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What A Week It Was: Apocadocuments from
View By Scenario:
Species Collapse:(3)
Plague/Virus:(4)
Climate Chaos:(7)
Resource Depletion: (6)
Biology Breach:(13)
Recovery:(3)
This Week's Top Ten Very Scary Tags:
food crisis  ~ climate impacts  ~ habitat loss  ~ toxic water  ~ water issues  ~ pesticide runoff  ~ weather extremes  ~ koyaanisqatsi  ~ toxic sludge  ~ toxic buildup  ~ unintended consequences  



ApocaDocuments (36) gathered this week:
Sun, Jul 20, 2008
from New York Times:
Trying to Build a Greener Britain, Home by Home
"...people... have reduced their carbon footprint by half in the last five years and turned Hove ... from the archetype of a traditional British seaside town into the prototype of a green village. Their efforts are gaining traction here, and recognition around Britain, as a model of easily replicated ways to cut greenhouse gas emissions. The British government is debating a plan to put some version of smart metering on all 46 million gas and electricity meters in the country’s homes." ...


Smart metering sounds like a pretty intelligent idea!

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Jul 20, 2008
from NaturalNews.com:
FDA Panel Seeks to Water Down Warnings on Tamiflu Side Effects
"...Tamiflu, known generically as oseltamivir, is an anti-viral medication that can be used to treat or prevent influenza. When used as a treatment, it reduces the duration of flu symptoms by approximately one day... According to the FDA, five children under the age of 17 died after "falling from windows or balconies or running into traffic." There have been a total of 25 deaths linked to Tamiflu, three of them in the United States." ...


There are things we know we know about Tamiflu, then there are things we know we don't know and then there are things we don't know we don't know.

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Jul 20, 2008
from The Baltimore Sun:
The coming black plague?
"...governments should start planning for a worst-case scenario, with soaring oil prices disrupting food supplies, just as they plan for other possibilities like nuclear war and bioterrorism... Dale Allen Pfeiffer, author of the recent book Eating Fossil Fuels: Oil, Food and the Coming Crisis in Agriculture, goes even further in his warnings. With global oil production soon sliding into decline, fuel prices might continue to skyrocket until the world's food system collapses, causing starvation, he wrote. "Growing evidence indicates that world [oil and gas] production will peak around 2010, followed by an irreversible decline. The impact on our agricultural system could be catastrophic," he wrote. "Hunger could become commonplace in every corner of the world, including your own neighborhood." ...


But ... don't you think that our world leaders will come to the rescue?

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Jul 20, 2008
from Washington Post (US):
Africa's Last and Least
"Soaring prices for food and fuel have pushed more than 130 million poor people across vast swaths of Africa, Asia and Latin America deeper into poverty in the past year, according to the U.N. World Food Program (WFP). But while millions of men and children are also hungrier, women are often the hungriest and skinniest. Aid workers say malnutrition among women is emerging as a hidden consequence of the food crisis." ...


I'm happy to discuss this, hon, just as soon as you get the dishes done.

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Jul 20, 2008
from The Quad-City Times:
States, localities cracking down on idling engines
"A billion gallons of diesel fuel are burned every year by idling long-haul trucks and locomotives, pushing 11 million tons of carbon dioxide into the air, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. That doesn't even count public buses, school buses and millions of cars across the country. Increasingly, though, it appears some states and localities see engine idling as an area in need of closer inspection." ...


Idling vehicles are the devil's workshop.

ApocaDoc
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Sun, Jul 20, 2008
from Toronto Globe and Mail:
A tough new row to hoe
"The Green Revolution that began in 1945 transformed farming and fed millions in developing countries. But its methods over the long run are proving to be stunningly destructive... Now, almost half a century later, the Green Revolution's key innovations - chemicals and monocultures - are being blamed for a recent pest and disease epidemic that has ravaged Asian rice fields and sharply curtailed the supply of the main food staple of half of the world's population." ...


And before long, all these troubles will land us in the funny farm.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Jul 19, 2008
from NaturalNews.com:
Greenpeace Ranks Eco-Friendliness of Electronics Manufacturers; Nintendo Dead Last
"In the most recent version of the Greenpeace Guide to Consumer Electronics, Nintendo became the first brand to ever score a zero out of 10 possible points. In the quarterly report, Greenpeace ranks a variety of electronics manufacturers on the extent to which they have eliminated toxic materials from their products (five categories) and on the nature of their product takeback and recycling policies (four categories)." ...


We must wonder if the Mario & Luigi are aware of this.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Jul 19, 2008
from Bangkok Post:
World Bank says Asian cities at risk
"The World Bank has urged Asian cities to come up with climate resilient programmes to safeguard people from natural hazards triggered by climate change and rising sea levels." ...


That World Bank: Always on the cutting edge.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Jul 19, 2008
from Washington Post (US):
Fish Virus Feeds Fears It Will Spread to Mississippi River
"CHICAGO -- A deadly fish virus has been found for the first time in southern Lake Michigan and an inland Ohio reservoir, spurring fears of major fish kills and the virus's possible migration to the Mississippi River...The Illinois Department of Natural Resources invoked emergency fishing regulations June 30 to stop the spread of viral hemorrhagic septicemia (VHS), often described as "fish Ebola," which was found in round gobies and rock bass tested at a marina near the Wisconsin border in early June." ...


It looks like Old Man River is in for some more hard times.

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Jul 19, 2008
from BBC:
Diary: Colorado River drought
"The south-western US is suffering its eighth consecutive year of drought. There are concerns that the Colorado River, which has sustained life in the area for thousands of years, can no longer meet the needs of the tens of millions of people living in major cities such as Las Vegas and Los Angeles. The BBC's Matthew Price is travelling along the river to investigate the scale of the problem and is sending a series of diary items from there." ...


Dear Diary: Geewillickers, I'm thirsty!

ApocaDoc
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Sat, Jul 19, 2008
from Miller-McCune:
Environment Becomes Heredity
"Advances in the field of epigenetics show that environmental contaminants can turn genes "on" and "off," triggering serious diseases that are handed down through generations. But there’s also a more heartening prospect: The same diseases may be treated by relatively simple changes in nourishment and lifestyle." ...


I'll finish reading this article as soon as I can wipe these darn particulates out of my eyes!

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 18, 2008
from Economist:
Up to their necks in it
"Despite good laws and even better intentions, India causes as much pollution as any rapidly industrialising poor country... By official estimates, India has facilities to treat 18 percent of the 33,200m litres of sewage its cities produce every day. In fact, it treats only 13 percent, because of shortages of power, water and technical expertise in its sewage plants. These figures may underestimate the problem: measuring the output of 700m Indians who have no access to a toilet is tricky... In the words of Sunita Narain, a prominent environmentalist, mocking the tourist ministry's slogan: "Incredible India, drowning in its excreta." ...


Can't they just hold it?

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 18, 2008
from Associated Press:
Should we move species to save them?
"With climate change increasingly threatening the survival of plants and animals, scientists say it may become necessary to move some species to save them. Dubbed assisted colonization or assisted migration, the idea is to decide how severe the threat is to various species, and if they need help to deal with it." ...


This story is brought to you by Arks R Us.

ApocaDoc
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Want more context?
Try reading our book FREE online:
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
More fun than a barrel of jellyfish!
Fri, Jul 18, 2008
from Associated Press:
Warming health report: Poor, elderly to hurt most
"Global warming will affect the health and welfare of every American, but the poor, elderly, and children will suffer the most, according to a new White House science report released Thursday. The 284-page report, mostly written by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, said every region of the country will be hit by worse health from heat waves and drought. It said all but a handful of states would have worse air quality and flooding. It predicts an increase in diseases spread by tainted food, bad water and bugs." ...


Well, who slipped the EPA a little doom-and-gloom pill this morning, eh?

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 18, 2008
from University of Michigan via ScienceDaily:
Record-setting Dead Zones Predicted For Gulf Of Mexico, Chesapeake Bay
"Record-setting "dead zones" in the Gulf of Mexico and Chesapeake Bay appear likely this summer, according to new forecasts from a University of Michigan researcher... Given recent massive flooding of cities and farms in the Mississippi River basin, the Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia Area Forecast is for the dead zone to cover between 21,500 and 22,500 square kilometers (8,400-8,800 square miles) of bottom waters along the Louisiana-Texas coast. If the prediction bears out, it will be the largest on record." ...


Maybe we can issue every creature their own, personal aqualung.

ApocaDoc
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Fri, Jul 18, 2008
from British Antarctic Survey via ScienceDaily:
Fragile Antarctic Marine Life Pounded By Icebergs: Biodiversity Suffering
"Antarctic worms, sea spiders, urchins and other marine creatures living in near-shore shallow habitats are regularly pounded by icebergs. New data suggests this environment along the Antarctic Peninsula is going to get hit more frequently. This is due to an increase in the number of icebergs scouring the seabed as a result of shrinking winter sea ice." ...


Great. Something new to worry about: thug icebergs

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 17, 2008
from New York Times:
Interior Dept. Opens 2.6 Million Alaskan Acres for Oil Exploration
"The Interior Department on Wednesday made 2.6 million acres of potentially oil-rich territory in northern Alaska available for energy exploration... The decision will open up for drilling much of the northeast section of the Northeast National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, holding an estimated 3.7 billion barrels of oil, Tom Lonnie, Alaska state director for the Bureau of Land Management, said in a conference call with reporters." ...


This, my friends, is a caribou-boo.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 17, 2008
from Baltimore Sun:
Color Me Concerned
"...New research indicates [synthetic dye] chemicals can disrupt some children's behavior, and activists and consumer groups are asking for bans or limits on the dyes. A prestigious British medical journal recommended that doctors use dye-free diets as a first-line treatment for some behavior disorders; British regulators are pressuring companies to stop using the dyes, and some are complying." ...


The FDA, however, is suggesting this is junk science about junk food.

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 17, 2008
from Public Library of Science via ScienceDaily:
Frogs With Disease-resistance Genes May Escape Extinction
"As frog populations die off around the world, researchers have identified certain genes that can help the amphibians develop resistance to harmful bacteria and disease. The discovery may provide new strategies to protect frog populations in the wild. New research examines how genes encoding the major histocompatibility (MHC) complex affect the ability of frogs to resist infection by a bacterium that is commonly associated with frog population declines." ...


These findings have legs!

ApocaDoc
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Thu, Jul 17, 2008
from Discover:
Ocean Acidification: A Global Case of Osteoporosis
"It all seemed so convenient: As our smokestacks and automobile tailpipes spewed ever more carbon dioxide into the air, the oceans absorbed the excess. Like a vast global vacuum cleaner, the world's seas sucked CO2 right out of the atmosphere, mitigating the dire consequences of global warming and forestalling the melting of glaciers, the submergence of coastlines, and extremes of weather from floods to droughts... The problem was that, having swallowed hundreds of billions of tons of greenhouse gases since the start of the Industrial Revolution, the oceans were becoming more acidic. And not just in a few spots. Now the chemistry of the entire ocean was shifting, imperiling coral reefs, marine creatures at the bottom of the food chain, and ultimately the planet's fisheries." ...


From global vacuum cleaner ... to global heartbreak.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Jul 16, 2008
from London Guardian:
Human consumption: Flying in the face of logic
"In 1968, six years after Rachel Carson published Silent Spring - the book regarded as marking the beginning of modern environmental consciousness - a young American entomology professor at Stanford University, California, published The Population Bomb... When Ehrlich wrote The Population Bomb, there were 3.5 billion people on Earth; there are now 6.7 billion." ...


Clearly, people have been too busy copulating to read!

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Jul 16, 2008
from World Wildlife Fund via ScienceDaily:
Cruise-liner Sewage Adds To Baltic Decline
"Most international cruise ship companies operating in the Baltic Sea have refused to co-operate with a plea from WWF to stop dumping their sewage straight into the water. The Baltic, an inland sea, is one of the most polluted seas in the world, so much so that the countries on its northern European shores have recently joined together to form the Baltic Sea Action Plan in an attempt to reverse its decline." ...


Everybody knows that bacchanal sewage from cruise ships is especially noxious.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Jul 16, 2008
from New Scientist:
When acquiring mosquito-borne disease is a good thing
"With 50 million cases in the tropics each year, dengue fever is humanity's most common insect-borne viral infection. Killing the mosquitoes that carry it is the only way to fight it, but now a large-scale survey in Thailand has revealed that this can make the deadliest form of dengue more prevalent. Known as "breakbone fever", dengue is painful but normally not fatal the first time around ... the real threat is the second infection....causing a potentially fatal disease called dengue haemorrhagic fever. DHF kills 12,000 people a year, mainly children. ...


Even the word haemorrhagic makes me want to bleed.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Jul 16, 2008
from Associated Press:
Chesapeake watermen fear blue crab not coming back
"Chesapeake Bay crabber Paul Kellam has advice for the teenage boys who help tend his traps every summer: You better have a backup plan. It's an anxious summer for watermen harvesting the Chesapeake's best-loved seafood, the blue crab. The way some see it, the crabbing business here isn't just dying. It's already dead." ...


Yeah, the crabbing business is dead, but the complaining has only begun.

ApocaDoc
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Wed, Jul 16, 2008
from Associated Press:
There's an 'energy tsunami' coming
"A bipartisan group of 27 elder statesmen is sending an open letter to both presidential candidates and every member of Congress saying the country faces "a long-term energy crisis" that threatens the security and prosperity of future generations if swift action isn't taken. The group includes Henry Kissinger, Colin Powell and six other former secretaries of state or defense, former senators of both parties and a half dozen former senior White House advisers and other Cabinet officers for both Republican and Democratic presidents." ...


If even all these old farts think we need to change -- and change fast -- then what's holding us back?

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Jul 15, 2008
from Associated Press:
EPA document ties public health problems to global warming; White House tried to bury analysis
"Government scientists detailed a rising death toll from heat waves, wildfires, disease and smog caused by global warming in an analysis the White House buried so it could avoid regulating greenhouse gases. In a 149-page document released Monday, the experts laid out for the first time the scientific case for the grave risks that global warming poses to people, and to the food, energy and water on which society depends." ...


It'll be a gas to have this administration gone.

ApocaDoc
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You're still reading! Good for you!
You really should read our short, funny, frightening book FREE online (or buy a print copy):
Humoring the Horror of the Converging Emergencies!
We've been quipping this stuff for more than 30 months! Every day!
Which might explain why we don't get invited to parties anymore.
Tue, Jul 15, 2008
from Scranton Times-Tribune (PA):
Biologists driven batty
Tens of thousands of bats in New York and New England died of a mysterious disease over the winter and experts are now keeping a close eye on Pennsylvania's winged mammals.... "Bats have been here for 60 million years, so they obviously perform some important function in the ecosystem," [Dr. Kwiecinski ] said, as he sat in his office, surrounded by real bats, toy bats and pictures of bats. "Never seen anything like this in bats," he said. ...


Maybe after 60 million years, they're just tired of performing their function.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Jul 15, 2008
from Muskegon Chronicle:
Zebra, quagga mussels cross Continental Divide
The Great Lakes' mussel pain has gone nationwide. European zebra and quagga mussels imported to the lakes by ocean freighters in the mid-1980s have crossed the Continental Divide and spread to California. This comes as the population of quagga mussels has multiplied dramatically in the Great Lakes in recent years, disrupting the fish food chain, fueling algae blooms that soil beaches and botulism outbreaks that have killed more than 70,000 fish-eating birds. ...


Uh-oh. The mollusk Mafia are
musseling in on new territory.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Jul 15, 2008
from Guardian (UK):
Ocean floor could store century of US carbon emissions
The Juan de Fuca plate, which comprises the ocean floor a few hundred kilometres from the coasts of Washington and Oregon, contains layers of basalt that geologists think might be suitable for long-term sequestration of CO2 as part of a carbon capture and storage (CCS) system.... The region identified could potentially store around 208bn tonnes of liquefied CO2, the researchers said, a figure that could rise to 250bn tonnes depending on how much of the gas reacted with the rocks to form carbonates. ...


I wonder what happens when the big one hits the West Coast.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Jul 15, 2008
from Columbia University, via EurekAlert:
Closing a coal-burning power plant leads to improved cognitive development in children
Closing coal-fired power plants can have a direct, positive impact on children's cognitive development and health... The study allowed researchers to track and compare the development of two groups of children born in Tongliang, a city in China's Chongqing Municipality -- one in utero while a coal-fired power plant was operating in the city and one in utero after the Chinese government had closed the plant. Among the first group of children, prenatal exposure to coal-burning emissions was associated with significantly lower average developmental scores and reduced motor development at age two. In the second unexposed group, these adverse effects were no longer observed; and the frequency of delayed motor developmental was significantly reduced. ...


That might explain why we all
seem to be getting stupider and stupider.

ApocaDoc
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Tue, Jul 15, 2008
from Oregon State University, via EurekAlert:
Greatest value of forests may be sustainable water supply
This new view of forests is evolving, scientists say, as both urban and agricultural demands for water continue to increase, and the role of clean water from forests becomes better understood as an "ecosystem service" of great value. Many factors -- changing climate, wildfires, insect outbreaks, timber harvest, roads, and even urban sprawl -- are influencing water supplies from forests. Preserving and managing forests may help sustain water supplies and water quality from the nation's headwaters in the future, they conclude, but forest management is unlikely to increase water supplies. ...


Can't squeeze more out of them,
but we could still squeeze ourselves dry.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Jul 14, 2008
from Australian Associated Press:
Global warming 'will multiply pests'
"Global warming will allow exotic plants and animals to invade vulnerable Australian ecosystems, the WWF conservation group has warned. Warmer temperatures will allow feral animals and invasive weeds to gain access to cooler and higher areas where they have not previously been able to exist, according to WWF's Invasive Species Policy Officer Julie Kirkwood." ...


Just so we balance things out with plenty of extinctions.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Jul 14, 2008
from Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Prions can survive sewage treatment, UW-Madison study says
"Mad cow disease-causing prions can survive conventional sewage treatment, according to a new study by University of Wisconsin-Madison scientists. Prions -- rogue misfolded proteins that cause mad cow disease, chronic wasting disease, and its human equivalent, variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease -- are not degraded by standard wastewater decontamination and can end up in fertilizers, potentially contaminating crops." ...


We will be dealing with this crap
until the mad cows come home.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Jul 14, 2008
from San Francisco Chronicle:
Olympics suck up China's already scarce water
"...Over-extraction of groundwater and falling water tables are huge problems for China, particularly in the north. Environmental activists warn that the nation is facing a future of water shortages, water pollution and continuing deterioration in water quality. Beijing is one of the world's most water-scarce mega-cities, with a deficit of 324,000 acre-feet annually." ...


Maybe we should introduce a new Olympic event: surviving thirst.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Jul 14, 2008
from Vietnam News:
Poisoned rivers menace public health (Vietnam)
Trinh Thi Bien, 73, has lived her whole life along the Nhue River in Ha Tay Province’s Phu Xuyen District. "In the past, the river was full of fish and shrimp, and it was so clean that the villagers could even cook with its water. But this is gone now," she says sadly. "The river has become terribly dirty. My family has drilled three wells, but all the water we find is polluted by the nearby river," says the old woman, who lives in Minh Tan Commune. ...


What did she expect?
That's progress.

ApocaDoc
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Mon, Jul 14, 2008
from Rights and Resources Institute, via EurekAlert:
New studies predict record land grab as demand soars for new sources of food, energy and wood fiber
Escalating global demand for fuel, food and wood fibre will destroy the world's forests, if efforts to address climate change and poverty fail to empower the billion-plus forest-dependent poor, according to two reports released today by the U.S.-based Rights and Resources Initiative (RRI), an international coalition comprising the world's foremost organisations on forest governance and conservation. ...


If a forest falls in the world and nobody hears it, it still won't absorb carbon dioxide.

ApocaDoc
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Other
Weeks' Archived
ApocaDocuments:

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