Archive for category the environment

Next Stop: Ultracapacitor Buses

Municipal transit agencies have tried to reduce the carbon footprint of their bus fleets using a range of options over the years, from biofuels and hydrogen to batteries and hybrid-electric diesel. Now a Chinese company and its U.S. partner say that ultracapacitors could offer the greenest and most economical way of powering inner-city buses.

Fast charger: A bus that runs entirely on ultracapacitors charges up at a bus stop in Shanghai. The buses can only travel three to five miles between charges, but the ultracapacitors allow for fast recharging at designated bus stops.  Credit: Sinautec Automobile Technologies

Fast charger: A bus that runs entirely on ultracapacitors charges up at a bus stop in Shanghai. The buses can only travel three to five miles between charges, but the ultracapacitors allow for fast recharging at designated bus stops. Credit: Sinautec Automobile Technologies

There’s just one catch: the best ultracapacitors can only store about 5 percent of the energy that lithium-ion batteries hold, limiting them to a couple of miles per charge. This makes them ineffective as an energy storage medium for passenger vehicles. But what ultracapacitors lack in range they make up in their ability to rapidly charge and discharge. So in vehicles that have to stop frequently and predictably as part of normal operation, energy storage based exclusively on ultracapacitors begins to make sense.

Sinautec Automobile Technologies, based in Arlington, VA, and its Chinese partner, Shanghai Aowei Technology Development Company, have spent the past three years demonstrating the approach with 17 municipal buses on the outskirts of Shanghai. On October 21, the two companies will offer a one-day demonstration at American University in Washington, DC, where an 11-seat minibus running on ultracapacitors will spend the day shuttling people around campus.

The trick is to turn some bus stops along the route into charge stations, says Dan Ye, executive director of Sinautec. Unlike a conventional trolley bus that has to continually touch an overhead power line, Sinautec’s ultracapacitor buses take big sips of electricity every two or three miles at designated charging stations, which double as bus stops. When at these stations, a collector on the top of the bus rises a few feet and touches an overhead charging line. Within a couple of minutes, the ultracapacitor banks stored under the bus seats are fully charged.

“It’s a brilliant concept,” says ultracapacitor expert Joel Schindall, professor of electrical engineering and computer science at MIT. “It’s not well suited for electric-only cars, but it is practical to stop a bus every few city blocks.”

The buses can also capture energy from braking, and the company says that recharging stations can be equipped with solar panels (although this is mainly to further the perception that the vehicles have a lower carbon footprint). Ye says the buses use 40 percent less electricity compared to an electric trolley bus, mainly because they’re lighter and have the regenerative braking benefits. They’re also competitive with conventional buses based on fuel savings over the vehicle’s 12-year life, based on current oil and electricity prices. Sinautec estimates that one of its buses has one-tenth the energy cost of a diesel bus and can achieve lifetime fuel savings of $200,000.

“The ultracapacitor bus is also cheaper than lithium-ion battery buses,” says Ye. “We used the Olympics (lithium-ion) bus as a model and found ours about 40 percent less expensive with a far superior reliability rating.” Ye adds that the environmental benefits are compelling. “Even if you use the dirtiest coal plant on the planet, it generates a third of the carbon dioxide of diesel when used to charge an ultracapacitor.”

Buses in the Shanghai pilot are made by Germantown, TN-based Foton America Bus Co, which uses ultracapacitors manufactured by Shanghai Aowei. The ultracapacitors are made of activated carbon and have an energy density of six watt-hours per kilogram. (For comparison, a high-performance lithium-ion battery can achieve 200 watt-hours per kilogram.) Clifford Clare, chief executive of Foton America, says another 60 buses will be delivered early next year with ultracapacitors that supply 10 watt-hours per kilogram.

“The ones in Shanghai right now have been on the road for three years without incident, without failure whatsoever, which in the bus industry is phenomenal,” says Clare, who adds that his company is in talks with New York City, Chicago, and some towns in Florida about trialing the buses. “It will end up being a third generation of the product, which will give 20 miles [of range per charge] or better.”

Sinautec is also in discussions with MIT’s Schindall about developing ultracapacitors of higher energy density using vertically aligned carbon nanotube structures that give the devices more surface area for holding a charge.

“So far we’re able to get twice the energy density of an existing ultracapacitor, but that’s not enough,” says Schindall. “We’re trying to get about five times.” Schindall says that this would create an ultracapacitor with one-quarter of the energy density of a lithium-ion battery.

“Right now the [Foton] buses can only go every other stop, a range of about 5 or 10 city blocks, and that’s okay for some routes, but here in the Boston area that would be too far [between charging spots],” Schindall adds. “If they could double that, or even quadruple that, it would increase by an order of magnitude the numbers of routes for which it could be a technical solution.”

There are some other important limitations. The 41-passenger buses, based on current technology, have a maximum speed of just 30 miles per hour, lose 35 percent of their range when air conditioning is turned on, and have weak acceleration. But even under these conditions, they could still prove practical for municipal, campus, airport, and tourist buses.

We want to replace a large portion of the diesel fleet in the United States

“We want to replace a large portion of the diesel fleet in the United States,” says Ye. “We do need to have charging stations throughout various points of the network, but as energy density goes up, the number of stations will go down.”

via Technology Review: Next Stop: Ultracapacitor Buses.

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Hikers: eat bananas – but take your skins home

Don't drop it: a banana skin. Photograph: Getty Images/Anna Yu

I have climbed Ladhar Bheinn, one of Scotland’s finest peaks. The view was glorious. And I threw a banana skin at it. I have stood on the magnificent Aonach Eagach ridge and gazed down on Loch Achtriochtan. And I threw a banana skin at that, too.

In fact, there are few mountains in Scotland I haven’t thrown a banana skin on. Forget all those energy drinks: nothing gets you up a ben like a banana. What’s more, they come in handy biodegradable wrappers. So I’m practically doing the mountain a favour, feeding the eco-cycle of nature.

But apparently I’m not. The John Muir Trust, which protects many of Scotland’s wild places, has just given banana-skin chuckers a stern ticking off. The trust estimates that there are now 1,000 banana skins strewn across Ben Nevis. Walkers, it seems, don’t realise that it takes ages for a banana skin to degrade: two years, in fact.

This comes as a shock. I have tutted my way round the litter-strewn shores of Loch Lomond and chased Mars Bars wrappers grabbed by the wind. Now I find that I am part of a “significant minority, who are littering and spoiling the experience for everyone else”.

And it gets worse. According to Keep Scotland Beautiful, orange peel, another of my happily jettisoned waste products, is pretty bad too. Still, at least I’ve never left a glass bottle. They last 1 million years, apparently – though I wonder how they know.

A load of rot: how long your litter takes to biodegrade

  • Paper bag – 1 month
  • Apple core – 8 weeks
  • Orange peel and banana skins – 2 years
  • Cigarette end – 18 months to 500 years
  • Plastic bag – 10 to 20 years
  • A plastic bottle – 450 years
  • Chewing gum – 1 million years

From Keep Britain Tidy (keepbritaintidy,org)

via Hikers: eat bananas – but take your skins home | Environment | The Guardian .

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Douwe Egberts GREEN packaging

DSCF9004

We’ve been using Douwe Egberts instant range of coffee at home for a number of years now, this is for a number of reasons, primarily because it tastes better than other coffees on the market, but then again I don’t fall in the category that believes that Italian coffee is the best in the world, I prefer filtered (percolated) coffee, but then again that’s an argument for another article, because don’t get me started on the size of the handle that a coffee cup should have.

Douwe and Egberts Instant coffee range come in these re-usable jars that my wife and I wash and store things in, from spare change to spices, we use them for everything.  In fact I don’t think we’ve thrown a single jar out since we started buying them; the times when we bought another brand of instant coffee left us no choice but to throw them into the recycling bin.  Why aren’t we using past sauce jars with metal lids as a reusable jar for our kitchen?  The Douwe Egbert jars just look so much better, just like something out of an old apothecary; and you can decorate them with whatever label you want.

The Douwe Egbert jars just look so much better, just like something out of an old apothecary

As a few regulars in our fridge, we grate parmesan and store them in the jars, as well as sauces, and minced garlic.  Best of all, we chuck them in the dishwasher with no problems.  We did find that if you do chuck them in the dishwasher, remove the plastic liner on the cap, as water always seems to collect in the glass top, so chuck this plastic stopper liner into the cutlery holder of the Dishwasher so it doesn’t run amok in the machine.

For sustainability sake, and product packaging that I would gladly re-use again and again, I give Douwe Egberts 10 out of 10 for packaging.  If only other brands would follow suit..

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The Age of Stupid

age-of-stupid-3

Just had the opportunity to see the Age of Stupid premier. This is a fantastic approach to creating a main stream media effort in preparation to the Copenhagen Climate Summit this December. Global Warming is a huge problem, and descriptive and alarming as this movie is, it scared the crap out of my wife.  With any luck it will scare enough people into making a real change in their lives.

As a quick synopsis, please consider the mistakes we’ve done over the past 50 years, how stupid were we as a society to make these mistakes. Now this film is based in the future, looking back, and seeing the mistakes we’re making right now. You want to shake your head and say… we’re stupid.

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Better Place debuts EV services platform at Frankfurt Motor Show

Names additional ecosytem players for scaling up production and on track for global deployment plans including first switchable battery EV from Renault

Better_Place_logo_20090501
Frankfurt (Sep 15, 2009) — Today, at the Frankfurt Motor Show, Better Place marked its next major technology milestone by demonstrating its electric vehicle (EV) services platform for making electric cars more convenient and affordable than internal combustion engine cars, unleashing a new era for wide-scale EV adoption. In conjunction with Renault’s unveiling of the world’s first switchable battery EV for Israel and Denmark, Better Place announced a newly expanded agreement with Renault, committing both companies to a volume of at least 100,000 electric cars in both countries by 2016.

As global demand for EVs builds and production scales so must the infrastructure. As a result, Better Place also named additional ecosystem players including Continental of Germany, Flextronics, Intel, Microsoft, and TÜV Rheinland as Better Place seeks to scale up global production of its EV services platform and infrastructure deployment capabilities.

“Next year will be an exciting year for the auto industry and for consumers as the first wave of electric cars hit the streets,” said Shai Agassi, Better Place Founder and CEO. “The industry needs to continue to overcome the obstacles of extended range, price and impact on the grid if we’re going to be able to deliver a better experience than what consumers currently get. Better Place is committed to working with existing and emerging players in this exciting new category, which has the potential to drive the industry to sustainable growth in the near term and beyond.”

Better Place showcased its EV services platform, which manages at scale the charging of electric cars and the impact on the grid, moments after Renault unveiled its five-seat, electric sedan designed and developed for initial introduction for Better Place subscribers in Israel and Denmark in 2011. Additional switchable EV models from Renault are currently under review.

To enable mass market EV adoption, the Better Place solution includes interfaces designed to support all kinds of electric vehicles announced and under development, thereby providing a comprehensive infrastructure that the automotive and utility industry can count on for the transition to EVs. It’s the combination of infrastructure – to physically charge the car – and the “information train” of data – which is used to optimize the charging and manage the grid – that forms the heart of the EV services platform.

Inside the car, Better Place manages the vehicle’s energy plan through an on-board computing platform, codenamed “AutOS.” The AutOS platform performs complex energy calculations to create a personalized energy plan for each driver.

Outside of the car, Better Place has architected a master data center, which acts as the “brain” of the network. The Better Place data center enables “smart charging” of all electric cars on the network by optimizing and prioritizing when, where and how much each car is charged. Doing so minimizes the impact on local utilities while carefully orchestrating the state of charge for all batteries on the network so that every car is “topped up.”

As a centrally controlled function, the data center integrates any data across the entire network including: the availability of charge spots and battery switch stations; the state of charge of each battery; the ability to harness peak levels of renewable energy generation; topography maps and traffic patterns; and driving habits and patterns.

By integrating the data, Better Place has a 360-degree view across the entire network of charge spots, battery switch stations, electric cars, batteries and local utilities, enabling an entire ecosystem of industry players to deliver a more convenient and affordable electric car.

Better Place Expands Ecosystem to Include Continental, Flextronics, Intel, Microsoft and TÜV

As Better Place readies for system-wide testing in Israel next year, the company identified additional industry players with global scale and cross-industry expertise including the automotive supplier Continental, Flextronics, Intel, Microsoft and TÜV Rheinland.

For the production of charge spots, Better Place today announced that it has signed an agreement with Flextronics, one of the world’s leading electronics manufacturing services provider. Better Place awarded the contract to Flextronics because of its ability to give Better Place competitive advantage through Flextronics’ global scale and expertise across the industries that Better Place intersects, namely automotive, infrastructure and consumer devices.

Better Place and Flextronics will jointly engineer, develop and stress-test 1,000 next generation charge spots in the field before deciding to scale up volume to 100,000 production-grade charge spots by 2011. Such an order will represent the largest order for charge spot production in the history of the industry. Better Place currently is field testing nearly 800 charge points in Israel in a variety of private and public locations including curbside locations, parking lots, shopping malls and private residences.

Better Place, which is an active participant in the global standards bodies, will demonstrate charge spot standards’ compliance with the world’s two leading charging connector standards – IEC 62196 and J1772 – in Frankfurt.

Better Place R&D is working closely with Continental of Germany and Intel and Microsoft R&D, developing the most modern computing platform for inside the car. Better Place is developing its AutOS in-car platform with Continental to produce in volume an automotive-grade head unit, which incorporates Microsoft Windows Embedded and is powered by the Intel® AtomTM processor. The combination gives AutOS the extra horsepower needed to quickly conduct energy management and planning calculations that form the cornerstone of enabling peace of mind for drivers. The always-on connectivity of the unit also enables the “connected car” to seamlessly communicate with all of the components of the Better Place network.

“We at Continental are pleased that we are doing our part to help Better Place on its way to success,” said Helmut Matschi, President of the Interior division and member of the Executive Board of Continental AG. “The connection between the car, the Better Place network and the driver is ensured by the head unit we will develop. We look forward for the start of series production.”

By building an open architecture platform on industry-standard building blocks from Continental, Intel and Microsoft, Better Place will enable developers to build innovative applications on the AutOS platform much like the innovations that have sprung from the Apple iPhone. The AutOS system works by tapping into a limited number of standard CAN messages that all cars use to communicate diagnostics by read-only, giving OEMs an easy on-ramp to plug into the entire Better Place system.

In Israel, both Intel and Microsoft also have signed up as Better Place “Vision Partners,” agreeing to transition to electric vehicles when commercially available in 2011.

“At Microsoft, we are committed to software and technology innovations that help people and organizations around the world improve the environment,” John Fikany, Microsoft, VP, Commercial Sector Industries. “Better Place’s vision for accelerating the transition from oil-based transportation to a sustainable mobility model will help to draw in a new ecosystem of players and innovations all aimed at fighting climate change. We view electric cars as roaming consumer electronic devices, which have the potential to move from niche product to mainstream, and we’re excited that Better Place is developing their solution using Microsoft technology.”

“There’s a natural technology intersection between enabling powerful, yet energy efficient computing platforms and the drive toward electric transportation,” said Staci Parmer, director of in-vehicle infotainment for Intel. “We see an obvious fit for the Intel® AtomTM processor in the Better Place solution to enable a unique, connected experience for the next generation of electric transport.”

Finally, Better Place also announced that it has signed a cooperation agreement with TÜV Rheinland, a global provider of technical, safety and certification services, to evaluate and certify the safety of the network as a first step of broad deployment certification, which will be standard in all Better Place geographies.

Better Place On Track to Deliver Globally as Demand Builds

To date, Better Place has signed up orders from more than 50 Vision Partners in Israel – representing a total car park of approximately 35,000 ICE (internal combustion engine) vehicles – which have committed to convert a portion of their ICE fleets to Better Place when commercially available in 2011. These fleet customers include the Israel operations for multi-national companies including Cisco, FedEx and IBM, among others.

In Denmark, Better Place is currently building similar demand among visionary companies. Better Place already has announced several partnerships with municipalities and a partnership with the local insurance company, TrygVesta, which will offer a 40% discount on insurance premiums for owners of EVs. For the UN Summit on Climate Change (COP15) in Copenhagen in December, Better Place will build a showcase to celebrate the EV as a scalable solution for fighting climate change.

In Australia, Better Place recently announced Canberra, the nation’s capital, as the site for its first citywide roll out of electric vehicle infrastructure in Australia where the company is on track for 2012 commercial availability.

In North America, Better Place has worked actively with local partners and government in Ontario, Canada, the San Francisco Bay Area and Hawaii to create the necessary conditions to foster a competitive EV marketplace. These three regions have made a commitment to accelerating the adoption of EVs through progressive policies aimed at consumer adoption, streamlining infrastructure deployment and in some cases, adding EVs as a competitive alternative for public sector procurement policies.

In Japan, Better Place recently won the first-of-its-kind project from the government to demonstrate electric taxis with switchable batteries. The company will kick off the demonstration in January 2010.

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Dandelion the Super Weed

Gummi aus Löwenzahn

Dandelion is currently being looked into as a source for rubber, as well as ethanol.

Ethanol can be made from inulin, an artificial sweetener found in the dandelion root. The inulin is fermented and made into ethanol. 1 million dandelion plants per acre will yield about 245 gallons of ethanol per planting.

Most natural rubber comes from rubber trees in Southeast Asia, but this source is now under threat from a fungus. Researchers have optimized the Russian dandelion to make it suitable for large-scale rubber production.

Anyone who has picked dandelions as a child will be familiar with the white liquid that seeps out of the stalks as you break them off. Viscous, sticky – and a much sought-after material: natural latex. Around 30,000 everyday products contain natural rubber, everything from car tires, catheter tubes, latex gloves to tops for drinks bottles. Car tires, for instance, would not be elastic enough without the incorporation of natural rubber. The bulk of this material comes from rubber trees in Southeast Asia. Rubber produced in this way can, however, cause allergic reactions, which is clearly an issue with clinical products. A fungus is also creating concern for rubber cultivators. In South America the infection is now so widespread that large-scale cultivation has become virtually impossible. The disease now also appears to have taken root in Southeast Asia’s rubber belt. Fungicides still provide at least temporary protection. But if the fungus disease was to reach epidemic proportions, chemical crop protection would be rendered useless – experts fear that the natural latex industry could collapse if that were to happen.

Researchers are therefore turning to other sources – such as the Russian dandelion. Germans, Russians and Americans produced rubber from this plant during the Second World War. Once it is cut, latex seeps out, albeit difficult to use as it polymerizes immediately. Scientists from the Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology IME in Aachen have now come a step nearer to large-scale rubber production from dandelions. “We have identified the enzyme responsible for the rapid polymerization and have switched it off,” says Prof. Dr. Dirk Prüfer, Head of Department at the IME. “If the plant is cut, the latex flows out instead of being polymerized. We obtain four to five times the amount we would normally. If the plants were to be cultivated on a large scale, every hectare would produce 500 to 1000 kilograms of latex per growing season.” The dandelion rubber has not caused any allergies so far, making it ideal for use in hospitals.

In the lab the researchers have genetically modified the dandelion. Their next step will involve cultivating the optimized plants using conventional breeding techniques. In around five years, Prüfer estimates, they may well have achieved their goal. In any case, the dandelion is not just suitable for rubber production: the plant also produces substantial quantities of inulin, a natural sweetener.

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Review: The Age of Stupid Gets Smart on Enviropocalypse

Blurring the boundary between sci-fi and documentary, Franny Armstrong’s The Age of Stupid peers back in time from a climate crisis-wracked 2055 to lament our current inaction on the mother of all conflicts: The war on terra. The film premieres globally on Monday.

“We’re not at war at the moment,” explains Piers Guy, a British wind-farm developer who serves as one of The Age of Stupid’s compelling subjects. “But if people actually recognized the full implications of what’s happening to us, they would be treating it like a war.”

Armstrong’s docu-film isn’t shy about examining those implications. Beginning with the Big Bang, The Age of Stupid’s evocative CGI hurls toward 2055 at light-speed, only to find Earth’s once-mighty metropoles annihilated. From a drowned London to a buried Las Vegas and a burning Sydney, its dystopian imagery conjures up disturbing visions of humanity and hyperconsumption gone seriously awry.

That self-negating process is analyzed by The Archivist (Pete Postlethwaite), who has assembled a global digital archive in a forbidding tower in the melted Arctic. A brilliant actor, Postlethwaite brings restraint and sadness to his part, which is the only fictional role in the documentary experiment. The rest of the film is told by The Archivist’s digital materials, consisting of real footage and media feeds, as well as interviews with global-warming experts.

That includes Piers and his wife Lisa, who begin The Archivist’s flashback with a visit to French mountain guide Fernand Pareau. The wizened Pareau has witnessed the startling decline of Mont Blanc’s snowpack firsthand, and provides the film with its most poignant statement: “I think everyone in the future will probably blame us. We knew how to profit but not protect.”

Pareau, Piers and Lisa are joined by the film’s other subjects: Young Iraqi refugees Jamila and Adnan Bayyoud, Nigerian medical student Layefa Malemi, Indian airline entrepneur Jeh Wadia and Shell Oil paleontologist Alvin DuVernay, whose criticism of excessive consumption provided The Age of Stupid with its title.

These real-life players are quite moving. Jamila and Adnan Bayyoud witnessed their father’s murder during the U.S. invasion of Iraq and their resentment is lethal, as they sell used shoes on the streets of Jordan. Layefa Malemi struggles to survive in an ironically depressed Nigeria, the most oil-rich nation in Africa, while selling diesel on the black market and aiding villagers whose air and water have been irrevocably poisoned by Shell Oil’s gas flares and dumping. Shell’s DuVernay, who rescued more than 100 people in his native New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina, laments the ignorant waste of cheap oil while digging for more.

That waste is brought home by arresting animations on resource wars, global emissions and more, as well as decontextualized music like Depeche Mode electro-pop hit “Just Can’t Get Enough,” Dragnerve’s speed-metal anthem “A Life in Ashes” and Radiohead’s eerie “Reckoning.” By the time The Age of Stupid’s flashbacks are over and the viewer is stuck in a ravaged 2055, the urge to do something immediate is palpable and powerful.

Crowd-funded by a profit-sharing partnership comprising a mere 228 people and groups, including a hockey team and a women’s health center, who each invested portions of its £450,000 budget, The Age of Stupid is a destabilizing experience. Its Monday global opening is concurrent with United Nations Climate Week, although the film has already been screened by the Scottish, Welsh, Swedish, Dutch and U.K. parliaments, as well as the European Union and Obama’s think tank, the Center for American Progress. The result is a full-court press aimed at influencing nations to come to the U.N.’s 2009 climate change conference in Copenhagen with their heads and hearts in the right place.

Which is to say, a much better place than Earth, circa 2055.

Wired: Killer CGI, dystopian cli-fi, heart-wrenching footage

Tired: Glenn Beck clips, “These Boots are Made for Walking” cover

via Review: The Age of Stupid Gets Smart on Enviropocalypse | Underwire | Wired.com.

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Warning: Showers can seriously damage your health

Geeks proved right after all

US scientists have rather disturbingly provided ammunition for shower-dodging geeks to defend their malodorous ways: showers can actually be bad for your health.

According to researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder, pathogens which occur naturally at low levels in water supplies can accumulate in high concentrations in “biofilms” inside shower heads, meaning that every time you turn on the water, you’re getting a faceful of nastiness.

Specifically, the scientists pinpointed Mycobacterium avium – “a pathogen linked to pulmonary disease that most often infects people with compromised immune systems but which can occasionally infect healthy people”, according to lead boffin professor Norman Pace.

The team probed 50 shower heads from nine cities in seven states, including Chicago, Denver and New York City. In 30 per cent of them they found “significant levels” of Mycobacterium avium and related oathogens – specifically, “more than 100 times the background levels of municipal water”.

Pace said: “There have been some precedents for concern regarding pathogens and showerheads. But until this study we did not know just how much concern.”

He warned: “If you are getting a face full of water when you first turn your shower on, that means you are probably getting a particularly high load of Mycobacterium avium, which may not be too healthy.”

The University of Colorado seems to have an unhealthy interest in Mycobacterium avium. It previously “found massive enrichments of M. avium in ‘soap scum’ commonly found on vinyl shower curtains and floating above the water surface of warm therapy pools”.

In 2006, Pace plunged again into therapy pools, and identified “high levels of M. avium in the indoor pool environment were linked to a pneumonia-like pulmonary condition in pool attendants known as ‘lifeguard lung’”.

This in turn led Pace and chums to dismantle the US’s shower heads, the results of which investigations are found in the 14 September issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (abstract here, more background detail here)

Naturally, you’re all wondering whether taking a shower is actually dangerous. Pace concluded: “Probably not, if your immune system is not compromised in some way. But it’s like anything else – there is a risk associated with it.”

The professor suggested using a metal showerhead, since the plastic type are apparently susceptible to biofilm build-up. Consider yourselves advised. ®

Bootnote

Here’s how the Colorado Uni boffins sniffed out their prey: “A molecular genetics technique developed by Pace in the 1990s allowed researchers to swab samples directly from the shower heads, isolate DNA, amplify it using the polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, and determine the sequences of genes present in order to pinpoint particular pathogen types.”

via Warning: Showers can seriously damage your health • The Register.

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Low lead levels harming children

Lead is linked to a number of health problems

Young childrens exposure to lead in the environment is harming their intellectual and emotional development, according to UK researchers.The researchers say the toxic effects of lead on the central nervous system are obvious even below the current so-called safe level of lead in the blood.They are recommending the threshold should be halved.A spokesman for the Health Protection Agency said levels of exposure should be kept to the minimum.Lead has been removed from paint and petrol by law in the UK, but it is still widespread in the environment.The study from the University of Bristol Centre for Child and Adolescent Health set out to see if there was any effect on the behaviour and intellectual development of children who had ingested just below the so-called safe level of 10 microgrammes per decilitre or tenth of a litre of blood.The study is published in the journal, Archives of Diseases in Childhood.

SOURCES OF LEAD

  • Lead-based paint
  • Household dust
  • Lead water pipes
  • Soil around the home
  • Paint on childrens toys
  • Childrens bead necklaces
  • Christmas lights
  • Lead smelters/industries

Lead levels

The Bristol researchers took blood samples from 582 children at the age of 30 months.They found 27% of the children had lead levels above five microgrammes per decilitre.They followed the childrens progress at regular intervals and then assessed their academic performance and behavioural patterns when they were seven to eight years old.After taking account of factors likely to influence the results, they found that blood lead levels at 30 months showed significant associations with educational achievement, antisocial behaviour and hyperactivity scores five years later.With lead levels up to five microgrammes per decilitre, there was no obvious effect.But lead levels between five and 10 microgrammes per decilitre were associated with significantly poorer scores for reading 49% lower and writing 51% lower.A doubling in lead blood levels to 10 microgrammes per decilitre was associated with a drop of a third of a grade in their Scholastic Assessment Tests SATs.And above 10 microgrammes per decilitre children were almost three times as likely to display antisocial behaviour patterns and be hyperactive than the children with the lower levels of lead in their blood.Adverse effectsThe effects of lead toxicity in children were first described in 1892 in Brisbane, Australia. The Agencys advice is that exposures to lead should be kept to the minimum that is reasonably practical Health Protection Agency spokesmanSince then acceptable levels of lead in the blood have fallen sharply.In 1991, the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, revised their level of concern for blood levels down to ten microgrammes per declitre.The World Health Organisation estimates that globally half of the urban children under the age of five have blood levels exceeding this limit.Professor Alan Emond, who led this study, said a third of the children in his study had levels only half of this but were still exhibiting adverse effects.He said: “Lead in the body is one of many factors that impacts on education, but this is a reminder that environmental factors are important and paediatricians must test more children with behavioural problems for lead.”"We did our blood survey when the children were about two and a half years old.”We think this is quite close to the peak age for lead ingestion when the children are putting everything in their mouths as they explore their environment.”This is a normal phase that we grow out of, but for children who have developmental problems, like autism, it may go on for a longer time so they may be particularly vulnerable. “A Health Protection Agency spokesman said: “The Agencys advice is that exposures to lead should be kept to the minimum that is reasonably practical.”This has been the policy in the UK and of health agencies throughout the world for many years.”Measurements have shown that levels of lead in children and adults have decreased markedly over the last two decades or more, primarily because of these policies.”

via BBC NEWS | Health | Low lead levels harming children.

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Sainsbury’s Sells Over 55 MSC Products

Sainsbury’s Supermarket, the UK’s longest standing major food retailing chain, is now selling over 55 MSC (Marine Stewardship Council) products, more than any other UK retailer.

In 2008, Sainsbury’s sales of MSC certified fish reached over GBP 35 million, significantly exceeding their target of doubling the MSC sales by the end of 2008. In 2009 Sainsbury’s introduced their own MSC labelled haddock, the first major supermarket to do so. Cod, haddock, tuna, salmon and prawns make up 80 percent of the fish Sainsbury’s sells. Sainsbury’s approach is to offer MSC certified fish where available, this programme is also fully consistent with the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation’s guidelines on eco-labelling.

“Sainsbury’s has placed sustainability at the heart of its seafood procurement policy and I very much welcome the company’s continued commitment to preference MSC certified and labelled seafood wherever possible. Sainsbury’s is the first retailer in the world to sell over 50 individual own labelled MSC certified products and the tremendous growth in sales – over 150% growth in the last year alone – indicates that Sainsbury’s customers also care deeply about the sustainability of their seafood choices”, said Rupert Howes, CEO, Marine Stewardship Council.

Where it is not possible to achieve MSC certification, Sainsbury’s uses their unique fish traffic light sustainability rating system, which was developed in 2006. This sourcing system considers the health of the fish stocks, how well the fishery is being managed and the impact of fishing on the environment. Green means scientifically verified to be in plentiful supply; Amber, concerns about sustainability, but action is being taken and Red, major concerns about sustainability. Sainsbury’s no longer sells any red-rated fish and they will soon move any amber-rated fish to green status.

The supermarket is also working with their suppliers to ensure that methods such as beam-trawling, which is used primarily to catch fish that live on the seabed, such as Dover sole, plaice and lemon sole, are properly managed.

Sainsbury’s is the largest retailer of line-caught cod and haddock in the UK – 100 percent of their fresh cod and haddock is now line-caught. The move makes Sainsbury’s the largest retailer of line-caught fresh cod and haddock in the UK. All Sainsbury’s tinned tuna is pole and line caught and rated top of Greenpeace’s Tinned Tuna League Table 2008, in recognition of their commitment to sustainable fishing.

tuna

Greenpeace’s Tinned Tuna League (Photo: Greenpeace)

“Scooping the top spot in Greenpeace’s tinned tuna league table showed that Sainsbury’s is leading the way amongst major UK retailers on canned tuna”, said Willie MacKenzie, Ocean Campaign, Greenpeace UK.

Sainsbury’s believes that where the fish-feed comes from is also important: depleting stocks of other endangered species, such as eel and blue whiting to feed farmed fish which is no way sustainable. They are working with farmers and feed producers to overcome these concerns and with their suppliers to ensure that farming practices are safe and sustainable. Also concerned about the effects of fishing and aquaculture on marine ecosystems, Sainsbury’s is working closely with their suppliers to eliminate the use of anti-foulants in the cleaning of nets used in fish farming by 2012.

via FIS – Companies & Products – Sainsbury’s Sells Over 55 MSC Products.

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