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Don't allow mining near the Grand Canyon

Posted on May 21st, 2009 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
Arizona002

Tell Interior Secretary Salazar:

Don't allow mining near the Grand Canyon























TAKE ACTION


Click here to urge Interior Secretary Salazar to prohibit mining near the Grand Canyon






Did you know that recently the Bureau of Land Management approved new mining operations near the Grand Canyon?


Did you know that Congress acted last year to temporarily prohibit new mining near the Grand Canyon?


Well,
it's true: the BLM -- part of the Interior Department -- authorized a
Canadian mining company to drill for uranium near the Grand Canyon. And
that may be only the beginning -- according to the Environmental
Working Group, since 2003 the number of mining claims within 5 miles of
Grand Canyon National Park increased from 10 to more than 1,100.


It's
fear for the impacts of uranium mining on the Grand Canyon that
prompted Congress to act last year to prohibit new claims near the park.


Because
mining near the Grand Canyon will not only threaten one of our greatest
national treasures, but will also threaten the Colorado River that
flows through the Canyon. The river provides drinking water for 25
million Americans.


Fortunately it's not too late to stop the mining near the Grand Canyon and protect this valuable water supply. President Obama's new Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, has not weighed in on the issue.


TAKE ACTION


Tell Secretary Salazar to make the land near the Grand Canyon off-limits to mining. Send a letter to Ken Salazar asking him to follow Congress's lead -- and the law -- in this matter.


Thanks for taking action,

Alan Septoff and Lauren Pagel, EARTHWORKS


Instructions:


  • Go to the action page to take action and for more information.
  • Read the sample letter and edit it if possible. Customized letters have greater impact.
  • Click "Send My Message" to send your letter to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.
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Swine flu is meat industry's latest plague

Posted on May 1st, 2009 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(


 
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A food system that kills

GRAIN, April 2009

Mexico is in the midst of a hellish repeat of Asia's bird flu experience, though on a more deadly scale. Once again, the official response from public authorities has come too late and bungled in cover-ups. And once again, the global meat industry is at the centre of the story, ramping up denials as the weight of evidence about its role grows. Just five years after the start of the H5N1 bird flu crisis, and after as many years of a global strategy against influenza pandemics coordinated by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), the world is now reeling from a swine flu disaster. The global strategy has failed and needs to be replaced with a public health system that the public can trust.

What we know about the situation in Mexico is that, officially speaking, more than 150 people have died from a new strain of swine flu that is, in fact, a genetic cocktail of pig, bird and human influenza strains. It has evolved to a form that is easily spread from human to human and is capable of killing perfectly healthy people. We do not know where exactly this genetic recombination and evolution took place, but the obvious place to start looking is in the factory farms of Mexico and the US.[1]

2Experts have been warning for years that the rise of large-scale factory farms in North America has created the perfect breeding grounds for the emergence and spread of new highly-virulent strains of influenza. "Because concentrated animal feeding operations tend to concentrate large numbers of animals close together, they facilitate rapid transmission and mixing of viruses,” said scientists from the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) in 2006.[2] Three years earlier, Science Magazine warned that swine flu was on a new evolutionary "fast track" due to the increasing size of factory farms and the widespread use of vaccines in these operations.[3] It’s the same story with bird flu. The crowded and unsanitary conditions of the farms make it possible for the virus to recombine and take on new forms very easily. Once this happens, the centralised nature of the industry ensures that the disease gets carried far and wide, whether by feces, feed, water or even the boots of workers.[4] Yet, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), “no formal national surveillance system exists to determine what viruses are prevalent in the US swine population.”[5] The same is true of Mexico.

Communities at the epicentre

Another thing we know about the swine flu outbreak in Mexico is that the community of La Gloria in the state of Veracruz was trying to get authorities to respond to a vicious outbreak of a strange respiratory disease affecting them over the past months. The residents are adamant that the disease is linked to pollution from the big pig farm that was recently set up in the community by Granja Carroll, a subsidiary of the US company Smithfield Foods, the world's largest pork producer.

After countless efforts by the community to get the authorities to help -- efforts which led to the arrest of several community leaders and death threats against people speaking out against the Smithfield operations -- local health officials finally decided to investigate in late 2008. Tests revealed that more than 60 per cent of the community of 3,000 people were infected by a respiratory disea3se, but officials did not confirm what the disease was. Smithfield denied any connection with its operations. It was only on 27 April 2009, days after the federal government officially announced the swine flu epidemic, that information came out in the press revealing that the first case of swine flu diagnosed in the country was of a 4-year old boy from the community of La Gloria on April 2, 2009.  Mexico’s Minister of Health says a sample taken from the boy was the only sample taken from the community that Mexican officials retained and sent for laboratory testing, which later confirmed that it was swine flu.[6] This despite the fact that a private risk assessment firm in the US, Veratect, had notified regional officials from the WHO about the outbreaks of the powerful respiratory illness in La Gloria in early April 2009.[7]

On 4 April 2009, the Mexican daily La Jornada published an article on the struggle of the community of La Gloria, with a photo in which a young boy is holding a placard at a demonstration with a picture of a pig crossed out and the words “Danger: Carrolls Farm” written on it in Spanish.[8]

About influenza pandemics in general, we know that proximity of factory pig farms and factory poultry farms increases the risks of viral recombination and the emergence of new virulent flu strains. Pigs held near to chicken farms in Indonesia, for instance, are known to have high-levels of infection from H5N1, the deadly variant of bird flu.[9] Scientists from the NIH warn “that increasing the numbers of swine facilities adjacent to avian facilities could further promote the evolution of the next pandemic."[10]

While it has not been widely reported, the region around the community of La Gloria is also home to many large poultry farms. Recently, in September 2008, there was an outbreak of bird flu among poultry in the region. At the time, veterinary authorities assured the public that it was only a local incidence of a low-pathogenic strain affecting backyard birds. But we now know, thanks to a disclosure made by Marco Antonio Núñez López, the President of the Environmental Commission of the State of Veracruz, that there was also an avian flu outbreak on a factory farm about 50 kilometres from La Gloria owned by Mexico's largest poultry company, Granjas Bachoco, that was not revealed because of fears of what it might mean for Mexico's export markets.[11] It should be noted that a common ingredient in industrial animal feed is "poultry litter", which is a mixture of everything found on the floor of factory poultry farms: fecal matter, feathers, bedding, etc

Could there be a more ideal situation for the emergence of a pandemic influenza virus than a poor rural area, full of factory farms owned by transnational corporations who care nothing for the well-being of the local people? The residents of La Gloria have tried for years to resist the Smithfield farm. And they tried for months to get authorities to do something about the strange illness hitting their people. They were ignored. Their voices did not register a single blip on the radar of the WHO's global emerging disease surveillance system. Nor did the bird flu outbreaks in Veracruz trigger a response from the OIE’s global disease alert system. News only broke out haphazardly from private sources.[12] This is what passes for global surveillance.

4Corporate bias

It is not the first time and it will not be the last time that corporate farms conceal disease outbreaks and put people’s lives at risk. It is the nature of their business. A couple of years ago in Romania, Smithfield refused to let local authorities enter its pig farms after residents complained of the stench coming from hundreds of dead corpses of pigs left rotting for days at the farms. “Our doctors have not had access to the American [company's] farms to effect routine inspections,” said Csaba Daroczi, assistant director at the Timisoara Hygiene and Veterinary Authority. “Every time they tried, they were pushed away by the guards. Smithfield proposed that we sign an agreement that would oblige us to warn them three days before each inspection.”[13] Eventually, it emerged that Smithfield had been concealing a major outbreak of classical swine fever on its Romanian farms.[14]

In Indonesia, where people are still dying from bird flu and where many health experts believe the next pandemic virus will emerge, authorities can still not enter large corporate farms without the permission of the company.[15] In Mexico, authorities deflected calls to investigate La Granja Carroll and accused the residents of La Gloria of spreading infection because “they use home remedies instead of going to the health centres to cure their flu.”[16]

Factory farms are time-bombs for global disease epidemics. Yet, there are still no programmes in place to deal with them, not even programmes of independent disease surveillance. Nobody on high seems to care, and it's probably no coincidence that these farms tend to be located amongst the poorest communities, who suffer dearly to get the truth out. Worse still, so much of our food supply now comes from this bloated system that the main task of government food safety agencies now seems to be to calm fears and keep people eating. Smithfield is already on the financial brink and just last week was negotiating for China’s largest agribusiness company, COFCO, to take it over.[17]

In the meantime, the pharmaceutical industry is making a killing from the crisis. The US government has already opened an emergency window in its authorisation system to allow antivirals like Tamiflu and Relaxin to be used more widely on flu sufferers than allowed. This is great news for Roche, Gilead and Glaxo SmithKline, who hold monopolies on the drugs. But even more importantly, a swathe of smaller vaccine producers like Biocryst and Novavax are seeing their share prices shoot through the roof.[18] Novavax is trying to convince both CDC and the Mexican government that it can come up with a swine flu vaccine in as little as 12 weeks if the testing rules remain relaxed.

Sea change needed

Clearly, the global system for dealing with health problems brought on by the transnational food industry is completely upside down. Its surveillance system is a bust, frontline public health and veterinarian services are in a shambles and authority has been handed over to the private sector, which has every interest in maintaining the status quo. Meanwhile, people are told to keep indoors and to keep their fingers crossed for Tamiflu or a new vaccine that they may or may not get access to. This is not a tolerable situation; action for a sea change is needed, now.

Photos are from this website, where you can get more information: http://enlace.vazquezchagoya.com/?p=812

In the specific case of the swine flu epidemic in Mexico, change can start with an immediate, transparent and thorough independent investigation of corporate pig and poultry farms in Veracruz, across the country and throughout North America. The people of Mexico need to know the source of the problem so that they can take adequate measures to cut the epidemic off at its roots and to ensure that it does not reoccur.

At the international level, the expansion of factory farms has to stop and be put into reverse. They are the hotbeds for pandemics and will continue to be so as long as they exist. It is probably pointless to call for a complete shift in the WHO-led global strategy, since the experience with bird flu demonstrates that neither the WHO, nor the OIE, nor most governments are going to take a hard line on corporate farming. Once again, it is people who are going to have to take the lead and protect themselves. Across the world, there are thousands of communities fighting against factory farms. These communities are on the front lines of pandemic prevention. What we now need is to turn these local fights against factory farms into a global movement to abolish them.

But the swine flu disaster in Mexico is also about a larger public health problem. The threats to consumer safety that are an inherent part of the industrial food system are compounded by a global trend to completely privatise health care, which has destroyed the capacities of public systems to properly respond to crises, and by policies to encourage migration to mega-cities where sanitation and public health policies are woefully inadequate. (The outbreak of swine flu hit Mexico City, a metropolis of more than 20 million people, just as the government cut off water supplies for much of the city’s population, particularly the poorest sections.) The fact that surveillance of disease outbreaks has to come from private consultancy firms, that governments and UN agencies can sit quiet on that information and that we have to depend on a handful of drug companies to produce half-tested but fully-patented relief for our suffering should tell us that things have gone too far. We need not only food but public health systems that truly have some public agenda and public accountability to them.


Going further

Debora MacKenzie, Pork industry is blurring the science of swine flu, 30 April 2009, http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/shortsharpscience/2009/04/why-the-pork-industry-hates-th.html

Laura Carlsen, Mexico’s Swine Flu and the Globalization of Disease, Americas MexicoBlog, 29 April 2009, http://americasmexico.blogspot.com/2009/04/mexicos-swine-flu-and-globalization-of.html

Iván Restrepo, Granjas Carroll, protegida de las autoridades, La Jornada, 13 de Abril de 2009 http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2009/04/13/?section=politica&article=020a2pol

Silvia Ribeiro, "Epidemia de lucro," La Jornada, 28 April 2009: http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2009/04/28/?section=opinion&article=020a1pol

Tom Philpott, Symptom: swine flu. Diagnosis: industrial agriculture? GRIST, 28 April 2009, http://www.grist.org/article/2009-04-28-more-smithfield-swine/

Mike Davis, The swine flu crisis lays bare the meat industry's monstrous power, The Guardian, 27 April 2009: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/apr/27/swine-flu-mexico-health

R G Wallace, "The Agro-Industrial Roots of Swine Flu H1N1," 26 April 2009
http://farmingpathogens.wordpress.com/2009/04/26/the-agro-industrial-roots-of-swine-flu-h1n1/

Edward Hammond, Indonesia fights to change WHO rules on flu vaccines, Seedling, April 2009: http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=593

Iván Restrepo, Granjas Carroll, sin control ambiental, La Jornada, 24 de Abril de 2006 http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2006/04/24/?section=opinion&article=026a2pol

See the GRAIN resources page on bird flu for the following articles (http://www.grain.org/birdflu/):

GRAIN, "Bird flu in eastern India: another senseless slaughter", Against the grain, February 2008, http://www.grain.org/articles/?id=35

GRAIN, "Germ warfare - Livestock disease, public health and the military–industrial complex", Seedling, January 2008, http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=533

GRAIN, "Viral times - The politics of emerging global animal diseases", Seedling, January 2008, http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=532

GRAIN, "Bird flu: a bonanza for 'Big Chicken'", Against the grain, March 2007, http://www.grain.org/articles/?id=22 (also available in Bahasa Indonesia)

GRAIN, "The top-down global response to bird flu," Against the grain, April 2006, http://www.grain.org/articles/?id=12

GRAIN, "Fowl play: The poultry industry's central role in the bird flu crisis", GRAIN Briefing, February 2006, http://www.grain.org/briefings/?id=194

References

1 The pig industry in Mexico, like its counterpart in the US, does not want the disease to be called "swine flu" on the grounds that it is being transmitted not from pigs but directly between people. (Their main concern, of course, is a pork market that is fast collapsing from the stigma.) And some Mexican officials, like the Governor of Veracruz, are telling the public that the virus came from China though there is no evidence to support this claim.

2 Mary J. Gilchrist, Christina Greko, David B. Wallinga, George W. Beran, David G. Riley and Peter S. Thorne, "The Potential Role of CAFOs in Infectious Disease Epidemics and Antibiotic Resistance," Journal of Environmental Health Perspectives, 14 November 2006.

3 Bernice Wuethrich, "Chasing the Fickle Swine Flu", Science, Vol. 299, 2003

4 Pro-poor Livestock Policy Initiative, "Industrial Livestock Production and Global Health Risks," FAO, 2007: http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/ programmes/en/pplpi/docarc/pb_hpaiindustrialrisks.html

5 CDC, April 21, 2009 / 58 (Dispatch);1-3: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm58d0421a1.htm

6 Andrés T. Morales, "Cerco sanitario en Perote, tras muerte en marzo de bebé por gripe porcina," La Jornada, 28 April 2009:  http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2009/04/28/?section=politica&article=012n2pol; Tracy Wilkinson and Cecilia Sánchez, "Mexico tries to focus on source of infection," Los Angeles Times, April 28, 2009.

7 Dudley Althaus, "World’s queries have no answers," Houston Chronicle, 27 April 2009.

8 Andrés Timoteo, “Alerta epidemiológica en Perote por brote de males respiratorios,” La Jornada, 4 April 2009.

9 David Cyranoski, "Bird flu spreads among Java's pigs," Nature 435, 26 May 2005.

10 Mary J. Gilchrist, Christina Greko, David B. Wallinga, George W. Beran, David G. Riley and Peter S. Thorne, "The Potential Role of CAFOs in Infectious Disease Epidemics and Antibiotic Resistance," Journal of Environmental Health Perspectives, 14 November 2006.

11 Piden cerco sanitario ante epidemia, SPI/ElGolfo.Info, 24 April 2009: http://www.elgolfo.info/web/lo-mas-nuevo/37017-piden-cerco-sanitario-ante-epidemia-.html

12 Tom Philpott first broadcast the possible connection between the swine flu outbreak and the Smithfield operation in Veracruz from his US-based blog on 25 April 2009: http://www.grist.org/article/2009-04-25-swine-flu-smithfield/

13 Mirel Bran: “Swine Plague: Romania Criticizes American Group’s Attitude”, Le Monde, 15 August
2007, translated by Leslie Thatcher (Truthout).

14 GRAIN, "Viral times - The politics of emerging global animal diseases", Seedling, January 2008

15 See “Box 2. Bird flu in Indonesia and Vietnam” (by GRAIN) in Edward Hammond, “Indonesia fights to change WHO rules on flu vaccines,” Seedling, April 2009: http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=593

16 "Afectados por extraña enfermedad, 60% de pobladores de La Gloria," La Jornada 27 April 2009: http://www.lajornadasanluis.com.mx/2009/04/27/pol15.php

17 “Is Smithfield on the market?”, Farming UK, 26 April 2009.

18 "Smaller drug firms gaining from swine flu," Reuters, 27 April 2009: http://www.reuters.com/article/pressReleasesMolt/idUSTRE53Q5P620090427

 

 

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A certain enlightment

Posted on May 9th, 2008 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
Hugo the Hippo - It's Really True (Opening Song)


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SOME ORGANIC FACTS

Posted on Mar 20th, 2008 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(

INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRY GET-TOGETHER CELEBRATES ORGANIC ENJOYMENT
46,484 trade visitors (2007: 45,469) streamed into the Nuremberg exhibition centre from 21-24 February to source information about the world market for organic products and natural personal care. The international share of attendance rose by 4 points to 37 %. The visitors came from 116 countries: after Germany, mainly from Austria, Poland, the Netherlands, Italy and France. Stricter admission requirements and their intensive control ensured another increase in the quality of attendance. The visitors were impressed by the rich, enjoyable and innovative range of products from the 2,764 exhibitors (2007: 2,547*), two thirds of whom came from abroad. Besides an impressively strong presence of German organic producers (939), Italy (397), Spain (211), France (175) and Austria (112) were very well represented. [+

WINNERS OF THE BIOFACH OLIVE OIL AWARD 
BioFach presented an award for the best olive oil for the first time this year and the following top ten entries received the award: Antica Masseria Venditti (Italy), RISCA GRANDE Lda. (Portugal), Giacomo La Russa (Italy), Battaglini Azienda Agr. E Franzoio (Italy), RISCA GRANDE Lda. (Portugal), Azienda Agricola Fattoria Serra di Mezzo (Italy), Societa Iniziative Agricole (Italy), Priego de Cordoba - Sucesores de Morales Morales (Spain), Agrion Terra (Greece), Almazaras de la Subbetica (Spain).

BIOFACH CHINA ENTERS SECOND ROUND IN 2008
The conditions for a successful second round of BioFach China in the Shanghai Everbright Convention & Exhibition Center from 29-31 May 2008 couldn’t be better. According to market observers, organic farming, processing and marketing are developing exceptionally dynamically in China. The first BioFach China was ceremoniously opened with a whirl of drums and lucky dragon dances in Shanghai at the end of May 2007. The premiere with 216 exhibitors and 7,290 trade visitors exceeded all expectations. NürnbergMesse China, the NürnbergMesse subsidiary based in Shanghai, is the organizer of BioFach China, the exhibition for certified organic raw materials, processed foods, natural personal care and natural textiles.[+]

WORLDWIDE ORGANIC AREA TOPS 30 MILLION HA 
30.4 million hectares are currently certified to organic standards (as at the end of 2006). Australia continues to account for the largest certified organic area with 12.3 million ha, followed by China (2.3 m ha), Argentina (2.2 m ha) and the USA (1.6 m ha). The greatest share of the global organic area is in Oceania/Australia (42%), followed by Europe (24%) and Latin America (16%). In terms of certified land under organic management as a proportion of national agricultural area, the Alpine countries, such as Austria (13%, 361,487 hectares) and Switzerland (12%, 125,596 hectares), top the statistics. Compared to the adjusted data of the previous survey, the global organic area grew by approximately 1.8 m ha during 2006.
The recently published study entitled "The World of Organic Agriculture: Statistics and Emerging Trends 2008" shows that the global market for organic products reached a value of 38.6 billion US dollars in 2006, according to Organic Monitor. This constitutes a growth of five billion US dollars compared with 2005.[+]

NEW ORGANIC SUPERMARKETS IN GERMANY
83 new specialist organic stores and organic supermarkets were launched in 2007 in Germany. These included 18 stores that moved to new, larger premises. Never in the last ten years have we seen so many organic stores opening their doors for the first time. At the beginning of 2008, there are around 450 specialist organic stores and organic supermarkets in Germany with over 200 m² of retail space. From 2000 to 2006, between 25 and 60 new organic supermarkets were founded every year. [+

GOVERNMENT SUPPORT FOR ORGANIC FARMING IN INDIA
Organic farming in India is set to get a major boost with investments coming into the sector, the Indian Food Processing Industries Minister Subodh Kant Sahai has said. "There is a plan to develop organic farming in India with investments up to 100 million euros in 23 states with partial support from the government," Sahai said at the Indian pavilion at BioFach 2008. Sahai said his ministry was also seriously considering the proposal from the industry to set up organic food parks in the country along with streamlining the agro-infrastructure with modernised facilities like cold chains. "The current global demand by the consumer for organic food has opened up new opportunities for trade and investments," Sahai said.
As India has been implementing the National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP) since 2001, the country has established a credible quality assurance system to meet consumer expectations, he said.
[+

AFRICA IMPROVES IMAGE AT BIOFACH 2008
This year for the first time, the African continent as a whole was represented at a BioFach trade fair. The 75 producer groups from a dozen countries in hall 4 gave visitors a vivid impression of both cultural diversity and the organic products available for export. Even more was in store on Saturday, when Grolink (Sweden) and Agro Eco (Netherlands) organised a series of events that attracted a good number of visitors. Egypt, South Africa, Ethiopia, Uganda and Kenya are all countries experiencing strong growth in the organic sector.
The man behind the African presence at BioFach, Gunnar Rundgren from Grolink, is very pleased with the results. He summed up that the African Pavilion was initiated to give Africa a stronger image and position as an organic supplier. "At the evaluation meeting all the participants agreed that the event had been a smashing success, and they are all committed to repeating it in the coming years."[+]

ORGANIC LAND IN GERMANY GROWS BY ALMOST 6 %
According to estimates by the Federation of the Organic Food Industry (BÖLW), the organic farming area in Germany grew again by 5.8 % last year, which is slightly more than in the previous years. Altogether 5.3 % of the agricultural land in Germany is therefore farmed by organic means, which corresponds to 873,010 ha. A good two thirds of this area belongs to members of the organic farming associations, such as Bioland, Biopark, Naturland, Demeter or Gäa.
On the basis of current data, BÖLW assumes total sales of 5.3 billion euros for the organic food market in 2007. This is 15 % more than the previous year. Detailed information can be found in a current BÖLW brochure available online. [+]

MODENA BIO 2008, A TOP-LEVEL CONGRESS
The 16th Organic World Congress of the International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM) unites the Organic World in Modena, Italy from 16th to 20th June 2008. Evo Morales, Vandana Shiva, Serge Latouche, Carlo Petrini and Wolfgang Sachs are among the delegates to have confirmed their attendance. Over 750 papers have been sent in from all over the world. The congress is being organized by IFOAM and ModenaBio and is expected to bring together about 2000 participants. It will run for five days, provide a platform for expounding the latest developments in scientific research and act as a catalyst for the strategies and instruments needed to preserve diversity and to disseminate ecologically and economically sustainable methods of production. [+]

IFOAM IS PATRON OF ONE WORLD AWARD
The One World Award (OWA) worth 25,000 euros is presented by the German producer Rapunzel for the first time. The patron of the award is IFOAM. The new award recognizes outstanding commitment and achievements in providing creative and high-impact solutions in the area of environmental protection and fair livelihoods. It also aims to encourage more commitment to a future worth living and to peaceful community building.
There will also be a One World Lifetime Achievement Award, which acknowledges pioneers and personalities who have played very active roles in the ecology movement. The deadline for nominations has been extended to 10th March.[+]

TUTTO BIO 2008, THE ORGANIC YEARBOOK FOR ITALY
The new Bio Bank Report on the organic scene in Italy is now available with very new figures. For the first time there is a province-by-province data survey, with 5 top and 10 leading provinces ranked according to categories of operators. The 2005-2007 period confirms the positive trend in the number of organic operators in each category, listed in order of growth for the first time. The short supply chain holds first place (increased by 60% from 222 to 356), with consumers organising themselves to buy in groups and farms opening their own stores (+ 37% to 1645) and offering accommodation (+ 25% to 1002), organic sales via e-commerce websites (+20% to 106), farmers’ markets (+ 10% to 204), shops (+9% to 1106), school canteens (+6% to 683) and restaurants (+1% to 174).[+]

EVENTS
[*] Planet Diversity opens doors: The World Congress on the Future of Food and Agriculture in Bonn from 12-16.5.2008.
www.planet-diversity.org

[*] The Bio Summit 2008 conference in Prague on 27 March reacts to growing organic food demand in Europe and introduces opportunities for organic food retailing in Central Europe; 27 March 2008, Prague/Czech Republic.
www.biosummit.cz

 NEWS TICKER

[*] The transition period for the use of potassium nitrate and sodium nitrite in Annex VI of the Organic Regulation has been extended until the end of December 2010.

[*] Woolworth is one of the largest retailers in South Africa and would like to appreciably increase the share of organic products in its range to promote farming methods that protect the groundwater.

 

 

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An ocean of obsolescence

Posted on Mar 6th, 2008 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
Banner_image
On February 17th, 2009, TVs in 21 million American households could become obsolete. From that day forward, TV stations will only broadcast digital signals - rather than the standard analog signals that have been in use since TVs were invented.

Trashed TVs are toxic TVs
Manufacturing TVs requires large amounts of mined metals in the first place, generating massive piles of toxic wastes at mining sites. This planned obsolescence will mean that older TVs will be dumped into trash sites in Africa and Asia, resulting in more toxic wastes and public health risks at the back-end as well.

Tell electronics CEOs to take responsibility for their waste
Please tell
the CEOs of major electronics firms to take responsibility for the TVs they make, and the waste that goes with them. While some companies, like Sony, are doing the right thing by implementing responsible recycling programs for their old TVs, most companies are ignoring the problem.

These laggard companies need to know that TV-buying consumers care about these issues. Unfortunately, most electronics manufacturers not only don't have recycling programs - they actively lobby against them.

Take action!
Send a letter to the CEOs of Panasonic, Sharp and Philips
- three of the worst offenders. Tell them that it's time to clean up their act and take back their TVs. After all, a pound of copper responsibly recycled from TVs is a pound of copper that doesn't have to be mined.

Thanks for your help!

Sincerely,
Alan Septoff
EARTHWORKS

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Five jewelers do the right thing

Posted on Feb 13th, 2008 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
Bearriver_benknight
This Valentine's Day, five leading jewelry retailers -- Tiffany & Co., Ben Bridge Jeweler, Fortunoff, Leber Jeweler Inc., and Helzberg Diamonds - have pledged their support for protection of the Bristol Bay watershed from large-scale mining, including the proposed Pebble gold mine.

Please send them a "thank you"
We often ask you to send letters urging companies to do the right thing. Today, please take a moment to THANK these jewelers for doing just that. Join us in thanking them for their courageous and principled position to protect the Bristol Bay watershed and its world-class wild salmon fishery.

The Pebble proposal violates the Golden Rules
The controversial Pebble mine is highlighted in a new report released today by the No Dirty Gold campaign. The report, Golden Rules: Making the Case for More Responsible Mining, documents the toll of irresponsible mining on people, water, and wildlife at a time when soaring metals prices are driving new mining development globally.

Take Action!
Please send a thank you letter to Tiffany & Co, Ben Bridge Jeweler, Fortunoff, Leber Jeweler and Helzberg Diamonds. Show these jewelers a little Valentine's Day love.

Thanks! And Happy Valentine's Day from the No Dirty Gold team.

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Heart Rays! as in the beggining

Posted on Feb 4th, 2008 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
Earth I love you!


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Enjoy!

Posted on Jan 3rd, 2008 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
The Mayan Calendar - Welcome to evolution 2012.


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Oxfam America: life-changing programs

Posted on Dec 29th, 2007 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
As 2007 draws to a close, add this to your list of New Year's resolutions: help change the world.

It's easier than it sounds. By making a year-end contribution to Oxfam America, you'll help thousands of people recover from disaster, overcome poverty, and find hope for a better future.

Click here to make your 2007 tax-deductible donation before midnight on Monday, 12/31.

In 2007, Oxfam brought its life-changing programs and desperately needed aid to people in over 120 countries.

* In Northern Darfur, Oxfam helped thousands of women build fuel-efficient cooking stoves. Now these women can take fewer trips outside their camps to gather wood – and avoid the ever-present risk of attack by soldiers.

* In drought-stricken Ethiopia, Oxfam helped build wells that provide life-saving clean water. Parents are no longer forced to knowingly give their children water from contaminated streams. We're also helping villages organize legal associations to stop their land and water rights from being sold off to private investors.

* In Cambodia, we helped small-scale rice farmers dramatically increase their yields with new growing techniques. Farmers are now saving money, sending their children to school, and competing in the global market.

There are only TWO DAYS LEFT to make a tax-deductible donation in 2007 and support innovative programs like these.

As you can see, Oxfam gives people the tools they need to make real, lasting changes in their communities. We take risks and devise practical solutions that make long-term, sustainable development a reality. This sets Oxfam apart.

With 2008 just around the corner, will you commit to helping us reach millions more people in the New Year? For every person we've helped, many more are still waiting.

I thank you for your generosity in 2007 and beyond.

Sincerely,

Raymond Offenheiser signature

Raymond C. Offenheiser
President
Oxfam America

P.S. If your 2007 end-of-year gift crossed this message in the mail, please disregard this request and accept our sincerest gratitude!
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Organic Widespread

Posted on Dec 27th, 2007 by LUNARA )O( : Cosmic Girl LUNARA )O(
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