Posted in economy, first person, health, tagged 2010, 2015, additive, adverse, agency, agriculture, anthropogenic, Apidae, approval, asthma, autism, autoimmune, babies, bathroom cleaners, Bayer, bee, beekeepers, biomagnification, biomarkers, biomonitoring, blame, Bloomberg, butterfly effect, buyer, cancer, carcinogen, care, chemical, chemistry, children, choice, choices, cleaners, coating, colonies, colony collapse disorder, commercial, companies, consequences, consumption, control act, cooking, cookware, cord blood, corporate interests, court, crops, cumulative, damage, dangerous, dangers of, date, death, decimate, decline, demand, die-off, disease, DNA, DuPont, dying, effects, empower, empowerment, enlightened consumer, environmental, EPA, epidemic, epigenetics, evolved, famine, farming, fate, fertilize, food, food chain, fungus, future, genes, genetic code, GMO, grandchildren, groups, harm, harvest, have our backs, health, hives, homologue, honeybees, hunger, illness, immune system, impact, industrial, ingredient, inherited, injunction, insect, institute, Internet, judge, lawmakers, learning disabilities, legislature, look in the mirror, lost headline, magnifier, market, marketplace, media, mice, mirror, mite, modern, modified, Movento, mutate, national, new year, New York, newborns, nonstick, numbers, nutrition, packaging, pans, parasite, pest, pesticides, PFOA, phase out, pocketbook, policy, pollen, pollinators, population, precautionary principle, profile, profitable, protection, public health, public interest, rationalize, reaction, reduction, reflection, regulators, represent, reproduction, research, retailers, risk, risk factor, ruling, safety, science, Scotchguard, self interest, serve, shopper, shrinking, sick, smart consumer, Spirotetramat, stain repellents, Stainmaster, stay, stewardship program, stock, stores, study, substances, take charge, Teflon, tipping point, toxic, traits, trigger, trouble, tumor, voluntary, voting with our wallets, weeds, welfare, withdraw, working group, zero on January 6, 2010 |
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Remember that story a few years back about the mysterious honeybee affliction known as Colony Collapse Disorder? It didn’t remain in the headlines for long but it should have: Honeybees pollinate up to 1/3 of the world’s crops. Lose them and we lose a great deal of human civilization to malnutrition.
I was reminded of this sad phenomena over the holidays when, from city to city, county to county, I kept stepping over dead and dying honeybees. Not just one, but several. Not merely one week, but several weeks in a row. Three years earlier — and what first brought CCD to my attention when I came online in search of an explanation — I took a walk in a local park and saw hundreds of bees dying on the ground. It was all I could do to keep my dog from stepping on them, a number of them still trying, fruitlessly so, to fly. A few weeks later at another park, I saw the same phenomena. The carnage became so commonplace that year that I eventually lost count.
Now here comes a late-breaking 2009 headline nearly lost amidst end-of-year festivities:
Bayer ‘Disappointed’ in Ruling on Chemical That May Harm Bees | Bloomberg.com
Bayer’s newest chemical wonder, Spirotetramat, was not on the market when CCD surfaced, but what is alarming about this story is that the EPA apparently approved it, critics allege, knowing that it could heighten or accelerate the harm to a critical link in the food chain.
Our food chain.
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Posted in health, technology, tagged agriculture, Amazon, appliance, area, biodegradable, boards, book vs. Kindle, books, breaking point, byproducts, calculate, carbon footprint, carcinogenic, centralization, chemicals, children, chip, chips, circuits, clean, coal power, computers, computing, conscious, conservancy, consumption, contaminated, cost, costly, costs, cultivated, dangers, data centers, degradable, demand, devices, disposable, dumb, e-lusion, e-readers, e-waste, Earth, eco-conscious, electricity, electronic frontier, electronics, Elinor Abreau, energy, energy vampires, environmental, environmental awareness quotient, equation, exposure, factories, First World, footprint, forested, free lunch, gadgets, Gaia, gasses, gear, geek, globe, Google, gray, gray side to green, Green, green is gray, green side, grid, growing, harm, hazardous, heavy metals, high-tech, human health, hypocrisy, IBM, impact, industrialization, Industry Standard, infrastructure, integrated circuit, Internet, IT/IS, Jeff Monroe, Kindle, land, lead, library vs. Internet, limit, load, love affair, manufacturing, megawatts, MEMEX, Microsoft, minimal, misinformation, modernity, myths, nature, nerd, net, network, newspapers, obsession, online, overuse, paper vs. digital, paperless, PCs, perceptions, petro, petroleum products, planet, plants, plastics, politics of green, population, power, power grid, price, print, production, public, public health, quantify, question, reader, reading, reality check, recyclable, recycling, renewable, reproductive, requirements, researchers, resources, scrap, semi-conductor, server farm, Silicon Valley, simple, sites, smart, smokestacks, solution, steward, tech, technology, territory, Third World, threat, toxicity, toxins, trade, trees, trendy, USA Weekend, usage, Vicki Kriz, waste, web, woodland, workers, world wide web, Yahoo on July 14, 2009 |
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Trees: 181,000 of them to be exact. That’s the number of leafy green lives we will save if we pay our bills online, writes Vicki Kriz, author of GreenSmart: Save trees, pay bills online in a July 5, 2009 USA WEEKEND Magazine column. A wise idea, right? “To find out the impact your household could make, use the ‘Green Calculator’ at payitgreen.org,” the article concludes.
That’s all well and good, but who’s asking the even bigger question: How many trees are we trading for coal-burning smokestacks vis-à-vis the increasing load our proliferating gadgets place on the electric grid?
Consider the carbon footprint of the Internet itself. The electrical requirements are astounding, yet as long as the public perceives all things Internet and electronic as a “free Green lunch”, no end to this grand, green e-lusion lies in sight.
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