Skip to content
Grist home
Grist home
Grist home

Uncategorized

All Stories

  • Insomniac zebra fish and stranded sea-turtle babies

    ... in defiance of a 1959 treaty that agreed no new claims would be laid on Antarctica, press reports say Britain is poised to claim a million square kilometers of Antarctic seabed ...

    ... the Canadian government announced it would add six new positions dedicated to fisheries assessment in the Arctic ...

    ... scientists began mapping the seafloor off the coast of Ulster. One scientist said the results would show that 90 percent of the Irish Republic is land beneath water ...

  • Friday music blogging: The Budos Band

    I know next to nothing about The Budos Band, and don’t really want to. I enjoy that they’re somewhat mysterious, as though they sprung through a spacetime warp direct from the 1970s, untainted by the 21st century. Their albums are The Budos Band I and The Budos Band II. This song is from the latter, […]

  • Stewart on Gore

    Here’s Jon Stewart (who’s got a spiffy new website) on Gore’s Nobel win:

  • Grist maximum leader Chip Giller lights up the pages of Time

    Laugh, or the planet gets it. Photo: John Clark, TIME. The cover story in TIME magazine’s international edition this week is "Heroes of the Environment." Lots of good stuff to browse through, but around here we’re particularly fond of #28: Environmentalists are the people you want to avoid at a party. Trust me — I’m […]

  • Bipartisan cap-and-trade bill introduced to mixed reviews

    On Wednesday, Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John Warner (R-Va.) introduced bipartisan climate legislation — America’s Climate Security Act — at long last bridging the acrimonious divide between Republicans and, um, independents. Democrats have all but made it tripartisan — Senate Environment Committee head Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) was gushing in her praise. Observers expect political […]

  • Ann Arbor, Mich., declares itself first U.S. city to use LEDs in all its streetlights

    Ann Arbor, Mich., home to the main campus of the University of Michigan, announced that it intends to become the first U.S. city to convert all of its downtown streetlights to LEDs (light-emitting diodes). The energy-saving lights use half the energy and are expected to last five times as long. In two years, when the […]

  • Ugh

    Last night’s party in Seattle went wonderfully well, and by “well” I mean I drank well beyond excess and by “wonderfully” I mean won’t someone please kill me now and end this pain. Blogging from yours truly may be slow today, and by “slow” I mean for the love of God why haven’t you killed […]

  • Britain wades into battle for sea-floor mineral rights in Southern Ocean

    The World Wildlife Fund has been trying to gather support to establish a network of marine protected areas in the Southern Ocean in an attempt to mitigate increasing ecological pressures in the area from climate change, invasive species, and commercial fishing. The plight of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean has often been overlooked compared to […]

  • Plan for northern spotted owl’s recovery in question

    The future of the infamous northern spotted owl in the Pacific Northwest may be in further jeopardy if some U.S. federal agencies carry out their plans to restructure its recovery. Perhaps most potentially destructive is the Bureau of Land Management’s recently announced plan to essentially opt out of the Northwest Forest Plan — a truce […]

  • Myanmar quickly being deforested for world timber trade, quick cash

    Ever wonder what the military government of Myanmar is up to when it’s not quashing peaceful, pro-democracy protests? According to environmental groups, the regime has allegedly been profiting from large-scale illegal logging operations that feed sawmills across the border in China. Green group Global Witness estimates that up to 95 percent of Myanmar’s timber exports […]