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What Goes Around Dumbs Around

Bush administration considers unloading mercury on world market

With stunning foresight, the U.S. Department of Energy is pondering a sale of more than 1,300 tons of mercury on the world market. Never mind that mercury sold overseas will, in all likelihood, just drift back to the U.S. as toxic air pollution. Never mind that, as Linda Greer of the Natural Resources Defense Council objects, "If they flood the market, how do we persuade the rest of the world to work on solving this problem?" And never mind that two years ago, the Defense Department elected to keep its 4,400-ton mercury stockpile off the market to avoid "human health and ecological risks." This is no time for sanity -- a bill to ban mercury exports is pending in the U.S. Senate, so the DOE needs to get crackin'. And what do federal environment-protectors have to say about it all? "We want to address the issue of all this excess mercury, but we need to do it in cooperation with the various stakeholders," says EPA's Maria Doa. Good idea -- perhaps over a tasty plate of sushi?

straight to the source: Chicago Tribune, Michael Hawthorne, 27 Nov 2006


Comments: (3 comments)

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Uplake and Down

One thing that's interesting about this story is that it points up the fact the Lakes Erie and Ontario get hit particularly hard (the rest of the lakes are uplake from Detroit-Windsor-Cleveland). Since fresh water is a necessity of life and the Great Lakes hold 95% of the US's surface supply, the time for the resources of the federal and Canadian governments to be brought to bear on this problem is yesterday.

Yes Wisconsin is fairly green

All that sewage growing extra algae and weeds that then add to sediments, then those sediments undergoing aneroebic digestion from the increased nitrogen due to manure, chemical fertilizer, and human waste runnoff.

And the methane released is a greenhouse gas 20 times worse than cO2.

What is the alternative (practiced in Wisconsin)?  Manure and farm waste turned into biogas that generates grid electricity, turning the methane into cO2 before it's released.  

All sewage ought to be treated the same way and the organic fertilizer from these digestors should be used to replace chemical fertilier that runns off lawns and farm fields into the lakes.  that organic fertilizer locks itself into the soil, unlike chemical fertilizer.

Of coures it would be even better to use that biogas in fuel cell/turbines at three times the normal efficiency of a power plant and recycle the CO3 through algae solar collector biofuel systems.

And harvest weeds and algae overgrowth in the lakes to feed the digestors and make even more biogas as it cleans up the more polluted parts of the lakes.

This sort of renewable backup for the grid saves chemical fertlizer, oil by producing biodiesel, coal by replacing regular power plant capacity, the lakes, and lots of methane and cO 2 GHG emissions.

http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin

This is Very Old News

Activists in Michigan have been yelling about this for decades.  It's about time you guys listened. Here in Grand Rapids we have regular overflows of the sewer system which pours into the Grand River and eventually flows in to Lake Michigan.  Our congressman, Vern Ehlers (a Republican!) launched a $20 Billion plan to fix these infrastructure problems 4 years ago.  The Bush Administration nixed the plan in the final stages after years of hearings and public meetings in all the Great Lake states with EPA officials.  I was present at a meeting at Grand Valley State University here in Grand Rapids with about 300 other folks, state of Michigan DEQ and DNR, the mayor, EPA and more.  Everyone in West Michigan is aware of this, the vast majority voted Democrat.  We can see the sewage and we can smell it.  Do you know what undigested corn looks like floating downstream?  The ducks and seagulls do!  Don't pass this off as NEWS Grist,  you've already missed the boat.

Jerome Alicki Black Bear Speaks http://blackbearspeaks.blogspot.com

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