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Environmental Issues

rynner2 said:
Sea surrender plan to ease flood fears on south coast
By Matt McGrath, Environment correspondent, BBC News

A scheme to combat flooding by surrendering land to the sea will be completed on Monday on the south coast.
The £28m "managed realignment" at Medmerry in West Sussex has seen the building of 7km (four miles) of new sea walls up to 2km inland.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24770379
Just a few miles west along the coast we come to Hayling Island...

Hayling Island's Eastoke Point gets Norwegian rock coast

A £5m scheme to replace a stretch of eroding coastline and protect 1,800 homes on Hayling Island in Hampshire from flooding has been completed.
About 70,000 tonnes of rock imported from Norway was placed on the beach at Eastoke Point to create 650m (2,132ft) of revetment and four new groynes.
Heavy machinery has worked on the beach for six months, shifting the rock and 25,000 tonnes of shingle into place.
The beach was closed for most of the summer but is now fully open.

As part of the scheme, designed by coastal engineers at the Eastern Solent Coastal Partnership, improvements were made to the existing sea wall behind the promenade.
New ramps and steps were also built along the stretch from Nutbourne Road and Bosemere Road, and around Sandy Point nature reserve, to Eastoke Point.

A Havant Borough Council spokesman said the defences performed well during the storm two weeks ago and no coastal flooding occurred.

Marc Bryan, project manager, said: "As with all large construction projects there have been many challenges along the way, but the finished scheme is one the local community can be proud of.
"We have been able to reduce the risk of coastal flooding and erosion while improving access and the amenity value of this important coastal area."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-24926882


It's a geological fact that the south coast of England is sinking while Scotland is rising:
In Great Britain, glaciation affected Scotland but not Southern England, and the post-glacial rebound of northern Great Britain is causing a corresponding downward movement of the southern half of the island.

http://www.bazpedia.com/en/p/o/s/Post-g ... bound.html
And Global Warming will also raise sea levels.

So if you want to live in the south, don't live on the coast - live on the South Downs, and let the sea come to you! :twisted:
 
And right now, Rome is not a good place to live:

Italy: Rome drowns in bird droppings as austerity bites
News from Elsewhere...
...as found by BBC Monitoring

Rome is facing a "guano alarm" as millions of starlings leave the city covered in a thick layer of droppings, Italian media report.

Some four million starlings annually overwinter in the capital, but this year spending cuts have derailed efforts to discourage the birds from settling in central areas. In previous years, anti-starling measures have included pruning plane trees and broadcasting amplified cries of birds of prey through loudspeakers.

But such efforts have not been put into action in 2013, so the birds have deposited a thick layer of droppings on streets, vehicles and buildings, reports La Stampa.

The tree-lined Lungotevere, the boulevard running along the river Tiber, is particularly badly affected. Sections of it are thick with droppings, creating slip hazards for pedestrians, cyclists and motorbike riders alike. Photos published by Corriere della Sera show vehicles blanketed with guano. :shock: Pedestrians arm themselves with umbrellas or run for cover. The situation is so that some residents bang on pots and pans in the streets and squares to scare the birds away, just as people used to do in years gone by

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-news-fr ... e-24939386

Rome has long been famous for its flocks of starlings, and the fantastic swirling patterns they make when congregating for the night-time roost:

They sparked a debate on Weird Weather which went on for a page or two, starting here:

http://www.forteantimes.com/forum/viewt ... 813#599813

A scientific study is reported here:
http://www.forteantimes.com/forum/viewt ... 232#760232

(But the TinyURL no longer points to the article, just to today's Telegraph... :( )
 
rynner2 said:
Don't smell that sea air: British holidaymakers warned as rotting seaweed gives off lethal fumes
By Peter Allen
Last updated at 10:50 AM on 07th August 2009

Holidaymakers are being warned to avoid beaches in northern France covered in potentially lethal rotting seaweed.
It has washed up in massive quantities in Brittany, where thousands from the UK are currently on their summer break.
As the algae rots it releases a noxious gas that can have the same effect as cyanide.

Environmentalists have warned that the seaweed could soon spread to the UK coast.
The authorities have closed St-Michel-en-Greve beach in Brittany - visited by 800,000 Britons a year - after a rider passed out and his horse died after inhaling toxic gas released by algae 3ft deep.

Pierre Philippe, of the hospital in Lannion, Brittany, said hydrogen sulphide was 'as dangerous as cyanide'.

He said he had treated several cases of poisoning caused by the gas, including a council worker paid to clear beaches of algae who was taken to hospital in a coma.





Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldne ... z0NUsyqaT1

I have also spent some time in Lannion hospital, thankfully not for this.

It's an amazing area, what are we doing?
 
Brazil says Amazon deforestation rose 28% in a year

Brazil says the rate of deforestation in the Amazon increased by 28% between August 2012 and last July, after years of decline.
The government is working to reverse this "crime", Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira said.
Activists have blamed the increase in destruction on a controversial reform to Brazil's forest protection law.

Last year Brazil reported the lowest rate of deforestation in the Amazon since monitoring began.
The provisional statistics from August 2012 to last July suggest that the area suffering deforestation was 5,843 sq km (2,255 sq miles), compared to 4,571 sq km (1,765 sq miles) in the previous 12 months.

Despite the interruption of the decline sequence started in 2009, the latest deforested area still remains the second lowest ever recorded.
The result frustrated the government's expectations, but several scientific institutions had suggested increases in their monthly deforestation reports.
Environmentalists say the controversial reform of the forest protection law in 2012 is to blame for the upwards trend.
The changes reduced protected areas in farms and declared an amnesty for areas destroyed before 2008.
The reform, a long-standing demand of the country's farmers' lobby, known as the ruralists, was passed after several vetoes by President Dilma Rousseff.

Agriculture accounts for more than 5% of the Brazilian GDP.
"If you sleep with the ruralist lobby, you wake up with deforestation," Amazon expert Paulo Adario from Greenpeace wrote on Twitter.

Ms Teixeira said the destruction rate was "unacceptable" but denied President Dilma Rousseff's administration were to blame.
"This swing is not related to any federal government fund cuts for law enforcement," she told reporters, adding that around 4,000 criminal actions have been taken against deforesters in the past year.

As soon as she returns from Poland, where she is representing Brazil at the United Nations summit on climate change, Ms Teixeira said she would set up a meeting with local governors and mayors of the worst hit areas to discuss strategies to revert the trend.

The majority of Brazil's greenhouse gas emissions, believed to be one of the main causes of global warming, stem from deforestation.
The Brazilian government made a commitment in 2009 to reduce deforestation in the Amazon by 80% by the year 2020, in relation to the average between 1996 and 2005.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-24950487
 
rynner2 said:
And right now, Rome is not a good place to live:

Italy: Rome drowns in bird droppings as austerity bites
News from Elsewhere...
...as found by BBC Monitoring

Rome is facing a "guano alarm" as millions of starlings leave the city covered in a thick layer of droppings, Italian media report.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-news-fr ... e-24939386

Rome has long been famous for its flocks of starlings, and the fantastic swirling patterns they make when congregating for the night-time roost:

They sparked a debate on Weird Weather which went on for a page or two, starting here:

http://www.forteantimes.com/forum/viewt ... 813#599813
More starling pics here:

In pictures: Murmuration of starlings near Gretna

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-s ... d-25104625
 
A story that probably won't make headlines outside of specialist publications or the local press, but it's a significant one anyway:

State seeks €5.9m bond on fishing boat
Published 25/11/2013 15:24

The state is looking for more than €5.9m bond on a fishing trawler which has been detained in Killybegs since Friday.

Naval officers and officers from the Sea Fisheries Protection Authority (SFPA) boarded the Dutch-owned Anneliles Ilena, formerly known as the Atlantic Dawn, about 100 nautical miles northwest of Tory Island on Friday morning,
It is alleged that three breaches of fishing regulations were observed and the trawler, one of the biggest in the world [photo in article], was brought to Killybegs.

Skipper Gerrit Plug appeared at Donegal District Court today, charged with three counts of breaching logging and discard regulations.
Solicitor Ciaran Liddy said the State was seeking payment of €5,922,544 before the trawler could be released. The figure is made up of the value of all the fish and gear on board at the time of detention, as well as the maximum fines and provision for costs.

Defence solicitor Dermot Barry told the court “The bond that is being looked for is out of the question. In this case, the evidence, such as it is, has a value of approximately €20. It’s costing him €100,000 a day to keep the ship in port.”
His client, he added, was prepared to pay a bond of €100,000.

Mr Liddy said the case concerned more than €20 worth of fish: “It’s alleged that the grading machinery was used in circumstances where it shouldn’t have been, to remove smaller fish and leave bigger fish.

Judge Kevin Kilrane said the bail seemed “disproportionate in this case” and asked Mr Liddy [to] find out whether there was any room for discretion. The case was adjourned for a short time but, on resumption, Mr Liddy confirmed that it was the DPP’s view that there was no room for discretion.

Judge Kilrane set bail at €250,000. He said he would not execute the order until 10.30am tomorrow (Tuesday) at Carrick-on-Shannon court. This gives the state time to challenge his ruling in a higher court, if it is thought bail should be higher. This also means that the trawler cannot leave Killybegs until 10.30 am tomorrow.

The ship’s owner, Diek Parlevliet, asked to speak. He pointed out that the skipper was arrested on Friday, just before the weekend, and the detention of the ship was something that cost a lot of money.
With regard to bail, he commented: “I’m hearing amounts of €5-6 million. I’ve never heard of this in my life. I’m not happy with €250,000 but at least it is considerably down. We feel that this is about €20 worth of fish, and nobody has seen any fish going into the sea.”

The case is due to be heard at the next sitting of the Circuit Court in Donegal Town on December 10.

http://www.donegaldemocrat.ie/news/done ... -1-5706498

Huge ships like this cruise the world's oceans, hoovering up fish stocks almost without any form of regulation. They often do this far from land, out of sight and out of mind, but perhaps Ireland's action in this case will serve as a wake-up call to the world, and make the owners of these factory ships think twice.
 
rynner2 said:
...

Huge ships like this cruise the world's oceans, hoovering up fish stocks almost without any form of regulation. They often do this far from land, out of sight and out of mind, but perhaps Ireland's action in this case will serve as a wake-up call to the world, and make the owners of these factory ships think twice.
Remember seeing a Russian factory ship off Shetland when I went up there on a ferry trip form Orkney. The crew were playing volleyball on the foredeck. That was nearly thirty five years ago and that boat would be small compared to the enormous factory trawlers doing the rounds, mid-ocean, these days.

Purse seine nets two kilometres long are not unusual...
 
rynner2 said:
Carlyon Bay campaigners meet at 'ruined' beach

Demolition work at a Cornish beach by developers who want build a £250m housing complex has damaged tourism. campaigners have claimed.
Carlyon Bay Watch staged a demonstration at the beach near St Austell over what they call "10 years of devastation".
Protesters say the bay has fallen into decay since a development project stalled.
Developers said they hoped the situation was temporary.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-21959497
Carlyon Bay developers must remove defences

The developers of a £250m beach resort have been ordered to remove rusting sea defences.
The Commercial Estates Group (CEG) wanted to keep the 80m (262ft) defences at Carlyon Bay in Cornwall until 2016.
CEG said that it was struggling to finance the development and needed to keep the defences, which have been in place for nine years.
But a Cornwall Council committee refused amid claims the defences were an "eyesore".

Carlyon Bay, near St Austell, was once the site of the Cornwall Coliseum entertainment venue.
Current owners CEG have permission to build 511 apartments, shops and leisure services on the site.
But permission has expired for "temporary" sea defences - a stretch of metal pilings and rocks - to protect the building site.

CEG said it was "disappointed" after the Central Sub Area Planning Committee requested a report on an enforcement timetable to remove the defences.
CEG said it was considering "all options before making any decisions about the timing of its removal".
"The recession has impacted heavily on businesses nationwide," it said.
"Development projects around the country including other major Cornish projects have been similarly adversely affected and we are asking for a little flexibility during this difficult period until the economy picks up and development finance becomes more accessible."

Peter Browning of Carlyon Bay Watch (CBW) said: "CBW is delighted that councillors have acknowledged the views of hundreds of local people and visitors alike that 'enough is enough'.
"If CEG can't begin their development then they should remove the eyesore they've created on the foreshore and let people enjoy the beach again."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-25112834
 
I've just used MarineTraffic to try to find the Dutch-owned Anneliles Ilena, but got the reply "No such animal". I suspect the Donegal Democrat has got the name wrong - it looked a bit odd when I first saw it, but I couldn't put my finger on it.

Back in the 70s there was an invasion of Russian factory ships off Devon and Cornwall. They weren't fishing themselves IIRC, but buying the catches off local boats to freeze and take home. Nowadays the UK and Ireland's waters are looted 'legally' :roll: by other EU countries. No fair!
 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25383373

Esa's Cryosat sees Arctic sea-ice volume bounce back

The bounce back in the extent of sea ice in the Arctic this summer was reflected also in the volume of ice.

Data from Europe's Cryosat spacecraft suggests there were almost 9,000 cu km of ice at the end of this year's melt season.

This is close to 50% more than in the corresponding period in 2012.

It is a rare piece of good news for a region that has witnessed a rapid decline in both area cover and thickness in recent years.

Full text at URL.
 
'Rare' Lizard juniper plant reintroduction hope by conservationists
By Chris Ellis, BBC News Online, South West

Conservationists hope to save an "extremely rare" plant which is only found in the wild in the UK in one valley in Cornwall.
The team from the Eden Project and Natural England are growing the Lizard juniper at a nursery and hope to plant them in the wild.
Only 13 junipers remain in the Gew Graze Valley, on the Lizard Peninsula, a spokesman from Natural England said.
He added that reintroducing them to the area could begin in 2014.
John Martin, from Natural England, said the people of Cornwall should be "very proud of the Lizard's botanical importance". It has a number of rare species.

Cuttings from all known wild juniper plants on the Lizard were taken in 2010 to the Eden Project in Cornwall.
Fruit was collected from five wild female plants two years later with the aim to grow plants from the seeds.
Both methods are now being used to help grow junipers.

"The 13 individuals live close together [in the wild] and we want to see if former sites where they used to be found might be suitable for the reintroduction," Mr Martin said.
"It will help protect them if something bad happens to those in the Gew Graze Valley."

Dr Tim Pettitt, from the Eden Project, said seedlings had been germinated from the collected seeds, but they had to be "robust enough" before being reintroduced.
"It's part of our native flora and we need to do more to understand why there has been such a strong decline," he said.
"The species was once abundant and we should endeavour to keep it."

The plant is a subspecies of the juniper, an evergreen conifer.
Mr Martin said the Lizard was the only place in the UK where it was found.

But he admitted there was some divide in the scientific community as to whether a type of juniper found in southern Europe was the same subspecies.
He said: "They live in different habitats, there would be no gene flow between the two populations, and they do differ, but at this stage it's unclear whether it is the same subspecies or not."

Dr Alistair Griffiths, who is one of the founders of the project, said: "It's a very important project, not just for conserving one population of plants, but also understanding the scientific methods of how best to protect our habitats and plants."
He added the research methods used for the Lizard juniper, as a case study, could help towards safeguarding other species.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-25402202

...and then we're going to build a distillery to make Cornish gin! :D
 
California tests natural disaster early warning system
By Rebecca Morelle, Science reporter, BBC World Service

An early warning system for earthquakes, tsunamis and floods is being trialled in the US.

Scientists are using GPS technology and other sensors to detect the impending threat of natural disasters.
The network is installed in Southern California and has already helped scientists to alert emergency services to the risk of flash floods.
Yehuda Bock from the Scripps Institute of Oceanography said: "This can help to mitigate threats to public safety."
And added: "It means real-time information can be made available."

The minutes and even seconds before a natural disaster strikes are crucial.
Early warning systems can help emergency services to prepare and respond more effectively and can provide vital information for the public.
In California, researchers have been testing a prototype network for a range of hazards.

The system builds on existing networks of GPS stations, which use satellite technology to make very precise measurements of any ground movement.
On these, they have installed seismic sensors and other instruments that can track changes in weather conditions.
Dr Bock said: "By combining the data from the GPS with the data from these other sensors, we can measure displacements that occur during an earthquake or another event."

He added that the system could detect the tremors that appear seconds before a large earthquake strikes, and accurately assess its magnitude and whether it is likely to generate a tsunami.

The GPS sensors and the meteorological instruments also help the team to monitor the water vapour in the air.

Dr Angelyn Moore, from Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said: "It might be surprising that we are using GPS to monitor weather hazards, but GPS is a weather instrument.
"Fundamentally, a GPS station is measuring the time it takes a signal to travel from the GPS satellites to the receiving stations on the ground, and that travel time is modified by the amount of moisture in the air.
"Whenever we measure the position of a GPS station, we are also measuring the amount of water vapour above it."
Through this, the team is able to track in real time how air moisture is changing and whether heavy rain is likely.
In the summer, the researchers used the system to forecast rainfall in San Diego.

Traditionally, some of this data comes from weather balloons.
"But there are only two sites at the southern border of California and these are about 150 miles apart. And the weather balloon launches are also infrequent: in San Diego it's only every 12 hours," said Dr Moore.
"In between those many hours between the weather balloon launches, we were able to use the GPS to monitor how the water vapour was changing."

With this real-time information, the team was able to issue flash flood alerts.
Dr Moore added: "This was verified - there were quite a few reports of flooding."

The sensing technology is being combined with communication advances to make sure the information is widely distributed, fast.

Dr Mark Jackson, from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Weather Service, said: "When a forecaster presses that button to issue that warning, it then goes to the police or fire person that's responsible for taking action to protect life and property almost instantaneously.
"We also have the public who now on their smartphones can receive warnings directly that say there is a warning in effect for your area."

The team said the technology was inexpensive, and systems like it could be rolled out around the world.
The findings were presented at the recent America Geophysical Union Fall Meeting in San Francisco.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25467873
 
Disarray over flood prevention plans
By Roger Harrabin, Environment analyst

There is disarray over government plans to prevent new developments making flooding worse, BBC News has learned.
The 2010 Flood Act states developments must be landscaped so water from roofs and drives seeps into open ground, and does not rush into the water system.
But details of the law have been delayed for more than three years.
House builders say it will put up the cost of new homes and have been wrangling with government and councils over who pays to maintain new systems.

The BBC understands that a deal has now been struck which is likely to see councils annually billing the owners of newly built homes for maintaining flood-prevention measures like ponds and hollows in the land designed to trap water.
The councils argue that owners of existing homes have to pay water companies to remove and treat their run-off water, so the new charge will simply be replacing another.

The new rules have been delayed several times and last summer MPs on the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs committee demanded that ministers should introduce them immediately.
The government had planned to bring in the rules in April but this week admitted that even this delayed deadline would be put back further.
All parties describe discussions as "extremely sensitive".

[Video: Sheffield scheme]
One major sticking point is that the home builders are resisting the experts' opinion on the way schemes should be built.
Experts say the UK should follow continental neighbours and introduce landscape drainage features that have multiple benefits, like ponds, areas of open grass and planting.
One scheme in Sheffield takes the run-off water from a housing estate, breaks up the flow through a pile of rocks and allows the water to soak away. A nearby pond - designed to hold run-off water - hosts ducks, a heron and dragonflies.

Paul Shaffer from Susdrain, the community for sustainable drainage, based at the construction research institute CIRIA, told BBC News: "The greatest benefits are likely to be if the water is captured on the surface.
"In some places it won't be appropriate, but generally it's a more simple solution that's easier to maintain. You get pollutants broken down free of charge by vegetation, you get amenity value that improves people's quality of lives, you help to improve biodiversity, you also get the benefit that in heatwaves the open areas of water help to cool down the surrounding land.
"Yes, it helps with flood prevention, but it gives so much more than just holding the water in a tank."

Run-off water contaminated with oil from cars is cleaned up by plants, which saves clean-up costs later - and in a heatwave, the water features will cool the surrounding homes.

The home builders say these features should not be mandatory because they take land which would otherwise be used for homes, and this increases the cost of house-building. They want the rules to allow them to capture run-off water in giant underground tanks. :roll:
The experts say this is an inadequate system which does not match the benefits of water storage on the ground.

Observers are dismayed that the disputes are rumbling on.
"It is ridiculous," said Richard Ashley, professor of urban water at Sheffield University. "The government is ideologically in favour of deregulation but it's supposed to be introducing this complicated piece of legislation with a demoralised department with civil servants that keep changing. The house builders are lobbying furiously behind the scenes.
"We have alternating periods of droughts and flooding in England and these systems are best at dealing with both - so there really shouldn't be a problem in sorting it out."

Local Government Association spokesman Councillor Mike Jones told BBC News: "The developers should be able to pay for the works that are needed. They are making very healthy profits."
He said it was appropriate that people should pay for their drainage.

But the government is struggling to make rules on exactly what sort of drainage should be permitted in different locations.
Prof Ashley warned: "Let's keep this in perspective. New developments are a small fraction of all buildings.
"The problem of floods has already been made worse by decades of misguided drainage rules allowing people to think that getting rid of water into rivers was solving the problem. It is the existing buildings and car parks that are the real challenge."

A spokesperson for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said: "Reducing the impacts of flooding on houses and businesses is a key priority for us and we are committed to introducing sustainable drainage systems (Suds) to help reduce the risk of floods from new developments.
"Suds are usually cheaper to maintain than conventional drainage, and we will be consulting soon on how they will be maintained by local authorities."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-25676973

The government fiddles while the waters rise...
 
Slipping away: row threatens centuries-old lighthouse
Row over lighthouse at risk of tumbling into the sea is threatening plans to save it
By Martin Fletcher
8:15AM GMT 12 Jan 2014

For 222 years, Orfordness lighthouse has protected mariners from the hazards of the Suffolk coast.
The cherished East Anglian building has survived storms and hurricanes, attacks by German warplanes, the Great Flood of 1953 and the Government’s secret testing of bombs and nuclear detonators on the remote shingle spit on which it stands.

But with the lighthouse at risk of tumbling into the sea because of coastal erosion, a row between its new owner and the National Trust is threatening plans to save the 98ft tower for a few more years.

It is thought that the lighthouse could fall within two years. Trinity House, the custodian of England’s lighthouses, decommissioned the Grade II listed building last summer.

The trust had declined to buy it the previous year, so in September it was sold for £2,000 to Nicholas Gold, a London lawyer with Suffolk roots and a home in Orford.
He came up with plans to temporarily save the tower by “sandbagging” a short stretch of crumbling shoreline, and to open it to the public for the first time.
But the National Trust has opposed the move, claiming that the bags will make little difference and saying that nature should take its course.

The organisation, which runs the only ferry to the spit, also opposes Mr Gold’s request to temporarily relax its cap of 156 visitors a day. It said the spit, a Site of Special Scientific Interest, was a fragile landscape and visitors value its “remoteness and isolation”.

Mr Gold claims the trust, whose land surrounds the building, is determined to thwart his plans. “It’s almost as if they regard it as their personal fiefdom,” he complained. Mr Gold will apply to Suffolk Coastal district council next week for permission to “sandbag” the shore.

The trust said that in 2010 it had agreed a position with Trinity House, the body responsible for lighthouse maintenance, to allow “natural forces to dictate the future of the building”.
It added: “We feel that any attempts to defend the lighthouse would either be unsuccessful, or cause unacceptable damage to what is a fragile habitat.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1056606 ... house.html

This is, of course, the LH involved in the Rendlesham Forest incident, but I'd be sad to see it go, having sailed past it many times.

I suppose, in these cash-strapped times, a solution like that of Smeaton's tower is out of the question..?
(The tower stood for many years on the Eddystone Rock, but when the rock itself became undermined, the tower was taken down and re-erected on Plymouth Hoe, where it stands to this day.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smeaton's_Tower
 
Thats it: we're living in an Dystopian SF novel. Even I am on the farmers side.

The US Supreme Court upheld biotech giant Monsanto’s claims on genetically-engineered seed patents and the company’s ability to sue farmers whose fields are inadvertently contaminated with Monsanto materials.

Supreme Court hands Monsanto victory over farmers on GMO seed patents, ability to sue
http://rt.com/usa/monsanto-patents-sue-farmers-547/
Published time: January 13, 2014 21:51

Reuters / Darren Hauck

?The US Supreme Court upheld biotech giant Monsanto’s claims on genetically-engineered seed patents and the company’s ability to sue farmers whose fields are inadvertently contaminated with Monsanto materials.

The high court left intact Monday a federal appeals court decision that threw out a 2011 lawsuit from the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association and over 80 other plaintiffs against Monsanto that sought to challenge the agrochemical company’s aggressive claims on patents of genetically-modified seeds. The suit also aimed to curb Monsanto from suing anyone whose field is contaminated by such seeds.

The group of plaintiffs, which included many individual American and Canadian family farmers, independent seed companies and agricultural organizations, were seeking preemptive protections against Monsanto’s patents. The biotech leviathan has filed over 140 lawsuits against farmers for planting the company’s genetically-engineered seeds without permission, while settling around 700 other cases without suing.

None of the plaintiffs are customers of Monsanto and none have licensing agreements with the company. The group argued that they do not want Monsanto’s genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) and want legal protection in case of inadvertent contact with the company’s products.

The appeals court decision was based on Monsanto’s supposed promise not to sue farmers whose crops - including corn, soybeans, cotton, canola and others - contained traces of the company’s biotechnology products.

In a June 2013 ruling, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, DC said it was inevitable, as the farmers’ argued, that contamination from Monsanto’s products would occur. Yet the appeals panel also said the plaintiffs do not have standing to prohibit Monsanto from suing them should the company’s genetic traits end up on their holdings "because Monsanto has made binding assurances that it will not 'take legal action against growers whose crops might inadvertently contain traces of Monsanto biotech genes (because, for example, some transgenic seed or pollen blew onto the grower's land).'"

The panel’s reference to “traces” of Monsanto’s patented genes means farms that are affected by less than 1 percent.

The plaintiffs asked Monsanto to pledge not to sue, but the company rebuffed the request, saying, "A blanket covenant not to sue any present or future member of petitioners' organizations would enable virtually anyone to commit intentional infringement."

Monsanto’s GMO seeds are designed to withstand the company’s own ubiquitous herbicide, Roundup. Recently, questions have begun to arise from the bioengineered seed’s resistance to pestilence, which has caused some farmers to increase their use of traditional pesticides.

"Monsanto never has and has committed it never will sue if our patented seed or traits are found in a farmer's field as a result of inadvertent means," said Kyle McClain, the Monsanto's chief litigation counsel, according to Reuters.

"The lower courts agreed there was no controversy between the parties," McClain added, "and the Supreme Court's decision not to review the case brings closure on this matter."

Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association President Jim Gerritsen expressed disappointment that the Supreme Court reaffirmed the previous ruling, refusing to hear the case.

"The Supreme Court failed to grasp the extreme predicament family farmers find themselves in," said Gerritsen, an organic seed farmer in Maine. "The Court of Appeals agreed our case had merit. However ... safeguards they ordered are insufficient to protect our farms and our families."

In addition to Monday’s news and the appeals court decision against them, the plaintiffs - many of them non-GMO farmers and who make up over 25 percent of North America’s certified organic farmers - also lost a district court case.

“If Monsanto can patent seeds for financial gain, they should be forced to pay for contaminating a farmer’s field, not be allowed to sue them,” said Dave Murphy, founder and executive director of Food Democracy Now!, in a statement “Once again, America’s farmers have been denied justice, while Monsanto’s reign of intimidation is allowed to continue in rural America.”

“Monsanto has effectively gotten away with stealing the world’s seed heritage and abusing farmers for the flawed nature of their patented seed technology,” said Murphy. “This is an outrage of historic proportions and will not stand.”

The case is Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association, et al., v. Monsanto Company, et al. Supreme Court Case No. 13-303.
 
Back-to-nature flood schemes need 'government leadership'
By Roger Harrabin, Environment analyst

Water experts are calling on ministers to show greater leadership on flooding.
They say the government is failing to promote back-to-nature schemes which protect lowland homes by deliberately creating floods in the hills.

The Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management (CIWEM) say upland schemes to slow river flow cost a fraction of conventional flood walls – and should be spread round the UK.
Ministers back the principle but say the details need to be worked out.

The idea of creating floods upstream to prevent floods downstream was a key message from the Pitt Review into the 2007 floods.
A handful of pilot projects have pioneered cheap small-scale measures like felling trees into streams to slow down the flow, and building earth banks to catch run-off water and allow it to soak away. But progress has been slow, with funding a major problem.

Katherine Pygott, from CIWEM, told the BBC: “Flooding is getting worse with changing weather patterns, but these schemes are taking a very long time and a lot of energy.
“Projects working with nature to reduce flood risk are needed right across the country but it is complicated with many different organisations involved and it will need political leadership from the highest level to make it happen. So far we haven’t seen that leadership.”

The upland schemes are designed to reduce the regularity of flooding, not remove risk completely. Conventional flood defences will still be needed but CIWEM estimates that re-wilding rivers will save ten of millions by reducing the peak flow and lowering the specification for flood walls. The projects should also benefit wildlife.

Phil Welton, from the Environment Agency, says the UK should aspire to have "a pond in every field in the areas where flood prevention is needed.
"We have got to give incentives to farmers to persuade them to capture water on their land," he argues. "Farmers will lose a bit of land – but these areas are only wet for two to three days a year and quite often they are on bits of land that farmers don't use – boggy areas or buffer strips.”

Incentives for farmers are one key sticking point. In theory, funds from the Common Agricultural Policy can be used for catchment management but in practice Ms Pygott says that the standard of proof is much higher than for biodiversity projects which can also be supported under the CAP.
“With biodiversity schemes a farmer simply has to show that he has changed the land in a way that’s expected to benefit wildlife," she adds. "With flood schemes they have to prove what the benefits will be and that’s very hard.
"We obviously don’t want to be wasting government money on the wrong projects but with weather patterns changing it really makes sense to take a leap of faith on this and say it’s obvious these schemes are going to help if you get them in the right place.”

While farmers’ union NFU supports the idea in principle, it maintains it is not a "panacea" and will not alleviate flood risk in all parts of the country.
"It is most beneficial in steeper catchments where rainfall is quickly funnelled into rivers that can result in high peaks in flows," its flood adviser Ian Moodie warned. “The measures are less likely to be beneficial within lowland areas such as the Somerset Levels where we’ve seen a lot of flooding in recent years.”

Taking the pilot schemes into upland areas nationwide will not be easy. CIWEM say thousands of farms need to be visited and surveyed to see where micro-schemes can be placed to protect catchments – a tough demand when Defra and the Environment Agency are shedding staff.
Environment Secretary Owen Paterson told the BBC he was "passionate about keeping water in the uplands but details of how to do this need to be resolved".

CIWEM say the quickest results for back-to-nature drainage will come in areas where land is owned by a few people.
For instance, near Pickering in Yorkshire, flood zones are being created and moorland drains stuffed with heather with the co-operation of just three large landowners including the Forestry Commission.

It was the need for forestry and farm output which saw the UK’s uplands drained in the first place when the farm department MAFF urged landowners to maximize productivity to overcome the U-boats during the Second World War.
Nearly seven decades after the armistice there’s still no concerted nationwide attempt to keep the rain on the uplands where it falls.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-25752320
 
Somerset Levels: There’s nothing 'natural’ about this man-made flooding
Catastrophic Somerset floods are the result of the Environment Agency's policy against dredging its rivers
By Christopher Booker
4:31PM GMT 25 Jan 2014

As I stood on the Somerset Levels on Thursday, watching one of the most spectacular sights known to nature – the aerobatic display of half a million starlings preparing to roost in the reeds – there was no clue that a few miles to the west a disaster was taking place: the flooding of 26 square miles of the Levels with water up to 6ft deep, marooning whole villages and likely to block the main A361 road across the county for weeks to come.

What is truly shocking about this “major incident”, as it has now been officially declared – costing, it is estimated, well over £50 million to clear up – is that it is not just largely man-made but it results from a deliberate decision by a Government agency out of control.

Talk to the locals, and to the experts of the Royal Bath & West agricultural society, representing hundreds of farmers – the Levels comprise a fifth of all Somerset’s farmland – and they are in no doubt as to why these floods are the most devastating in memory: it is because, since it took over prime responsibility in 1995 for keeping this vast area drained, the Environment Agency has deliberately abandoned the long-standing policy of dredging its rivers.

Thanks to the agency, the four main rivers have become so clogged with silt that there is no way for floodwaters to escape. The farmers and the local drainage boards that used to keep the pumping stations in working order are only too keen to play their part in clearing the maze of drainage ditches. But the agency’s officials have decreed that, as soon as silt is lifted on to the banks, it cannot be spread on nearby fields without being classified as “controlled waste”, making it so difficult to move that much of it just slides back into the water.

Last Wednesday in Westminster Hall, the four MPs for the area, one Tory and three Lib Dems, were at one in blaming this disaster squarely on the Environment Agency, calling one after another for the resumption of dredging. Leading the debate, Bridgwater’s Tory MP Ian Liddell-Grainger pointed out that, while the agency says it doesn’t have the £3 million needed to dredge the rivers, it is happy to see £31 million spent on dismantling flood defences on the nearby coast to provide a wildlife habitat. :shock:

The Levels farmers pay hefty rates to their drainage boards, only to see £560,000 a year of it going to the Environment Agency – to be spent, as they see it, on little more than providing its officials with shiny new 4x4s to drive around in announcing “flood alerts”, and to provide warnings on local television of yet more inundations that they did nothing to avert. :evil:

What the tens of thousands of people who live and work on the Levels want to see is our Environment Secretary, Owen Paterson, taking a grip on this disaster, by forcing the Environment Agency to spend a fraction of its £1.2 billion a year income on a job it was set up to do. Mr Paterson cannot afford any repetition of the highly embarrassing recent episode, when one of his junior ministers was ferried to the marooned village of Muchelney, only to convince the residents that he hadn’t the faintest idea what he was talking about. :twisted:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/enviro ... oding.html
 
ramonmercado said:
Farmers whining again.
Not only the farmers.

People who live there have either been flooded out, or found themselves living on a little island that's difficult to get to or from for the most minor excursion. There are no main drains on the Levels, so all the houses use Septic tanks, many of which have flooded and can't now be used. And anyone who's escaped most of that will probably find that their car, parked just down the road, is under water!

Not for nothing has this been declared a 'major incident', with the military on standby.

Somerset floods: 'Major incident' declared
...
A major incident is declared where there is a situation which could not be dealt with easily by the local council and could threaten lives, disrupt the community or damage property.
...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-somerset-25876309
 
It was raining heavily here until an hour ago:

UK weather: Further flood warnings as heavy rain falls

Heavy rain has swept across western parts of the UK, bringing a further risk of flooding to some areas left struggling after recent storms.
The rain has now moved to eastern parts of the country, which will see heavy rain for the next three hours.

Forecasters also issued an amber warning of rain for the Somerset Levels, warning of further flooding.
Environment Secretary Owen Paterson is due to visit later to speak to those affected and the agencies helping them
.

The heaviest rain has fallen in Wales, where some 22mm (0.9in) has fallen in the past 12 hours.
BBC forecasters said persistent rain had now cleared but there were bands of showery rain following behind the main rain area.

...

Meanwhile, the Environment Agency has 12 flood warnings for southern England - the majority in western parts - indicating flooding is expected and immediate action is required.

Forecasters said between 10 and 20mm (0.5-1in) of rain was expected to fall on the Somerset Levels on Sunday.
It comes after a "major incident" was declared there on Friday, with the council asking the armed forces to consider helping villagers who had been cut off. A water-pumping operation is also continuing
.

etc...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-25898521
 
That Fracking Dave is at it again.
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/jan/27/david-cameron-green-regulations

David Cameron pledges to rip up green regulations

Prime minister says plans to scrap or amend more than 3,000 regulations will save businesses £850m a year

The Guardian, Rowena Mason, political correspondent. 27 January 2014


David Cameron will on Monday boast of tearing up 80,000 pages of environmental protections and building guidelines as part of a new push to build more houses and cut costs for businesses.

In a speech to small firms, the prime minister will claim that he is leading the first government in decades to have slashed more needless regulation than it introduced.

Among the regulations to be watered down will be protections for hedgerows and rules about how businesses dispose of waste, despite Cameron's claims to lead the greenest government ever.

Addressing the Federation of Small Businesses conference, Cameron will argue that the new rules will make it "vastly cheaper" for businesses to comply with their environmental obligations.

The government also plans to scrap many building standards relating to things such as the size of windows and demands for renewable energy sources, saving builders about £500 for each new home.

"We have trawled through thousands of pieces of regulation, from the serious to the ridiculous, and we will be scrapping or amending over 3,000 regulations – saving business well over £850m every single year. That's half a million pounds which will be saved for businesses every single day of the year," Cameron will claim.

No 10 sources insisted that the new rules would not necessarily mean the environment suffers, as they claim many of the regulations are obsolete.

However, the move comes after the coalition was criticised for overhauling planning guidance to make way for new homes, relaxing restrictions on how developers can build on green spaces.

Amid a severe housing shortage, particularly in the south-east, the coalition is desperate for builders to start work on new homes.

Cameron's pitch to small businesses appears to be the first stage of a fightback against Labour's attempts to depict itself as the champion of small businesses.

Last month, Ed Miliband, the Labour leader, pledged to give small firms more help with escalating business rates and soaring energy costs. Speaking at the same conference as Cameron, Chuka Umunna, the shadow business secretary, will promise to create a new small business agency – modelled on the small business administration under US president Barack Obama – if Labour wins the next election.

This body would "remove blockages to business growth, ensuring the voices of small businesses and entrepreneurs are better heard in policymaking".

Umunna will say: "So Britain can grow its way out of the cost of living crisis and build a balanced recovery built to last, we need to do all we can to help our small businesses grow, create new jobs and meet their aspirations.

"We need government to be a better servant – and customer – of our small businesses and to make sure that entrepreneurs' voices are heard at the top table. A UK Small Business Administration is necessary to realising this ambition."

Karen Mills, former head of the US small business administration and a former member of Obama's cabinet, will also address the conference and urge politicians to give small businesses "a seat at the table".
His bosses will be pleased.
 
Floods: Environment Agency in dredging row
[ Video: Ten tonnes of flood water per second is being pumped in Somerset, as John Maguire reports]

The Environment Agency has been criticised as flood warnings for south-west England remain in force.
Farmers and MPs in the Somerset Levels accused the agency of exacerbating the situation by not dredging the rivers.
But the agency has said increased dredging would not have prevented recent flooding.

Environment Secretary Owen Paterson has said he wants an action plan drawn up for the area, where a "major incident" has been declared.
The Environment Agency currently has 14 flood warnings in place, 10 of which are in south-west England, where more rain is forecast over the coming days.

An environment agency spokesman said: "We're doing everything we can to pump water off the Somerset Levels as quickly as river and tide levels allow.
"We have brought in extra manpower and pumping equipment from around the country and have 65 pumps working around the clock. This is the single largest pumping operation ever undertaken in Somerset."
But he added: "Dredging is often not the best long term or economic solution and increased dredging of rivers on the Somerset Levels would not have prevented the recent widespread flooding."

Mr Paterson, speaking on a visit to the area, said he wanted to see a "concrete plan" to provide a long-term solution submitted to him within the next six weeks.
He added the plan would "almost certainly" involve clearing the Parrett and Tone rivers, acknowledging that national guidelines on dredging did not apply in the area as so much of it is below sea level.

Mr Paterson said: "I've come down here to see what can be done. It appears from what everyone's telling me that we do need to dredge these two rivers but also we need to do more to hold water back, way back in the hills."

BBC broadcast meteorologist Sarah Keith-Lucas said: "We're expecting some more pretty heavy rain over the next 24 to 48 hours.
"The heaviest of the rain is going to be concentrated across parts of southern England, where we really don't need it, and eastern Scotland.
"Showers in southern England are of the most concern and we could see up to 25mm (1in) fall in 24 hours which in itself isn't a huge amount, but it is falling on saturated ground and is going to have a further impact."
She said the places set to be affected include the Somerset Levels and parts of Hampshire and Dorset.

Flood warnings in England are in place for parts of the Midlands, North East, South East and South West. There were also 138 flood alerts - indicating flooding is possible - in places across England and Wales.

On Sunday, farmers in Somerset held a demonstration against the Environment Agency accusing them of failing to dredge the rivers, which they say has exacerbated the flooding.

Ian Liddell-Grainger, Tory MP for Bridgwater and West Somerset, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme about the River Parrett: "Once it's dredged we can then maintain it but the Environment Agency has to stop this mucking around and get on with it."
He dismissed as "pathetic" the Environment Agency's claims that the rain would have overwhelmed the river system even if it had dredged the waterways.
"It is an absolutely ridiculous excuse," he said. "This never flooded to this level ever in living memory, and we've got people who have been here for a long time. If you look back into the mists of time you don't have this."

Prime Minister David Cameron said he thought the Environment Agency had done "excellent work" helping communities deal with flooding.
He added: "The Environment Agency has to listen to these concerns, and you do get some quite widespread concerns that the base of rivers have risen over the years, I think they have to address those and give some clear answer."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-25908098
 
Apology over sewage and dead rats on Hayling beach

Sewage and dead rats have washed up on a beach in Hampshire, prompting an apology from Southern Water.
The waste was discharged from an outfall pipe at Eastney in Portsmouth, after heavy rain and ground water inundated the sewage system.
Clean-up teams have now removed most of the sewage waste from Hayling Island.

Southern Water said £30m was being spent on fixing the problem, but work on the systems will not be finished until the end of the year.
It said waste was released after storm-water screens at Fort Cumberland, which receives wastewater from Eastney Pumping Station, were blocked and failed during the recent severe weather.

Louise MacCallum, environment officer at Langstone Harbour Board, said: "We've seen a variety of things - cotton bud sticks, female sanitary products and also hypodermic syringes.
"Lots of very unsightly waste."

Councillor Andy Lenaghan, of Havant Borough Council, said: "We've got a Blue Flag beach with lots of windsurfers and of course they have a text system for notifying all the other windsurfers.
"The last thing we want is for them to stay away."

Geoff Loader, director of Southern Water, said: "We have screens at Fort Cumberland that remove this debris from the wastewater - but they were initially damaged in a storm a couple of years ago.
"A complete rebuilding process at that plant was overtaken by the weather before it could be completed."

In a statement, the company added: "We regret and apologise for the current situation and are committed to making major improvements to the site.
"We are currently working on a £10m scheme to change the way storm-water enters the site, which will ease the pressure on the screens, making them more robust.
"We are also part-way through a £20m scheme to radically change the Victorian sewer system in Portsmouth.
"The scheme will divert rainwater from Portsmouth's sewers to ease the pressure on the system during storms."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-25921140
 
rynner2 said:
Floods: Environment Agency in dredging row
[ Video: Ten tonnes of flood water per second is being pumped in Somerset, as John Maguire reports]

The Environment Agency has been criticised as flood warnings for south-west England remain in force.
Farmers and MPs in the Somerset Levels accused the agency of exacerbating the situation by not dredging the rivers.
But the agency has said increased dredging would not have prevented recent flooding.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-25908098
29 January 2014 Last updated at 14:57
Flood-hit rivers in Somerset to be dredged

Rivers in Somerset are to be dredged as soon as the current high water levels drop, the government has said.
David Cameron made the announcement during Prime Minister's Questions, in response to a plea from Jeremy Browne, the Liberal Democrat MP for Taunton.
The Prime Minister said high-volume pumps would be brought in to help tackle the problem.

Somerset County Council leader John Osman said he was "delighted" with the announcement.
A meeting of the Government's Cobra emergency committee will also take place later, to discuss the crisis.
The Somerset Levels have been badly hit by flooding in recent weeks with villages such as Muchelney cut off for almost a month.

Mr Cameron said the current situation was "not acceptable".
"It's not currently safe to dredge in the Levels but I can confirm that dredging will start as soon as it is practical, as soon as the waters have started to come down," he said.
"The Environment Agency are pumping as much water as is possible given the capacity of the rivers around the Levels."

Mr Cameron said he had also ordered new high-volume pumps from the "national reserve" to be sent to the area "to increase the volume of the pumping operation as soon as there's capacity in the rivers to support that".
"We are urgently exploring what further help the government can give to local residents to move around and will rule nothing out in the days ahead to get this problem sorted," he added.

Mr Browne said the flooding was causing "acute distress" for residents, and asked for a "long term plan so this doesn't happen in the future".
Currently about 11,500 hectares (28,420 acres) of the Somerset Levels are inundated by about 65 million cubic metres of water.

Somerset's council leader said the prime minister's announcement was "just what we wanted to hear".
"We have lobbied hard to get national attention, we are in a major incident due to the extent and length of time that much of the county is flooded," said Mr Osman.
"Now we have the PM behind us, people can start to believe that real action, dredging the rivers, sorting the drainage systems, protecting our communities will really happen."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-somerset-25940947
 
Farmers urged by WWF to do more to prevent flooding
Roger Harrabin
By Roger Harrabin
Environment analyst
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25931847

David Nussbaum (left) and John Austen on the young River Nar

Environmentalist David Nussbaum (left) and farmer John Austen support "lazy river" schemes

Farmers getting public grants should be forced to capture water on their land to prevent floods downstream, environmentalists have said.

Green group WWF said farmers should get subsidies only if they agreed to create small floods on their own land to avoid wider flooding in towns and villages.

The average family pays £400 a year in grants to farmers.

Farmers' leaders rejected the idea but said they would support incentives to farmers to prevent flooding.

WWF is already working with eight farmers on the young River Nar in Norfolk in an experimental project to restore upstream rivers to their original state.

Rivers have been squeezed into straight, fast-flowing channels over hundreds of years to hurry rainwater off fields.

But that has contributed to flooding of prime agricultural land downstream. Fast-flowing rivers also carry silt which causes rivers to clog up.

Meandering pattern
Using old maps, the experimental Norfolk scheme redirects rivers into their original meandering pattern.

Trees have been felled into the stream and when rain falls heavily the river floods and water soaks into the soil.

WWF said the speed of water flowing through the River Nar had fallen noticeably.

"Lazy rivers" do not have the energy to carry much silt, either, and this should reduce the need for dredging downstream.

Special ponds have also been created to catch much of the fertile silt running off fields and keep it for local farmers to spread on their land.

This is the sort of scheme the Environment Agency has in mind when it says dredging the rivers in the Somerset Levels may not be the best solution.

Map showing natural flood prevention measures around Belford in Northumberland
WWF is supporting catchment management schemes in several countries including Colombia, Tanzania and China.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

There should be an obligation on farmers who benefit from payments to farm in a way that's sensitive to river catchments”

David Nussbaum
WWF UK chief executive
The group's UK chief executive, David Nussbaum, told BBC News: "We pay farmers a lot of money in grants through the Common Agricultural Policy [nearly £50bn a year]. What do we get in return?

"There should be an obligation on farmers who benefit from payments to farm in a way that's sensitive to river catchments and which contributes to managing water in a way that reduces flooding and silting downstream."

He said "rewilding" rivers this way would be much cheaper than installing high concrete walls downstream.

"You can achieve your aims on flooding by spending money better - not just spending more."

WWF claimed that the 800 acres under the Norfolk scheme held back 157 million litres of water in 2013.

'Icing on the cake'
John Austen, a Norfolk farmer and chairman of a drainage board, said he supported the lazy river scheme.

"Here we have a flood plain protecting the village of Litcham. It's full of wildlife… absolutely fantastic. Drainage is not about diggers and silt - what we have to think about is the whole river starting with the catchment right the way down to the sea."

But Mr Austen opposed the idea that grants should be made conditional on capturing water.

"It shouldn't be compulsory but to really incentivise the farmer to do these projects he will want a little bit of icing on the cake - I suggest £200 a hectare to allow your grass to be flooded."

In theory farmers can already get extra EU grants to hold water on their land, and some of the participants in the Nar trial are receiving extra subsidies for wildlife - but experts say subsidies for water storage are much harder to obtain than grants for benefiting wildlife.

A study for the Environment Agency suggested that works such as these needed to be carried out across substantial portions of a river catchment to be really effective and WWF says that implies that greater pressure needs to be imposed on farmers to take part.

Environment Secretary Owen Paterson planned to reshuffle farm grants so more money could be made available for such schemes but was overruled by the prime minister after the National Farmers' Union (NFU) said it might put rural votes at risk.

'Balanced approach'
An NFU spokesman said: "Although we agree that 'slowing the flow' should have an important role to play in reducing flood risk from hilly upland catchments, techniques such as tree planting need to be located carefully.

"They are not a panacea, and should not be expected to significantly reduce flooding everywhere and on their own.

"For this reason we would not support a requirement for all farmers to have to capture water on their land in order to access grants from the EU.

"Our approach to river flooding must be balanced, looking at river systems as a whole; attenuating flows upstream where needed and maintaining capacity downstream, including de-silting and vegetation management.

"The NFU would welcome guidance and environmental stewardship options that facilitated farmers to use natural processes to help control flows in, over and around farms and where appropriate store water."

The back-to-nature river scheme in Norfolk has been subsidised by Coca-Cola which has a global partnership with WWF on fresh water issues.

The company's local plant relies on sugar beet grown near the River Ouse which runs above field level and is prone to flooding. The Ouse is fed by the River Nar.

The Nar scheme has a cultural element too - Charles Rangeley Wilson, an author and conservationist, is researching old maps to find the original course of rivers so the meanders can be restored.

"You have to work with topography, not against it," he said.

Follow Roger on Twitter@rharrabin.
 
Monsanto blamed for disappearance of monarch butterflies
Published time: January 31, 2014 18:12
http://rt.com/usa/monsanto-roundup-mona ... flies-483/

AFP Photo / Gabriel Bouys

As scientists continue to track the shrinking population of the North American monarch butterfly, one researcher thinks she has found a big reason it’s in danger: Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide.

On Wednesday, the World Wildlife Fund announced that last year’s migration – from Canada and the United States down to Mexico – was the lowest it’s been since scientists began tracking it in 1993. In November, the butterflies could be found on a mere 1.6 acres of forest near Mexico’s Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, a decline of more than 43 percent over the previous year.

Back in 1996, the insects could be found covering a span of 45 acres. Part of the decline can be attributed to illegal logging in Mexico that has decimated the butterfly’s natural habitat, as well as rising temperatures, which threaten to dry out monarch eggs and prevent them from hatching.

Now, though, biologist Karen Oberhauser of the University of Minnesota has also pinpointed the increased use of Monsanto’s Roundup herbicides in the United States and Canada as a culprit.

According to Oberhauser, the use of Roundup has destroyed the monarch butterfly’s primary food source, a weed called milkweed that used to be commonly found across North America. As the agriculture industry boomed and farmers effectively eliminated the weed from the land in order to maximize crop growth, she was able to catalog a parallel decline in the butterfly’s population.

Speaking with Slate, Oberhauser said that when the milkweed population across the Midwest shrank by 80 percent, the monarch butterfly population decreased by the same amount. With some states such as Iowa losing more than 98 percent of their milkweed population – the weed doesn’t even grow on the edges of farmland anymore – the disappearance of the plant poses a huge risk to the insect’s survival.

“We have this smoking gun,” she told Slate. “This is the only thing that we’ve actually been able to correlate with decreasing monarch numbers.”

For its part, Monsanto noted that herbicides aren't the only reason the monarch is dying. The company cited studies that showed the butterfly’s population in Michigan and New Jersey were not shrinking, though scientists have dismissed those studies since they focused on areas where milkweed was still prevalent.

Monsanto has come under fire before for the effects of its agriculture-oriented chemicals. As RT reported last year, studies linked Roundup’s main ingredient to diseases such as cancer, autism and Alzheimer’s. In spite of these findings, the Environmental Protection Agency ruled to raise the permissible level of the ingredient that can be found on crops.

Meanwhile, another report in October found a clear link between the pesticides sold by Monsanto in Argentina and a range of maladies, including higher risk of cancer and thyroid problems, as well as birth defects.

As for the plight of the monarch butterfly, the insect is still thriving in Hawaii and countries like Australia and New Zealand. In North America, Oberhauser believes the great migration can still rebound due to the monarch’s high fertility rates (a single female can lay up to 1,000 eggs throughout her life). For that to happen, however, scientists believe the US, Canada and Mexico will have to work together and draft a strategy that will help the insect safely make its way through the three countries.

“I think it’s past time for Canada and the United States to enact measures to protect the breeding range of the monarchs,” monarch expert Phil Schappert of Nova Scotia told the Washington Post, “or I fear the spiral of decline will continue.”
 
Cornwall flood warning homes permissions rise

Planning applications given the go-ahead despite warnings on flooding have risen in Cornwall, it has emerged.
Sixty-one consents were given against the advice of the Environment Agency last year, compared with 28 between 2008 to 2012.
Cornwall Council said flooding was a planning consideration.

An agency spokesman said it was government planning policy that developments at risk of flooding should be avoided.
Where development was "necessary" it should be made safe without increasing flood risk elsewhere.
"We advise on flood risk and as a final resort may object where high risk is not mitigated.

"Our advice to local planning authorities helps to ensure that developments are safe and resilient over the lifetime of their development, taking climate change in account.
"We only comment on planning policies or applications - we do not decide them."

A Cornwall Council spokeswoman said: "Flooding is a planning consideration and we consult the Environment Agency in accordance with the national guidance to seek their advice.
"On occasions when consent is given against EA advice, the schemes are designed to take into account the risk and to mitigate flooding."

The Department for Communities and Local Government said that last year more than 99% of England and Wales homes were decided in line with agency flood risk advice.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-26189847
 
Not just Cornwall:

Flood-hit areas earmarked for more homes
Councils have issued plans to build hundreds of new homes in some of the areas worst affected by the country's flooding crisis
By Andrew Gilligan, and James Quinn
9:14PM GMT 15 Feb 2014

Councils in some of the areas worst affected by Britain’s flooding crisis have published plans to build hundreds of homes on land that is currently under water. :shock:

Dozens of potential sites have been earmarked for development in areas hit by the floods, such as the village of Wraysbury in Berkshire and Chertsey in Surrey.
Potential housing development is also scheduled for Walton-on-Thames and Molesey — two riverside sites in Surrey that are subject to “severe” flood warnings involving danger to life.

On the Somerset Levels, Taunton Deane borough council has designated land in the village of North Curry for new homes, even though one of the proposed sites, next to Curry Moor, is used as an overspill area for flood water and has been underwater for weeks.

Writing for the Telegraph, Mark Wilson, the chief executive of Aviva, Britain’s largest insurer, calls for a halt to building on “defenceless” floodplains.
In the past decade alone, tens of thousands of homes have been built in areas of significant flood risk, with the British insurance industry paying out more than £5 billion to homes and businesses since 2000.
Mr Wilson says: “As a nation we need to build more homes, but the cost of development must include the cost of defences. Let’s be crystal clear: no defences, no development.

Large swathes of southern England have been underwater for weeks following the wettest January for almost 250 years and continued storms and wet weather at the start of this month.

...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/weath ... homes.html
 
One of the Climate Change issues most likely to wake me up in a cold sweat in the wee wee hours.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...r-installation-of-flood-defences-9146887.html

Risk of nuclear leak sparks call for installation of flood defences

Long-term plan needed to protect radioactive waste at Cumbria site, says Environment Agency

Independent. Mark Leftly. 23 February 2014


Managers of a nuclear waste dump on the Cumbria coast have been ordered to start preparations to defend the site against floods and erosion, amid fears that radioactive material could one day leak into the sea.

Much of the waste buried in vaults and concrete trenches at the Low Level Waste Repository (LLWR) near the village of Drigg originates from one of the world's most contaminated nuclear sites, Sellafield, a few miles away. The waste dump is expected ultimately to require protective flood barriers.

Experts at the Environment Agency fear that future generations could suffer from waste with a long radioactive half-life leaking into the Irish Sea as the pace of climate change quickens and its effects become less predictable. The agency has been heavily criticised for its tardy response to the recent floods,

Campaigners seized on the warnings yesterday as proof that toxic waste should not be buried by Britain's coastline, particularly after the devastation caused this winter by seas pounding the coastline and by flooding rivers inland.

Local politicians say they have been shocked at the degree of concern expressed by agency officials about the possibility of flooding and coastal erosion at Drigg during a consultation about altering the terms of the site's environmental permit.

The agency has asked the private sector consortium led by the US engineering firm URS, which is contracted to manage the LLWR to 2018, to look into the long-term need for additional flood defences and the feasibility of building these.

It is understood that engineers from a leading UK consultant, Halcrow, have privately warned the agency that these issues must be addressed soon to prevent units holding radioactive scrap metal, plastics and protective clothing from eventually being compromised.

The facility, which also stores low-level radioactive waste from Ministry of Defence sites, hospitals and the oil industry, has been in operation since 1959.

Although the site is considered safe for the next 100 years, there is already a risk of flooding to the southern area of the site. The Environment Agency wants, as a precaution, to make sure that no action is taken at the LLWR that would prevent the future installation of flood defences. A source close to the agency said that the operators of the LLWR had been asked "to consider long-term coastal erosion at the site".

In a 19-page briefing pack given to delegates at a workshop during the consultation, which ended last week, the agency admitted that a recent study showed that "in the future there may be increased risk of flooding to some areas of the site". Ultimately, it predicted "erosion and inundation" of the Drigg dump, although the situation was unlikely to be severe for hundreds of years.

The briefing also conceded that coastal erosion was a "key issue" for the LLWR. Any permit variations allowing the site to dispose of waste currently considered safe would also have to be "demonstrated to be acceptable" against the agency's existing guidance on the erosion threat.

A workshop delegate said this weekend that the twin problems "seemed to be way up the Environment Agency's agenda" during presentations, with coastal erosion a particular concern as it is "not an exact science".

Keith Hitchen, a Conservative councillor for the borough of Copeland in Cumbria who attended the workshop, said: "My concern for this project [the LLWR] is that it goes so far into the future that there is no certainty of any predictions. How accurate are the predictions? You just have to see what's been happening around the country this winter: in securing the integrity of the site I'm not sure that there is much you can do about controlling coastal erosion."

Dr David Lowry, a member of Nuclear Waste Advisory Associates and the Department of Energy's Geological Disposal Implementation Board for Radioactive Waste, said: "One of the certainties of climate change is that the sea level will rise – therefore, developing a huge nuclear waste storage site on the coastline is a problem for future generations."

A spokesman for the Office of Nuclear Regulation, which jointly regulates the nuclear industry with the Environment Agency, said: "Site operators have arrangements in place to ensure that their sites remain in a safe condition in the event of severe weather, and to take whatever action is necessary to secure the safety of personnel on their sites."
That's not even mentioning sea-level rise.
 
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