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Squids perishing in increasing numbers.
Last week, over 150 of the marine animals were discovered washed up on beaches on the west coast of Vancouver Island, Canada. They have also been sighted lifeless on the shores of Japan, along the northern US Pacific coast from California to Alaska, and on the South American coast from Peru to Chile.

Scientists from the Canadian environmental charity Raincoast Education Society report that these new fatalities may be linked to climate change, as young squid migrate further north and encounter unexpected currents that lead to their stranding.

The events are also increasing in frequency, dozens more that were found in southern California just three weeks ago.

Our appreciation, Canadian scientists and Raincoast Education Society for these observations that illustrate the unmistakeable distress of our marine co-inhabitants.

Let us all turn to the compassionate way of living – the veg diet – to restore the comfort of their natural habitat,
which is also the beauty of our Earth. Saddened by the tragedies of global warming, Supreme Master Ching Hai has often conveyed her wisdom to help alleviate the planetary crisis, as in this March 2009 Juice Fast for Peace videoconference in California, USA.

Supreme Master Ching Hai: As the ocean becomes warmer and warmer and more acidic, more toxins are present in the water. The whales and dolphins are thus being driven from the ocean as the conditions worsen; it is suffocating them. Sometimes hundreds at a time, they’re dying on the beach because they cannot tolerate this toxic condition in the seawater anymore.

So, even though fish may not have the obvious carbon impact that other animals do, everything is interconnected. And there is no way to say that consuming these things results in lower carbon price to the Earth at all.

We should not kill anything. We should not eat anything except plant-based diet.
Reference
http://www2.canada.com/westerly/story.html?id=ba3d33d6-5227-4066-8493-e050ba633e3f
http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Holy+calamari+Squid+stranded+Vancouver+Island/
1859180/story.html

UK develops carbon absorbing cement.
Originally launched from Imperial College London, the young British company Novacem has now raised US$1.7 million to develop its carbon-absorbing cement to reduce CO2 emitted by the cement industry, which accounts for approximately 5 percent of global carbon emissions.

The material, which is made from magnesium silicates, is designed to absorb more CO2 than it emits over time, with the company estimating that for every ton of conventional cement replaced by Novacem, three-quarters of a ton of CO2 is saved.

Kudos Novacem, for your commitment to this green industry transformation! We look forward to seeing such an Earth-beneficial technology available for all.
http://globalgoodnews.com/business-news-a.html?art=12496148026748221

Extra News
In addition to plans for building a US$43 million lithium-ion battery facility that will help generate 600 green collared jobs, US-based General Motors Company announces the introduction of a plug-in hybrid model as early as 2011.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-08/06/content_11838903.htm

Friends of the Earth International calls for participation in the upcoming "Flood for Climate Justice" event on December 12 in Copenhagen, Denmark with a peaceful rally that will urge immediate action to save our planet.
http://vegclimatealliance.org/copenhagen-update-spectacular-history-in-the-making/

French researchers find that ozone depletion and higher atmospheric greenhouse gases create winds across the southern oceans, bringing up CO2 saturated waters and making it more difficult for the ocean to store CO2.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/08/090806141716.htm
http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2009/2009GL038227.shtml

US-based nonprofit Conservation International calls for urgent action on behalf of the world's most diverse marine ecosystem, the Verde Island Passage in the Philippines, to save its endangered marine life from overfishing and a range of climate change effects.