In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for the ‘Ecological and Public Health Crisis’ Category

The reckless depredations of corporate power and neo-Malthusian enthusiasts within the elite threaten our environment and our very survival. EM radiation,disappearing bees and pollinators, heavy metal toxicity, GM crops and soil depletion are amongst the most immediate dangers we face.

Heavy rains mean apple crop is a washout

Posted by seumasach on July 9, 2012

On 26th June the following appeared in the Telegraph:

Apple growers in the South East have lost up to 90% of their stock following one of the wettest seasons on record.

Heavy rains in April and May have led to a fall in bee numbers with the result that fruit blossoms have not been pollinated.

Tony Ealses Tendring Fruit Farm in Hailsham, East Sussex, said:”I doubt if I’ve got a 10 per cent crop.It’ll be ‘hunt the apple’ this autumn.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Colony Collapse Disorder | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Looming health crisis: Wireless technology and the toxification of America

Posted by seumasach on July 9, 2012

Professor James F.Tracy

Global Research

8th July, 2012

As a multitude of hazardous wireless technologies are deployed in homes, schools and workplaces, government officials and industry representatives continue to insist on their safety despite growing evidence to the contrary. A major health crisis looms that is only hastened through the extensive deployment of “smart grid” technology.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Studies and statements showing mobile phone health risk | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Press release: Russian cell phone standards offer better protection than American standards

Posted by seumasach on July 8, 2012

EM Facts

5th July, 2012

Unlike the U.S. radiofrequency standards that regulate cell phones, the Russian standards are based on the precautionary principle. Moreover, they are designed to protect the public from all risks due to cell phone radiation, not just from heating.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Joel M. Moskowitz, Ph.D.

PRLog (Press Release) – Jul 05, 2012 –

In a review paper just published online in the journal, Bioelectromagnetics, Michael Repacholi and his colleagues take issue with the “philosophy” underlying the Russian radiofrequency (RF) standards. Unlike the U.S. and European standards, the Russian standards are based on the precautionary principle and were designed to protect the public from all potential risks from exposure to cell phone radiation, not just heating effects.

The authors of this paper point out that the Russian RF standards were based on studies that demonstrated autoimmune effects of exposure to RF that were not necessarily pathological. In contrast to standards adopted by other governments including the U.S., Russia adopted a precautionary approach in setting the RF standards:

“The general approach to public health protection and setting exposure limits by previous Soviet and current Russian committees is that people should not have to compensate for any effects produced by RF exposure, even though they are not shown to be adverse to health (pathological). In other words, these committees assume there could be long-term health consequences if people have to compensate for RF exposures that produce biological but not pathological effects. Exposure limits are then set that do not cause any possible biological consequence among the population (regardless of age or gender) that could be detected by modern methods during the RF exposure period or long after it has finished. Their approach to protection is that limits of RF exposure should not cause even a temporary initiation of the protective or adaptive compensatory mechanisms over the near or long term. Thus, the final exposure limits are set as a fraction of the minimum RF exposure that is capable of provoking some adaptation-compensatory reactions in people.”

“This is an important difference from the approach used by the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP), which bases its limits on the lowest RF exposure that causes any established adverse health effect (RFLowest). Limit values in their guidelines are then set by assuming that there is maximum absorption of the RF field by people and then reducing the RFLowest by large safety factors to produce the final limits, normally by a factor of 50 lower than the RFLowest for the general public [ICNIRP, 1998].”

The authors claim that the Russian standards are based on old research that is flawed, but they do not critique this research as the focus of their paper is on the philosophy underlying the standards.

The authors do not discuss the serious limitations of the industry-developed (IEEE and ICNIRP) guidelines that form the basis for the U.S. and European standards. These standards only recognize adverse health effects caused by heating tissue (i.e., thermal effects) and not the various adverse health effects that research has shown to be associated with non-thermal mechanisms.

Unlike the U.S. standards adopted by the F.C.C. in 1996 which treat children like adults, the Russian guidelines for children are more sensible as they take a precautionary approach in protecting children’s health:

“Children are not small adults since they are developing organisms with special sensitivities and might be expected to be more sensitive to EMF than adults [Grigoriev, 2005; Kheifets et al., 2005]. Thus, results of studies conducted on adults might not be validly extrapolated to children; therefore, the RNCNIRP [i.e., the Russian committee] considered that children need special consideration when developing exposure limits. According to the RNCNIRP, the following health hazards are likely to be faced in the near future by children who use mobile phones: disruption of memory, decline in attention, diminished learning and cognitive abilities, increased irritability, sleep problems, increase in sensitivity to stress, and increased epileptic readiness. For these reasons, special recommendations on child safety from mobile phones have been incorporated into the current Russian mobile phone standard [Russian Standard, 2003].”

“Recommends limiting mobile phone call time as much as possible and limiting possibility of use by children age < 18 years, pregnant women and pacemaker wearers” (see 2003 Russian standards in Table 2)

The authors of this paper disparage Russia’s “philosophy of protection”:

“The philosophy of protection of the public  that RF exposure of individuals should not cause any compensatory response is not used in standards outside of Russia. National authorities in most countries want to know what health effects they are protecting against and not make assumptions about what effects may occur. This is the philosophy of the ICNIRP and IEEE committees.”

If the purpose of a nation’s RF emission standards is to protect population health, doesn’t the precautionary approach seem more prudent? When the F.C.C. conducts the next review of its 16-year old RF standards for cell phone radiation, a precautionary perspective should be applied. The standards should be revised to enable cell phone communications with emissions that are “as low as reasonably achievable” (ALARA), and all non-thermal effects, including auto-immune and reproductive health effects, must be considered.

===

Source:

Michael Repacholi, Yuri Grigoriev, Jochen Buschmann, Claudio Pioli. Scientific basis for the Soviet and Russian radiofrequency standards for the general public. Bioelectromagnetics. Published online Jul 2, 2012.

Abstract

The former Soviet Union (USSR) and the USA were the first countries to introduce standards limiting exposure to radiofrequency (RF) fields. However, the exposure limits in the USSR standards were always much lower than those in the USA and other countries. The objective of this article is to provide a history of the development of the Soviet and Russian RF standards. In addition, we summarize the scientific evidence used to develop the original USSR RF and subsequent Russian public health standards, as well as the mobile telecommunications standard published in 2003, but we do not critique them. We also describe the protective approaches used by the Soviet and Russian scientists for setting their limits. A translation of the papers of the key studies used to develop their standards is available in the online version of this publication. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/bem.21742/abstract

http://www.prlog.org/11916029

==============================================
Joel M. Moskowitz, Ph.D.
Director
Center for Family and Community Health
The UC Berkeley Prevention Research Center
School of Public Health
University of California, Berkeley
50 University Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720-7360

Phone: 510-643-7314
E-mail: jmm@berkeley.edu
WWW: http://cfch.berkeley.edu
==============================================

Posted in Studies and statements showing mobile phone health risk | Leave a Comment »

Fukushima reactor meltdown was a man-made disaster, says official report

Posted by seumasach on July 5, 2012

Guardian

5th July, 2012

Last year’s accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was a manmade disaster caused by poor regulation and collusion between the government, the operator and the industry’s watchdog, a report has said.

Read more

Posted in Nuclear Meltdown | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Designed for disaster: San Onofre nuclear plant could become California’s Fukushima

Posted by seumasach on June 19, 2012

RT

19th June, 2012

A nuclear nightmare on par with the Fukushima disaster could have unfolded at a power plant outside of Los Angeles, California, federal regulators reveal to the Associated Press in a just-published report.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Nuclear Meltdown | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

US law firm reports on further evidence of cell-phone risk

Posted by seumasach on June 15, 2012

Bernstein Liebhard LLP Reports On Study That Finds More Cell Phone Radiation Side Effects

SFGate

New York (PRWEB)

11th June, 2012

Bernstein Liebhard LLP, a nationwide law firm representing clients injured by cell phone radiation side effects, reports on a March 15, 2012 study, which found that exposure to cell phone radiation during pregnancy leads to hyperactivity and other behavioral problems in the offspring of pregnant mice.* Dr. Hugh Taylor and a team of researchers from the Yale School of Medicine conducted the study, which was published in Scientific Reports. The researchers exposed one group of pregnant mice to cell phone radiation from an active phone placed above the cage, and kept a control group of pregnant mice under the same conditions with the phone deactivated. They found that the offspring of the pregnant mice exposed to radiation developed behavior problems, which increased with the duration of cell phone radiation exposure. Specifically, the offspring of mice exposed to radiation tended to be more hyperactive with reduced memory capacity.

Read more

Posted in Studies and statements showing mobile phone health risk | Leave a Comment »

Experts warn of possible catastrophe at Japan reactor

Posted by seumasach on June 13, 2012

The Hindu

13th June, 2012

Some nuclear experts are warning that spent fuel rods at a damaged plant in Japan could trigger a major catastrophe despite the government’s declaration in December that the emergency phase of the nation’s worst nuclear disaster was over.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Nuclear Meltdown | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Fukushima fallout rivals Chernobyl

Posted by seumasach on June 13, 2012

14 000 Americans already died from Fukushima fallout?

Dr Mae-Wan Ho

ISS

11th June, 2012

A paper published online December 2011 in a peer-reviewed journal estimated that nearly 14 000 have died in the United States in 14 weeks following the arrival of the radioactive fallout from the Fukushima meltdown [1]. It noted that the estimate is comparable to the 16 500 excess deaths in the 17 weeks after the Chernobyl disaster. The rise in reported deaths after Fukushima was greatest among infants less than one year of age.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Nuclear Meltdown | Leave a Comment »

Brazilian study shows cancer link with mobile towers

Posted by seumasach on June 10, 2012

Mortality by neoplasia and cellular telephone base stations in the Belo Horizonte municipality, Minas Gerais state, Brazil.

PubMed

September, 2011

Pollution caused by the electromagnetic fields (EMFs) of radio frequencies (RF) generated by the telecommunication system is one of the greatest environmental problems of the twentieth century. The purpose of this research was to verify the existence of a spatial correlation between base station (BS) clusters and cases of deaths by neoplasia in the Belo Horizonte municipality, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, from 1996 to 2006 and to measure the human exposure levels to EMF where there is a major concentration of cellular telephone transmitter antennas. A descriptive spatial analysis of the BSs and the cases of death by neoplasia identified in the municipality was performed through an ecological-epidemiological approach, using georeferencing. The database employed in the survey was composed of three data banks: 1. death by neoplasia documented by the Health Municipal Department; 2. BSs documented in ANATEL (“Agência Nacional de Telecomunicações”: ‘Telecommunications National Agency’); and 3. census and demographic city population data obtained from official archives provided by IBGE (“Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística”: ‘Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics’). The results show that approximately 856 BSs were installed through December 2006. Most (39.60%) of the BSs were located in the “Centro-Sul” (‘Central-Southern’) region of the municipality. Between 1996 and 2006, 7191 deaths by neoplasia occurred and within an area of 500 m from the BS, the mortality rate was 34.76 per 10,000 inhabitants. Outside of this area, a decrease in the number of deaths by neoplasia occurred. The greatest accumulated incidence was 5.83 per 1000 in the Central-Southern region and the lowest incidence was 2.05 per 1000 in the Barreiro region. During the environmental monitoring, the largest accumulated electric field measured was 12.4 V/m and the smallest was 0.4 V/m. The largest density power was 40.78 μW/cm(2), and the smallest was 0.04 μW/cm(2).

Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Posted in Studies and statements showing mobile phone health risk | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Brussels abuzz over bee decline

Posted by seumasach on June 6, 2012

Before making the usual mechanical calls for more research it’s a good idea to look at research which has already been done. See:

ITNT archive: Disappearing Bees

Euronews

5th June, 2012

Brussels and bees – two words you don’t always hear together, but on World Environment Day the future of our furry friends is of increasing concern to beelovers andMEPs.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Colony Collapse Disorder | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

Assam: Sparrows victim of mobile tower radiation, use of chemicals

Posted by seumasach on June 2, 2012

IBN

28th May, 2012

Golaghat: Sparrows are disappearing from many parts of the country, and specially from Assam where electro-magnetic radiation from communication towers, use of leaded petrol in vehicles and overuse of chemicals and pesticides in agriculture have been cited as causes by scientists.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »