For
17 November
2005 |
From their earliest archeological remains, humans have been identified
by their garbage piles. In the industrial and nuclear era some forms
of human waste have left toxic and lethal legacies on the land.
How should these wastes be managed? Who should bear the brunt of
these residues? What the environmental justice issues reflected
in waste placement and management?
Non-Point Source Pollution - Agriculture &
Industrial Chemicals
FARM CHEMICAL
PROBLEMS
Morning Edition
Friday, October 24, 1997
NPR's John Nielsen reports on the Clinton administration's
new program for reducing the runoff of farm chemicals from the fields
where they're applied, into the nation's waterways. Agricultural runoff
has been linked to various ecological problems: most recently, fish
kills along the Atlantic coast. The federal government will make money
available to farmers who plant grasses and trees in buffer zones along
the edges of their fields. Those protective strips would take harmful
pollutants out of the water that passes through them and prevent the
chemicals from entering streams and rivers. (5:00)
PFIESTERIA &
CHICKENS
All Things Considered
Wednesday, September 17, 1997
NPR's John Nielsen examines the factors that maybe
involved in the fish kills reported along the Chesapeake Bay. In the
past six weeks, three rivers have been closed to commercial fishing
after the discovery of parasite-infested fish. Nutrients in the water
appear to be encouraging the proliferation of the parasite -- nutrients
that may come from agricultural runoff or other forms of water pollution.
At the moment, investigators are focusing on manure flowing into the
rivers from the scores of chicken farms along the Bay. But it's not
clear that this is the cause of the infestation. (6:00)
CONTAMINATED
WATER & DEFORMITIES
Morning Edition
Friday, January 02, 1998
Mary Losure of Minnesota Public Radio reports that
scientists have linked the frequency of deformed frogs to contaminated
well and ground water. Health experts are now investigating whether
those same contaminants pose a risk to humans. (7:19)
Dead
Zones
Weekend Edition - Saturday
Saturday, August 07, 1999
There are an estimated 50 "Dead Zones" in the world's oceans. Dead zones
can be natural events, but most occur when polluted water drains out
of cities and off farms and ends up concentrated in part of the ocean.
The pollution triggers a chain of events that sucks the oxygen out of
this water. The biggest Dead Zone in the Western Hemisphere develops
every year at this time in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, near the
mouth of the Mississippi River. NPR's John Nielsen reports. (4:40)
MTBE (methyl tertiary-butyl
ether) and Underground Storage Tanks
EPA’s federal underground storage tank (UST) regulations have
contributed greatly to reducing soil and groundwater contamination (by
MTBE and other fuel components) from USTs. However, not all UST systems
are regulated and not all components of regulated UST systems are regulated.
Even with the most ideal regulations, there will continue to be equipment
failures and installation mistakes which will result in releases of
fuel to the environment. See also MTBE
FAQs. and MTBE
in Drinking Water
MTBE in Massachusetts:
A REPORT ON GASOLINE
ADDITIVE METHYL TERTIARY BUTYL ETHER (MTBE) IN MASSACHUSETTS: MTBE’S
Threat to Citizens’ Health and Drinking Water
"MTBE
contamination is unfortunately the best-kept secret in Massachusetts.
There are no
blaring front-page headlines of contamination sites to rally opposition
to this gasoline additive - methyl tertiary butyl ether, known as
MTBE. There are no angry bands of citizens marching on the State House
to protest its use.
Sadly, there
are only media stories about how gasoline prices will skyrocket this
summer. This bodes ill for the future health and drinking water supplies
of the Commonwealth’s citizens. It also bodes ill for the future
budgets of Massachusetts and its municipalities as more and more MTBE-contaminated
sites must be cleaned up...."
MTBE in Maine:
MTBE
in Maine: Summary of Five Point Plan - October 13, 1998
MTBE
in California:
"Trading
Democracy: The Other Chapter 11" - Bill Moyers
Excerpt 1 -
Excerpt 2 -
Excerpt 3
Everyone's heard about NAFTA — the North American Free Trade Agreement
— and all the talk about jobs. But almost no one heard about one
obscure section of NAFTA — Chapter 11 — except for multinational
corporations who are using it to challenge democracy.
Chapter 11 is only one provision in the 555-page
North American Free Trade Agreement — negotiated to promote business
among the US, Canada and Mexico. It was supposedly written to protect
investors if foreign governments tried to seize their property.
But corporations have stretched NAFTA's Chapter 11
to undermine environmental decisions — the decisions of local
communities — even the verdict of an American jury. The cases
brought so far total almost four billion dollars.
Point Source
Pollution - Agricultural Waste and Industrial Sources
Texas
Hogs
All Things Considered
Wednesday, March 08, 2000
Janet Heimlich reports that large pork producers
are looking to the Texas panhandle for possible expansion as resistance
to their massive operations has grown in traditional pork producing
states such as Iowa and North Carolina. The panhandle's semi-arid climate
and sparse population make disposal of enormous quantities of hog waste
less of an environmental problem. (8:30)
EPA'S GUIDELINES FOR MANAGING ANIMAL WASTE
Morning Edition
Thursday, September 17, 1998
NPR's John Nielsen reports that the Environmental
Protection Agency has new guidelines for managing animal waste from
the nation's industrial-scale hog and poultry farms. The farms employ
tens of thousands of people, while producing 1.4 billion tons of manure
a year. The EPA wants to increase the number of inspections, and make
penalties more severe for farms that break the rules. (4:11)
Kansas Water
- Urban vs. Farming use of Water
Morning Edition
Tuesday, August 21, 2001
Much of America's heartland sits atop a vast underground
lake known as the High Plains Aquifer.
Stretching
as far north as Wyoming and South Dakota, and as far south as Texas,
both cities and farms use the aquifer as their primary source of water.
But now some officials are worried the aquifer is being over used, and
some areas may become depleted if new guidelines aren't established.
Peter Hancock from Kansas Public Radio takes a look at the controversy.
PHOENIX
RISING
All Things Considered
Wednesday, June 30, 1999
Mark Moran of member station KJZZ in Phoenix reports
on that city's recent and rapid growth. As one of the country's fastest
growing cities, Phoenix faces a slate of problems and challenges, ranging
from traffic congestion and pollution--to finding enough water to supply
the population. (3:30)
Research Tools
for Industrial Toxic Sources:
Internationl Aspects of Toxic Waste: US
toxic waste leaves Japan
Sunday, 14 May, 2000, 02:25 GMT 03:25 UK
A ship containing US toxic waste has set sail from
Japan - four weeks after being refused entry into the US and Canada.
The US military ship, carrying 100 tonnes of contaminated
waste, left Yokohama port on Saturday heading for the American territory
of Wake Island in the central Pacific.
US defence officials said the waste would be stored
there temporarily until its final destination was decided.
Protesters from the environmental group Greenpeace
have criticised the US Government for not having definite disposal plans
for the waste.
Toxic
waste 'dumped' in Golan
Wednesday, 20 December, 2000, 21:25 GMT
Syrian students have staged a protest in Damascus
over what they say is the dumping by Israel of toxic waste on the occupied
Golan Heights.
Calling for international help, they urged the United Nations Secretary
General, Kofi Annan, to send a mission to investigate.
A spokesman for the protesters, Medhat Saleh, said
barrels of paint, containing poisonous substances which could cause
cancer or gene deficiencies, had been discovered near five Syrian villages
on the Golan.
Private deal
The Israeli Environment Ministry denied the allegation.
It said in a statement that Israel did not dump any kind of waste on
the Golan Heights.
Golan
- Water
All Things Considered
Thursday, January 06, 2000
NPR's Linda Gradstein reports that one of the contentious
issues being discussed in the Israeli-Syrian peace talks is control
over water resources. Syria is demanding a return to its borders before
the 1967 war between Israel and Syria, which would include the water
sources for the entire Golan Heights. But Israel says that would give
Syria control over the Sea of Galilee, known as Lake Tiberius to the
Syrians, and that, the Israelis say, is unacceptable. (5:15)
Lawrence
Summers and the World Bank Memo (Source: The
Whirled Bank)
DATE: December 12, 1991
TO: Distribution
FR: Lawrence H. Summers
Subject: GEP
'Dirty' Industries: Just between you and me, shouldn't the World Bank
be encouraging MORE migration of the dirty industries to the LDCs [Less
Developed Countries]? I can think of three reasons.....
Postscript
(from the Whirled Bank)
After the memo became public in February 1992, Brazil's then-Secretary
of the Environment Jose Lutzenburger wrote back to Summers: "Your
reasoning is perfectly logical but totally insane... Your thoughts
[provide] a concrete example of the unbelievable alienation, reductionist
thinking, social ruthlessness and the arrogant ignorance of many conventional
'economists' concerning the nature of the world we live in... If the
World Bank keeps you as vice president it will lose all credibility.
To me it would confirm what I often said... the best thing that could
happen would be for the Bank to disappear." [...] Mr. Lutzenburger
was fired shortly after writing this letter.
Mr. Summers,
on the other hand, was appointed the U.S. Treasury Secretary on July
2nd, 1999, and served through the remainder of the Clinton Admistration.
Afterwards, he was named president of Harvard University.
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