Archive for March 6th, 2011

Green jeans: big companies start sustainable clothing initiative

Mongabay: Ever wonder how 'green' one pair of shoes was over another? Or how much energy, water, and chemicals went into making your pair of jeans? A new effort by over 32 companies, environmental organizations, and social watchdogs may soon allow shoppers to compare not only price and appeal, but sustainability too. Dubbed the Sustainable Apparel Coalition, the group plans to craft an industry-wide index, which measures the environmental and social impacts of clothing and footwear. With corporate heavyweights...

Bountiful Alaska salmon harvest forecast for 2011

Reuters: The 2011 Alaska commercial salmon harvest is forecast to be one of the largest since statehood -- but that doesn't mean prices will be coming down any time soon, a state fish and game official said on Sunday. The Alaska Department of Fish and Game forecasts that 203 million fish will be caught this year, the fifth largest haul since statehood, thanks to a combination of good environmental conditions over the past few years as well as careful management by the state. The harvest of pink salmon,...

World’s most controversial dam, Brazil’s Belo Monte, back on

Mongabay: A recent injunction against controversial dam, Belo Monte, in Brazil has been overturned, allowing the first phase of construction to go ahead. The ruling by a higher court argued that not all environmental conditions must be met on the dam in order for construction to start. Issued on February 25th, the injunction against the dam argued that the partial license granted by Brazil's environmental agency, IBAMA, was issued illegally. Judge Ronaldo Destêrro found that the license was granted under...

Biodiversity Panel Learns from IPCC Experience

Inter Press Service: After five years of preparation the international community is expected to launch the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services this year. For some of its proponents, even the decisions of the World Trade Organisation should be subject to its analysis. IPBES would be analogous to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), but focused on biological diversity. The idea behind this effort is that decisions by all levels of government are largely responsible for...

Experts say roads, ports could be in danger

Daily Comet: Traffic passes along the Leeville Bridge Thursday. Transportation advocates and port officials say that in the future, sea-level rise could endanger ports and the roads that serve them. Global warming could pose a threat to Port Fourchon and the roads that serve it, according to transportation advocates and port officials. Related Links: Air your views about oil recycler`s permit The La. 1 Coalition, a group that has long pushed for major improvements to the road that connects Fourchon to...

United States: Denver puts water fees toward forest conservation

Ecosystem Marketplace: Like many cities around the world, Denver gets its drinking water from rivers and reservoirs, which in turn get their water from forests. Many of those forests, however, are in trouble – thanks to funding cuts, climate change, and a horde of opportunistic beetles. That puts the city's water supply at risk as well, so Denver teamed up with the U.S. Forest Service to funnel money it collects from water fees into forest restoration. And it's not the only city to do so. Denver Water delivers clean...

Chevron-Ecuador case spawns complex legal issues

San Francisco Chronicle: The $9.5 billion environmental lawsuit against Chevron Corp. in Ecuador has touched off an international legal scrum, with courts on three continents trying to assert control over the outcome. And it could get messier. The long-running case, watched worldwide for the precedent it could set, will probably move to other countries unless the two sides settle, which Chevron has vowed not to do. Last month, an Ecuadoran judge ruled that Chevron should pay to clean up a swath of the Amazon rain forest...

Climate change takes toll on coffee growers, drinkers too

Seattle Times: A mile above this rural mountain town, coffee trees have produced some of the world's best arabica beans for more than a century. Now farmers are planting even higher -- at nearly 7,000 feet -- thanks to warmer temperatures. "We noticed about six years ago, the weather changed," said Ricardo Calderón Madrigal, whose family harvests ripe, red coffee cherries at the higher elevation. He sells beans to some of the most notable coffeehouses in the U.S., including Stumptown Coffee of Portland and...

Deforestation’s impact on Mount Kilimanjaro calculated

ScienceDaily: The impact that local deforestation might have on the snowcap and glaciers atop Mount Kilimanjaro are being calculated at The University of Alabama in Huntsville using regional climate models and data from NASA satellites. The first piece of that research, which looked only at the month of July, found that deforestation is changing weather patterns around the mountain but not (at least in July) at the peak, according to Dr. Udaysankar Nair, a research scientist in UAHuntsville's Earth System Science...