Saturday, March 31, 2018

Saturday Tweets: Passover/Holy Saturday Edition



from Root Simple https://ift.tt/2GKWZAY
via IFTTT

Co-op to switch own-brand water to 50% recycled plastic bottles


The Co-op supermarket plans to switch all of its own-brand water to 50% recycled plastic bottles in a move it expects will present an “ethical dilemma” to customers.

The new bottles will have a cloudier and greyer appearance than those that do not contain recycled plastic and the Co-op said it accepted that they could test shoppers’ environmentally conscious credentials.

The new bottles, which are 100% recyclable and sourced in the UK, will be in stores later this year.

The supermarket has estimated that the change to all of its own-brand still, sparkling and flavoured water bottles will save almost 350 tonnes of plastic every year.

It has also said it plans to rid its aisles of black and dark coloured plastic by 2020 because it is harder to detect by sorting machines due to its pigment and contaminates the recycling stream, reducing the usefulness and value of the recovered material.

Co-op Food’s chief executive, Jo Whitfield, said: “Our customers expect us to respond to this challenge and help them make more ethical choices, and we’re dedicated to doing just that.

“Making these changes will also create new uses for recycled materials which in turn gives our customers greater confidence in recycling.”

Iain Ferguson, Co-op environment manager, said: “Suppliers are working hard to make the bottle clearer – and they already have.

“In the meantime, our bottles will wear this greyish colour which I see as a badge of honour – we are part of the market for recycled products and are proud of that.”

The Co-op said it fully supported government plans announced this week for a deposit return scheme to cut plastic bottle waste.



from Environment | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2GXo8OR
via IFTTT

Madagascar's vanilla wars: prized spice drives death and deforestation

Friday, March 30, 2018

Brazil creates four massive marine protected areas

Brazil will soon have four vast marine protected areas (MPAs) in the Atlantic Ocean, covering an area of more than 920,000 square kilometers (355,200 square miles). The new designation will increase the coverage of Brazilian MPAs from 1.5 percent to about 24.5 percent of the country’s waters, exceeding the international target of protecting at least 10 percent of marine areas by 2020. “This measure will help safeguard our rich biodiversity, and renew our commitment to a more sustainable world,” President Michel Temer said in a video address to the 2018 World Ocean Summit held in Mexico last week. Trindade and Martin Vaz is an archipelago located in the Southern Atlantic Ocean about 1,100 kilometers (680 miles) east of the coast of Espírito Santo, Brazil. Photo by Flavio Forner. All four MPAs, created far away from the Brazilian coast, will protect remote sets of islands. Two of the MPAs will cover waters around the archipelago of Trindade, Martin Vaz and Mount Columbia, located more than 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) east of the Brazilian mainland. One MPA, encompassing 402,377 square kilometers (155,359 square miles), will allow some sustainable use of fishing resources. The protected area management plan, which will define what activities will be restricted and regulated, is currently being developed by the Ministry of Environment, said Jenny Parker McCloskey, vice president of media at Conservation International (CI). The other MPA, covering 69,155 square kilometers (26,701 square miles) of the sea, will prohibit all human activity. The remaining two MPAs will be located around the São Pedro and…

from Conservation news https://ift.tt/2pRFUvM
via IFTTT

When #MeToo Comes for Picasso

Queen Brunhilde still wears her crown as a horse drags her through the streets by her hair in Italian poet Giovanni Boccaccio’s early 1400s manuscript “Concerning the Fates of Illustrious Men and Women.” She looks young there, though the Frankish queen, who led a kingdom and its military, was 80 when her enemies executed her in 613 A.D. She tells her own story in Boccaccio’s book, sharing the ways that she was wronged. But the narrator — Boccaccio — continually interjects to remindatti her that her devious femininity and power hunger actually ruined her until, eventually, she’s contrite.

Often, Boccaccio’s manuscripts are commended as some of the earliest deep looks at strong historical women. The women are powerful, but the exhibition “Outcasts,” at The Getty Museum in Los Angeles, points out the prejudices inherent in his approach. The queen “fell victim to the misogyny of later medieval authors who cast her as the archetypal ‘nasty woman,’” reads the exhibition label about Boccaccio’s manuscript, paralleling Brunhilde’s treatment with insults hurled at Hillary Clinton. 

“The Death of Brunhilde, Queen of France” by Giovanni Boccaccio from about 1413-1415. Digital image via <a href="http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/105199/boucicaut-master-giovanni-boccaccio-the-death-of-brunhilde-queen-of-france-french-about-1413-1415/?dz=0.6929,0.6929,0.69">The J. Paul Getty Museum</a>.

The exhibition addresses a whole range of prejudices in medieval manuscripts: racial, religious, gendered. Kristen Collins and Bryan C. Keene, the show’s curators, conceived of the project in the aftermath of Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential win. “It came out of a burst of energy that began the day after the election,” Collins recalls.

The show opened at The Getty on Jan. 30, 2018, right when the effects of the #MeToo movement hit the U.S. art world hardest. The National Gallery had canceled a retrospective of iconic portrait artist Chuck Close due to sexual harassment allegations against him. Then there was a widely circulated petition that called for The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City to remove, or at least re-contextualize, a seemingly pedophilic painting by mid-20th-century Polish artist Balthus. Would the #MeToo movement tidal wave, already washing over living artists, come for historic artists too, even after the art community downplayed their problematic, predatory behavior for years? 

Emma Sulkowicz’s asterisk performance at The Met in 2018. Photo by Sangsuk Sylvia Kang, used with permission.

The asterisks

The very same day “Outcasts” opened, artist Emma Sulkowicz staged a protest performance in New York City. Sulkowicz — who in 2015 carried a mattress around campus to protest Columbia University’s handling of her own alleged rape — wore a negligée and asterisk-shaped pasties over her nipples. First she posed next to work by Chuck Close in the 86th Street Q station and at The Met. Then she went to MoMA and stood in front of Picasso’s breakthrough 1907 Cubist masterpiece, “Les Demoiselles d’Avignon,” spreading her arms and legs so her body resembled a star — a human asterisk — then dashing away before security guards reached her.

She chose the asterisk motif because of a New York Times article published two days prior, in which museum officials discussed using asterisks on wall labels to acknowledge sexual offenses. “I was just so appalled by what the museum directors were saying in the article,” Sulkowicz told Artnet News in February. “One guy said something like, ‘if we go down this road, all of our museum walls would be bare.’”

“At some point you have to ask yourself, is the art going to stand alone as something that needs to be seen?” Yale Gallery director Jock Reynolds told the Times. “Pablo Picasso was one of the worst offenders of the 20th century in terms of his history with women. Are we going to take his work out of the galleries?” 

While Palo Alto High School removed all of alumni James Franco’s paintings from its walls after his #MeToo fall, no respected curator or critic is calling for Picasso’s removal from major museums. But given that his much young mistress/muse Marie-Thérèse Walter once said, “[h]e violates women first, and then we work,” acknowledging the great man’s shortcomings might help, not hinder, general understanding of his output.

On its website, the Museum of Modern Art calls “Les Demoiselles d’Avignon” a “monumental” painting depicting “five naked women with figures composed of flat, splintered planes.” The blurb acknowledges Avignon as a street known for its brothels but omits the fact that five prostitutes posed for Picasso or that Picasso began frequenting brothels at age 13.

In his preparatory sketches for “Demoiselles,” he drew an adolescent girl nearing puberty, naked with legs splayed. Multiple scholars assume that Raymonde, the young girl Picasso and his partner Fernande Olivier adopted from a convent in 1907, modeled for this sketch. “Young girls excited Picasso,” wrote biographer John Richardson. Olivier returned the girl to the convent that same year.

The transgressions continued. In the 1950s, an aging Picasso completed a series of drawings inspired by pin-ups, occasionally depicting a bespectacled, beret-wearing older man leering at female models. He started making these around the time writer — and the first wife of artist Lucian Freud — Caroline Blackwood visited him at his Paris studio. He asked her to come up to the roof to see his doves then lunged at her. “All I felt was fear,” she recalled years later. “I kept saying, ‘Go down the stairs, go down.’ He said, ‘No, no, we are together above the roofs of Paris.’ It was so absurd, and to me, Picasso was just as old as the hills, an old letch, genius or no.”

“And to think how many people he had up there,” she added. Perhaps the lurid details belong in biographies, but the general gist — that the misogyny on paper and canvas had real-world implications — certainly gives insight into the artist’s interests.

 “Thérèse Dreaming” by Balthus. Image via <a href="https://www.wikiart.org/en/balthus/th%C3%A9r%C3%A8se-dreaming-1938">WikiArt</a>.

Revisioning    

In November 2017, New York entrepreneur Mia Merrill visited The Met and saw the 1938 painting “Thérèse Dreaming” by Balthus, who was also an artist Picasso admired. Immediately after, Merrill circulated an online petition asking that The Met, at the very least, revise its wall label to acknowledge the painting’s objectification of an underage girl. Thérèse sits with legs spread and eyes closed, “dreaming.” In its audio guide, The Met, which refused to make any concessions, describes the “adolescent” model as “aloof, unconcerned, even completely unaware of her revealing pose.”

Asked during his lifetime why he posed his young female models so provocatively, Balthus responded: “It is how they sit.” Ashley Remer, founder of the online-only Girl Museum, strongly disagrees. “Most girls Thérèse’s age (12 or 13) wouldn’t sit like that without being asked or compelled,” she wrote in a recent blog post. Her museum gives the young women and children depicted in artworks as much attention as the artist, challenging the traditional artist-subject imbalance. 

“We tend to think of artists sexually predating on young girls/models as just how it was,” Remer says via email, “which does not make it any more acceptable then than now.” She cannot “think of an instance where viewers” do not deserve information about an artist’s potentially predatory behavior, especially if models were the prey. “It doesn’t have to be the focus,” Remer says, “but it will force the museum and the viewer to be honest with themselves.” She adds, “Wanting to ‘just enjoy the art’ has led to a huge misconception about what art is and how it influences us.”

<span style="color: rgb(34, 34, 34); font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px;">Attic r</span><span class="m_-1695682895786594922gmail-mw-mmv-filename" style="color: rgb(34, 34, 34); font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12.8px;">ed-figure kylix fragments, Antikensammlung Berlin, 1976. Image via <a data-saferedirecturl="https://www.google.com/url?hl=en&q=https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_der_griechischen_T%25C3%25B6pfer_und_Vasenmaler/P%23/media/File:Attic_red-figure_Kylix_fragments_Antikensammlung_Berlin_1976.5.jpg&source=gmail&ust=1522538476008000&usg=AFQjCNHAPD-1K6fjNZcbzp6Xc0Cpq74p9w" href="https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_der_griechischen_T%C3%B6pfer_und_Vasenmaler/P#/media/File:Attic_red-figure_Kylix_fragments_Antikensammlung_Berlin_1976.5.jpg" style="color: rgb(17, 85, 204);" target="_blank">Wikimedia Commons</a>.</span>

A history of violence

Historians’ attempts to explain away sexual violence in art have, on occasion, been quite funny. In his 1993 book “Greek Erotica on Attic Red-Figure Vases,” scholar Martin Kilmer looked at depictions of rape on ancient vases. One cup by the Pedieus painter — a prolific artist who worked in the 500s BCE and whose identity is otherwise unknown — depicted men seemingly forcing women to perform fellatio. Kilmer does not assume this is rape. He writes, “we could as easily understand the gesture as meant primarily to provide the counterforce necessary to get the penis in to her mouth and to help establishing the rhythm.” On another Pedieus painter vessel, a man wields a sandal like a paddle while penetrating a woman from behind. Kilmer gives artist and imagery a pass: “the sandal is not a formidable weapon” as its closest contemporary parallel “is probably the bedroom slipper.” 

Historian Ann Olga Koloski-Ostrow awarded an unknown artist no such leniency more than 20 years later when she examined a depiction of the rape of the seer Cassandra in Casa del Menandro, a house discovered during the excavation of Pompeii. Her “nude upper torso is very eye-catching,” writes Koloski-Ostrow, who suspects the artist meant for this scene of assault to titillate viewers. “Her vulnerability and imminent violation [are] openly displayed” as Ajax “gazes longingly at her body,” continues Koloski-Ostrow, who manages to expose the artwork’s bias without downplaying its impressiveness.

”The Spirit of the Dead Keeps Watch” by Paul Gauguin, 1892. Image via <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paul_Gauguin-_Manao_tupapau_(The_Spirit_of_the_Dead_Keep_Watch).JPG">Wikimedia Commons</a>.

Opening dialogue

“In no way are we discounting that these are beautiful objects,” says Brian Keene of the objects he and Collins included in “Outcasts” at The Getty. “But even within those, you still see these difficult truths about an uncomfortable past.” Collins and Keene announced their show in a blog post published in August 2017. In that post, they ask the general public for feedback: How could they best address issues of diversity and inclusion in a show that looked critically at medieval manuscripts?

“That was a major motivation for the blog, that we would open a dialogue and invite in the input of people who have different experiences than our own,” says Collins. They received over 3,000 responses. Educators asked them to share exhibition didactics online, which they did. One concerned commenter cautioned against overgeneralization — not everyone in the Middle Ages was racist or sexist even if manuscripts in The Getty’s collection — works all made for the richest 1% of the time — suggest the opposite. Others saw the project as liberal propaganda, like one who said it wreaked of “the sort of PC-speak that usually accompanies the closing of the mind.” The comments were “humbling, rewarding and terrifying,” says Keene, who hopes the dialogue will continue. The curators scheduled multiple blog posts to come out after the show closes. “These can never just be one-off instances,” says Keene. Changing the conversation requires ongoing effort.

Theresa Sotto, associate director of academic programs at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, trains gallery educators to engage difficult conversations. She emphasizes the importance of looking. She uses the late 19th and early 20th century paintings of Paul Gauguin as an example of how the ways we look at art can change in accordance with views at each time. If, for instance, a contemporary visitor compares the white, French Gauguin’s erotic treatment of his young, female Tahitian subjects with current discussions about sexual harassment, an educator might ask, “What in the painting makes you say that?” Adds Sotto, “As long as it’s grounded within what we see, it’s relevant.” That said, if the racially and sexually exploitative undertones of Gauguin’s work don’t come up, an educator should probably take it up herself. “I just don’t think it’s possible to have those paintings in your space and not talk about those issues,” says Sotto, “if you really want to be true to the history of it.”

Ashley Reynolds of the Girl Museum puts it more strongly: “For us, Gauguin is not firstly a ‘great painter,’ he was an exploitative pedophile.” Reynolds is planning an exhibition for the fall about the depictions of girls in Impressionist paintings. The show will “flip the script on many revered artists,” she says. “It will be the type of show that we would like to see in a physical museum.”



from GOOD https://ift.tt/2IhRvLa
via IFTTT

My first drive-through nursery experience: Evergreen Nursery in El Cajon, CA

Last weekend I spent a whirlwind 48 hours in San Diego. My first stop on Friday morning was Evergreen Nursery, a wholesale grower open to the public. The company has three locations: San Diego proper, Oceanside, and El Cajon. The El Cajon location was holding an Aloe ortholopha for me, so that's where I was headed.

Evergreen Nursery is right off Interstate 8 northeast of town. Surrounded by hillsides, green at this time of year, the rural location is beautiful.


What makes Evergreen Nursery so special is that it's a drive-through nursery. That was definitely a first for me. This is how the company explains the "Evergreen System:"
Just follow the Evergreen 3 step system: 
1. Drive through or park and shop (you may load directly into your car)
2. Ask Questions
3. Pay at the Checkout Booth
Evergreen's pricing system is designed for your ease and convenience. Plants are priced by the container size. The plants are color coded (the color code is on the map). While driving, the customer can look at a field of one gallon shrubs and easily see the least expensive (yellow card) varieties and read the plant's description. 

Read more »
© 2018 Gerhard Bock, https://ift.tt/1l5MlEA. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without prior written permission of the copyright holder.


from Succulents and More https://ift.tt/2GEglHZ
via IFTTT

Butterflywatch: mixed blessings of a long winter


A long, hard winter is no bad thing for butterflies. Researchers are discovering that milder winters wreak more havoc, disrupting the hibernation of many of our 59 native species, most of which endure the coldest months as caterpillars.

So this late spring may be a blessing in disguise, although erratic pulses of cold weather could spell disaster for some species. This March, I’ve only seen two small tortoiseshells – an unprecedentedly meagre return.

But British butterflies can celebrate one thing this month: the 50th anniversary of Butterfly Conservation. This dynamic little charity really fluttered into life in 1969 when the Rolling Stones released thousands of large whites on stage at Hyde Park to remember their dead bandmate, Brian Jones. Many of the butterflies were dying, and the co-founder of Butterfly Conservation wrote to the Times to condemn “the wanton releasing of butterflies in a park without food plants in the centre of a large city”.

Butterfly Conservation was a Cinderella organisation for decades – its first salaried staffer ran it from his spare room in the 1990s. But in the past decade, its membership has more than doubled. The charity now has more members than Ukip – and Momentum. The butterfly effect is becoming bigger.



from Environment | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2GHcHwV
via IFTTT

18 beautiful edible landscaping plants


It's that time of year when garden centers are full, and you just can't seem to squeeze enough hours out of the day to get your yard done. With budgets tightening, many folks are considering growing food instead of just pretty flowers. But fear not - just because a plant is edible, it doesn't have to be ugly. In fact, with a little thought you can create a beautiful, edible landscape that feeds all your sense.

I blame the Victorians. I mean who decided that beautiful gardens had to be solely ornamental, and who says that edible gardens can't be beautiful? Luckily, with folks getting ever more interested in local, organic food, people are rethinking the false distinctions between beauty and utility.

Take these asparagus plants, for example. (And the rest on the following pages.) These could beat any ornamental fern in a stately home garden. And the young spears, when harvested direct from the garden and cooked within hours, are a delicacy that's infinitely superior to store-bought asparagus.



from Latest Items from TreeHugger https://ift.tt/2pW0mum
via IFTTT

The EPA edited out farmworker concerns about pesticides.

In November, EPA reps met with farmworkers and health experts to hear what they had to say about protecting agricultural laborers from chemicals. The EPA is supposed to register all the concerns people bring to it. In this case, it’s pretty clear that it misrepresented some of those concerns when it sent its notes to Democratic Senator Tom Udall.

According to ThinkProgress, for instance, the EPA censored points that people had brought up at the meeting about chlorpyrifos — an acutely toxic pesticide. Under Obama, the EPA had proposed banning the known neurotoxin; Trump’s EPA has moved to protect it.

The meeting attendees wrote a letter to protest the selective editing: “We do not have an expectation that the EPA’s decisions will always correspond with our specific points of view, yet we do expect our views to be heard and we certainly do not expect them to be ignored or mischaracterized simply because they do not fit into a pre-determined political narrative.”

This doesn’t actually change anything, but it’s further evidence that the EPA now has an ideological agenda, and is not acting as an honest broker.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline The EPA edited out farmworker concerns about pesticides. on Mar 30, 2018.



from Grist https://ift.tt/2IksEXo
via IFTTT

A judge just said “nope” to ExxonMobil’s efforts to stop an investigation into their own coverup.

In 2015, two U.S. attorney generals set out to determine whether oil giant ExxonMobil misled the public and its investors about the role that fossil fuels play in warming the planet.

Exxon didn’t take too kindly to that. The company sued New York AG Eric Schneiderman and Massachusetts AG Maura Healey in 2016 to challenge their alleged unfair bias against the company, which it claimed violated Exxon’s constitutional rights. That’s the corporate equivalent of being accused of cheating on a test, and then blaming it on the teacher’s prejudice against cheaters.

On Thursday, U.S. district judge Valerie Caproni dismissed Exxon’s lawsuit on the grounds that the allegations against the attorney generals were “extremely thin” and “speculative.” The basis of the lawsuit was essentially that the attorneys had a political grudge against the company. The evidence: They held a well-publicized press conference with Al Gore in 2016.

So what did Exxon know about climate science decades ago, and what did it withhold from the public? Thanks to Caproni’s ruling, the investigation into those questions will continue. That’s good news for ongoing climate change lawsuits against major polluters across the country, from California to New York, because they hinge on the plaintiffs’ ability to prove that oil companies deceived the public about climate change.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline A judge just said “nope” to ExxonMobil’s efforts to stop an investigation into their own coverup. on Mar 30, 2018.



from Grist https://ift.tt/2pQOydE
via IFTTT

All The Racquet: What Science Tells Us About The Pros And Cons Of Grunting In Tennis


One of tennis’ perennial debates has ignited early at this year’s Australian Open, after Belarusian player Aryna Sabalenka was accused of grunting too loudly during her first-round loss to Australian Ash Barty.

In the past, former world number one Martina Navratilova has gone so far as to suggest grunting is cheating. She argues it may hamper an opponent’s capacity to hear the ball striking the racquet, which is an important element of shot preparation. But what does science have to say?

There are two aspects to grunting and tennis performance that have generated research interest.

  • First, grunting has been investigated from the perspective of an opposition player, who may find it detrimental to their performance as it interferes with how they are able to process information during shot preparation.

  • Second, the influence of grunting on the performance of the grunters themselves has also been considered as it relates to their hitting performance.

In both instances, grunting could be considered performance-enhancing for the grunter and performance-hindering for their opponent.

Does Grunting Negatively Affect An Opponent?

There has been some preliminary experimental work that showed grunting may mask important auditory information used by an opponent.

Participants in a study were asked to watch video clips of a professional tennis player striking the ball with or without an accompanying auditory stimulus (a grunt). Their task was to determine as quickly and accurately as possible whether the ball was being hit to their left or right side. Results revealed the grunt did impair the speed and accuracy of their directional decision-making.

Taking the results from the lab onto the court, it has been suggested that the 30-millisecond delay in responding when an additional auditory stimulus is present would mean a typical rally shot would be picked up two feet later, relative to when no grunt is present.

This means more time pressure on the opponent and less preparation time, which is certainly not advantageous to their performance.

How a grunt impairs performance is less clear. As anecdotally suggested by many professional players, a well-timed grunt can mask important auditory information used by a player as the racquet strikes the ball. Another suggestion is that a grunt could draw a player’s attention away from the sound of racquet-ball contact to the actual grunt, which in turn may impair their timing.

Finally, a grunt may draw visual attention away from the processing of the visual information conveyed at racquet-ball contact. There is currently no clear evidence to support any of these suggestions.

Does Grunting Enhance Hitting Performance?

When the impact of a grunt is investigated, there is evidence that hitting performance is enhanced. Skilled university tennis players were found to hit with a 3.8% increase in groundstroke hitting velocity when they grunted.

For a serve, a 4.9% enhancement in velocity was found among players who grunted. This translated to “grunted serves” being hit 7km/hr faster than those that were not.

While the increase in hitting velocity came at no additional physiological cost, in relation to perception of effort and energy consumption, there was an increase in force production as measured by muscular activity. Overall this suggests that grunting is performance-enhancing, and is a sustainable strategy over the course of a match.

Do we have to continue to put up with grunting at the tennis?

First, it’s important to note that it’s quite natural to grunt when exerting the type of effort that tennis players do during a match. As many spectators will attest, the grunting can go up a level as a rally drags on. But when is the grunting excessive and seemingly more for dramatic effect than in response to exertion?

It’s true that not all grunts are the same, and it’s on these occasions — during crucial points — where grunting may inhibit an opponent’s performance.

While Barty claimed Sabalenka’s grunting wasn’t a distraction and she can deal with it (and clearly did, given she won), would players would continue to be so charitable if they knew they were losing precious preparation time on each stroke?

Sadly, the science is not yet in on what’s a fair grunt. But equally, given the amount of successful players who are known “grunters” — often-cited culprits include Maria Sharapova, Serena Williams, and Rafael Nadal — a resolution is probably some time off.

Damian Farrow is a professor of sports science at the Institute of Sport, Exercise, and Active Living at Victoria University.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Share image by Jeff Gross/Getty Images.



from GOOD https://ift.tt/2GpVFAc
via IFTTT

The EPA left this town in the dust. What happens now?

This story was originally published by Mother Jones and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

The residents of Uniontown, a poor, majority-black town in rural Alabama, are used to being ignored by the federal government. For years, they have fought against the Arrowhead landfill, a site that they say is negatively impacting the environment and forcing residents to cope with offensive odors, upper respiratory infections, headaches, and vomiting among other symptoms. The Environmental Protection Agency accepted a civil rights complaint from Uniontown in 2013, but earlier this month, the EPA announced that its External Civil Rights Compliance Office was “resolving and closing” the complaint citing “insufficient evidence” to find that the state violated any civil rights.

Have their options run out? “They’re not giving up by any stretch,” says Marianne Engelman Lado, a Yale University professor who helped represent Uniontown residents. Even after receiving the disappointing news from the EPA, residents are not going to back off. “We will continue to pursue every means that we can,” said Ben Eaton, the vice president of Black Belt Citizens Fighting for Health and Justice. “Uniontown is a good place, with good people, even though we have an uphill battle to fight for our environmental civil rights.”

Toxic waste sites, such as landfills and oil refineries, are more likely to be located in communities of color so the pollution from these sites often has a disproportionate effect on marginalized people. This makes environmental justice an integral part of the civil rights movement. Just weeks after the EPA announcement, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights issued a blistering statement about the EPA’s decision. “Sadly, these dismissals continue the EPA’s disturbing and longstanding track record,” it said. In 2016, the agency released a report that documented the EPA’s dismal failure to enforce civil rights. “We will continue to monitor the EPA’s enforcement of federal civil rights statutes,” the statement said, “and find this is yet another distressing step in the wrong direction for the agency.”

Uniontown is in Alabama’s Black Belt, a region in the central portion of the state that was once dominated by slave owners. The town is majority-black and poor with 48 percent of individuals living below the poverty line. Even before the landfill opened — which was designed to receive waste from over half the country — the people of Uniontown were against it. They formed the Black Belt Citizens Fighting for Health and Justice to stop its construction by suing the Alabama Department of Environmental Management and the Perry County Commission, but a trial judge ruled against them.

Nonetheless, the Arrowhead landfill opened in 2007, and soon after, dust, foul odors, and flies became a part of daily life for the people living nearby. “People talk about how the paint peels from the cars,” Esther Calhoun, the president of the Black Belt Citizens Fighting for Health and Justice, told Grist in 2016. “And there’s dust everywhere, everywhere. There’s buzzards everywhere, too.”

The following year, a disaster hundreds of miles away became Uniontown’s problem. In December 2008, a retaining wall at the Kingston Fossil Plant gave way in the middle of the night and more than 1 billion gallons of coal ash, the toxic byproduct of burning coal, spilled into the Tennessee River and on more than 300 acres of land. Three homes were destroyed and dozens were damaged. Even though no one was killed, the coal ash sludge, which contains hazardous chemicals such as arsenic and mercury, remained and needed to be cleaned up.

In 2009, with the blessing of local leaders and against the wishes of the residents, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the owner of the plant, began shipping its coal ash to the Arrowhead landfill. At the time, Bob Deacy, TVA’s vice president of clean strategies and project development told the New York Times that Arrowhead was chosen because it was accessible by train instead of truck, had the capacity to hold all the coal ash, and local leaders had underbid all the other offers.

Meanwhile, Uniontown residents had mobilized to fight back. In 2012, they filed their first complaint against the Alabama Department of Environmental Management, the agency in charge of issuing permits for the landfill. The complaint alleged that because ADEM permitted the landfill, it was violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits recipients of federal funds from taking actions that have disproportionate adverse effects on the basis of race. The complaint described the dire health consequences of living near the landfill, they also said that dust from the coal ash collected on their homes, plants, and cars. The presence of the landfill has decreased property values. After six years, the EPA issued their final decision this month, saying there was insufficient evidence to find any discrimination.

Lawyers working with them suggest that there may still be some legal options. “We are still looking at further legal action,” Claudia Wack, a member of Yale Law’s Environmental Justice Clinic, told the Selma Times-Journal. “We are keeping up the good fight.”

Faced with this setback, residents still are trying to make a difference on the local level by continuing to pressure ADEM. Some have decided to run for office to replace the town leadership that they believe got them into this situation in the first place. Ben Eaton, BBCHJ’s vice president, has been inspired to run for county commissioner to add his voice to those of the commissioners who “originally voted to allow the coal ash to come into Uniontown.” In terms of mounting an effective opposition, Engelman Lado said, running for office is “a really important part of their strategy.”

The Black Belt Citizens Fighting for Health and Justice has also continued to organize actions surrounding environmental concerns in their community. The group has scheduled events to attend Uniontown city council meetings to voice their concerns about pollution and other injustices.

Uniontown residents may not have been surprised about the outcome, given the EPA’s history of ignoring civil rights complaints, but they were still disappointed. “When you go Uniontown, you smell that landfill,” Engelman Lado says. “You don’t need a peer reviewed study to tell you it’s affecting peoples’ lives.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline The EPA left this town in the dust. What happens now? on Mar 30, 2018.



from Grist https://ift.tt/2E7ASj0
via IFTTT

Which generates more greenhouse gases, transportation or buildings?

It all comes back to buildings.

A few months ago I wrote that Transportation is now the biggest source of US CO2 emissions, noting that the switch from coal to natural gas for power generation had caused emissions from power generation to decrease while cars kept turning into trucks and emitting more. More recently, the Rhodium Group released Final US emissions numbers for 2017, including other sectors, like industry and buildings.

emissions by sector© Rhodium Group

Architect Gregory Duncan saw this graph and suggested that architects and others in the industry should not get complacent just because the yellow line was so low, way lower than power or transportation.

"Of course, buildings affect emissions from power and transportation sectors as well. We in the AEC industry shouldn't assume that the yellow line being the smallest means that we don't have a big impact."

livermore 2016Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the Department of Energy/Public Domain

Indeed; I discovered that I was wrong when I said transportation was the biggest source of CO2 emissions when I was preparing a lecture for my Sustainable Design class at Ryerson University School of Interior Design, and discussed energy flows, were the power actually went, using what I have called The Chart That Explains Everything. Basically, most of the power goes into buildings, for light and mostly air conditioning.

carbon flows© World Resources Institute

This graph from the World Resources Institute shows it more clearly by identifying the end use activities. Residential and Commercial buildings together account for 27.3 percent of carbon emissions from electricity, heating and other fuel combustion. And that is not even including the iron and steel and cement that goes into buildings, a big chunk of the 4.5 percent they put out.

Transportation energy Intensity© Alex Wilson/ BuildingGreen

Then there is the Transportation Energy Intensity of all those buildings- what Alex Wilson of BuildingGreen defined as..

...the amount of energy associated with getting people to and from that building, whether they are commuters, shoppers, vendors, or homeowners. The transportation energy intensity of buildings has a lot to do with location. An urban office building that workers can reach by public transit or a hardware store in a dense town center will likely have a significantly lower transportation energy intensity than a suburban office park or a retail establishment in a suburban strip mall.

He calculated that commuting used 30 percent more energy than the building itself.

Average Annual Person Miles and Person Trips per Household by Trip PurposeAverage Annual Person Miles and Person Trips per Household by Trip Purpose/Public Domain

Looking at data from the Federal Highway Administration, it was surprising how many person-miles were devoted to social and recreational. But how many of those trips are a function of urban design, the way our cities and suburbs are laid out. Ralph Buehler wrote in Citylab about how the US is designed for driving, and we do:

In 2010, Americans drove for 85 percent of their daily trips, compared to car trip shares of 50 to 65 percent in Europe. Longer trip distances only partially explain the difference. Roughly 30 percent of daily trips are shorter than a mile on either side of the Atlantic. But of those under one-mile trips, Americans drove almost 70 percent of the time, while Europeans made 70 percent of their short trips by bicycle, foot, or public transportation.

berlin streetA residential street in Berlin/ Lloyd Alter/CC BY 2.0

In Europe, people often live in apartment buildings with offices and stores on the ground floors, so they do not have to drive to get dinner. In North America, it is zoning and urban design that makes it difficult and inconvenient not to drive.

So I cannot determine exactly what percentage of transportation emissions are directly attributable to buildings and urban design, but it's got to be well over half. And then of course, there is the concrete and steel for roads and bridges, the chemicals, aluminum and steel that goes into making cars. When you total it all up, probably most of our emissions are caused either by our buildings or driving to them.

Perhaps I am naive, but I keep thinking that if we built walkable and cyclable cities out of radically efficient buildings, we wouldn't be having these problems.



from Latest Items from TreeHugger https://ift.tt/2GmlFfH
via IFTTT

Building a Counter-Anticulture

What a surprise to find, in the last chapter of Notre Dame political science professor Patrick Deneen’s incendiary little book Why Liberalism Failed, a shout-out to radical homemaking, a.k.a urban homesteading.

Some background: the “liberalism” of the book’s title does not refer to the popular use of the word as in someone who is on the left end of the political spectrum. Rather, by “liberalism,” Deneen means a political philosophy that has as its central organizing principle the promotion of freedom of the individual. We have two dominant political parties in this country that are markedly different but share a common liberal DNA. One advocates protecting individual rights with more government and the other with less. Liberalism is the invisible operating system of modern life. As Deneen puts it, “This political philosophy has been for modern Americans like water for a fish, an encompassing political ecosystem in which we have swum, unaware of its existence.”

What could be wrong with freedom of the individual? How about political, economic and ecological chaos? But Deneen does not suggest turning back the clock. We would not want to walk back on the civil rights movement, for instance. But, Deneen suggests, we really do need to more forward and correct liberalisms consequences: out of touch bureaucracies, an eviscerated educational system, alienated work and, probably worst of all, an impending ecological crisis in the form of climate change. To address these thorny problems we’ll have to pop the hood and look at our culture’s liberal operating system.

Deneen’s mention of radical homemakers (he footnotes Shannon Hayes’ excellent book of that title), comes in the context of offering solutions to liberalism’s “anticultural” tendencies. Deneen says,

Liberal anticulture rests on three pillars: first, the wholesale conquest of nature, which consequently makes nature into an independent object requiring salvation by the notional elimination of humanity, second, a new experience of time as a pastless present in which the future is a foreign land; and third, an order that renders place fungible and bereft of definitional meaning. These three cornerstones of human experience–nature, time and place–form the basis of culture, and liberalism’s success is premised upon their uprooting and replacement with facsimiles that bear the same names.

The radical homemaking alternative is one of the key solutions to our current crisis. Deneen says,

The building up of practices of care, patience, humility, reverence, respect, and modesty is also evident among people of no particular religious belief, homesteaders and “radical homemakers” who–like their religious counterparts–are seeking within households and local communities and marketplaces to rediscover old practices, and create new one, that foster new forms of culture that liberalism otherwise seeks to eviscerate.

Often called a counterculture, such efforts should better understand themselves as a counter-anticulture . . . A counter-anticulture also requires developing economic practices centered on “household economics,” namely, economic habits that are developed to support the flourishing of households but which in turn seek to transform the household into a small economy. Utility and ease must be rejected in preference to practices of local knowledge and virtuosity. The ability to do and make things for oneself–to provision one’s own household through the work of one’s own and one’s children’s hands–should be prized above consumption and waste. The skills of building, fixing, cooking, planting, preserving, and composting not only undergird the independence and integrity of the home but develop practices and skills that are the basic sources of culture and a shared civic life. They teach each generation the demands, gifts and limits of nature; human participation in and celebration of natural rhythms and patterns; and independence from the culture-destroying ignorance and laziness induced by the ersatz freedom of the modern market.

Deneen, in this passage, summarizes what has been the project of our blog and books for the past ten years.

A related thoughtstyling on Facebook
While we’re on the subject of counter-anticultural activists, in addition to Shannon Hayes, let me also suggest Tom Hodgkinson of The Idler. Reacting to this month’s scandal, Hodgkinson quotes a Guardian article he wrote in 2008, on why he chose not to open a Facebook account,

I am going to retreat from the whole thing, remain as unplugged as possible, and spend the time I save by not going on Facebook doing something useful, such as reading books. Why would I want to waste my time on Facebook when I still haven’t read Keats’ Endymion? And when there are seeds to be sown in my own backyard? I don’t want to retreat from nature, I want to reconnect with it. Damn air-conditioning! And if I want to connect with the people around me, I will revert to an old piece of technology. It’s free, it’s easy and it delivers a uniquely individual experience in sharing information: it’s called talking.

We have a lot of work to do to build that counter-anticulture but that the project unites as eclectic a crew as Patrick Deneen, Shannon Hayes, Tom Hodgkinson, Rod Dreher and Cornell West gives me great hope.



from Root Simple https://ift.tt/2Goc8VH
via IFTTT

Frogs may be ‘fighting back’ against deadly epidemic

Micro-apartment redesigned like a 'toolbox' in heritage building (Video)

There have been a number of green-minded projects coming out of Melbourne, Australia -- from tall, cross-laminated timber towers to thoughtful preservation projects that convert older buildings into new micro-residences.

From Never Too Small, we get a look into this charming, minimalist redo of a 24-square-metre (258 square feet) apartment in an Art Deco building known as the Cairo Flats. Originally constructed in 1935 by architect Best Overend, it demonstrated the minimum flat concept, which which "[provided] maximum amenity in minimum space for minimum rent" and featured transformer furniture and the newest appliances of the era. In his renovation of what is his own residence here in Cairo Flats, architect Nicholas Agius has refined the concept further, adding a integrated kitchen unit that functions almost like a "toolbox." Watch:

Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture
Never Too Small© Never Too Small

Dubbed Fitzroy, Agius' redesign keeps more distinct zones rather than having one big multipurpose space, which suited him and his partner and his dog better:

I was interested in creating a suite of different spaces, rather than completely clearing out wall and doors and turning it into one big space, and to draw focus on the existing details of the building, which I didn't want my design to compete or overtake. I wanted to complement [these existing details].

Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture

The hidden kitchen is one point of major focus in the design: conceived as a toolbox that opens up, and built with farmhouse-inspired structural system, it opens up to reveal a sink, gas-burner stove, oven, an overhead dish-drying rack and storage.

Nicholas Agius Architects© Nicholas Agius Architects
Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture
Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture
Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture

Intriguingly, one of the walls swings open, while the other slides out to the side, becoming a mobile partition that stores books on the other side and closes off the adjacent bedroom. Thanks to the high ceilings, the bedroom has a picture rail above, creating a cozy space for slumber.

Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture
Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture
Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture

The lounge is also cozy; the balcony windows face north so there's plenty of sunlight year-round (remember, this is the southern hemisphere, so optimal sun orientation is the opposite of what it would be here in the northern hemisphere).

Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture

The lovely bathroom retains its original 1930s layout, with a dressing room area to one side.

Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture
Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture
Never Too SmallNever Too Small/Video screen capture

Aguis kept the materials palette as minimal and as continuous as possible throughout the apartment to keep it visually clean and uncluttered. Despite the small space, it feels like a cohesive whole that functions smoothly and comfortably. To see more, visit Nicholas Agius Architects.



from Latest Items from TreeHugger https://ift.tt/2GXE4ka
via IFTTT

Row erupts between Italy's Parma ham makers and activists over pig welfare

Study: Indonesia’s ambitious peat restoration initiative severely underfunded

5 reasons to spring clean like a Swede


Minimalist blogger Jenny Mustard points out the life-enhancing benefits that come from scouring and freshening your home.

If anyone knows a thing or two about spring cleaning, it's the Swedes. They put up with months of darkness and minimal sunshine, so by the time the days lengthen and the air warms, they are ready to fling open those windows, shake out the rugs, and spruce up their dwellings in celebration of spring.

Minimalist blogger and YouTuber Jenny Mustard, who is originally from Sweden but now resides in Berlin, recently posted a video on how spring-cleaning like a Swede can improve your life. Illustrated by images of her gorgeous stark white apartment, you'll want to grab a garbage bag and a few gallons of paint after watching this.

Mustard (who probably doesn't have little hooligans running around the house like I do) urges you to spring-clean for the following reasons:

1. It's a clean slate. Think of it like New Year's Eve 2.0. We're a few months into the new year, but you can still start over with a tidy, organized space. Give yourself a boost and turn your living space into a literal version of that clean slate. It will prepare you for the season's changes and developments.

2. Your home is an extension of who you are. And if you're not happy about what your home is saying about you, then change it to reflect who you want to be. This is an interesting concept. Mustard asks, "What does that ideal person's home look like?" Chances are, we all want to have some degree of organizational skill, decorating talent, and cleanliness, and it's easier to be that person if our homes already play the part.

3. It helps maintain focus. "A clean space is relaxing and helpful at making us more creatively focused." Need anything more be said?

4. It will save you time. Yes, cleaning and organizing takes time, but think how much more time you'll save in the long run once your space is organized. It's easier to cook in a neat kitchen, easier to get dressed with an organized closet, quicker to pay bills using carefully-filed paperwork.

5. It offers happiness. Mustard urges you to think of the feeling of deep contentment that comes from walking around a perfectly organized home on a Friday evening, with sunshine streaming in the windows and a fridge full of food. You'll have a huge smile on your face, guaranteed, and you'll be thinking, "I made this happen. This is my place."



from Latest Items from TreeHugger https://ift.tt/2pRSjid
via IFTTT

In other news: Environmental stories from around the web, March 30, 2018

Tropical forests Questions arise about new agreement to protect the Congo Basin’s peatlands (REDD Monitor). Dozens of ancient villages, possibly home to 1 million people, found in the Amazon rainforest (New Scientist). Laughing gas emissions from peatlands no laughing matter for climate change (University of Birmingham/EurekAlert). More than 3 billion people at risk as a result of biodiversity and ecosystem services loss from land degradation (IPBES/EurekAlert, Reuters, The Wall Street Journal). Research aims to find the carbon footprint of Easter eggs and other chocolate (University of Manchester/EurekAlert). The Brazilian government may open the Amazon rainforest up to sugarcane farming (The Guardian). New research looks for alternatives to the use of fire in Indonesia’s oil palm sector (CIFOR Forest News). Questions about who controls forests still hamper the strategy to address climate change and economic development known as REDD+ after a decade (CIFOR Forest News). Indigenous communities in Papua, seeking infrastructure development, accuse Greenpeace of driving away investors (The Jakarta Post). Wildlife would benefit if authorities in Cameroon and Nigeria worked together (All Africa). Other news New video explores the threats that may be pushing cheetahs toward extinction (The Revelator). At least 130 of 150 short-finned pilot whales stranded in Australia have died (The Atlantic, The Guardian). Research looks into the secret behind some amphibian species’ survival despite global die-off (The Atlantic). Drones give scientists new insights into reindeer migration (The New York Times). A judge has thrown out ExxonMobil’s opposition to an investigation into the company’s statements and research on…

from Conservation news https://ift.tt/2E7oS0M
via IFTTT

Kelp jerky start-up blows through crowdfunding goal


I've written before about grand claims that 3D seaweed farms could heal our oceans and save our climate. While there's good reason to be beyond skeptical about any claims of a 'magic bullet' solution to climate change, it's hard to argue with the idea that kelp farming—which requires no fresh water, fertilizer, or dry land and actually helps reverse ocean acidification and sequester carbon— has the potential to be significantly more sustainable than land-based farming.

That's especially if kelp is being used to replacing beef in our diets.

That's probably one of the reasons why Akua's crowdfunding campaign to launch a shelf-stable brand of kelp and mushroom 'jerky' has already raised more than double its original goal. They're planning to use that money to fund their first full production run, buy fully recyclable packaging (at twice the cost of regular packaging!), and also build an online store so they can sell their kelp jerky around the world.

But what exactly is this stuff? Here's the skinny from Akua's kickstarter page:

After a year of R&D, we’re ready to launch our first product, Kelp Jerky to the world - a delicious, savory, vegan jerky in 3 flavors made with kelp, mushrooms, and superfoods - the only high-protein, high-fiber, plant-based snack on the market that’s free from refined sugar, soy, and gluten. [...] Our Kelp Jerky is packed with outrageously delicious flavors like our sea salt & sesame with hints of nori, our "High Thai'd" with turmeric and coconut, and our rosemary BBQ with a touch of maple, all layered on top of hints of umami mushroom and mineral-rich sugar kelp.

BTW, for backers of $3,000 or more, Akua's even offering an opportunity to create your own kelp jerky flavor. Anyhow, check it out. And if you're someone who'd like to have more kelp in your life, then it's probably a good idea to back Akua now. Once they get their jerky brand underway, their plans for future products include kelp burgers, kelp sausages, kelp broth, kelp noodles, kelp dressings, and more.

Stay tuned.



from Latest Items from TreeHugger https://ift.tt/2pVml4C
via IFTTT

The Ecoflats by Solares Architecture are a glorious failure

They worked so hard to meet the Passivhaus target and they missed it.

There are not a few people out there who think that the Passive House or Passivhaus concept sets an "arbitrary energy target that ignores everything else." Another critic once called it "a single metric ego-driven enterprise that satisfies the architect's need for checking boxes, and the energy nerd's obsession with BTUs."

interior of the ecoflats© Solares Architecture

And then there are the Ecoflats, a conversion of an old Toronto row house into three residential units just completed by Tom Knezic and Christine Lolley of Solares Architecture. It is fascinating, not for the architecture, but for the chase after that arbitrary energy target, that single metric, that obsession with BTUs.

The Ecoflats failed to meet that target. Many people will say "so what, they did a great job and it is arbitrary anyway." But the fact that there WAS a target drove them to find out where every air leak, big and small, came from. It drove serious research, experimentation, testing and designing solutions to problems that come up in every renovation.

windo failure© Solares Architecture/ Tom: "We trusted you!"

They discovered that they shouldn't have trusted their window manufacturer, that the windows needed latches top and bottom if they were really going to seal.

Looking for leaks© Solares Architecture

Tom discovered "leaking in places I didn't know existed." They developed new ways to seal around joists and to install air barriers.

Looking for leaks© Solares Architecture

Air barriers are misunderstood and often ignored; when I practiced architecture they weren't even in the codes. As Green Building Advisor notes,

Building scientists have learned a great deal about air barriers since the 1970s. They now recognize that air barriers are key to how long a building will last, how much energy it will require to heat and cool, and how comfortable its occupants are going to be.

John Straube may be a Passivhaus skeptic but he believes in a good air barrier and is quoted in Green Building Advisor.

“The only way you can know for sure that the air coming into a house is clean is to know where it's coming from,” Straube writes. “People who say, ‘I want my house to breathe’ are really saying, ‘I want to rely on the mistakes that were made by the plumber and the electrician to provide me with fresh air.’ That's exceptionally dangerous. Any air that enters a house through leaks in the building envelope may be loaded with pollutants. The dead squirrel in your attic and the SUV idling in your garage are not going to provide you and your family with fresh indoor air.”

Clearly, everybody agrees that controlling air leakage is of paramount importance. In a townhouse divided into three apartments it is even more important, since dust, bugs and smoke can travel through those air leaks. (marijuana is being legalized in Canada in July, so you really want a good air barrier, that smell travels!)

final tightness© Solares Architecture

Which brings me back to my original point. Tom had a target, aiming for the Passivhaus standard of 0.6 air changes per hour (ACH) He chased every leak, and did everything he could, and got to 1.18 ACH. He failed.

targets© Solares Architecture

And it isn't actually a big deal, the difference is going to cost him all of $29.93 per year in additional heating and cooling. And he probably spent a hundred times that chasing down the leaks to get it to that point. But who knows what it might have been had he not had a target? Where would it be? 2ACH? 3? Who knows, but it would certainly be higher. He might have been happier to be able to call his project a success instead of a failure. But he learned really important lessons.

when air barrier© Solares Architecture

Perhaps the biggest lesson was learning that one should worry not about WHERE the air barrier is, but WHEN. You have to take this issue seriously and make room for it, or you will keep coming back to look for new leaks and problems.

Having a tough target drives innovation, creativity and knowledge, which they will apply to their next Ecoflat renovation. As for missing it, I will end with Robert Browning, who is a bit more poetic than John Straube: "Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, Or what's a heaven for?"



from Latest Items from TreeHugger https://ift.tt/2pSdO2B
via IFTTT

12 ways to get rid of slugs naturally

Get rid of slugs (and snails) without the use of pesticides that harm beneficial creatures and pollute our waterways. from Latest Items f...