Archive for March 14th, 2013
Bees are still dying – an EU pesticide ban would be a start
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on March 14th, 2013
Guardian: When I wrote A World Without Bees to investigate why honeybees were mysteriously disappearing across the US and parts of Europe, one of the conclusions I came to – having talked to beekeepers, scientists, farmers and pesticide manufacturers, and waded through piles of academic papers – was that we must suspend the use of some neonicotinoid pesticides until we had a better idea of what harm they may be causing our bees.
The European commission has an opportunity to do just that on Friday by voting...
Tribes rejects payment from electricity company behind destructive Amazon dam
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on March 14th, 2013
Mongabay: Leaders of more than two dozen Kayapó indigenous communities have rejected a $9 million offer from Brazilian state energy company Eletrobras to fund development projects in their region due to the the firm's involvement in the construction of the Belo Monte dam, reports Amazon Watch, an activist group fighting the hydroelectric project.
Eletrobras had offered the money over a four year period, during which it is planning to proceed with the dam, which will redirect the flow of 80 percent of the...
United Kingdom: Cuadrilla delays fracking plans until 2014
Posted by BusinessGreen: Jessica Shankleman on March 14th, 2013
BusinessGreen: Cuadrilla Resources' controversial plans to extract potentially huge reserves of shale gas from underneath Lancashire have been pushed back by at least year, after the company withdrew its original planning application over environmental concerns. Cuadrilla had initially hoped to restart test drilling for shale gas reserves this year, after fracking was deemed safe by the government late last year. A temporary ban had been imposed in 2011 following two small earthquakes near Blackpool that were...
New Zealand suffering most widespread drought in at least 30 years as dairy industry takes hit
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on March 14th, 2013
Associated Press: Dairy farmer John Rose has sent more than 100 of his cows to the slaughterhouse over recent weeks as a severe drought browned pastures in New Zealand's normally verdant North Island.
He had to thin his herd so the remaining 550 cows have enough to eat, and he's supplementing their diet with ground palm kernel as the grass in his fields withers.
"We try and make sure they've got water and shade during the day and do the best we can for them,' he said. "It's very hard to remember when the last...
The natural ecosystems in the Colombian Orinoco Basin are in danger
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on March 14th, 2013
ScienceDaily: The Orinoco River flows from the Andesin Colombia to the Atlantic in Venezuela. The area of the basin includes landscapes of the Andes, plains of the Llanos and the Guiana shield. Orinoco's tributary rivers form a basin considered to be the 3rd most important river system on the planet, and one of the most biologically diverse areas of the world.
Colombia has shown a strong commitment to the achievement of the Convention on Biological Diversity's2010 biodiversity target, by promoting the conservation...