Jul 26, 2012

After shutting down nukes, Japan's energy shortages may bankrupt them - record first-half trade deficit for Japan

TOKYO — Japan posted its biggest first-half trade deficit on record, according to government figures released Wednesday, highlighting the economic consequences for this nuclear-averse country of importing fossil fuels to meet its energy needs.

The Finance Ministry reported a 2.92 trillion yen (or $37.3 billion) trade deficit, which reflected not only Japan’s surging need for oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG), but also weakened exports to slumping markets such as Europe and China.

The world’s third-largest economy has averted economic crisis this year largely because of a spike in domestic demand, spurred by reconstruction of the earthquake- and tsunami-devastated northeast.

Please continue reading at:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/amid-energy-shortages-a-record-first-half-trade-deficit-for-japan/2012/07/25/gJQA0cpK8W_story.html

Jul 25, 2012

Help Wanted! Listing of new #Health & #Safety #JOBS

Environmental, safety & Health Specialist at Bloom Energy Corporation
Sunnyvale, Ca.

Under the direction of manager, this position is responsible for supporting the EHS team in the development, implementation, monitoring and continuous improvement of Environmental Health and Safety programs, ensuring compliance with corporate, Federal, state, and local EHS requirements.

Required Skills and Experience:
    * AA or BS in a EHS or other science major
    * 3-5 or more years of experience in environmental, Safety & Health
    * Understand and apply Cal-OSHA, EPA, DTSC and other related regulations
    * Have good Industrial Hygiene and occupational safety/health hands on identification, evaluation and controls skills
    * Have good interaction skills and have the ability to build liaisons between the different company departments
    * Have excellent skills using Excel, Power Point, and other MS software
    * Knowledge of safety management systems such as OSHA VPP, OHSAS 18001 are a plus.

Please complete application at: http://www.bloomenergy.com/

For additional Information contact Sam Ghezavat, Global EHS manager at 408-543-1056


Safety Director at LB Construction, Inc.
Roseville, CA

specializing in the commercial construction industry seeking a Safety Director, bilingual in Spanish preferred but not required.  The Safety Director plans, directs and implements the company safety program to ensure safe, healthy and accident-free work environment by assisting in meeting company safety goals and objectives.  

Job Requirements and Skills for Safety Manager

  • Knowledge in Construction/Industrial Health and Safety OSHA regulations, some basic H/R Knowledge, five years of solid experience.
  • Bachelor’s Degree in Environmental Health and Safety is required.
  • Coordinates physical processes and compliance functions to ensure company safety program is in compliance with local, State and Federal OSHA Regulations.
  • Provide assistance in Health and Risk Management and Workers Compensation and administration.
  • Good driving record.

Our company is an E.O.E, Drug-Free work environment and offers an employee benefits package including an Employee Stock Option Plan, Medical/Dental, 401K, Holiday/Vacation/PTO and competitive wages.

Send resume to e-mail: hr(at)Lbconstructioninc.com or call (916) 624-8404


Workers Compensation Risk Adviser
Cavignac & Associates
Brokerage seeks TEMPORARY assistance for a leave of absence. September – December 2012. Duties: review/report claims; advise/strategize claims mgmt with clients/adjusters; project/analyze xmods; reconcile xmods; analyze loss history to identify risks/hazards/exposures to be managed; previous brokerage exp a plus; contact srugg(at)cavignac.com.

See more at: Cal-OSHA Reporter

Wanted: A Steve Jobs for #sustainability - via ‏@enviroexpert #green, #crs

WRI: Where is the Steve Jobs of sustainability?

The business leader with the big, disruptive ideas—and the force of will—to achieve for sustainable production and consumption what Apple’s visionary chief did for global technology and information?

This question springs strongly to mind after attending the Rio+20 conference.

Unlike the original Earth Summit 20 years earlier, business leaders were everywhere at Rio 2012. And with governments failing to make headway at the UN-led forum, there was much talk of businesses taking a greater lead in fixing the world’s environmental and development challenges.Yet apart from Unilever CEO Paul Polman (who declared, “We have to bring this world back to sanity and put the greater good ahead of self-interest”), few corporate leaders at Rio appeared ready to take up the baton. While literally hundreds of business-led initiatives were announced, most were incremental rather than transformative. And there was limited evidence that CEOs recognize that the planet is on a fundamentally unsustainable course and the window for action is closing.

Sustainable Business Pathways

That said, Rio did see real progress in a few important areas for the private sector. In particular, assuming corporations follow through, it laid foundations for more sustainable business models and scalable partnerships between companies and governments.

Here are three Rio trends that demonstrate an emerging shift in business thinking and provide a platform that smart, forward-looking CEOs should look to build on...

Continue reading by: Manish Bapna, Kirsty Jenkinson

http://www.environmental-expert.com/articles/wanted-a-steve-jobs-for-sustainability-303787

What's in the water Washingtonians drink that is linked to obesity, diabetes, autism, cancer, and other disorders—and that medications and products we use every day might contribute to the problem.

Washington’s tap water, most of which comes from the Potomac River, meets or exceeds federal water-quality standards. But new pollutants have emerged that are not removed by current water-purification technology. Evidence suggests that the same contaminants that caused massive fish kills and deformities in recent years are linked to increases in obesity, diabetes, autism, cancer, and other disorders—and that medications and products we use every day might contribute to the problem.

Of all the natural resources in the Washington area, none is more important than the potomac river. Besides the beauty and recreation it provides, the area pulls nearly 400 million gallons of water a day out of it—about 90 percent of our drinking water.

In some ways, the Potomac is cleaner today than it was 40 or 50 years ago. Back then, people were warned not to swim in the river or eat fish from it; a tetanus vaccination was recommended for anyone who did swim there. On many days, you could smell the Potomac before you saw it.

Improvements in wastewater treatment and conservation upgraded the water quality of the river, which wends its way nearly 500 miles from its origin in the Appalachian Plateau to Point Lookout, Maryland, where it empties into the Chesapeake Bay. These efforts helped reduce major pollutants—such as nitrogen and phosphorous from fertilizers, pesticides, and soaps—that fed algae, rootless plant-like organisms that grow in sunlit water. Algae blooms—rapid accumulations of microscopic algae in water that can stretch for miles—deplete the water of oxygen and release harmful toxins. 

They can virtually destroy a river if left to grow unchecked.

Read on at:

Why sustainability execs should shun the S-word - via @makower

It seems that the most effective thing sustainability executives in large companies can do is to stop talking about sustainability.

That's my takeaway from a new report, published today, by VOX Global, Weinreb Group Sustainability Recruiting and the UC Berkeley chapter of Net Impact. The report—a jointly conducted survey of sustainability leaders at mostly large companies—aims to understand the skills, drivers, and internal collaboration strategies sustainability executives need to succeed. [Note: VOX Global provides PR services for GreenBiz Group and Ellen Weinreb is a regular columnist for GreenBiz.com.]

The group surveyed 32 corporate sustainability leaders, primarily from Fortune 100 companies, and conducted in-depth phone interviews with sustainability officers and senior executives at AT&T, DuPont, EMC, Hilton Worldwide, McDonald’s, Novelis, and Nixon Peabody, a law firm with offices throughout the northeastern United States.


Read more By Joel Makower

http://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2012/07/24/should-sustainability-execs-shun-s-word

How To Develop A Small Hydropower Site - #green #energy

 
The following pdf was written by European Small Hydropower Association (ESHA) and summarizes the main aspects regarding the development of small hydropower plants. It contains the following chapters:

Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Fundamental of Hydraulic Engineering
Chapter 3: Evaluating Stream Flow
Chapter 4: Site Evaluation Methodologies
Chapter 5: Hydraulic Structures
Chapter 6: Electromechanical Equipment
Chapter 7: Environmental impact and its mitigation
Chapter 8: Economic analysis
Chapter 9: Administrative procedures

The file can be found here at ESHA’s site:

http://www.esha.be/index.php?id=39

Read more at source
http://www.myengineeringworld.net/2011/05/how-to-develop-small-hydropower-site.html

'Green' wood-fired power plants generate pollution violations.

Of the 107 U.S. biomass plants operating at the start of this year, 85 have been cited by state or federal regulators for violating air-pollution or water-pollution standards at some time during the past five years.

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Would You Trust an 80-Year-Old Nuclear Reactor? - via @Slashdot

The worst nuclear near-disaster that you've never heard of came to light in 2002, when inspectors at Ohio's Davis-Besse nuclear power station discovered that a slow leak had been corroding a spot on the reactor vessel's lid for years (PDF). When they found the cavity, only 1 cm of metal was left to protect the nuclear core. That kind of slow and steady degradation is a major concern as the US's 104 reactors get older and grayer, says nuclear researcher Leonard Bond. U.S. reactors were originally licensed for 40 years of operation, but the majority have already received extensions to keep them going until the age of 60. Industry researchers like Bond are now determining whether it would be safe and economically feasible to keep them active until the age of 80. Bond describes the monitoring techniques that could be used to watch over aging reactors, and argues that despite the risks, the U.S. needs these aging atomic behemoths."

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#comdust Explosion rocks PGE power plant responsible for 7% of country's power supply.

(Reuters) - A coal dust explosion hit Poland's top utility PGE Turow lignite power plant late on Tuesday, sparking a fire that caused a shutdown of three out of eight blocks of the plant responsible for 7 percent of the country's power supply.

Please continue reading at:

Federal Government's Debt Jumps More Than $1T for 5th Straight Fiscal Year

CNSNews.comPrior to fiscal 2008, the federal government had never increased its debt by as much as $1 trillion in a single fiscal year. From fiscal 2008 onward, however, the federal government has increased its debt by at least $1 trillion each and every fiscal year.

The federal fiscal year begins on Oct. 1 and ends on Sept. 30. At the close of business on Sept. 30, 2011—the last day of fiscal 2011—the total debt of the federal government was $14,790,340,328,557.15. By June 29, the last business day of the third quarter of fiscal 2012, that debt had grown to $15,856,367,214,324.44—an increase for this fiscal year of $1,066,026,885,767.29.

Please read full and follow at:

Jul 24, 2012

Before Shipping Your Electronic Wastes to India

Ken Manchen...

 on my way to Bangalore, India, to participate in a workshop and seminar for India environmental professionals. One of my duties will be to give a presentation on the electronic waste (e-waste) problem and the reasons for India's new restriction of hazardous substances (RoHS) and waste electrical and electronic waste (WEEE) rules.

Consumer electronics manufacturers, importers, collectors, and recyclers operating in India are required to apply for government authorization by July 31, 2012. I am not sure everyone fully appreciates just how significant a step India is taking.

I am currently reading Katherine Boo's book Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity, which chronicles events in the life of a boy who lives in a Mumbai slum and makes a living as a "kabadiwala" (one who collects and sorts through trash and sells sorted materials to recyclers). He is doing this to help lift his family out of poverty.

Many "kabadiwalas" specialize in collecting scrap electronic equipment. They collect old electronics and sell it to backyard recyclers, who break it apart and extract usable components. These recyclers also crudely extract metals from old circuit boards. In the process, they contaminate themselves and the environment.

Much of the e-waste collected and recycled in India is imported from Western countries. E-waste collection and recycling has become a major industry in India. It is a major source of income for poor families and a major source of raw materials. Enacting rules that could negatively impact the poor was no small challenge. Still, India went ahead and did what it thought was the right thing.

The new rules will bar Indian consumers from dumping electronic waste into garbage bins. Waste electronics will have to be taken to government-authorized collection centers, returned to the original product manufacturer, or taken to an authorized recycler, who will properly handle, disassemble, and recycle it. Authorized recyclers will have to meet the highest global standards (e-steward and R2 standards). The new rules will also prohibit e-waste imports and exports

Please continue reading by Ken Manchen at:

The Dawn Of The Great California Energy Crash | via @ZeroHedge

The greenest energy state in the union is dying from of lack of energy...
zerohedge - California, which imports over 25% of its electricity from out of state, is in no position to lose half (!) of its entire nuclear power capacity...Will California now find that it must import as much as 30% of its power?

The problem of California’s energy dependency has been decades in the making. And it’s not just its electrical power balance that presents an ongoing challenge. California’s oil production peaked in 1985. And despite ongoing gains in energy efficiency via admirably wise regulation, the state’s population and aggregate energy consumption has completely overrun supply.

Some will say, however, that California doesn’t need to concern itself with domestic energy production. As aninnovation economy, in the manner of Japan or South Korea, many have said California can simply import greater and greater quantities of energy in exchange for its intellectual capital and the services and products it provides to the world.

...There is no miracle solution for California. Even if we assume that the country continues to enjoy cheap natural gas prices, the cost of imported electricity from NG-fired power generation will not fall, because the cost of electricity transmission will continue to rise as the grid ages and requires new investment. Eventually the price level of higher energy and lower quality public services will also catch up even to higher wage employees, because a hollowing-out effect is going to pare down the number of service providers -- teachers, merchants, construction workers, and even health care professionals and lawyers.

Such woes, however, are not unique in any way to California. They are shared by most US states right now; California is simply further down the timeline at this point. The key question here is what are the steps Californians (and the rest of us) should be taking?

Jul 23, 2012

Mapping the government’s local food work as a way to keep it alive #Locavore

Click to explore the map of the USDA’s efforts to boost local food systems.

Yesterday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released what it’s calling the “2.0 version” of its Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food Compass. For those not in the know, the Compass is a map of all of the local food projects — including farmers markets, food hubs, infrastructure, and producers — the USDA funds.

The Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food (KYF) initiative itself is the brainchild of USDA Deputy Secretary Kathleen Merrigan — possibly the highest ranking supporter of sustainable agriculture we’ve ever had at USDA — as a way to highlight efforts to aid local foods.

I’m a big fan of mapping as a visualization tool and the Compass certainly provides lots of data. That said, it’s not really much of a consumer-focused tool compared with private efforts like RealTimeFarms.com, which not only maps farmers markets and farms, but also shows the links between particular restaurants and their local artisanal and farm suppliers.

Instead, the KYF Compass is a way to illustrate what Merrigan and her team are accomplishing. The Compass demonstrates the national reach of USDA-funded local food products; there are little dots all over the country and in every state. Similarly, the KYF website has new local food “case studies” that spell out the department’s recent work. Here are some examples:

The Compass also proves that local food isn’t just a coastal phenomenon; it’s thriving in Nevada, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, too (and also, you know, Micronesia).

The stories themselves are pretty cool, but it’s also worth considering the Compass as a very conscious effort to paint a picture of KYF as benefiting a broad range of regions and businesses.

For example, the local-meat case study in Seattle features a librarian-turned-sausage-maker who wanted to open a USDA-inspected sausage factory in his garage. And, with the help of the right folks at USDA, he succeeded. The Wisconsin story describes a virtuous circle that begins with hoop houses on small farms to extend growing seasons, which led to an increase in so-called “value-added food business” (i.e. artisanal products like jam and pickles), which led to jobs and higher incomes.

It’s worth noting that KYF itself doesn’t provide any new funding — it has simply drawn a connection between preexisting projects run through an alphabet soup of USDA divisions in order to strengthen the message that the agency supports local and regional food. And while it might seem that KYF would be entirely uncontroversial in Washington, it’s not. In fact, almost from the moment of its inception, the effort has raised the ire of Republican lawmakers, who see it as a distraction from USDA’s “real” job of supporting industrial agriculture.

Indeed, the House GOP tried to kill the KYF program last year, along with other attempts at reform. It was an effort that mostly just involved attempts to force USDA to take down the KYF website. KYF survived — but not without a requirement to submit a report of its work to Congress; the Compass is very clearly a part of that reporting.

Please continue reading at:

That Sinking Feeling About Groundwater in Texas draws down 27% of the nation’s irrigated cropland.

...The recent Texas drought was indeed severe. Lubbock’s rainfall for 2011 amounted to a meager 5.86 inches compared to its long-term annual average of 18 inches.

Besides setting the stage for a record-breaking fire season, the drought forced farmers to pump more groundwater to make up for the rainfall deficit.  Without the extra pumping, the drought would have decimated their crops.

Farmers in the District draw from the Ogallala Aquifer, a vast underground water reserve that supplies portions of eight states and waters 27 percent of the nation’s irrigated cropland.  Since much of the aquifer gets little recharge from rainfall today, rising rates of pumping have led to steady depletion.  According to the U.S. Geological Survey, a volume of groundwater equivalent to two-thirds of the water held in Lake Erie has been depleted from the Ogallala since 1940.

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LED retrofits cut a slice out of NYC’s energy costs | will save it $750,000 over 3 years.

I’ve often wondered how much energy New York’s myriad of buildings could save by doing simple things like replacing light bulbs. One commercial realtor has quantified what would happen if LED lighting was retrofitted into its properties, and the payback that it expects to receive is substantial.

Commercial property owner SL Green intends to install Seesmart LEDs in 21 of its buildings before the end of this summer. SL Green estimates that the retrofit, which replaces incandescent, halogen and fluorescent lights, will save it US$750,000 over three years.

Three years is all that it will take for payback due to lower utility and material/labor expenses. Seesmart builds have an estimated lifespan of 8 years, so the project will more than cover its cost. (Just imagine the savings when there’s national energy efficiency standards.)

“Lighting represents approximately 25 to 30 percent of total energy cost in the commercial real estate industry, and addressing lighting efficiency is a key ‘low hanging fruit’ cost savings opportunity,” Jay Black, director of sustainability at SL Green said in a statement. He added lavish praise for Seesmart.

Please continue reading at:

Population change and CO2 Emissions are not Correlated via @nextbigfuture

Population changes are a minor factor in CO2 emissions. The chart below shows that you can have an increase in population and a decrease in CO2 emissions. The bigger factors are GDP increases and the economy.

The group Population Matters pushes for draconian state controls on birth rates and on immigration because they feel that the first solution to CO2 emissions should be population policies.

Long-Term Trend in Global CO2 Emissions (2011, 42 pages, EU Commission)

Fossil fuel combustion accounts for about 90% of total global CO2 emissions excluding forest fires and woodfuel use. As the global economy rebounded strongly in 2010, both in mature industrialised countries and in developing countries, global energy consumption also saw a very strong growth of 5.6%, which is the largest annual growth since 1973 when the world was recovering from the recession caused by the first oil price crisis

Like Russia, Ukraine has seen a greater reduction in CO2 emissions since 1990 than laid out in the Kyoto Protocol - the reason being the collapse of national industry in the 1990s. The result was such a dramatic drop in emissions that in recent years, the country saw a welcome boost to state funds received from the trade of carbon emission quotas.

The reduction was not because of lower population.

Read more »

MIT Chip A Triple-Threat Power Harvester | @Earthtechling

...The MIT approach combines energy from multiple sources by switching rapidly between them. It doesn’t quite sound simultaneous, but Bandyopadhyay did say of the system, “we extract power from all the sources.”

The conquered another challenge, according to the university: driving down how much power the control circuit itself consumes.

The researchers made the system more efficient by using what the university called “an innovative dual-path architechture.” This means the system is able to build a up a charge in an energy-storage device (a battery or supercapacitor), which is customary – or it can bypass energy storage and directly power the device.

According to the abstract for the paper that describes the MIT research, published in the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, this dual-path architecture “has a peak efficiency improvement of 11%–13% over the traditional two-stage approach.”

The abstract also reports: “A proposed time-based power monitor is used for achieving maximum power point tracking for the photovoltaic harvester. This has a peak tracking efficiency of 96%. The peak efficiencies achieved with inductor sharing are 83%, 58%, and 79% for photovoltaic boost, thermoelectric boost, and piezoelectric buck-boost converters, respectively.”...

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Fuel Cell Treats Wastewater and Harvests Energy: Scientific American

A new microbial fuel cell creates energy during wastewater treatment and also vastly reduces the amount of sludge produced. Israel-based company, Emefcy, named as a play on the acronym for microbial fuel cell (MFC), starts with the same principle as most wastewater treatment—water is aerated so bacteria in the liquid break down organic material in a closed series of containers known as a bioreactor.

"We didn't invent anything scientifically new," says Ely Cohen, vice president of marketing and business development for the four-year-old company.

The novelty factor: instead of using electricity to push air into the water, Emefcy uses a permeable filter that allows air in but doesn't let liquid out, much like how a diaper works. The polyethylene plastic membrane, similar to materials used in construction, surrounds the fuel cell chamber into which wastewater flows.

Inside the fuel cell, Emefcy coaxes anaerobic bacteria, primarily Shewanella oneidensis and Geobacter sulfurreducens, to release electrons in an oxygen-free environment. The electrons flow to an anode and then into a circuit to cathodes in a separate chamber on the outside of the membrane. The electrons allow the carbon cathodes to react with oxygen to form carbon dioxide.

The practical side of the Emefcy fuel cell relates to the materials engineering: both the anode and cathode are made of a carbon cloth that acts as a conductor. Precious metals have long been used as conducting materials in batteries and other types offuel cells but are too expensive to use at a commercial scale in microbial fuel cells.

For a typical paper-recycling factory, one Emefcy fuel cell module, which is about the size of a cubic meter, could treat about three cubic meters per day of wastewater depending on the amount of organic material present, according to Cohen, and the modules can be scaled to meet the needs of larger or smaller plants.

The bacteria eat a lot to produce electricity and live a longer life because the environment is optimized for their survival, so sludge can be cut down by 80 percent, Cohen says. Roughly four watts of electricity are produced for every kilogram of organic material that the bacteria consume. The amount of electricity generated will not exactly power the entire town, or even the entire processing facility, but it can offset the energy used to clean the water.

"The energy we don't consume is more important than the electricity we might produce," says environmental engineer Bruce Logan of Pennsylvania State University, an Emefcy advisor.

Please continue reading at:

Weight of Patients Becomes Workplace Safety Issue

Nurses, nursing aides and orderlies have borne the weight of the nation's obesity epidemic and suffered the consequences. They have gone home with aching backs and, in worst-case scenarios, ended up in hospitals themselves. Press & Sun-Bulletin (Binghamton, NY)
Go to the Full Story...

US Standards on Workplace Noise Trail Those of Other Countries

Noise levels recorded at nearly a dozen restaurants, gyms and bars in New York City reached heights that, if sustained over as little as two hours, would violate standards set by Fed-OSHA to protect workers' hearing. But even if the regulations were heeded, federal noise protection standards lag behind much of the industrialized world's. New York Times
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Wisconsin governor tours drought-savaged state.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker began a drought tour Friday as his state continues to grapple with fish kills, dying crops and water emergencies amid raging heat. On Wednesday, the Republican governor declared a state of emergency in all of Wisconsin's 72 counties because of abnormally dry conditions.

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IOSH Investigating General Mills Death

An inspector from Iowa OSHA arrived in Cedar Rapids Thursday to investigate the death of a worker at a local General Mills plant. On Wednesday, emergency personnel responded to the plant for a report of a man trapped between a piece of machinery and a safety post. KCRG (Cedar Rapids, Iowa)
Go to the Full Story...

Where to put all our nuclear waste?

We have, in this country alone, something like 70,000 tons of high level nuclear waste -- 250,000 worldwide, give or take. What we don't have, here or anywhere else, is a place to put it all. And figuring that out means you have to convince people it'll be okay to store nuclear waste where they live.

Please continue reading at:

‘The radiation effects at Chernobyl will last 1,000 years...’

It’s hard to believe that the explosion at Reactor Four on April, 26, 1986, happened more than a quarter of a century ago.

But the children born long after its eruption are still living with the poisoned land and food grown in the two countries.

Alexander’s immune system has packed up. He was one of the so-called liquidators sent into the area immediately around Chernobyl to clear up.

One of those areas is the Red Forest. It used to be green like any other, but the pine trees turned ginger-brown after they died following the absorption of high levels of radiation.

Marian says: ‘Alexander and many others felled the trees and dug the trenches in which the trees were then buried. Then he buried the machinery used to fell the forest because it too was so highly contaminated.

‘All he was given was an apron with a little bit of lead in it and a pair of lead-lined boots.’

He stayed with Marian at her home in Blakemere Crescent, Paulsgrove, Portsmouth, in April, because he has spent the past 26 years working tirelessly for the victims of Chernobyl. He wanted to see for himself what people like Marian and her team do for the children.

Marian first took in youngsters seven years ago. She’s not missed a year since. Every year she takes two lads for the whole of June.

‘I’d lost a son who was stillborn. My husband was diagnosed with bowel cancer. I was 39 and he was 49. I knew there would be no more children for us.

‘Two friends of mine answered an advertisement in The News desperately seeking a host family for two girls. I helped out and I realised this was for me.

‘Of course, like everyone else I knew about Chernobyl when it happened, but I had no idea about the effects of radiation which will last for 1,000 years...

Please continue reading at:

Endocrine Disruptors: A Toxic Result of Plastic pollution « EnviroDiscovery

The endocrine system is essentially the system through which our glands, lymph nodes, gonads, pancreas, and other hormonal organs operate. The instructions given by our endocrine system through different hormones cause many of the fundamental processes that keep us alive.

Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that can alter the endocrine processes by simulating the chemical structure of a hormone or acting in a similar manner when processed through the body. Endocrine disruptors exist in nature, but the most toxic ones have been synthesized by man.

Understand that a small change in our endocrine system can have devastating long term effects on our emotional and physical health. So, this understood, endocrine disruptors must exist in small quantities in very few highly dangerous industrial conditions, right?

Wrong. The sad truth is that many endocrine disruptors exist in our everyday lives in the form of pesticides, dental sealants, perfumes, soaps, and common disposable plastics such as PVC and polyethylene.

PVC Pipes

Concentrations of ED’s are magnified as they go through the process of bioaccumulation up the food chain. If a plankton were to consume a small amount of an ED, and then a small aquatic organism ate that plankton, and then a small fish ate that organism, and then a large fish or a bird ate that organism, the animal at the top of this food chain would have a highly toxic amount of ED’s in their prey, so much so that the result could have significant developmental effects, sickness, or even death.

 

 

Trash in the North Pacific Gyre

In a strange twist on bioaccumulation, Capt. Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation skimmed the surface of the North Pacific Gyre using a fine-mesh net device over an area of more than 100 kilometers. He found six times more plastic by weight than naturally occurring zooplankton. Other researchers found that the plastic bits absorb and concentrate toxins such as PCB and DDE up to a million times their levels in ambient seawater. Birds and fish are ingesting the plastic because they mistake for zooplankton. Because the plastic is a PCB/DDE “magnet,” the animals consuming it are getting massive doses of Eds.

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China’s nuclear powered ocean floor mining station drills for oil, gold |

SmartPlanet -,China has revealed plans to send a luxurious, hotel-like, nuclear propelled massive underwater mining station to the depths of the Pacific, where it will drill for oil, gold, copper, zinc, lead and other metals smack dab on the seabed.

According to the South China Morning Post (free 2-week registration required), the China Ship Scientific Research Center’s mega-craft will house 33 “aquanauts” for 2 months at a time. It will not only drill for riches, but will also process the metals right there, way down below the ocean.

Race to the bottom. Who will get there first? China? Russia? U.S.? Japan? Maybe these bottlenose dolphins.

The paper reports:

Equipped with a nuclear reactor, the station would be able to support 33 crewmen for up to two months at a time.

“If a submersible were a plane, this station would be an aircraft carrier,” Ma Xiangneng , a researcher with the project, told China National Radio. “The station will be an underwater palace, with showers, a living room and laboratories.”

The designs show the station resembling a nuclear submarine, with two propeller fans at the tail. It would measure 60.2 metres long, 15.8 metres wide and 9.7 metres tall, weighing about 2,600 tonnes.

Like a space station, the deep-sea station would have multiple ports to support the docking of smaller manned or unmanned vessels.

Researchers such as Ma have said the station’s main purpose would be deep-sea mining. With an underwater “mother ship” hovering above the station, located just below the surface and undisturbed by weather conditions, mining facilities could be built much more quickly and cheaply than if surface ships were used.

It’s not clear from the story exactly how deep the floating roustabouts will plunge. It looks like anywhere from between 1,000 meters to 8,000 meters - nearly 5 miles. (At those depths, the showers in the luxury cabins should have plenty of pressure!).

Please continue reading at:

Fuel Cell Treats Wastewater and Harvests Energy: Scientific American

A new microbial fuel cell creates energy during wastewater treatment and also vastly reduces the amount of sludge produced. Israel-based company, Emefcy, named as a play on the acronym for microbial fuel cell (MFC), starts with the same principle as most wastewater treatment—water is aerated so bacteria in the liquid break down organic material in a closed series of containers known as a bioreactor.

"We didn't invent anything scientifically new," says Ely Cohen, vice president of marketing and business development for the four-year-old company.

The novelty factor: instead of using electricity to push air into the water, Emefcy uses a permeable filter that allows air in but doesn't let liquid out, much like how a diaper works. The polyethylene plastic membrane, similar to materials used in construction, surrounds the fuel cell chamber into which wastewater flows.

Inside the fuel cell, Emefcy coaxes anaerobic bacteria, primarily Shewanella oneidensis and Geobacter sulfurreducens, to release electrons in an oxygen-free environment. The electrons flow to an anode and then into a circuit to cathodes in a separate chamber on the outside of the membrane. The electrons allow the carbon cathodes to react with oxygen to form carbon dioxide.

The practical side of the Emefcy fuel cell relates to the materials engineering: both the anode and cathode are made of a carbon cloth that acts as a conductor. Precious metals have long been used as conducting materials in batteries and other types offuel cells but are too expensive to use at a commercial scale in microbial fuel cells.

For a typical paper-recycling factory, one Emefcy fuel cell module, which is about the size of a cubic meter, could treat about three cubic meters per day of wastewater depending on the amount of organic material present, according to Cohen, and the modules can be scaled to meet the needs of larger or smaller plants.

The bacteria eat a lot to produce electricity and live a longer life because the environment is optimized for their survival, so sludge can be cut down by 80 percent, Cohen says. Roughly four watts of electricity are produced for every kilogram of organic material that the bacteria consume. The amount of electricity generated will not exactly power the entire town, or even the entire processing facility, but it can offset the energy used to clean the water.

"The energy we don't consume is more important than the electricity we might produce," says environmental engineer Bruce Logan of Pennsylvania State University, an Emefcy advisor.

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Brave new world as solar PV energy heads to 50c/watt


US Energy Secretary Stephen Chu earlier this year suggested that solar PV without subsidies will be cheaper than both coal and gas if it could get its costs down to around $1/watt by the end of the decade – an event that would trigger a total re-examination of the way electricity was produced in the world's largest economy.

That meant cutting the cost of modules to round 50c/W, and then bring the balance of module costs down with it. The latest research says that the module cost target will happen by 2016. Which also means that forecasts by Chinese officials and the Indian government that solar PV would reach wholesale parity with fossil fuels by 2020 (or 2017 in the case of India) are likely to occur even earlier.

GTM Research this week published the latest version of its five-year cost outlook for solar PV. Its first take was to admit that its previous predictions about costs, deployment and consolidation in the industry had been wildly misplaced. Like others, it has struggled to get its spread sheets around the stunning reduction in costs over the last few years, and misread the impact of feed in tariffs, consumer demand, and the ability of Chinese manufacturers to lower costs.

"How wrong we were," wrote GTM analyst Shyam Mehta. "We didn't really have an accurate, even semi-quantitative, understanding of the relationship between pricing, incentives, finance and demand." And by "we", GTM could include not just its own researchers, but nearly the entire global energy industry.

And predictions on how the solar market is going to play out are not getting any easier. "Truth be told, we are not a long way farther along in developing an understanding of the PV market than we were back in 2008," he writes.

But some things can be noted: "That industry has sheer momentum behind it in terms of interested, well-capitalized parties, that technology innovation will happen at breathtaking speed, helping to push c-Si (silicon-based) module costs toward the $0.50/W mark at 17% module efficiencies over the next half-decade.

"We also don't plan to underestimate the lucre that even cooling uncapped FIT markets still have, especially in an era when system costs are fast approaching $2.00/W. We also don't think that pricing and demand have a nice, simple relation in terms of elasticity: customers will wait to purchase equipment for months if they think prices will come down further, but then install gigawatts of PV in a few weeks if those weeks precede a major tariff reduction." (Hello Germany, Italy, and last week, Queensland).

The report includes a few notable graphs. The first is the cost path for module – now estimated at around 75c/W and heading down to 50c/W at a rate of knots. GTM, and most others in the industry, believe it will get to the 50c/W mark by 2016 at the latest, most likely 2015.


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Richard Branson urges Obama to back next-generation integral fast reactor nuclear technology that President Clinton Cut in 1994

guardian.co.uk

Sir Richard Branson is urging the US government to help commercialise a controversial class of nuclear reactor, according to a letter seen by the Guardian asking for a meeting with President Barack Obama and US energy secretary Steven Chu.

The White House declined the meeting to discuss integral fast reactors (IFRs), which proponents say offer a way of dealing with nuclear waste, although no working commercial reactors are in operation.

But the move brings the intriguing prospect of a race to develop nuclear technology between Branson and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, whose new company TerraPower is developing another type of next-generation nuclear technology known as the travelling wave reactor.

"Obviously we urgently need to come up with a clean effective way of supplying our energy since not only are the dirty ways like oil running out but we need to do so to help avoid the world heating up," Branson told the Guardian.


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Why Is America Throwing Away $11.4 Billion a Year? - via @Forbes

forbes... A month or so ago, this column ran a pieceintroducing the concept of extended producer responsibility (EPR), a recycling system wherein companies are responsible for collecting and recycling the packaging they create. The idea has the backing of big beverage industry players, including Nestle Waters North America and Coca-Cola, but the idea is that it would include all packaging, not just beverage containers, and so far other grocery manufacturers–those that make and sell cereal, canned foods, and so forth–are not on board. While the beverage industry has been taken to task time and again for its bottles and cans, other grocery manufacturers have so far avoided any sort of scrutiny around packaging. And while the beverage companies want more of their containers back so they can use them to make new containers with the high recycled content they've been promising in press releases for years, the grocery guys are under no such pressure.

Enter the NGOs. Today the As You Sow foundation, which uses shareholder advocacy to push corporations to prioritize sustainability and public health, released a comprehensive report on EPR, outlining the various reasons the system makes sense for the U.S. market. As You Sow senior director Conrad Mackerron makes several salient points in the report, which pulls together much of the research that has been done on EPR over the years, but the most compelling by far from a business perspective is the fact that the value of discarded packaging in the United States in 2010 was $11.4 billion. "We're talking about valuable stuff like aluminum–Alcoa can't get enough aluminum back–and PET plastic, which not only the beverage companies here want, but also the textile and automotive industries, both here and in China," Mackerron said.

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Teenager Unveils Plan to Turn Plastic Waste Into $78 Million of Biofuel! | @Inhabitat

inhabitat. - What Azza proposes is to break down the plastic polymers found in drinks bottles and general waste and turn them into biofuel feedstock. (This is the bulk raw material that generally used for producing biofuel.) It should be noted that this is not a particularly new idea, but what makes Azza stand out from the crowd is the catalyst that she is proposing. She says that she has found a high-yield catalyst called aluminosilicate, that will break down plastic waste and also produce gaseous products like methane, propane and ethane, which can then be converted into ethanol.

Speaking about the breakthrough, Azza said that the technology could "provide an economically efficient method for production of hydrocarbon fuel" including 40,000 tons per year of cracked naptha and 138,000 tons of hydrocarbon gasses – the equivalent of $78 million in biofuel.

Azza has already been making waves in the scientific community and has been presented with the European Fusion Development Agreement award at the 23rd European Union Contest for Young Scientists. She is now looking to get her findings patented through the Egyptian Patent Office...

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‘The radiation effects at Chernobyl will last 1,000 years...’

It's hard to believe that the explosion at Reactor Four on April, 26, 1986, happened more than a quarter of a century ago.

But the children born long after its eruption are still living with the poisoned land and food grown in the two countries.

Alexander's immune system has packed up. He was one of the so-called liquidators sent into the area immediately around Chernobyl to clear up.

One of those areas is the Red Forest. It used to be green like any other, but the pine trees turned ginger-brown after they died following the absorption of high levels of radiation.

Marian says: 'Alexander and many others felled the trees and dug the trenches in which the trees were then buried. Then he buried the machinery used to fell the forest because it too was so highly contaminated.

'All he was given was an apron with a little bit of lead in it and a pair of lead-lined boots.'

He stayed with Marian at her home in Blakemere Crescent, Paulsgrove, Portsmouth, in April, because he has spent the past 26 years working tirelessly for the victims of Chernobyl. He wanted to see for himself what people like Marian and her team do for the children.

Marian first took in youngsters seven years ago. She's not missed a year since. Every year she takes two lads for the whole of June.

'I'd lost a son who was stillborn. My husband was diagnosed with bowel cancer. I was 39 and he was 49. I knew there would be no more children for us.

'Two friends of mine answered an advertisement in The News desperately seeking a host family for two girls. I helped out and I realised this was for me.

'Of course, like everyone else I knew about Chernobyl when it happened, but I had no idea about the effects of radiation which will last for 1,000 years...

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Endocrine Disruptors 101: A Toxic Result of Plastic pollution « EnviroDiscovery


The endocrine system is essentially the system through which our glands, lymph nodes, gonads, pancreas, and other hormonal organs operate. The instructions given by our endocrine system through different hormones cause many of the fundamental processes that keep us alive.

Endocrine disruptors are chemicals that can alter the endocrine processes by simulating the chemical structure of a hormone or acting in a similar manner when processed through the body. Endocrine disruptors exist in nature, but the most toxic ones have been synthesized by man.

Understand that a small change in our endocrine system can have devastating long term effects on our emotional and physical health. So, this understood, endocrine disruptors must exist in small quantities in very few highly dangerous industrial conditions, right?

Wrong. The sad truth is that many endocrine disruptors exist in our everyday lives in the form of pesticides, dental sealants, perfumes, soaps, and common disposable plastics such as PVC and polyethylene.

Concentrations of ED's are magnified as they go through the process of bioaccumulation up the food chain. If a plankton were to consume a small amount of an ED, and then a small aquatic organism ate that plankton, and then a small fish ate that organism, and then a large fish or a bird ate that organism, the animal at the top of this food chain would have a highly toxic amount of ED's in their prey, so much so that the result could have significant developmental effects, sickness, or even death.

 In a strange twist on bioaccumulation, Capt. Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation skimmed the surface of the North Pacific Gyre using a fine-mesh net device over an area of more than 100 kilometers. He found six times more plastic by weight than naturally occurring zooplankton. Other researchers found that the plastic bits absorb and concentrate toxins such as PCB and DDE up to a million times their levels in ambient seawater. Birds and fish are ingesting the plastic because they mistake for zooplankton. Because the plastic is a PCB/DDE "magnet," the animals consuming it are getting massive doses of Eds.

EPA Provides $950,000 To Improve Water Quality Using Green Infrastructure In 17 Communities

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced recently that it is providing $950,000 to help 17 communities expand green infrastructure use to improve water quality and protect people's health and benefit communities. Green infrastructure uses vegetation and soil to manage rainwater where it falls, keeping polluted stormwater from entering sewer systems and waterways in local communities. The EPA funding is intended to increase incorporation of green infrastructure into stormwater management programs, protect water quality, and provide community benefits including job creation and neighborhood revitalization.

"Effective stormwater management is one of the most widespread challenges to water quality in the nation," said Nancy Stoner, EPA's Acting Assistant Administrator for Water. She announced the funds today at a stormwater symposium in Baltimore held by the Water Environment Federation. "Polluted stormwater can be harmful to the health of our nation's waterbodies. These funds will help expand the use of green infrastructure, revitalize local neighborhoods and help safeguard people's health and the environment."

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China’s nuclear powered ocean floor mining station drills for oil, gold | via @SmartPlanet

SmartPlanet -,China has revealed plans to send a luxurious, hotel-like, nuclear propelled massive underwater mining station to the depths of the Pacific, where it will drill for oil, gold, copper, zinc, lead and other metals smack dab on the seabed.

According to the South China Morning Post (free 2-week registration required), the China Ship Scientific Research Center's mega-craft will house 33 "aquanauts" for 2 months at a time. It will not only drill for riches, but will also process the metals right there, way down below the ocean.

Race to the bottom. Who will get there first? China? Russia? U.S.? Japan? Maybe these bottlenose dolphins.

The paper reports:

Equipped with a nuclear reactor, the station would be able to support 33 crewmen for up to two months at a time.

"If a submersible were a plane, this station would be an aircraft carrier," Ma Xiangneng , a researcher with the project, told China National Radio. "The station will be an underwater palace, with showers, a living room and laboratories."

The designs show the station resembling a nuclear submarine, with two propeller fans at the tail. It would measure 60.2 metres long, 15.8 metres wide and 9.7 metres tall, weighing about 2,600 tonnes.

Like a space station, the deep-sea station would have multiple ports to support the docking of smaller manned or unmanned vessels.

Researchers such as Ma have said the station's main purpose would be deep-sea mining. With an underwater "mother ship" hovering above the station, located just below the surface and undisturbed by weather conditions, mining facilities could be built much more quickly and cheaply than if surface ships were used.

It's not clear from the story exactly how deep the floating roustabouts will plunge. It looks like anywhere from between 1,000 meters to 8,000 meters - nearly 5 miles. (At those depths, the showers in the luxury cabins should have plenty of pressure!).

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