If you’re reading this on the web or someone forwarded this e-mail newsletter to you, you can sign up for Globe Climate and all Globe newslettersLet us introduce ourselves. We are Pippa Norman and Kate Helmore – your substitute newsletter curators. Sierra Bain, the steady captain of this ship, has vanished into the wilderness. We do not know where, why or how she will return.
Replacing studies that would have historically taken months, rapid attribution tools are being used globally to hold big oil and gas companies to account, bolster calls to action and ensure climate science has answers to peoples’ questions about the weather affecting their communities. Ryan MacDonald is The Globe’s senior editor, climate, environment and energy. For this week’s deeper dive, Ryan talks about a mining operation gone wrong in Northern Canada.Last week, the size and scale of how the gold mining business works was revealed when giant piles of cyanide-laced rocksHeap leaching involves stacking mined ore into giant piles and then sprinkling it with hundreds of litres of water laced with cyanide.
It’s also important because what happens downstream from the mine affects not just the environment, but the people who depend on it.the true cost of cleaning up mining pollution is growing in places like British ColumbiaEastern Canada and much of the U.S. recently experienced what weather experts refer to as a “heat dome,” with temperatures feeling hotter than 40 degrees with the humidex.
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