovered Under the Black Sea

This color-augmented 3-D radar image shows where the undersea channel enters the Black Sea from the Bosphorus. Photo by University of Leeds via the Daily Mail The broad and powerful Bosphorus defines Istanbul, splitting the city into two continents and solidifying its importance over centuries as a transit and trading route. Anyone who’s been out on its waters knows the strength of the strait and … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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World’s Sixth-Largest River Discovered Under the Black Sea

Bring Water Into Climate Change Negotiations

Longer periods of drought, decreased river flow, higher rainfall variability and lower soil moisture content: water is at the heart of the impacts of climate change. Yet the precious commodity scarcely features in climate negotiations. Three hundred million Africans lack access to clean water; 500 million lack access to proper sanitation, according to Bai-Mass Taal, Executive Secretary from the African Ministers’ Council on Water. “Lack of water security will be exacerbated by climate change, which directly threatens food security,” says Dr Ania Grobicki, head of the Global Water Partnership (GWP). Yet there is no focus on water in climate change negotiations under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. “There is no United Nations agency for water, and there's no international convention regulating water resource management and there is no water focus under the UNFCCC,” says Grobicki. “Water also evaporated from the text of the Copenhagen Accord.” Grobicki and her colleagues argue for a focus on adaptation measures on the ground. Rehabilitation and maintenance of existing infrastructure is one place to start. “With our local partners, we cleaned up a water course that was polluted by waste water from a sugar cane plantation in Swaziland,” says Alex Simalabwi from GWP's Partnership for Africa's Water Development project. “As a result 10,000 smallholder farmers have access to clean water.” Burkina Faso, where 80 percent of the population depends on agriculture for a living, has invested in the construction of more than 1,500 small dams since 1998. These reservoirs – built at relatively low-cost, often with local communities contributing labour to their construction – are a vital protection against drought. Most African agriculture is rain-fed, says Grobicki. “As climate variability increases and temperatures rise, water security drops radically. Dams ensure water is available throughout the year.” The scale and operation of water infrastructure needs to be carefully planned. “Using water from the river for irrigation might benefit a farming community, but it could have damaging effects downstream. That’s why it is important to have shared decision-making. In this process there will be trade-offs, but also shared benefits,” she says. Other adaptation measures include shifting to more drought-resistant crops and the use of satellite imaging to reveal moisture content of soil and guide farmers' irrigation efforts: pilot projects in several countries already send out such information via text messages to farmers' phones. Water-saving technologies can further maximise the benefits of these strategies. “Drip irrigation offers huge potential for saving water in rural areas, while remote sensing can be used to inform farmers about the moisture content of the soil so they know how much water they need to use to grow their crops,” says Grobicki. Drip irrigation is a highly efficient means of watering crops and applying fertiliser via tubing spread throughout the field. In Zimbabwe and Malawi, smallholder farmers are coping with drought with simple drip systems consisting of a couple of large plastic containers on a raised platform, and 100-odd metres of plastic tubes delivering the water to vegetable gardens. snip The call is for water to be recognised in climate change negotiations as both the transmitter of climate change impacts and an important vehicle for strengthening social, environmental and economic resilience to them. continued added by: JanforGore

Residents Speak Out on Natural Gas Fracking

Image credit: Wyoming: Upper Green River Valley /Flickr Natural gas “fracking” has become a contentious issue in the U.S., and now residents in four regions are getting the opportunity to talk about their concerns with the practice. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is holding four public information meetings (two have already happened) on “the proposed study of the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and its potential impacts on drinking water.” … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Residents Speak Out on Natural Gas Fracking

European nudes and American prudes

(Tribune Media Services) — It was 1978. My vagabuddy Gene and I were heading for a Turkish bath. With tattered towel around my waist, I walked gingerly across slippery marble into a steamy world of shadowy Turks under Byzantine domes. I felt gawky … and more naked than naked. After an awkward sit in the sauna, a muscular Turk, who doled out massages like cannery workers gut salmon, laid me onto a round marble slab. With a loud slap, he landed on me, his hands working as if kneading dough in a prison bakery. He smashed and stretched each of my tight muscles. Finally, like lobotomized Gumbys, we were led to marble thrones to be doused in hot water and scrubbed with coarse mittens. Dirt curled off of us in rolls. Finally, we emerged onto the streets of Istanbul, cleaner than we'd ever been. Any traveler to Europe who's visited a bath, perused a newsstand, hung out at a beach or park on a sunny day, or channel-surfed broadcast TV late at night has noticed that Europeans are more relaxed than Americans about nudity. In the south of France, sunbathing grandmothers have no tan lines. In Norway, young children play naked in fountains. On summer days, accountants in Munich head to the park on their lunch break to grin and bare it, trading corporate suits for birthday suits. It's quite a shock to Americans (they're the ones riding their bikes into the river and trees). In Belgium, huge billboards advertise soap by showing a woman's lathered-up breasts. A Copenhagen student tourist center welcomes visitors with a bowl of free condoms at their info desk. I'm not comfortable with all of this, though I do think Americans tend to be overly prudish. But if you can leave your inhibitions at home, you can better appreciate some of the amazing experiences Europe has to offer. In Finland, a trip to a public sauna — warmed by a wood-fired stove topped with rocks — not only feels good, but is a living slice of this culture. Historically, Turkish baths weren't just for getting clean — they were also a place for socializing, where Muslim women could look for a suitable bride for their sons or celebrate the birth of a baby. Croatia has some of the best beaches — many of them without any dress code. The trend dates back to royalty: In 1936, England's King Edward VIII visited the island of Rab on holiday. Wanting an all-over tan, he went through the proper channels to have one of Rab's beaches designated for nudists. Inspired by his example, other travelers followed suit (er, dropped suit) … and a phenomenon was born. Not everyone in Europe is comfortable with nudity. At the Vatican Museum, fig leaves cover many statues. From 1550 to 1800, the Church decided that certain parts of the human anatomy were obscene. Perhaps Church leaders associated these full-frontal sculptures with the outbreak of Renaissance humanism that reduced their power in Europe. Whatever the cause, they reacted by covering classical crotches with plaster fig leaves, the same kind of leaves that Adam and Eve used when the concept of “privates” was invented. Years ago, I faced my own fig-leaf dilemma. An early edition of my art-for-travelers guidebook featured a naked David on the cover. My publisher was concerned that bookstores in more conservative areas wouldn't stock it. A fig leaf would help sales. I proposed, just for fun, that we put a peelable fig leaf on the cover so readers could customize the level of nudity. I even paid half the cost and had the fun experience of writing “for fig leafs” on a check. Things get trickier when it comes to public television. Because of FCC regulations, we can't easily show spas, saunas, or beaches in Europe where nudity is the norm. And because I show paintings and sculptures of naked bodies, my programs are flagged by the network and, in some regions, aired only after 10 p.m., when things are less restrictive. In recent years, programmers actually got a list of how many seconds that marble and canvas body parts appeared in each episode. They couldn't inflict a Titian painting or a Bernini statue on a conservative viewership without taking heat and risking having to pay enormous fines of $275,000. You may not want to bring the more casual European approach to sex and the human body back home with you. And I'm not saying we should all run around naked. But I like a continent where the human body is considered a divine work of art worth admiring openly. added by: eden49

dumpling festival 2010

dumpling festival on 16th Jun 2010. A priest in traditional costume throws zongzi, a traditional Chinese rice dumpling, into the river during a religious ritual to honour patriotic Chinese poet Qu Yuan during the Dragon Boat Festival, also known as Duanwu Festival, at Longtan park in Beijing June 16, 2010. The festival commemorates the death of Qu Yuan, who drowned himself in 277 B.C. on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month to protest against the corrupt government of his time. The tradition

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dumpling festival 2010

Gulf’s Oil-Soaked Birds: Rescue or Kill?

By Eliott C. McLaughlin, CNN June 10, 2010 6:18 p.m. EDT A brown pelican coated in heavy oil tries to take flight on East Grand Terre Island, Louisiana. Some experts see it as a well-meaning flight of fancy. To others, cleaning a bird soaked with oil from the Gulf of Mexico is the only chance it has for survival. In the case of the brown pelican, removed last year from the endangered species list, it may be the only way to save the entire lot. “It's like triage on a battlefield. You have to weigh where you can have your best success,” said Ginette Hemley, the World Wildlife Fund's senior vice president for conservation strategies and science. Earlier this week, a German biologist painted a less rosy picture in an interview with the magazine Der Spiegel. Silvia Gaus of the Wattenmeer National Park said it was more humane to euthanize the birds because they will suffer a painful death regardless of whether the oil is scrubbed from their feathers. “According to serious studies, the middle-term survival rate of oil-soaked birds is under 1 percent,” Gaus told the magazine. “We, therefore, oppose cleaning birds.” The statement spotlighted a similar statement in 2002 from the World Wildlife Fund, which said it was reluctant to advise cleaning birds after the Prestige spill off the coast of Spain. In that incident, a sunken tanker dumped about 20 million gallons of oil off the Galician coast. The fund issued a statement earlier this week saying its 2002 remarks could not fairly be applied to the situation in the Gulf of Mexico. Thursday marked Day 52 of the gusher. “In many cases, WWF believes there is value in trying to clean and rehabilitate wildlife, especially if productive, viable adult animals can recover from exposure to oil,” the release said. “But every situation is different, and it is too soon to fully calculate the impact the Gulf spill will have on the long-term viability of populations of many species in the region.” Hemley said it could take up to three years to determine the spill's total impact on wildlife. According to Wednesday's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service numbers, rescue officials have collected 1,075 birds. Of those, 442 were alive and “visibly oiled.” Another 633 were found dead, and 109 of those were visibly oiled. The report states BP's Deepwater Horizon spill is not responsible for all dead birds. “How long will the birds survive that have been cleaned and released? We don't know yet,” Hemley said, explaining it depends on a variety of factors. Included are how quickly the bird was saved, the bird's age and size and the length of exposure to the oil, she said. Lee Hollingsworth, a wildlife adviser with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds in Wales, said other concerns are the level of saturation and how much oil a bird has ingested. Seabirds' feathers are weatherproofed by natural oils, stimulated by a gland in their lower back. This is why birds nuzzle their tail feathers when they're preening, Hollingsworth said. “If that gland is damaged,” he said, “then that no longer secretes oil.” Other rescue methods, such as holding the birds in captivity to protect them or moving them to a new habitat, can be dangerous as well, he said. Captivity is stressful, and changing a bird's environment introduces it to new prey and predators, whereas it was accustomed to its food and enemies in its natural habitat. Many birds are quite specialized, he said, and don't do well in artificial, foreign or zoo-like environs. The Welsh society joined the World Wildlife Fund in 2002, saying that heavily oiled birds could not be helped. But on Thursday, Hollingsworth said the 8-year-old statement was specific to the situation in Spain, which happened in chilly November. The Gulf is warm, which could bode well for the birds, he said. “The majority of [birds affected by the Prestige incident] didn't survive anyway. That, again, is due to the ingestion of oil and weatherproofing,” he said. Hollingsworth said many people cleaning birds are working for charities that don't receive much government funding, and it's important for such groups to prioritize their efforts and target areas where they'll do the most good. In the Gulf of Mexico, that may mean focusing on brown pelicans. The birds, which are native to the Atlantic Coast and eastern Gulf, spent almost 40 years on the endangered species list until last year . “The chances of success increase every time we deal with one of these unfortunate situations. … Hopefully we're getting better at this. –Ginette Hemley, World Wildlife Fund When salvaging just a few birds is so vital to the survival of a species, Hollingsworth said, “something has got to be done, and of course it's worth saving the bird.” Despite conflicting studies on the viability of washing birds, there are plenty of success stories. The International Bird Rescue and Research Center, which is working in the Gulf, cites several examples on its website. After the 2000 Treasure spill off the coast of South Africa, rescuers saved 21,000 African penguins and released about 19,500 birds back into their colonies, according to the center. The website notes rescuers also saved 32 snowy plovers after the 1999 New Carissa spill off the Oregon coast, 180 king eiders after a 1996 spill near Alaska's Pribilof Islands and 175 waterfowl after California's Santa Clara River spill of 1991. “It may seem like a small number but it was significant to us, as we knew what those animals endured being covered in very heavy and thick oil,” wrote Jay Holcomb, the center's executive director. Hemley said the wildlife fund would generally “err on the side of recovering birds.” After all, she said, it's not costly to rinse the birds and let them rest before scrubbing them with Dawn, the dishwashing liquid whose motto once was, “Takes grease out of your way.” Rescuers are always looking to improve on their methods for saving animals, and they've learned a lot since the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill off the coast of Southern California, she said. “The chances of success increase every time we deal with one of these unfortunate situations,” Hemley said. “Hopefully we're getting better at this.” added by: EthicalVegan

GUNS on the Border – Mexicans and American Agents Aim Weapons at Each Other

TODAY—-FBI says Mexican forces pointed guns at investigators of border shooting– | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Mexico News FROM WIRE REPORTS The Associated Press, Los Angeles Times CIUDAD JU

Chicago, Citing Benefits Of ‘Floaters’ – Tells Obama Administration To Take A Dive

Paraphrasing: ‘ city kids don’t know how to swim; and, so it’s better to have repulsive water to keep them from going in and drowning .’ I’m thinking that the ‘we can’t afford it just now’ argument would have been sufficient. Here’s a sample of Chicago Tribune coverage that spells out the essence: Three decades of improvements already have cleaned up the river to the point where 60 species of fish can be found in channels where just five once survived. But as more people are drawn to the waterways for recreation, federal and state officials have concluded that past efforts haven’t been good enough. After five years of study and two years of debate, the EPA concluded t… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Chicago, Citing Benefits Of ‘Floaters’ – Tells Obama Administration To Take A Dive