The Flickr Environmentalhazards Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

Gilman, Colorado, a toxic ghost town #1 by jimsawthat

© jimsawthat, all rights reserved.

Gilman, Colorado, a toxic ghost town #1

"Gillman was founded in 1886 and is still not exactly a ghost town. The town is perched on the side of Battle Mountain and had as many as 2000 residents during its boom years. Most of the cabins were built on the side of the steep hill and steps were constructed up the cliff to gain access to the mines. Half of Gillman was destroyed by fire in 1899 including a hotel, the schoolhouse and most of the business section. However, as recently as 1950 production was valued at nearly 13 million dollars and was well above five million in 1953. In 1984, Gilman was abandoned and closed to the public while being cleared of mining pollutants. Zinc and lead were mined there."

Gilman, Colorado, a toxic ghost town #2 by jimsawthat

© jimsawthat, all rights reserved.

Gilman, Colorado, a toxic ghost town #2

"Gillman was founded in 1886 and is still not exactly a ghost town. The town is perched on the side of Battle Mountain and had as many as 2000 residents during its boom years. Most of the cabins were built on the side of the steep hill and steps were constructed up the cliff to gain access to the mines. Half of Gillman was destroyed by fire in 1899 including a hotel, the schoolhouse and most of the business section. However, as recently as 1950 production was valued at nearly 13 million dollars and was well above five million in 1953. In 1984, Gilman was abandoned and closed to the public while being cleared of mining pollutants. Zinc and lead were mined there."

What’s This and What’s it Doing in Fogg Dam_0438 by Irwin Reynolds photo eXpressions

© Irwin Reynolds photo eXpressions, all rights reserved.

What’s This and What’s it Doing in Fogg Dam_0438

Fogg Dam is a pristine wetland less than an hour’s drive east of Darwin. Walking along the Dam wall just after sunrise, I was puzzled to find what looked like a piece of industrial junk sitting, as if abandoned, among the lily pads and aquatic grasses.

When I asked the leader of a small tour group about it she said the machine could best be described as a kind of aquatic lawnmower*. She went on to explain that in a good wet season with plenty of rain, the monsoonal flows flush out the dead plants from the previous season. But in years when there’s insufficient rain, the dead plants remain in the Dam where they rot and de-oxygenate the water--a situation that threatens the health of the freshwater turtles, water pythons and other aquatic wildlife. The solution is to use the “lawnmower” to remove the debris.

So it turns out that the piece of “industrial junk” is a part of what keeps this pristine wetland pristine.

* The Friends of Fogg Dam refer to it somewhat more prosaically as a weed harvester.

© Irwin Reynolds, all rights reserved. If you are interested in using one of my images or would like a high quality fine art print, please send me an email (irwinreynolds@me.com).

Risk Diagnostic Series: Environmental Report by Adv.Ltd

© Adv.Ltd, all rights reserved.

Risk Diagnostic Series: Environmental Report

bit.ly/1QuudBW Advisen wrote a white paper that examines the environmental risk landscape, the risk management response, and the role of insurance in addressing environment risks. The free, 4-page paper is sponsored by Starr Companies.

Gray Reality by Drik Images

© Drik Images, all rights reserved.

Gray Reality

Fatema is writing her class notes at end of the afternoon. During the monsoon toxic water gets into their house and they suffer. Her father died eight years ago and mother works as a housemaid. They are not capable of renting a good home. Part of the story Grey Reality, on Hazaribagh area in Old Dhaka, by Saikat Ranjan Bhadra. Hazaribagh, Dhaka, Bangladesh. June 30, 2009.

Too Late for Questions! The answers are already here! by dougblackport

© dougblackport, all rights reserved.

Too Late for Questions!  The answers are already here!

Copyright 2011

_ATG0014 by atgphotography

© atgphotography, all rights reserved.

_ATG0014

THE OIL SPILL COULD HAVE BEEN SOLVED ON DAY 2........IF WE HAD ASKED FOR HELP FROM NATIONS WHO HAD HIGH-TECH IN UNDERWATER OPERATIONS..........FOR EXAMPLE, CHINA, who built the THREE GORGE DAM....could have solved this problem. I know this for a fact. by roberthuffstutter

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

THE OIL SPILL COULD HAVE BEEN SOLVED ON DAY 2........IF WE HAD ASKED FOR HELP FROM NATIONS WHO HAD HIGH-TECH IN UNDERWATER OPERATIONS..........FOR EXAMPLE, CHINA, who built the THREE GORGE DAM....could have solved this problem. I know this for a fact. by roberthuffstutter

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

THE OIL SPILL COULD HAVE BEEN SOLVED ON DAY 2........IF WE HAD ASKED FOR HELP FROM NATIONS WHO HAD HIGH-TECH IN UNDERWATER OPERATIONS..........FOR EXAMPLE, CHINA, who built the THREE GORGE DAM....could have solved this problem. I know this for a fact.

SLOWLY, THE REAL TRUTH IS BEGINNING TO LEAK OUT...


Despite the vow by President Obama to keep the Gulf oil spill a top priority until the damage is cleaned up, 50 days after the BP rig exploded, a definitive date and meaningful solution is yet to be determined for the worst oil spill in the U.S. history.

So, you would think if someone is willing to handle the clean-up with equipment and technology not available in the U.S., and finishes the job in shorter time than the current estimate, the U.S. should jump on the offer.

But it turned out to be quite the opposite. .

U.S. Refused Help on Oil Spill

According to Foreign Policy, thirteen entities had offered the U.S. oil spill assistance within about two weeks of the Horizon rig explosion. They were the governments of Canada, Croatia, France, Germany, Ireland, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Romania, Republic of Korea, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United Nations.

The U.S. response - Thank you, but no thank you, we've got it.



"..While there is no need right now that the U.S. cannot meet, the U.S. Coast Guard is assessing these offers of assistance to see if there will be something which we will need in the near future."



Blame It On The Jones Act?

Separately, Belgian newspaper De Standaard also reported Belgian and Dutch dredgers have technology in-house to fight the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, butthe Jones Act forbids them to work in the U.S.

A Belgian group--DEME-- contends it can clean up the oil in three to four months with specialty vessel and equipment, rather than an estimated nine months if done only by the U.S. The article noted there are no more than 5 or 6 of those ships in the world and the top specialist players are the two Belgian companies- DEME and De Nul - and their Dutch competitors.

The U.S. does not have the similar technology and vessel to accomplish the cleanup task because those ships would cost twice as much to build in the U.S. than in the Far East. The article further criticizes this "great technological delay" is a direct consequence of the Jones Act.

What Is The Jones Act?

The Merchant Marine Act of 1920 is a United States Federal statute that regulates maritime commerce in U.S. waters and between U.S. ports. Section 27, also known as the Jones Act, deals with coastal shipping; and requires that all goods transported by water between U.S. ports be carried in U.S.-flag ships, constructed in the United States, owned by U.S. citizens, and crewed by U.S. citizens and U.S. permanent residents.

The purpose of the law is to support the U.S. merchant marine industry. Critics said that the legislation results in increased costs moving cargoes between U.S. ports, and in essence, is protectionism, Supporters of the Act maintain that the legislation is of strategic economic and wartime interest to the United States. .

European Service Sector - Offshore Subsea Specialist

As discussed in my analysis of the oil service sector, the European companies typically possess the knowhow in offshore and subsea; whereas their North American counterparts excel in onshore drilling and production technologies.

So, it is more than likely that European firms do have the expertise to clean up the spill quicker and more effectively as DEME asserts.

Since the Jones Act means the Belgian ship and personnel cannot work in the Gulf, it does seem the Act has inhibited technology and knowledge exchange & development, and possibly prevented a quicker response to the oil spill.

Jones Waiver Time

On the other hand, waivers of the Jones may be granted by the Administration in cases of national emergencies or in cases of strategic interest. It would appear the U.S. government's initial refusal to foreign help most likely stemmed from a mis-calculation of the scale and deepwater technological barriers for this unprecedented disaster, and/or perhaps ..... pride.

Whatever the rationale, and if De Standarrd's claim that the Jones Act forbids the European companies to help fight the spill is true, it is high time the U.S. government grant the Jones waiver, and let this be an international collaborative effort.

It's always better late than never.


Global Research Articles by Dian L. Chu

Debris in dirty fill dumped by Westchester County from Playland at Jay Property, Rye, NY by Jay Heritage Center

© Jay Heritage Center, all rights reserved.

Debris in dirty fill dumped by Westchester County from Playland at Jay Property, Rye, NY

UPDATED: The information in this album of photos reflects conditions prior to and existing at the time that the non-profit Jay Heritage Center entered into a new and collaborative public-private partnership agreement with NY State Parks and Westchester County Parks in late 2013 to take on stewardship of the 21.5-acre Jay Property, a large percentage of the 23-acre Jay Estate that surrounds the buildings and grounds owned by the Jay Heritage Center (JHC). Some of these hazards have been cured but others legally must STILL be remedied by Westchester County Parks under the current County Executive and Board of Legislators. They were NOT completely remedied by Westchester County Parks Commissioner Kathleen O'Connor and her staff and still remain an issue after 15 years. The County has not fulfilled its obligation.

JHC filed a Notice of Claim against Westchester County Parks which forced the County to remove over 400 tons of construction debris, garbage and contaminated soils from the site and place it into a permitted landfill in 2010. It was a good start but much more needs to be done. Contaminated materials remain and in 2023, Westchester County Parks agreed AGAIN to remediate any additional historic environmental hazards discovered at the park. Stay tuned for more updates and positive progress!

Did you know? County Parks staff have recently thanked JHC for their due diligence saying that the incident prompted Westchester County Parks to start using CLEAN fill. That's good news for everyone's safety and health!
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Where in Rye? This large rusted green piece of metal is in the dirty fill dumped by Westchester County Parks on the historic NHL Jay Property in Rye along with other pieces of metal and plastic debris. The fill was obviously not properly screened.

Debris in the fill includes numerous plastic bottles including a Pennzoil container, wallboard, metal piping, tin foil food tin, plastic coated electrical wire, plastic bags, tree stumps, drinking straws, etc. It was brought to Jay Property from Playland by Westchester County Parks Dept. Friday January 22, 2010. JHC is concerned about presence of SVOCs, heavy metals like arsenic and lead, and pesticides that might be present in this fill but invisible to the eye.

It had been JHC's hope and recommendation that the area in question someday be used for intergenerational gardens for children and seniors to learn organic methods.The current type of fill is obviously inappropriate for that purpose. It also poses a hazard to migrating winter wildlife that may ingest it.

The Jay Heritage Center was designated as steward for the Jay Property when it was first incorporated and chartered by the Board of Regents and Commissioner of Education of the University of the State of New York on April 27, 1990. The JHC's mission is to educate the public about the historic and environmental importance of this landscape where John Jay grew up.

The Jay Property is the centerpiece of the National Historic Landmark Boston Post Road District (added to the NRHP in 1982 as NR #82001275 and designated an NHL in 1993.)


Jay Heritage Center
210 Boston Post Road
Rye, NY 10580
(914) 698-9275
Email: jayheritagecenter@gmail.com

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www.jayheritagecenter.org

Dirty Old Town by Angela Anderson-Cobb

© Angela Anderson-Cobb, all rights reserved.

Dirty Old Town

Zug Island. One big reason Southwest Detroit is one of the most polluted, unhealthiest, and highest childhood asthma having neighborhoods in the country.

Gasoline Storage Tanks by Rennett Stowe

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Gasoline Storage Tanks

Face Protection by Chas Pope 朴才思

© Chas Pope 朴才思, all rights reserved.

Face Protection

A woman protects her face from the environment in Dazhalan alley, Beijing.

This photograph was actually taken yesterday just before the arrival of one of the worst sandstorms to hit the capital in recent years. There is now a layer of sand over the whole city.