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.
"Spate of Gas Drilling Leaks Raises Marcellus Concerns"
ES&T, 09/03/2009"On New Year’s Day, 2009, in the tiny northeast Pennsylvania town of Dimock, a drinking-water well blew up because of a methane leak associated with natural-gas drilling nearby."
California Water Wars Continue
SF Bay Guardian, 09/02/2009"San Francisco Bay and the delta are dying. Salmon runs are collapsing. Droughts are getting worse. And big agriculture still wants more water."
"'Pacific Garbage Patch' Expedition Finds Plastic, Plastic Everywhere"
San Jose Mercury News, 09/02/2009"Scientists who returned to the Bay Area this week after an expedition to the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" brought piles of plastic debris they pulled out of the ocean — soda bottles, cracked patio chairs, Styrofoam chunks, old toys, discarded fishing floats and tangled nets."
"EPA Should Set Nutrient Limits To Block Dead Zones, IG Says"
New Orleans Times-Picayune, 08/31/2009"The Environmental Protection Agency should move immediately to adopt enforceable limits on the release of nutrient pollutants -- such as fertilizer and sewage -- into rivers and streams to halt the creation of dangerously low oxygen areas in water bodies, and the dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico should be one of its first targets, the agency's Office of Inspector General said in a report made public today."
Illegal, Shallow Wells May Expose 1,000s of Fla. Homeowners to Health Risks
Palm Beach Post, 08/31/2009Shallow rivate wells in part of West Palm Beach, drilled illegally by contractors, may be exposing homeowners there to drinking water contamination. People there fear a possible cancer cluster.
"Rain Tests Water Rules"
Albany Times-Union, 08/31/2009"A major problem facing municipalities around Albany County: sewer systems that are often overrun by heavy rain and governments that don't have the millions of dollars needed to upgrade often antiquated systems."
"Water Shortage Threatens Two Million People in Southern Iraq"
Guardian, 08/27/2009"A water shortage described as the most critical since the earliest days of Iraq's civilisation is threatening to leave up to 2 million people in the south of the country without electricity and almost as many without drinking water."
"EPA Tweets That It's Putting Bay on Pollution Diet"
AP, 08/25/2009"The Environmental Protection Agency says it's putting the Chesapeake Bay on a pollution diet. The federal agency used the Twitter social networking site to 'tweet' the message Friday to its followers on the site."
"Oil Spill Worsens as Explosion Risk Delays Clean-Up"
Sydney Morning Herald, 08/24/2009"A dangerous oil spill off the far north coast of Western Australian will take at least seven weeks to clean up and cost the company that owns the drilling rig tens of millions of dollars."
"Rising Acidity Erodes Alaska's Fisheries"
Daily Climate, 08/21/2009"Alaska's marine waters -- source of 60 percent of the United States' seafood harvest -- show surprising impact as greenhouse emissions undermine the base of the food web."
"Scientists Uncover New Ocean Threat From Plastics"
Independent, 08/20/2009"Scientists have identified a new source of chemical pollution released by the huge amounts of plastic rubbish found floating in the oceans of the world. A study has found that as plastics break down in the sea they release potentially toxic substances not found in nature and which could affect the growth and development of marine organisms."
"Taking Down Levees in Louisiana"
Environment Report, 08/17/2009"Man made levees line the banks of the Mississippi River and its tributaries. They protect towns and they allow farmers to plow the bottomlands. But levees come at a price: habitat destruction and worse flooding downstream. Now, more people are calling for taking down levees and returning floodplain areas to their natural state."
Utah, Nevada Draft Plan for Sharing Snake Valley Aquifer
Deseret News, 08/14/2009"After four years of negotiations, Utah and Nevada officials have created a draft agreement for management of the controversial Snake Valley aquifer straddling both states."
"Obama Admin Breathes New Life Into Long-Delayed Great Lakes Restoration Program"
Greenwire, 08/14/2009"EPA is rolling out a new package of restoration programs that could begin shifting the Great Lakes back toward ecological health. The program, known as the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, is backed by a $475 million pledge from the White House and House of Representatives, which approved full funding for the program in June."
"Fiji Water: Spin the Bottle"
Mother Jones, 08/13/2009Fiji water is in fashion. Alleged to be pure. And a brutal military dictatorship threatens prison and rape for any journalist who may suggest otherwise.

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