Rachel's News #985

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Rachel's Democracy & Health News #985

"Environment, health, jobs and justice--Who gets to decide?"

Thursday, November 13, 2008.............Printer-friendly version
www.rachel.org
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Featured stories in this issue...

The 'Other' CO2 Problem: Acidity Threatens Ocean Life
  If carbon dioxide emissions remain unchecked, in 40 years the
  oceans will be more acidic than anything experienced in the past 20
  million years.
Town of Lyndhurst, N.J. Adopts the Precautionary Principle
  The town of Lyndhurst, N.J. this week adopted a precautionary
  principle ordinance to guide municipal policy. Lyndhurst is only the
  second municipality in the U.S. to adopt precaution as an overarching
  guide to municipal policy, and the first on the East Coast to do so.
Energy Agency Warns of 10.8 Degree Fahrenheit Temperature Rise
  The International Energy Agency's latest report says the planet is
  on course to experience an average temperate rise of 11 degrees
  Fahrenheit.
Changing Climate May Push More Countries Past the Brink of War
  At the planet rapidly warms and people are dislocated by floods,
  drought and famine, they will be thrown together in unexpected ways,
  so rising levels of conflict will not be a surprise.
What the Public Doesn't Get About Climate Change
  We have a steady drumbeat of new scientific evidence of global
  warming's severity but little in the way of real precautionary action.
  Why? Because "There is a profound and fundamental misconception about
  climate." Even graduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of
  Technology (M.I.T.) don't get it.
Nanotechnology Sparks Fears for the Future
  A report from the British Royal Commission -- the top science
  agency in the United Kingdom -- says nano particles that are already
  in consumer products will kill people, just as asbestos has done,
  unless humans become much better at regulating commerce and protecting
  the public.
Prescription Drugs Can Deliver High Doses of Phthalates
  "Every day for three months, the patient took a prescription drug
  called Asacol to treat his inflamed colon. Unbeknownst to him, every
  pill he swallowed also delivered a dose of a hormone-altering,
  industrial chemical."
An Attempt To Control Corporate Behavior Is Thwarted, for Now
  In 2006, a solid majority of voters in Humboldt County, California
  approved Meaure-T, which outlawed donations to local electoral
  candidates by corporations with headquarters outside the county (such
  as Wal-Mart). But the corporations have managed to frighten the
  County Board of Supervisors into declaring the new law null and void.

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From: The Daily Climate, Nov. 12, 2008
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THE OCEAN'S ACID TEST

Changes society is forcing on the ocean may be larger than any
inferred from the geologic record of the past 300 million years. And
it's already underway.

By Douglas Fischer, Daily Climate editor

The most pressing example of climate change's impact is not monster
hurricanes, retreating glaciers or water wars. It's the humble
swimming sea snail.

The tiny pteropod has difficulty growing a shell in a warmer planet's
acidified ocean waters. Given the snails' role at the base of the
cold-water food chain, its struggle threatens the entire polar
ecosystem, through salmon to seals and whales.

The problem is one of many associated with ocean acidification. That
change is well underway -- a consequence of warming that has already
happened and fossil-fuel emissions that have long since been dumped
into the atmosphere.

In absorbing those emissions the oceans have buffered humanity from
the worst effects of climate change. But in doing so ocean chemistry
has changed, acidifying to levels not seen in 800,000 years.

The result, according to a new report issued today by Oceana, is
that today's ocean chemistry is already hostile for many creatures
fundamental to the marine food web. The world's oceans -- for so long
a neat and invisible sink for humanity's carbon dioxide emissions --
are about to extract a price for all that waste.

The effects are not local: Entire ecosystems threaten to literally
crumble away as critters relying on calcium carbonate for a home -
from corals to mollusks to the sea snail -- have a harder time
manufacturing their shells. Corals shelter millions of species
worldwide, while sea snails account for upwards of 45 percent of the
diet of pink salmon.

To avoid the most serious problems associated with acidification,
Oceana and other scientists warn, society must hold atmospheric carbon
dioxide levels at 350 parts-per-million, roughly 25 percent higher
than the pre-industrial mark.

The rub is that the globe has already passed 385 ppm. And many
economists and climatologists figure the peak will lie somewhere north
of 570 ppm before society figures out how to curb emissions.

"Climate change has been happening for a long time," said Jackie
Savitz, Oceana's senior director of pollution campaigns and co-author
of the report, Acid Test: Can we save our oceans from CO2? The oceans
"are so big, so vast, and everyone thought they were untouchable. But
the fact is we've been touching them all along."

****

What alarms scientists most is the rate of change: The transformation
has happened over 250 years, faster than anything in the historical
record. And if emissions remain unchecked, Oceana warned, the oceans
in 40 years will be more acidic than anything experienced in the past
20 million years.

Over the next several centuries the pH changes may be larger than any
inferred from the geologic record of the past 300 million years, with
the exception of a few rare extreme events, scientists predict.

The process is fairly simple. For eons prior to the Industrial
Revolution, oceans were at equilibrium with the atmosphere, absorbing
as much carbon dioxide as they released.

As humanity started burning fuel, atmospheric carbon dioxide levels
started to rise, and the oceans responded, taking in more and more
carbon each year and increasing acidity by nearly 30 percent.

The oceans so far have absorbed some 30 percent of the carbon dioxide
that humans have added to the atmosphere since the beginning of the
Industrial Revolution and nearly 80 percent of the heat generated by
those gases, according to Oceana.

Today the world's oceans absorb some 30 million metric tons of extra
carbon dioxide every day, according to scientists -- roughly twice the
amount of carbon dioxide emitted each day by the United States.

The ocean has a number of natural buffers to help with change -- ocean
sediments and deep water represent two enormous potential reservoirs -
but they all work on vastly slower time scales, said Richard Zeebe,
associate professor of oceanography at the University of Hawaii at
Manoa.

"It's very difficult to find a nice analogue in the past that's going
to show what we're going to experience over the next 200 to 300
years," he said. "It's pretty much outrageous what we've done."

"We are overwhelming the system," he added. "The system is not quick
enough to react. It takes thousands of years to do this."

****

Scientists are already seeing harm as the oceans acidify. Reefs are
struggling in many parts of the world, shell growth rates are slowing,
life phases -- particularly reproductive maturity -- are being thrown
out of whack.

Even the healthiest reefs in the most optimum conditions today face a
daily struggle to grow faster than reef dwellers and the ocean can
erode them, and the effects grow more dire as atmospheric carbon
dioxide levels rise.

Somewhere between 450 ppm and 500 ppm atmospheric carbon dioxide, for
instance, lies a tipping point where, scientists suspect, reefs become
"rapidly eroding rubble banks." Much beyond that, Oceana reported,
"reefs as we know them would be extremely rare." Current projections
show that by the end of this century no adequate conditions for coral
will remain in the world's oceans.

But the chemistry is complex and the variables myriad. Atmospheric
carbon dioxide alone does not determine acidity.

"We cannot look into the past and say atmospheric carbon dioxide was
highest in the Cretaceous (65 to 145 million years ago), therefore
this is what the ocean is going to look like," Zeebe said. "Time scale
is key. Rate of change is key."

A frequently touted example of rapid change in the geologic record is
the so-called Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum. About 55 million years
ago the Earth abruptly warmed 6 deg. C, the oceans acidified,
atmospheric and oceanic circulation patterns shifted and a large
number of bottom- dwellers died off.

That change happened over perhaps 10,000 years -- not even close to
today's pace.

"This is hard for many people to understand," Zeebe said. "You need to
separate the different time scales."

****

Oceana maintains that holding atmospheric carbon dioxide at 350 ppm
would prevent the most dire problems but still represents a
concentration above the safe threshold for today's ocean life.

But for many scientists, that mark is history; in fact current
industrial emissions exceed even the highest scenario -- 850 ppm by
century's end -- mapped by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, said Stanford University climatologist Stephen Schneider.

There's no question 350 ppm represents the safest level, Schneider
said. But society will be lucky to peak at 450 ppm, he said, with a
more likely crest north of 550 ppm before emissions stabilize.

"We're going to have an overshoot," he said. "The only question is how
bad is that overshoot going to be."

"Our objective has to be to prevent a 'much worse,' rather than
pretend we can roll the clock back to an impossibility."

The question then becomes how much acidification can reefs handle
before they start to crumble. Unfortunately as scientists learn more,
the threshold keeps dropping.

"We're pretty sure that 560 is too high and we're almost certain that
700 is too high, but we just plain don't know much about whether 350
or 450 would be OK," said Joanie Kleypas, a marine scientist studying
coral at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder,
Colo.

Marine scientists have gradually concluded that world carbon dioxide
levels will eventually peak at some higher-than-desired threshold no
matter what happens, Kleypas said, and hold hope that some technology
or solution will bring concentrations back down to the threshold level
or lower.

There are hazards with this approach, or course, notably the increased
likelihood of passing dangerous tipping points in climate, ocean
circulation or general ecological response.

That's why Oceana's Savitz believes the line must be held at 350 ppm.
It is a realistic goal, she said. "The good news is it's from lack of
trying. We really haven't done the obvious things or picked the low-
hanging fruit."

Conservation, for instance, can erase big chunks of projected
emissions.

The Oceana report outlines five approaches that together would help
drop atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations to 350 ppm and preserve
coral, including stopping deforestation and overfishing, promoting
energy efficiency and low-carbon fuels, and regulating carbon
releases.

"The better job we do at limiting ourselves, the less (harm) we'll
see," Savitz said. "But we're going to see some impacts. We're not
going to get out of this unscathed."

Douglas Fischer is editor of TheDailyClimate.org. Reach him at
dfis...@dailyclimate.org.

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From: Rachel's Precaution Reporter #168, Nov. 12, 2008
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TOWN OF LYNDHURST, N.J. ADOPTS THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE

By Peter Montague

The town of Lyndhurst, N.J. yesterday adopted a precautionary
principle ordinance to guide municipal policy.

Lyndhurst is only the second municipality in the U.S. to adopt the
precautionary principle as an overarching guide to municipal policy,
and the first on the East Coast to do so. The City and County of San
Francisco (Calif.) adopted the precautionary principle in June,
2002.

Ordinance #2674 was introduced Oct. 14, unanimously approved Oct. 21
after a "first reading" and finalized Nov. 11 by a unanimous vote of
the township Commission. The official text of Ordinance 2674 is
available here.

Lyndhurst is a municipality of 20,000 people in Bergen County, an old
industrial town located in the Meadowlands of northern N.J.

Section 22-8.1 of Ordinance 2674 reads, "The following Precautionary
Principle shall be established as the policy of the Township of
Lyndhurst: 'When an activity raises threats of harm to human health,
or the environment precautionary measures should be taken even if some
cause and effect relationships are not fully established
scientifically.' (Wingspread Statement, 1998)"

Section 22-8.2 of Ordinance 2674, says, in part,

"a. ...The Township of Lyndhurst will utilize the Precautionary
Principle to develop laws for a healthier environment. By doing so,
the Township will create and maintain a healthy, viable environment
for current and future generations, and will become a model of
sustainability. The Precautionary Principle is intended as a tool and
philosophy to promote environmentally healthy alternatives while
removing the negative and often unintended consequences of new
technologies."

"b. ...The Township of Lyndhurst will strive to make decisions based
on the least environmentally harmful alternatives in order to provide
every resident with an equal right to a healthy and safe environment.
This requires that our air, water, soil, and food be of a sufficiently
high standard that we can live healthy lives. The precautionary
approach to decision-making will help Lyndhurst move beyond fixing
environmental ills to preventing the ills before they can do harm."

The local newspaper, The Leader, ran a story October 23 quoting
Lyndhurst Mayor Richard J. DiLascio explaining how precaution
could serve Lyndhurst:

"In an interview after the ordinance was introduced Oct. 14, DiLascio
expressed frustration that the cost of environmental monitoring tests
near Bedroc [a demolition firm that emits dust into the air adjacent
to a public recreational complex] would have to be borne by the
township. Lyndhurst opted not to perform them.

"Instead, DiLascio said the contractor should have to prove that its
actions are not unhealthy.

"'If you're going to do something that has a potential hazard, you are
going to have to show that it's not going to be detrimental to the
environment, the municipality or any other waterway,' DiLascio said."

Bedroc Contracting is a demolition company operating immediately
adjacent to public ball fields where kids play soccer. Bedroc operates
heavy machinery, kicking up clouds of dust.

In response to the Bedroc situation, and to a possible cancer
cluster, the township's health officer, Joyce Jacobson, initiated the
precautionary ordinance.

"We're almost positive [Bedrock's air emissions are] harmful,"
Jacobson told the Leader newspaper. "But the scientific proof isn't
there.... We can't prove (it), because we can't do the testing that
it's harmful, so we don't have scientific evidence. But, we all pretty
much know or believe that it is."

Jacobson -- trained as a physician's assistant -- wrote the precaution
ordinance in conjunction with Mayor DiLascio.

The new ordinance puts a premium on preventing harm, rather than
managing harm. It shifts the burden of proof of safety from the health
department onto a polluter like Bedroc, to show that its emissions are
not harmful. When decisions are pending, it will also initiate a
systematic search for the least-harmful way of achieving the
municipality's goals.

Mayor DiLascio says he hopes other communities will follow Lyndhurst's
example and adopt the precautionary principle.

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From: New Scientist, Nov. 6, 2008
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ENERGY AGENCY WARNS OF 6 DEG. C RISE IN TEMPERATURES

By Catherine Brahic

Our voracious appetite for energy is potentially putting the planet on
the path for a 6 deg. C (10.8 deg. Fahrenheit) rise in temperatures --
which is far more than what climate specialists say the environment
can cope with.

In its 2008 World Energy Outlook, the International Energy Agency says
the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit will have to set ambitious carbon-
limiting caps and that the energy sector must play a key role in
making this possible.

European policy-makers have set themselves the goal of keeping
temperature rises below 2 deg. C (3.6 deg. F.) relative to what they
were before the industrial revolution. Last year, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [IPCC] issued its forecasts
of how rises between 1 deg. C (1.8 deg. F.) and 5 deg. C (9 deg. F.)
would change the environment (see table in Climate Change is here
now, says major report). A rise of 6 deg. C (10.8 deg. F.) was off
the charts.

The report addresses fossil fuel reserves -- the main culprits of
temperature rises. It says that oil is not running out just yet, and
could last until at least 2030, if consumption continues to rise at
current rates. However, the agency warns that while the oil may be
there, we may not be able to exploit it fast enough to meet demand.

The group also chastises oil-rich African nations for the energy
poverty of its citizens. As an example, it cites Nigeria and Angola
whose oil and gas exports bring in some £3.5 trillion each year.
Yet the IEA estimates that more than half the population in ten oil-
rich African nations could still rely on wood and charcoal for cooking
by 2030.

"Tackling energy poverty is well within these countries' means but
major institutional reforms are needed," the IEA concludes.

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From: The Kansas City Star (Missouri), Nov. 8, 2008
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CHANGING CLIMATE MAY PUSH MORE COUNTRIES PAST THE BRINK OF WAR

By Scott Canon

A warmer planet could find itself more often at war.

The Earth's fast-changing climate has a range of serious thinkers --
from military brass to geographers to diplomats -- predicting a spate
of armed conflicts driven by the weather.

Shifting temperatures lead to shifting populations, they say, and that
throws together groups with longstanding rivalries and thrusts them
into competition for food and water.

"It's not hard to imagine violent outbursts," said Julianne Smith of
the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Smith helped write one of four major studies put out in a little more
than a year by centrist organizations in Europe and the United States
that warn climate change threatens to spark wars in a variety of ways.

Each report predicted starkly similar problems: gunfire over land and
natural resources as once-bountiful soil turns to desert and
coastlines slip below the sea. They also expect violent storms to
unsettle weak governments and set up dispirited radicals in revolt.

Security analysts say profound dangers are just years, not decades,
away. They already see evidence of societies at odds.

Ethnic groups clash in Sudan's Darfur region, trading gunfire in a
conflict with climatological overtones. The armed thugs who rule
Myanmar were exposed, and their regime knocked back on its heels, when
Cyclone Nargis killed tens of thousands of people in May and the
leadership responded so poorly. Likewise, hurricanes Katrina and Rita
in 2005 began the fall of President Bush's approval ratings.

Much more is going on in Darfur than climate change, but crop scarcity
in the region has pushed rival ethnic groups onto the same turf.

Even those scientists who are most adamant that the planet is warming
in unnatural ways don't blame single storms on climate change. But
even conservative climatologists predict crazier weather that is
capable of toppling governments.

"Governments that are already weak will be destabilized much more
often and much more easily," said Jay Gulledge, a senior scientist at
the Pew Center on Global Climate Change. "And if cooperation isn't
enough to stretch resources, then what happens?"

Mounting studies suggest a number of potentially violent scenarios:

oPeople see their fertile land turn arid and migrate -- packing them
closer to historical and newfound adversaries.

oCountries already weak or crippled by corruption tip into chaos with
even moderate climate change. Crop failures spur violent uprisings and
give new energy to ethnic grudges in the face of famine.

oCompetition for resources -- food, water, oil -- grows more tense in
times of scarcity.

oEconomic collapse in North Africa gives rise to Islamist extremism as
blame for climate change focuses on the West. By accident of history
and geography, Islamic countries feel the first profound effects of
climate change.

** Flooding of coastal areas -- particularly in South Asia and the
United States -- force severe migration and alter regional and even
national identities.

** A push to revive the nuclear power industry -- as a way to find
energy that doesn't belch more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere --
masks rogue countries' efforts to build atomic weapons.

Although still controversial in some circles -- Congress has split
along partisan lines over whether the military should plan for global
warming -- the scientific consensus is that the Industrial Revolution
increased greenhouse gases that set off an unprecedented rate of
climate change.

Growing seasons could lengthen. Frozen seas could thaw to make way for
convenient shipping routes. Previously inaccessible spots could be
ripe to gush oil.

Meantime, wetlands could dry up. Rivers could disappear. Scientists
already think that hurricanes, blizzards and droughts are more
frequent and more severe. Rising sea levels could send tens of
millions of people scurrying for higher ground.

"The idea that somehow there are winners in this is wrong," said Peter
Ogden, a security analyst at the Center for American Progress. "Even
places that come out ahead" -- a longer growing season, for instance
-- "will see pressure on them from outside from the losers."

Last year the Center for Naval Analyses gathered retired generals and
admirals to gauge the potential for climate to cause conflict. The
former commanders concluded that war would be more likely, that the
U.S. military needed to plan for the new threats and that the United
States had to reduce its carbon emissions.

"We will pay for this one way or another," wrote retired Marine Gen.
Anthony Zinni, the former chief of the U.S. Central Command. "We will
pay to reduce greenhouse gas emissions today, and we'll have to take
an economic hit of some kind. Or, we will pay the price later in
military terms. And that will involve human lives. There will be a
human toll."

Already, the effects pose logistical headaches for the military.

The retreat of ice in the Arctic Ocean means more water for the Navy
to patrol. Yet it sports only two aged ships designed to patrol in icy
waters while Russia and Canada have far larger fleets capable of
sailing the region.

In the tropics, British and U.S. forces have come to rely on the
remote Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia as a key staging ground --
including for the Missouri-based B-2 stealth bomber. With an average
elevation of just four feet above sea level, the melting of ice near
the Earth's poles could raise oceans and flood runways there.

Even as the planet becomes harder to navigate, the military could be
called on with increasing regularity to respond to humanitarian crises
set off by the upswing in severe storms.

Developing countries stand most at risk, the studies conclude. Those
countries lack the resources to absorb resulting disasters.

Consider Bangladesh. Long riddled by crushing poverty, it lies in a
region that scientists expect will see even more devastating storms
and the steady retreat of its coastline. That could send even more
Bangladeshi Muslims running to the fence that predominantly Hindu
India is building to keep them out.

Likewise, weather patterns that make it harder to grow food in Latin
America could increase the rush to cross the southern U.S. border.

"People will pay no attention to borders. They will swamp borders.
They will trample over them in desperation." said Raymond Callahan, a
military historian at the University of Delaware.

Even efforts to mitigate global warming could prove dangerous.

Nuclear power doesn't add greenhouse gases, but it could mean the
spread of doomsday technology to unstable parts of the world. Iran
already is thought to be cloaking nuclear weapons ambitions inside
"peaceful" nuclear facilities.

The techonology needed for nuclear power also can produce weapons-
grade uranium.

"If you don't have a lot of safeguards in sharing the technology,
you're going to have a lot of problems," said Richard Weitz, a Hudson
Institute analyst who consulted on one of the climate-security
reports.

The pluses of climate change -- new shipping routes through the
Arctic, land newly suitable for cultivation, fresh access to oil
fields -- could set large militaries on edge.

In August 2007, a Russian diver went almost three miles beneath the
North Pole to plant a titanium flag and claim 463,000 square miles for
his country. That came as Canada was boosting its military presence in
the Arctic.

"When climate changes, then a lot of things follow," said Sherri
Goodman, who helped direct the Center for Naval Analyses study.
"People come into conflict."

To reach Scott Canon, call 816-234-4754 or send e-mail to
sca...@kcstar.com.

Copyright 2007 Kansas City Star

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From: Time Magazine, Oct. 28, 2008
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WHAT THE PUBLIC DOESN'T GET ABOUT CLIMATE CHANGE

By Bryan Walsh

As I report on climate change, I come across a lot of scary facts,
like the possibility that thawing permafrost in Siberia could release
gigatons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere or the risk that
Greenland could pass a tipping point and begin to melt rapidly.

But one of the most frightening studies I've read recently had nothing
to do with icebergs or mega-droughts. In a paper that came out Oct.
23 in Science, John Sterman -- a professor at Massachusetts Institute
of Technology's (MIT) Sloan School of Management -- wrote about asking
212 MIT grad students to give a rough idea of how much governments
need to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions by to eventually stop
the increase in the concentration of carbon in the atmosphere. These
students had training in science, technology, mathematics and
economics at one of the best schools in the world -- they are probably
a lot smarter than you or me. Yet 84% of Sterman's subjects got the
question wrong, greatly underestimating the degree to which greenhouse
gas emissions need to fall. When the MIT kids can't figure out climate
change, what are the odds that the broader public will?

The shocking study reflects the tremendous gap that exists regarding
global warming. On the one hand are the scientists, who with few
exceptions think climate change is very serious and needs to be dealt
with immediately and ambitiously. On the other side is the public,
which increasingly believes that climate change is real and worries
about it, but which rarely ranks it as a high priority.

A 2007 survey by the U.N. Development Programme found that 54% of
Americans advocate taking a "wait and see" approach to climate-change
action -- holding off on the deep and rapid cuts in global warming
that would immediately impact their lives. (And it's not just SUV-
driving Americans who take this position -- similar majorities were
found in Russia, China and India.) As a result, we have our current
dilemma: a steady drumbeat of scientific evidence of global warming's
severity and comparatively little in the way of meaningful political
action.

"This gap exists," says Sterman. "The real question is why."

That's where Sterman's research comes in. "There is a profound and
fundamental misconception about climate," he says. The problem is that
most of us don't really understand how carbon accumulates in the
atmosphere. Increasing global temperatures are driven by the increase
in the concentration of carbon in the atmosphere. Before the
industrial age, the concentration was about 280 parts per million
(p.p.m.) of carbon in the atmosphere. After a few centuries of burning
coal, oil and other fossil fuels, we've raised that concentration to
387 p.p.m., and it continues to rise by about 2 p.p.m. every year.

Many scientists believe that we need to at least stabilize carbon
concentrations at 450 p.p.m. to ensure that global temperatures don't
increase more than about 2 degrees Celsius [3.6 degrees Fahrenheit]
above the pre-industrial level. To do that, we need to reduce global
carbon emissions (which hit about 10 billion tons last year) until
they are equal to or less than the amount of carbon sequestered by the
oceans and plant life (which removed about 4.8 billion tons of carbon
last year). It's just like water in a bathtub -- unless more water is
draining out than flowing in from the tap, eventually the bathtub will
overflow.

That means that carbon emissions would need to be cut drastically from
current levels. Yet almost all of the subjects in Sterman's study
failed to realize that, assuming instead that you could stabilize
carbon concentration simply by capping carbon emissions at their
current level. That's not the case -- and in fact, pursuing such a
plan for the future would virtually guarantee that global warming
could spin out of control. It may seem to many like good common sense
to wait until we see proof of the serious damage global warming is
doing before we take action. But it's not -- we can't "wait and see"
on global warming because the climate has a momentum all its own, and
if we wait for decades to finally act to reduce carbon emissions, it
could well be too late. Yet this simply isn't understood. Someone as
smart as Bill Gates doesn't seem to get it. "Fortunately climate
change, although it's a huge challenge, it's a challenge that happens
over a long period of time," he said at a forum in Beijing last year.

"You know, we have time to work on it." But the truth is we don't.

If elite scientists could simply solve climate change on their own,
public misunderstanding wouldn't be such a problem. But they can't.

Reducing carbon emissions sharply will require all 6.5 billion (and
growing) of us on the planet to hugely change the way we use energy
and travel. We'll also need to change the way we vote, rewarding
politicians willing to make the tough choices on climate. Instead of a
new Manhattan Project -- the metaphor often used for global warming --
Sterman believes that what is needed is closer to a new civil rights
movement, a large-scale campaign that dramatically changes the
public's beliefs and behaviors. New groups like Al Gore's We Campaign
are aiming for just such a social transformation, but "the reality is
that this is even more difficult than civil rights," says Sterman.

"Even that took a long time, and we don't have that kind of time with
the climate."

The good news is that you don't need a Ph.D. in climatology to
understand what needs to be done. If you can grasp the bathtub
analogy, you can understand how to stop global warming. The burden is
on scientists to better explain in clear English the dynamics of the
climate system, and how to affect it. (Sterman says that the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's landmark report last year
was "completely inadequate" on this score.) As for the rest of us, we
should try to remember that sometimes common sense isn't a match for
science.

Copyright 2008 Time Inc.

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From: The Times (London, U.K.), Nov. 12, 2008
[Printer-friendly version]

NANOTECHNOLOGY SPARKS FEARS FOR THE FUTURE

By Lewis Smith, Environment Reporter

Read the report in full.

Nanomaterials are likely to kill people in the future just as asbestos
did unless extensive safety checks are put in place, a Royal
Commission report has said.

The team of experts assessing the likely impacts of the emerging
technology are worried that when nanomaterials escape into the
environment they will damage people and wildlife but that it will be
years before the effects are seen.

Past generations have brought into general usage materials such as
asbestos, leaded petrol, CFCs and cigarettes without adequately
considering the potential damage and the commission fears
nanomaterials will prove similarly dangerous.

Only by introducing rigorous safety systems, including widespread
monitoring and intensive research, can threats posed by nanomaterials
be identified and countered, the Royal Commission on Environmental
Pollution concluded.

Nanomaterials are already used in a variety of products on the market
including a range of clothes in Japan that have dispensed with dye
because refracting nanomaterials provide the colours.

A nanomaterial placed on the surface of the glass in the roof at St
Pancras Station has been designed to keep it clean. It reacts with
sunlight to break down dirt without the need for window cleaners to
clamber up on the roof.

Many sun creams contain titanium dioxide particles, a nanomaterial
which has been in use for years. There are about 600 different
products using nanomaterials around the world and around 1,500 have
been patented.

Professor Sir John Lawton, chairman of the commission, accepted that
no evidence has yet been found to show damage has been caused to human
health or the environment by nanomaterials.

But he said that while the technology had the potential to offer many
benefits to society there is also the possibility it will cause harm.

"The rate of innovation in this sector far outstrips our capacity to
respond to the risks," he said. "There is an urgent need for more
research and testing of nanomaterials."

So little is understood about nanomaterials in the environment that
scientists have yet even to work out ways of finding them.

Nanomaterials manufactured for use in products were considered by the
Commission to be those that measure one to 100 nanometres long. A
grain of sand is about a million nanometres wide.

Professor Susan Owens, of the University of Cambridge, said: "If we
don't do anything and we leave it, then things manifest themselves in
10 to 15 years' time. By then the technology is so embedded in society
it's very difficult to deal with it."

Backing calls for research and monitoring she said that problems
caused by CFCs, asbestos and other products, were only detected when
they started damaging human health and the environment.

Experts on the Commission estimated Britain and the rest of the world
has about a decade to carry out research on the safety of
nanotechnology before the use of nanomaterials, ranging from the
diameter of a DNA strand to that of a virus, become too widely-used
for any damage to be halted.

The commission's report, Novel Materials in the Environment: the case
of nanotechnology, rejected an outright ban on the technology because
of the huge potential benefits.

A spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs (Defra) said: "As the Commission states, it has found no
evidence of harm to health or the environment from nanomaterials, but
the Government remains committed to researching their health and
environmental impact.

"In particular, ministers are pushing in Europe to ensure that
effective regulation is in place. EU and UK reviews of existing
legislation have concluded that the existing regulatory framework can
be changed to extend to nanomaterials."

Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.

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From: Environmental Health News, Nov. 10, 2008
[Printer-friendly version]

PRESCRIPTION DRUGS CAN DELIVER HIGH DOSES OF PHTHALATES

For millions of people, medicines are a little-known, major source of
the compounds, which are linked to reproductive abnormalities.

Scientists warn "of the potential for high delivered doses of
phthalates to vulnerable segments of the population, particularly
pregnant women or young children."

By Marla Cone

Every day for three months, the patient took a prescription drug
called Asacol to treat his inflamed colon.

Unbeknownst to him, every pill he swallowed also delivered a dose of a
hormone-altering, industrial chemical.

The man, who lived in the Boston area, was contaminated with about 100
times more dibutyl phthalate than ever recorded before in a human
being. His daily dose of the chemical was double the amount that the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers safe.

At least 47 prescription medications--including the colitis drug
Asacol, an antacid and an HIV drug--contain phthalates, according to
scientists at the Harvard School of Public Health and U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.

Widely used as plasticizers, phthalates have been linked to abnormal
reproductive tracts, sperm damage and reduced testosterone in animal
tests as well as some human studies.

Russ Hauser, a Harvard professor ofenvironmental epidemiology, called
pharmaceuticals "an unrecognized source of potential high exposure." A
thin layer of a phthalate-containing polymer, designed to slow the
release of medication, coats many timed-release drugs.

Phthalates are found in virtually every human body. But for people
taking medications coated with the compounds, their exposure exceeds
other, well-known sources, such as plastics, perfumes and lotions, by
ten to 1,000-fold, Hauser said.

Phthalates are ingredients in vinyl, as well as some building
materials, paints, adhesives and personal care products, including
fragrances, shampoos and nail polishes.

Congress enacted a law in August banning the chemicals in toys and
other children's products.

But their use in prescription drugs and over-the-counter medications
is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

New data showing high levels of phthalates in people taking some
medications "raise concern about potential human health risks," Hauser
and his colleagues reported in a study published in October in
Environmental Health Perspectives online.

The scientists warned "of the potential for high delivered doses of
phthalates to vulnerable segments of the population, particularly
pregnant women or young children."

In one case, the man taking Asacol for his ulcerative colitis, an
inflammatory bowel disease, had a concentration of a dibutyl phthalate
(DBP) metabolite in his urine measuring nearly 17,000 parts per
billion, according to a case study reported by the Harvard/CDC team.

The average for the general population was 46.

The unidentified man, in his early 30s, was tested for phthalates as
part of a visit to a Boston infertility clinic. He and his wife were
unable to conceive a child.

The effects of phthalates on male fertility remain unknown, but some
scientists theorize that exposure, especially in the womb, could
contribute to an increase in men's reproductive disorders, such as
reduced sperm quality, testicular cancer and undescended testicles.

Representatives of the plastics industry say the levels of phthalates
used in consumer products are safe. They say human studies are small
and inconclusive, and that the animals in studies showing effects were
exposed to high doses.

The FDA has not put restrictions on use of phthalates except for a
2001 guideline that warned hospitals that phthalate-containing
intravenous tubing and other plastic medical devices exposes infants
to large doses of the chemicals.

Dr. Shanna Swan, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology and of
environmental medicine at University of Rochester, called DBP, used in
Asacol, "one of the most toxic" phthalates. It was associated with
feminization of newborn boys--a shortened distance between the
genitals and the anus -- in a study that Swan and her colleagues
published in 2005.

About 20 million prescriptions for Asacol have been written in the
United States since it was approved by the FDA in 1992, according to
Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals, the drug's manufacturer.

"DBP is an important component of our enteric coating, which ensures
that Asacol is delivered to the site of inflammation in the colon
and/or rectum," said Scott Docherty, external relations manager for
Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals.

Without the phthalate coating, which dissolves when it reaches a
certain pH, the drug would be released in the stomach. Because DBP has
been approved by the FDA, the company is not looking for alternatives,
Docherty said.

P&G's surveillance of patients "has not identified any adverse events
or effects" caused by the DBP, he said.

The Boston area man was prescribed an extraordinary dosage of
Asacol--12 pills a day, which is double the highest recommended dose
on the manufacturer's label. He took it for three months, twice as
long as recommended.

Docherty said for patients taking the recommended doses of Asacol,
their DBP exposure is far below the EPA's "no observed effects level."

"If the patient follows the labeled dose, even the highest dose on the
label, they would be taking six tablets per day and there would still
be a safety margin 100-fold below" the EPA's guideline, Docherty said.

But Hauser's team recently found other examples of high exposure,
although not as extreme as that man's.

The scientists analyzed a national database of 8,000 people, and found
six, including a pregnant woman, who took mesalamine, the active
ingredient in Asacol. They averaged 50 times more DBP metabolite in
their urine than people who did not take the drug, and two exceeded
the EPA's no-effects level, the October report said.

Another 121 people who took three other medications--omeprazole, used
in Prilosec antacids; didanosine, which is sold under the name Videx
EC and treats HIV patients; and theophylline, a pulmonary disease
medicine -- also had above-average levels of another phthalate, up to
eight times higher than people who did not take the drugs.

Swan cautioned that the Harvard/CDC study included small numbers of
people taking the drugs so the averages may be distorted by a few
highly exposed ones. Nevertheless, Swan, who did not participate in
the study, said the data suggest that millions of people could be at
risk.

Baby boys exposed in the womb may be the most vulnerable, Hauser and
Swan said.

At least three women in the study with above-average phthalate levels
were pregnant -- one was taking mesalamine and two were taking the
antacids, said Sonia Hernandez-Diaz, a Harvard associate professor of
epidemiology who was the study's lead author. Another woman of
childbearing age who took the colitis drug had a daily dose of DBP
exceeding the EPA's guideline.

"We know that high doses of DBP given to pregnant rats can lead to
reproductive tract anomalies in the male offspring. Therefore, I would
be concerned about high DBP exposure in pregnant women," Hauser said.

When prescribing medications to pregnant women, doctors should seek
formulations free of the compounds, he said.

Many people who take the medicines have a serious disease that may
make them more susceptible to chemicals. HIV patients, for example,
have a suppressed immune system.

The authors reported that their study "probably underestimates the
true impact of exposure to phthalates in medications."

Most notably, they did not study over-the-counter medications and
vitamins, which often have timed-release coatings.

"I think there are likely other medications that also contribute to
very high human exposure," Hauser said, adding that the number of
problematic medications "is likely to change, up or down, depending on
what we learn in the coming months."

Copyright 2003 Environmental Health Sciences.

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From: Democracy Unlimited of Humboldt County, Nov. 10, 2008
[Printer-friendly version]

HUMBOLDT COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS CAVE TO CORPORATE PRESSURE

Agreement To Settle Over Measure T Filed In Federal Court

Eureka, Calif. -- Humboldt County Board of Supervisors and the Pacific
Legal Foundation filed a joint settlement proposal in Federal Court
today declaring the county's ban on corporate campaign contributions
"null and void."

Known locally as Measure T, the Humboldt County Ordinance to Protect
Our Right to Fair Elections and Local Democracy was a groundbreaking
county-wide law that banned non-local corporations from contributing
money to local elections and challenged the legal doctrine of
Corporate Personhood -- the idea that corporations can legally claim
constitutional rights such as the First Amendment. Measure T passed by
citizen's initiative in Humboldt County 2006 by 55%.

"We are deeply dismayed that our elected officials bowed so easily to
the pressure from the corporate-backed Pacific Legal Foundation," said
Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, the spokesperson for the Humboldt Coalition
for Community Rights, the group that campaigned for the Measure. "We
have offered help and support to the Board of Supervisors to do the
right thing every step of the way -- instead they chose to make this
decision without soliciting input from the people of Humboldt County
who were looking to them to defend our rights and respect our
authority to determine what is best for our local elections."

Measure T was passed in June 2006 in reaction to repeated interference
in local elections by large corporations. The Measure received
national attention when Humboldt County became the largest
jurisdiction to directly challenge Corporate Personhood, and joined
with dozens of communities across the country that have rejected the
idea that a corporation can claim rights to overturn local laws that
restrict their behavior.

"While this is a sad day for democracy, the fight is far from over.
Past social movements like the civil rights struggle, the
abolitionists, women's suffragists and the trade unionists have shown
us that when people don't back down, justice ultimately prevails,"
said Sopoci-Belknap. "All movements have their wins and losses, and
the movement for local democracy and citizen sovereignty over large
corporations will prevail. Humboldt County will play a role regardless
of whether the current Board of Supervisors have the integrity to
stand with us."

Pacific Legal Foundation, the organization that initiated the lawsuit
against Humboldt County, is a Sacramento-based law firm backed by the
types of corporations Measure T sought to restrict -- companies like
ExxonMobile and Philip Morris. In response to the lawsuit, many
candidates in the recent local election races took a pledge to follow
Measure T, regardless of the outcome. Many candidates declined
contributions from companies that attempted to make political
contributions to their campaigns and also pledged to publicly oppose
the doctrine Corporate Personhood and to uphold the rights of citizens
over those of corporations during their time in office. The majority
of candidates taking the pledge were elected last Tuesday.

The proposed lawsuit settlement may be found at
http://www.VoteLocalControl.org/MeasureT-SettleAgmt.pdf, the website
of the Humboldt Coalition for Community Rights.

For more information visit: http://www.DUHC.org, the website for
Democracy Unlimited of Humboldt County.

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  Rachel's Democracy & Health News (formerly Rachel's Environment &
  Health News) highlights the connections between issues that are
  often considered separately or not at all.

  The natural world is deteriorating and human health is declining  
  because those who make the important decisions aren't the ones who
  bear the brunt. Our purpose is to connect the dots between human
  health, the destruction of nature, the decline of community, the
  rise of economic insecurity and inequalities, growing stress among
  workers and families, and the crippling legacies of patriarchy,
  intolerance, and racial injustice that allow us to be divided and
  therefore ruled by the few.  

  In a democracy, there are no more fundamental questions than, "Who
  gets to decide?" And, "How do the few control the many, and what
  might be done about it?"

  As you come across stories that might help people connect the dots,
  please Email them to us at d...@rachel.org.
  
  Rachel's Democracy & Health News is published as often as
  necessary to provide readers with up-to-date coverage of the
  subject.

  Editor:
  Peter Montague - pe...@rachel.org
  
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Environmental Research Foundation
P.O. Box 160, New Brunswick, N.J. 08903
d...@rachel.org
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