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Jury Acquits Grace in Libby Asbestos Case
NYTimes, 05/10/2009"A federal court jury on Friday acquitted the big chemical products company W. R. Grace and three of its former executives on all charges that they had knowingly contaminated the small Montana mining town of Libby with asbestos, then conspired to cover up the deed."
Bayer Knew MIC Monitors Were Broken
Charleston Gazette, 05/10/2009"INSTITUTE, W.Va. -- Bayer CropScience managers knew methyl isocyanate monitors were broken last August when they restarted a pesticide unit where up to 37,000 pounds of the deadly chemical are stored, company officials have confirmed."
Weather Gives CA Firefighters the Edge
LA Times, 05/10/2009"Thousands of Santa Barbara residents are being allowed to return home as low winds and dramatically cooler temperatures have given firefighters the upper hand in their assault on the 6-day-old Jesusita fire, which stretches for five miles."
UN Adds 9 New Chemicals to Global Ban
Reuters, 05/10/2009Nine dangerous chemicals used in farming and industry will be added to a list of banned substances whose presence in the environment causes serious health risks, more than 160 government agreed on Saturday."
Farmers v. Enviros Over CA Wilderness
Greenwire/NYTimes, 05/08/2009"SAN FRANCISCO -- A Bay Area oyster cannery in an estuary slated to become a federal wilderness area is at the heart of a battle pitting proponents of fishing and local food production against environmental advocates."
Gas Lobby Targets Anti-Fracking Bill
Greenwire/NYTimes, 05/08/2009The natural gas industry yesterday launched a campaign against rules to control a drilling technology called 'hydraulic fracturing.'
"Biodiesel Makers Lash Out at E.P.A. Rule"
NYTimes, 05/08/2009"Biodiesel producers are chafing at the Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed methods of calculating their fuel’s greenhouse gas emissions."
EPA Hid Risks Of Coal Ash: Report
Charleston Gazette, 05/08/2009"The Bush administration kept secret for nearly five years data that showed increased cancer risks from drinking water polluted by coal-ash impoundments...."
Obama Insists: Auction CO2 Permits
Reuters, 05/08/2009"President Barack Obama's $3.55 trillion budget, released on Thursday, retains his plan to cut climate-warming carbon dioxide emissions by auctioning off 100 percent of emission permits to industries."
NJ To Appeal Kiddie Kollege
Philadelphia Inquirer, 05/08/2009"The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection announced yesterday that it would appeal a court ruling that the owner of the Kiddie Kollege building in Franklin Township, Gloucester County, is not responsible for its $1 million cleanup."
Bhopal Victims Lobby Congress
AFP, 05/08/2009"Victims of the 1984 gas leak that killed thousands of people in Bhopal, India took their battle Thursday to the US Congress, seeking pressure on Dow Chemicals."
Jews Go 'Eco-Kosher' Print | Forward |
Los Angeles Times, 05/08/2009With Sabbath candles burning, 14 guests eat a "sustainable" Sabbath dinner with "food that was locally grown, mostly organic and intended to elevate their practice of Judaism."
EPA Targets Utility Waste
Washington Post, 05/04/2009EPA may regulate runoff from the coal ash and sludge from air-pollution-control that power plants store in ponds and piles.
Transmission Superhighway May Carry Coal Power to Northeast
, 03/25/2009SolveClimate founder David Sassoon explains March 24, 2009, how energy policies and East-West differences in power transmission needs are quietly leaving the door open for the cheapest, dirtiest coal power to flood the Northeast under plans for what is intended to be a green transmission superhighway.
Author contact information: David Sassoon"Food Inspectors Leave Some Problems With Bottled Water Unreported"
, 03/25/2009"The Canadian Food Inspection Agency often finds problems with bottled water, but doesn't tell the public about them. Canada's federal food watchdog issued 29 recall notices for bottled water products between 2000 and early 2008, citing deficiencies such as contamination by bacteria, moulds, glass chips and trace amounts of arsenic. Of the recalls, affecting 49 different products, it issued a public warning in only seven cases, two of which came after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration made public its recall orders.

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