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Spanish prosecutors, ecologists urge action on pollution

Police hurt, five arrested in Greek landfill clash
Athens (AFP) Feb 9, 2011 - Two police officers were hurt and five people were arrested after late night clashes near Athens between riot police and rural residents opposing a planned waste landfill, officials said on Wednesday. The clashes late on Tuesday broke out after police began searching homes in the town of Keratea, some 40 kilometres (25 miles) southeast of the capital. One resident was detained on the spot and police later found dozens of Molotov cocktails and incendiary materials on a rural highway where police and locals have been sporadically clashing for over two months. Hours after the raid, the local police station was attacked with stones, firecrackers and Molotov cocktails, the police said in a statement.

"Two officers were injured and hospitalised," the police said. The residents of Keratea have long opposed the creation of the landfill, which was earmarked for the area nearly a decade ago, arguing that the local environment will be irreversibly degraded. The government counters that the new facility will replace existing garbage dumps that already constitute a risk to the local environment. Greece has few organised waste disposal facilities and recycling efforts have only recently begun in earnest. For decades, garbage was dumped in a wholesale manner in ravines and other available areas, earning the country large fines from the European Commission for serious environmental neglect.

Pollution clues found in book pages
Rehovot, Israel (UPI) Feb 8, 2011 - An Israeli researcher says a source for studying the Earth's pollution history has been discovered in books -- not what is written there, but the paper itself. A scientist at the Weizmann Institute has found the paper in library collections of old books and newspapers contains a record of atmospheric conditions at the time the trees that went into making the paper were growing. Environmental science Professor Dan Yakir says he has traced the effects of atmospheric pollution from burning fossil fuel going back to the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution, a university release said Tuesday. Scientists have long reconstructed the record of past climate change from such sources as ice cores or tree rings, but a reliable tree ring history, Yakir says, requires an analysis of quite a few trees.

"Rather than going to forests all over the world to sample trees," he says, "we went to the local library." In the Weizmann library's archives, Yakir found issues of the scientific journals Science, Nature and the Journal of the Royal Chemical Society going back over 100 years to the late 19th century. Small samples from the margins of successive volumes were analyzed for the proportion of two carbon isotopes that showed levels of CO2 added to the atmosphere from burning fossil fuel. The levels in the paper were a good match for existing atmospheric records and even revealed some local phenomena, including differences between American and European records, Yakir says.
by Staff Writers
Madrid (AFP) Feb 9, 2011
Spain's public prosecutors joined environmental groups Wednesday in demanding emergency measures to clear a thick layer of smog lingering over Madrid that medics warned could have grave health effects.

Both Madrid and Barcelona, Spain's two largest cities, have seen their levels of atmospheric pollution rise due a high pressure system lodged over the Iberian peninsula that prevents the pollutants from clearing.

Meteorologists expects the weather pattern, which has also brought sun and warm weather since last week, to last until at least Friday.

Virtually all levels of air contamination in Madrid and the surrounding area, home to over five million people, are higher than those recommended by the World Health Organisation, said a spokesman for environmental group Ecologists in Action, Paco Segura.

"Madrid has very serious problems of air pollution. We broke the limits in 2010 and we are breaking them now," he told a news conference.

The European Union recommends that levels of tropospheric ozone, also called "low level ozone", not be allowed to surpass 120 micrograms per cubic metre.

In Madrid this level was surpassed at eight out of 23 measuring stations, according to the environmental group.

"We demand immediate measures be taken to promote the use of public transportation and discourage the use of private cars," said the president of the regional federation of residents' associations of Madrid, Ignacio Murgui.

The group called for the number of parking spaces to be reduced and their costs increased, the use of bicycles to be encouraged and for limits to be placed on the rise in the cost of public transportation.

Another environmental group, Equo, went even further, calling for cars to be banned "immediately" from the centre of Madrid and all public transportation be free of charge.

At the same time the public prosecutors' office has sent an official letter to the mayor's office urging the city take steps "to lower pollution levels because they have surpassed European limits", a spokesman for the office said.

Municipal authorities in the Spanish capital have since Monday used overhead panels on the city's ring road to advise drivers to take public transport "as a preventive measure" to avoid raising pollution levels.

The municipality, which is controlled by Spain's conservative opposition Popular Party, came under fire last year for moving the measuring stations to less polluted districts of the city in a bid to post lower levels.

Spain's Environment Minister Rosa Aguilar said Madrid, unlike Barcelona, had not adopted any measures to fight the smog.

"Surely we'll soon have some proposals," she told a news conference.

The government of the northeastern region of Catalonia, which had a long-standing plan to increase speed limits from 80 kph (50 mph) on some motorways entering Barcelona from Monday, postponed the measure to reduce the risk of pollution.

Air pollution is reponsible for 16,000 premature deaths each year in Spain, according the European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union.

"It can increase mortality by at least five percent," warned Doctor Javier Gonzalez Medel, the spokesman for the Association for the Defence of Public Health in Madrid.

When the International Olympic Committee was considering bids from host cities for the 2016 Games, Ecologists in Action presented it with a study that showed that Madrid suffered from higher air pollution levels than other major European cities like London and Paris.

The Games were awarded to Rio de Janeiro, which eliminated the Spanish capital in the final round of voting.



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