Tag Archives: Water

Hollywood Ink: Now Starring, No. 13, Alex Rodriguez

TV Bites: Zac Efron Finds His Inner Anakin Skywalker

Piranha 3D Footage Too Racy for Comic-Con?

Considering the marketing campaign for Piranha 3D has revolved around girl-slapping videos , wet t-shirts, straight up nudity and all-around misogyny — not to mention the implied carnage that thousands of CG-created 3D piranhas can do to an unsuspecting co-ed swimming in the water — that it has been deemed not appropriate for families attending Comic-Con next weekend should come as a surprise to exactly no one.

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Piranha 3D Footage Too Racy for Comic-Con?

US Company Set to Ship Billions of Gallons of Water from Alaska to India

Photo via Alaskan Dude India is hurting for water. With rapidly growing populations of people and a rising middle class that is mimicking the wasteful water consumption habits well known here in the United States, coupled with poor water management practices, India is set to be one of the first parts of the world hit by a major water crisis . Still, does that mean shipping water from Alaska all the way to India is a smart solution? On… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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US Company Set to Ship Billions of Gallons of Water from Alaska to India

BP: Cap on gushing well removed, oil flows freely

Robotic submarines removed the cap from the gushing well in the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday, beginning a period of at least two days when oil will flow freely into the sea. It's the first step in placing a tighter dome that is supposed to funnel more oil to collection ships on the surface a mile above. If all goes according to plan, the tandem of the tighter cap and the surface ships could keep all the oil from polluting the fragile Gulf as soon as Monday. BP spokesman Mark Proegler said the old cap was removed at 12:37 p.m. CDT on Saturday. “Over the next four to seven days, depending on how things go, we should get that sealing cap on. That's our plan,” said Kent Wells, a BP senior vice president. It would be only a temporary solution to the catastrophe unleashed by a drilling rig explosion nearly 12 weeks ago. It won't plug the busted well and it remains uncertain that it will succeed. The oil is flowing mostly unabated into the water for about 48 hours — long enough for as much as 5 million gallons to gush out — until the new cap is installed. The hope for a permanent solution remains with two relief wells intended to plug it completely far beneath the seafloor. Engineers now begin removing a bolted flange below the dome. The flange has to be taken off so another piece of equipment called a flange spool can go over the drill pipe, where the sealing cap will be connected. The work could spill over into Sunday, Wells said, depending on how hard it is to pull off the flange. BP has a backup plan in case that doesn't work: A piece of machinery will pry the top and the bottom of the flange apart. On Friday, National Incident Commander Thad Allen had said the cap could be in place by Monday. That's still possible, given the timeline BP submitted to the federal government, but officials say it could take up to a week of tests before it's clear whether the new cap is working. The cap now in use was installed June 4, but because it had to be fitted over a jagged cut in the well pipe, it allows some crude to escape. The new cap — dubbed “Top Hat Number 10” — follows 80 days of failures to contain or plug the leak. added by: JanforGore

San Jose, CA Considers Privatizing Municipal Water to Bail Out Budget

Photo via Alex E. Proimos San Jose, California is having a lot of trouble closing its budget deficit. After cutting back on public benefits like library hours and reducing pay for city workers, it is now looking at selling municipal water to a private corporation for a gain of around $50 million. Mayor Chuck Reed told Mercury News, “I’m trying to be creative about balancing the budget. This is an obvious potential source of money, and I have to look at it seriously… I’d like to put it up on eBay and see what we can get.”… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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San Jose, CA Considers Privatizing Municipal Water to Bail Out Budget

Kaj Meets DMX: Vanguard Extra

In this Vanguard extra, correspondent Kaj Larsen talks about an unusual moment of levity while shooting the episode “War Crimes.” At Arizona's Maricopa County Jail, inmates insisted on bringing him “X” — which turned out not to be an offer for drugs, but a chance introduction to rapper DMX. Watch a trailer for “War Crimes”: http://current.com/shows/vanguard/92518362_war-crimes-vanguard-trailer.htm “Vanguard,” airing weekly on Current TV Wednesdays at 10/9c, is a no-limits documentary series whose award-winning correspondents put themselves in extraordinary situations to immerse viewers in global issues that have a large social significance. Unlike sound-bite driven reporting, the show's correspondents, Adam Yamaguchi, Kaj Larsen, Christof Putzel and Mariana van Zeller, serve as trusted guides who take viewers on in-depth real life adventures in pursuit of some of the world's most important stories. For more, go to http://current.com/vanguard . added by: Kaj

Riki Ott: BP, Governments Downplay Public Health Risk From Oil and Dispersants

See more photos at link Pensacola Beach, FL — When Ryan Heffernan, a volunteer with Emerald Coastkeeper, noticed a bag of oily debris floating off in Santa Rosa Sound, she ran up to BP's HazMat-trained workers to ask if they would retrieve it. “No, ma'am,” one replied politely. “We can't go in the ocean. It's contaminated.” Ryan waded in and retrieved the bag. That was Wednesday, June 23, the first day visible oil hit Pensacola Beach. Ryan had been swimming off the beach the day before, as she said, “to get in my last swim before the oil hit.” The trouble is that not all of the oil coming ashore is visible. Dispersed oil – tiny bubbles of oil encased in chemical dispersants – are in the water column. On Thursday Ryan was treated at a local doctor's office for skin rash on her legs. Three days later on Pensacola Beach, I watched BP's HazMat-trained workers shovel surface oiled sand and oily debris into bags early in the morning. The workers followed the waterline like shorebirds, scurrying up the beach in front of breaking waves and moving back down with receding waters. The late morning sun retired the workers to the shade of their tents and the job of “observing,” while it brought out throngs of beach-goers — children, parents, grandparents — who happily plunged into the “contaminated” ocean without a second thought. I was astounded. Why did people think the ocean was safe for swimming? There were five HazMat tents, four front-loaders, and at least two dozen HazMat workers on the beach. HazMat workers wore yellow over-boots duct-taped to their long pants' legs to minimize risk of contact with the water. The white surf popped with visible black tar balls as it rolled towards the beach. Waves left an oily signature of tar balls on the beach, melting in the sun. The treads of my Chacos weighed down with oily sand despite trying to avoid the mess. Most people were barefoot. Hotels set up oil cleaning stations on their premises – and signs saying the water advisory (put in place after Ryan's incident) had been lifted. What's wrong with this picture? Lots. For starters, Ryan's story from Pensacola Beach is not an isolated incident. I have received emails and heard personal stories from Louisiana to Florida of people who have developed skin rashes and blisters from going in the ocean. People describe stings by “invisible jellyfish.” Turtle patrol volunteers who walk beaches daily write of blisters and bronchitis. And then there are individuals like Sheri Allen who took her dog for a walk on a beach in Mobile Bay in May. Sheri wrote me that her “arms and legs were burning, even after the shower. The following morning … (there were) … small blood blisters. By evening the blisters had begun to welt. By the fourth day, the areas had got larger and swollen.” She went to see a doctor but the sores remain and they have begun to scar her arms and legs. For several days after Sherri's incident, her husband found fish kills on the beach. William Rea, MD, who founded the Environmental Health Center-Dallas, treated a number of sick Exxon Valdez cleanup workers. He once told me, “When you have sick people and sick animals, and they are sick because of the same chemical, that's the strongest evidence possible that that chemical is a problem.” It's not just skin rashes and blisters. At community forums, I commonly hear from adults and children with persistent coughs, stuffy sinuses, headaches, burning eyes, sore throats, ear bleeds, and fatigue. These symptoms are consistent across the four Gulf states that I have visited. Further, the symptoms of respiratory problems, central nervous system distress, and skin irritation are consistent with overexposure to crude oil through the two primary routes of exposure: inhalation and skin contact. Most distressing to me are stories about sick children. “Dose plus host makes the poison,” I learned in toxicology. A small child is at risk of breathing a higher dose of contaminants per body weight than an adult. Children, pregnant women, people with compromised or stressed immune systems like cancer survivors and asthma sufferers, and African Americans are more at risk from oil and chemical exposure – the latter because they are prone to sickle cell anemia and 2-butoxyethanol can cause, or worsen, blood disorders. Public officials have failed to sound an alarm about the public health threat because three federal agencies – DHHS, EPA, and OSHA – cannot find any unsafe levels of oil in air or water. Perhaps the federal air and water standards are not stringent enough to protect the public from oil pollution. Our federal laws are outdated and do not protect us from the toxic threat from oil – now widely recognized in the scientific and medical community. BP is still in the dark ages on oil toxicity. BP officials stress that, by the time oil gets to shore, it is “weathered” and missing the highly volatile compounds like the carcinogenic benzene, among others. BP fails to mention the threat from dispersed oil, ultrafine particles (PAHs), and chemical dispersants, which include industrial solvents and proprietary compounds, many hazardous to humans. If oil was so nontoxic, then why are the spill response workers giving hazardous waste training? Our federal government should stop pretending that everything is okay. What isn't safe for workers isn't safe for the general public either. Ryan's rash was getting better until she sat on Pensacola Beach to watch fireworks on July 4. The next day her skin erupted in fiery red burns. She is worried about her health. So are many other people along the Gulf. Perhaps it is time for the government to protect public health first and BP's profit second. Riki Ott, PhD, is a marine toxicologist from Alaska, volunteering in the Gulf. She has written two books on surviving the Exxon Valdez oil spill – Sound Truth and Corporate Myths on biological impact of oil to people and wildlife, and Not One Drop on emotional impact of disaster trauma and litigation to people and community. www.rikiott.com . Ott is working with Emerald Coastkeeper and others to petition the EPA to delist toxic chemical products in oil spill response. added by: samantha420

Avril Lavigne, Brody Jenner Tattoo Their Names On Each Other

Singer and ‘The Hills’ star have been dating for months. By MTV News Staff Avril Lavigne Photo: Steven A Henry/WireImage Just four months into her relationship with “The Hills” star Brody Jenner, Avril Lavigne has taken the plunge. No, the divorced 25-year-old singer isn’t getting married again, but according to gossip site X17 , she and Jenner recently got each other’s names tattooed on their torso. Paparazzi photos of Lavigne and Jenner on a recent trip to the beach show the word “Brody” imprinted just below Lavigne’s left breast and what appears to be her first name on the inside of his arm. The couple displayed their new ink during a recent July 4 outing in Malibu, California, where they were photographed hugging on the beach and paddling surfboards in the water. In May, the couple also reportedly got the word “F—” tattooed on their respective rib cages after just a month together. (Avril confirmed her “F—” tattoo when she appeared in the June/July issue of ) That followed their first double-inking, in April, when they got matching lightning bolts during a trip to Las Vegas. Lavigne has a history of getting matching tats with pals and lovers, including a small pink heart surrounding the letter “D” in honor of her former husband, Deryk Whibley, singer for Sum 41. She’s also got a star on the inside of her left wrist that matches a tat on the body of musical collaborator/producer Ben Moody, ex-guitarist for Evanescence. Lavigne, who is working on songs for her fifth album, was most recently heard on Almost Alice, an album of music inspired by Tim Burton’s “Alice in Wonderland” that included her lead track, “Alice.” Should couples get matching tattoos? Would you do it? Discuss it in the comments! Related Artists Avril Lavigne

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Avril Lavigne, Brody Jenner Tattoo Their Names On Each Other

Oil Spill Could Mean Toxic Arsenic Build-Up in Gulf

Photo via John E. Lester Arsenic is a naturally occurring toxin present in minerals and also introduced into the water by oil spills and the wastewater from oil rigs. Usually, the ocean can filter out arsenic through the sediments on the sea floor. However, researchers from Imperial College London have found that the presence of oil in seawater disrupts the ocean’s ability to filter out arsenic, which means it can build up and enter the food chain, causing anything from birth defects to changes in behavior among marine animals. That means the oi… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Oil Spill Could Mean Toxic Arsenic Build-Up in Gulf