Archive for the 'pollution' Category

Cruises - better than air travel?

Not quite.

Earlier this year, we were thinking about possible vacation destinations, and cruising down the Mediterranean sounded like a cool idea.  One of my coworkers raved about a 3 week cruise she took to Israel, Egypt, Turkey, Greece, which compelled me to investigate further.

Just as I was starting to get excited about the prospect of taking a cruise, I came across this article in the NY Times.  Basically, cruise lines are not well policed when it comes to compliance with environmental policies.  For example, did you know:

  • Most ships run on bunker fuel, which is the dirtiest and cheapest fuel oil
  • A one-week voyage on a large ship is estimated to produce 210,000 gallons of sewage, a million gallons of gray water (runoff from sinks, baths, showers, laundry and galleys), 25,000 gallons of oily bilge water, 11,550 gallons of sewage sludge and more than 130 gallons of hazardous wastes

Until the industry changes its ways and makes significant strides in reducing its carbon footprint, I won’t be taking a cruise anytime soon.

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Is it about being green or the green?

The economy continues to battle through troubled times. Unemployment is near an all time high, wages are down, uninsured numbers are on the rise, housing prices continue to fall, and trillions of dollars in wealth has evaporated. On top of this, we in California are facing one of the worst droughts we’ve seen in years. The only bright stop is the recent rise in the stock market.

During these times, I’ve heard people are trading in being green for some extra green. When it comes to putting food on the table or keeping a roof over your head vs. buying products that have are green (and more expensive), it’s tough to argue which one wins.

However, keep in mind that being green often means living a smarter and more frugal lifestyle. For example, turn off lights and appliances when you’re not using them. Take shorter showers. Use cloth towels instead of paper towels. Combine trips when you need to go out and run errands. Bring a reusable shopping bag to the market - it doesn’t cost you a thing, and you may even get a little green back from the store. In fact, doing many of the things we’ve been discussing in ThingsThatMakeYouGoGreen will help you save green.

If you have ideas and tips on green things that save green, let us know. I can be reached at greenhl [at] ttmygg [dot] com. I would personally love to hear your ideas!

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Emergency Green Plan

olympics.jpgThe Olympics start in a mere 11 days.

As you’ve likely heard, China has embarked on several measures to improve air quality, such as limiting the use of cars and the closing of dozens of factories.

Apparently, these efforts have had little impact. The Air Pollution Index, or API, (the API measures particulate matter) in Beijing has hovered over 101. To qualify for a “blue sky day,” which is supposedly safely for athletes, the API must be below 101.

As a result, the Chinese are implementing an “Emergency Green Plan”, banning 90% of the 3.3M private cars from the roads, and temporarily closing even more factories.

What do you think? Is it going to work? Or is it too late?

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It’s whack, yo!

Livescience.com has a very good article about 8 Signs the Animal Kingdom is Out of Whack.

I’m posting the article below…

1. Earlier Migration: Several bird species are making their annual northward jaunt slightly ahead of schedule in recent springs, as the East Coast of the United States heats up, according to a study detailed in the June issue of the journal Global Change Biology. The report confirms similar studies dating back to 2006. Early birds may not sound like a huge deal, but scientists warn that long-distance migrators who start out in South America, and therefore lack cues about the timing of spring in Northern Hemisphere destinations, will be less able to keep pace with the changing climate. “Trees and shrubs are further along in their development, and different groups of insects are out,” said lead author Abraham Miller-Rushing of Boston University. “Spring is coming earlier for most other plants and animals, but not for the long-distance migratory birds. Thus, these long-distance migrant birds may need to learn to eat different sources of food or face other challenges because of the changes in timing.”

2: Jellyfish Rule: An outbreak of jellyfish in oceans across the planet has resulted from the stinging creatures hitching rides on ships that circumnavigate the globe. In fact, studies suggest that almost a quarter of all marine species in international harbors are alien transplants, thanks to human-assisted dispersal.

3: Food Web Contaminated. Scientists said last month that they found toxic pollutants in nine deep-sea species of cephalopods, a class of mollusks that includes octopuses, squid, cuttlefish and nautiluses. Among the contaminants were at least two banned in the United States in the 1970s: dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Scientists say it’s further evidence that contaminants make their way deep into the marine food web.

4. Heading for the Hills: Thirty species of reptiles and amphibians have fled uphill to cooler climes as global warming has caused the mercury to rise. We could see a rash of extinctions occurring between 2050 and 2100, scientists say, because higher ground will eventually run out.

5. Penguins in Peril: A rapid population decline among penguins because, in addition to a warming planet, they face the triple whammy of oil pollution, depletion of fisheries and aggressive coastline development. “Penguins are among those species that show us that we are making fundamental changes to our world,” said Dee Boersma, a University of Washington biology professor who has studied the flightless birds for more than 25 years. “The fate of all species is to go extinct, but there are some species that go extinct before their time and we are facing that possibility with some penguins.

6. Sea-Life Shift: Scientists see a notable shift in the composition of coastal marine animal communities, caused in part by changing ocean temperatures, from vertebrates (fish) to invertebrates (lobsters, squid, and crabs), as well as from bottom-feeders to species that feed higher in the water column. Meanwhile, warm-water species have superseded larger, cool-water species in population size.

7. Migrating Parasite: The parasite Angiostronglyus vasorum, commonly known as “French heartworm,” is migrating northward because of rising temperatures. Normally found in southwestern England, the parasite has been detected in dogs admitted to animal hospitals in Scotland. Climbing temperatures in the country have also resulted in a sudden proliferation of slugs and snails.

8. Food Shortages: Plant-loving animals in extremely seasonal environments such as the Arctic struggle to feed themselves because global warming causes their food supply to peak in availability before they can reach breeding grounds. “Think of it like this,” said Eric Post, a biologist at Penn State. “You’ve been out on the town with friends, and on the way home you want to stop off for a bite to eat, but the restaurant you’ve always gone to has closed early. So you try for one around the corner that’s always open a little longer. But when you get to that one, it too is closed. For herbivores, the fact that there are several ‘restaurants’ — their food patches — dispersed across the landscape isn’t useful if they all begin closing at the same time in addition to closing earlier in the season.”

What do you guys think?  Are we totally screwed?  Is it too late?  …How many more days til George W is out of the White House?

CONGRESS, ACT NOW!!

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Happy feet no more

This is sad news:  in Brazil, hundreds of baby penguins are washing up dead on the shores of Brazil’s beaches.

The culprit?  It’s unclear but many speculate it’s either due to:  1.   overfishing, which causes penguins to fish closer to shore and get caught in swift current; or 2.  pollution, the Campos oil field (off the shores of Brazil) and other pollutants are weakening penguins’ immune systems.

It’s pretty sad to see so many plant and animal species being so detrimentally impacted by our environment.  Honeybees, polar bears, penguins and more… what next?

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