Archive for January 17th, 2011

Drinking water in Vietnam has excessive arsenic

Reuters: More than a quarter of drinking wells in Vietnam's densely-populated Red River delta contain unsafe levels of arsenic that can cause cancer, neurological problems and hypertension, researchers warned on Tuesday. In a paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they also said 44 percent of the wells in the delta carried levels of manganese that exceed World Health Organization guidelines. "About 7 million people are at a considerable risk of chronic arsenic...

Queensland’s soggy soils revealed

BBC: Smos passes over Australia twice a day, producing broad strips of imagery Continue reading the main story Queensland Floods Nick Bryant: Australians' extraordinary grit How flood recovery begins In pictures: Flood clean-up Barrier reef braces for flood impact The extent to which Queensland's soils became saturated with water as the Australian state was deluged with rain is evident in new satellite imagery. The maps were made by Europe's Smos spacecraft, which carries a novel instrument...

Groups launch wind power product label “WindMade”

Reuters: Groups and companies including WWF and Danish wind turbine maker Vestas on Monday supported the launch of "WindMade" as a label for products made using wind power, aiming to attract green consumers. To use the label, producers would have to pass a test confirming their use of wind power, and in return they can benefit from a possible price premium similar to that organic food has over conventional produce. A technical group has not yet decided details of how the label would work, backers of...

Losing the Andes glaciers

Global Warming: Glacier melt hasn’t caused a national crisis in Peru, yet. But high in the Andes, rising temperatures and changes in water supply have decimated crops, killed fish stocks and forced entire villages to question how they will survive for another generation. U.S. officials are watching closely because without quick intervention, they say, the South American nation could become an unfortunate case study in how climate change can destabilize a strategically important region and, in turn, create conditions...

Floods report for climate committee

Sydney Morning Hearld: A report on the flood disaster and climate change will be undertaken by an expert on the federal government's multi-party committee which is investigating ways to price carbon. Professor Will Steffen, a member of the climate change committee set up by the Gillard government in September last year, told AAP he was working on a report covering the floods. The report comes as the Australian Greens called on the coal industry to foot some of the flood damage bill because of the role of burning...

Floods ‘highlight challenges’ of waterfront living

Australian Broadcasting Corporation: An economist on Queensland's Gold Coast says the Brisbane floods have highlighted the challenges that can confront waterfront property owners. Riverfront homes were among the thousands of properties inundated in south-east Queensland last week. Around 180 real estate professionals from around the world are discussing the impact of climate change on property developments at a conference at Bond University this week. The director of the Institute for Sustainable Development at Bond University,...

Miners attack Greens leader Bob Brown over call for coal producers to fund flood clean-up

Australian: James Madden reports from Gailes Caravan Village in Brisbane, where 100 residents lost everything they owned in the floods. GREENS leader Bob Brown is facing mounting condemnation after calling on coal companies to foot the bill for the Queensland flood recovery. Senator Brown said coal companies, as major climate change contributors, should pay a 40 per cent resources super profits tax to pay for the clean-up. Minerals Council of Australia deputy chief Brendan Pearson accused Senator Brown...

Natural greenhouse gas sink is smaller than believed

Daily Independent: An international team of scientists has uncovered an important part of the global greenhouse gas budget. This new analysis indicates that greenhouse gas uptake by continents is less optimistic than previously thought. The balance between carbon uptake by continents and their emissions of greenhouse gases is important because it indicates how much continents can compensate for human emissions of CO2 to the atmosphere. Past analyses of carbon and greenhouse gas exchanges on continents have failed...

Australian floods threaten Victoria state

Reuters: Water seeped on to the streets of rural communities in southern Australia today as the country's flood crisis threatened to deliver another region its worst deluge in a century. Residents of Victoria state waited anxiously for rising waters in their towns to peak, after three weeks of flooding tore a devastating path through the north-eastern state of Queensland, in what could be the country's costliest natural disaster. The region's Murray-Darling river basin links Queensland with New South...

Kansas teacher discovers new water beetles

Associated Press: LAWRENCE -- University of Kansas entomologist Andrew Short is not new to fieldwork. The 30-year-old assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology has taken part in 20 expeditions to South America, eight in the past four years to Venezuela to study aquatic insects. But his latest expedition directed him to what he describes as "a high-difficulty place to get into" -- an unspoiled tropical rain forest in Suriname, where he discovered at least 20 species of water beetles new to science....