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"Groups Sue EPA Over Honey Bee Deaths, Blame Some Insecticides"

"U.S. environmental regulators are failing to protect honey bees and their role in pollinating important food crops, and should immediately suspend use of some toxic insecticides tied to the widespread deaths of the bees, a lawsuit filed on Thursday charges."

Source: Reuters, 03/22/2013

"Bird Group Calls for Halt To Widely Applied Insecticide"

"The American Bird Conservancy is calling for a ban on using one of the globe's most widely used classes of insecticides in seed treatments and for a suspension of all other uses, pending an independent review of its impact on birds and other wildlife."

Source: USA TODAY, 03/19/2013

"Bay’s Intersex Fish Mystery Remains Unsolved"

"Ten years have gone by since one of the weirdest discoveries in the Chesapeake Bay region, on the south branch of the Potomac River — male smallmouth bass with lady parts, eggs in places where they absolutely should not be."

Source: Wash Post, 03/18/2013

"Hoping to Save Bees, Europe to Vote on Pesticide Ban"

"PARIS -- Will Brussels try to give bees a break? In a case closely watched on both sides of the Atlantic, European officials plan to vote Friday on a proposal to sharply restrict the use of pesticides that had been implicated in the decline of global bee populations."

Source: NY Times, 03/15/2013

"Chemical And Gas Suppliers Battle Over LNG Exports"

"The U.S. is in the midst of an energy transformation. Technologies that free fossil-fuel reserves, once trapped in shale, have radically shrunk natural gas imports. By 2020, the nation is expected to produce more gas than it needs. As the country approaches this milestone, it faces a question long asked in other countries with abundant energy resources: How much should we use at home and how much should we sell abroad?"

Source: Chemical & Engineering News, 03/12/2013

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