Arctic global warming »
Posted By Alexia 1 year, 6 months ago in NewsOver 300 miles north of the Arctic Circle, in the polar dark of a December morning, University of Manitoba Ph.D. student Jesse Carrie is out on the frozen Beaufort Sea, collecting ice samples to measure for mercury and pesticides. Lowered by crane from the deck of the icebreaking research vessel the CCGS Amundsen, and accompanied by a rifle bearer who keeps watch for polar bears, Carrie extracts ice cores and vials of frigid water.
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Aidenag1 year, 6 months ago
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This is already damaging marine life in my region. Off the Coast of Washington state, and in Puget Sound especially, our whales have the highest mercury and PBDE levels of anything living on the planet. Just last year we had our first ever health warning put out for fish caught in Puget sound due to mercury. And the scary part is, we don't even have any coal mines or coal fired power plants. The closest Coal mine, or power plant is like 3 states away from us. So its some other regions pollution drifting in and screwing with our state...
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1-2-Oscar1 year, 6 months ago
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There may not be any coal mines in the state today, but Washington has produced considerable coal in the past. In fact, deep mining was carried out there until 1975, and the last open pit closed just two years ago--so the state definitely HAS contributed to its own pollution. The town of Roslyn, a tourist attraction where the TV series "Northern Exposure" was taped, even advertises a "Coal Mines Trail" for bikers.
Washington is one of several states which have passed laws restricting construction of NEW power plants in accordance with tight emission standards that almost entirely eliminate new coal-fired electrical generation. An Energy Northwest application for a plant in Cowlitz County was recently rejected, but United Power of Gig Harbor is still pushing an application for a proposed plant in Walla Walla County. But several older coal-fired plants continue to operate in the state.
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