| Headline |
Author |
Published |
Section |
French conservatives go green, too! Sarkozy pushes proposals on energy and the environment |
Joseph Romm |
09 Oct 2007 |
Gristmill |
| We have already seen that British Conservatives 'get' global warming -- both the danger of inaction and the economic opportunity of a 'green revolution.' Now the right wing cheese-eating surrender monkeys are also putting their American political counterparts to shame. As Nature reports about the new conservative French president: Sarkozy made the greening of France a major plank of his election campaign this year. He has since created a superministry for ecol ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, energy, energy efficiency, France, politics, renewable energy (all these topics) |
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Your Food Doesn't Come From the Store A journey into the heart of industrial agriculture |
Tom Philpott |
09 Oct 2007 |
Grist Feature |
| Americans live in a post-agricultural age. Today, fewer than two of every 100 U.S. citizens owe their living primarily to the land. A century ago, two of every five did. Yet even though very few of us contribute to food production, we all still eat -- and food comes from somewhere. But where? In a sense, the answer is: Iowa, buckle of the farm belt, heart of the heartland ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, food, green living, Iowa, placemaking (all these topics) |
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Sow What? A Grist special series on food and farming |
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09 Oct 2007 |
Grist Feature |
| You know where babies come from, sure -- but do you know where Tater Tots come from? In this two-week series, we'll take you on a behind-the-scenes tour of your very own diet. Everybody eats, every day, but we tend to gloss over the details. Things like the work that really goes into putting food on our plates, the environmental impacts of food production, and how we can make the best choices -- for our bodies and the planet -- ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, food, green living, health (all these topics) |
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Berry Bad News EPA approves carcinogenic pesticide |
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08 Oct 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 1:45 PM on 08 Oct 2007 Just when we think the U.S. EPA might have some sense, it goes and approves a carcinogenic pesticide, ignoring scientists' warnings that "pregnant women and the fetus, children, the elderly, farmworkers, and other people living near application sites would be at serious risk." As a substitute for ozone-depleting fumigant methyl bromide, California and Florida strawberry growers and other farmers will w ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, California, Florida, health, news, toxics, US EPA (all these topics) |
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Angry greens giants Inspired by the spinach scare, new California rules could wilt small farmers |
Tom Philpott |
04 Oct 2007 |
Gristmill |
| This is a guest essay by Judith Redmond, co-owner of Northern California's legendary Full Belly Farm and president of the Community Alliance with Family Farmers. California is on the verge of adopting a policy that would regulate all of the state's salad greens-producing farms -- including ones that sell to a local market -- as if they were huge operations that ship cross-country. That's as predictable as it is absurd -- another case of the problems caused by industri ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, agriculture, California, food, health, industrial ag (all these topics) |
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The 'Exxon of corn' licks its chops Archer Daniels Midland sees glut as opportunity to consolidate the ethanol market |
Tom Philpott |
03 Oct 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Over the past year, ethanol production has exploded -- surpassing even the dramatically higher "alternative fuel requirement" in last year's energy bill. And now we have a glut of ethanol on the market, which has pushed prices down dramatically and caused many ethanol plants -- particularly independent farmer-owned ones -- to struggle. But Archer Daniels Midland, hailed on Wall Street as the Exxon of corn, is seeing the downturn in ethanol prices as an ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, business, energy, ethanol (all these topics) |
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Neither trick nor treat Pumpkin production is down for second year in a row |
Sarah van Schagen |
02 Oct 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Halloween may still be four weeks away, but this story's already got me spooked: Scorching weather and lack of rain this summer wiped out some pumpkin crops from western New York to Illinois, leaving fields dotted with undersized fruit. Other fields got too much rain and their crops rotted. It's the second year in a row that pumpkin production has been down. First we're losing our woolly turtlenecks and now our jack-o'-lanterns? Scary. Good thing no on ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, climate, food, holiday, severe weather (all these topics) |
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Take Your Chertoff Federal officials claim ethanol, border fence green as can be |
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02 Oct 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 2:11 PM on 02 Oct 2007 Well, phew. Ethanol's not to blame for high food prices and a fence on the U.S.-Mexico border will actually benefit the environment. If we can't believe the top federal farm official and the top federal security official, whom can we believe? From the Archives McCormick and Quits. President of Nature Conservancy resigns. Happy Decouple. States adopt decoupl ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, Department of Agriculture, Department of Homeland Security, energy, ethanol, food, lying liars, national security, news (all these topics) |
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Business as usual? Why we shouldn't forget the Farm Bill |
Aimee Witteman |
02 Oct 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Once again, a prime example of our misguided farm policies hits like a ton of factory-farm manure sludge -- or in this case, a massive sack of federally insured, genetically modified corn. Last Wednesday, Monsanto announced that the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) approved a pilot program that will give farmers a 20 percent discount on insurance premiums if they plant a majority of their corn acres with seeds featuring Monsanto's trademarked YieldG ... |
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| Topics: ag policy, agriculture, business, legislation, politics (all these topics) |
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All's Fair and We Love More Fair-trade market boosted by consumer demand |
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02 Oct 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 10:24 AM on 02 Oct 2007 An ever-greener and ever-more-caffeinated world is boosting the fair-trade market -- not just for coffee, but for products such as cocoa, cotton, tea, pineapples, and flowers. The certification, which holds growers to strict standards per child labor, pesticide use, recycling, and more, is not a phenomenon specific to hippie shops: all Dunkin' Donuts in the U.S. and all McDonald's in Englan ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, business, food, greenish companies, news, sustainable ag (all these topics) |
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DDT, Yeah You Know Me Study suggests link between DDT exposure and breast cancer |
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01 Oct 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 1:04 PM on 01 Oct 2007 Women exposed to the pesticide DDT as children are five times as likely to develop breast cancer, according to a study published in Environmental Health Perspectives. Draw your own conclusions. source: Los Angeles Times From the Archives Veg Out. Today is World Vegetarian Day. Lejeune Bugged. U.S. Navy must notify N.C.-based Marines of exposure to contamin ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, health, news, scientific research, toxics (all these topics) |
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Welcome to the Fuel World U.S. ethanol boom slowing due to market glut |
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01 Oct 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 6:16 AM on 01 Oct 2007 The ethanol boom in the United States, the political darling of presidential candidates, farm-state lawmakers, and others, has recently been showing signs of slowing due to a market glut that's exacerbated by infrastructure troubles. It seems everyone and their farmer have been constructing ethanol refineries to turn corn into fuel, but the means to get that fuel to gas stations hasn't been k ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, ethanol, news, United States (all these topics) |
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On not rearing pigs A little weekend humor |
Erik Hoffner |
29 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| In case you missed this hilarious letter that made the email rounds early this year poking fun at bizarre agricultural subsidies ... it gets to carbon credits midway through, naturally: Secretary of State Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Smith Square London Dear Secretary of State, My friend, who is in farming at the moment, recently received a cheque for £3,000 from the Rural Payments Agency for not rearing pigs. I would now like to joi ... |
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| Topics: ag subsidies, agriculture, funnies, politics, United Kingdom (all these topics) |
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Iodide and Gone to Heaven EPA delays approval of nasty pesticide |
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28 Sep 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 3:06 PM on 28 Sep 2007 Delightfully defying our dire predictions, the U.S. EPA will (again) delay approval of nasty pesticide methyl iodide, after 54 scientists wrote a letter expressing shock that the agency was even considering giving such a toxic chemical the thumbs-up for agricultural use. source: Associated Press From the Archives Dimmockery. British citizen sues government over distributi ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, news, progress, toxics, US EPA (all these topics) |
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Live green, go yellow U.S. conservation land may soon end up in your gas tank |
David Roberts |
27 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Well isn't this delightful (sub rqd): The Agriculture Department may allow farmers to plow up land in conservation agreements to plant row crops, despite a record corn crop this year, fueled by the ethanol industry's thirst for the feedstock. Acting Secretary Chuck Conner told reporters this week that USDA is considering releasing some land currently enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program, which pays farmers to idle nearly 34 million acres of land for wildl ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, biofuels, energy, ethanol (all these topics) |
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Smokin' greens The eco-depredations of the tobacco industry |
David Roberts |
26 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Brad Plumer points to what is no doubt going to be a fascinating story on the environmental evils of the tobacco industry. Clicking the link reveals that the story itself won't be available until Oct. 1, but using his prodigious powers of precognition, Brad excerpts this bit: Without even factoring in the paper wrapping, packaging, and print advertisements--which require as much paper by weight as the tobacco being grown--nearly 600 million trees are felled each yea ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, climate, deforestation, food, greenhouse-gas emissions (all these topics) |
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Spare the Ozone and Despoil the Riled EPA may soon approve toxic alternative to ozone-depleting pesticide, despite criticism |
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26 Sep 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 7:11 AM on 26 Sep 2007 To replace the toxic, ozone-depleting pesticide methyl bromide -- a favorite of stubborn U.S. berry growers -- the U.S. EPA is reportedly set to soon approve an alternative that doesn't deplete ozone but is "one of the more toxic chemicals used in manufacturing" according to opponents, including six Nobel Prize-winning chemists. ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, news, toxics, United States, US EPA (all these topics) |
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Suffer the little children -- from carbon offsets? A clean tech firm accuses a carbon credit nonprofit of forcing kids to do fieldwork |
Elsa Mary |
25 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| You might blame a leading carbon-offset provider of forcing poor kids to work, according to The Times of London. Or not. Carbon credit firm Climate Care pays families in India to use human-powered treadle pumps to get water out of the ground for drinking and farming. As a result, half a million foot pumps have replaced diesel ones, which pollute and cost a lot to fuel. Unfortunately, Climate Care doesn't ensure the diesel pumps are retired instead of finding new lif ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, carbon offsets, climate, energy, India (all these topics) |
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ADM's man at the USDA USDA secretary resigns; industrial-corn man takes charge |
Tom Philpott |
21 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Big doings at the USDA yesterday: Mike Johanns, the reliably pro-agribiz former governor of Nebraska, resigned from his post as USDA chair -- right in the middle of Farm Bill negotiations, now in the Senate. He says he's going to run for the Senate seat that Chuck Hagel is vacating. Chuck Conner, currently the USDA's no. 2 man, will be the agency's acting secretary. Conner joined the Bush administration in 2001 as the president's "special assistant" on ag i ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, Big Ag, business, Department of Agriculture, industrial ag, politics (all these topics) |
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Pick Your Poison Pesticides up to no good, says new research |
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18 Sep 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 5:08 PM on 18 Sep 2007 A decrease in pesticide availability led to an associated decrease in suicide rates in Sri Lanka, researchers publishing in the International Journal of Epidemiology have concluded. In 1995 and 1998, restrictions were put into place on importation and sales of highly toxic pesticides in Sri Lanka; in 2005, the country's suicide rate was half what it had been in 1995. "Changes in the availability o ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, health, news, Sri Lanka, toxics (all these topics) |
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Nuggets and Hummers and fish sticks, oh my! PETA VP argues vegetarianism is the best way to help the planet |
Grist |
18 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| This is a guest essay from Bruce Friedrich, vice president for campaigns at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). It was written in response to Alex Roth's essay "PETA's dogma is all bark and no bite." Friedrich has been an environmental activist for more than 20 years. In 1987, I read Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappé and -- primarily for human rights and environmental reasons -- went vegan. Two decades later, I still believe ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, animal welfare, aquaculture, climate, deforestation, fishing, food, health, sustainable ag, vegetarianism and veganism, waste ... (all these topics) |
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Smithfield hogs the China market Looking at an industrial-meat giant's China deal |
Tom Philpott |
18 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| While PETA roils Gristmill and other greenie sites by brandishing climate change to promote vegetarianism, Smithfield Foods just keeps cranking out industrial meat. As I noted in last week's Victual Reality, the company recently announced a deal to sell 60 million pounds of pork to China. Since then, Smithfield has revealed details about how it will fill that order: by ramping up production at a slaughter facility in Sioux City, Iowa, hometown of one of the nation's ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, animal welfare, business, China, food (all these topics) |
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Not So Fast On meat eating and global warming |
Umbra Fisk |
17 Sep 2007 |
Ask Umbra |
| Dear Umbra, I see that PETA's latest campaign says that meat eating is the No. 1 cause of global warming, not SUVs. This statement may be manipulative and political, but -- is it true? J. Helena, Mont. Dearest J., I'll bite. Shallow digging on one People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals site quickly uncovered their excitement at a 2006 report by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, "Livestoc ... |
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| Topics: advice, agriculture, Ask Umbra, food, greenhouse-gas emissions (all these topics) |
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Trouble Cropping Up Climate change will cause agricultural output to decline significantly, says study |
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13 Sep 2007 |
News |
| Posted at 4:43 PM on 13 Sep 2007 Attention, people who eat: Climate change could cause global agriculture output to decline by up to 16 percent by 2080, according to a new study from the Center for Global Development and the Peterson Institute for International Economics. Like life itself, the allocation won't be fair: productivity is likely to generally decline in developing countries -- Indi ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, climate, climate change impacts, food, news (all these topics) |
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Treadles are not the devil, after all Human-powered irrigation can increase harvests for farmers |
Gar Lipow |
13 Sep 2007 |
Gristmill |
| Recently, I wrote about treadle pumps that let human power replace diesel power for irrigation. As a one-to-one replacement it sounded pretty oppressive. But it turns out that it is not a one-to-one replacement. Poor farmers who only earn a dollar or so, per person per day, can afford to do a lot more irrigation with treadles than they can renting diesel pumps from rich farmers and buying diesel fuel to run it. So they multiply the size of their harvests by two or thr ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, energy (all these topics) |
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