Planet Watch
Lakota oppose expansion of uranium operations
The proposed 2,100-acre expansion of Canada-based Cameco's Crow Butte Resources uranium mine near Crawford in western Nebraska is meeting opposition from members of the Oglala Sioux (Lakota) Tribe, including proponents of commercial hemp cultivation as an economic alternative for the impoverished Pine Ridge Reservation, which lies just across the South Dakota line.
Oil: $200 a barrel by year's end?
The International Energy Agency is urging OPEC to boost production, with IEA executive director Nobuo Tanaka at the World Economic Forum in Davos calling global supplies "very tight." Oil ministers from Iraq and Qatar at Davos were noncommittal, saying the decision would be made at the OPEC summit in Vienna next month. (Bloomberg, Jan. 25) Speaking in Caracas, price-hawk Venezuela's oil minister Rafael Ramirez rejected calls for boosting output, but said the "possible impact on the energy market" of a US economic downturn would be considered at Vienna. (Reuters, Jan. 25) President Hugo Chávez, sounding unusually conciliatory, said the price "is there, close to 100 dollars, hopefully it won't keep going up, hopefully it will stabilize." Prices reached $100 a barrel earlier this month, and now hover at around $90. (Reuters, Jan. 25) On Jan. 7, when prices hit $100, Bloomberg wrote: "The fastest-growing bet in the oil market these days is that the price of crude will double to $200 a barrel by the end of the year."
WHY WE FIGHT
From Reuters, Dec. 12:
Residents say lives ruined by South Korea oil spill
TAEAN, South Korea - South Korean officials say they have made progress in cleaning up the country's worst oil spill but residents worried on Thursday about ruined livelihoods and conservationists saw damage lasting for years.
Indigenous peoples protest UN climate meet
From the Global Justice Ecology Project, Dec. 7:
Indigenous Peoples shut out of Climate Change Negotiations
Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia - Indigenous peoples representing regions from around the world protested outside the climate negotiations today wearing symbolic gags that read UNFCCC, the acronym of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, symbolizing their systematic exclusion from the UN meeting.
Rural England revolts against GPS
Perhaps the revolt against the hypertrophy of the technosphere has finally begun. We've already noted the rebellion at a Druze village in Israel against the local siting of a cellphone antennae, and the strike by New York City taxi drivers against the mandatory fitting of their cars with GPS. On Nov. 27, the New York Times' City Room blog reported on the case of Judge Robert M. Restaino of municipal court in Niagra Falls, NY, who in a fit of what the city's Commission on Judicial Conduct called "inexplicable madness," threatened to arrest all 70 people in his courtroom unless a cell phone that had gone off was turned over. Perhaps such draconian measures are called for, although a general abolition would be far preferable. On Dec. 4, the Times reported a startlingly hopeful development from the English countryside:
Continent of garbage grows in North Pacific
We wish we were joking. From Canada's The Tyee, Nov. 21:
Earth's Eighth Continent
It swirls. It grows. It's a massive, floating "garbage patch."
Located in the Pacific Ocean between California and Hawaii and measuring in at roughly twice the size of Texas, this elusive mass is home to hundreds of species of marine life and is constantly expanding. It has tripled in size since the middle of the 1990s and could grow tenfold in the next decade.
Hyper-priapic OPEC still can't get it down
Continuing to demonstrate hyper-priapism, oil inches unsteadily but seemingly inexorably towards the symbolic watershed of $100 per barrel despite high output. Prices briefly rose to over $95 a barrel before dropping back to just over $92 Nov. 29 as an Enbridge Inc. crude pipeline linking Canada to the US exploded in Minnesota. Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi helped the price level off by reiterating OPEC's stance that crude supply is healthy, saying "there is no relationship between the fundamentals today and the price... We believe that the world market is well supplied and petroleum inventories are comfortable." (Thomson Financial, Nov. 29) This is precisely what is so scary. OPEC is already pumping it out like crazy, with Saudi Arabia the only member with real available spare capacity to bring to the market...
Some monkeys push back
It seems scientists at Oregon Health & Science University have cloned monkey embryos to create embryonic stem cells. "Breakthrough or an ethical nightmare?" asks News-Medical.net Nov. 15. We say it is far worse than an "ethical nightmare," which implies some ambiguity. At risk of loaning legitimacy to the religious right (who we disagree with about almost everything, abortion first and foremost), we say it is a moral abombination—a further step towards elite technocratic colonization of of the very mechanisms of human evolution, and the ultimate abolition of humanity—a destiny that the sinister-wacky "trans-humanists" are hubristic (and warped) enough to welcome. So it is a comfort to find that right in the heart of New Delhi, troupes of monkeys not only remain intransigently outside human control—but are even actively resisting the human system. From Reuters, Nov. 14:
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