I have been following the Zen Habits blog for some time now, and I believe you should too. The blog focuses on these core concepts: simplicity, health & fitness, motivation and inspiration, frugality, family life, happiness, goals, getting great things done, and living in the moment. Leo Babauta, the creator and writer of Zen Habits […]
U.K. artists Robert Graves and Didier Madoc-Jones researched how rising C02 levels (climate change) will transform London, from harsher winters, due to the slowdown of the Gulf Stream, to flooding to to rising ocean levels and even to the insurgence of climate refugees. The London Futures Events will be held at the Museum of London […]
You might not be aware of this, but on average, we inadvertently consume over 700 kg (1540 lbs) of corn a year, per person. Sounds crazy doesn’t it. The number blew me away too. I knew corn had permeated it’s way into most processed ‘foods’, but 1500 lbs – that’s over 4 pounds a day! […]
Repower America along with the Alliance for Climate Protection are having a vote to see who we feel is the “the dirtiest opponent of clean energy this year“. From Deepwater Oil to Upper Big Branch, 2010 has been a year of environmental disasters. But the big oil and coal companies aren’t backing down. Shadowy front […]
It is a theme on TreeHugger that living walkable communities and dense cities use less energy per capita, and that the auto-centric suburb is perhaps the worst of all planning models if we want to reduce our energy and particularly our oil consumption. But do people really want to live in high density apartments if they have the choice? A new Canadian study indicates that for a number of reasons, more and more people do.
Where did it all go wrong? When did we, as a society, decide the economy trumps all, including the very environment that makes human life, and in-turn our ‘benevolent’ system of trade possible? Was it a gradual shift or did it happen overnight? In either case here we are. I think Bill McKibben, the author […]
Seriously? The sad truth is we are voluntarily exposing ourselves to some very nasty chemicals everyday simply by ‘freshening’ up our homes, cars and workspaces. ‘Air fresheners’ are mostly a mixture of volatile toxic chemicals and neurotoxins including benzene, formaldehyde, naphthalene, toluene, xylene, acetone, benzaldehyde, methylene chloride … just to name a few. Your probably […]
We need to break our insatiable appetite for bottled water. The U.S. guzzled back almost 50 billion bottles of it last year, up from just over 3 billion in 1997. That’s over 1500 bottles every second of every minute of every hour of every day. Think about it … these are just numbers for the […]
… Overfishing was recognized as one of the world’s greatest and most immediate environmental problems in 2002, when it was first demonstrated that global catches of wild fish had peaked around 1989 and have since been in decline …
Overfishing. It’s one of those issues we hear about but don’t quite understand. It seems like every time I go to a restaurant or to a supermarket they have seafood available. When I go to the St Lawrence Market in Toronto the place is packed with seafood. So what gives? Well the truth is we as humans are superb fisherman with advanced fishing techniques and have worked diligently to eradicate the planet of marine life.
Ok. That was bit of a stretch. I don’t believe our goal is to eradicate all life in the oceans, but we are doing it just the same. We have all heard of the collapse of the Atlantic Cod fisheries in the North Atlantic in the 1990’s. Tragic yes. And now as we are moving into 2011, almost 20 years after the moratorium on cod, the fishery has not recovered. They are now predicting total extinction of this species in the not too distant future. Crazy considering the fish in this area were so abundant at the turn of the 20th century you could catch them with your bare hands. Literally.
The sad truth is this fishery is not the only casualty in the battle between man and the oceans, countless other species are being decimated at unsustainable rates…..sea bass, grouper, haddock, halibut, marlin, blue-fin tuna, salmon, sharks, sturgeon, shrimp, lobster…. just to name a few. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization reports that 70% of marine fish species are on the brink of collapse due to overfishing. Now don’t be fooled by the promise of fish farming, it is not a viable solution and farmed fish should be on your AVOID list. Fish farming not only introduces diseases to the fish and surrounding waterways due to overcrowding, but also introduces loads of antibiotics to control these diseases. Couple that with the fact it takes roughly 2-3lbs of smaller fish used as food to produce 1lbs of farmed fish and you can see right way this is not a sustainable practice.
What can you do?
So the first and most important thing you can do is to pay attention to what seafood you are eating and always ask where it is from, the exact species, and whether it is wild or farmed. To help you, here is a list of fish to consume and fish to avoid: