Wednesday, June 16, 2010

From the Inbox: Robert Redford reflects on Gulf Oil Disaster

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JUNE 2010, VOLUME 2

ROBERT REDFORD ON THE GULF OIL DISASTER

ROBERT REDFORD ON THE GULF OIL DISASTER

"All the people on the coast who depend on fishing for their livelihood could be wiped out and the economic consequences are going to spread over the whole country. But maybe we needed it to be that bad to wake us up. We have to get off of our dependence on oil." Watch Robert Redford now.

Get full coverage of the Gulf oil spill from NRDC's experts.

View OnEarth's video on the threat posed to the Gulf Coast seafood industry.

Simple Steps - green living fromNRDC
What to Do About E-WasteWhat to Do About E-waste
We dump about 2.6 million tons of electronic waste annually, poisoning waterways and adding to the toxic load of our planet. But you can keep your e-waste from adding to the burden -- read the guide.

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Tell your senators to pass energy legislation that will prevent future oil spills.

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New OnEarth

The Philippe family has called Louisiana's Grand Bayou home for centuries. But with vast amounts of oil still spewing into the Gulf of Mexico, the waters that sustain the fish, oysters, and shrimp they rely on are threatened, along with the family's future. Watch their story.

From Our Blogs

Al Huang, environmental justice attorney
Lisa Suatoni, senior scientist


The Many Pathways (and Impacts) of the Oil - From Surface to Sea floor
"It's important to keep in mind that the oil that hits the shoreline is what well-respected marine ecologist Jeremy Jackson calls, the 'ring around the bathtub.' This is the oil that we can see. And, in the case of Gulf oil disaster, it is only a fraction of the more than 18 million gallons of oil that have flooded into the Gulf of Mexico. The majority of it remains dissolved or dispersed throughout the Gulf's waters -- largely out of our sight."

Read the full post.





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