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Tuesday, 13 August 2013

Appeals court: Nuclear Regulatory Commission has been violating federal law by delaying a decision on a proposed nuclear waste dump in Nevada - Yahoo! News

Posted on 17:13 by Unknown

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a rebuke to the Obama administration, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has been violating federal law by delaying a decision on a proposed nuclear waste dump in Nevada.

By a 2-1 vote, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia ordered the commission to complete the licensing process and approve or reject the Energy Department's application for a never-completed waste storage site at Nevada's Yucca Mountain.

In a sharply worded opinion, the court said the nuclear agency was "simply flouting the law" when it allowed the Obama administration to continue plans to close the proposed waste site 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas. The action goes against a federal law designating Yucca Mountain as the nation's nuclear waste repository.

"The president may not decline to follow a statutory mandate or prohibition simply because of policy objections," Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh wrote in a majority opinion, which was joined Judge A. Raymond Randolph. Chief Judge Merrick B. Garland dissented.

The appeals court said the case has important implications for the separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches of government.

"It is no overstatement to say that our constitutional system of separation of powers would be significantly altered if we were to allow executive and independent agencies to disregard federal law in the manner asserted in this case by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission," Kavanaugh wrote. "The commission is simply defying a law enacted by Congress ... without any legal basis."

A spokesman for the NRC said Tuesday the agency was reviewing the decision. He declined further comment.

Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said the Energy Department was not a party to the lawsuit, but he characterized the Yucca Mountain project as "a complete stalemate." He said he saw no evidence of that changing.

"Currently we do not have funding," he told reporters at a clean energy conference Tuesday in Las Vegas.

The court's decision was hailed by supporters of the Yucca site, which has been the focus of a dispute that stretches back more than three decades. The government has spent an estimated $15 billion on the site but has never completed it. No waste is stored there.

"This decision reaffirms a fundamental truth: The president is not above the law," said South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson. The Obama administration "cannot pick and choose which laws to follow and which to ignore," Wilson said.

Please read full and follow at:
http://news.yahoo.com/appeals-court-obama-violating-law-nuke-153924603.html
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This is bad...China about to become world’s largest oil importer | via @SmartPlanet

Posted on 03:54 by Unknown

SmartPlanet: China is calling for the oil can. So much so that the Asian economic giant will surpass the U.S. as the world's largest oil importer in October, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

"The imminent emergence of China as the world's largest net oil importer has been driven by steady growth in Chinese demand, increased oil production in the United States, and a flat level of demand for oil in the U.S. market," EIA said in a press release.

With China yearning for so much foreign oil, it makes you wonder how geopolitics will change, and which flags might fly from the ships patrolling places like Middle East sea lanes.

graph of net oil imports for China and the U.S., as explained in the article text

Photo from theiranproject.com. Chart from U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Read on from China about to become world's largest oil importer |
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Monday, 12 August 2013

World changing technology enables crops to take nitrogen from the air

Posted on 15:24 by Unknown

A major new technology has been developed by The University of Nottingham, which enables all of the world's crops to take nitrogen from the air rather than expensive and environmentally damaging fertilisers.

Nitrogen fixation, the process by which nitrogen is converted to ammonia, is vital for plants to survive and grow. However, only a very small number of plants, most notably legumes (such as peas, beans and lentils) have the ability to fix nitrogen from the atmosphere with the help of nitrogen fixing bacteria. The vast majority of plants have to obtain nitrogen from the soil, and for most crops currently being grown across the world, this also means a reliance on synthetic nitrogen fertiliser.
Read on from World changing technology enables crops to take nitrogen from the air - The University of Nottingham 
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Study: US debt six times greater than declared - $211 trillion

Posted on 03:45 by Unknown
...The real shocker in the report, however, came with the cost of Medicare and Social Security, which ran at $27.6 trillion and $26.5 trillion respectively.   

Hamilton could not conceal his surprise at the findings.

"These numbers are so huge it is hard even to discuss them in a coherent way," he said before providing a caveat on the US demographic situation. "The US population is aging, and an aging population means fewer people paying in and more people expecting benefits. This reality is unambiguously going to be a key constraint on the sustainability of fiscal policy for the United States.

"One would think we should be saving as a nation today as preparation for retirement, and if in fact we are not, the current enormous on-balance-sheet federal debt is all the more of a concern."

It is not just the sick and elderly, however, who are adding to the US debt burden. Government loans for students also featured high in the report.

The US Department of Education approved $714 billion at the end of 2012, which is a significant jump from the $104 billion issued at the end of 2007.  But with the US economy failing to generate new jobs, many of these now college graduates lack the financial means to return their debt.

Although the report paints an extremely worrisome picture of America's fiscal situation, some say it may actually be overly optimistic.

The US debt burden is much greater says Boston University economics professor Laurence J. Kotlikoff, who served on President Ronald Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers.

"If you add up all the promises that have been made for spending obligations, including defense expenditures, and you subtract all the taxes that we expect to collect, the difference is $211 trillion. That's the fiscal gap," Kotlikoff said in an interview with National Public Radio. "That's our true indebtedness." Please continue reading at:
http://rt.com/usa/us-debt-study-hamilton-economy-103/
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Eating raw garlic just twice a week can almost halve the risk of lung cancer, new research shows.

Posted on 03:41 by Unknown

A study carried out in China found adults regularly consuming raw garlic as part of their diet were 44 per cent less likely to suffer the disease.

Even when researchers allowed for whether people smoked – the biggest single cause of lung cancer – they found garlic still seemed to reduce the dangers by around 30 per cent.

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The Battle for Water - #water = #life

Posted on 03:37 by Unknown

Brahma Chellaney: The sharpening international geopolitical competition over natural resources has turned some strategic resources into engines of power struggle. Transnational water resources have become an especially active source of competition and conflict, triggering a dam-building race and prompting growing calls for the United Nations to recognize water as a key security concern.

Water is different from other natural resources. After all, there are substitutes for many resources, including oil, but none for water. Similarly, countries can import fossil fuels, mineral ores, and resources from the biosphere like fish and timber; but they cannot import water, which is essentially local, on a large scale and on a prolonged – much less permanent – basis. Water is heavier than oil, making it very expensive to ship or transport across long distances even by pipeline (which would require large, energy-intensive pumps).

The paradox of water is that it sustains life but can also cause death when it becomes a carrier of deadly microbes or takes the form of a tsunami, flash flood, storm, or hurricane. Many of the greatest natural disasters of our time – including, for example, the Fukushima catastrophe in 2011 – have been water-related.

...Rapid economic and demographic expansion has already turned adequate access to potable water into a major issue across large parts of the world. Lifestyle changes, for example, have spurred increasing per capita water consumption, with rising incomes promoting dietary change, for example, especially higher consumption of meat, production of which is ten times more water-intensive, on average, than plant-based calories and proteins.

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 The Battle for Water by Brahma Chellaney - Project Syndicate | shared via feedly mobile


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Splenda goes from 'safe' to 'caution' after leukemia found in mice #Health

Posted on 03:33 by Unknown

Source: MSN

The Center for Science in the Public Interest is urging caution in the use of the artificial sweetener Splenda.

A food safety advocacy group has downgraded its rating for sucralose, the artificial sweetener better known as Splenda, from "safe" to "caution" in its chemical guide to food additives.

The Washington-based Center for Science in the Public Interest announced Wednesday that it had long rated sucralose as "safe" but is now categorizing it with a "caution," pending peer review of an unpublished study by an independent Italian lab that found the sweetener caused leukemia in mice.

Previously, the only long-term animal-feeding studies were done by sucralose's manufacturers, the CSPI said.

Other artificial sweeteners such as saccharin, aspartame and acesulfame potassium have received the center's lowest rating, "avoid."

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Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (499)
    • ▼  August (45)
      • Appeals court: Nuclear Regulatory Commission has b...
      • This is bad...China about to become world’s larges...
      • World changing technology enables crops to take ni...
      • Study: US debt six times greater than declared - $...
      • Eating raw garlic just twice a week can almost hal...
      • The Battle for Water - #water = #life
      • Splenda goes from 'safe' to 'caution' after leukem...
      • Dogs Trained To Sniff Out Ovarian Cancer
      • Hybrd wind-current turbine world's first capable o...
      • Six Japanese nuclear reactors likely to resume ope...
      • Taking pills for unhappiness reinforces the idea t...
      • China faces its worst economic crisis: water - use...
      • A Material That Could Make Solar Power “Dirt Cheap...
      • Sweden does not have enough garbage and imports it...
      • Healthier for people, more environmentally friendl...
      • China's Pollution Fighting Budget Will Have to Be ...
      • How unsustainable our techno future is...25 times ...
      • Bill Gates Promotes Vaccine Projects, Swipes At Go...
      • 60% of Federal Student Loan Borrowers, or 17 milli...
      • Why we can kiss the US economy goodbye
      • U.S. has most people in prison of any country desp...
      • Where the jobs went... about 20% of the labor forc...
      • Nuclear Plant Safety Enhancements - Fukushima less...
      • Senator Barbara Boxer's Own Experts Contradict Oba...
      • $60 trillion reasons to Worry About an Arctic Meth...
      • Metabolix engineers plants to make cheaper, cleane...
      • Researchers preserve cancer-fighting properties in...
      • Toxin Found in Most U.S. Rice Causes Genetic Damag...
      • Global Water Shortages Grow Worse but Nations Have...
      • Renewable energy? Burning US forests in UK power s...
      • Still Have Doubts Combustible Dust is Primarily a ...
      • Molten Salt Reactor review with benefits like very...
      • Greentec Awards could not handle the truth that Mo...
      • It's a $6 trillion dollar market.... The User's Gu...
      • In response to explosion at fertilizer plant, pres...
      • Duke Energy Scraps Plans For Florida Nuclear #Ener...
      • Lab-Grown Beef Burger To Debut On Monday to produc...
      • Sweden: Peak Garbage “There’s a European waste ma...
      • Where the economy really is ....off the charts
      • Procedures for EPA study of the potential impacts ...
      • US Student Loans are more than China’s Total Exter...
      • Nitrogen fixing bacteria will enable all plants to...
      • Chemical company breaks new ground, creates fuel f...
      • Unsustainable: 110 million in the U.S. on entitlem...
      • National Energy Tax Repeal Act (S. 1324) - To help...
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