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hat we do: The Mercury Campaign works to protect our communities from mercury pollution and urges the Bush Administration to require that polluting industries use the best available technology to reduce their mercury emissions as much as possible.
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Toxic mercury is affecting real people. Read their stories and get involved! Read their stories...
Laura, 28, Miami, FL: "I was tested for mercury last summer. My levels were 1.51, well above the amount the EPA considers unsafe. I ate fish often, but I never expected to see levels that high. I felt angry. My husband and I want to have a baby, but we've decided to wait so my body can get rid of the poison. I'm sad our government would turn their back on such an alarming problem."
For your wallet: The Sierra Club's Mercury Survival Guide
The government advises women who may become pregnant, pregnant women, nursing mothers, and young children to eat smart to reduce mercury. Take our quiz, then get a handy guide.
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Got merc? Get tested!
The Sierra Club and a co-sponsor make it easy and affordable for you to find out how much mercury is in your body from a small hair sample. Order a kit!
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Many chapters and groups of the Sierra Club plan to or have engaged in community-based programs to distribute energy-efficient lightbulbs. This spring, Club activists will be giving away CFLs across the country. Here are guidelines for selecting, distributing, and recycling environmentally-preferable lightbulbs during mass giveaways. (PDF)
Feature: Coal-fired Power Plants and Mercury Pollution
Coal-fired power plants are one of the largest sources of mercury pollution in the U.S. In addition to mercury, using coal for electricity scars lungs, tears up the land, pollutes water, devastates communities, and makes global warming worse. Learn about coal's dirty secrets that have serious societal and economic consequences in our brand new report, "The Dirty Truth about Coal: Why Yesterday's Technology Should Not Be Part of Tomorrow's Energy Future.
Read the report.
Feature: Mercury hurts wildlife, too
Already know about how mercury can harm humans? Now there is new evidence showing that these same problems and others are affecting our nation's wildlife, and at an alarming rate. Read more about the dangers of mercury pollution for animals like songbirds, the Florida panther, whales, and even the bald eagle. (pdf)
Feature: Green News You Can Use: Mercury Rising
Hear how mercury gets into your body (mp3) and what you can do about it. Though the federal government is currently doing little to protect you from the toxic health effects of mercury contamination, there are simple steps you can take yourself to significantly lower the amount of mercury in your body.
More: The Mercury Cycle: From Smokestacks to the Dinnertable
When coal is burned at power plants, it releases mercury into our atmosphere. This mercury falls to earth in rain, running into our lakes, rivers and streams. Bacteria in the water transform this mercury into toxic methyl-mercury. This diagram shows how toxic mercury from coal-burning power plants gets into our food supply.
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