Latest Articles
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Once the global capital of bad food, London shows the way forward.
Since I started writing for Gristmill, I've tried to make the point that our food system amounts to an ongoing environmental disaster, and deserves much more attention from greens.
Over in London, Mayor Ken Livingstone is putting that idea into action. As the Guardian reports, Livingstone recently declared that "The energy and emissions involved in producing food account for 22% of the UK's greenhouse gas emissions."
Ponder that number for a minute. Rather than obsess about hybrids and switchgrass and CAFE standards -- worthy topics, to be sure -- it might make sense to push for policies that make food production more eco-friendly. And Livingstone is doing just that.
"I want London to set a standard for other cities around the world to follow in reducing its own contribution to climate change. How we deal with food will play an important role in this," he told the Guardian.
(Thanks to the Organic Consumers Association for bringing this story, which came out way back on Jan. 7, to my attention.)
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A guessing game!
I love contests.
Today's exciting game: find the theme in today's Daily Grist headlines.
First one to post a correct answer gets a virtual high-five!
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The Daily Grist Headline Battle Royale: Match 1
Is it me or has it been pretty serious here in Gristmill as of late? This is Grist -- "gloom and doom with a sense of humor," you know? Plus, it is Friday. So, I've decided to launch a new weekly tradition here in Gristmill: "The Daily Grist Headline Battle Royale"!
Here is how it will work:
- The Daily Grist Headline Battle Royale nominating committee (yours truly) will pick the top five Daily Grist headlines from the week based on humor, wit, and the presence of soy milk coming out of my nose.
- I'll post the top five headlines for your consideration.
- You vote. (Must be a registered Gristmillian.)
- The following week I present the winner and the new batch of nominees.
- And maybe -- just maybe -- at the end of the year we'll have a "Daily Grist Headline Deathmatch" where you choose the most punny headline of the year.
So here it goes -- the nominees are:
- Utahward Bound: NRC approves nuke-waste dump on Utah Indian reservation
- Mapled Crusaders: Community forests help revitalize New England towns
- The Midas Crutch: EPA may replace ozone-depleting chemical with cancer-causing chemical
- Finger-Lickin' Bad: How poultry producers are ravaging the rural South
- One King to Bring Them All and in the Darkness Bind Them: An interview with Sir David King, U.K.'s top scientist and climate crusader*
* As it was a short week due to the holiday, I included this one from last week. And it is a LOTR reference -- I just had to! (My precious made me do it.)
Vote
Now it is time to vote (click "Link and Discuss" below)! Remember, you have to be registered and logged into Gristmill to cast your vote.
(And PS, once you register, you'll also be able to post comments and submit your own posts within the Poverty & the Environment discussion area.)
Update [2006-2-25 9:7:16 by Chris Schults]: Apparently you don't have to be registered or logged into Gristmill to vote. We encourage you to register anyway so you can enjoy all the benefits of membership.
Remember: this is supposed to be fun. Happy Friday!
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Moth dearth, cat-on-cat violence, poached oxen, and other oddities
I photographed this moth in Costa Rica. It was about four inches across and looked like a pair of flying lips. A study has found that the number of moths in Britain has declined by about 30% in the last thirty years. That's a 10% decline per decade. Sixty-two species have already gone extinct on the island in the 20th century. Extrapolating into the future, you could expect the last moth to drop dead in about seventy years, assuming the decline remains linear.
A Florida Panther (radio collared of course) was recently tranquilized for eating, among other things, a house cat. The biologists seemed to know everything about this cougar -- how many cubs he has sired, his age. He even has a name and a number. I have to wonder how many times in its eleven-year life it has been shot with tranquilizer darts and radio collared. He must feel like a pin cushion. Rapid housing development continues to destroy habitat. There are only 80 Florida panthers left on the planet.
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Media Shower: Listen up! And see the big picture.
This morning I received the Summer Rayne Oakes newsletter, which mentions that the eco-fashionista will be heading to Singapore to film "a new, entertaining environmentally-charged show." I've contacted SRO's PR firm for details.
Also highlighted in the newsletter is a video by New Century Thinking featuring Summer Rayne, who speaks on "fashion's hidden impact." So, who is New Century Thinking?
New Century Thinking is a media project in the early stages of development, dedicated to getting the varied stories of the movement into the mainstream. The project's principle focus is on the American college campus, which is rapidly expanding as a meeting ground for those who wish to realize the economic, social, and environmental opportunities upon which a brighter future depends.
Other videos feature Peter Senge, Sara Schley, Paul Freundlich and Billy Parish.
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In the heartland of industrial agriculture, a county goes local and organic
Nestled in the heartland of globally oriented commodity-food production, Woodbury County in Iowa has made a bold move away from industrial agriculture.
Last summer, the Kellogg Foundation's Food and Society (FAS) website reports, "the County passed an 'Organics Conversion Policy,' offering up to $50,000 annually in property tax rebates for those who convert from conventional to organic farming practices."
And then in January 2006, FAS continues, the county ...
... became the first in the United States to mandate the purchase of locally grown, organic food. The "Local Food Purchase Policy" requires Woodbury County departments to purchase locally grown, organic food from within a 100 mile radius for regular city use. The policy has the potential to shift $281,000 in annual food purchases to a local farmer-operated cooperative, increasing local demand and spurring increased production and processing.
Why would a county in Iowa, of all places, implement what amounts to a rejection of industrial agriculture?
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Ethanol is suddenly all the rage in D.C. and Detroit
It’s as befuddling to see the “Live Green, Go Yellow” slogan splashed across the General Motors ads running throughout the Olympics as it was to hear the term “switchgrass” uttered by President Bush in his State of the Union speech last month. Here we have GM and Dubya, two of the world’s most entrenched and […]
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From Willie to Waste
Can you hot box in that thing? Willie Nelson’s on the road again … in a limited-edition “Willie’s Willys” pickup, which will run on pure BioWillie, natch. Just 500 of the re-created 1941 Willys hot rods were made — and one can be yours for the low, low price of $97,000. Willie’s BioWillie-run Willie’s Willys […]
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Save the Life of My Child
Organic diet causes pesticide levels to plummet in children, study finds If you needed that extra nudge to start feeding your kids organic grub, here it is: In a recent U.S. EPA-funded study, 23 Seattle-area youngsters were switched to an all-organic diet, and the levels of pesticides in their bodies declined to essentially zero after […]
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APRIL, Come Around She Will
Loggers and environmentalists strike deal in Indonesia Maybe we can all just get along. A landmark deal between a logging company and an environmental group could double the size of a designated national park in the Tesso Nilo rainforest on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, the site of years of conflict between conservationists and timber […]