June 19, 2012
After a period of rapid ice loss through the first half of June, sea ice
extent is now slightly below 2010 levels, the previous record low at
this time of year. Sea level pressure patterns have been favorable for
the retreat of sea ice for much of the past month.
Overview of conditions
On June 18, the five-day average sea ice extent was 10.62 million
square kilometers (4.10 million square miles). This was 31,000 square
kilometers (12,000 square miles) below the same day in 2010, the record
low for the day and 824,000 square kilometers (318,000 square miles)
below the same day in 2007, the year of record low September extent.
Conditions in context
The main contributors to the unusually rapid ice loss to this point
in June are the disappearance of most of the winter sea ice in the
Bering Sea, rapid ice loss in the Barents and Kara Seas, and early
development of open water areas in the Beaufort and Laptev Seas north of
Alaska and Siberia. Recent ice loss rates have been 100,000 to 150,000
square kilometers (38,600 to 57,900 square miles) per day, which is more
than double the climatological rate.
Sea level pressure favors the advection of ice
A pattern of high pressure over the Beaufort Sea and low pressure
over the Laptev Sea has been present for the past few weeks. This
pattern is favorable for summer ice loss, by advecting warm winds from
the south (in eastern Asia) to melt the ice and transport it away from
the coastlines in Siberia and Alaska. The high pressure over the
Beaufort leads to generally clear skies, and temperatures are now above
freezing over much of the Arctic pack. Snow cover in the far north is
nearly gone, earlier than normal, allowing the coastal land to warm
faster. READ MORE
A collection of articles defining our times. The pages contain clickable links, don't let the titles fool you, some of the best articles have very non-descript titles and there are usually more articles on the matters in the days and week pages the links land on so it's a sort of treasure hunt through history, Enjoy!
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Thursday, July 5, 2012
USDA Greenlights Monsanto's Utterly Useless New GMO Corn
—By Tom Philpott
| Mon Jan. 23, 2012 1:15 PM PST
You've got to keep an eye on US regulatory agencies in the second
half of December. That's when watchdog journalists like me tend to take
time off—and regulators like to sneak gifts to the industries they're
supposed to be regulating. This year, I was alert enough to detect this gift from the FDA to the meat industry; but the USDA caught me napping. The agency made two momentous announcements
on GMO crops, neither of which got much media scrutiny. It deregulated
Monsanto's so-called drought-tolerant corn, and it prepared to
deregulate Dow's corn engineered to withstand the herbicides 2,4-D and
dicamba. More on the later this week.
The drought-tolerant corn decision, which came down on Dec. 21, was momentous occasion, because it marked the first deregulation of a GMO crop with a "complex" trait. What I mean by that is, the other GMOs on the market have simple, one-gene traits: a gene that confers resistance to a particular herbicide, like Monsanto's Roundup Ready seed or a gene that expresses the toxic-to-bugs properties of the bacteria Bt, as in Monsanto's Bt seed. But a plant's use of water is a complex process involving several genes; there's no single "drought tolerant" gene. Generating such traits in plants that succeed in field conditions has been considerably more tricky for the agrichemical giants than than simple traits.
The drought-tolerant corn decision, which came down on Dec. 21, was momentous occasion, because it marked the first deregulation of a GMO crop with a "complex" trait. What I mean by that is, the other GMOs on the market have simple, one-gene traits: a gene that confers resistance to a particular herbicide, like Monsanto's Roundup Ready seed or a gene that expresses the toxic-to-bugs properties of the bacteria Bt, as in Monsanto's Bt seed. But a plant's use of water is a complex process involving several genes; there's no single "drought tolerant" gene. Generating such traits in plants that succeed in field conditions has been considerably more tricky for the agrichemical giants than than simple traits.
And indeed, Monsanto has staked huge PR capital on its ability to do just that. In a famous 2008 press release,
the company declared it would "double yield in its three core crops of
corn, soybeans and cotton by 2030, compared to a base year of 2000,"
using patented seeds that will simultaneously "reduce by one-third the
amount of key resources required to grow crops." It placed complex
traits like drought tolerance at the center of its effort, promising
seeds that would "result in more production per unit of land, and
reduced use of energy, fertilizer and water per unit produced."
The drought-tolerant corn the USDA signed off on in December is the first approved crop of that kind. The trouble is, it doesn't work very well. The USDA acknowledged as much in its Nov. 11 Final Environmental Assessment of the crop. It makes clear that the product's "drought tolerance" extends only to "moderate" drought conditions, and it has the same "minimum water requirements" as conventional corn.
And then it drops this bombshell, citing Monsanto's own field tests: READ MORE
The drought-tolerant corn the USDA signed off on in December is the first approved crop of that kind. The trouble is, it doesn't work very well. The USDA acknowledged as much in its Nov. 11 Final Environmental Assessment of the crop. It makes clear that the product's "drought tolerance" extends only to "moderate" drought conditions, and it has the same "minimum water requirements" as conventional corn.
And then it drops this bombshell, citing Monsanto's own field tests: READ MORE
Congress' Big Gift to Monsanto
—By Tom Philpott
| Mon Jul. 2, 2012 3:00 AM PDT
If you want your crops to bear fruit, you have to feed the soil. Few
industries understand that old farming truism better than ag-biotech—the
few companies that dominate the market for genetically modified seeds
and other novel farming technologies. And they realize that the same
wisdom applies to getting what you want in Washington, DC.
According to this 2010 analysis from Food & Water Watch, the ag-biotech industry spent $547.5 million between 1999 and 2009. It employed more than 100 lobbying firms in 2010 alone, FWW reports, in addition to their own in-house lobbying teams.
The gusher continues. The most famous ag-biotech firm of all, Monsanto, spent $1.4 million on lobbying in the first three months of 2012, after shelling out $6.3 million total last year, "more than any other agribusiness firm except the tobacco company Altria," reports the money-in-politics tracker OpenSecrets.org. Industry trade groups like the Biotechnology Industry Organization and Croplife America have weighed in with $1.8 million and $524,000, respectively.
What fruits have been borne by such generous fertilizing of the legislative terrain? It's impossible to tie the fate of any bit of legislation directly to an industry's lobbying power, but here are two unambiguous legislative victories won on the Hill this month by Monsanto and its peers. READ MORE
According to this 2010 analysis from Food & Water Watch, the ag-biotech industry spent $547.5 million between 1999 and 2009. It employed more than 100 lobbying firms in 2010 alone, FWW reports, in addition to their own in-house lobbying teams.
The gusher continues. The most famous ag-biotech firm of all, Monsanto, spent $1.4 million on lobbying in the first three months of 2012, after shelling out $6.3 million total last year, "more than any other agribusiness firm except the tobacco company Altria," reports the money-in-politics tracker OpenSecrets.org. Industry trade groups like the Biotechnology Industry Organization and Croplife America have weighed in with $1.8 million and $524,000, respectively.
What fruits have been borne by such generous fertilizing of the legislative terrain? It's impossible to tie the fate of any bit of legislation directly to an industry's lobbying power, but here are two unambiguous legislative victories won on the Hill this month by Monsanto and its peers. READ MORE
Climate Change Is Already Shrinking Crop Yields
—By Tom Philpott
| Wed Jul. 4, 2012 3:00 AM PDT
For years now, people
have wondered how climate change will affect farming. How will humanity
feed itself during a time of rising temperatures and recurring
drought?
Here in the US, we're starting to get a taste of things to come—and it's bitter. Brutal heat is now roiling the main growing regions for corn, soy, and wheat, the biggest US crops. According to Bloomberg News, 71 percent of the Midwest is experiencing "drier-than-normal conditions," and temperatures are projected to be above 90 degrees in large swaths of key corn/soy-growing states Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana through July 7 if not longer.
As a result, Goldman Sachs projects that this year's corn yields will come in 7.5 percent below the USDA's projection of 166 bushels an acre. (Why is a Wall Street behemoth like Goldman Sachs fussing over corn yields? That's another story, altogether, and an interesting one). Accordingly, crop prices are rising steeply, Bloomberg reports.
Here in the US, we're starting to get a taste of things to come—and it's bitter. Brutal heat is now roiling the main growing regions for corn, soy, and wheat, the biggest US crops. According to Bloomberg News, 71 percent of the Midwest is experiencing "drier-than-normal conditions," and temperatures are projected to be above 90 degrees in large swaths of key corn/soy-growing states Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana through July 7 if not longer.
As a result, Goldman Sachs projects that this year's corn yields will come in 7.5 percent below the USDA's projection of 166 bushels an acre. (Why is a Wall Street behemoth like Goldman Sachs fussing over corn yields? That's another story, altogether, and an interesting one). Accordingly, crop prices are rising steeply, Bloomberg reports.
Of course, we can't tie any individual heat wave to long-term climate
trends—there's plenty of random weather variation even in times of
climate stability. But we do know that hot, dry weather can stunt plant
growth and reduce yields—and we also know that we can expect more hot,
dry weather in key growing regions as the climate warms up.
I hope the current heat wave gets policymakers thinking about the effect of climate change on food, because for for a long time, the consensus was that global warming might be more or less neutral for agriculture. Sure, the thinking went, climate change will likely make droughts more common and make some already-hot areas too hot for farming; but it will also lengthen the growing season in cold-winter areas like the US Midwest, perhaps increasing crop yields. Also, all that carbon dioxide we're pumping into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels would be manna to plants, allowing them to grow faster. These factors, many thought, would largely cancel each other out, and mean that climate change would have no great effect on global food production.
But back in 2008, a pair of researchers from the USDA and Columbia University shattered that comforting idea. READ MORE
I hope the current heat wave gets policymakers thinking about the effect of climate change on food, because for for a long time, the consensus was that global warming might be more or less neutral for agriculture. Sure, the thinking went, climate change will likely make droughts more common and make some already-hot areas too hot for farming; but it will also lengthen the growing season in cold-winter areas like the US Midwest, perhaps increasing crop yields. Also, all that carbon dioxide we're pumping into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels would be manna to plants, allowing them to grow faster. These factors, many thought, would largely cancel each other out, and mean that climate change would have no great effect on global food production.
But back in 2008, a pair of researchers from the USDA and Columbia University shattered that comforting idea. READ MORE
The Dog That Voted and Other Election Fraud Yarns
Charts: UFO Sightings Are More Common Than Voter Fraud |
The GOP's 10-year campaign to gin up voter fraud hysteria—and bring back Jim Crow at the ballot box.
—By Kevin Drum
On March 21, 2005, a sandy-haired
43-year-old attorney named Mark "Thor" Hearne took a seat under the
Greek Revival dome of the Ohio Statehouse to testify before the House
Administration Committee. The committee was holding a field hearing on
the subject of voter fraud, a hot topic in Congress—and in Ohio, where
George W. Bush had eked out a narrow, hotly contested victory over John
Kerry the year before.
Hearne introduced
himself as counsel for the American Center for Voting Rights. The
Buckeye State, he said, had suffered from "massive" registration fraud
during the presidential election. Liberal groups like ACORN and the
AFL-CIO were implicated in illegal voter registration schemes. An NAACP
operative had paid for fake registrations in crack. Then, after
enrolling thousands of phony voters, these same groups had flooded the
courts with lawsuits designed to create bedlam on Election Day and
prevent fraudulent votes from being discovered. To back up his story,
Hearne submitted a 31-page report, signed by more than a dozen Ohio
attorneys.
It was a startlingly lurid picture—and the latest chapter in a
long-simmering feud between Republicans, who claim that fraud is rampant
in US elections, and Democrats, who say such charges are merely an
excuse to suppress the vote. Still, there was something different about
this episode. It wasn't just a one-off bit of bluster during a bitter
recount battle. That would have been politics as usual. Instead, it
marked a dramatic widening of the war. This was, after all, a
congressional hearing, and Hearne represented an organization dedicated
to pushing Republican claims of voter fraud not just during
post-election court fights, but everywhere and all the time. READ MORE
Monday, July 2, 2012
Genetic Engineers Report: GMO Food Is Dangerous
By Open Earth Source
02 July 12
ren't critics of genetically engineered food anti-science? Isn't the debate over GMOs (genetically modified organisms) a spat between emotional but ignorant activists on one hand and rational GM-supporting scientists on the other?
A new report released today, "GMO Myths and
Truths",[1] challenges these claims. The report presents a large body of
peer-reviewed scientific and other authoritative evidence of the
hazards to health and the environment posed by genetically engineered
crops and organisms (GMOs).
Unusually, the initiative for the report came not from
campaigners but from two genetic engineers who believe there are good
scientific reasons to be wary of GM foods and crops.
One of the report's authors, Dr Michael Antoniou of
King's College London School of Medicine in the UK, uses genetic
engineering for medical applications but warns against its use in
developing crops for human food and animal feed.
Dr Antoniou said: "GM crops are promoted on the basis
of ambitious claims - that they are safe to eat, environmentally
beneficial, increase yields, reduce reliance on pesticides, and can help
solve world hunger.
"I felt what was needed was a collation of the evidence that addresses the technology from a scientific point of view.
"Research studies show that genetically modified crops
have harmful effects on laboratory animals in feeding trials and on the
environment during cultivation. They have increased the use of
pesticides and have failed to increase yields. Our report concludes that
there are safer and more effective alternatives to meeting the world's
food needs." READ MORE
Here Are Over One Hundred Products Made From Child Or Slave Labor (GRAPHIC)
It's hard to believe, but true: Still today, many everyday products from around the globe are the result of child and slave labor, according to a 2011 report from the U.S. Department of Labor.
Now thanks to an infographic from the National Post, we can more clearly see the effects: All together, the infographic counts 130 product-types from 71 countries -- each the result of forced labor, child labor or some combination of the two.
Indeed, slave labor still exists within economic powerhouses like India, China and Brazil, for example. It's not just these two forms of labor that have come under fire lately. China has faced more wide-ranging criticism over its labor practices, especially after reports of poor working conditions and labor law violations at Foxconn, a factory that manufactures electronics for companies such as Apple and Microsoft.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this graphic incorrectly categorized some forms of child labor as forced labor. National Post has updated the graphic.
See the National Post's infographic below to find out which countries are making products by exploiting slave labor: READ MORE
Now thanks to an infographic from the National Post, we can more clearly see the effects: All together, the infographic counts 130 product-types from 71 countries -- each the result of forced labor, child labor or some combination of the two.
Indeed, slave labor still exists within economic powerhouses like India, China and Brazil, for example. It's not just these two forms of labor that have come under fire lately. China has faced more wide-ranging criticism over its labor practices, especially after reports of poor working conditions and labor law violations at Foxconn, a factory that manufactures electronics for companies such as Apple and Microsoft.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this graphic incorrectly categorized some forms of child labor as forced labor. National Post has updated the graphic.
See the National Post's infographic below to find out which countries are making products by exploiting slave labor: READ MORE
Slave Labor, Prison Privatization, Prison Industry - ALEC Conservatives push this agenda nationwide!
Privatize, privatize, privatization of anything owned or controlled
by the public or taxpayers is again being applied by Conservatives from
coast to coast. Sadly through the manipulations of ALEC and their
thousands of legislative and corporate members, this agenda that began
way back in the 80's is once again being used to usurp more public
assets. These assets include publicly built prisons, work-release
centers, medical care facilities, schools and a myriad assortment of
other buildings, programs and initiatives that now exists due to public
funding.
ALEC claims that corporations can run and operate these necessary programs and prisons more efficiently than public employees. They claim this will reduce government staffing and thus government payrolls and somehow make us all safer (corrections), smarter (school voucher programs), our kids better trained to enter the workplace (repeal of child labor laws) and help reduce municipal, city, state and county costs (using inmates in place of public employees).
Like any other pyramid scheme turned lose on society, this one is well funded by the likes of Koch Industries and their owners, Charles and David Koch, AT&T and other communications and telecom companies, PhaRma and related pharmaceutical manufacturers. It is well advertised to the public through Republican and Conservative PAC's such as Heritage Foundation, Reason Foundation, Americans for Prosperity Foundation, and includes the professional opinions of researchers and scholars provided by such as the CATO Institute, Manhattan Institute,Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment, Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy and the Tax Foundation.
READ MORE
ALEC claims that corporations can run and operate these necessary programs and prisons more efficiently than public employees. They claim this will reduce government staffing and thus government payrolls and somehow make us all safer (corrections), smarter (school voucher programs), our kids better trained to enter the workplace (repeal of child labor laws) and help reduce municipal, city, state and county costs (using inmates in place of public employees).
Like any other pyramid scheme turned lose on society, this one is well funded by the likes of Koch Industries and their owners, Charles and David Koch, AT&T and other communications and telecom companies, PhaRma and related pharmaceutical manufacturers. It is well advertised to the public through Republican and Conservative PAC's such as Heritage Foundation, Reason Foundation, Americans for Prosperity Foundation, and includes the professional opinions of researchers and scholars provided by such as the CATO Institute, Manhattan Institute,Foundation for Research on Economics and the Environment, Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy and the Tax Foundation.
READ MORE