Friday, April 19, 2013
Thursday, April 18, 2013
BPA in Most Canadians’ Urine, Effects Unknown
Canadian Press
TORONTO – A Health Canada study suggests most Canadians have the chemical bisphenol A in their urine and all have traces of lead in their blood. Details here.
The Tyranny Of The Tar Sands
thestar.com - Clayton Ruby
In exploiting every last drop of tar sands crude, the government is impoverishing our country, its democratic freedoms and its future prosperity. Full story here.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
The Curse of Fertilizer
National Geographic
Ducks in a nutrient-rich river. PLT photo
If we don’t watch out, agriculture could destroy our planet. Here’s how to grow all the food we need with fewer chemicals. Details here.
Related articles:
Related articles:
- Field of Nightmares - Ottawa continues to embrace the widespread use of Roundup on Canadian farms by letting corporate seduction trump scientific evidence.
- Ditches of Destruction - Manitoba’s “war on weeds” comes complete with powerful herbicides, questionable spraying practices and collateral damage.
Summer Ice Melt In Antarctica Is At The Highest Point In 1,000 Years, Researchers Say
CANBERRA (Reuters) - The summer ice melt in parts of Antarctica is at its highest level in 1,000 years, Australian and British researchers reported on Monday, adding new evidence of the impact of global warming on sensitive Antarctic glaciers and ice shelves.
Researchers from the Australian National University and the British Antarctic Survey found data taken from an ice core also shows the summer ice melt has been 10 times more intense over the past 50 years compared with 600 years ago.
"It's definitely evidence that the climate and the environment is changing in this part of Antarctica," lead researcher Nerilie Abram said.
Researchers from the Australian National University and the British Antarctic Survey found data taken from an ice core also shows the summer ice melt has been 10 times more intense over the past 50 years compared with 600 years ago.
"It's definitely evidence that the climate and the environment is changing in this part of Antarctica," lead researcher Nerilie Abram said.
Monday, April 15, 2013
Why Would Anyone Celebrate the Death of Margaret Thatcher? Ask a Chilean
The Nation
Never have I witnessed a gap between the mainstream media and the public quite like the last twenty-four hours since the death of Margaret Thatcher. Details here.
Climate change: How a Warming World is a Threat to our Food Supplies
The Guardian
Global warming is exacerbating political instability as tensions brought on by food insecurity rise. With research suggesting the issue can only get worse we examine the risks around the world. Details here.
Manitoba corn following a freak frost; Aug.'07 PLT photo
Manitoba corn following a freak frost; Aug.'07 PLT photo
PLT: As a Canadian, I'm getting quite tired of coverage such as this, concentrating on the US as centre of the universe, then radiating outward in any direction except Canada! The only reference I can find in this entire article to my country is this: "Canada will be a winner, as crops move north." Say what?
I've lived most of my 70+ years on the Canadian prairies & the only crop "moving north" that I'm aware of is a rare disease of canola, purportedly carried north on the wind and thriving due to drought. (Kuz we had drought here, too, last summer!)
As I look out my window this mid-April day, I see mounds of snow with more forecast. And I hear on the radio of highways turned into skating rinks, cars in ditches and schools closed, yet again. Much more snow is falling on Winnipeg and North Dakota as we speak, where serious flooding is again a virtual certainty. When North Dakota floods, we flood, thanks to the Red River which flows from them to us. Floods of epic proportions already ravaged my province (Manitoba) in '97, '09, '11 & '12 (plus slightly less serious ones in between). Cabins on lakeshores, millions of dollars worth of municipal infrastructure such as roads and bridges were destroyed. People were displaced with many still waiting to return, two years after the event. Millions of hectares of cropland either went unseeded then, or seeded crops were drowned. As of now; we don't really know when farmers will be getting on the land this spring, or whether they'll be able to get a crop in, at all!
Blizzards are an everyday occurrence somewhere in this vast region of Canada, it now seems. Record cold has been the "norm" all winter, with temperatures (both maxes & mins), frequently running 10 to 15 degrees Celsius below normal.
I'm still a staunch supporter of the science of climate change. Still, I'm growing increasingly puzzled as to how this record cold winter fits into the scenario of global warming. Meanwhile, I'm still watching and waiting for more detailed, scientific analysis of what is happening in the US, Africa and Asia, for sure, but also in my neck-of-the woods, too, if you please! Having read the above article, I guess I'll just have to keep looking!
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Experimental Lakes Area Closure a Financial Blunder, Say Greens
Grandview: The Green Party of Canada calls on the federal government to keep the Experimental Lakes Area (ELA) research station open. Closure of ELA will cost Canadian tax payers $50 million to decommission the site while keeping it open would only be $2 million a year. “Do the math,” says Kate Storey, of the Dauphin Swan River Marquette Green Party. “This attack on science is a financial blunder.”
Giving no reasons, the Harper government terminated
funding to the facility, forcing it to close this March. Concerned citizens have suggested that the closure is a vendetta against environmentalists. Research coming out of the experimental lakes could be inconvenient to those wishing to ignore the effects of toxins on the water and on the health of Canadians.
The Experimental Lakes station has operated as a unique,
world-renowned centre for freshwater research in northwestern Ontario for about half-a-century. Studies done there have resulted in strategies to combat acid rain, climate change, algae blooms, mercury poisoning and nutrient buildup in lakes such as Erie and Winnipeg. The science could be used to move industry to become more environmentally responsible.
The ELA cost relatively little to maintain. Scientists could
bring in specific funding for their experiments and be asked for rent, potentially making it self-funding. The scientific activity is also an economic boon to the local economy. However, even scientists with funding to offer are no longer being allowed to work there. Thousands of people have signed petitions to keep it open and various groups have offered to buy the facility, but the Harper government is deaf to common sense.
Storey is particularly appalled at the actions of the local
Dauphin MP. “Mr Sopuck ran a campaign on his "green credentials" and commitment to science.
Yet, on March 20th, he voted with his Conservative
colleagues to defeat an Opposition motion calling for continued funding to keep the ELA open until another operator could be found. "Why would anyone with even a small bit of environmental or economic common sense agree to close such a valuable scientific facility?" Storey asks.
The ELA was a help to ordinary Canadians because it
provided the science needed to keep our drinking water clean. Canada’s pre-eminent water scientist David Schindler recently called the government’s action “sheer stupidity.”
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Green Party Demands Action On GE foods
Dear Larry,
Are you eating untested genetically engineered foods?
If you buy anything from a typical grocery store, the answer is yes.
Unfortunately,
avoiding them is almost impossible since the labeling of GE ingredients
is not required by law and is entirely voluntary.
Health
Canada has never conducted independent research into the safety of GE
foods, relying solely on information provided by the companies making
the products.
In
fact, despite being on shelves since 1996, genetically engineered foods
have never been subjected to any long-term testing to review potential
health hazards, including antibiotic resistance, toxicity, or allergic
reactions. Genetically engineered crops also pose serious threats to the
health of natural ecosystems and organic agriculture.
Elizabeth May has been fighting for transparency in food labeling, and to stop GE foods being sold in Canada.
The Green Party will continue to speak out to demand:
We can win this fight with your help.
Please help us continue to speak out publicly in Parliament and in the media about this important issue now by donating $15, or any amount you can afford.
With
your support, we will have the resources needed to call attention to
the Conservatives’ attempt to relax Canada's food standards, and ensure
an open and transparent food system that is safe for all Canadians.
Sincerely, ![]()
Kate Storey
Shadow Cabinet Critic for Agriculture Green Party of Canada |
Monday, April 8, 2013
Green Party Leader Gob-Smacks the Media Darling of the CBC and National Post
Greens do politics differently (But not in the way that Rex Murphy thinks)
By Elizabeth May

In his Saturday National Post column, Rex Murphy claimed that Canada’s Green party has no goal other than to get me elected as an MP — and that this has been the case for “two or three general elections.” Full story here.
Alberta’s Bold Plan To Cut Emissions Stuns Ottawa And Oil Industry
The Globe & Mail
The Alberta government has quietly presented a proposal to sharply increase levies on carbon production and force large oil-industry producers to slash greenhouse gas....Details here.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
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Lytton, BC under evacuation threat again, as hundreds of wildfires burn across Canada
Canada's National Observer This week marks the four-year anniversary of a deadly wildfire that destroyed the British Columbia village of...
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Are hungry kids a priority for the Harper government? by Larry Powell The forum (for the riding of Dauphin - Swan River - Neepawa) w...
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by Larry Powell Planet In Peril has sorted through some of the confusion surrounding the absence of Robert Sopuck, the Conservative M...
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Larry Powell Powell is a veteran, award-winning journalist based in Shoal Lake, Manitoba, Canada. He specialize in stories about agriculture...