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.
"Sea Shepherd Buys Anti-Whaling Ship From Japan"
Guardian, 12/11/2012"The marine conservation group Sea Shepherd has scored a propaganda victory over Japan after it emerged it had bought its newest anti-whaling vessel from the Japanese government, apparently without its knowledge."
"Arctic Shipping Is Disaster Waiting To Happen, Safety Group Warns"
LA Times, 12/11/2012"Ferrying a load of soybeans from Seattle to China in 2004, the engine of Malaysian freighter Selendang Ayu lost power and the vessel broke in half on rocks off Unalaska Island in the middle of the Alaskan archipelago."
"Chevron Aims at an Activist Shareholder"
NY Times, 12/11/2012Chevron has subpoenaed one of its shareholders, a sutainable investment firm that has sponsored numerous stockholder proposals over the years, for records that include the firm's conversations with the news media.
10 Shopping Days Until Dec. 21 "Mayan Apocalypse"
BBC, 12/11/2012"Fears that the world will end on 21 December are rife, despite there being no evidence. So, why are we so fixated with end of the world theories?"
"Climate Talks Yield Commitment to Ambitious, but Unclear, Actions"
NY Times, 12/10/2012"DOHA, Qatar -- The annual United Nations climate change negotiations concluded here late Saturday after the customary all-night negotiating session and recriminations over who must bear the costs and burdens of a warming planet."
"Beef's Raw Edges"
Kansas City Star, 12/10/2012"The Kansas City Star, in a yearlong investigation, found that the beef industry is increasingly relying on a mechanical process to tenderize meat, exposing Americans to higher risk of E. coli poisoning. The industry then resists labeling such products, leaving consumers in the dark. The result: Beef in America is plentiful and affordable, spun out in enormous quantities at high speeds, but it's a bonanza with hidden dangers. Industry officials contend beef is safer than it's ever been."
"Mighty Old Trees Are Perishing Fast, Study Warns"
Green/NYT, 12/10/2012"The death rate of many of the biggest and oldest trees around the world is increasing rapidly, scientists report in a new study in Friday’s issue of the journal Science. They warned that research to understand and stem the loss of the trees is urgently needed."
"Norway to Pay Brazil $180 Million for Slowing Deforestation"
Reuters, 12/07/2012"Norway has agreed to give $180 million to Brazil as part of a broader $1 billion deal for slowing deforestation in the Amazon rainforest, Oslo's environment minister said on Thursday."
"Norway has promised $1 billion each to Brazil and Indonesia for protecting their tropical rainforests and warned Jakarta earlier this year that its progress in reforming its forestry sector will not be sufficient to meet its pledge to reduce carbon emissions by 26 percent by 2020.
"Buenos Aires Hit By Toxic Cloud"
Telegraph, 12/07/2012"Hospitals are on red alert and parts of Buenos Aires have been evacuated as a toxic cloud descends upon the city."
"Gas Tanker Completes Arctic Sea Journey"
Green/NYT, 12/07/2012"A bit of news about the melting of the Arctic waterways associated with climate change: Gazprom, the Russian energy giant, says it recently completed the world’s first liquefied natural gas cargo delivery through the Arctic Northern Sea Route. Escorted by Russian nuclear icebreakers, the giant L.N.G. carrier Ob River went through the waters of the Barents and Kara seas and then through an icy passage between the Vilkitsky and Bering straits."
"Tsunami Warning Lifted for Strong Japan Earthquake"
AP, 12/07/2012"A strong earthquake Friday struck the same Japanese coast devastated by last year's massive quake and tsunami, generating small waves but no immediate reports of heavy damage. Several people along the northeastern coast were reportedly injured and buildings in Tokyo and elsewhere swayed for several minutes."
"U.S. Negotiators Work on Treaty That May Never Pass Muster at Home"
Greenwire, 12/06/2012"DOHA, Qatar -- The Senate's rejection yesterday of a treaty to extend rights to disabled people internationally does not bode well for a climate change treaty, observers here said today as the clock began to wind down on this year's U.N. climate talks."
"IPCC, Assessing Climate Risks, Consistently Underestimates"
Daily Climate, 12/06/2012"Checking 20 years' of projections by the foremost global climate science panel against reality finds that the group has consistently underestimated the pace and impacts of climate change – with severe consequences for the public it is tasked to inform."
"Starving Snowy Owls Flock South To B.C."
CBC, 12/06/2012"Snowy owls have left the arctic en masse this year, flocking south to B.C., delighting bird enthusiasts across the province but worrying biologists."
"Extreme Weather Is New Normal, U.N.'s Ban Tells Climate Talks"
Reuters, 12/05/2012"Extreme weather is the new normal and poses a threat to the human race, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Tuesday, as he sought to revive deadlocked global climate change talks."

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