FROM THE ARCHIVE
AP: Bush to sign toxin treaty
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APRIL 19, 2001 In advance of Earth Day, a source with the Bush administration told The Associated Press the President will announce his support for an international toxin treaty finalized last December. The treaty calls for a phaseout of the so-called "dirty dozen" chemicals. These include PCBs, dioxins, and pesticides. Indigenous people who live a subsistence lifestyle typically have twice the amount of dioxins in their bodies even though industrial nations thousands of miles away produce the majority of the pollutants. Get the Story:
Bush supports treaty to ban 'dirty dozen' chemicals worldwide (AP 4/18) Relevant Links:
How POPs threaten the Natural Environment and the Future of Indigenous Peoples - http://www.ienearth.org/pops_threat-p1.html
The Indigenous Environmental Network - http://www.ienearth.org
Contaminants in Alaska - http://www.state.ak.us/dec/deh/contaminants.htm
Persistent Organic Pollutants, the United Nations - http://irptc.unep.ch/pops Related Stories:
EPA dioxin report opposed (4/12)
Alaska hails pollutant treaty (12/13)
Negotiations begin to ban pollutants (12/5)
Alaska Natives call for toxin study (10/13)
Scientists trace Arctic pollution to US (10/4)
Dioxins are everywhere (10/4)
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