Category: News updates

Imperial Valley Environmental Justice Summit

Some 100 miles east of San Diego, lives a big agri-town called Imperial Valley (IV) that supplies 2/3 of the winter vegetables and 1/3 of the fruits/vegetables consumed in the entire US. Majority of IV residents are hispanic with 25% living below poverty line and the majority of farmworkers are migrant workers coming from Mexicali across the US-Mexico border. IV has high rates of asthma (one in five children) and the highest heat-related illness rate in the entire state. Several environmental threats contribute to these issues, including the harsh desert climate, the shrinking Salton Sea, blowing dust storms, pesticides-laden runoff from highly irrigated lands, agricultural activities that produce dust and smoke, rapid urbanization, industrial expansion, and now the lithium exploration activities.

State and Federal government representatives, local NGOs and community members, researchers, and most importantly, the farmworkers, met to discuss about how to deal with the emerging environmental challenges of the region in an event called EJSummit. The Environmental Health Leadership Summit (EJSummit) is an annual event organized by a local community organization called Comite Civico del Valle now in its 13th year. The event occured on October 22/23 this year, right next to the agricultural fields of the IV in El Centro, CA.

Following points were noted:

  1. The hot brine below the Salton Sea (not the Salton Sea water) has enough Lithium to meet 1/3 of today’s global demand. The proposed Direct Lithium Extraction method extracts lithium from brine directly using more environmental friendly technique using a adsorption material thereby rejecting the brine which is reinjected underground, but the technology has not been implemented in industrial scale so the reality of anticipated ‘Lithium Valley’ is yet to be realized.
  2. The Salton Sea continues to shrink due to high rate of evaporation combined with reduced inflow of water caused by the Quantification Settlement Agreement (QSA) of 2003 that diverted some 15% water to San Diego region. The local people mentioned that many people have lost their jobs due to reduced agricultural activities, caused by the reduced water inflow to the IV crop fields.
  3. Speakers included 84-year old living legend Preston Arrow-Weed (in picture), a member of Kumeyaay tribe, who lived in this region for thousands of years. Who else can better teach how to reduce our environmental footprint and to live in harmony with nature?

Heat stress sensors installation in the Imperial Valley

We have deployed two sets of instruments to our field sites at Westmorland, Imperial Valley in coordination with the University of California Cooperative Extension (UCCE) office at Holtville, CA. Each station has a black-globe sensor, relative humidity and temperature sensor, and pyranometer. Together, these measurement will be used to calculate Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT), a key indicator of heat stress on humans.

Installation of heat stress sensors at Westmorland, Imperial Valley.

We have also installed one station at an urban site in El Centro, Imperial Valley in cooperation with the Air Pollution Control District (APCD), El Centro office. The station is located on the roof of the APCD building.

Station at APCD, El Centro building.

Working for ~4 hour in the sun for the instrument installation in this early May was not easy. Imagine farmworkers working in the field everyday regardless of heat, wind, or dust.

Foods do not come to our table so easily. They do not grow in the grocery stores either. A lot of sweat, hardwork, and endurance involved. We must treat farmworkers and the soil with respect if we want quality food on our table.

PS: We are grateful to our collegues at UCCE, Hotville and APCD, El Centro for facilitating installation of our instruments in their sites.

See you at the California State Capitol!

My application for the CCST Science Translators Showcase 2024 has been accepted (with travel support).

CCST Science Translators Showcase is an annual event organized by California Council on Science and Technology (CCST), which is a non-profit organization that aims to inform California’s policies through science and technology.

As part of this program, the final 13 candidates selected will get a chance to explain their research to legislative staffers, agency managers, and senior policy leaders during a networking event at the California State Capitol. The candidates are also provided with trainings to effectively communicate science to policymakers and their staff before the event.

If you want to know what I will be presenting at the event, here is a link to a 60-second video that I created as part of the above application.

The event for this year is scheduled for Feb 07, 2024 at the California State Capitol! Hope to see some of you there!

Joining the editorial board of Nature communications earth & environment

I have recently accepted an offer to join the Editorial Board of the Journal Communications Earth & Environment as a member starting this July. Communications Earth and Environment is an emerging open-access journal from the esteemed Nature Porfolio. I am very happy to join this particular journal because I value life and I care about the wellbeing of our planet Earth.

I hope to contribute meaningfully in uplifting the quality of this journal while also encouraging authentic research works that address the widespread problem of air pollution and degrading Earth’s environment. There is no doubt that, whatever be our research objectives, we must support the wellbeing of our Planet Earth and its biodiversity.

Please consider submitting your article in this open-access journal from Nature Portfolio to increase the impact of your work.

Long live our Earth and environment!

Did you know?

Nature partially pays to their editorial board members.

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