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Grist for the Military

Navy divers clean up coastal messes

Navy divers are the latest crazy hippies clamoring to clean up coastal messes. For problems too expensive or vast for civilian government agencies to handle, military divers provide cutting-edge technology and finely tuned abilities -- and in turn, they get to sharpen their diving skillz. This summer, Army and Navy divers helped collect tons of old fishing nets from the bottom of Puget Sound in Washington state -- experience that could come in handy if they one day need to remove harbor-blocking nets during hostilities. Navy divers may also clean up the newly designated national marine preserve in the Hawaiian islands, and plan to remove a 37-acre failed artificial reef of old tires off Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "When you actually see the magnitude of the tires, it doesn't take an environmentalist to know ... we need to get the tires out of there for the good of our country," says Navy Chief Warrant Officer Dan Mikulski. But don't call them tree-hugging (ahem) pansies, he warns: "We're big, bad, hairy-chested deep-sea divers."

straight to the source: USA Today, Traci Watson, 12 Oct 2006


Comments: (3 comments)

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US at 300 million

Why hasn't the GristMill been covering the US population reaching 300 million at all?

300 million news

We wrote about it in Daily Grist a couple of weeks ago:

So That's Why We Can Never Find a Parking Space
U.S. population to hit 300 million in October

As the U.S. population ticks ever closer to the 300 million mark -- 299,800,000-plus and counting! -- many enviros worry that the rising numbers will amplify existing environmental problems. "The U.S. is the only industrialized nation in the world experiencing significant population growth," says Vicky Markham of the Center for Environment and Population. "That, combined with America's high rates of resource consumption, results in the largest ... environmental impact [of any nation] in the world." Ecologists point out that at current consumption rates, the long-term "carrying capacity" of the U.S. wouldn't sustain even half of the nation's current population. Baby boomers, with their relative wealth and preference for big homes and vehicles, are doing more than their part as the highest resource consumers in the nation's -- and the world's -- history. The U.S. population doesn't look likely to stabilize anytime soon; it's expected to hit 400 million by mid-century. And in case you didn't notice, the world population hit 6.5 billion earlier this year. Feeling claustrophobic?

population

Oh, OK.  Thanks.

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