Author: Neville

  • We’re just beginning to understand the wider impacts of neonicotinoids.( MONBIOT )

    DDT 2.0

    Posted: 13 Aug 2013 12:37 AM PDT

    We’re just beginning to understand the wider impacts of neonicotinoids.
    By George Monbiot, published on the Guardian’s website, 5th August 2013

    It’s the new DDT: a class of poisons licensed for widespread use before they had been properly tested, which are now ripping the natural world apart. And it’s another demonstration of the old truth that those who do not learn from history are destined to repeat it.

    It is only now, when neonicotinoids are already the world’s most widely deployed insecticides, that we are beginning to understand how extensive their impacts are. Just as the manufacturers did for DDT, the corporations which make these toxins claimed that they were harmless to species other than the pests they targeted. Just as they did for DDT, they have threatened people who have raised concerns, published misleading claims and done all they can to bamboozle the public. And, as if to ensure that the story sticks to the old script, some governments have collaborated in this effort. Among the most culpable is the government of the United Kingdom.

    As Professor Dave Goulson shows in his review of the impacts of these pesticides, we still know almost nothing about how most lifeforms are affected. But as the evidence has begun to accumulate, scientists have started discovering impacts across a vast range of wildlife.

    Most people who read this newspaper will be aware by now of the evidence fingering neonicotinoids as a major cause of the decline of bees and other pollinators. These pesticides can be applied to the seeds of crops, and they remain in the plant as it grows, killing the insects which eat it. The quantities required to destroy insect life are astonishingly small: by volume these poisons are 10,000 times as powerful as DDT. When honeybees are exposed to just 5 nanogrammes of neonicotinoids, half of them will die. As bees, hoverflies, butterflies, moths, beetles and other pollinators feed from the flowers of treated crops, they are, it seems, able to absorb enough of the pesticide to compromise their survival.

    But only a tiny proportion of the neonicotinoids that farmers use enter the pollen or nectar of the flower. Studies conducted so far suggest that only between 1.6 and 20% of the pesticide used for dressing seeds is actually absorbed by the crop: a far lower rate even than when toxins are sprayed onto leaves. Some of the residue blows off as dust, which is likely to wreak havoc among the populations of many species of insects in hedgerows and surrounding habitats. But the great majority – Goulson says “typically more than 90%” – of the pesticide applied to the seeds enters the soil.

    In other words, the reality is a world apart from the impression created by the manufacturers, which keep describing the dressing of seeds with pesticides as “precise” and “targeted”.

    Neonicotinoids are highly persistent chemicals, lasting (according to the few studies published so far) for up to 19 years in the soil. Because they are persistent, they are likely to accumulate: with every year of application the soil will become more toxic.

    What these pesticides do once they are in the soil, no one knows, as sufficient research has not been conducted. But – deadly to all insects and possibly other species at tiny concentrations – they are likely to wipe out a high proportion of the soil fauna. Does this include earthworms? Or the birds and mammals that eat earthworms? Or for that matter, the birds and mammals that eat insects or treated seeds? We don’t yet know enough to say.

    This is the story you’ll keep hearing about these pesticides: we have gone into it blind. Our governments have approved their use without the faintest idea of what the consequences are likely to be.

    You might have had the impression that neonicotinoids have been banned by the European Union. They have not. The use of a few of these pesticides has been suspended for two years, but only for certain purposes. Listening to the legislators, you could be forgiven for believing that the only animals which might be affected are honeybees, and the only way in which they can be killed is through the flowers of plants whose seeds were dressed.

    But neonicotinoids are also sprayed onto the leaves of a wide variety of crop plants. They are also spread over pastures and parks in granules, in order to kill insects that live in the soil and eat the roots of the grass. These applications, and many others, remain legal in the European Union, even though we don’t know how severe the wider impacts are. We do, however, know enough to conclude that they likely to be  bad.

    Of course, not all the neonicotinoids entering the soil stay there indefinitely. You’ll be relieved to hear that some of them are washed out, whereupon … ah yes, they end up in groundwater or in the rivers. What happens there? Who knows? Neonicotinoids are not even listed among the substances that must be monitored under the EU’s water framework directive, so we have no clear picture of what their concentrations are in the water that we and many other species use.

    But a study conducted in the Netherlands shows that some of the water leaving horticultural areas is so heavily contaminated with these pesticides that it could be used to treat lice. The same study shows that even at much lower concentrations – no greater than the limits set by the European Union – the neonicotinoids entering river systems wipe out half the invertebrate species you would expect to find in the water. That’s another way of saying erasing much of the foodweb.

    I was prompted to write this article by the horrible news from the River Kennet in southern England: a highly protected ecosystem that is listed among the few dozen true chalk streams on earth. Last month someone – farmer or householder, no one yet knows – flushed another kind of pesticide, chlorpyrifos, down their sink. The amount was equivalent – in pure form – to two teaspoonsful. It passed through Marlborough sewage works and wiped out most of the invertebrates in fifteen miles of the river.

    The news hit me like a bereavement. The best job I ever had was working, during a summer vacation from university, as temporary waterkeeper on the section of the Kennet owned by the Sutton estate. The incumbent had died suddenly. It was a difficult job and, for the most part, I made a mess of it. But I came to know and love that stretch of river, and to marvel at the astonishing profusion of life the clear water contained. Up to my chest in it for much of the day, I immersed myself in the ecology, and spent far more time than I should have done watching watervoles and kingfishers; giant chub fanning their fins in the shade of the trees; great spotted trout so loyal to their posts that they had brushed white the gravel of the river bed beneath their tails; native crayfish; dragonflies; mayflies; caddis larvae; freshwater shrimps and all the other teeming creatures of the benthos.

    In the evenings, wanting company and fascinated in equal measure by the protest and the remarkable people it attracted, I would stop at the peace camp outside the gates of the Greenham Common nuclear base. I’ve told the strange story that unfolded during my visits in another post.

    Campaigners seeking to protect the river have described how, after the contamination, the river stank from the carcases of the decaying insects and shrimps. Without insects and shrimps to feed on, the fish, birds and amphibians that use the river are likely to fade away and die.

    After absorbing this news, I remembered the Dutch study, and it struck me that neonicotinoid pesticides are likely, in many places, to be reducing the life of the rivers they enter to a similar extent: not once, but for as long as they are deployed on the surrounding land.

    Richard Benyon, the minister supposed to be in charge of protecting wildlife and biodiversity, who happens to own the fishing rights on part of the River Kennet, and to represent a constituency through which it passes, expressed his “anger” about the chlorpyrifos poisoning. Should he not also be expressing his anger at the routine poisoning of rivers by neonicotinoids?

    Were he to do so, he would find himself in serious trouble with his boss. Just as they are systematically poisoning our ecosystems, neonicotinoids have also poisoned the policies (admittedly pretty toxic already) of the department supposed to be regulating them. In April, Damian Carrington, writing in the Observer, exposed a letter sent by the minister in charge of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), Owen Paterson, to Syngenta, which manufactures some of these pesticides. Paterson promised the company that his efforts to prevent its products from being banned “will continue and intensify in the coming days”.

    And sure enough, the UK refused to support the temporary bans proposed by the commission both in April and last month, despite the massive petitions and the 80,000 emails on the subject that Paterson received. When Paterson and Deathra were faced with a choice between the survival of natural world and the profits of the pesticides companies, there was not much doubt about how they would jump. Fortunately they failed.

    Their attempt to justify their votes led to one of the most disgraceful episodes in the sorry record of this government. The government’s new chief scientist, Sir Mark Walport, championed a “study” Deathra had commissioned, which purported to show that neonicotinoids do not kill bees. It was not published in a peer-reviewed journal, nor could it be, as as any self-respecting scientist, let alone the government’s chief scientist, should have been able to see in a moment that it was complete junk. Among many other problems, the controls were hopelessly contaminated with the pesticide whose impacts the trial was supposed to be testing. The “study” was later ripped apart by the European Food Safety Authority.

    But Walport did still worse, making wildly misleading statements about the science, and using scare tactics and emotional blackmail to try to prevent the pesticides from being banned, on behalf of his new masters.

    It is hard to emphasise sufficiently the importance of this moment or the dangers it contains: the total failure of the government’s primary source of scientific advice, right at the beginning of his tenure. The chief scientist is not meant to be a toadying boot-licker, but someone who stands up for the facts and the principles of science against political pressure. Walport disgraced his post, betrayed the scientific community and sold the natural world down the river, apparently to please his employers.

    Last week, as if to remind us of the extent of the capture of this government by the corporations it is supposed to be regulating, the scientist who led the worthless trials that Walport and Paterson cited as their excuse left the government to take up a new post at … Syngenta. It seems to me that she was, in effect, working for them already.

    So here we have a department staggering around like a drunkard with a loaded machine gun, assuring us that it’sh perfectly shafe. The people who should be defending the natural world have conspired with the manufacturers of wide-spectrum biocides to permit levels of destruction at which we can only guess. In doing so they appear to be engineering another silent spring.

    www.monbiot.com

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  • Tony Abbott denies saying same-sex marriage is ‘fashion of the moment’

    ” WHO SHOULD WE BELIEVE/ ANYTHING FOR VOTES”

    «»

    Tony Abbott denies saying same-sex marriage is ‘fashion of the moment’

    By chief political correspondent Emma Griffiths

    Updated 6 minutes ago

    Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has moved to defuse criticism that he described same-sex marriage as the “fashion of the moment” by saying he was speaking more broadly about social change.

    The brouhaha comes barely a day after Mr Abbott triggered controversy by saying a female candidate had “sex appeal” – a description he has since put down to a “dorky dad moment”.

    This morning, when asked about the issue of gay marriage on Sydney Radio 2SM, Mr Abbott reiterated his view that marriage is between a man and a woman and went on to discuss the importance of tradition in the debate.

    “My idea is to build on the strength of our society and I support, by and large, evolutionary change,” he said.

    “I’m not someone who wants to see radical change based on the fashion of the moment.”

    I’m not someone who wants to see radical change based on the fashion of the moment.

    Opposition Leader Tony Abbott

     

    Deputy Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has described the statement as “deeply offensive” and “out of touch”.

    “This is an extraordinary comment and an insight, once again, into Tony Abbott’s character,” he said.

    “To define sexual orientation as fashion of the moment will be deeply offensive to many Australians.”

    He said the comments show Mr Abbott is not ready to be prime minister.

    “What he needs to do is reflect modern Australian values in 2013 rather than values that may have had a place in the past, but really don’t sit with modern Australia,” he told ABC News 24.

    But Mr Abbott said this afternoon that he was “not suggesting” gay marriage was a passing fad.

    “We’d really moved beyond the subject of same-sex marriage in that discussion,” he said.

    “We were talking about tradition more generally.

    “The point I was making really was that conservatives tend to hasten slowly – regardless of the issue.”

    He went on to explain why he did not believe marriage equality was inevitable, likening the push to the failed bid for Australia to become a republic.

    “There were many a few years ago who kept telling us a republic is inevitable,” he said.

    “If this country lasts for a thousand years quite possibly at some point we might be a republic but I don’t think a republic is inevitable any time soon and similarly I don’t see same sex marriage as inevitable.”

    Abbott concedes ‘sex appeal’ remark was ‘old-fashioned’

    However, Mr Abbott has conceded his comments yesterday that a female Liberal candidate had “sex appeal” were “old-fashioned”.

     

    Yesterday afternoon he described Fiona Scott, who is running in the Western Sydney seat of Lindsay, as being “young, feisty” with “a bit of sex appeal”.

    Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has taken aim at the statement.

    “If any male employer stood up in a workplace anywhere in Australia and pointing to a female staff member, said, ‘This person is a good staff member because they’ve got sex appeal’, I think people would scratch their heads, at least,” Mr Rudd said.

    “And I think the employer would be finding themselves in serious strife.

    “In modern Australia, neither sexism, nor racism, nor homophobia has any place whatsoever and I believe people look to our national leaders to set that sort of example.”

    But Mr Abbott has dismissed the Prime Minister’s criticism.

    This is an extraordinary comment and an insight, once again, into Tony Abbott’s character.

    Deputy Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

     

    “I’ll leave Mr Rudd to hyperventilate. I think I’ve more than addressed that issue,” he said.

    This morning, Mr Abbott refined his comments about Ms Scott – saying she had “the X-factor” and put his earlier description down to him being “exuberant”.

    “I was a bit exuberant and maybe a bit old-fashioned in some respects,” he said.

    Still facing questions this afternoon about the issue, Mr Abbott said Ms Scott is “smart, she’s hardworking, she knows the electorate inside out and gee whiz, she’s putting up a good show out there in Lindsay and the Labor Party are understandably very worried”.

     

     

  • Melting glaciers likely to have ‘minor’ role in future sea-level rise

    “Ocean warming could also be a contributor to Sea-Level Rise.”

    Melting glaciers likely to have ‘minor’ role in future sea-level rise

    Last Updated: Tuesday, August 13, 2013, 14:55

    Washington: A new study has suggested that melt-water that trickles down through the ice is likely to have a minor role in sea-level rise compared with other effects like iceberg production and surface melt.

    Previously, scientists had feared that melt-water could dramatically speed up the movement of glaciers as it acts as a lubricant between the ice and the ground it moves over.

    A team led by scientists from the University of Bristol found through the results of computer modelling, based on fieldwork observations in Greenland that by the year 2200 lubrication would only add a maximum of 8mm to sea-level rise – less than 5 per cent of the total projected contribution from the Greenland ice sheet.

    In fact in some of their simulations the lubricating effect had a negative impact on sea-level rise – in other words it alone could lead to a lowering of sea-level.

    Lead author, Dr Sarah Shannon, from the University of Bristol, said that this is an important step forward in our understanding of the factors that control sea-level rise from the Greenland Ice Sheet.

    She said that their results showed that melt-water enhanced lubrication will have a minor contribution to future sea-level rise.

    Shannon asserted that future mass loss will be governed by changes in surface melt-water runoff or iceberg calving.

    Previous studies of the effects of melt-water on the speed of ice movement had assumed the water created cavities at the bottom of ice masses. These cavities lifted the ice slightly and acted as a lubricant, speeding up flow.

    This theory had led scientists to think that increased melt-water would lead directly to more lubrication and a consequent speeding up of the ice flow.

    The scientists found that no matter whether more melt-water increases or decreases the speed of ice flow, the effect on sea level is small.

    Shannon said that her team found that the melt-water would lead to a redistribution of the ice, but not necessarily to an increase in flow.

    The findings have been published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    ANI

  • Typhoon Utor displaces thousands in the Philippines

    bbc.co.uk

    13 August 2013 Last updated at 06:52 GMT

    Typhoon Utor displaces thousands in the Philippines

    Residents commute along a flooded stretch of road during heavy rain in the suburbs of Manila on 12 August 2013 Most classes in Manila and Luzon were cancelled on Monday

    Thousands of residents in the northern Philippines were left homeless after a powerful typhoon hit on Monday, officials say.

    At least two people died and 11 were missing in the wake of Typhoon Utor, the national disaster agency said.

    The storm made landfall in the north of the main island of Luzon early on Monday, bringing winds of up to 210kp/h (130 mph) and heavy rain.

    It is forecast to head towards southern China on Tuesday.

    “Trees have fallen down, roofs have been torn off houses, electric poles and electric towers have collapsed,” Reynaldo Balido, from the national disaster agency, told Agence-France Presse news agency.

    Typhoon Utor displaced more than 100,000 people from three cities in 14 provinces, the national disaster agency said in a statement.

    Rescuers on Tuesday were still working to clear blocked roads to remote towns directly hit by the typhoon in Aurora province, located north-east of the capital, Manila, according to reports.

    Most classes on Monday were cancelled in Manila and in Luzon. Some domestic flights on Monday were also cancelled, as well as passenger and ferry trips.

    The typhoon is one of 20 forecast to hit the Philippines this year, officials say.

    The country has been hit by two devastating storms in recent years – in 2011, Typhoon Washi left about 1,300 people dead when it struck northern Mindanao and in 2012 Typhoon Bopha left more than 1,000 people dead.

    Typhoon Utor is forecast to move across the northern part of the South China Sea and make landfall in China’s Guangdong province on Wednesday night.

    China’s maritime authority on Tuesday has already issued the second-highest weather alert warning, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

    More on This Story

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  • Liberal Preferences and their Impact on Green Prospects in Melbourne ( Antony Green )

    « My Campaign Diary – Week 1 | Main

    August 14, 2013

    Liberal Preferences and their Impact on Green Prospects in Melbourne

    Life for the Greens at the 2013 election just got tougher with the Liberal Party’s decision to change its policy on preferences.

    In the past the Liberal party has ignored philosophical differences and taken the entirely strategic decision of recommending preferences for the Greens ahead of Labor.

    It was a policy of using my enemy’s enemy as a useful tool in the heat of political battle.

    Labor was forced to direct resources to fighting the Greens in its own seats because of the Liberal decision.

    Now that the Greens win seats from Labor on Liberal preferences, but the Liberal Party has never received a Green preference recommendation in return, the Liberal Party has chosen to make preference decisions based on philisophy rather than strategy.

    The Federal Liberal Party will now follow the policy of its Victorian branch at the 2010 state election of treating the Greens as a party ideologically to the left of Labor, and therefore recommend preferences to Labor ahead of the Greens.

    It is the only logical position the Liberal Party can take if it wants to argue that the Greens are a bigger danger to the Australia than Labor.

    The consequence of this decision is that Greens MP Adam Bandt will find it much harder to retain his seat of Melbourne, gained from Labor on Liberal preferences in 2010. On my estimates, Bandt will need to increase his first preferences vote from the 36.2% he won at the 2010 election to above 40% if he wants to win re-election.

    The deision also rules out any remote chances the Greens had of winning other inner-city seats such as Batman in Victoria and Grayndler and Sydney in New South wales.

    Why this is the case is easily shown by the following table of Liberal preference flows in Labor-Green contests at the 2010 Federal election, and under the reversed Liberal preference recommendations at the 2010 Victorian election.

    Distribution of Liberals Preferences – 2010 Federal and Victorian Elections Compared
    Federal Election Victorian Election
    Electorate % Prefs to Greens Electorate % Prefs to Greens
    Batman (VIC) 80.86 Brunswick 33.70
    Grayndler (NSW) 73.55 Melbourne 33.63
    Melbourne (VIC) 80.86 Northcote 29.09
    Richmond 35.73

    On a technical note, the Federal preference data is actual preference flows derived on from ballot papers with a Green first preference, where the Victorian data is extracted from the formal distribution of preferences, and so includes some other minor party votes in the totals. However, the data is still broadly comparable.

    In Melbourne at the 2010 Federal election, Labor led on the first preferences with 38.1% of the vote, Bandt finished second with 36.2%, the Liberals third on 21.0% and four other candidates had 4.7% between them.

    This translated into the Greens on 56.0% after the distribution of preferences to Labor 44.0%.

    But if the Liberal preference flow had been only 33.6%, the figure in the state seat of Melbourne later in the year, then the 2010 Federal result after preferences would have been Labor 53.7%, Greens 46.3%.

    That is a 9.7% swing from Green to Labor generated entirely by the switch in Liberal preferences.

    Let me assume the above change in preference flows, and also assume that the Liberal Party poll the same vote as in 2010.

    If this is the case, then the only way Bandt can overcome the switch in Liberal preferences is to increase his first preference vote by at least 3.7% at the expense of Labor, effectively to poll above 40% on first preferences.

    Only once have the Greens ever polled above 40% in a state or federal election, and that was the 2009 Fremantle state by-election when there was no Liberal candidate.

    Polling above 40% will be tough for Bandt at an election where the general Green vote is likely to fall. Given the strong concentration of Green support in inner-city seats, a national change in first preference vote against the Greens of 1-2% is likely to be amplified into a larger change in electorates with a high Green vote like Melbourne.

    In Bandt’s favour, he has has the advantage of building a personal profile, the incumbency factor that works in the favour of sitting members. He can also tap into resentment amongst left-wing Labor voters of the government’s shift to the right on policies such as asylum seekers.

    The Liberal decision has ended Green prospects elsewhere in Australia, and made life much tougher for the Greens in Melbourne.

    Posted by on August 14, 2013 at 10:09 AM in Federal Politics and Governments,

  • The five excuses marketeers use for failing to promote sustainability

    The five excuses marketeers use for failing to promote sustainability

    Many US companies are increasing their sustainability, but are reluctant to promote their efforts, writes Tensie Whelan

    Online marketing books in a bookshop

    Marketers need to stop excuses for failing to promote sustainability Photograph: Jeff Blackler/Rex Features

    While a growing number of companies are increasing the sustainability of their own operations and supply chains, many – particularly US companies – are surprisingly timid about promoting their efforts. I hear the same excuses over and over again from marketing professionals and brand managers. They boil down to five themes:

    Customers aren’t asking for it

    Generally, companies point to surveys showing that only 10% to 15% of consumers actively search out sustainable products. Fair enough. But average consumers also don’t generally demand a new kind of chip, soda or smartphone. Instead, marketing professionals usually develop campaigns to convince us we want those new things. Why should sustainability be any different?

    When we give it to them, they don’t want it

    Some companies say they tried to promote a more sustainable product and people didn’t buy it, so clearly there’s no interest. When I look at these examples, they usually contain one of several common mistakes: either the product was inferior, it cost more, it got buried among the regular offerings or its marketing was boring, confusing or inadequate.

    Sustainability is boring, too complicated and too expensive

    It can be all of these things, but it doesn’t have to be. For example, Rainforest Alliance’s video about the common man trying to protect rainforests, Follow the Frog, went viral with 1.3m views, 25m tweets and a TED award. The move toward more local, artisan or authentic products can be marketed in a cool and interesting way.

    It’s risky

    By trying something new, we might lose customers. It’s unusual to see a company lose market share by focusing on sustainability, although inadequate marketing can certainly reduce potential gains. Both McDonalds and PG tips (a UK brand of tea owned by Unilever, which also owns Lipton) increased their sales after promoting Rainforest Alliance-certified tea and coffee.

    We need to communicate our core attributes

    Sustainability isn’t core. Yes, people need to know that your product tastes good, for example. But in order to break out of the pack and tap into an accelerating consumer shift toward buying from companies that reflect their values, we need to make sustainability a core attribute.

    A 2011 study identified a big consumer shift from mindless to mindful consumption, which author John Gerzema, president of Brand Asset Consulting, calls the “spend shift.” People who want to patronise businesses that reflect their values, so-called “spendshifters,” make up 55% of the US population, according to the study. Between 2005 and 2009, the key brand attributes that grew in importance for American consumers include kindness and empathy, which increased by 391%; friendliness, up by 148%; high quality, up by 124%; and socially responsibility, up by 63%.

    Marketing professionals should be finding innovative ways to sell sustainability by tapping into trends such as growing interest in community, in knowing where products come from and in supporting artisans and by using technologies to bring unique stories to life.

    I’m not necessarily talking about using the words ‘sustainable,’ ‘socially responsible’ or ‘ethical’. Instead, I’m talking about focusing on the core attributes of sustainability, such as the ability to track the product back to a place and producer of origin, and making them fun, cool and relevant to consumers. If marketers have created a multibillion-dollar business out of carbonated sugar water, they should be able to proactively and creatively figure out how to sell products and services that are actually good for people, communities and the planet. No more excuses.

    Tensie Whelan is the president of the Rainforest Alliance