| Headline |
Author |
Published |
Section |
Judge Not Lest Ye Be Judged
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04 Feb 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Judge Not Lest Ye Be Judged A coalition of more than 60 environmental, civil-rights, and Native American groups have sent a letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee opposing the confirmation of William G. Myers III to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Before serving as the Interior Department's chief legal offic ... |
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| Topics: Department of Interior, environmental justice, environmental non-government organizations, politics, ranching, water pollution, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Fake Is the New Real
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03 Feb 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Fake Is the New Real In an effort to conserve water (and perhaps bolster Southern California's reputation as a showcase for all things fake), the city of Anaheim, Calif., and the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California are pilot-testing faux lawns. If water savings meet expectations, residents who replace real grass with fake greenery could soon be eligible for rebates from the water dis ... |
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| Topics: California, food and agriculture, green living, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Going South
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03 Feb 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Going South The search for Antarctic organisms that can be used for pharmaceutical and other commercial purposes -- called "extremophiles" for their ability to thrive in harshly cold, dry, and salty conditions -- is pushing international patent law to the breaking point and threatening the fragile Antarctic environment, concludes a United Nations study released on Sunday. The Antarctic T ... |
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| Topics: Antarctica, pollution and waste, United Nations, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Sore Like an Eagle
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02 Feb 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Sore Like an Eagle The greatest threat to the bald eagle is no longer pesticides, but development and suburban sprawl, say environmental scientists. The bald eagle has starred in one of the most successful species-restoration stories in U.S. history; thanks to the banning of DDT in 1972 and the careful efforts of environmental advocates, the eagle has soared back from the brink of extinction. Still, b ... |
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| Topics: Northeast, placemaking, population, toxics, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Oily Residue Judge Imposes $4.5 Billion in Damages in Exxon Valdez Case |
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29 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Oily Residue Judge Imposes $4.5 Billion in Damages in Exxon Valdez Case A federal judge in Alaska on Wednesday imposed $4.5 billion in punitive damages on ExxonMobil Corp. for the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil tanker spill in Prince William Sound. The judgment marks t ... |
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| Topics: Alaska, commercial and industry organizations, energy, environmental justice, marine life, placemaking, politics, pollution and waste, water bodies and marine life, water pollution, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Shout, Trout, Let It All Out Western Hunters and Anglers Oppose Energy Bill |
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29 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Shout, Trout, Let It All Out Western Hunters and Anglers Oppose Energy Bill A group of outdoor enthusiasts descended on Washington, D.C., Wednesday to lobby against attempts by Republicans to revive the omnibus energy bill, defeated in the Senate last year. They object to provisions in the bill that would drastically increase oil ... |
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| Topics: commercial and industry organizations, energy, marine life, outdoor recreation, political groups, politics, West, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Vultural Phenomenon Indian Vultures Near Extinction Due to Cattle Painkiller |
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29 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Vultural Phenomenon Indian Vultures Near Extinction Due to Cattle Painkiller Three vulture species in India are nearing extinction at an unprecedented rate due to a common painkiller used on cattle in the region. The drug, diclofenac, is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory in the same class as ibuprofen. It has been widely used on humans for decades; it was adopted for veterinary u ... |
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| Topics: commercial and industry organizations, India, pollution and waste, wildlife (all these topics) |
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20,000 Toxins Under the Sea Ocean Mammals Getting Pummeled by Pollution |
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27 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| 20,000 Toxins Under the Sea Ocean Mammals Getting Pummeled by Pollution New research indicates that human-made toxins have infiltrated deep and remote parts of the ocean. The Ocean Alliance, a Massachusetts-based research organization, has found troubling levels of DDT, PCBs, and other contaminants in the blubber of sperm whales. Scienti ... |
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| Topics: Australia, marine life, oceans, pollution and waste, toxics, United States, water bodies and marine life, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Walk Like an Egyptian Egyptian Agro-Business Is Socially Conscious and Green to Boot |
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27 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Walk Like an Egyptian Egyptian Agro-Business Is Socially Conscious and Green to Boot In the arid Egyptian desert -- an area not typically associated with socially progressive entrepreneurship -- the Sekem Group is demonstrating how home-grown business can make both profit and positive change. Founded in 1977 by Ibrahim Abouleish, the agro-business has developed a wide range of products (herbal medicin ... |
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| Topics: business, food and agriculture, Middle East, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Rivers and Tithes Judge Rules Government Must Pay for Withheld Water |
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26 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Rivers and Tithes Judge Rules Government Must Pay for Withheld Water In a case that could have substantial implications for enforcement of the Endangered Species Act, a federal judge ruled recently that the U.S. government must pay California irrigators some $14 million for water it withheld from them ... |
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| Topics: California, climate, environmental justice, food and agriculture, marine life, politics, rivers and watersheds, Southwest, water conflicts, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Leipzig Lizards! World's Largest Solar Energy Plant Planned for Germany |
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21 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Leipzig Lizards! World's Largest Solar Energy Plant Planned for Germany The world's largest solar energy plant -- projected to meet the power demands of some 1,800 households -- will soon start soaking up rays outside the eastern German town of Leipzig this year. The $27 million plant, to be built by the Royal Dutch/Shell's Solar Group, will contain 33,500 solar modules and have an output c ... |
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| Topics: European Union, green living, ozone, renewable energy, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Bad Kitty! New Book Says a Romantic View of Nature Could Come Back to Bite Us |
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20 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
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| Topics: Colorado, green living, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Meow Mix David Baron's The Beast in the Garden says a romantic view of nature could come back to bite us |
Michelle Nijhuis |
20 Jan 2004 |
Arts and Minds |
| One afternoon in mid-January 1991, students in a high school English class in Idaho Springs, Colo., saw a familiar sight outside their classroom windows: Their schoolmate Scott Lancaster, a dedicated competitive cyclist, was starting his daily training run on the wooded ridge behind Clear Creek High School. The 18-year-old clowned for the class as he passed by, ... |
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| Topics: United States, wildlife (all these topics) |
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The Oil Hits the Fan Oil Pipeline Through Georgian Republic Runs Into Trouble |
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16 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| The Oil Hits the Fan Oil Pipeline Through Georgian Republic Runs Into Trouble A $3 billion, 1,000-mile pipeline -- slated to be pumping oil from the newly opened Caspian oilfields through Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey to the world market by April 2005 -- has run into a whole mess of trouble. Environmenta ... |
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| Topics: Azerbaijan, business, energy, food and agriculture, Georgia, globalization, mining and drilling, population, renewable energy, Turkey, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Sick and Wrong
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Wildlife Trust |
16 Jan 2004 |
Counter Culture |
| Hey, hey, I'm a monkey. Photo: HSUS. 350 million+ -- number of plants and animals involved in international wildlife trade each year1 $6 billion -- annual worth of criminal wildlife trade2 99,939 -- number of primates legally imported into the U.S. as pets or research animals between 1995 and 20021 80-90 -- percentage of macaque monkeys (popular exotic pets) infected with Herpes B virus or Simian B, a virus harmless to monkeys but often fatal to huma ... |
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| Topics: United States, wildlife (all these topics) |
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The Big Disease-y New Controls Needed on Wildlife Trade to Prevent Disease, Scientists Say |
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16 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
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| Topics: Brazil, business, food and agriculture, globalization, health, India, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Flu Dunnit Enviro Disruptions Will Cause More Animal Diseases to Jump to Humans |
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14 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Flu Dunnit Enviro Disruptions Will Cause More Animal Diseases to Jump to Humans In coming years, diseases -- primarily viruses -- passed from animals to human beings pose one of the principal threats to world health, warned a conference of scientists at the Royal Society in London yesterday. Environmental disruptions ranging from deforestation to population migration to global warming ... |
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| Topics: climate, deforestation, health, population, United Kingdom, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Orangutangle Orangutans Face Possible Extinction in 20 Years, WWF Says |
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13 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Orangutangle Orangutans Face Possible Extinction in 20 Years, WWF Says Orangutans may have just two decades left if current trends continue, the World Wildlife Fund warned yesterday. One of the four great ape species, orangutans are rapidly disappearing from their only remaining native habitat on the islands of Sumatra and Borneo in Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei. Populations ... |
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| Topics: deforestation, Indonesia, logging, wilderness, wildlife, World Wildlife Fund (all these topics) |
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Viscous Cycle In Ironic Twist, Thawing Tundra Causes Trouble for Alaska's Oil Industry |
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13 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Viscous Cycle In Ironic Twist, Thawing Tundra Causes Trouble for Alaska's Oil Industry Global warming -- brought about in part by the burning of fossil fuels -- has raised temperatures in Alaska and reduced the length of the "frozen season" during which oil-prospecting convoys are allowed to traverse the landscape. The past three decades have seen the season ... |
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| Topics: Alaska, climate, commercial and industry organizations, Department of Energy, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Death Be Not Toxic Green Burials Catch on Amongst the Eco-Friendly Set |
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12 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Death Be Not Toxic Green Burials Catch on Amongst the Eco-Friendly Set It's no longer enough to live an eco-friendly life; now, the greenest of the green are planning for their own eco-friendly deaths. A small but growing number of people are seeking out burial in green cemeteries. Ramsey Creek Preserve in Westminster, S.C., is one such spot, a 35-acre expanse of woodla ... |
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| Topics: green living, pollution and waste, South Carolina, toxics, United Kingdom, wildlife (all these topics) |
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Homeocidal Herbal Medicine Trade Threatens Thousands of Plant Species |
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09 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Homeocidal Herbal Medicine Trade Threatens Thousands of Plant Species The booming worldwide market for herbal medicines threatens between 8 and 20 percent of the 50,000 known wild medicinal plant species with extinction, according to a forthcoming study by the World Wildlife Fund. Having risen by10 percent per ... |
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| Topics: Asia, China, climate, European Union, globalization, green living, health, India, North America, population, wildlife, World Wildlife Fund (all these topics) |
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Mine Every Mountain, Fill Every Stream Bush Admin. Rule Change Would Give a Boost to Mountaintop Mining |
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08 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Mine Every Mountain, Fill Every Stream Bush Admin. Rule Change Would Give a Boost to Mountaintop Mining Mountaintop-removal mining is poised to get even easier thanks to a rule change proposed by the Bush administration yesterday. Significant chunks of Appalachia have already been devastated by this mining technique, which involves blasting off the t ... |
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| Topics: Department of Interior, mining and drilling, politics, rivers and watersheds, water pollution, wildlife (all these topics) |
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A Mighty Wind New California Wind Farm Blows Previous Efforts Away |
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07 Jan 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| A Mighty Wind New California Wind Farm Blows Previous Efforts Away Between San Francisco and Sacramento lies the nearly completed High Winds Energy Center, a state-of-the-art wind farm expected to generate roughly 162 megawatts of electricity -- enough to power 75,000 homes -- and make wind power competitive with extractive energy sources. The turbin ... |
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| Topics: business, California, energy, food and agriculture, green living, San Francisco, wildlife, wind power (all these topics) |
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NPR: One Thing Considered Pristine Petroleum Reserve in Alaska Opened to Oil Drilling |
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16 Dec 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| NPR: One Thing Considered Pristine Petroleum Reserve in Alaska Opened to Oil Drilling Try as it might, the Bush administration hasn't been able to get its hands on oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Perhaps to make itself feel better, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management is forging ahead with plans to permit aggressive oil drilling in large swaths of ... |
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| Topics: Alaska, Bureau of Land Management, energy, mining and drilling, politics, wilderness, wildlife (all these topics) |
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It Doesn't Look a Day Over 29 Taking Stock of the Endangered Species Act at Age 30 |
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10 Dec 2003 |
Daily Grist |
| It Doesn't Look a Day Over 29 Taking Stock of the Endangered Species Act at Age 30 Who knew the Endangered Species Act was a Sagittarius? That's right, this month the act will turn 30. Signed into law by President Nixon in 1973, the ESA aimed to prevent extinctions, bring imperiled species back to viable population levels, and protect the natural habitat needed to sustain wildlife. Five years later, the law ga ... |
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| Topics: dams, energy, politics, Tennessee, wildlife (all these topics) |
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