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"Making Contact" National Radio Project
"Making Contact," produced by National Radio Project, offers many great radio programs.
Please visit their webpage for a complete listing:
http://www.radioproject.org/.
Also subscribe to the
podcast via their RSS feed: http://www.radioproject.org/rss.xml
Here are descriptions from their website of a few of their Radio Programs:
"Waves of Change, Rivers of Doubt: Global Water Issues and Solutions" (hour-long special)
"Making Contact" #34-06 August 23, 2006 - produced by National Radio Project
====>Click to hear "Waves of Change, Rivers of Doubt: Global Water Issues and Solutions"
Description, guest list and links
Water... it's the source of all life. 70 percent of the planet is
covered in it, and more than half of your body is made up of it. We use
water everyday to refresh, revive, to subsist... yet, water resources
are growing increasingly scarce around the world and access to potable
water is alarmingly difficult in some regions.
In this special, hour-long edition, we look at some core water issues
affecting people around the world, including privatization, access to
clean water, desalination technology, bottled water debates, and
non-point source pollution. A half-hour version of this program is also
available.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Women Rising VIII: International Changemakers
Protecting the Environment" July 26, 2006
Description, guest list and links
Women are gaining influence as leaders throughout the world, fighting for peace, justice, the environment and civil society.
On this edition, we profile four courageous young ecology activists,
going to court for environmental justice and leading regional
cooperation to rescue precious natural resources and indigenous
cultures. Anne Kajir is an indigenous lawyer fighting for the rainforest
and the people of Papua New Guinea. Olya Melen is a Ukrainian lawyer who
stopped her government from destroying the Danube Delta. Dana Rassas is
a Palestinian activist on trans-boundary water policy issues in the
Middle East. Ilana Meallam is an Israeli advocate for the indigenous
Bedouin people of the Middle East.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Who Owns Our Water? Profits vs. Public Interest" January 5, 2005
Description, guest list and links
Water is essential to survival. Yet access to fresh, clean water has
increasingly come under the control of private corporations, making it
less affordable and harder to come by. On this edition, we'll take a
look at water as a basic human right. We'll hear about a plan to
privatize water services in Lagos, Nigeria, and we'll hear about how
activists in Maui, Hawaii are working to recover the island's water
sources for public use.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Water Woes" August 10, 2005
Description, guest list and links
Access to clean water is a matter of life and death for poor people across the globe. And that's the reality over one billion face today.
On this edition, we'll hear about the problem of water domestically and
abroad, and the community organizers who are creating solutions. People
in cities ranging from Manilla in the Philippines to Felton, California
are thirsting for change.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Katrina Uncovers:
Environment, Health and Rescue" September 13, 2005
Description, guest list and links
Millions of lives torn apart, a city in ruins, and a government in denial. No doubt, Katrina is one of the most catastrophic and costly events ever to hit the U.S.
In this first part of a special series, hear the powerful stories from those who survived and find out how you can help with the relief efforts in your local communities and beyond.
We'll also take a look at how the events unfolded after Katrina smashed
into the shores of the southern U.S. coastline and we'll talk to a water
expert who explains what the people in the gulf coast might be up
against in the coming months.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Tapping the Market: Privatizing the World's Water Supply" August 28, 2002
Description, guest list and links
The World Bank predicts that two-thirds of the world¹s population will
not have enough fresh drinking water by the year 2025. Instead of
protecting existing supplies, promoting conservation or helping
vulnerable populations, many governments are turning to private
companies to fix their water woes. Private companies, often large
transnational corporations, are looking to cash in. On this edition of
Making Contact, we take a look at water privatization in South Africa,
Ghana, Bolivia, and the United States.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Water Harvest: A Look at Desalination" December 12, 2001
Description, guest list and links
Only a slim percentage of the world's water is usable for human
consumption. More than 97 percent of it is salt water. In some areas,
where there are shortages of fresh water, people are turning to
desalination plants - facilities that can remove salt from ocean water.
On this program, we take a look at this technology, and what it means
for the environment and our outlook for water supply.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Thirst for Profits: Privatizing the World's Water" May 9, 2001
Description, guest list and links
Over one billion people throughout the world lack the most basic water
supply. At the same time, agribusiness and other industries are rapidly
depleting remaining fresh water sources. On this program, we take a look
at the global water supply and the push for privatization.
Copyright © 2007 National Radio Project, All Rights Reserved.
WGBH Forum Network
WGBH Forum Network Live and Archived Webcasts of Free Public Lectures
in Partnership with Boston's Leading Cultural and Educational Organizations.
Presented by WGBH in association with the Lowell Institute.
Please go to the WGBH Forum Network webpage to find a complete listing of many high quality audio programs:
http://forum.wgbh.org/wgbh/. Also subscribe to the
podcast via their RSS feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/WgbhForumNetworkPodcast
Here are descriptions from their website of a few of their Audio Shows related to Environmental Issues:
====>Click to hear "Saving Coral Reefs and Communities After the Tsunami" 5 June 2006 {Real Player Only}
for a free download of Real Player: http://www.real.com/realplayer.html
Dr. Deborah Brosnan explains the interdependence of humans and the marine environment as demonstrated by the disaster in Southeast Asia.
Copyright © 2006 WGBH Educational Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Ocean Exploration and Conservation" 30 May 2006 {Real Player Only}
for a free download of Real Player: http://www.real.com/realplayer.html
Dr. Stone relates details of his experiences diving in Antarctica, living in an undersea research station, and doing coral reef research in the remote South Pacific Ocean.
Copyright © 2006 WGBH Educational Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "50 Ways to Save the Ocean" 24 April 2006 {Real Player Only}
for a free download of Real Player: http://www.real.com/realplayer.html
David Helvarg presents his new book, 50 Ways to Save the Ocean.
Copyright © 2006 WGBH Educational Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Conservation Medicine: What the Oceans are Telling Us" 23 May 2005
Dr Alonso Aguirre explains the emerging field of conservation medicine and what the ocean can tell us about our health as a species.
Copyright © 2006 WGBH Educational Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Water Wars: Is the Mississippi River Losing the Battle?" 15 Nov 2003{Real Player Only}
for a free download of Real Player: http://www.real.com/realplayer.html
Douglas Dalgle and Jerry Glover talk about the possibility that the Mississippi River is dying.
Copyright © 2006 WGBH Educational Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
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Please visit the WGBH Forum Network site: http://forum.wgbh.org/wgbh/ to find many other valuable audio programs.
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National Water Center - Coordinator, Barbara Harmony
====>Click to hear "Water Use, Water Attitudes and Water Conservation with Emphasis on Composting Toilets"
This is a look at water use, water attitudes and water conservation with emphasis on composting toilets. See plans for composting toilet by Stan Slaughter
Over the last 25 years, we have approached the appreciation of water in many different ways.
In this presentation we visualized the water in a relaxing water journey and tried to carry that same relaxed feeling as we looked at the hard core issues as they have been distilled by the Water Committeee of the Continental Bioregional Congresses since 1984.
Recognizing our part in the water cycles, thanking the water and being present to the water are changes in consciousness that I believe must occur for us to share water and use it wisely. Water is living, wanting to be known.
Barbara Harmony, Coordinator National Water Center
---------------------------
Barbara Harmony has been a community organizer for 45 years. In 1979, she became a water advocate and cofounded the National Water Center. http://www.nationalwatercenter.org.
Water Center Publications We All Live Downstream: A Guide to Waste Treatment that Stops Water Pollution; Aquaterra: Water Concepts for the Ecological Society; Aquaterra: Meta Ecology and Culture are all described at the site.
She has served as coordinator for the Water Committee of the Bioregional Movement since 1984.
The complete (60 pages) WaterWorks: Water and Bioregionalism is at the www.nationalwatercenter.org site.
In 1999, after being invited on a tour of Bolivia and Peru to learn to do ceremony at Sacred Sites. she began to work on the http://www.planetaryhealer.net
website as a way to link people giving thanks to the Water.
As a practicing bioregionalist she lives in a little house in the woods, heats with a woodstove has a compost toilet., collects rainwater, is vegetarian and eats locally grown food.
This is her personal website . http://www.ipa.net/~peace
Copyright © 2006 Barbara Harmony, All Rights Reserved.
Living On Earth
The Living On Earth podcast Living on Earth with Steve Curwood is the weekly environmental news and information
program distributed by Public Radio International. Every week approximately 300 Public Radio stations broadcast Living
on Earth's news, features, interviews and commentary on a broad range of ecological issues. The show airs in 9 of the 10
top radio markets and reaches 80% of the US.
Their webpage offers a complete listing of many quality audio programs:
http://www.loe.org/.
Also subscribe to the
podcast via their RSS feed: http://www.loe.org/podcast.rss
Here are descriptions from their website of their Audio Programs:
====>Click to hear "Pond Scum or Planet Savers?" 11-24-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 11-24-2006
Pond scum just might be the answer to solving the CO2 woes of the Industrial Age. Host Bruce Gellerman visits with Dr. Isaac Berzin, founder of GreenFuel Technologies Corporation. Berzin is working on a prototype that uses algae to convert power plant emissions into biofuels. (5:15)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Trash Vortex" 11-17-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 11-17-2006
Researchers have discovered a Texas-sized area of trash floating in the Pacific Ocean. Composed primarily of plastic garbage from landlubbers, the area has become both a major threat to marine life and a frightening example of how polluted our oceans are. Living on Earth speaks with Adam Walters, a scientist for Greenpeace who is monitoring the vortex aboard the vessel Esperanza. (5:15)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Banking on Wetlands / Ashley Ahearn" 11-03-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 11-03-2006
Wetlands are disappearing at an astonishing rate across the United States. Private companies have come up with a profitable solution to counter the loss. Living on Earth's Ashley Ahearn reports on the problems and potential of this booming environmental industry known as "wetland mitigation banking." (6:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Well"-being 10-27-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 10-27-2006
When Ryan Hreljac was six years old he learned that many areas around
the world did not have access to clean water. Ryan decided to raise
money to build a well in a village in Uganda. Akana Jimmy lived in that
village and the boys became penpals and fast friends. Ten years later,
Ryan and Jimmy join host Steve Curwood to share their story and to
discuss Ryan's continuing efforts to bring water to other struggling
villages. (7:15)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Foresaken Mermaids / Philippe Cousteau" 10-06-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 10-06-2006
In 1970, oceanographer Jacques Cousteau visited Blue Spring in Florida
to film a documentary on the manatees that depended on its warm water
for their survival. Boat traffic and harassment had turned their winter
safe haven into a danger zone. Jacques Cousteau's grandson, Philippe,
brings us the story of the manatee's new fight for survival in the face
of development and Florida's rising demand for water. (15:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Blue Jeans, Blue Water / Jana Schroeder" 09-22-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 09-22-2006
In Mexico, the production of worn-out jeans has environmentalists
singing the blues. Manufacturing methods send chemicals into nearby
waterways. Jana Schroeder reports on how environmental authorities do
and don't enforce Mexican environmental laws (10:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Problems Underground / Julie Grant" 09-15-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 09-15-2006
Although we don't pay them much attention, when sewer systems fail the
consequences are far worse than the smell might indicate. Julie Grant of
WKSU in Kent, Ohio, goes underground to find out what's wrong with our
nation's sewage systems. (6:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "New Orleans Health" 09-08-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 09-08-2006
A year after Hurricane Katrina, critics of the EPA say the health
hazards in New Orleans are under-researched and under-regulated. Living
on Earth talks with Dr. Gina Solomon, a senior scientist with the
Natural Resources Defense Council, who is on the ground in New Orleans
testing the quality of the air, sediment, and water. (5:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Wetland Mystery / Ashley Ahearn" 09-08-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 09-08-2006
Marsh grass is dying in wetlands in the northeastern U.S. and scientists
are having a hard time finding out what's causing this "sudden wetland
dieback." Living on Earth's Ashley Ahearn visited some sick wetlands and
has our story. (5:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Saving the Bay / Andrea Kissack" 08-11-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 08-11-2006
There was a time when the San Francisco Bay was replete with native
oysters. But it's been many years now since they were contaminated and
fished out. As part of efforts to restore the Bay, Andrea Kissack of
KQED reports scientists are trying to bring back these useful and
sought-after mollusks. (6:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Water Permeable Concrete / Conrad Fox" 08-04-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 08-04-2006
Mexico City gets almost 30 inches of rain each year, but most of it runs
out to the ocean through extensive drainage systems. During the summer
rains, the streets flood and the aquifers are not refilling fast enough
to keep the water supply at a constant level. A group of entrepreneurs
believe they have a solution to the city's water problems with a
material called "Ecocreto." Conrad Fox reports. (9:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Coral Talk / Allan Coukell" 08-04-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 08-04-2006
Producer Allan Coukell listens to the sounds of a reef, and tells us how
fish use sound to find their way around. (2:15)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Emerging Science Note/Toxic Breakdown / Allison Smith" 07-14-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 07-14-2006
Researchers develop a non-toxic catalyst that breaks down potentially
harmful estrogens in water supplies. Living on Earth's Allison Smith
reports. (1:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Dead Zones / Mhari Saito" 06-30-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 06-30-2006
Dead zones--large areas of water with little oxygen--occur when excess
fertilizer and untreated sewage seep into the waters. The dead zones are
usually seasonal and they cause fish and other bottom-dwelling animals
to move outside the area to avoid being suffocated. Much underwater life
also dies. Since the 1960s the number of dead zones worldwide has
doubled with each passing decade. In Lake Erie, a massive multiyear
study is underway to study how the lake's ecosystem is affected by its
dead zone. Producer Mhari Saito has our report. (6:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "A Supreme Look at the Swamp / Jeff Young" 06-23-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 06-23-2006
The US Supreme Court is split on whether the Clean Water Act protects
all wetlands. Living On Earth's Jeff Young tells us what's next for
wetlands protection and what the decision tells us about the court's
newest members. (7:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "A Green Legacy?" 06-23-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 06-23-2006
The Bush Administration has officially limited the use of snowmobiles in
national parks and has created a massive marine protected area as a
national monument off the Hawaiian coast. Are these signals of a new
environmental direction for the administration? Host Steve Curwood talks
with Terry Anderson, executive director of the Property and
Environmental Research Center in Bozeman, Montana.
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Fishy Business" 06-23-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 06-23-2006
Fish stocks crashed in the U.S. in the late 80's, prompting the
government to require rebuilding plans for all overfished species. Host
Steve Curwood turns to Professor Andy Rosenberg, of the University of
New Hampshire, who has just completed a ten-year assessment of fish
population rebuilding efforts in the U.S., to find out how the
recovery's going. (5:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Lake Okeechobee At Risk" 06-16-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 06-16-2006
Lake Okeechobee, the second largest lake in the contiguous US, has been
called the "Liquid Heart" of Florida, and a 143-mile dike keeps it from
spilling over. But new maps from the Army Corps show weaknesses in the
walls that could mean disaster for the communities around the lake if a
massive hurricane were to breach the dike. Host Steve Curwood talks with
Associated Press reporter Brian Skoloff about why the Corps is keeping
the maps under wraps. (7:15)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Remaking the Los Angeles River / Ilsa Setziol" 06-16-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 06-16-2006
Straightened, lined with concrete, filled with treated sewage, is there
still a river in the Los Angeles River? Angelenos are saying yes, and
demanding that planners and engineers go to lengths, even great lengths,
to bring back a stream Los Angeles can call its own. Ilsa Setziol
reports. (15:25)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Stemming Red Tide / Ashley Ahearn" 06-09-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 06-09-2006
Red tide hits the world's coasts every year when toxic algae bloom
offshore and are swept into coastal waters. But there's a parasite that
destroys red tide algae and could one day be used to fend off the toxic
blooms. Living on Earth's Ashley Ahearn reports. (5:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Prairie Pothole Wetland" 05-26-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 05-26-2006
Spring comes alive in central North Dakota, near the Chase Lake National
Wildlife Refuge. Nature recordist and photographer Lang Elliott gives
Living on Earth host Steve Curwood a tour of a cattail marsh and the
birds we're likely to find there. (7:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Early Signs: Kilimanjaro / Kate Davidson" 05-19-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 05-19-2006
You may have heard the snows of Kilimanjaro are fast disappearing. It
turns out, so are the forests. Reporter Kate Davidson spent time with
scientists and local farmers in Tanzania to look at the combined effect
of tree-cutting and climate change in this installment of the series
Early Signs: Reports from a Warming Planet. (14:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Out to Sea / Ashley Ahearn" 05-12-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 05-12-2006
The Magnuson-Stevens Fisheries Act is up for renewal and there are
several proposals on the table. U.S. fish stocks have been steadily
recovering since they crashed in the early nineties, and that's leading
some fishermen to ask for reduced fishing regulations. But others
believe that staying the conservation course will ensure robust
fisheries in the future. Living on Earth's Ashley Ahearn reports. (6:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Our Fisheries Today by David Helvarg" 05-12-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 05-12-2006
David Helvarg might be the ocean's biggest fan. He started the
non-profit environmental organization, Blue Frontier, back in 2003 and
he's been working to make blue the new green ever since. Host Bruce
Gellerman spent the afternoon with Helvarg at the New England Aquarium
to talk about the state of America's oceans. (10:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Early Signs: Bangladesh / Sandhya Somashekhar and Emilie Raguso" 04-21-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 04-21-2006
When scientists discuss countries at risk from the potential effects of
climate change, they point to Bangladesh. Just above sea level, and in
the flood plain of the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers, 144 million people
live in a space the size of Wisconsin. Producers Sandhya Somashekhar and
Emilie Raguso report on what's at stake for Bangladesh. (15:45)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Contaminated Water" 04-14-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 04-14-2006
Reports from some troops and company whistleblowers say Halliburton
subsidiary KBR supplied contaminated water to military camps in Iraq.
Living on Earth's Jeff Young talks with some soldiers who came home sick
and wonder if it's from the dirty water. (5:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Early Signs: Water Disappearing / Aaron Selverston" 04-14-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 04-14-2006
For low-lying coral islands in the South Pacific, the warming of the
planet and its atmosphere is not an abstraction, it's a reality. In the
fifth in a series on early signs of climate change around the globe,
Aaron Selverston reports from the island nation of Kiribati (kiri-bahs).
(12:45)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Early Signs: Melting Ice Caps in Ecuador" 04-07-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 04-07-2006
This week we travel to the Ecuadorean Andes, to a snow-covered mountain
that has been the source of legend for centuries. Now the glacier has
melted, and the region's native people try to cope with a warmer, drier,
world. (15:25)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Water Dialogues" 03-24-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 03-24-2006
The fourth international World Water Forum just wrapped up in Mexico
City. Elisabeth Malkin, who covered the forum for the New York Times,
says that with representatives from NGO's, governments, the UN and the
corporate world, it was hard to find common ground. She speaks with host
Bruce Gellerman from Mexico City. (5:10)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Quenching Australia’s Thirst" 03-24-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 03-24-2006
Brad Moggridge is a hydro-geologist with the New South Wales Department
of Environment and Conservation. He's found a way, through cultural
research, to tap his aboriginal heritage for solutions to Australia's
modern day water problems. (4:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Early Signs: Reports From a Warming Planet / Jori Lewis" 03-24-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 03-24-2006
In the second of a series on climate change, Living on Earth travels to
East Africa. The waters of Lake Tanganyika have warmed in recent years.
Now some scientists are worried that that could be affecting a small
fish that's a staple food for Tanzania. Jori Lewis reports. (14:50)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Early Signs: Reports From a Warming Planet / Nick Miroff and Jon Mooalem" 03-17-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 03-17-2006
Living on Earth kicks off a six-part series of reports from places where
climate change concerns are already bringing change. First stop:
Churchill, Manitoba where Nick Miroff and Jon Mooalem report diminished
polar ice is forcing a town to reexamine whether it has any future as
"The Polar Bear Capital of the World." (15:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Whither the Waterways" 02-17-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 02-17-2006
On Tuesday the Supreme Court will hear two clean water cases. Protection
for more than half the country's wetlands is the issue. Host Jeff Young
speaks with David Savage, a reporter for the Los Angeles Times about
what's at stake. (5:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "U.S. Indian Tribes Challenge Canadian Company's Legacy of Waste / Ingrid Lobet" 02-10-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 02-10-2006
Observers say an environmental border dispute 20 years in the making is
likely to set precedent. A Canadian metal smelter dumped 15 million tons
of waste into the Columbia River, which many suspect to be poisonous to
fish and wildlife. Now Indian tribes who live downstream in the U.S.
want the American Superfund law be applied to the Canadian company.
Living on Earth's Ingrid Lobet reports. (16:20)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Drought in East Africa Causes Crisis" 01-27-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 01-27-2006
A severe drought in East Africa has taken a heavy toll on livestock and
now, people are beginning to die from lack of food. Host Steve Curwood
talks with Brendan Cox from Oxfam in Wajir, Northern Kenya about the
crisis. LOE also speaks with Richard Moller, head of Wildlife and
Security at Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in Kenya, about how the drought is
affecting wildlife. (7:15)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Mercury in Fish: Casting Caution to the Wind?" 01-13-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 01-13-2006
An ad campaign called FishScam.com says government mercury advisories
are inaccurate and meant to scare consumers. Host Bruce Gellerman talks
to David Martosko of the Campaign for Consumer Freedom about the
campaign. He also speaks with Dr. Leo Trasande of Mount Sinai Medical
School who says studies show that, in fact, the government safety
threshold for mercury should be even stricter. We also speak with
reporter Sam Roe of the Chicago Tribune. His recent series "The Mercury
Menace" revealed many fish deemed safe by the government contain high
levels of mercury. (12:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Pond Scum or Planet Savers? / Bruce Gellerman" 01-13-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 01-13-2006
Pond scum just might be the answer to solving the CO2 woes of the
industrial age. Host Bruce Gellerman visits with Dr. Isaac Berzin,
founder of GreenFuel Technologies Corporation. Berzin is working on a
prototype that uses algae to convert power plant emissions into
biofuels. (6:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
============== ============== ==============
====>Click to hear "Greenland's Ice Melt" 12-09-2005
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 12-09-2005
Carbon dioxide emissions are causing temperatures to rise and that's
making Greenland glaciers melt at rates faster than previously expected.
Living on Earth host Steve Curwood talks with Richard Alley, professor
of geosciences at Penn State University, about how melting ice sheets
may affect sea levels and global coastlines. (6:15)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Water Warnings" 12-02-2005
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 12-02-2005
A group of engineering students from MIT have come up with a cheap, yet
effective, flood warning system. Host Steve Curwood talks with Elizabeth
Basha of the Flood Safe Early Warning project about the group's work in
hurricane ravaged Honduras. (4:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Maine River Cleanup Spawns Controversy / Susan Sharon" 11-11-2005
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 11-11-2005
Once on the list of the country's ten most polluted rivers, Maine's
Androscoggin River was one of the inspirations for the Clean Water Act.
But some old mill towns in Maine are at odds over the cleanup of the
Androscoggin. Maine Public Broadcasting Network's Susan Sharon has our
story. (9:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Planting Sideways" 11-04-2006
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 11-04-2005
Host Bruce Gellerman interviews Lindsey Williams, a freshmen at Southern
Methodist University. She won the Gloria Barron Prize for Young Heroes
for inventing a new kind of irrigation system for crops. (3:00)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "The Mad Kayaker" 11-04-2005
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 11-04-2005
Roger Frymire has been patrolling the Charles River watershed in
Massachusetts for over a decade, testing viral and bacterial levels that
have been appearing at alarming highs. Living on Earth's Dennis Foley
has this portrait of an average citizen who's putting the problem of
water pollution on the radar. (7:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Environmental Refugees" 10-28-2005
====>Click to hear The Entire Show: 10-28-2005
Scholars predict fifty million people will be displaced within five
years by rising sea levels, desertification, dried up aquifers, and
other serious environmental change. The term "environmental refugees"
has increasingly been invoked over the last two decades to describe
growing waves of people displaced by environmental problems. Host Steve
Curwood talks with Andrew Simms. He's the Policy Director of the New
Economics Foundation in the United Kingdom and the author of a recent
book entitled, "Environmental Refugees: The Case for Recognition".
(6:30)
Copyright © 2006 Living on Earth, All Rights Reserved.
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Please visit the Living On Earth site: http://www.loe.org/ to find many other valuable audio programs.
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Maude Barlow
CITIZENShift Free Range media for Social Change
Please visit their webpage: http://citizen.nfb.ca/blogs/podcasts/ and subscribe
to their podcast with this RSS feed:
http://citizen.nfb.ca/podcasts/citizencast.xml
====>Click to hear "Canada Needs a National Water Policy" March 16, 2007
This engaging interview with Maude Barlow about the privatization of Canadian freshwater is brought to you by Redeye Coop radio in Vancouver.
Copyright © 2007 CITIZENShift, All Rights Reserved.
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Anti Corporate Globalization Activist Maude Barlow, Author of "Blue Gold" talks about Water and other issues
Many thanks to Andrew Geller from the "People Rise Up" program and KBOO in Portland, Oregon for this recording on March 22, 2006.
====>Click to hear the "Maude Barlow Interview"
Copyright © 2007 KBOO.fm, All Rights Reserved.
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Real
World Radio (RWR) is a multilingual radio on the web, functioning in
the auspices of the communication area of the environmentalist group
Friends of the Earth International (FoEI).
Please visit their webpage: http://www.radiomundoreal.fm/rmr/?q=en and subscribe
to their podcast with this RSS feed:
http://www.radiomundoreal.fm/rmr/?q=en/rss.xml
====>Click to download audio "Maude Barlow Interview"
Copyright © 2007 Real World Radio.fm, All Rights Reserved.
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Many thanks to Democracy Now for this interview of Maude Barlow
from April 30th/May 1st, 2002. Fast forward past the midway point of
each section to hear the interview.
====>Click to hear "Maude Barlow Interview" Part 1
====>Click to hear "Maude Barlow Interview" Part 2
Copyright © 2007 Democracy Now, All Rights Reserved.
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A World of Possibilities - Maude Barlow Interview
A
World of Possibilites is an award-winning one hour weekly radio
program that penetrates behind the headlines to uncover the deeper
meanings of events. It offers in-depth analysis, informed commentary and
an exploration of new approaches to our most challenging problems. Our
aim is to open minds and inspire new possibilities.
Please go to their webpage to find a complete listing of many high quality audio programs:
http://www.aworldofpossibilities.com/. Also subscribe to the
podcast via their RSS feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/AWorldOfPossibilities
====>Click to hear "Thirsting for Profits" 6-17-03
Thirsting for Profits - Interview with Maude Barlow
Copyright © 2007 Arts of Peace, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Heartstone Recordings 2006
The Heartstone Recordings 2006 are an assembly of music, poetry,
discussion, and presentations honoring that critically valuable but
endangered resource: Water. This Water Event was produced by Warren
Wilson College in October of 2006. Please visit their webpage: http://www.warren-wilson.edu. Also listen to great
environmental information on the Swannanoa Journal Radio Program.
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Warren Wilson College Orchestra:
====>Click to hear "Opening"
====>Click to hear "Wade in the Water"
====>Click to hear "Bring Me Little Water Sylvie"
====>Click to hear "River Was Dry"
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Dr. Sandy Pfeiffer"
Warren Wilson College President Dr. Sandy Pfeiffer - remarks at the Environmental Leadership Center luncheon, October 16, 2006
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Matthew Turino"
Fiddle solo - by Matthew Turino at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Janisse Ray - remarks"
====>Click to hear "Janisse Ray - poem"
Janisse Ray - remarks at the Environmental Leadership Center's Council of Advisor's luncheon on October 16, 2006.
Janisse Ray - reading of her contribution (her first poem) to Heartstone
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Julia Kernitz"
Julia Kernitz - student observations of her four years at Warren Wilson College and the role of the Environmental Leadership Center in her college career
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Sadie Adams"
Sadie Adams - student of Warren Wilson College sharing her experiences with the Environmental Leadership Center
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Dr. John Casey"
Dr. John Casey - remarks by Warren Wilson College Interim Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the College
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Ann Turkle"
Ann Turkle - Chair of the Warren Wilson College undergraduate creative writing program - reading at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "John Lane"
John Lane - reading by author at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Gary Lilley"
Gary Lilley - faculty of Warren Wilson College - reading by author at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Catherine Reid"
Catherine Reid - author reading at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Sebastian Matthews"
Sebastian Matthews - reading by author - joined by the Warren Wilson College Chorale at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "Thomas Rain Crowe"
====>Click to hear "Thomas Rain Crowe's Flute Performance"
Thomas Rain Crowe - reading by the author at the Heartstone evening celebration
Thomas Rain Crowe - performing with flute at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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====>Click to hear "MariJo Moore"
MariJo Moore - author reading at the Heartstone evening celebration
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
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Warren Wilson College Chorale:
====>Click to hear "Come Now and Gather at the Green"
Copyright © 2007 Warren Wilson College, All Rights Reserved.
CITIZENShift
CITIZENShift Free Range media for Social Change
Please visit their webpage: http://citizen.nfb.ca/blogs/podcasts/ and subscribe
to their podcast with this RSS feed:
http://citizen.nfb.ca/podcasts/citizencast.xml
====>Click to hear "Canada Needs a National Water Policy" March 16, 2007
This engaging interview with Maude Barlow about the privatization of Canadian freshwater is brought to you by Redeye Coop radio in Vancouver.
Copyright © 2007 CITIZENShift, All Rights Reserved.
============== ============== ==============
====>Click to hear "There's a Glacier in our Sink" March 21, 2007
We continue our focus on Water, this week, with this award-winning audio
piece by PhD student, Tara Narwani and composer, Paul Steenhuisen of
Edmonton.
In the piece, Tara and Paul follow water as it cycles from the Columbia
Icefields through the North Saskatchewan River to their tap, and then to
the waste water treatment plant and out to the river again.
Copyright © 2007 CITIZENShift, All Rights Reserved.
Ken Midkiff
Please visit Ken
Midkiff's website for very important information related to CAFOs
(Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) and the growing Water Crisis. He has just started a podcast
and will be adding more audio in the weeks and months to come. Here is
the address to his website: http://www.kmidkiff.com.
Information about "NOT A DROP TO DRINK: America's Water Crisis (and What
You Can Do)" can be found at: http://www.newworldlibrary.com/productdetails.cfm?PC=
491
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Many thanks to The Allegheny Front
for permission to link to this radio interview. Please visit their
webpage: http://AlleghenyFront.org and subscribe to
their podcast at: http://feeds.feedburner.com/alleghenyfront
====>Click to hear "Earth's Bounty: America's Water Crisis and Agriculture "
Meat, watermelon, rice, and other foods require a lot of water to grow.
And water is becoming scarce in major growing areas. That could increase
demand for foods grown in our region. These ideas are explored in the
new book Not A Drop to Drink: America's Water Crisis [And What You Can
Do]. The author, Ken Midkiff, is on the Board of Directors of Concerned
Citizens for Clean Water and is co-chair of the National Clean Water
Network. He recently spoke with The Allegheny Front's Jennifer Szweda
Jordan. It's part of our Earth's Bounty series on food and the
environment. Air date: Week of 08/08/2007
Copyright © 2007, 2008 The Allegheny Front, All Rights Reserved.
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Many thanks to WVXU Cincinnati for permission to link to the following interview. This
interview originally was broadcast on the Cincinnati Edition, produced by 91.7 WVXU
Cincinnati. Please visit their webpage: http://WVXU.org and subscribe to one of their many
podcasts http://WVXU.org/podcasts/.
====>Click to hear "Field Notes: Not A Drop To Drink"
Thane Maynard talks with author Ken Midkiff about his new book Not a
Drop to Drink: America’s Water Crisis (and What You Can Do). In it,
Midkiff argues that the U.S. Water supply is facing a state of
emergency. Air date: 08/05/2007
Copyright © 2007, 2008 Cincinnati Public Radio, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
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Many thanks to Wisconsin Public Radio for their high quality programing. Please visit their webpage: http://www.wpr.org
====>Click to hear "Not a Drop to Drink: America's Water Crisis"
[Note: the above link requires you to have a free copy of RealPlayer on your computer. Download at: http://www.real.com/freeplayer/?rppr=npr
Jim Packard in for Kathleen Dunn
We often think about oil shortages, but a far more important resource...
water, is disappearing altogether. Jim Packard's guest, after ten,
discusses how we're losing our water, and what we can do about it.
Guest: Ken Midkiff, co-chair, National Clean Water Network. Author, "Not
a Drop to Drink: America's Water Crisis (and What You Can Do)". Air
date: 07/30/2007
Copyright © 2007, 2008 WISCONSIN PUBLIC RADIO, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
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