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Columnists

As wake-up calls go, it's hard to beat the BP oil spill

If there is a God, she's surely bewildered by the apparent determination of the human race to ignore the deafening wake-up call she's recently sent our way.

As wake-up calls go, it's hard to beat the BP oil spill. The relentless gush of oil into the Gulf of Mexico for the past 85 days, captured live on camera, should be enough to finally force us to look critically at the deeply flawed concepts that have become the guiding ideologies of our times -- starting with unbridled capitalism, and its elevation of economic gain above the very sustainability of the Earth we inhabit.

Another dominant creed that cries out for rethinking is blind faith in technology and the human ability to solve any problem.

Columnists

Deep Spill 2: Not coming to a gulf near you

"Deep Spill 2" sounds like a sequel to a Hollywood thriller.

Unfortunately, it is more of a reality show. "Deep Spill 2" is the name of an ambitious series of proposed scientific experiments that should be happening right now. Scientists from around the globe are ready, literally, to dive in to understand what is happening with the oil and gas that are spewing into the Gulf of Mexico with the force of a volcano.

There is one problem, though: BP won't let them.

Columnists

You, me and disasters in the deep sea

For those of us who live far away from the Gulf of Mexico, the oily videos and doomsaying headlines are getting to be a bit wearying and are drifting to the back of the news.

After all, we get stunned by the repetition after a while and in the end we can live with environ mental disaster as long as it hap pens elsewhere and as long as it doesn't really affect us. In this case, specifically as long as oil prices don't go up. So far so good, right?

Well, maybe not. Here's the other side of the story. Among the energy institutes, oil economists and other thinkers, the question is whether we have in fact come to the long-predicted tipping point with regard to oil production and prices.

Columnists

BP oil disaster: In memory of all that is lost

NEW ORLEANS -- The anger is palpable across the Mississippi Delta. As the Deepwater Horizon oil geyser, almost a mile underwater, continues unabated, the brunt of this, the largest environmental catastrophe in United States history, is rolling onto the coast, impacting the ecology, the economy and entire ways of life.

I travelled across the bayous and towns of coastal Louisiana for four days, meeting the people on the front lines of the onrush of BP's oil slick. They are angry, out of work and read the papers about people getting sick.

press release

American scientist Craig Venter creates and sells self-replicating synthetic life

The Belfast Telegraph in Northern Ireland has leaked news of monumental importance to humanity:

"An American biologist has stepped into the shoes of Baron Frankenstein by breathing life into a bacterium using genes assembled in the laboratory.

The creation of the 'synthetic cell', described as a 'landmark' by one British expert, is a 15-year dream come true for maverick genetics entrepreneur Dr. Craig Venter."

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Redeye

Compensation for Gulf oil spill

March 23, 2012
| Earlier this month BP announced that a settlement had been proposed between the company and those affected by the oil spill. Antonia Juhasz says that BP jumped the gun to mollify investors.

16:27 minutes (15.06 MB)

From the Gulf Coast to English Bay: Protecting our oceans from Big Oil

Jun 9 2011 - 7:00pm
Jun 9 2011 - 10:00pm

Location

W2 Media Cafe
#250-111 W Hastings Street
Vancouver, BC
Canada
49° 16' 55.5636" N, 123° 6' 27.4464" W

A Vancouver Book Launch for Antonia Juhasz's Black Tide

with Ben West, No Tankers campaigner with the Wilderness Committee

"Black Tide is riveting, infuriating, and incredibly important to understand the places, politics, and people who survived the Gulf oil disaster." --Rebecca Solint, author of A Paradise Built in Hell.

Contact name: 
Ben West

Weekly Mulch: One year after the BP oil spill, none the wiser

| April 22, 2011
Sarah Laskow

Weekly Mulch: Chevron must pay

| February 19, 2011
Sarah Laskow

Weekly Mulch: The sticky truth about oil spills and tar sands

| January 16, 2011
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