EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"Study Finds an Increase in Arsenic Levels in Chicken"
NY Times, 05/13/2013"Researchers at Johns Hopkins University said they found levels of arsenic in chicken that exceeded amounts that occur naturally, and warned that they could lead to a small increase in the risk of cancer for consumers over a lifetime."
"US Approves New Pesticides Linked To Mass Bee Deaths As EU Enacts Ban"
RT, 05/13/2013"In the wake of a massive US Department of Agriculture report highlighting the continuing large-scale death of honeybees, environmental groups are left wondering why the Environmental Protection Agency has decided to approve a 'highly toxic' new pesticide."
Foreign Food Inspections Decline as Illnesses From Imported Goods Rise
NY Times, 05/08/2013"NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. — Inside a warehouse near the Canadian border, boneless hams bound for Philadelphia are coming off a tractor-trailer from Toronto under the gaze of a federal food inspector. Each week, about 20 of the 150 food trucks from Canada are rejected because of paperwork problems or contaminated meat."
"Replanting the Rust Belt"
NY Times, 05/08/2013Until recently the American food revolution seemed to have bypassed the Rustbelt region which rims the Great Lakes from Buffalo to Detroit. But an "interdependent web of chefs, butchers, farmers, millers, bakers and brewers" there are "cooking sustainably, supporting agriculture and raising families — all while making world-class food with a strong sense of place."
"NASA: Warming Climate Likely Means More Floods, Droughts"
LA Times, 05/07/2013"The Earth's wettest regions are likely to get wetter while the most arid will get drier due to warming of the atmosphere caused by increased levels of carbon dioxide, according to a new NASA analysis of more than a dozen climate models."
"Honey Bee Decline Due to ‘Complex’ Multiple Factors" -- Study
ENS, 05/03/2013"WASHINGTON, DC -- Multiple factors are responsible for the steep decline in honey bees across the United States, including parasites and disease, genetics, poor nutrition and pesticide exposure, federal government officials reported today, releasing a new scientific consensus on honey bee health."
"America's Fertilizer Keeps Blowing Up. It Doesn't Have To."
Mother Jones, 05/03/2013"Europe and Australia long ago recognized the benefits of a fertilizer formula that doesn’t blow up. Here, the chemical industry fought back."
"Who Paid For Last Summer's Drought? You Did"
NPR, 05/02/2013A new analysis says federal crop insurance not only allowed corn and soybean farmers to survive last summer's drought, it also allowed them to make higher profits than in a normal year -- at taxpayer expense.
Exemption Shields Some Fertilizer Plants from Safety Rules, Inspections
Center for Public Integrity, 05/02/2013"The Texas fertilizer plant that blew up on April 17, killing at least 15 people, appears to have been claiming an arcane exemption that allowed it to avoid targeted workplace inspections and safety requirements and enter a 'streamlined prevention program' with environmental regulators, a government spokesman confirmed."
"Declining Bee Populations Pose A Threat to Global Agriculture"
YaleE360, 05/01/2013"The danger that the decline of bees and other pollinators represents to the world’s food supply was highlighted this week when the European Commission decided to ban a class of pesticides suspected of playing a role in so-called 'colony collapse disorder.'"
"Bee-Harming Pesticides Banned in Europe"
Guardian, 04/29/2013"EU member states vote in favour of continent-wide suspension of neonicotinoid pesticides."
USDA Poised to OK Chicken-Plant Speedups Increasing Risky Chemicals
Wash Post, 04/26/2013The Agriculture Department is poised to approve an increase in line speeds at poultry processing plants. That is likely to mean increased use of toxic, bacteria-killing chemicals which have harmed some workers.
"NM Grapples With Tough Choices as Drought Persists"
AP, 04/25/2013"HATCH, N.M. -- In southern New Mexico, the mighty Rio Grande has gone dry -- reduced to a sandy wash winding from this chile farming community to the nation's leading pecan-producing county. Only puddles remain, leaving gangs of carp to huddle together in a desperate effort to avoid the fate of thousands of freshwater clams, their shells empty and broken on the river bottom."
"Investigators Search for Clues at West Fertilizer Co. Blast Epicenter"
Dallas Morning News, 04/22/2013"State and federal investigators on Sunday began their first in-depth look at the cratered epicenter of a fertilizer plant explosion that killed at least 14 people, including about 10 volunteer firefighters and the residents who tried to help them extinguish a fire at the site."
"Beekeeping -- Rural Greece Does It Best"
AFP, 04/22/2013Beekeepers in the remote hills of southern Greece are not seeing colony collapse disorder in their hives. The reason may be that the bees are not exposed to pesticides.

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