Canada's National Observer
The RCMP’s controversial C-IRG unit hired a third-party intelligence company to spy on the online activities of Fairy Creek activists, newly available documents show. Story here.
Canada's National Observer
The RCMP’s controversial C-IRG unit hired a third-party intelligence company to spy on the online activities of Fairy Creek activists, newly available documents show. Story here.
Gold medals. Split-second finishes. The thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. Every two years, the Olympics are a huge global news story, as multitudes of people around the world follow the feats of amazing athletes competing for personal recognition and national glory.
Most news coverage rightly concentrates on the athletes’ contests, but reporters at these Olympics could not ignore the role of unfriendly weather. Downpours marred the opening ceremony (and may have contributed to an E. coli infection that caused Belgium’s withdrawal from the mixed triathlon). Then, searing temperatures assaulted athletes and spectators alike as a heat dome settled over much of Europe and North Africa.
Much less reported, though, was the fact that the super-hot conditions “would not have occurred” without man-made global heating. That’s the finding of a study issued July 31 by scientists at the World Weather Attribution group (WWA). “The extreme temperatures reached in July would have been virtually impossible if humans had not warmed the planet by burning fossil fuels,” the group’s press release stated.
Since its founding in 2015, WWA has established a reputation for accurate, timely studies that calculate how much more likely global warming has made a given extreme weather event. WWA’s methods and studies are peer-reviewed, providing an answer to skeptics, in newsrooms and elsewhere, about the climate connection to extreme weather. Its latest study even came with an eye-catching sound bite from its lead scientist, Friederike Otto: “Climate change crashed the Olympics.”
Yet most of the world’s biggest media appear to have ignored the WWA study. Television, the medium of choice for a visual spectacle like the Olympics, was all but silent about climate change, much less the fossil fuel burning that was driving the extreme heat at these Olympics.
Exceptions to the trend — stories by the Guardian (which Mother Jones picked up), AFP (which the Times of India picked up), and Politico Europe — demonstrate that such stories could easily be produced. That so much of broadcast media didn’t do so recalled the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, when extreme heat melted snowpack, leaving bare mountainsides straddling strips of artificial snow — yet climate change went unmentioned in news coverage.
Covering Climate Now has long said that climate change is a story for every beat in every newsroom. A recent issue of our biweekly newsletter Locally Sourced shows how to make the sports-climate connection, and CCNow has plenty more resources to help do a better job going forward.
Canada’s National Observer
It didn’t take long for the American and Canadian right to weaponize the assassination attempt on Donald Trump against the left. In the United States, Republicans and their supporters immediately pointed their fingers at progressives as the cause of the violence. Ohio senator JD Vance even blamed President Joe Biden for the attack. Details here.
As the world inevitably transitions away from fossil fuel extraction, there’s a growing international consensus that mining critical minerals — including copper, nickel, cobalt, zinc and more — will have to ramp up in order to power clean energy sources.
This consensus, reflected in the 2022 Canadian Critical Minerals Strategy, rests on the assumption that our lifestyles in the developed world are sustainable, if only we stopped pumping CO2 into the atmosphere while commuting from the suburbs in our personal vehicles to work. But given that mining for raw minerals is beset by many of the same problems as fossil fuel extraction — from water pollution to violating Indigenous rights and facilitating violent, exploitative relations with the Global South — I contend this assumption is faulty.
Some degree of mining, naturally, will always be a necessity to keep our lights on and computers running. The fundamental question is one of harm reduction — how do we balance the needs of an energy transition with the harsh realities of mining critical minerals?
Indigenous Peoples and environmentalists have played a leading role in opposing the expansion of mining in Ecuador, which has corrupted pristine, biodiverse lands that are central to Indigenous ways of life. In February, the Shuar Arutam People of Ecuador took Vancouver-based Solaris Resources to the B.C. Securities Commission for allegedly failing to disclose to shareholders that it received consent from just two of 47 Shuar communities for its proposed Warintza mine in the Amazon.
In Sudan, proceeds from gold mining have bankrolled the country’s brutal civil war, which has displaced 7.3 million people and killed thousands since April 2023.
Authorities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo have destroyed homes, villages and agricultural land, and engaged in human rights abuses including sexual violence, beatings and arson to make way for expanded cobalt and copper mining, according to a report last year from Amnesty International.
The products of this violence and environmental degradation in the Global South fuel our modern, tech-infused lifestyle in the Global North, which is bad for the environment, Indigenous reconciliation and international human rights.
But under the existing framework of endless growth, it is, more or less, a necessity. Precious metals aren’t going to mine themselves.
There are, of course, alternatives to this global rush for critical minerals.
One option is to slow down the pursuit of economic growth, ensuring an appropriate international regulatory regime is in place to mitigate the worst abuses of mining companies and their government enablers.
A good starting point might be the elimination of the investor-state dispute settlement process, through which extractive companies, including Canadian ones, have strong-armed developing countries into paying them billions in compensation for implementing policies that impact their profit margins.
A more radical proposition is to dispose of the concept of growth altogether.
The word degrowth might be jarring to some, who read it as a call for austerity — a sign of how deeply embedded assumptions about the need for constant economic growth are in our collective consciousness — but it’s provocative by design.
French economist Serge Latouche, writing in Le monde Diplomatique, says the purpose of degrowth is “not a concrete project but a keyword,” which challenges the “tyranny [that] has made imaginative thinking outside the box impossible.
“What really matters is that we reject continuing destruction in the name of development,” he added.
At its core, degrowth proposes a decline in wasteful energy and material consumption habits, with decisions about resource allocation made via local participatory democracy instead of the whims of a global capitalist class. It’s about replacing an economics of “desire” with one of “need,” in which ecological and social values are placed at the forefront of allocating resources.
Indigenous relations of reciprocity between the people and the land, in which people take what they need from each other and nature, and give back what they can, provides a useful framework for degrowth economics.
A degrowth economy would build cities efficiently, rather than in ways that enrich developers; protect green spaces, mountains and waterways; transform investor-owned vacant housing into affordable housing; end health-care privatization; make higher education accessible to anyone who yearns to learn; and promote diplomacy in global conflict.
Degrowth ideals offer an on-ramp towards a better green world that doesn’t simply halt increasing global temperatures while reproducing the inequities of the climate crisis, creating instead a truly just global energy transition.
Jeremy Appel is an independent Edmonton-based journalist and author of Kenneyism: Jason Kenney's Pursuit of Power (Dundurn, 2024). He also writes The Orchard newsletter on Substack, which focuses on the intersection of politics, media and corporate power.
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Over 30 years ago, large factory style barns, used for raising pigs, started dotting the landscape across southern Manitoba. Not surprisingly, within just a few years, smelly and sometimes toxic bluegreen algae blooms began to dominate Lake Winnipeg, and other southern Manitoba lakes. Was this just a coincidence? Not quite.
In these factory style barns, often thousands of pigs are kept confined together on slatted floors through which their urine and feces fall, collecting in pits underneath. Toxic fumes of hydrogen sulphide, methane, ammonia and carbon dioxide rise from these pits and are blown out into the neighbouring communities by large industrial fans. Should those fans fail, the fumes are so poisonous that the pigs will suffocate within a few hours.
Factory hog barn.
These waste pits are routinely emptied into open lagoons near the barns, once again causing nauseating odours for neighbours. Those lagoons are then emptied twice a year when that liquid manure is either sprayed or injected into the soil on neighbouring fields to be used as fertilizer. The reason the manure is considered good fertilizer is that it contains phosphorus and nitrogen, both nutrients essential for growth of any plants.
So, what’s the problem? Aside from subjecting animals to a life of misery and deprivation, there is simply too much manure to be safely applied each year. The excess phosphorus and nitrogen that is not taken up by whatever crop is grown, may run off during the spring melt, rainstorms, and floods. It then gets into streams, rivers and lakes including our beloved Lake Winnipeg.
Phosphorus and nitrogen are the two main nutrients that feed blue-green algae. The amount of phosphorus getting into Lake Winnipeg has increased substantially since the 1990s and the algae blooms have matched that growth. Did you know that government regulations in Manitoba allow for manure application at rates of five times what the crop can use in one year, as long as manure is not re-applied for five years? This assumes that the phosphorus and nitrogen will remain in that soil without moving all that time.
But we know that during floods, rains, snowmelt these nutrients may run off and get into our waterways. Scientists who have measured where the phosphorus originates from, tell us that within Manitoba, 35% of phosphorus getting into Lake Winnipeg comes from agriculture, while only 12% comes from the city of Winnipeg.
In 2007, the Clean Environment Commission issued a report on the sustainability of the hog industry in Manitoba, and one of the recommendations was that government review phosphorus application provisions of the Livestock Mortalities and Manure Management Regulation, after the regulation has been in place for five years. That review has never happened, and its now 17 years later. Why not?
Blue-green algae in a lake.
Its no wonder that there is too much manure to be safely dealt with when you consider that in 1991 there were an average of 434 pigs per farm in Manitoba but that has now ballooned to an average of 5,563 according to Stats Canada.
So, what is Hog Watch Manitoba calling for? The phase out of factory style barns over the next five years to be replaced by the conventional way of raising pigs, on straw, with fewer numbers of animals per barn. This includes access to outdoors when weather is suitable, no routine antibiotics in feed and amending the manure application regulations to reflect the agronomic benefit of recommended levels of phosphorus in soil. As well, stop the subsidization of industrial hog facilities and offer education and financial incentives to farmers who want to raise pigs on straw in conventional, more humane, environmentally sustainable ways. The animals, farm staff, communities living near hog factories, and our lakes will all benefit. And Manitoba can finally be proud of leading the way from the ills of industrialized hog production, to a more humane, ethical regenerative mode of raising pigs.
Canada's National Observer Seniors across Canada attended “rocking chair rallies,” marches, movie nights, town halls and other protests ...