Plastic junk may turn island into Superfund site A remote, 25-acre island in the North Pacific is so besieged by garbage that it may become the first U.S. hazardous-waste site whose primary problem is plastic.
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Plastic junk may turn island into Superfund site A remote, 25-acre island in the North Pacific is so besieged by garbage that it may become the first U.S. hazardous-waste site whose primary problem is plastic.
Victor Bykov
Remember, climate change is a serious threat to the world's cocoa supply!
Is Your State Ready for Climate Disasters?Â
Mother Jones -Â Tim McDonnell/Climate Desk
For the world of urban policy, Superstorm Sandy was, in many senses of the word, a watershed moment, rearranging decades long priorities and forcing policy makers and urban planners alike to reflect on what city life means in an era of climate change.
Lucas Lindsey (via thisbigcity)
Philippine delegate weeps at UN climate conference
Moved by the devastation wrought by Typhoon Haiyan, Naderev âYebâ Sano vows to fast until âmeaningfulâ climate outcome
Nov. 11Â 2013
The devastation caused by Typhoon Haiyan cast a gloom over U.N. climate talks that kicked off Monday in Poland as the envoy from the Philippines â where thousands are believed to have died when the cyclone made landfall Friday â broke down in tears and announced he would fast until a âmeaningful outcome is in sight.â
Naderev âYebâ Sanoâs emotional appeal was met with a standing ovation at the start of two-week talks in Warsaw where more than 190 countries will try to lay the groundwork for a new pact to fight global warming.
Sanoâs tears, which he wiped away with a red handkerchief, made other delegates at the COP19Â react emotionally as well.
Officials in the Philippines estimate that as many as 10,000 people died in the hard-hit city of Tacloban alone. As the desperate survivors loot for food and supplies, Filipino authorities have begun trying to recover the bodies of those who perished in Haiyanâs devastating wake.Â
Speaking of the link between extreme weather and climate change that scientists have said is wreaking havoc all over the world, Sano urged members of the summit to take action.
"We can fix this. We can stop this madness. Right now, right here," he told delegates in Warsaw.
Choking on his words, he said he was waiting in agony for news from relatives caught in the massive stormâs path, though he was relieved to hear his brother had survived.
"In the last two days he has been gathering bodies of the dead with his own two hands," Sano said.
"In solidarity with my countrymen who are struggling to find food back home ⌠I will now commence a voluntary fasting for the climate," he added. "This means I will voluntarily refrain from eating food during this (conference) until a meaningful outcome is in sight."
U.N. climate chief Christiana Figueres also made reference to the âdevastating impactâ of the typhoon in her opening speech, and urged delegates to âgo that extra mileâ in their negotiations.
Still, some scientists say single weather events cannot conclusively be linked to global warming. Also, the link between man-made warming and hurricane activity is unclear, though rising sea levels are expected to make low-lying nations more vulnerable to storm surges.
Nevertheless, extreme weather such as hurricanes often prompt calls for urgency at the U.N. talks.
Last year, Hurricane Sandyâs assault on the U.S. East Coast and Typhoon Bophaâs impact on the Philippines were mentioned as examples of disasters the world could see more of unless it limits the greenhouse gas emissions that scientists say are warming the planet.
On the sidelines of the conference, climate activists called on developed countries to step up their emissions cuts and their pledges of financing to help poor countries adapt to rising seas and other impacts of climate change.
Tense discussions also are expected on a proposed âloss and damageâ mechanism that would allow vulnerable countries to get compensation for climate impacts that itâs already too late to adapt to.
Asked whether the U.S. had any plans to increase its emissions target in the international talks, U.S. negotiator Trigg Talley said the âfocus for us nowâ is to meet the existing target, of cutting emissions by 17 percent between 2005 and 2020.
"I think that we are on the right track to achieve it," he said, noting President Barack Obamaâs plans to cut emissions from power plants, boost renewable energy and other measures.
Though no major decisions are expected at the conference in Warsawâs National Stadium, the level of progress could be an indicator of the worldâs chances of reaching a deal in 2015. Thatâs the new watershed year in the U.N.-led process after a 2009 summit in Copenhagen ended in discord.
Al Jazeera and The Associated Press
The worldâs 10 most polluted places Remote industrial towns, e-waste processing centers and the site of an infamous nuclear disaster top 2013âs worst polluted places, according to a new list from the New York-based nonprofit Blacksmith Institute.
Why we need to live with less Americans have more stuff and more space for that stuff than ever before. Is it possible to scale back?Â
**5 THINGS EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW ABOUT SLUT SHAME THIS HALLOWEEN**
1. Calling women sluts/whores/skanks is a form of sexism. When it comes to costumes, clothing, and sexual behavior, women are judged by a very different rubric than men. Â When a guy has a lot of sex, heâs a stud. Â If a woman behaves the same way, sheâs a âwhoreâ, âdirtyâ, âused upâ, and doesnât deserve to be treated with respect. Â While people may use terms like âmanslutâ or âmanwhoreâ, the consequences for the âmanwhoreâ are not nearly as extreme. Â People donât see him as unworthy of respect. Â He wonât be degraded, bullied, or have lies and rumors spread about him. Â His reputation wonât be destroyed. Â Being a âmanwhoreâ is dismissed as him *~just being a guy~*. Â
Because slut shame is a result of sexist ideas about what a woman âshouldâ be or is allowed to do/be in the first place, women slut-shaming each other is a form of internalized sexism.  This is where a woman believes sexist things about herself and other women.  It can be very disruptive and harmful to womenâs relationships with each other. Â
These are some of the ways slut shame is entrenched in sexism.
2. Slut shame limits womenâs freedom. Calling women names and degrading them when they *break the rules* about how a woman is SUPPOSED to dress or behave ensures that women donât have the same freedom men do.  They are not allowed to dress or do what they likeâŚunless they want to pay the price of being bullied or dehumanized for it.
3. Slut shame is one of the ways women compete with each other for male approval. Â Slut-shaming creates a divide between women. Â There are the âslutty stupid onesâ with âno self respectâ and there are the âproper ladiesâ who deserve to be treated as human. Â Instead of building women up and cultivating healthy friendships, slut shame turns women against each other so that the slut-shamer can prove sheâs ânot like thatâ and therefore worthy of respect. Â It puts women into harmful categories based on nothing more than how someone dresses or is perceived by others. Â
4. Slut shame is a form of bullying. Girls who break outside the mold of what they are supposed to do/be sexually and are thusly labeled sluts are at a higher risk of anxiety, depression, and suicide. Â There have been many suicides that started with bullying in the form of slut shame. RIPÂ Felicia Garcia, Amanda Todd, Phoebe Prince, Hope Witsell, Stacey Ramboldâs unnamed victim, and all the other young women who have tragically taken their own lives because of the heartlessness and sexism of their peers.
5. Slut shame leads to rape, sexual assault, and sexual violence. Because people see âslutsâ as unworthy of respect, she is therefore not entitled to say no.  In this mentality, âslutsâ become a target of harassment, assault, and even rape.  After the violence, she is then blamed for it.  After all, she was just a dumb slutâŚ.she asked for it, right?
This Halloween (and always) be a good person. Â Respect women, respect their choices, and check yourself when you find yourself thinking or saying someone is a slut. Â Itâs a deeply held attitude about women that we all learn from our sexist culture, and it is vital that we all take the time to unlearn it. Â These attitudes are more vicious and dangerous than they might appear.
xx
Laci
New York City has 250,000 street light fixtures. And in the next five years, every single one will be replaced with energy-efficient light-emitting di
The damage brought by events like Superstorm Sandyâs New York City landfall are part of the reason why resiliency is replacing sustainability as planningâs central buzzword.Â
If you have your own #citydata submission youâd like to see included in our series, then send it our way!
Our latest infographic: 10 ways riding a bike can save the world.
Available in HQ here.
Nuns With a New Creed: Environmentalism
Every woman in this story is confoundingly non-descript. Short hair, often grey. Conservative dress. Unmarried; soft-spoken. Most are well into their seventies, and all will tell you that their way of life is dying out. They will also tell you, with surprising conviction, that the world is in peril.
They are Roman Catholic sisters, from a variety of ordersâDominican, Mercy, Passionistâbut donât think Whoopie Goldberg or a young Sally Field. While many of their aged peers are living out their days in quiet convents, these women are digging gardens and offsetting carbon. Theyâre as well-versed in solar and geothermal technology as they are in the Gospels of Luke and John, and some wear Carhartts and work boots like theyâre habits. At the heart of the womenâs action is a belief that the changing climate and world demand a new kind of vocation â that Ave Marias wonât cut it anymore, but maybe clean energy will. Called Green Sisters, or Sisters of Earth, they are pushing the bounds of their tradition toward a new, and deeply spiritual, kind of environmentalism.
Read more. [Image: Angela Evancie]
The next bright idea for energy savings Actor Ian Somerhalder sings the praises of an innovative new light bulb.
US shutdown hits Obamaâs climate agenda as EPA staff are sent home: Officials say government shutdown will disrupt monitoring of air and water quality and delay new rules for penalising polluters @ Guardian