Archive for June 9th, 2010

United States: Rainwater Collective

East Bay Express: In recent years, rain barrels have gone the way of the low-flow toilet: mainstream. Thanks to California's three-year drought and a critical mass of interest in resource conservation, homeowners can drop $100 for a designer version at just about any local gardening store. They can take their pick from among countless styles at home improvement superstores. Or they can order one of a number of mass-produced kits and simply make their own. But there's a problem: When restricted to exterior ...

A Gulf Spill Puzzle: How Best To Clean Beaches

National Public Radio: MELISSA BLOCK, host: Yesterday on the program, we heard about the problems with cleaning up Gulf Coast marshes. Fragile grasslands already threatened by oil can be further damaged by the boots and boats of cleanup crews. Cleaning crude off of beaches has a number of problems, too. And to talk about the pros and cons, we're joined by Lisa Speer. She's director of the International Oceans Program at the Natural Resources Defense Council. Welcome to the program. Ms. ...

Drought threatens Thailand’s rice crop

Associated Press: The world's largest rice exporter, Thailand, is facing major losses to its next crop of rice and a water crisis because of the worst drought in nearly two decades. Chanchai Rakthananon, president of the Thai Rice Mills Association, said Tuesday that rice output for the next crop cycle, ending in August, could fall to as little as 2 million tons from a previously forecast 5 million tons. "It didn't rain when it needed to rain," said Angsumal Sunalai, director general of the Thai ...

Australia: Emphasis shifts to limiting effects of global warming

Sydney Morning Herald: THERE is little sense of urgency about climate change in the budget, and the more muscular rhetoric about cutting greenhouse gases in recent budget papers has been replaced by talk of "minimising" the impact of global warming. About $170 million will be directed to energy- and water-saving programs that had been previously announced, including household rebates, while the establishment of many national parks meant a funding boost for the parks sector. The energy-saving schemes ...

Allen says 630,000 gallons of oil captured daily

Associated Press: Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen says the oil spill containment operation in the Gulf of Mexico is now catching up to 630,000 gallons daily. Assessing efforts to restrain the oil spill, Allen told reporters that "we continue to make progress," although he said reinforcement help is on the way, including the expected arrival of a shuttle tanker from the North Sea within the next few days. He also said he hopes capacity of the existing containment structure can be increased soon to ...

Oil spill ripples through Florida economy

Reuters: Gary Chernekoff doesn't own a restaurant, isn't a charter boat captain and doesn't work for a hotel or resort. But he is hurting. A plumber by trade, the Pensacola, Florida resident expected to have a busy and profitable summer. He had three big jobs lined up -- vacation homes being built in this summer tourist haven on the coast of the Florida Panhandle. It was more than enough work for a one-man operation. But the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico that began in ...

Gulf residents angry about BP and claims process

Associated Press: The financial toll of the oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico escalated Wednesday as BP's stock plummeted to a 14-year low and fishermen, businesses and property owners who have filed damage claims with the company angrily complained of delays, excessive paperwork and skimpy payments that have put them on the verge of going under. The oil company captured an ever larger-share of the crude gushing from the bottom of the sea and began bringing in more heavy equipment to help in the ...

BP spill response plans severely flawed

Associated Press: Professor Peter Lutz is listed in BP's 2009 response plan for a Gulf of Mexico oil spill as a national wildlife expert. He died in 2005. Under the heading "sensitive biological resources," the plan lists marine mammals including walruses, sea otters, sea lions and seals. None lives anywhere near the Gulf. The names and phone numbers of several Texas A&M University marine life specialists are wrong. So are the numbers for marine mammal stranding network offices in Louisiana ...

United States: The next drilling disaster?

Nation: A tour of Dimock, Pennsylvania, with Victoria Switzer is a bumpy ride over torn-up roads, around parking lots filled with heavy machinery and storage tanks, and past well pads that not long ago were forests. The winter here was quiet, but with the thawing ground came the return of the rigs, the trucks, the constant noise and lights of a twenty-four-hour-a-day gas drilling operation. "It's a modern-day Deadwood out here," Switzer says, likening the activity to the gold rush. "No rules, no ...

BP under pressure as U.S. probes Gulf spill

Reuters: British energy giant BP Plc's stock price tumbled on Wednesday as it faced more U.S. government and congressional scrutiny over its handling of the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill. BP shares fell around 6 percent in London, following a 5 percent drop on Tuesday, on worries that the company will have to suspend its dividend payment under pressure from U.S. politicians who say it should go to pay for legal claims and environmental damage in the Gulf. The cost of protecting BP ...