Archive for June 23rd, 2010

Shoddy parts trip up major North Sea wind farm

Spiegel: Unforeseen problems at the Alpha Ventus wind farm have lukewarm investors reevaluating the billions of euros they have invested in offshore wind energy. Germany's first offshore wind park was dealt a blow with the failure of two turbines due to inferior materials. The rough patch has energy executives scurrying to reassure Berlin and banks scrutinizing their billions in offshore wind energy investments. Less than two months after celebrating its opening, the Alpha Ventus test ...

iPhone 4 and Apple’s silence on pollution in China

Guardian: Announcing the iPhone4 at the WWDC conference earlier this month, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said, "it's a major jump from the original models. This is undoubtedly the most beautiful and sophisticated product I have created." However in sharp contrast with this high-profile release, Apple has been silent about questions regarding their supply chain's heavy metal pollution. On April 16, 2010, 34 Chinese environmental organizations, including Friends of Nature, the Institute of Public and ...

Gulf property sales slide further on oil fears

Associated Press: This was the year, Alicia Hollis and her fellow real estate agents thought. After a nasty batch of hurricanes and the bursting of the housing bubble, this was the year that condo sales along the Florida Panhandle's brilliant white beaches were going to rebound. Then came the oil -- or more accurately, the mere threat of oil. Though most of the Gulf Coast remains free of tar balls, sheen and sludge from the spill in the Gulf of Mexico, owners and agents say the disaster has ...

U.S. Halts Use of Beetle to Attack Tamarisk

New York Times: Got an alien invader plant species? Unleash an alien insect invader to fight back. One invader eats the other, and then abracadabra: problem solved. That was the theory, anyway. But the United States Department of Agriculture this month quietly ended its involvement in a five-year-old program intended to reduce an invasive alien tree species in the West -- the saltcedar, or tamarisk -- using an equally alien invasive beetle from Kazakhstan, the saltcedar leaf beetle, which loves to ...

United States: Where Thoreau Lived, Crusade Over Bottles

New York Times: Henry David Thoreau was jailed here 164 years ago for refusing to pay taxes while living at Walden Pond. Now the town has Jean Hill to contend with. Jean Hill has proposed a ban on the sale of bottled water in Concord, which will be reviewed by the state attorney general and could go into effect next January. Mrs. Hill, an octogenarian previously best known for her blueberry jam, proposed banning the sale of bottled water here at a town meeting this spring. Voters approved, ...

Fierce Recycling Effort in Fighting Oil’s Spread

New York Times: Pete Parker's not-so-small frame radiates purpose. Striding around a dockside yard where his "decontamination unit' works, he keeps an eye on 11 workers who are stooped over drills, bolts and iron mallets to repair oil-containment booms damaged by waves and strong currents in the gulf. Pete Parker, center, leads the unit that works on the Gulf Coast to make damaged oil-containment booms seaworthy again. Like a cobbler in a town where no new shoes are to be had, Mr. Parker, 60, ...

United Kingdom: Hydropower schemes surge in decade, Environment Agency figures show

Press Association: The number of small-scale hydropower schemes to generate energy from rivers in England and Wales has surged in the last decade, figures from the Environment Agency showed today. The number of new licences issued by the government agency for hydropower schemes has increased sixfold since 2000. Last year, 31 new licences for energy schemes in rivers were granted – compared with just five in 2000. The Environment Agency has already issued 29 licences this year and is ...

Biking the Danube for biodiversity

Guardian: It was when we were swimming in the tranquil waters of a Romanian lake this month that it really sank in. Surrounded by willows filled with birds sunning their wings and electric blue dragonflies zipping past, this was the delta of the Danube and we'd cycled nearly 3,000 km to get there. It was over a year ago that we first had the rash idea to cycle the length of "Europe's answer to the Amazon", the longest river in the EU, which passes through 10 countries from its source in ...

Oil Spill Provokes Questions On Human Health

National Public Radio: Medical researchers are meeting this week in New Orleans to discuss the health effects of the ongoing oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. But most of the discussion is about what's NOT known. The workshop was pulled together in a matter of days by the Institute of Medicine, a prestigious independent body chartered by Congress. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius asked for the review. Even though oil spills are fairly common, scientists at the two-day workshop say ...