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Articles by Sarah K. Burkhalter

Sarah K. Burkhalter is Grist's project manager.

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  • The separation of economy and environment is a myth.

    New head of the United Nations Environment Program Achim Steiner:

    "Care for the environment is often portrayed as detrimental to economic growth," he told on his first day as head of the United Nations' top environment body.

    "We hope to lay that myth to rest in the 21st century," he said by telephone from UNEP headquarters in Nairobi, setting out priorities for a four-year term.

    Common sense ... I like it.

  • China can pollute and dam all at once!

    China has experience with spilling toxics into rivers: it's done it just recently in the Songhua, the Xiangjiang, the Yellow, and the Yangtze.

    And China really loves dams; oh, does it heart dams.

    So I guess this shouldn't be surprising:

    Chinese authorities tried to slow the spread of a toxic spill by building 51 makeshift dams along the tainted river and using fire trucks to pump out polluted water before it reaches a reservoir serving a city of 10 million people, state media said Friday.

    The spill of 60 tons of coal tar into the Dasha river in north China's Shanxi province was the latest in a series of mishaps fouling the country's already polluted waterways. Officials said there have been at least 76 water pollution accidents in the last six months.

    Nope, not surprised. Just depressed.

  • What you can do.

    Protestors at L.A.'s South Central farm were evicted yesterday:

    It took authorities nearly eight hours to forcibly clear protesters from the farm. Officials bulldozed vegetable gardens and chopped down an avocado tree to clear the way for a towering Fire Department ladder truck so the final four protesters could be plucked from a massive walnut tree.

    See pictures here.

    More bulldozing feels inevitable, but supporters haven't given up hope. What you can do (from a press release):

  • Native tribe wary of mercury in fish.

    Grist has kept tabs on northern Wisconsin's Mole Lake Sokoagon Chippewa tribe for the past five years as they've striven to keep a mine from disrupting their community and way of life. The story culminated in a happy ending just recently as the tribe rassled up $8 million in mortgage payments to the mining company, and the company returned the payment in full in the form of a trust fund.

    But -- go figure -- the tribe is facing other environmental troubles. The Washington Post reports that the Mole Lake Chippewas (also known as the Ojibwe), who spearfish every spring for food and traditional purposes, have now added a new tradition:

    [T]hey consult a color-coded map that tells them which of the more than 50 lakes in the region have the highest mercury levels.