Monthly Archive for September, 2010

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China: Desplazados Por El Agua

Foto encontrado en: www.observadorglobal.com

“A pesar de las inundaciones recientes, el norte del país sufre una falta crónica del recurso hídrico, por lo que las autoridades están recurriendo a planes ambiciosos para abastecer a la población. Alrededor de 500.000 personas serán desplazadas como resultado del Proyecto de Desviación de agua Sur-Norte, que apunta a redireccionar miles de millones de toneladas de agua desde las regiones centrales, sur y oeste de China, hacia Beijing y sus ciudades aledañas. El plan implica un movimiento interno muy importante que ya generó el apoyo y la desaprobación de gran parte de los habitantes.

Más de medio millón de personas se está reubicando a medida que China construye un nuevo y enorme sistema de agua y tres canales son construidos en la campiña del sur. Chen Xuefei, una anciana de 87 años que sufre de enfermedades del corazón, está a punto de someterse a una de las cosas más estresantes en la vida: una mudanza.”

Leér más: Observador

Villagers drink from Shashe River in water crisis

Photo retrieved from: zimbabweflora.co.zw

“Chadibe, Shashemooke and Borolong residents have been forced to drink the murky waters of Shashe River after the taps in their villages ran dry on Tuesday.

“Chadibe village headman Aaron Nyambe said in the past two days people have been forced to fetch water from the river for their needs.

“”Our village has dried up, neither do we drink water or bath. We only see Water Utilities vehicles driving around the village leaving clouds of dust behind them but I cannot tell you what they are doing here since they never communicate with us,” the unhappy chief fumed. He said since the water crisis residents have had to make do as best as they can under very difficult circumstances. “Most people in the village have water connections into their homes, they use indoor toilets but without water the toilets are useless. You can imagine what the situation would be like,” Nyambe said.

“Lillian Nyambe, the chief’s wife said that the water condition is making them suffer. “It is a disaster, we sometimes fetch water at around 2am, which also gets cut off at any moment,” she said.”

Read more: Mmegi Online

Keeping Potomac River Flowing: Drought-watch, 18 years of research, and a toxic stew.

“First in an occasional series on the Potomac River, water quality, and the people and agencies who advocate for its wellbeing.

“Low water levels on the Potomac River, which provides 75 percent of the Washington region’s drinking water, prompted the release of 170 million gallons of water a day beginning Sept. 10 from the Jennings Randolph Reservoir.

“The reservoir on the North Branch Potomac River is 200 miles upstream from Potomac’s water filtration plant.

“The last times water needed to be released from Jennings Randolph, which holds about 13 billion gallons of water, occurred in 1999 and 2002 during dry conditions.

“The rate of release will be evaluated daily, along with data on stream flows throughout the basin, precipitation, water demand and groundwater levels, according to Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.

“Potomac River flows are well below normal levels and 94 percent of the Potomac River Basin has been declared abnormally to extremely dry, according to the NOAA Climate Prediction Center and the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.”

Read more: Potomac Almanac

Biodiversidad: “Clave” Para Las Metas Del Milenio

Foto encontrado en: www.bbc.co.uk

“El gobierno japonés ha propuesto que los próximos diez años sean declarados década internacional de biodiversidad, y algunos grupos de conservación luchan en Nueva York por conseguir respaldo a esa idea.

Activistas japoneses están reclamando que Estados Unidos ratifique la Convención de la Biodiversidad de Naciones Unidas.

Santuario

El año pasado, Palaos declaró todas sus aguas territoriales santuario del tiburones. En Nueva York, ese país junto con Honduras está invitando a otros países para hacer lo mismo.

“En Palaos, las barreras coralines dependen de los depredadores -y los tiburones son los depredadores superiores -porque sin ellos otros peces destruirían las barreras”, aseguró Stuart Beck, embajador de Palaos ante la ONU.

Beck dijo que su país reclamará acción para proteger a los tiburones en aguas abiertas.

Aunque más del 10% de la tierra es área protegida, la superficie protegida de los océanos no llega al 1%, señaló Beck, por lo cual iniciativas como la de Palaos cuentan con el apoyo de muchos grupos conservacionistas.”

Leér más: BBC Mundo

The Whole Fracking Enchilada

Sandra Steingraber

Photo retrieved from: OrionMagazine.org

“Until a few years ago, much of the natural gas trapped underground was considered unrecoverable because it is scattered throughout vast sheets of shale, like a fizz of bubbles in a petrified spill of champagne. But that all changed with the rollout of a drilling technique (pioneered by Halliburton) that bores horizontally through the bedrock, blasts it with explosives, and forces into the cracks, under enormous pressure, millions of gallons of water laced with a proprietary mix of poisonous chemicals that further fracture the rock. Up the borehole flows the gas. In 2000, only 1 percent of natural gas was shale gas. Ten years later, almost 20 percent is.

“International investors began viewing shale gas as a paradigm-shifting innovation. Energy companies are now looking at shale plays in Poland and Turkey. Fracking is under way in Canada. But nowhere has the technology been as rapidly deployed as in the United States, where a gas rush is under way. Gas extraction now goes on in thirty-two states, with half a million new gas wells drilled in the last ten years alone. We are literally shattering the bedrock of our nation and pumping it full of carcinogens in order to bring methane out of the earth.

“By 2012, 100 billion gallons per year of fresh water will be turned into toxic fracking fluid. The technology to transform it back to drinkable water does not exist. And, even if it did, where would we put all the noxious, radioactive substances we capture from it?

“HERE, THEN, are the environmental precepts violated by hydrofracking: 1) Environmental degradation of the commons should be factored into the price structure of the product (full-cost accounting), whose true carbon footprint—inclusive of all those diesel truck trips, blowouts, and methane leaks—requires calculation (life-cycle analysis). 2) Benefit of the doubt goes to public health, not the things that threaten it, especially in situations where catastrophic harm—aquifer contamination with carcinogens—is unremediable (the Precautionary Principle). 3) There is no away.”

read more: Orion Magazine

Toxic Foam Chokes Brazil River

Photo retrieved from: www.nationalgeographic.com

“Toxic foam chokes Brazil‘s most polluted waterway, the Tietê River, on September 4 in the town of Pirapora do Bom Jesus (map).

The foam is caused mostly by untreated household runoff from nearby São Paulo, the biggest city in Brazil, according to Malu Ribeiro, water-program coordinator for the local environmental nonprofit SOS Mata Atlântica. The runoff flows directly into the river via waste pipes, she added.

The organization has tracked the river‘s water quality since 1993, a few years after foam pollution was first detected. (How much do you know about the world’s fresh water?)

The foam forms when water mixes with phosphate and phosphorus—ingredients found in products such as biodegradable detergents, Ribeiro said.

The phenomenon occurs in Brazil’s June-to-August dry season, when lowered water levels make the pollutants more concentrated.”

Read more: National Geographic

Perú: Cusco Paralizado Por Protestas

Foto encontrado en: www.bbc.co.uk

“Al culminar el primer día de una huelga de 48 horas en Cusco, la antigua capital imperial Inca, la ciudad continuaba paralizada, con los servicios de trenes a Machu Picchu, la mayor atracción turística del país, suspendidos.

Las protestas se realizan en contra de un proyecto de irrigación en otra parte del sur del país andino que, según los campesinos levantados, amenaza con dejarlos sin agua.

Durante el día, cientos de manifestantes que se habían solidarizado con la gente de Espinar, marcharon por las calles de la ciudad donde se habían suspendido las clases escolares y la actividad comercial había quedado reducida a un mínimo.

Las carreteras que comunican con el circuito turístico del Valle Sagrado continúan bloqueadas, mientras que los campesinos de Espinar se preparan para llegar a Cusco este miércoles.”

Leér más: BBC Mundo

More Than 3 Million Affected By Indian Floods

Photo retrieved from: www.reuters.com

“The waters have ravaged 500,000 hectares of farmland in Uttar Pradesh, the top cane growing state, prompting the government to cut by around a tenth its sugar output projections for the harvest season beginning in October.

People waded through chest deep water, travelled on bullock carts or on boats to reach safer areas, carrying children and household belongings in their hands and on their heads. In relief camps, they complained of a lack of food and medicines.

(For a graphic on rains distribution, click link.reuters.com/xex59n)

In Uttarakhand, where the army was called in after the Hindu holy river Ganges rose to near the danger level by the sacred town of Haridwar, 500,000 people were affected by the floods, said Mahendra Negi, a disaster management centre official.

“They (army) are actively providing medicines, shifting people to safer grounds and conducting repairs of small stretches of roads,” said Colonel S. Om Singh, the army spokesman.”

Read more: Reuters

Activists Stop Chevron Deepwater Drilling Ship Off The Shetland Islands

Photo retrieved from: www.networkedblogs.com

“The area west of Shetland is believed to hold 2bn-4bn barrels of ‘oil equivalent’ in oil and gas. BP already operates three oil and gas fields in the area, in water no deeper than 1,800ft. In July 2010, BP confirmed that it plans to drill at much deeper depths at a potential field called Cardhu, a few miles south of the Chevron site.

This occupation comes just two days before environment ministers from countries bordering the North Sea meet in Norway to discuss a proposal to ban new deep water oil drilling in the area at the OSPAR Convention. The UK government is sending two ministers to the meeting to block the proposal.

Listen to Victor talking on the phone about what it’s like hanging off the anchor chain.

We saw what happened in the Gulf of Mexico only a few months ago.The world’s biggest oil spill a direct consequence of reckless deepwater drilling. It’s time we go beyond oil and stop gambling with our environment and the climate.”

Read more: Earth First

Navajo Community Groups Appeal To Highest Court To Stop Uranium Contamination of Drinking Water

Photo retrieved from: www.alternet.org

“The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has granted a license to mine uranium in Crownpoint and Church Rock to Hydro Resources, a subsidiary of the Texas-based Uranium Resources, Inc.

The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Hydro Resources Inc.’s Section 8 property in Church Rock is not in Indian Country.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, with the Navajo Nation as intervenor, had argued previously before the 10th Circuit that because “the community of reference,” or Churchrock, is in Indian Country, Hydro Resources’ land must be considered Indian Country, too.

During the administrative proceeding after which the Nuclear Regulatory Commission granted Hydro Resources a uranium mining license, Eastern Navajo Dine against Uranium Mining, ENDAUM, presented evidence that the proposed uranium mining operation would contaminate large areas of groundwater, including the Navajo communities’ primary drinking water source.

This is the first time that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has licensed a uranium mining operation in a community drinking water supply, says Jantz, “despite the fact that no aquifer in which in-situ leach uranium mining has occurred has ever been restored to pre-mining condition.”

Read more: AlterNet