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Exxon-Mobil pleads guilty in deaths of protected US birds Washington (AFP) Aug 13, 2009 US oil and gas company Exxon-Mobil has pleaded guilty to killing 85 protected birds by exposing them to hydrocarbons at sites in five different US states, the Justice Department said on Thursday. The company pleaded guilty before a Denver court to having violated the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act by allowing hydrocarbons to escape from uncovered natural gas well reserve pits and waste water storage facilities at sites in Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. The exposure killed birds including waterfowl, hawks, ibis, and owls at Exxon-Mobil drilling and production facilities. The birds are listed as protected, but are not in danger of extinction. The guilty plea came as part of an agreement with the government that will see Exxon-Mobil plead guilty to five charges and pay 400,000 dollars in fines and 200,000 in community service payments, the Justice Department said. The fines will go towards a federally-administered fund to protect wetlands, while the community service payments will be divided between a bird foundation in Colorado and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation chapter in each affected state. "The environmental compliance plan that Exxon-Mobil has agreed to in this multi-district plea agreement is an important step in protecting migratory birds in these five states," said John Cruden, acting assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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China closes factory after 300 children poisoned: report Beijing (AFP) Aug 12, 2009 Authorities in northern China Wednesday announced the closure of a smelting plant blamed for the lead poisoning of at least 300 children, state media reported. The children, all living near the Dongling Lead and Zinc Smelting Co. plant in Changqing, Shaanxi province, were found to have as much as four times the normal maximum level of lead in their blood, Xinhua news agency said. ... read more |
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