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Coal-hearted New Stats On Energy Use in China Alarm Environmentalists |
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22 Oct 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Coal-hearted New Stats On Energy Use in China Alarm Environmentalists The most populous country on the planet may also pose the biggest threat to the global climate, according to recently released statistics about coal production and consumption in China. Until a few months ago, many energy experts hoped that the nation would have a relatively limited impact on climate change, because its state-owned companies were tho ... |
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| Topics: China, climate, energy, placemaking (all these topics) |
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No More Sulfuring in Silence China Bans Coal Plants in Big Cities |
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09 Oct 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| No More Sulfuring in Silence China Bans Coal Plants in Big Cities In a much-needed and long-awaited gambit to improve air quality and reduce acid rain, China has banned coal-fired power plants in major cities across the nation. The ban applies to Beijing, Shanghai, and 21 provincial capitals, which together produce approximately 60 percent of China's sulfur dioxide emissions. Sulfur dioxide is the leading cause of acid rain, which pl ... |
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| Topics: China, energy, toxics (all these topics) |
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Drowned and Out Three Gorges Dam Causing Unexpected Pollution Problems |
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01 Oct 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Drowned and Out Three Gorges Dam Causing Unexpected Pollution Problems Unexpected environmental problems are already cropping up at China's Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest hydropower and construction project. After the dam went into operation in June, the reservoir behind it reached 443 feet and was supposed to stay at that level until 2006, but the Chinese government recently announced that the ... |
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| Topics: China, dams, energy, hydropower, pollution and waste (all these topics) |
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Grand Shift Auto Car Ownership Surging in Beijing |
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08 Sep 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Grand Shift Auto Car Ownership Surging in Beijing The number of registered cars in Beijing jumped to 2 million last month, doubling in just six years. Now one in five households in the Chinese capital owns a car, a huge shift from the situation a decade ago, when most cars were owned by the government and the city's residents were more likely to have a run-in with a horse-drawn cart than a motorized vehicle. Along with th ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, China, placemaking (all these topics) |
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Lake Woe-be-here
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01 Jul 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Lake Woe-be-here The pristine environment around Lake Baikal in Siberia, the world's deepest freshwater lake, is endangered by a joint Russian-Chinese plan to build an oil pipeline through the region, Greenpeace warned yesterday. A month ago, Russian and Chinese oil companies signed a 25-year deal to pump 30 million tons of Russian crude oil to China every year, alo ... |
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| Topics: China, commercial and industry organizations, Greenpeace, lakes, Russia, United Nations (all these topics) |
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Our Gorge Is Rising
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02 Jun 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Our Gorge Is Rising China yesterday blocked the flow of the Yangtze River by closing gates at the massive Three Gorges Dam and began to fill up what will be the world's largest reservoir. It's a joyous occasion for government engineers and Communist Party faithful who have long touted the coming benefits of hydroelectric power and flood control, an ... |
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| Topics: China, dams, energy, pollution and waste, rivers and watersheds, toxics, water pollution, Yangtze River (all these topics) |
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Turtle Wane
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20 May 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Turtle Wane Having depleted their own nation's once-plentiful turtle populations, Chinese buyers are now offering top dollar for turtles from the southern U.S. In the last three years, there's been a dramatic upswing in the number of turtles exported to China, where the animals' meat is considered a delicacy and their shells are ground up to make virility powders. In 2002, ... |
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| Topics: Alabama, China, marine life, Mississippi, North Carolina, South, South Carolina (all these topics) |
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Pro-fusion
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25 Feb 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Pro-fusion The U.S. and China have officially joined the quest to develop fusion power, which proponents say could be an affordable, eco-friendly alternative to existing energy sources. The International Thermonuclear Energy Reactor is the largest global science project after the International Space Station. China, the U.S., Canada, the ... |
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| Topics: Asia, Canada, China, climate, energy, European Union, green living, Japan, nuclear power, Russia, United States (all these topics) |
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Gorging Themselves
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20 Feb 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Gorging Themselves China's controversial Three Gorges dam looks like small potatoes next to the country's latest proposed water project, a gargantuan network of dams and canals designed to divert water from the south to thirsty northern cities such as Beijing. The project would cost $60 billion over 50 years (twice as muc ... |
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| Topics: Asia, China, dams, energy, international government agencies, pollution and waste, rivers and watersheds, wetlands, Yangtze River (all these topics) |
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Crying Shaman
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19 Feb 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Crying Shaman A new oil pipeline that will run from the Russian region of Buryatiya into China is being hailed by industry officials and government leaders as a major economic boon, but many local residents beg to differ. Construction of the pipeline will involve bulldozing land and felling trees -- environmental problems anywhere and ... |
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| Topics: Asia, China, commercial and industry organizations, globalization, green living, logging, national parks, wilderness (all these topics) |
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The Fire Down Below
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14 Feb 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| The Fire Down Below Forget about car emissions for a moment; coal fires, hundreds of which are raging out of control around the world, pump so much carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the atmosphere that researchers at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science yesterday called them a "global catastrophe." Coal fires burn both ... |
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| Topics: China, Colorado, energy, India, Indonesia, Pennsylvania, pollution and waste (all these topics) |
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Kodak Moments
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13 Feb 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| Kodak Moments Environmentalists have many tools for looking after Momma Earth -- and now, in remote villages in the southwestern Chinese province of Yunnan, one of them is a Kodak camera. Through a project designed and funded by the Nature Conservancy, about 100 people in the region have been given cameras and training to help them take photos documenting how three minority groups -- Naxi, Yi, and Tibetan -- relat ... |
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| Topics: Asia, China, logging, Nature Conservancy (all these topics) |
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The Strong and Short of It
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22 Jan 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| The Strong and Short of It In a sign of increasing international concern about the ecological challenges posed by China, one of the world's most prominent greens has moved to Beijing and set up shop as an environmental consultant. For more than three decades, Canadian Maurice Strong has been a major player in global diplomacy, environmental and otherwise; earlier ... |
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| Topics: Asia, business, China, green living, news, nuclear power, United Nations, United States (all these topics) |
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Drag Your Computer to the Recycle Bin
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05 Dec 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Drag Your Computer to the Recycle Bin In an abrupt departure from past policy, high-tech giant Hewlett-Packard has announced that it will support California legislation requiring computer manufacturers to pay for safe disposal of electronic waste. In October, HP used its considerable clout as the world's largest maker of personal com ... |
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| Topics: California, China, commercial and industry organizations, green living, health, pollution and waste, recycling, toxics (all these topics) |
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Don't Dig a Hole, Too, China
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29 Oct 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Don't Dig a Hole, Too, China In yet another blow to the environment, the Chinese government is launching a massive expansion of its road network to accommodate its fast-emerging car culture. By 2010, the country says major roads will span a total of 22,000 miles in and between major cities, including Hong Kong, Beijing, and Shanghai; by 2020, it hopes to have doubled the expansion to 44,000 miles. The only areas with no projected new mot ... |
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| Topics: China, placemaking (all these topics) |
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You Will Live a GM-free Life ... in Bed
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22 Oct 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| You Will Live a GM-free Life ... in Bed Until recently, China seemed to be positioning itself as a world leader in bioengineered foods, spending tens of millions of dollars on new technologies and touting the benefits of genetically modified rice, soybeans, and other crops. Now, though, the nation has imposed tough restrictions on domestic planting of genetically modified (GM) crops and strict labeling rules fo ... |
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| Topics: business, China, food and agriculture, GMOs (all these topics) |
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Haze Reaches Record Level in Hong Kong
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11 Sep 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Haze Reaches Record Level in Hong Kong While a metaphorical cloud shrouds New York City today, an all-too-real one is suffocating the city of Hong Kong, where pollution levels have set record highs this week, obscuring skyscrapers and prompting officials to warn people to stay indoors. Earlier this week, smog levels reached a record 185 on an air pollution index where any reading over 100 is considered dangerously high. Hong Kong's lea ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, China (all these topics) |
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Hurricane Hugo
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06 Sep 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Hurricane Hugo If Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has his way, some developing nations will create an OPEC-like cartel to protect plants and animals from exploitation by the industrialized world. Speaking earlier this week at the close of the World Summit on Sustainable Development, Chavez said, "If these [developed] countries carry off a medical formul ... |
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| Topics: Brazil, business, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Mexico, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Not the Year of the Bicycle
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06 Sep 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Not the Year of the Bicycle Ever since the Communist Revolution of 1949, bicycles have been a seemingly indelible part of the Chinese landscape, as endemic as pandas. Now, though, as the pace of life picks up in China's major cities, urban planners and government authorities have begun treating bicycles as nuisances -- antiquated devices that impede the free flow of cars. So far, Shanghai has banned bikes on 54 major roads, and there is ... |
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| Topics: China, placemaking (all these topics) |
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Chinese Checkmate
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23 Aug 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Chinese Checkmate In a move that could further isolate the United States on environmental issues, China announced yesterday that its State Council is on the verge of approving the Kyoto Protocol on climate change. The Chinese parliament would also need to ratify the treaty, but that body generally rubber-stamps decisions made by the State Council, where the real decision-making takes place. Because it is a developing country, China wou ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, China (all these topics) |
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Fine, China
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05 Aug 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Fine, China California is one of the most environmentally minded states in the U.S.; China is one of the most polluted countries in the world. Now, the two have teamed up to clean up: California scientists and entrepreneurs are working with the Chinese government to combat environmental degradation in its myriad forms. The effort is being led by the Energy ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, California, China, environmental non-government organizations, pollution and waste (all these topics) |
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Dumbstruck
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19 Jun 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Dumbstruck The sins of the fathers (etc.) shall be visited on the children -- at least when the sins are environmental and the children are in China. A recent survey of more than 11,000 schoolchildren in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen found that nearly two-thirds suffered from lead poisoning. Such poisoning, when untreated, can cause damage to the brain, nervous, and reproductive systems; mental retardation; behavioral problem ... |
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| Topics: China, health, toxics (all these topics) |
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Barking Up the Right Tree
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15 May 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Barking Up the Right Tree Apparently spooked by a recent history of devastating floods and blinding sandstorms, China has unveiled a plan to plant trees on almost 200,000 square miles of land in an effort to reverse rampant deforestation. The plan, which Chinese officials call the largest conservation effort ever attempted, will cost an estimated $12 billion over 10 years and restore trees to an area larger than Ge ... |
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| Topics: China, rivers and watersheds, wilderness (all these topics) |
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Bad Air Day
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26 Apr 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Bad Air Day As if California didn't have enough of a smog problem all by itself, now it and other parts of the nation are suffering from air pollution blown in from China. Toxic pollutants from power plants, factories, and farms travel on wind currents across the ocean and mingle with our own less-than-perfect air to create an international smog blanket that is particularly acute on the West Coast. The smog is ass ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, China, health, West Coast (all these topics) |
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True Grit
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15 Apr 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| True Grit For the third year in a row, massive dust storms from China have blown into South Korea, closing schools, canceling flights, and creating a run on facemasks and respiratory medication. The storms are the result of severe desertification in China, where the Gobi Desert grew by 20,000 square miles from 1994 to 1999; the desertification stems from overfarming, overgrazing, and deforestation, among ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, China, desertification, South Korea (all these topics) |
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