Categories
Environment Health

The invisible toll of pollution

IVF success drops nearly 40% with air pollution exposure: study
by Katie Dangerfield (Global News)

See also: Moving towards climate accountability

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It’s ‘almost impossible’ to eliminate toxic PFAS from your diet. Here’s what you can do by Tom Perkins (The Guardian)

Microplastics are infiltrating brain tissue, studies show: ‘There’s nowhere left untouched’ by Douglas Main (The Guardian)

Hope plastic’s inert in the body! 😨🤞

Individuals can’t grit their way out of systemic harms. There is no escaping the environment we have made for ourselves.

See also: Extending my understanding of self-care

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Surprising New Research Links Infant Mortality to Crashing Bat Populations by Catrin Einhorn (New York Times)

When weird correlations *do* equal causation (indirectly) 👀

Related: Peel those apples: washing produce doesn’t remove pesticides, study finds by Carey Gillam (The Guardian)

 

As a society, are these harms we are truly willing to trade off for cheaper products and food, plus the existence of billionaires? Are they just hidden enough that they can be brushed under the rug? Are we beset by too many crises at once to deal with? We can barely hold the line on having environmental protections, let alone add new ones. Or is the inertia too strong, status quo too dug in, and we’ve been told we’re powerless for long enough we believe it?

Personally, I am pro-regulation and would prefer to err on the side of caution where our collective health is concerned.

 

See also:

When life is an externality

The injustice embedded in our infrastructure

Categories
Activism Art and Design

Read Wild Art

Read Wild Art

Wild Art is an incredibly vivid, colourful and current collection of over 300 extraordinary artworks that are too offbeat, outrageous, kitsch, quirky or funky to ‘make it’ in the formal art world of galleries and museums. From pimped cars and graffiti to extreme body art, ice sculpture, flash mobs, burlesque acts, portraits made from bottle tops, paintings made by animals, light shows, carnivals and giant artworks that can only truly be appreciated from the air, this book has it all. The works featured here are variously moving, funny or shocking, celebrating the beauty and art in anything and everything. Authors David Carrier and Joachim Pissarro have studied alternative and underground art forms and cultures for years and have compiled the ultimate collection of creative works to challenge and engage every reader’s perception of what is and isn’t art.

An odd (thick) collection of environmental activism, body modification, art made with food and reclaimed materials and other non-standard materials, weird architecture, and more.

spread of book with knitted coral reef photo
Mary Ellen Croteau – Bag Coral (2009)

giant fish sculptures made of plastic bottles emerging from a beach

hammerhead shark sculpture made of wooden pieces of layered skate deck
Haroshi – hammerhead shark
rainbow painted stripes on the walls and floor of a passageway, top colors dripping down over the ones below
Markus Linnenbrink – visitor’s tunnel at the JVA Prison
artist carving skulls into the grime of the subway
Alexandre Orion — Ossario
Categories
Environment Featured Places Political Commentary

Theft of the land

In his latest book Local, Alastair Humphreys visits the suburbs, exurbs, and industrial-rural lands surrounding his home, encountering plenty of litter. At first, he’s disgusted and thinks poorly of those who’ve tainted their environment. People he encounters blame the Travelers, saying that because they don’t own the land they don’t treat it well. But after meeting some friendly Traveler kids, he reflects a bit deeper: is burying the litter in a shared pit, as landfills are, really so much better?

And while the litter is the most visible damage done to the landscape, what about all the invisible damages — chemical pollutants despoiling the water, emissions befouling the air — done to the land by those who own it in the name of industry? What about the ecological destruction caused by intense sheep-grazing methods, which has become invisible due to shifting baselines? Owning the land is no guarantee someone will care for it, in fact is justification for the extraction of resources from it.

The presence of a discarded liquor bottle is more obvious than the absence of birds that might have lived there. Pollution and ecological “cold deserts” are much worse environmental harms than a candy wrapper or a soda bottle, but because we can see them, we get more upset about litter. It’s easier to explain away the other damages for having a “virtuous” (in the modern sense) cause: making money. Nor do we demand those land owners clean up their messes, restore the damages they’ve done.

In the Seattle area, the Duwamish River has been polluted and damaged in all ways — litter clogs the shores, chemicals bioaccumulate in the fish, its channel has been constrained and flood plain cut off. Local volunteers are doing the physical cleanup of the litter; the EPA will soon complete a cleanup of the contaminants at the Superfund site, and locals worry that once the river is nice again, they’ll be priced out of the area. They’re asking that planning start to ensure the community that lives there can stay: “While the [EPA] has developed guidance for environmental justice best practices in its public engagement, it hasn’t implemented a strategy that helps to hold physical space for affordable housing or community-oriented development.”

Is it environmental justice if you clean up the chemicals that have been harming the locals but then let them be immediately driven out so someone else benefits?

When the Maui fires happened last year, all of us were thinking it: this is going to be a massive landgrab for haoles. Even the President mentioned that the government wasn’t going to let that happen. I haven’t seen any followup reporting on how successful that effort was 🤞 (Looks like they’re cracking down on illegal AirBnBs?)

Antonia Malchik highlights the primacy of land ownership in the modern world:

In their book The Prehistory of Private Property, authors Karl Widerquist and Grant S. McCall repeatedly go back to the main difference that they see in a private property society versus one where private ownership of, say, land, much less water and food, is unknown: freedom to leave. That is, if you want to walk away from your people, or your place, can you do so and still support yourself? Can you walk away and find or make food, shelter, and clothing? In non-private property societies, the freedom to walk away and still live just fine is the norm. In private property societies, it’s almost nonexistent. You have to work to make rent. Land-rent, you might call it. Someone else owns the land, and you have to pay to live on it.

And our system offers few protections for people’s right to have a home available to rent: instead, we shrug and say the market will take care of it, while zoning for single-family detached units and requiring excessive parking minimums. (It says a lot about a society when we’re more anxious to have free parking than enough housing.)

 

See also:

Paying attention to the design of our spaces

Categories
Environment Fantasy

Re-watched Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind

Watched Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind by Hayao Miyazaki from Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.

Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (Japanese: 風の谷のナウシカ, Hepburn: Kaze no Tani no Naushika) is a 1984 Japanese post-apocalyptic anime fantasy film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki, based on his 1982–94 manga series of the same name.

I first watched this in 1997, when a friend acquired a Japanese version on VHS and we printed off an English script from the internet… except that it only covered about two thirds of the movie — we were so lost 😂 I’m annoyed because when I bought the streaming version, I had to choose between the English dub and the Japanese. Fortunately, the English dub is pretty good (it’s got Patrick Stewart!).

The plot is fast-paced, jumping from travail to travail, but many of the scenes are almost ponderous, lingering on a man in a blowing cape looking off towards the horizon. I think this might help balance the heavy themes.

The environmental and anti-war themes are very on the nose in the (English) dialogue — I wonder if the Japanese might have more nuance? This is… very much the trauma of WWII: the unexpected annihilation of cities, the unimaginable world-destroying weapons and those who would use them.

Such a wonderful introduction; first seeing the grim destruction of the toxic jungle through the eyes of distrustful Lord Yupa, then contrasting Nausicaä’s pleasured wonder at interacting with the environment — the tone shifts marvelously from grim and fearful to accepting and full of awe when the two characters are in similar forests.

I can see the traces of 1960s and 1970s sci-fi art (book covers, Moebius) in the animation and world design. The way the ohmu shells move is echoed later in Howl’s Moving Castle.

Categories
Environment Nature

Living with the litter of modernity

Bookmarked Hermit Crabs Are Using Trash as Shells Across the World, Scientists Find by Christian Thorsberg (Smithsonian Magazine)

Exactly why the crustaceans are making homes out of trash remains an open question. Maybe hermit crabs, which molt and exchange their shells every 12 to 18 months, are struggling to find natural sources of protection, the authors suggest. Marine snail shells, their main choice for housing, are likely in decline as a result of shrinking gastropod populations, per the paper. Humans might also pick up viable shells as souvenirs. Perhaps, presented with a housing crisis of sorts, the crabs have turned to plastic trash as it becomes more and more prevalent in aquatic habitats.

hermit crab sticking out of a dented metal light bulb end
A hermit crab wears a broken lightbulb as a shell. By Shawn Miller

😭

Via Kyle Raymond Fitzpatrick, who writes:

There are microplastics everywhere and we are increasingly curious about their relationship to us. This is a fact of modern lives and, although we can do some things about it, there is little we can actually do. “An American adult could consume, on average, at least 11,000 microplastic pieces per year,” the Washington Post reported earlier this month, following the release of a study on the subject.

[…]

Unfortunately these plastics are too small for me or you or anyone to fish out. Multiple recent studies of multiple different salts — from Indonesia, from Europe, from Australia and India — have found microplastics within the condiment. That is how small we’re talking. This isn’t cheap salt either but fleur de sels and pink sea salts: you cannot “buy your way out” of them.

Categories
Environment Future Building Health

Climate change is unhealthy for humans

Tuesday was world’s hottest day on record – breaking Monday’s record (The Guardian)

“As the rising temperatures drive worsening heatwaves, including terrible humidity, we expect to see substantial increases in related deaths. Many people cannot afford indoor cooling and some people must be outside for work. Heat-humidity then becomes the silent killer, since we often do not realise how many people are in lethal difficulty, especially when it does not cool down at night.”

— Ilan Kelman, a professor of disasters and health at University College London’s Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction

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Climate change spells ‘terrifying’ future: UN rights chief (RTE)

“More than 828 million people faced hunger in 2021. And climate change is projected to place up to 80 million more people at risk of hunger by the middle of this century,” said Mr Turk.

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Air Quality — A Major Issue of Our Time (Eric Topol)

…I think a lot of people don’t understand that the premature deaths — almost 7 million a year — the cancer, cardiovascular disease, the asthma — they just don’t understand the connection about air quality…

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Pollution and health: a progress update (The Lancet)

…pollution is a planetary threat, and that its drivers, its dispersion, and its effects on health transcend local boundaries and demand a global response. Global action on all major modern pollutants is needed. Global efforts can synergise with other global environmental policy programmes, especially as a large-scale, rapid transition away from all fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy is an effective strategy for preventing pollution while also slowing down climate change, and thus achieves a double benefit for planetary health.

4 million deaths from ambient pollution (PM 2.5)

Burning fuels results in fine and ultrafine particulates (eg, PM2·5 and others), long-lived greenhouse gases, and short-lived climate pollutants (SLCPs). SLCPs are simultaneously air pollutants and climate warmers. The primary SLCPs are methane, black carbon (ie, soot), and hydrofluorocarbons.

Global winds transport air pollution from east Asia to North America, from North America to Europe, and from Europe to the Arctic and central Asia.

Categories
Health Lifestyle Society

Society and environment sets the baseline for your health

Liked https://mobile.twitter.com/thefatdoctoruk/status/1591062358532972545 (mobile.twitter.com)

Rest of the thread:

We like to blame others for making choices that cause their woes but it’s easy to fall into some logical fallacies — turns out the whole every individual for themselves thing doesn’t really reflect reality, or help improve outcomes.

See also: Stress response — finding / achieving health as a community