Louisiana Pacific Canada Limited operates an "Oriented Strand Board" plant in the Swan Valley of western Manitoba. It's been at odds with critics ever since the provincial government allowed it to shut down its pollution control equipment last January.
Following an uproar from community members and environmentalists, the government instructed an advisory committee, the Clean Environment Commission (CEC), to review that decision. It conducted public meetings earlier this summer in Swan River. Participants argued for and against LP's application to make the shutdown permanent.
Then, two groups critical of LP's proposal, joined forces. "Concerned Citizens of the Valley" and "The Boreal Forest Network" tried to arrange for scientific experts to tour the plant.
They argued this was the only way for them to fully take part in the process, since the format of the public meetings did not permit them to cross-examine LP's witnesses.
The groups described one of the experts they hoped would tour the plant as a specialist in "human health risk assessment," another as an "expert in the environmental regulation of forestry operations" in Canada.
Despite their insistence that the individuals have PhDs with extensive experience, LP refused.
The company said it had already co-operated fully with the committee and saw no need to allow further tours or inspections.
But Dan Soprovich of "Concerned Citizens" doesn't see it that way. He suggests LP has refused the request simply because it has something to hide.
LP has threatened to close the plant if it is forced to start up the pollution controls once again.
Meanwhile, the people of the Swan Valley are anxiously awaiting the recommendations of the CEC.
New research shows oxygen depletion in the atmosphereaccelerating since 2003, coinciding with the biofuels boom;climate policies that focus exclusively on carbonsequestration could be disastrous for all oxygen-breathingorganisms including humans Dr. Mae-Wan Ho
Threat of oxygen depletion
Mention climate change and everyone thinks of CO2 increasingin the atmosphere, the greenhouse effect heating the earth,glaciers melting, rising sea levels, floods, hurricanes,droughts, and a host of other environmental catastrophes.Climate mitigating policies are almost all aimed at reducingCO2, by whatever means.Within the past several years, however, scientists havefound that oxygen (O2) in the atmosphere has been dropping,and at higher rates than just the amount that goes into theincrease of CO2 from burning fossil fuels, some 2 to 4-timesas much, and accelerating since 2002-2003 [1-3].
Simultaneously, oxygen levels in the world’s oceans havealso been falling [4] (see Warming Oceans Starved of Oxygen,SiS 44).It is becoming clear that getting rid of CO2 is not enough;oxygen has its own dynamic and the rapid decline inatmospheric O2 must also be addressed. Although there ismuch more O2 than CO2 in the atmosphere - 20.95 percent or209 460 ppm of O2 compared with around 380 ppm of CO2 –humans, all mammals, birds, frogs, butterfly, bees, andother air-breathing life-forms depend on this high level ofoxygen for their well being [5] Living with Oxygen (SiS 43).
In humans, failure of oxygen energy metabolism is the singlemost important risk factor for chronic diseases includingcancer and death. ‘Oxygen deficiency’ is currently set at19.5 percent in enclosed spaces for health and safety [6],below that, fainting and death may result.The simultaneous decrease in ocean oxygen not only threatensthe survival of aerobic marine organisms, but is symptomaticof the slow-down in the ocean’s thermohaline ‘conveyor belt’circulation system that transports heat from the tropics tothe poles, overturns surface layers of into the deep andvice versa, redistributing nutrients and gases for the oceanbiosphere, and regulating rainfall and temperatures on thelandmasses.
This dynamical system is highly nonlinear, andsmall changes could make it fail altogether, with disastrousrunaway effects on the climate [7] (Global Warming & thenthe Big Freeze, SiS 20). More importantly, it could wipe outthe ocean’s phytoplankton that’s ultimately responsible forsplitting water to regenerate oxygen for the entire biosphere,on land and in the sea [4].Read the rest of this article herehttp://www.i-sis.org.uk/O2DroppingFasterThanCO2Rising.phpOr read other articles about climate change herehttp://www.i-sis.org.uk/climateglobalwarming.php
==========
This article can be found on the I-SIS website athttp://www.i-sis.org.uk/O2DroppingFasterThanCO2Rising.phpAll new articles are also announced on our RSS feedhttp://www.i-sis.org.uk/feed.xmlIf you like this original article from the Institute ofScience in Society, and would like to continue receivingarticles of this calibre, please consider making a donationor purchase on our websitehttp://www.i-sis.org.uk/ISISappeal.phpISIS is an independent, not-for-profitorganisation dedicated to providing critical publicinformation on cutting edge science, and to promoting socialaccountability and ecological sustainability in science.If you would like to be removed from our mailing listunsubscribe athttp://www.i-sis.org.uk/unsubscribeor email unsubscribe@i-sis.org.uk
============
CONTACT DETAILSThe Institute of Science in Society,The Old House 39-41 North Road, London N7 9DPtelephone: [44 20 7700 5948] [44 20 8452 2729]For email details, seehttp://www.i-sis.org.uk/contact.phpMATERIAL ON THIS SITE MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORMWITHOUT EXPLICIT PERMISSION. FOR PERMISSION, PLEASECONTACT ISIS at http://www.i-sis.org.uk/contact2.php
by Larry Powell - (Please also note comments at bottom.)
A resident of Elie, Manitoba, Linda Aquin, says she worries that the massive backlog of straw-bales stored near the town will catch fire, resulting in the release of toxic chemicals. Aquin and her husband operate a bed-&-breakfast in the small town on the Trans Canada Highway, west of Winnipeg.She says Dow Bio Products which owns the now defunct strawboard plant, has hired exterminators to control the rodents living in the straw.
She believes they used a poison possibly containing arsenic for this purpose. If a fire breaks out, she adds, she doesn't know what could happen. But, it could be like a chemical fire and if the wind is in the wrong direction, results could be serious.She says a fire at the Elie school some time ago produced toxic smoke when some plastic chairs burned."We couldn't breath and had to get out of there," she remarked.She fears a similar incident, only on a larger scale, could still happen with the bales.
Aquin says there have already been fires that smoldered for a long time in the bales and even ones inside the plant, when it was still operating.There have been rumours that the bales will be removed, she adds. These include a deal with a Hutterite band (to bury them) and with the Trans Alaskan pipeline, who would use the straw to cover some of its equipment. But this has not happened, so far.*
Aquin adds, the failure of the plant, which has been dismantled and the machinery shipped to new owners in Brazil, means area farmers, who once had a market for their straw at the plant, are burning it, once again.She believes the owners set money aside to clean up the site. Yet the bales "just sit and sit and sit."The question becomes, is it now even safe, given the chemicals used to control the rodents, to attempt to destroy the bales even in a controlled burn, because of the possible toxins they would produce? ===== * Dow has now begun a cleanup program on the west side of the straw bale piles, nearest the town. ===== Please also read "A Testament to Failure." Click here. =====COMMENTS; That rat breeding grounds on the #1 is owned by Dow Ind. and is backed by our government. A gov'nt article stated it was now tarped and just ignore the tumbled piles. Very responsible, don't u think? Anon. =====Apparently Dow Industries was using the straw piles (and piles and piles and...) to manufacture building supplies. They have tarped some, according to a government article, but we're told to ignore all the tumbled over piles-probably the rat infested piles. Every year I drive down the #1, I see the same eyesore too, and you know it's not the farmers. Anon.
By Judith Burns - Science reporter, BBC News.Photo by Peter Hollinger Scientists say they have evidence that the powerful greenhouse gas methane is escaping from the Arctic sea-bed.
SUNDRE, Alta. - Mounties hope a Crime Stoppers re-enactment will help them find who is killing wild horses in the Alberta foothills.Photo courtesy Canadian Geographic
Editor's note: Once again, our inhumanity to our fellow creatures shows no bounds. l.p.