Environmental Assessment in Practice

The federal Minister of Environment and Climate has assembled an Expert Panel to evaluate environmental assessment in Canada, receive input from First Nations, industry, environmental groups, the public, and masticate this into revisions to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act.

I managed to squeak in this last minute submission.  One aspect of my input I would like to have spent more time on is the effect that shrinking the scientific resources in the public service has had on environmental stewardship. I think the path to improved environmental assessment lies as much through an investment in robust institutions and human resources as it does through legislative change.

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Jacob Marley retells Christmas Carol from the other side

marley

Just enjoyed Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol this evening at the Jericho Arts Centre. The familiar tale from Marley’s perspective. It was a well acted, spooky, and minimalist production. Satisfying and fit for a family that wants to get into the Spirit of the season.

Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol is at Jericho Arts Centre until Dec. 18. For tickets, call 604-224-8007 or go to brownpapertickets.com. 

“Jacob Marley was dead.” In Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol we know that Ebenezer Scrooge’s business partner is “most sincerely dead,” but we don’t know why he comes back on Christmas Eve to haunt Scrooge’s bedchamber. What’s in it for Jacob Marley?

That’s where playwright Tom Mula begins: Marley is in the Counting House, a sort of antechamber to the next world, where he awaits his everlasting fate. The Record Keeper (David C. Jones) offers him a deal: to avoid going to Hell, Marley must reform Scrooge, “the only man worse than I,” claims Marley.

Accompanied and guided by the Bogle — a hobgoblin or ghost — Marley visits Scrooge’s past, present and future in his efforts to redeem him. On their journey we learn about Marley’s own childhood and discover why he turned out as warped as he did.

Source: Jacob Marley retells Christmas Carol from the other side

spotified

Now into the second month with paid #Spotify and pleasantly surprised by how much i use it.  it’s well  matched to  random impulses and exploration.  From Iwan Fals to David Byrne to Harry Belafonte to In the Hall of the Mountain King, it’s all there.  The option to download albums for offline is great.

Great platform for a jazz education too…

Scientists Create World’s Largest Coral Gene Database

Promising findings from genomic analysis of corals:

Corals face four major threats from humans: Destruction of reefs by grenades and poison used to kill fish for food; nutrient pollution, usually from sewage or agricultural runoff, that overstimulates harmful algae; increased heat in the upper ocean, which causes most coral bleaching that can kill reefs; and acidification of the ocean, according to Falkowski.”Corals are the most diverse marine ecosystems on the planet,” he said. “But their value to marine ecosystems — and to our own use of marine resources — is very underappreciated.”

Perhaps the extreme diversity of coral systems help along an adaptive response to climate change:

Bhattacharya and coauthors found dozens of genes that allow corals to coordinate their response to changes in temperature, light and pH (acidity vs. alkalinity) and deal with stress triggered by the algae that live with them and exposure to high levels of light.
Surprisingly, some of these stress-related genes are of bacterial origin and were acquired to help corals survive. An intriguing theory that arose from the study is that the vast genetic repertoire of corals may help them adapt to changing ocean conditions.

Source: Scientists Create World’s Largest Coral Gene Database

Could Fighting Global Warming Be Cheap and Free?

and now for some optimism

On one side, there has been dramatic progress in renewable energy technology, with the costs of solar power, in particular, plunging, down by half just since 2010. Renewables have their limitations — basically, the sun doesn’t always shine, and the wind doesn’t always blow — but if you think that an economy getting a lot of its power from wind farms and solar panels is a hippie fantasy, you’re the one out of touch with reality.

On the other side, it turns out that putting a price on carbon would have large “co-benefits” — positive effects over and above the reduction in climate risks — and that these benefits would come fairly quickly. The most important of these co-benefits, according to the I.M.F. paper, would involve public health: burning coal causes many respiratory ailments, which drive up medical costs and reduce productivity.

via www.nytimes.com

Great Barrier Reef Faces ‘Irreversible’ Damage: Report

Unless immediate action is taken, the famous coral reef system will be unable to recover from the "irreversible" damage that climate change will wreak on it by 2030, a new report out of Australia warns.

Published by the World Wildlife Fund-Australia, the University of Queensland report paints a bleak picture for the future of the ecosystem.

"If we don't increase our commitment to solve the burgeoning stress from local and global sources, the reef will disappear," the report, prepared for Earth Hour's upcoming annual event, states. "This is not a hunch or alarmist rhetoric by green activists. It is the conclusion of the world's most qualified coral reef experts."

via www.huffingtonpost.com

Pacific Underwater: A winter’s dive | Healthy Oceans | David Suzuki Foundation

This is the best time of year to be underwater in B.C. As more light reaches into depths free of phytoplankton and bull kelp, visibility is incredibly clear. Just a few feet beneath the surface, water temperature doesn't change much from summer to winter, so with proper diving gear there's nothing to worry about.

via www.davidsuzuki.org

Diving in winter here is fantastic, just a little clunky in a 6 ml wetsuit. And my blood has thinned I think and my diving tends to happen only when in the tropics these days.