Posts

Pork Industry's Muddy Image

Winnipeg Free Press - Laura Rance Austin tragedy didn't help. Full story here. Please also read: Pork Council Must Focus More on Farmers' Needs 

Parents Need to Act Against Climate Change for Their Kids’ Sake

Image
by Mark Hertsgaard - The Daily Beast Droughts, heat waves, with the evidence mounting of major climate change, why aren’t parents taking action to protect their children from its dire effects? Mark Hertsgaard calls for parents to act just like they would if a train was heading toward their children. Full story here. Damage from a wicked plow wind which struck a wide area of western Manitoba in July. PLT photos

Why Organic?

Image
Rodale's - A note from our Executive Director    The news has been flooded with all sorts of noise about the Stanford meta-analysis “Are Organic Foods Safer or Healthier Than Conventional Alternatives?” Although both the researchers themselves and the media made it sound as if conventional came out on top, the numbers clearly made the case for organic. Here is what we saw when we read the report: PLT photo 

Where Cows Are Happy and Food Is Healthy

Image
New York Times Don’t laugh, but maybe milk is tastier and healthier if it comes from a cow with a name. Full story here. PLT photo

Weathergirl Goes Rogue

Image

In Defence of Science

Image
Schindler's Pissed - Alternatives Journal - Canada's Environment Magazine.  Freshwater science pioneer David Schindler fires back about tar sands development, closing the Experimental Lakes Area, and why researchers should speak out. Full story here. Also in this issue, "Field of Nightmares," exposing the dark side of Roundup. 

Ottawa to Unveil Weakened Emissions Rules for Coal-Fired Power

Globe and Mail After a year of tough negotiations with companies and premiers that tested Ottawa’s resolve to fight climate change, Environment Minister Peter Kent is finally ready to present the final version of regulations to curtail greenhouse gas emissions from the coal-fired electricity sector. Full story here.

Field of Nightmares

Image
Ottawa continues to embrace the widespread use of Roundup on Canadian farms by letting corporate seduction trump scientific evidence. by Larry Powell A crop-duster sprays a GMO crop in western MB. A PinP photo. In its quest to dominate the planet's agricultural biotechnology sector, Monsanto's business model has produced significant collateral damage. Generations of farming families in South America, India and other robustly developing regions have been devastated by the US-based multinational’s product line, namely its flagship herbicide Roundup and the patented seeds that go with it.  In the 1970s, the company began genetically modifying canola, and they’ve since created their own patented versions of soybeans, corn, cotton and a range of other crops. The havoc wreaked by Monsanto’s remarkable growth in the interim includes widespread claims of pollution, illegal activity and damage to health and livelihoods, as well as a systematic effort to crush detr

Staples Canada Picks up Straw-Based Paper

Manitoba Co-operator Step Forward Paper is made with 80 per cent straw Manitoba farmers could see a lucrative new market for straw emerge, as the province moves closer to becoming the site of North America's first pulp and paper mill using straw. Full story here.

Welcome to the Anthropocene - a New Geologic Era (Radio podcast + video)

Image
This podcast has been airing on the CBC Radio program, "The Current." It suggests human activity has now placed us in an entirely new geologic epoc. And not a good one! Listen here.                           (PLT video & photo) I shot this video of my home (above) just after these winds toppled two mature spruce trees, narrowly missing our house as we slept. The still photo (r.) shows the gap left in the shelterbelt which protects us from the elements. To me, climate change is now personal! Larry Powell. 

Food Prices Set to Soar. Reducing Poverty in Manitoba Just Got Harder.

Image
Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Early last year stories hit the news about the potential for food prices to rise throughout 2011.    PLT photo Commodities prices for wheat, corn, sugar, and others were all on the rise which ultimately resulted in a 4.4% rise in the cost of food to December 2011. Full story here