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subject: New Internationalist- Ice, African Bees, Aust poverty etc

New Internationalist . August 2000 (No.326)

"Currents"
=======

"As the planet's icebox defrosts, the US goes emissions trading"
By Dinyar Godrej
-----------------------------------------------------------------

As spring began in the North, the Worldwatch Institute sent out an
urgent message that the earth's ice cover was melting at a faster
rate than previously predicted.

The signs are most visible at the poles. Forty per cent of the ice
sheet that covers the Arctic Ocean has been lost over the last thirty
years. It could be only decades until it melts completely. Each year
since 1993 more than a metre has been shaved off the Arctic's
Greenland ice sheet. In Antarctica, three great ice sheets have gone
completely, but whether land ice is melting as rapidly is a matter of
dispute. If the West Antarctic ice sheet were to collapse, the seas
would surge by a catastrophic six metres.

The world's glaciers are in retreat because the summer melt is more
than can be replenished in winter. Himalayan glaciers are 'receding
faster than in any part of the world', according to a study
commissioned by the UN's International Commission on Snow and Ice. If
the Worldwatch Institute's prediction of shrinkage by a fifth in this
region in the next 35 years appears alarmist to some, the UN study is
even starker, threatening the complete disappearance of these
glaciers in the same time-frame.

For the 6,000 people whose lives are at risk from the brimming Tsho
Rolpa glacial lake in Nepal the situation has a greater urgency.
Dozens of lakes have formed high in the Himalayas, threatening to
burst and send a wall of water rushing down the valleys. For large
parts of northern India, which depend upon water from the glaciers,
the melt is causing spring floods followed by summer scarcity.

Just weeks after the Worldwatch Institute's warning rang out,
President Clinton - leader of the nation that emits a quarter of the
world's greenhouse gases - visited India. Top of his environmental
agenda was a plan to provide finance for energy-inefficient
industries to upgrade Indian technology and reduce emissions. The
expected payoff for this was back home - where US industries could
buy emissions credits from India and continue to
pollute. Unfortunately for him, the Indian Government did not endorse
the plan.

 ***************************

"Battle of the bees"

In South Africa, killer bees have been mysteriously disappearing.
According to Madeleine Beekman of Sheffield University, Cape honey
bees brought north by beekeepers are invading the killers' hives.
This is the first time worker bees have been caught taking over the
hives of other bees. 'They invade the killer bees' nests and start
laying eggs,' says Beekman. 'The killer bees get confused and think
there are multiple queens, so they attack and kill their own queen
and the colony usually dies.'

New Scientist Vol 166 No 2234

*********************

"Losers in the lucky country" By Hugh Mackay, Turning Point ---------
-------------------------

Australia, which sees itself as a refuge for equality, has left
many individuals and families poor, according to social-science
researcher Hugh Mackay.

Around 800,000 Australian children are raised in households where
neither parent has an income. These households contain some of the 32
per cent of adults who are primarily dependent on welfare payments
for their income. And while the top 20 per cent of households have an
average annual income of $86,828, the bottom 20 per cent of
households have only $7,720.

*************************

-- Pesticides -- "Hopeful Harvest" By Alison Ware -------------------
----

Fighting dramatic income drops due to falling sales, Peruvian coffee
farmers are turning to a new source of earnings - organic crops. As
reported in Coffee - Spilling the Beans, ever since the price-control
clause of the International Coffee Agreement was suspended in 1989,
the international coffee market has been notoriously volatile.

One response to this was the growth of the fair-trade movement, now a
decade old. CECOVASA, the Central Office of Agrarian Coffee-producing
Co-operatives of the Valleys of Sandia, in the lower eastern slopes
of the Peruvian Andes, became a fair-trade supplier. 'In 1995 our
fair-trade sales as a proportion of total sales were only 4 per
cent,' says Teodoro Paco, the current General Director. 'Last year
they were 12 per cent, and we are optimistic that the figure will
continue to rise.'

In the meantime, CECOVASA's members are interested in organic coffee
which is environmentally more sustainable and of higher quality. But
for the farmers the most attractive benefit lies in the price organic
coffee fetches on the international market: $15 more per quintal than
ordinary coffee (one quintal = 46 kilos).

To assist its members in making the three-year transition to organic
coffee, CECOVASA approached a US-based organization, Conservation
International (CI), for support. CI sent advisors to teach the
farmers organic techniques, which they have since been putting into
practice. San Ignacio Co-operative, for example, now boasts a
communally managed nursery which is home to neat rows of raised
wooden seed boxes and nursery beds, where seeds germinate and grow.
'When the seedlings are ready the farmers can take them back to
their own farms,' explains Juan Carcasi, a member of San Ignacio Co-
operative for 25 years. 'This way we hope to encourage the farmers to
learn a better way of raising their stock. Healthier plants will
produce better-quality coffee. ' Nicolas Sucaticona, one of 30
farmers in San Ignacio Co-operative who have been awarded organic
certification, began harvesting organic coffee last year for the
first time. He is hopeful: 'Eventually I want my whole harvest to be
organic.'

 ***********************

"Condoms to keep the peace" -------------------------------

The UN is distributing condoms to peacekeepers because of US
complaints that the forces are spreading hiv. Two peacekeeping
operations authorized since the US concerns were raised - in Sierra
Leone and the Democratic Republic of Congo - both contain budget
provisions for 'one condom per man per day' to the UN troops. Surplus
are to be distributed to locals. One UN official commented: 'You have
to accept reality. Where you have a man away from home in a poor
environment, this is going to happen. Therefore, you have to provide
condoms. In my philosophy, condoms have the same value as
flak jackets.'

********************

"Fair Trade: Poisoned Youth" By Barbara Salgado ---------------------
-----------

Children's brains are damaged by chemical farming.

In Mexico, more evidence has been found that the heavy use of
agricultural pesticides has dramatically impaired development of pre-
school children.

Elizabeth Guillette, a University of Arizona medical anthropologist,
studied 50 children and their families living in the Yaqui Valley
lowlands and highlands of Sonora, Mexico. In the intensely farmed
lowlands, farmers apply pesticides 45 times per crop cycle and they
grow one or two crops per year. Pesticides using compounds such as
lindane and endrin, which are banned in the US, are frequently used.
Researchers from the Technological Institute of Sonora found that
lowland children were born with detectable concentrations of many
pesticides in their blood and were further exposed through
drinking breast milk.

The highland families live more traditional lives, rejecting the use
of pesticides and modern agricultural practices. Their only major
exposure to pesticides comes from government spraying of DDT to
control malaria.

By studying the lowland and highland groups of children who share the
same gene pool, Guillette was able to assess the developmental
differences between groups. Fifty children from both regions were
given straightforward motor and cognitive tests to perform. Guillette
had anticipated the differences between the two groups would be
subtle but instead she was shocked. The valley children demonstrated
less stamina, hand-eye co-ordination and short-term memory. The most
striking difference was in the figures the children drew (see picture
above). Most of the pictures the highland children drew looked like
recognizable people but the drawings by the lowlanders were merely
scribbles.

Guillette says her findings give credence to reports that children
growing up in areas with high levels of pesticide use have impaired
learning and physical skills. The adverse effect of pesticides on
human development is widespread, she says: 'I don't think the kids'
exposures are either more or less than might occur in other
agricultural areas - even in developed countries.'

******************************

"Corporations beat countries" ------------------------------

The list of the world's largest economic entities based on market
value (rather than revenue) reveals that companies are overtaking
countries. Last year only three companies had broached the $200-
billion threshold, compared with 17 stockmarkets. In this year's
list, 11 companies are worth $200 billion while the number of stock
markets in the list increased by only one.

Still, the top nine largest economic entities measured by market
value are all countries. In rank order these are: the US, Japan,
Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Switzerland, Holland and Italy.
Microsoft is the next largest at number ten, followed by Hong Kong,
General Electric, Australia, Spain and Cisco Systems.

*****************************

"Rusting radar" By Jim Trautman -------------------

Abandoned radar sites are polluting the Canadian Arctic. Constructed
by Canada and the US in the 1950s to spot Soviet bombers, the Distant
Early Warning Line (DEW line) has been abandoned since 1963. But the
42 sites are contaminating the sensitive Arctic environment - large
tanks that contained heating oil and gasoline have been leaking;
toxic chemicals, such as PCB transformers, have been left behind;
paint, garbage, sewage, airplanes and trucks remain onsite. Due to
the cost and small population of the Arctic very little political
pressure has been brought to bear regarding pollution.

The US claims that 21 abandoned stations are not their responsibility
any longer. The Canadian Government wants to contain the material in
the Arctic due to the great expense of transporting it south but has
promised that toxic material left on 15 sites in the new territory of
Nunavut will be cleaned up. " JC 





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