Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
42 minutes ago, eyeman said:

I think we're going to need more committees and panels to properly tackle this problem, thankfully we're the hub of such...

Thats it. More rubbish talk from pro politicians

Posted

Maybe they need a meeting in Singapore from all head of state from neighboring countries and stay at the finest hotel and discuss this forther?

Posted

The deputy prime minister further instructed pertinent state agencies to collaborate with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The goal is to initiate discussions with neighbouring countries suspected of contributing to the transboundary haze pollution in Thailand.

 

This is such a scandal, this is such a heinous level of deflection on the part of these Thai government creeps who refuse to acknowledge responsibility for the dangerous health hazard facing the nation at this time. This is the worst pollution I've seen in over a decade, and the continuing unwillingness to confront Big Agra (the sugar refiners) and the sugar and corn growers is one of the major factors here.

 

Blame it on forest fires across the border, blame it on whatever you want, most of us know what the truth is and most of us know that you guys are guilty as sin and totally sold out to corporations and Big Agra.

 

I thought Prayuth was compromised, I thought Prayuth was corrupt. Sretta is elevating corruption and compromise to an unheard of level. Lock him up. Punish him. The jig is up as they say. 

 

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Posted
15 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Responding to the escalating haze crisis, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin has directed all provinces in the upper north, including Chiang Mai, to prepare their operation centres. This step aims to mitigate air pollution during the forthcoming Songkran festival, which traditionally sees a surge in tourist arrivals

Sort out the burning issue permanently, not cover it up for a few days over Songkran to make some profit.

  • Agree 1
Posted
1 hour ago, spidermike007 said:

The deputy prime minister further instructed pertinent state agencies to collaborate with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The goal is to initiate discussions with neighbouring countries suspected of contributing to the transboundary haze pollution in Thailand.

 

This is such a scandal, this is such a heinous level of deflection on the part of these Thai government creeps who refuse to acknowledge responsibility for the dangerous health hazard facing the nation at this time. This is the worst pollution I've seen in over a decade, and the continuing unwillingness to confront Big Agra (the sugar refiners) and the sugar and corn growers is one of the major factors here.

 

Blame it on forest fires across the border, blame it on whatever you want, most of us know what the truth is and most of us know that you guys are guilty as sin and totally sold out to corporations and Big Agra.

 

I thought Prayuth was compromised, I thought Prayuth was corrupt. Sretta is elevating corruption and compromise to an unheard of level. Lock him up. Punish him. The jig is up as they say. 

 

Temper, temper. I remember, 10 years ago I think, Chiang Mai authorities blaming elevated lung cancer in CM on smoking (as if smoking didn't exist in other provinces) and not field burning......save the tourist numbers. I can also remember reading about air pollution in CM in a travel guide 25 years ago. It's not a new problem and has probably existed for several hundred years or as long as rice has been harvested. What I don't understand is why so little (almost none in my area) field burning takes place in Isaan, I've only witnessed one. My village isn't very far from the Cambodian border and yet we don't suffer from smog due to forest fires.

Posted
2 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

I thought Prayuth was compromised, I thought Prayuth was corrupt. Sretta is elevating corruption and compromise to an unheard of level. Lock him up. Punish him. The jig is up as they say. 

 

Its all one big club .............

  • Agree 2
Posted
1 hour ago, soalbundy said:

Temper, temper. I remember, 10 years ago I think, Chiang Mai authorities blaming elevated lung cancer in CM on smoking (as if smoking didn't exist in other provinces) and not field burning......save the tourist numbers. I can also remember reading about air pollution in CM in a travel guide 25 years ago. It's not a new problem and has probably existed for several hundred years or as long as rice has been harvested. What I don't understand is why so little (almost none in my area) field burning takes place in Isaan, I've only witnessed one. My village isn't very far from the Cambodian border and yet we don't suffer from smog due to forest fires.

I am a Issan often and I'm constantly witnessing sugar and rice cane fields being burned, and the smoke is horrendous, and it travels for kilometers and kilometers, and fouls the air to no end. It is a crime against the Thai people and the perpetuation of this shows a staggering lack of respect that these farmers have for their neighbors, and the nation. Same applies to the foul sugar refiners. 

  • Like 1
Posted
2 minutes ago, spidermike007 said:

I am a Issan often and I'm constantly witnessing sugar and rice cane fields being burned, and the smoke is horrendous, and it travels for kilometers and kilometers, and fouls the air to no end. It is a crime against the Thai people and the perpetuation of this shows a staggering lack of respect that these farmers have for their neighbors, and the nation. Same applies to the foul sugar refiners. 

Well I'm pleased to say that this isn't something that I have witnessed. I have noticed that the steel beams painted light blue that hold up the car porch roof gets a soot like dust film that I clean off once every two years. One has to look at field burning as something that happens once a year as opposed to traffic pollution which is all year round, especially in big cities, it wasn't too long ago, before leaded petrol was banned, that the dust collected on window sills in London contained enough lead as to be of a mine able quality and that had gone on for 60 years. All human activity produces some form of pollution. I'm not saying I agree with field burning but one has to offer farmers (who aren't well off) alternatives, to say, plow the rice stalks into the ground, ignores the fact that plowing is expensive.

Posted

The only real solution is to start punishing small farmers and sugar refiners in a meaningful manner. Punish them where it hurts. Big fines, and confiscating their land or refineries, if it is a 3rd offense. This is an emergency. Treat it as such. 

 

Individual fires are usually small and short-lived. But they are often so numerous that smoke, along with air pollution from rural and urban areas, mixes to produce thick layers of haze that blanket the landscape. Such hazes contain mixtures of small airborne particles called aerosols and gaseous pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, and ozone that degrade air quality and have harmful health effects.

 

Fires, most of them lit intentionally, are a major contributor to the haze. One of the main reasons is agriculture, either to clear forests for planting or to burn post-harvest crop stubble. “Maize, which is primarily used for animal feeds, is the crop burned the most,” said Danny Marks, a Dublin City University geographer. It’s also common for people to start forest fires to aid in the collection of mushrooms and other forest products and to make it easier to hunt game. Subsistence farmers sometimes practice swidden agriculture, a technique that involves periodically cutting down trees and shrubs, letting the wood dry out for a few months, and then burning it to clear space for crops.

 

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/152616/grappling-with-thailands-seasonal-haze

 

 

chao-4384254_1280-1024x682.jpg.webp

Posted

Eight hours of moderate rain last night has produce a marked improvement today bu tit may only be temporary.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...