Monthly Archives: June 2007

Environmental politics

The end of cheap food?

When I was studying agricultural science 20-odd years ago, much intellectual effort was being spent on how to reduce mountains – butter mountains, beef mountains, and wine lakes (just for variety).

What’s slipped by almost unnoticed is that the butter mountain has now officially gone – not melted, but eaten. And the price of wholesale milk has doubled worldwide.

The continuing drought in Australia, which has crippled the country’s dairy output, has raised the wholesale price of skimmed milk powder by 60 per cent in six months. Over the past year, the cost of skimmed milk powder, used widely by the food processing industry, has soared from $2,000 per tonne to $4,800 per tonne. Butter is also becoming much dearer, rising from $1,800 per tonne to $2,550 per tonne, according to figures from the Milk Development Council.

Putting this together with the weather news from America – long-term catastrophic drought – and you wonder just what are the levels of the world food supplies? And what are the prices likely to be like if, say, Europe were to have a really bad summer?

Feminism

Abortion progress

Two pieces of good news on abortion in the UK:

*The BMA medical ethics committee has recommended that the two-doctor rule be removed, nurses and midwives be able to provide abortions, and restrictions on where an abortion can be carried out be loosened. This is in recognition of medical advances, and that the current system is making women wait much longer for abortions than is necessary, which of course means later, more medically risky, abortions. (Although of course abortion is still safer than pregnancy.)

* And on the political side there is a parliamentary push for a change in the 1967 law.

Whatever your personal stance on the issue, such a change in the law would not mean more abortions – just safer, less stressful ones, i.e. we would stop penalising, punishing women for getting pregnant.

Theatre

Good news and bad news

The bad news is that the glorious, if faded, Wilton’s Music Hall has been listed among the world’s most endangered monuments.

The good news is that, hopefully, this means something might be done to secure the fabric of “the world’s oldest music hall” for the future.

I’ve been to several shows there and even though it does feel slightly like it might come down around your ears any second, it is a wonderful, evocative, spooky place.

Feminism

Let’s ban pink

Sometimes you just have to despair. There is a new airline starting up (well that’s enough cause for despair in itself), but this is an airline marketing itself entirely at women.

How’s it doing that? By painting the plane pink, offering manicures before take-off, and heading for Paris as a “shopping destination”.

Aaarrrghhh!!!!

(Only yesterday I was privately raging about all of the Freecycle postings offering or asking for “boy’s” or “girl’s” baby clothing, as if it makes any difference to babies!)

Blogging/IT

Not so weighty after all…

How much does the internet weigh?

60 grammes, or 6 microgrammes, depending on which method of calculation you use to weigh those electrons.

As ever, lies and damned statistics…

Feminism

Mourn another brave woman

In what was considered a “safe” area of Kabul, Zakia Zaki was shot as she slept in her bed with her baby son beside her.

Zakia Zaki, 35, had run the US-funded station Peace Radio since the fall of the Taliban in 2001. She was also headmistress of a local school and ran for parliament in 2005.

She recently received warnings from powerful local commanders to tone down her reporting, according to the Afghan Independent Journalists Association. “This is a very bad day for female journalists. Our work is becoming increasingly dangerous,” said Farida Nekzad of Pajhwok, an Afghan news agency, after returning from Zaki’s funeral today.