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Tsunami watch: Japan's floating junkyard approaches

TOKYO — What do an empty fishing boat, a Harley-Davidson and a soccer ball have in common? For residents of the West Coast of the US and Canada, they are all reminders of the devastation unleashed on the other side of the Pacific Ocean by last year's Japanese tsunami.

The Story Behind the Story: Reporting at the top of the world

Reporter and documentary filmmaker Caitlin McNally tells GlobalPost what it was like to report on the Arctic and why she plans to stick with the story.

How do you get at ‘ground truth’ in the Arctic when it is melting right beneath your feet?

Over the summer I set out on a journey with documentary journalist and filmmaker Caitlin McNally to do our best to get at a story that is as vast as the frozen tundra of the Arctic itself. We arrived in the Arctic just as scientists were recording a historic melting of the sea ice due to global warming, a perilous development for the environment that has become a potential boon to the oil industry as shipping lanes and drilling operations open up amid the great melt.

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Record global carbon dioxide levels reported in 2011

Global carbon dioxide levels hit a new record high in 2011, the UN weather agency says.

Sandy's impact on job growth will be acute

Super storm Sandy's aftermath could exact a significant toll on the jobs picture, with November payrolls expected to show little gain as economic growth slows to a standstill, according to the latest projections from Deutsche Bank.

Australia superstorm: Brisbane hit with 4,000 lightning strikes

Australia was hit by a superstorm Saturday, which pummeled southeast Queensland with 22,000 lightning strikes and left 29,500 homes without electricity.

Haiti: Flooding claims at least 10 lives

Haiti continues to be at the mercy of hurricane season, as a night of heavy rainfall caused flooding that took at least 10 lives.

The reality of climate change can no longer be ignored

Commentary: US Generals explain why it is a global problem requiring global solutions.
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The surface of an iceberg lit by the sun as it sets over the Jacobshavn Bay on August 29, 2007 near the town of Ilulissat, Greenland. (Uriel Sinai/Getty Images)
US Generals explain why it is a global problem requiring global solutions.
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India: GM crops set for more obstacles, with 10-year moratorium proposed

As farmers protest against more trials of genetically modified crops, an official committee has suggested a 10-year moratorium
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Cotton is a thirsty plant and parts of India drought-prone. But the intensive farming process for cotton leaches the soil and requires high pesticide and fertiliser use that pollutes further downstream (India cotton 2012 11 6 0/AFP/Getty Images)

Doing business in India is about to get harder for genetically modified seed companies like Monsanto, an article in this week's Tehelka suggests.

According to the magazine, the latest round of farmer protests against trials of new GM crops marks an escalating opposition to the technology -- which some argue has contributed to the high rate of suicides by farmers in India's cotton belt.

"The anti-GM sentiment in the country has grown louder with states such as Bihar, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh banning field trials," Tehelka reports. "Besides, official committees have also recommended discontinuing such trials."

"The latest report, dated 18 October, was submitted by the Technical Expert Committee (TEC) set up by the Supreme Court. A key recommendation is to put a 10-year moratorium on field trials of Bt transgenics in all food crops (meant for direct human consumption) until specific sites for conducting the trials have been marked and certified, and competent monitoring mechanisms put in place," the magazine said.

As GlobalPost reported earlier this year, the third film of San Francisco film-maker Micha X Peled's globalization trilogy blames US agribusiness giant Monsanto for a wave of farmer suicides that has claimed tens of thousands of lives across India's cotton belt.

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India: New web site tracks green clearances

India's Center for Science and Environment launches website to clear "grey haze, marred by non-transparency and half-truths."
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(GlobalPost)

In the wake of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's call for $1 trillion in infrastructure investment "at all costs," the Center for Science and Environment (CSE) launched a new website designed to refute claims that the environmental clearance regime is slowing India's economic growth.

The site features a slick map that identifies the locations of industrial sites by categories, including thermal power plants, cement plants, iron & steel facilities, bauxite mines, and so forth. There is also a database that is searchable on various different parameters, which should make it easier for journalists and researchers to crunch numbers on India's environmental performance.

As GlobalPost reported earlier this year, CSE and various environmental journalists and activists have long maintained that it is a rank falsehood that green clearances have held up development. 

The new website should provide valuable new data.

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