Corporate Social Responsibility, CSR, Sustainability, SocioEconomic, Community
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Environmental Debt: Chemicals, Pesticides And Big Ag Industry: Monarch Butterfly Migration Plunges

Environmental Debt: Chemicals, Pesticides And Big Ag Industry: Monarch Butterfly Migration Plunges | Corporate Social Responsibility, CSR, Sustainability, SocioEconomic, Community | Scoop.it

March 13, 2013 - New York Times

The monarch migration population to their winter home in a Mexican forest sank this year to a 59 percent decline ince December 2011 due to extreme weather and a lack of the milkweed that the butterflies feed on, experts say.

 

But an equally alarming source of the decline  is the explosive increase in American farmland planted in soybean and corn genetically modified to tolerate herbicides.

The American Midwest’s corn belt is a critical feeding ground for monarchs, which once found a ready source of milkweed growing between the rows of millions of acres of soybean and corn. But the ubiquitous use of herbicide-tolerant crops has enabled farmers to wipe out the milkweed, and with it much of the butterflies’ food supply.

“That habitat is virtually gone. We’ve lost well over 120 million acres, and probably closer to 150 million acres,” Mr. Taylor said.

A rapid expansion of farmland — more than 25 million new acres in the United States since 2007 — has eaten away grasslands and conservation reserves that supplied the monarchs with milkweed" ...  http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/14/science/earth/monarch-migration-plunges-to-lowest-level-in-decades.html?smid=tw-nytnational&seid=auto

 

March 14, 2013 - Guardian Environment

MEXICAN MONARCH BUTTERFLY NUMBERS DROP 59% TO RECORD LOWS - SIXTH DECLINE IN SEVEN YEARS http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/mar/14/mexican-monarch-butterfly-numbers

 

March 15, 2013 - By Lincoln IP. Brower and Homero Aridjis - New York Times
THE DYING OF THE MONARCH BUTTERFLIES http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/16/opinion/the-dying-of-the-monarch-butterflies.html?emc=tnt&tntemail1=y

 

 

 

MONSANTO RIDER" IN FARM BILL EXEMPTS AGRIBUSINESS FROM LIABILITY FOR BIOCROPS, PESTICIDES, CHEMICALS AND ELIMINATES GOVERNMENT POWER TO REGULATE THEM ... http://grist.org/article/frankenfoods-hitch-a-ride-through-congress-but-you-can-help-stop-them/

 

FRANKENFOODS HITCH A RIDE THROUGH US CONGRESS, FREE FROM LIABILITY AND REGULATION - BUT YOU CAN STOP IT http://sco.lt/526Rmr

 

 

 

 

SEE:

PESTICIDES AND BEES http://www.scoop.it/t/agriculture-gmos-pesticides?q=BEES

 

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No chance for climate deal unless companies join push and lobby their governments: UN

No chance for climate deal unless companies join push and lobby their governments: UN | Corporate Social Responsibility, CSR, Sustainability, SocioEconomic, Community | Scoop.it
Davos, Switzerland (AFP) Jan 26, 2012 - The world has no chance of sealing an emissions cut deal unless companies lobby their governments for an accord, the UN climate chief told the global business elite in Davos on Thursday.
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The critics ramp up the pressure at Davos - A club for the rich and powerful?

The critics ramp up the pressure at Davos - A club for the rich and powerful? | Corporate Social Responsibility, CSR, Sustainability, SocioEconomic, Community | Scoop.it
The World Economic Forum in Davos is not just a get-together of leading politicians and managers. Organizations like Amnesty International are also piping up - occasionally with scathing criticism.

"Davos can not afford to be a complacent club for the rich and powerful of this world," says Salil Shetty, Secretary General of Amnesty International. He couples this statement with a call for a demonstration in Davos. The motto: "Companies must be kept on a tight leash." Nongovernmental organizations (NGO) have adopted a stern approach at this year's forum in the Swiss Alps, effectively forcing their topics onto the agenda. "The governments must take responsibility. We need stricter regulation of large corporations," says Shetty.

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Who Killed Economic Growth?

**PLEASE SHARE** Excerpted from: http://www.endofgrowth.com
Richard Heinberg propose a startling diagnosis: humanity has reached a fundamental turning point in its economic history. The expansionary trajectory of industrial civilization is colliding with non-negotiable natural limits.

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