Tuesday, August 08, 2006

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Monday, August 7, 2006

News of Note

According to the U.N., adding "escape holes" to shrimp trawler nets has the potential to save vast numbers of marine wildlife commonly snared and discarded dead. Find out more here.


Today's News

Balloons Work with Satellite to Gauge Bad Air Days
The weather outside was frightful: hot, humid and layered with a haze of pollution so thick it seemed it could be cut with a machete -- a perfect day to use balloons and a satellite to monitor some bad air.

Despite Opposition, Greens Push for Restoration of Yosemite Valley
With its soaring granite walls and spouting waterfalls, Yosemite's Hetch Hetchy Valley was described by conservationist John Muir as "a grand landscape garden, one of Nature's rarest and most precious mountain temples."

Tsunami Boosts Illegal Indonesia Logging
The rebels of Aceh are trading their guns for chain saws and cashing in on a logging binge that is jeopardizing the future of the world's third largest tropical forest reserves.

BP Shutting Eight Percent of U.S. Oil Output Due to Spill
Oil producer BP Plc began shutting down on Sunday the biggest oilfield in the United States, Alaska's Prudhoe Bay, after discovering a small pipeline leak, cutting output by 400,000 barrels daily and sending oil prices up nearly 2 percent.

Scientists Say Warming Triggers Dead Zone
Bottom fish and crabs washing up dead on Oregon beaches are being killed by a recurring "dead zone" of low-oxygen water that is larger than in previous years and may be triggered by global warming, scientists said.

EPA Gives Green Light to One Group of Pesticides, Bans Another
After a decade-long review, the Environmental Protection Agency has decided to allow continued use of 31 popular but controversial agricultural pesticides, concluding cumulative exposure does not pose a health risk.


>>>More articles at ENN.com


Network Member News

Senate Vote for Triple Border Wall Will Destroy Endangered Species and Ecosystems
By: Center for Biological Diversity
The Center for Biological Diversity blasted this week's U.S. Senate vote to fund the construction of a massive triple wall over 370 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border, calling the plan a colossal environmental disaster and declaring that it will not stem the tide of illegal immigration.


Proposal to Expand California/Oregon Drift Gillnet Fishery Puts Endangered Sea Turtles and Whales at Risk
By: Sea Turtle Restoration Project
On Friday, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) announced their proposal to issue a permit that will authorize the capture of the endangered humpback, sperm and fin whale by the California/Oregon drift-gillnet fishery. This announcement comes at a time when drift-gillnet fishery industry representatives are pressuring the NMFS to expand this controversial fishery off the California and Oregon coast.


Countries Losing War With Advancing Deserts
By: Earth Policy Institute
Large-scale desertification is concentrated in Asia and Africa - two regions that together contain nearly 4.8 billion of the world's 6.5 billion people. Populations in countries across the top of Africa are being squeezed by the northward advance of the Sahara.


More Than 100 Conservation Organizations Call for Withdrawal of Proposed Rules Expanding Aerial Gunning and Trapping in Wilderness Areas
By: Center for Biological Diversity
A coalition of more than 100 conservation organizations submitted comments this week opposing controversial new rules proposed by the U.S. Forest Service that would permit the use of motorized vehicles in wilderness areas to trap and kill predators like bears, coyotes, wolves, bobcats and mountain lions.


SCA And Honda Putting 'Conservation In Motion'
By: Student Conservation Association
The Student Conservation Association (SCA) and Honda Motor Company have joined forces to launch 'Conservation in Motion', a strategic partnership targeting the nation’s most urgent conservation issues.


Study Finds Dozens of Bering Sea Animals in Trouble
By: Center for Biological Diversity
The Center for Biological Diversity and Pacific Environment released a report classifying 12 percent of the Bering Sea's wildlife species as species of concern because they are at risk of decline or extinction, and identifying potential threats to 22 percent of the region's wildlife populations.


Suit Filed Over Paradise Coal-fired Plant in Kentucky
By: Center for Biological Diversity
EPA’s Failure to Require Adequate Permit Places Health and Environment at Risk


Mgahinga Visitor Center: Open Doors to a Brighter Future in Uganda
By: African Wildlife Foundation
On July 7, 2006, the Mgahinga Gorilla National Park Visitor Center was officially opened, welcoming tourists who come to southern Uganda to trek the endangered mountain gorillas. The opening of the visitor center marks an important milestone for ecotourism in the park. The visitor center will enhance tourism services and facilities, thereby contributing to increased revenues. It will also help educate both international tourists and Ugandan visitors about the park's endangered inhabitants.


Students Dialogue With Legendary Activists
By: California Safe Schools
California Safe Schools honors Sheinbaum & Farrell


San Pedro Railroad Abandonment Approved Old Rail Bed Considered for Trail System
By: the Center for Biological Diversity
The rail line that has run along the banks of the San Pedro River for more than 100 years will be retired, according to a decision published July 26 by the Surface Transportation Board. The Center for Biological Diversity had filed a lawsuit against the federal Surface Transportation Board (STB) in June for failing to perform an environmental review considering the impacts of continued railroad operations in the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area.


Editor's Note : 'Network News' features press releases submitted directly by organizations in ENN's member network. This content is not specifically endorsed or supported by ENN and is not subject to ENN's editorial process.

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