j’s blog

April 16, 2005

Soot Reduces Sunshine Over China, Study Finds

Category: Pollution

Soot Reduces Sunshine Over China, Study Finds - Yahoo! News
It is not as sunny as it used to be over China and pollution is probably to blame, Chinese researchers reported on Friday.

They found a significant decrease in daily surface solar radiation and less sunshine per month compared with 1961 — especially over the eastern part of the country where most people live and most factories are located.

The best explanation is a rise in aerosols — little particles that include soot, dust and even smaller bits produced by burning fossil fuels such as coal and oil, Huizheng Che and colleagues at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Xian reported in this week’s issue of Geophysical Research Letters.

They measured several components of sunniness, including daily global radiation, annually averaged solar direct radiation and daily diffuse radiation, as well as the annually averaged daily clearness index.

“Almost all stations in China showed decreasing trends in the clearness index,” they wrote in their report.

“From these results, we conclude that the increasing emissions of anthropogenic (human-made) aerosols have likely affected the magnitude and variability of solar radiation and sunshine duration over much of China, especially the eastern part of the country.”

April 5, 2005

Human Damage to Earth Worsening Fast

Yahoo! News - Report: Human Damage to Earth Worsening Fast

By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent

OSLO (Reuters) - Humans are damaging the planet at an unprecedented rate and raising risks of abrupt collapses in nature that could spur disease, deforestation or “dead zones” in the seas, an international report said on Wednesday.

The study, by 1,360 experts in 95 nations, said a rising human population had polluted or over-exploited two thirds of the ecological systems on which life depends, ranging from clean air to fresh water, in the past 50 years.

“At the heart of this assessment is a stark warning,” said the 45-member board of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment.

“Human activity is putting such strain on the natural functions of Earth that the ability of the planet’s ecosystems to sustain future generations can no longer be taken for granted,” it said.

Ten to 30 percent of mammal, bird and amphibian species were already threatened with extinction, according to the assessment, the biggest review of the planet’s life support systems.

“Over the past 50 years, humans have changed ecosystems more rapidly and extensively than in any comparable time in human history, largely to meet rapidly growing demands for food, fresh water, timber, fiber and fuel,” the report said.

“This has resulted in a substantial and largely irreversible loss in the diversity of life on earth,” it added. More land was changed to cropland since 1945, for instance, than in the 18th and 19th centuries combined.

GETTING WORSE

“The harmful consequences of this degradation could grow significantly worse in the next 50 years,” it said. The report was compiled by experts, including from U.N. agencies and international scientific and development organizations.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said the study “shows how human activities are causing environmental damage on a massive scale throughout the world, and how biodiversity — the very basis for life on earth — is declining at an alarming rate.”

The report said there was evidence that strains on nature could trigger abrupt changes like the collapse of cod fisheries off Newfoundland in Canada in 1992 after years of over-fishing.

Future changes could bring sudden outbreaks of disease. Warming of the Great Lakes in Africa due to climate change, for instance, could create conditions for a spread of cholera.

And a build-up of nitrogen from fertilizers washed off farmland into seas could spur abrupt blooms of algae that choke fish or create oxygen-depleted “dead zones” along coasts.

It said deforestation often led to less rainfall. And at some point, lack of rain could suddenly undermine growing conditions for remaining forests in a region.

The report said that in 100 years, global warming widely blamed on burning of fossil fuels in cars, factories and power plants, might take over as the main source of damage. The report mainly looks at other, shorter-term risks.

And it estimated that many ecosystems were worth more if used in a way that maintains them for future generations.

A wetland in Canada was worth $6,000 a hectare (2.47 acres), as a habitat for animals and plants, a filter for pollution, a store for water and a site for human recreation, against $2,000 if converted to farmland, it said. A Thai mangrove was worth $1,000 a hectare against $200 as a shrimp farm.

“Ecosystems and the services they provide are financially significant and…to degrade and damage them is tantamount to economic suicide,” said Klaus Toepfer, head of the U.N. Environment Program.

The study urged changes in consumption, better education, new technology and higher prices for exploiting ecosystems.

“Governments should recognize that natural services have costs,” A.H. Zakri of the U.N. University and a co-chair of the report told Reuters. “Protection of natural services is unlikely to be a priority for those who see them as free and limitless.”

April 2, 2005

Humans Must Change Course for Planet to Sustain Future Generations - Science Panel

Yahoo! News - Humans Must Change Course for Planet to Sustain Future Generations - Science Panel

Abid Aslam, OneWorld US

WASHINGTON, D.C., Mar 31 (OneWorld) - Our children and grandchildren will live in a world hostile to human habitation unless we curb runaway consumption and the environmental abuses that fuel modern development, more than 1,300 scientists have warned in an unprecedented study of Earth’s ability to sustain life.

‘’At the heart of this assessment is a stark warning,'’ representatives of the science panel said in a statement. ‘’Human activity is putting such strain on the natural functions of Earth that the ability of the planet’s ecosystems to sustain future generations can no longer be taken for granted.'’

Growing demand for food, fresh water, timber, fiber, and fuel led humans to change ecosystems on which life depends more rapidly and extensively over the past 50 years than in any comparable time in human history, the experts said in a ‘’Millennium Ecosystem Assessment.'’

‘’This has resulted in a substantial and largely irreversible loss in the diversity of life on Earth,'’ they said, adding that extinction stalks 10-30 percent of mammal, bird, and amphibian species. Possible consequences include outbreaks of disease among humans or among animals and plants on which we rely for food.

Two-thirds of ecosystems on which life depends already have been degraded or exploited too much, the study said. Two natural resources–fisheries and fresh water–appeared to be well below levels that could sustain current, much less future, demand.

Nevertheless, major changes in consumption, better education, and new technology could reduce the damage and improve the outlook.

If humans do not alter course, the scientists warned, then these systems likely will deteriorate further over the next half-century as the increased use of resources that accompanied economic growth in the late 20th century continues at an unsustainable rate.

The assessment was aimed at influencing governments’ thinking on how to achieve the goals set out by four major international treaties covering the protection of species and environments. It further concluded that international commitments to improve the health, education, and economic opportunities of the world’s poorest people could not be met without addressing environmental crises.

‘’Any progress achieved in addressing the goals of poverty and hunger eradication, improved health, and environmental protection is unlikely to be sustained if most of the ecosystem ’services’ on which humanity relies continue to be degraded,'’ the report said.

The situation is not hopeless, so long as humans change the way we manage our economies, run our businesses, and consume goods and services.

The report’s recommendations for urgently needed action included removing subsidies to agriculture, fisheries, and oil and gas companies that encourage environmental harm–for example by rewarding overproduction, which gives farmers an incentive to ignore gluts and drive up surpluses by using chemical fertilizers.

Rather, the scientists recommended paying landowners to manage property in ways that help the environment, and using free-market incentives to reduce farm pollution and global-warming gas emissions.

Currently, for example, airlines pay for the fuel they buy but not for the fumes they emit by burning it. The study suggested such ‘’externalities'’ should be factored into companies’ bottom lines, adding that ways existed to soften the impact on businesses and consumers.

The scientists also sought greater investment in cleaner agricultural and energy technology–particularly for harvesting wind, solar, and other forms of renewable power–and urged that oceans and other critical areas receive greater protection from development.

Progress has been made in some areas, the scientists said. New forests planted mainly in the Northern Hemisphere have begun to make a dent in global warming although the problem itself remains critical.

Policymakers, businesses, and consumers should not be naive about the tasks that lie ahead.

‘’These changes will be large and are not currently under way,'’ the World Resources Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank that worked on the study, said in a statement.

The study differed slightly from previous ones by categorizing ecosystems in terms of the ‘’services,'’ or benefits, that they provide people–timber for building, for example, clean air to breathe, fish for food, and fibers to make clothes.

It said a booming world population and the demands of modernization drove the overuse of these natural resources after World War II.

Real human progress was made. Economies and food production soared. But the cost to the environment now imperils future prosperity, the study said.

Take the case of agriculture. More land was converted to plant and animal farming since 1945 than in the 18th and 19th centuries combined. More than half of all the synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, first made in 1913, used on the planet were applied after 1985. Crop, livestock, and aquaculture yields flourished.

The cost? Nitrogen and phosphate farm runoff has choked off oxygen, creating coastal ‘’dead zones'’ around the world and the problem likely will worsen, threatening fishery production and more. In the United States, such dead zones include those in the Gulf of Mexico, Chesapeake Bay, and Puget Sound.

Four years of research by 1,360 experts in 95 countries culminated in the 2,500-page study, released Wednesday and based on evidence that enjoyed consensus endorsement by scientific bodies around the world. The United Nations, World Bank, international environmental and development agencies, and U.S. philanthropies backed the effort. The private sector and non-governmental organizations provided advice and guidance.

‘’The overriding conclusion of this assessment is that it lies within the power of human societies to ease the strains we are putting on the nature services of the planet, while continuing to use them to bring better living standards to all,'’ the science panel’s directors concluded.

‘’Achieving this, however, will require radical changes in the way nature is treated at every level of decision-making and new ways of cooperation between government, business and civil society.'’

March 24, 2005

Study Finds Toxic Dust Samples in 7 States

Category: Health, Pollution

Yahoo! News - Study Finds Toxic Dust Samples in 7 States

By TERENCE CHEA, Associated Press Writer

SAN FRANCISCO - Americans are exposed to a variety of potentially dangerous chemicals in their homes from products such as computers, frying pans and shower curtains, according to a new study released Tuesday.

The study, called “Sick of Dust,” found 35 hazardous industrial chemicals in household dust samples from 70 homes in seven states, including Michigan and California. It was commissioned by nine environmental groups, including the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland and the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition in San Jose.

“It literally brings home the fact that hazardous chemicals are in our daily lives,” said Beverly Thorpe, international director for Clean Production Action, one of the study’s sponsors. “We feel now is a prime opportunity to overhaul chemical regulation in the United States.”

The researchers tested the dust samples for six types of chemicals, including pesticides and flame retardants. All the chemicals are legal, but many are known to be harmful to immune, respiratory, cardiovascular and reproductive systems. They said infants and young children are especially vulnerable to exposure.

But the American Chemistry Council, which represents major chemistry companies, said that just because a substance is found in dust or in the body at low levels doesn’t necessarily mean it causes health problems.

“The report sounds scary but breaks no new ground,” the council said in a statement. “The benefits of chemistry have helped us all live longer and healthier lives. These advances should not be underestimated or undermined by scare tactics.”

The study’s backers said they decided to test dust samples in U.S. homes after seeing similar studies that found high levels of toxic chemicals in households in Europe, where lawmakers are tightening regulation of chemical production.

They said they hope the test results will help prompt state and federal legislation to curb the use of dangerous chemicals in the production of household goods, ranging from furniture and clothes to carpets and nail polish.

“I’m concerned and outraged that our government isn’t protecting us from toxic chemicals,” said Angela Grattaroti, a mother in Leominster, Mass., who participated in the study. “We have a right to have safety in our homes. It’s inexcusable to subject our children and our families to a harm that can be avoided.”

The study mentioned Dell, IKEA, Herman Miller and Shaw Carpets as companies that have switched to cleaner chemical alternatives in their products.

The other states involved in the study were New York, Washington, Oregon, Massachusetts and Maine.

On the Net:

Safe Products Project: http://www.safer-products.org

American Chemistry Council: http://www.americanchemistry.com

EPA Chemical Program: http://www.epa.gov/chemrtk/volchall.htm

March 22, 2005

Unseen, monkeys do; seen, monkeys don’t

Newsday.com - Health News/Science News

BY JAMIE TALAN

March 21, 2005

Off the coast of Puerto Rico, living in the wild, rhesus monkeys are teaching scientists a thing or two about reasoning and deception.

Given the opportunity to snag a grape, these primates do so only when they think no one is looking.

This, said Jonathan Flombaum of Yale University, suggests that monkeys are able to alter their behavior after making a judgment about what is going on in another’s mind. This study shows monkeys can gather information from the environment that helps them make social decisions.

In the study, reported in the journal Current Biology, the monkeys focused on the scientists’ eyes to see whether they were paying attention. Even when a scientist was facing them, if the scientist’s eyes were averted, the monkeys took the grape, appearing to realize that the scientists were not looking.

Monkeys perceiving the scientist’s gaze upon them understood that they were being watched and that it wasn’t a good time to take the grape.

Flombaum, a graduate student, conducted the study in collaboration with Laurie Santos, an assistant professor in the department of psychology. The scientists hope that the finding might point the way to pathways involved in reasoning during social interactions and provide clues to human conditions where such social judgments are difficult, such as in autism. Many people with autism have difficulty reading people’s eyes, which is how people tell what’s on another person’s mind.

The experiment was conducted on the island of Cayo Santiago. There, free-ranging colonies of monkeys live, and scientists work among them. In the current study, Flombaum and his colleagues walked around looking for an isolated monkey. They stood 15 feet away, placed a platform on the ground and attached a grape. As the scientists stood 4 feet apart facing the monkey, one scientist would avert his eyes (keeping his head straight) while the other would look at the monkey.

Over and over again, the monkeys would steal the grape from the experimenter who was not looking. In another experiment, they used cardboard to cover their mouths or their eyes. When the eyes were covered, the animals went after the grape, but not when the mouth was covered. "They can take the other’s perspective," Flombaum said.

In a recent study, two grapes are placed on a ramp and the scientist, unknown to the monkey, releases one of the grapes. As it falls, it lands at the bottom, half the time sheltered by a canopy. Only when the canopy is present, and the monkey decides that the human doesn’t see the fallen grape, will he go for the food.

Flombaum said that the autistic brain can’t make these same judgments based on social cues.

March 20, 2005

Mercury Pollution, Autism Link Found

Category: Health, Environment

Yahoo! News - Mercury Pollution, Autism Link Found - U.S. Study

By Jim Forsyth

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (Reuters) - Mercury released primarily from coal-fired power plants may be contributing to an increase in the number of cases of autism, a Texas researcher said on Wednesday.

A study to be published on Thursday in the journal "Health and Place" found that autism, a developmental disorder marked by communication and social interaction problems, increased in Texas counties as mercury emissions rose, said Claudia Miller, a family and community medicine professor at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio.

"The main finding is that for every thousand pounds of environmentally released mercury, we saw a 17 percent increase in autism rates," she said in an interview.

About 48 tons of mercury are released into the air annually in the United States from hundreds of coal-burning plants.

The study looked at Texas county-by-county levels of mercury emissions recorded by the government and compared them to the rates of autism and special education services in 1,200 Texas school districts, Miller said.

"The study shows that there may be a very important connection between environmental exposure to mercury and the development of autism," she said in an interview.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control has said it does not know how many cases of autism there are in the country or whether the number has increased, but that the issue is under study.

Some experts estimate there are 1.5 million people in the United States with autism, most of them children, and say the number of cases has risen rapidly in recent years.

"Autism has increased dramatically over the last decade or so and the reasons for that have really stumped the medical community," Miller said.

"Now we think that due to the rising exposures in pollutants like mercury, they may be at the root of some of these cases," she said.

The Bush administration this week ordered power plants to cut mercury pollution by 50 percent within 15 years, but environmentalists said the action fell short of what was needed. They have called for a 90 percent cut in mercury emissions.

"This research has implications for toxic substance regulation and prevention policies," said Raymond Palmer, an autism expert at the San Antonio school who helped in the study.

"Policies regarding toxic release of mercury and the incidence of developmental disorders should be investigated," he said.

March 15, 2005

A little appreciated yet great invention

Category: Environment

Yahoo! News - Smog-Busting Inventors Get Tech Award

Smog-Busting Inventors Get Tech Award

By BEN DOBBIN, Associated Press Writer

ROCHESTER, N.Y. - Three scientists who helped this car-crazy world breathe a whole lot easier have been given the nation’s highest technology award.

Their creation — a ceramic honeycomb that oxidizes auto emissions — has kept an estimated 3 billion tons of toxic pollutants out of the atmosphere over the last 30 years.

“People don’t realize how bad it was when millions of cars were spewing out deadly fumes,” said retired engineer Rodney Bagley. “Many of the cities were almost unbreathable” in the 1960s.

The soda can-sized device developed by Bagley, Irwin Lachman and Ronald Lewis at Corning Inc. in 1972 and 1973 made air pollution control practical for the first time. Its paper-thin walls were coated with precious-metal catalysts that turned lung-choking gases streaming through automotive exhausts systems into water vapor, nitrogen and carbon dioxide.

President Bush (news - web sites) awarded each of the men a National Medal of Technology during a ceremony Monday at the White House.

Theirs was possibly the most significant contribution to air pollution control, but one that “needs time to develop … before all those years of use shows up as a benefit,” Lachman said.

First fitted in 1975-model cars, the honeycombs are now used in 95 percent of the world’s autos with catalytic converters. By 2007, all new diesel vehicles on U.S. highways will need to be equipped with the smog-busting devices.

Lachman and Lewis came up with the “miracle material” — a mixture of clay, talc and alumina, an oxide of aluminum — capable of withstanding immense heat and cooling rapidly without cracking. Bagley devised the manufacturing process to create thousands of the cells.

March 8, 2005

Wind power production capacity increased 20 percent in 2004

Category: Science, Environment

Yahoo! News - Wind power production capacity increased 20 percent in 2004

PARIS (AFP) - Production capacity by wind turbines increased 20 percent last year to 47,317 megawatts, the Global Wind Energy Council said in a statement.

One megawatt is estimated to be enough to power 500 homes in the United States.

Germany continued to top the list of production capacity, with 16,629 megawatts, or 35 percent of the total.

Spain had capacity of 8,263 megawatts and 17 percent of the total, and plans to add another 2,065 megawatts of production capacity this year.

The United States had 6,740 megawatts of capacity and 14 percent of the total, but added only 389 megawatts last year.

Denmark fell to fourth place with 3,117 megawatts, or seven percent of the total.

The Europe Union had the biggest wind production capacity, at 34,205 megawatts, or 72 percent of the total. It added 5,702 megawatts last year, a 20 percent increase.

By continent, North America was second with 7,814 megawatts, while Asia was third with 4,674 megawatts.

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