
i.e. What's DDT? What's CFC?
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Jos Elkink wrote:Savanik, since you're so careful in being relatively academic in your posts, can you also keep up the academic standards of including the full name in a text when you first encounter a new abbreviation?
i.e. What's DDT? What's CFC?
Lists that CFCs have been responsible for much warmingTitle: The role of halocarbons in the climate change of the troposphere and stratosphere
Author(s): Forster PMD, Joshi M
Source: CLIMATIC CHANGE 71 (1): 249-266 JUL 2005
Lists again the damage from CFCsTitle: Low-energy electron-induced chemistry of CF2Cl2: Implications for the ozone hole?
Author(s): Nakayama N, Wilson SC, Stadelmann LE, Lee HLD, Cable CA, Arumainayagam CR
Source: JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B 108 (23): 7950-7954 JUN 10 2004
It seems the research you described denies some very fundamental basics of chemistry and chemical reactions? I used to do chemistry, and I doubt that the above process, easily observable, heavily reserached, and conforming to known chemical rules of reaction, is really unture?How do CFCs destroy the Ozone layer?
Gases produced in high quantities by humans on earth can cause the ozone to be destroyed in the stratosphere. CFCs are the most problematic ozone-depleting compound.
Diagram:
Step 1: CFC accumulate in stratosphere
Step 2: Sunlight breaks chlorine (Cl) atom from the CFC; Cl attacks Ozone (O3) breaking it into to O and O2 .
Step 3: Chlorine atom combines with free oxygen (O) to form Chlorine monoxide. Chlorine monoxide breaks down into Cl and O. Cl is free to attack more ozone molecules.
Repetition of the step 2 and 3 chemical reaction allows one chlorine atom to destroy millions of ozone molecules.
Says that DDT affects 'aromatose' levels in human tissue, causes excess production of oestrogenTitle: DDE-induced changes in aromatase activity in endometrial strornal cells in culture
Author(s): Holloway AC, Stys KA, Foster WG
Source: ENDOCRINE 27 (1): 45-50 JUN 2005
Shows that use of DDT and other pesticides can be found in breast milk - there are at least three other eserach papares this year also showing levels of DDT in breast milk from across the globe - no matter what the levels - how can feeding a baby pesticides be safe? They can'#t go by the 'acceptavble daily intake' - considering the just the size of new born, breast feeding babies - the daily intake should be a fraction of that for an adult - consdiering the fragility of a newborn - how can any contamination be 'safe'?Title: Persistent organochlorine compounds in human breast milk from mothers living in Penang and Kedah, Malaysia
Author(s): Sudaryanto A, Kunisue T, Tanabe S, Niida M, Hashim H
Source: ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY 49 (3): 429-437 OCT 2005
Shows that past use of DDT, having been banned in Spain for some years, has left detectable traces still in human tissue.Title: HCH and DDT residues in human fat in the population of Murcia (Spain)
Author(s): Molina C, Falcon M, Barba A, Camara MA, Oliva J, Luna A
Source: ANNALS OF AGRICULTURAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE 12 (1): 133-136 2005
wroteRisks posed by trace organic contaminants in coastal sediments in the Pearl River Delta, China
C.N. Fung, G.J. Zheng, D.W. Connell, X. Zhang, H.L. Wong, c, J.P. Giesy, c, Z. Fang and P.K.S. Lam
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Volume 50, Issue 10 , October 2005, Pages 1036-1049
The results showed that OC pesticide contamination in the PRD was particularly serious and might pose a threat to the health of the marine inhabitants.
If you want recent, this is just off the press - and indicates that ground water is contaminated with DDT -Organochlorine pesticide contamination of ground water in the city of Hyderabad
Gangesh Shuka, Anoop Kumar, Mayank Bhanti, P.E. Joseph and Ajay Taneja
Article in Press, Corrected Proof
These concentrations of pesticides in the water samples were found to be above their respective Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI) values for Humans.
they write:Human health risk assessment of organochlorines associated with fish consumption in a coastal city in China
Q.T. Jiang, T.K.M. Lee, K. Chen, H.L. Wong, J.S. Zheng, J.P. Giesy, c, K.K.W. Loa, , N. Yamashitad and P.K.S. Lam
Environmental Pollution
Volume 136, Issue 1 , July 2005, Pages 155-165
Health risk assessment of organochlorines associated with fish consumption reveals potential cancer risks for some contaminants in a coastal population in China
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:On the discussion about nuclear energy. I have no problems in accepting that it is a safe form of power - the problem lies in waste disposal, a point you seemed to gloss over, or not even mention Sav? What do you do with thousands of kilos of highly dangerous radioactive waste?
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:In terms of GM foods... What about the deeply unfair 'terminator gene'? This means that all GM crops are infertile - meaning farmers have to buy new bags of seeds each crop cycle - how does that beifit poor farmers?
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:Also, GM crops are created that are very resistant to herb-and-pest-icides. This means that very powerful chemicals can be, and are, used. Which have know adverse effects - and, whatsmore, the resistance is usually to a certain form of that 'cide - sold by the company that produces the crop - I see a distinct lack of fairness there too.
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:It seems the [CFC] research you described denies some very fundamental basics of chemistry and chemical reactions?
(4)Dr. Fred Singer wrote: My comments have pointed to the lack--so far--of convincing observational evidence for long-term ozone depletion:
* The data from ground-based observing stations are reported to be contaminated by UV absorption from atmospheric sulfur dioxide.
* The statistical treatment is inadequate, with the derived "trend" strongly dependent on the time interval selected for analysis.
* There is also the problem of disentangling any CFC effects from long-term ozone trends of natural origin, correlated with well-recorded trends in sunspot numbers.
Obviously, one cannot exclude the possibility of a long-term depletion of ozone due to anthropogenic causes, and specifically due to CFCs. But with each cause producing its characteristic "finger prints," proof must rely on a longer time series of more detailed observations (of CFC-specific altitude, latitude, and seasonal dependence).
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:... no matter what the levels - how can feeding a baby pesticides be safe? They can'#t go by the 'acceptavble daily intake' - considering the just the size of new born, breast feeding babies - the daily intake should be a fraction of that for an adult - consdiering the fragility of a newborn - how can any contamination be 'safe'?
MANAQUIRI, Brazil (Reuters) -- The worst drought in more than 40 years is damaging the world's biggest rainforest, plaguing the Amazon basin with wildfires, sickening river dwellers with tainted drinking water, and killing fish by the millions as streams dry up.
"What's awful for us is that all these fish have died and when the water returns there will be barely any more," Donisvaldo Mendonca da Silva, a 33-year-old fisherman, said.
Nearby, scores of piranhas shook in spasms in two inches of water -- what was left of the once flowing Parana de Manaquiri river, an Amazon tributary. Thousands of rotting fish lined the its dry banks.
The governor of Amazonas, a state the size of Alaska, has declared 16 municipalities in crisis as the two-month-long drought strands river dwellers who cannot find food or sell crops.
Some scientists blame higher ocean temperatures stemming from global warming, which have also been linked to a recent string of unusually deadly hurricanes in the United States and Central America.
Rising air in the north Atlantic, which fuels storms, may have caused air above the Amazon to descend and prevented cloud formations and rainfall, according to some scientists.
"If the warming of the north Atlantic is the smoking gun, it really shows how the world is changing," said Dan Nepstadt, an ecologist from the Massachusetts-based Woods Hole Research Institute, funded by the U.S. government and private grants.
"The Amazon is a canary in a coal mine for the Earth. As we enter a warming trend we are in uncertain territory," he said.
Deforestation may also have contributed to the drought because cutting down trees cuts moisture in the air, increasing sunlight penetration onto land.
Other scientists say severe droughts were normal and occurred in cycles before global warming started.
In the main river port of Manaus, dozens of boats lay stranded in the cracked dirt of the riverbank after the water level receded. Pontoons of floating docks sit exposed on dry land. People drive cars where only months ago they swam.
An hour from where it joins the Rio Negro to form the Amazon River, the Rio Solimoes is so low that kilometers (miles) of exposed riverbank have turned into dunes as winds whip up thick sandstorms. Vultures feed on carrion.
Another major Amazon tributary, Rio Madeira, is so dry that cargo ships carrying diesel from Manaus cannot reach the capital of Rondonia state without scraping the bottom. Instead, fuel used to run power plants has to be hauled in by truck thousands of kilometers (miles) from southern Brazil.
Dry winds and low rainfall have left the rainforest more susceptible to fires that farmers routinely start to clear their pastures.
In normal dry seasons, rains arrive often enough to put out blazes that escape from farms and spread to the forest. This year, the forest is catching fire and staying aflame.
In Acre state, some 100,000 hectares (250,000 acres) of forest have burned since the drought started and thick black smoke has on occasion shut down airports.
"It's illegal to burn but everyone around here does it. I do it to get rid of insects and cobras and to create fresh grass for my cows," a man who would only identify himself as Calixto said while using bundles of green leaves to smother flames and control fires near a highway.
The drought has also upset daily life in communities scattered throughout the basin's labyrinth of waterways.
"We closed 40 schools and canceled the school year because there's a lack of food, transport and potable water," said Gilberto Barbosa, secretary of public administration in Manaquiri. People whose wells have dried up risk drinking river water contaminated by sewage and dead animals.
Sinking water levels have severed connections in the lattice of creeks, lakes and rivers that make up the Amazons motorboat transportation network.
Many people in Manaquiri's 25 riverine communities are now forced to walk kilometers (miles) to buy rice or medicines.
Cases of diarrhea, one of the biggest killers in the developing world, are rising in the region. Many fear stagnant water will breed malaria. In response, the state government has flown five tons of basic medicines out to distant villages.
It will be two more months before the river fills again during the rainy season. Even then, residents fear polluted water will float to the top, causing sickness and economic plight.
"I've never seen anything like this," said Manuel Tavares Silva, 39, who farms melons and corn near Manaquiri, a town 149 km (93 miles) from Manaus, the capital of Amazonas state.
I has missed that point I guess - i was focusing more on the specific areas Savanik had brought up. Environmentalists rarely target the 'little farmers' - if anything these are the people they want to help.Jos wrote:aren't you kind of ignoring Savanik's argument about how developing countries could be helped a lot when environmentalists got a little bit less their way?
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:In terms of nuclear waste - what right do we have to produce tonnes of radioactive waste, that will be active for generations to come?
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:I do agree, however, that it is very hypocritical to swanny about the world telling poorer countries to be so environmentally sound when our own, western, development is shrouded in horrendous environmental damage.
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:In the UK - the cost of claening up nuclear waste - from over the past 50 years - was originally priced at £8bn. This has risen now to £56bn.
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:...science can't always be a firm basis for value judgements.
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:What I find very lacking is adequate research into long term effects - and multiple contamination.
One of the biggest myths about food poverty is that there's not enough food available - one that is strung out by monsanto and other GM crop producers.Savanik wrote:Actually, I think it's pretty hypocritical to talk to the world about protecting the environment when we have food on the table and they don't.
I doubt inflation over two years made £8bn rise to £56bn?In a normal economy, this is usually called 'inflation'. It may also be that the UK is producing more nuclear waste now than it was 50 years ago.
I've not suggested the reult of this long term, albeit it, low level of contamination is death. A recent report by the US National Cancer institue has described how cancer rates are rising - without any definitive explanation. (Deaths have fallen overall - because they have fallen for white men - which indiactes the lack of equal access to health - as many ethnic minorities are amongst the US poor).If these chemicals were as toxic as they are claiming, we would be dying off like flies.
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:I'm not going to argue against the levels of poluuiton created by coal fired powerstations. I don;t think, however, that nuclear energy can be said to be 'green' - that's absurd - 'green' energy should mean it has no long term effect on the environment, preferably no environmental damage at all - that's hardly the case with nuclear ebergy?
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:One of the biggest myths about food poverty is that there's not enough food available... The amount of energy imput involved and space required in feeding and rearing a cow, which will feed ten people, is enough to feed fifty people with crops- with more than a one-off yield.
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:A recent report by the US National Cancer institue has described how cancer rates are rising - without any definitive explanation. (Deaths have fallen overall - because they have fallen for white men - which indiactes the lack of equal access to health - as many ethnic minorities are amongst the US poor).
hallucinatingfarmer wrote:I guess my original quote was mis-read - I meant the cost of cleaning waste that has been generated over the past fifty years was estimated to cost £8bn two years ago - now it is £56bn
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