Archive for August, 2011

Illegal logging activities blamed for flood in Indonesia

Rainforest News: Uncontrolled illegal logging has been blamed for a flash flood in Tangse district, Pidie regency, Aceh, on Thursday evening. The flood waters killed at least 12 people and displaced hundreds of families. "It's undeniable that the disaster was caused by illegal logging and land clearing activities in the region," Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) Aceh branch executive director Teuku Muhammad Zulfikar. Illegal logging activities became increasingly widespread in the region following the...

Digital cloud lets farmer know when to water

BBC: "Water availability is gradually declining. Even 30 years ago we had probably twice as much water as we have now." Glenn Schur has been farming for 30 years. His father first moved to the plains around Plainview, Texas in the late 1940s, and after graduating from college Mr Schur returned home to work on the farm he now owns. Almost half of the property's 1,800 acres are given over to cotton production, the rest is divided between grain sorghum, wheat, seed crops and livestock. Times...

Niger Delta left with $1bn oil pollution clean-up bill

Independent: Oil pollution in the Niger Delta has gone further than previously thought and a clean-up will take 20 years and cost over $1bn (£614.6m), the UN said. Half a century of oil production has had a "disastrous impact" on the swamps, mangroves and creeks of the south eastern Nigerian region of Ogoniland, forcing residents to breathe contaminated air and drink polluted water, according to a study by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP). "Since average life expectancy in Nigeria is less than 50 years,"...

United States: Tests: Oil spill’s most toxic compounds dissipated

Associated Press: The most toxic compounds in the estimated 50,000 gallons of oil that spilled into the Yellowstone River evaporated quickly after the pipeline break last month, leaving gobs of sticky crude that pose no threat to human health, federal officials said Thursday. There were no surprises in the recently released results of air, water and soil samples taken after the July 1 pipeline break near Laurel, said Steve Merritt, the on-scene cleanup coordinator for the Environmental Protection Agency. Samples...

Nigerian oil pollution may need world’s biggest clean-up: UN

AFP: Decades of oil pollution in Nigeria's Ogoniland region may require the world's biggest ever clean-up, the UN environmental agency said Thursday as it released a landmark report on the issue. The United Nations Environment Programme also called for the oil industry and the Nigerian government to contribute $1 billion to a clean-up fund for the region that activists say has been devastated by pollution. Restoration of the region could take up to 30 years, UNEP said. Activists reacted to the...

Famine spreads: 29,000 young children perish

Mongabay: Famine spreads: 29,000 young children perish As the UN announces that famine has spread in Somalia to three additional regions (making five in total now), the US has put the first number to the amount of children under 5 who have so far perished from starvation in the last 90 days: 29,000. Nearly half of the total population of Somalia is currently in need of emergency food assistance. Yet, the al Qaeda-linked group al-Shabab, which controls parts of Somalia, has made bringing assistance to many...

Nigeria’s Ogoniland needs biggest ever oil clean-up: U.N

Reuters: A U.N. report has criticized Shell and the Nigerian government for contributing to 50 years of pollution in a region of the Niger Delta which it says needs the world's largest ever oil clean-up, costing an initial $1 billion and taking up to 30 years. The United National Environment Programme (UNEP) analyzed the damage oil pollution has done in Ogoniland, a region in the oil-rich labyrinthine creeks, swamps and waterways of the Niger Delta, the heartland of Africa's largest oil and gas industry....

UN: Widespread oil damage found in Nigeria delta

Associated Press: A United Nations report says there is widespread ecological damage from oil spills in a region of Nigeria's crude-rich southern delta. The U.N. report, released Thursday, describes oil destroying crops and seeping into drinking water supplies in Ogoniland, a region of the Niger Delta. In one case, the U.N. found one village where drinking water was polluted with benzene 900 times more than the international limit. The U.N. also found one region where an oil spill 40 years ago hadn't been cleaned....

Midwest more prone to flooding from climate change, report says

Desmoines Register: A protected area near Hamburg in southwest Iowa was threatened by the floodwaters of the Missouri River in mid-June. This view is the levee as it heads to the north. The Natural Resources Defense Council's report on climate change and health threats is available at www.nrdc.org/climatemaps The Midwest, including Iowa, is facing higher risks of flood and more heat in an era of climate change, a new analysis by the nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council shows. That adds to health threats that...

Niger delta oil spill clean-up will take 30 years, says UN

Guardian: Cleaning up a succession of oil spills in a region of the Niger delta that have occurred over five decades will cost $1bn and take up to 30 years, according to a major UN report into oil contamination in the region. The United Nations Environment Programme (Unep) will announce on Thursday that Shell and other oil companies have for half a century systematically contaminated and failed to clean up a 1,000 square kilometre area of Ogoniland with devastating consequences for human health and wildlife....