In Court
Logjam: A federal appeals court has blocked logging of trees scorched in one of the US's largest wildfires. It is unlikely that the dead trees can be harvested before rotting. The court order came after a two-year old court battle. The 2002 blaze that burnt 202,343 hectares in southwestern Oregon had become the focus of an intense political and scientific debate, with the Bush administration and the timber industry on one side, and the environmentalists on the other. "The court's action gives us a chance to find some balance here that will actually be good for the forests and the people in the region, instead of just logging everything in sight,' said Todd True, an attorney representing the environmentalists. Needless to say, the judgment left the pro-timber group seething.
hope ahoy: US Chemical company, DuPont, has agreed to pay as much as US $343 million to settle a lawsuit holding the chemical giant guilty of contaminating drinking water supplies in West Virginia and Ohio (see
Related Content
- Joint committee report on pollution of Chandlai lake, Jaipur, Rajasthan, 21/11/2024
- Judgment of the National Green Tribunal regarding pollution by Nectar Life Sciences Limited, Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar, Punjab, 21/11/2024
- Judgment of the National Green Tribunal regarding sewage discharge into storm water drains which meet river Yamuna, 21/11/2024
- Status report on behalf of Amicus Curiae on pollution by pulp and paper industry in Muzaffar Nagar, Uttar Pradesh, 20/11/2024
- Order of the National Green Tribunal regarding discharge of untreated water into Jadhav Sagar, Sakhya Sagar and Madhav Sagar lake, Shivpuri, Madhya Pradesh, 19/11/2024
- Report by the Kerala State Pollution Control Board regarding Periyar river pollution, 19/11/2024