New Dangers Arise at Chernobyl

ZOLtán Dujisin

CHERNOBYL, Apr 30 2011 (IPS) – In the aftermath of the anniversary of the worst nuclear disaster in history, Ukrainian authorities have pledged not to abandon those still in need of assistance. But many of the country s policies may be increasing the risk of a new catastrophe.
Abandoned houses close to the Chernobyl plant behind. Credit: Alina Rudya/IPS.

Abandoned houses close to the Chernobyl plant behind. Credit: Alina Rudya/IPS.

In April 1986 an explosion at reactor four of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, 100km north of the capital Kiev, lead to the release of massive …

Reimagining Food Systems in the Midst of a Hunger Crisis

WASHINGTON, Jun 3 2011 (IPS) – Today one billion people are living in hunger, not because of scarcity of production or a shortage of food on shelves in the global marketplace, but because they lack the most basic purchasing power needed to acquire it , Olivier De Schutter, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, said Thursday.
Enter the Transnationals
At a panel entitled “Feeding the World While Caring for the Planet”, representatives from the U.S. Agency for International Development joined with De Schutter to discuss the U.S. government’s latest Feed the Future Initiative.
While seemingly aligned with the policies and recommendations of leading ecological and environmental experts, the initiative has generated tremendous controversy since Rajiv Shah,…

U.S.: Coal Ash New Focus of Dispute Over Health Hazards

Elizabeth Whitman

NEW YORK, Jul 20 2011 (IPS) – Survey your surroundings and you ll discover that coal ash waste from coal burned to produce electricity is more present in everyday life than you might expect. To name a few places: toothpaste, cosmetics, wallboard, cement, and agricultural and winter de-icing products.
Coal ash, also known as coal combustion residues (CCRs), and its beneficial uses recycling it in commercial, consumer, or agricultural products- have lately been an area of controversy between those who seek greater regulation of coal ash reuse and those who unwaveringly promote it as economically and environmentally beneficial.

The U.S. (EPA) promotes the beneficial use of coal ash, but reports indicate that the agency is not fully aware of the potenti…

INDIA: Hunger Shows its Power

Ranjit Devraj

NEW DELHI, Aug 24 2011 (IPS) – If India s powerful central government that rules over the destinies of 1.2 billion people quails before a slight 74-year-old man, it is because he is armed with a weapon that has rarely failed in this country extreme renunciation through a fast-unto-death.
Doctors continuously monitor the health of Anna Hazare, sitting on a protest fast-unto-death. Credit: Anjan Mitra/IPS

Doctors continuously monitor the health of Anna Hazare, sitting on a protest fast-unto-death. Credit: Anjan Mitra/IPS

The present expone…

EUROPE: Unrest Spreads Eastwards

BUDAPEST, Jan 20 2012 (IPS) – Protests in Hungary and Romania are the first signs of anti-systemic mobilisation in the Eastern half of the continent. While protests in both countries indicate dissatisfaction with their governments’ authoritarian turn, their origins differ, as does the European Union’s reaction to them.
Romania, EU member since 2007 and Hungary, which joined in 2004, have both been badly hit by the economic crisis.

Romanian and Hungarian protesters of various social and ideological backgrounds have poured into the streets this month, demanding fundamental changes in their political systems, and accusing the political elite of degenerating into authoritarianism while ignoring growing poverty.

Comparisons with 1989 are rife among demonstrators. Aro…

Spanish Cities Far From Sustainable

MADRID, Mar 1 2012 (IPS) – Though Vitoria-Gasteiz, capital of the Basque Country, was elected the European Green Capital of 2012 – an award presented by the European Union to promote and reward efforts to mitigate climate change – Spain still has a long way to go to earn the label of ‘sustainable’ for others cities around the country.

The air that the citizens of Vitoria-Gasteiz breathe is of the highest quality, according to the score given by the European Union, thanks to campaigns to increase bicycle use around the city and the promotion of a new bus network together with tram routes and new parking regulations.

In contrast, cities such as Madrid, Barcelona, Sevilla or Bilbao have been consistently exceeding standard levels of pollution as a result of a lack o…

Put Food Crisis on G8’s Plate, Group Urges

WASHINGTON, Apr 7 2012 (IPS) – Days before the annual White House Easter Egg Roll, anti- poverty advocates staged their own egg hunt in Lafayette Park to urge President Obama to find political will to end global hunger during the upcoming G8 Summit at Camp David.
Hunger advocates call on President Obama to pledge a commitment to global hunger at the G8 summit. Credit: ActionAid USA

Hunger advocates call on President Obama to pledge a commitment to global hunger at the G8 summit. Credit: ActionAid USA

Sponsored by , the activists held banners that rea…

‘It Should be Named Planet Ocean, Not Planet Earth’

Manipadma Jena interviews WENDY-WATSON WRIGHT, executive secretary of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC).

YEOSU, South Korea, Jun 22 2012 (IPS) – Oceans, seas and coasts provide over 200 million jobs globally, while 4.3 billion people get 15 percent of their intake of animal protein from the seas. Travel and tourism, ports and energy production use oceans and seas to create jobs and economic and social benefits for millions of people.

Wendy Watson-Wright, executive secretary of the Intergovernmental Ocean…

Operating in Rural Tanzania “To Save a Life”

KIGOMA, Tanzania, Aug 3 2012 (IPS) – At the Kakonko Health Centre, about 250 kilometres from the nearest hospital in Kigoma Region, Western Tanzania, assistant medical officer Abdu Mapinduzi prepares to operate on Joanitha, a young pregnant mother.

She has given birth via caesarean section three times before at a regional hospital. But now, for her fourth child, she is able to have the baby at her nearest medical health centre.

Despite the fact that the Kakonko Health Centre is 150 km away from Joanitha’s home village, it is still closer than her nearest regional hospital, which is the only other facility able to conduct caesareans. Health centres here cater for 50,000 people, approximately the population of one administrative division, but are not equipped to…

Stevia, a Flourishing Business in Spain

Stevia, a natural sweetener with significant health benefits, could create income opportunities in the depressed Spanish economy.

The field where the Unemployed Workers Movement of Málaga has planted 2,000 stevia seedlings. Credit: Inés Benítez/IPS

MÁLAGA, Spain, Sep 26 2012 (IPS) – On a parcel of land a few kilometres outside the southern Spanish city of Málaga, unemployed activists are growing 2,000 seedlings of stevia, a plant used by the Guaraní indigenous people for centuries as a natural sweetener that is awakening ever greater interest in Spain.

Stevia rebaudiana bertoni, called ka a he e or “sweet herb” by the Guaraní, originates from the Amamb…