Tuesday, July 3, 2012

A New Satellite Tool Tracks Deforestation

http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/25/a-new-satellite-tool-tracks-deforestation/

A New Satellite Tool Tracks Deforestation

The Terra-i satellite tool maps deforestation in nearly real time.http://www.terra-i.org/Karolina Argote/Louis ReymondinThe Terra-I satellite tool maps deforestation in nearly real time.
Green: Science
An international team of researchers presented a new tool at the Rio+20 sustainability conference last week: the first satellite system for monitoring deforestation across Latin America in nearly real time. While such programs have existed in Brazil for several years, the program, called Terra-I, fills a much-needed gap for some smaller Latin countries that are losing forests at an equal or higher rate.
“Everyone more or less understands maps,” said Mark Mulligan, a geographer at King’s College London and one of the project’s designers. “Having dynamic maps that show where forest loss is occurring is more effective than statistics you always hear about — ‘we’ve lost another patch of forest the size of Wales.’ ” Now, he said, people can visualize exactly where and how quickly that forest was felled, including which towns or protected areas that it lay near.
The project is a collaboration, involving Dr. Mulligan; a graduate student, Louis Reymondin; the International Center for Tropical Agriculture in Colombia; the Nature Conservancy; and the School of Engineering and Management of Vaud in Switzerland.
Using NASA’s Modis satellite sensor, it depicts land changes every 16 days at a resolution of 250 square meters (about 2,700 square feet) on the ground. The constantly updated maps are freely available online as a simple overlay on a Google map or formatted for more sophisticated Web mapping software. “People familiar with Google Maps can just look down at their own areas,” Dr. Mulligan said. “And we provide the data so others who have methods for manipulating geodata can actually do further things with the data than we’ve done.”
Preliminary results revealed that the effects of deforestation in parts of Colombia have more than quadrupled, increasing by 340 percent since 2004. More than a million hectares (2.5 million acres) of forest have been felled in Paraguay’s Gran Chaco region. “I think the Gran Chaco results are quite surprising — there’s much greater deforestation than we expected,” Dr. Mulligan said.

For Terra-I to work, the researchers had to train the system to differentiate between seasonal changes in vegetation and human-induced impacts. They developed a computational neural network and taught the program to recognize those changes with old data from 2004 to 2005.
Brazil in particular was a good starting point for teaching the machine, since large swaths of land often change from all forest to no forest. From there, the scientists are refining the system to distinguish between visual obstacles like cloud cover and flooded rivers and to home in on more sporadic deforestation.
In many parts of the world, the details of what’s being cut where and when are splotchy, making managing a given patch of forest — let alone an entire country’s holdings — tricky. Dr. Mulligan and his colleagues hope the new tool will help governments, conservationists and those drafting climate-related policies to accurately assess landscape changes and make decisions — how to balance livelihoods and food security with biodiversity conservation, for example, or how to design more eco-efficient agriculture.
Now that monitoring for Latin America is up and running, the team is working on systems for Asia and Africa. Those areas are proving more challenging, though: forests there often occur in disconnected patches rather than one green blanket, and deforestation tends to be carried out by small-scale individual operations rather than large corporations.
Still, they are working on methods to improve their algorithms so they can better function in an African or Asian context. They are also brainstorming on ways to bolster their computing power, since continuously running an analysis of each pixel of data taken every 250 square meters on the continental scale is “hugely computationally intensive,” Dr. Mulligan said.
The Rio+20 attendees and others seemed to respond favorably to Terra-I’s debut, Dr. Mulligan said, with the Web site logging around 2,300 hits on the first day of the conference. “The best way to improve a system is to get people to use it,” he said, although so far most people have just taken a quick look. “It takes time for people to come back after figuring out, O.K., now what can I do with it?”

Dubstep Dispute : Short animation

http://vimeo.com/44878206


Dubstep Dispute from Fluxel Media on Vimeo.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Monsanto



Coming soon after France bans GMO maize, WikiLeaks cables expose details of 'military-style trade wars' against countries who reject Monsanto GMOs.
France banned the Monsanto MON 810 "Yieldgard" maize due to environmental and health concerns. And now the European Union is stepping in to re-secure Monsanto's presence in that country, against the will of the nation itself.

Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/326009#ixzz1xmVRTY6f
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US House biotech proposal would bypass courts:

* Provision would muzzle judges, says biotech critic

* Court cases on GMO crops can run for years

* USDA proposes deregulation of GMO sugar beets

WASHINGTON, June 5 (Reuters) - A provision in a U.S. House bill would allow farmers to grow genetically modified crops while court battles are under way to decide if the plants are safe, said a biotech skeptic on Tuesday, calling the idea an unprecedented muzzle on federal judges. http://af.reuters.com/article/commoditiesNews/idAFL1E8H5L6N20120605
_________

The American Academy of Environmental Medicine has warned that the public should avoid genetically modified (GM) foods, stating, "There is more than a casual association between GM foods and adverse health effects. There is causation."

A large number of studies and incidents have implicated GM foods in a wide variety of health problems, including accelerated aging, immune dysfunction, insulin disorders, organ damage and reproductive disruption.

For example, female rats fed a diet of GM soy experienced a drastically higher infant death rate, and their surviving infants were smaller and less fertile than the offspring of rats fed on a non-GM soy diet. Male rats fed the GM soy had their testicles change from pink to blue, and the GM soy was also observed to damage the DNA of sperm and embryos. Fertility problems such as abortion, infertility, premature delivery, prolapsed uteri, infant death, and even delivery of unformed infants (bags of water) have been observed in farm animals fed GM cottonseed and corn.

Animals consuming crops that have been genetically modified to produce the pesticide Bt (approved for human consumption in the United States) have died by the thousands, while animals grazing on a non-GM version of the same crops remained unharmed. Upon autopsies, researchers have found black patches in the animals' livers and intestines, internal bleeding and other signs of Bt poisoning. Farm workers in India have begun developing allergic reactions upon handling Bt corn, similar to the effects experienced by people exposed to Bt spraying.

In addition to these risks, GM soy and corn contain significantly higher concentrations of allergens than unmodified varieties. Evidence also suggests that the genetic abnormalities of GM foods may transfer to bacteria in the human gut, thereby exposing people to their detrimental effects long after a food has been consumed.

Yet in spite of all this evidence and the prevalence of GM crops in the U.S. food supply not a single clinical trial of any GM crop has ever been published.

"The experiments simply haven't been done and we now have become the guinea pigs," said Canadian geneticist David Suzuki. "Anyone that says, 'Oh, we know that this is perfectly safe,' I say is either unbelievably stupid or deliberately lying."

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/028245_GM_food_side_effects.html#ixzz1xmWCXvPQ

— with Steve Moats.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Nos comptes Facebook sont, je vous le confirme, observés par la Sureté du Québec

En allant assister à la période de questions à l’Assemblée nationale ce matin, comme il m’est arrivé de le faire plusieurs fois depuis le vote de la loi 78, le garçon à l’accueil m’a fait patienter sous des prétextes de problèmes de système informatique.

Après avoir attendu une douzaine de minutes, le chef de la sécurité du Parlement est venu me voir en m’interpellant à peu près de cette façon :

« Monsieur Lapointe, mon nom est ********* de la sûreté du Québec. Nous voulons vous aviser que nous savons que vous avez, via Facebook, incité les gens à venir à l’Assemblée nationale pour assister à la période de questions. Y’a t’il d’autres personnes qui vous accompagnent aujourd’hui ? Vous savez que nous voyons à peu près tout ce qui se trouvent sur Facebook ? »

Moi : « Non je ne savais pas et non, personne ne m'accompagne. Je viens toujours ici seul et j’exerce simplement un de mes droits qui est celui d’assister aux travaux parlementaires et j’ai oui, je ne m'en cacherai pas, utilisé Facebook pour informer les gens de ce droit qu’ils ont et qui est le leur. »

Lui : « Sachez que nous vous contrôlerons de la sorte à chacune de vous visite et que si vous enfreignez le code comportemental de l’Assemblée nous vous en interdirons l’accès pour toujours. »

Chose dont je suis déjà bien informée comme vous pouvez vous imaginer.

Et juste comme ça, tout dernièrement une femme a passée sa journée en prison pour avoir lue à haute voix 1984 de George Orwell dans le métro à Montréal...

Bref, pour vous dire que oui, nos comptes Facebook sont, je vous le confirme, observés par la Sureté du Québec et qu’ils restent seulement trois périodes de questions d’ici la fin des travaux parlementaires. En effet, ceux-ci se terminent vendredi.

Et oui, les élus s’en vont pour l’été et laisseront la situation politique telle qu'elle est semble t'il.

Je vous rappelle qu’il y a 66 places pour permettre aux citoyens d'assister aux travaux parlementaires.

Voici le numéro pour réserver votre places : (418) 643-7239.

La période de questions est à 9h45 demain, jeudi et vendredi.

À 15h30 aujourd’hui il restait 4 places pour mercredi, 27 places pour jeudi et 48 places pour vendredi.

Et étrangement tout cela me rappelle d’ailleurs que dernièrement mon téléphone cellulaire (qui est flambant neuf) fait vraiment de drôles de bruits d’interférences et d’interruption de service…

Christian Lapointe
Citoyen du Québec

https://www.facebook.com/notes/th%C3%A9%C3%A2tre-p%C3%A9ril/nos-comptes-facebook-sont-je-vous-le-confirme-observ%C3%A9s-par-la-suret%C3%A9-du-qu%C3%A9bec/10150969787734653

Saturday, April 14, 2012

The Scores and How Our 2012 Retirement Index Works

This is a qualitative assessment, based on real-world data gathered on the ground. For each category in our Index, we looked closely at what matters most to you when you’re considering an overseas retirement spot—everything from the price of bread to how easy it is to make friends or stay in touch with family.

We considered a vast range of data points, from the average humidity to the cost of a taxi. And with costs in mind, we examined prices for real estate, rentals, and utilities like water, electricity, and cable TV. We looked at costs for groceries, eating out, even specific medical procedures. We took into account what kind of discounts retirees can get on travel, taxes and entertainment. And we cons


Country Real Estate Special Benefits Cost of Living Inte. E&A Health Infras. Climate Final Scores
Ecuador 97 98 100 95 90 85 80 83 91.1
Panama 95 100 95 96 96 91 82 68 90.4
Mexico 94 91 88 96 96 88 75 89 89.6
Malaysia 94 79 95 95 96 87 91 66 87.7
Colombia 93 76 60 92 96 93 84 75 83.7
New Zealand 87 72 69 90 93 84 86 89 83.6
Nicaragua 92 79 94 89 85 78 63 70 82.6
Spain 79 68 78 90 93 76 94 81 82.1
Thailand 90 68 71 91 97 83 76 75 81.4
Honduras 82 89 76 95 96 78 67 63 80.7
Uruguay 91 76 81 87 57 81 83 87 80.4
Italy 69 74 60 71 98 80 90 100 80.3
Brazil 81 87 68 81 99 85 69 71 80.2
Ireland 70 90 57 99 91 70 85 79 80.2
France 68 75 57 82 100 90 88 90 80.1
Costa Rica 88 79 65 97 94 83 74 60 80.0
Belize 80 84 84 100 83 82 70 57 79.9
Chile 90 73 77 80 93 81 84 61 79.8
Dom. Republic 93 68 60 85 89 72 75 72 76.8

*E&A = Entertainment and Amenities; Inte. = Integration; Infras. = Infrastructure