Archive for November 3rd, 2010

Long After Spill, BP Gets ‘F’ Ratings for Alaska Pipelines

New York times: Is there another BP disaster waiting to happen, this time in Alaska? The British oil giant has several major accidents in the United States over the last five years, in part due to inadequate attention to maintenance and safety. Most famously, a BP deepwater well blew out in April, killing 11 rig workers and spilling millions of barrels of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico. In 2005, an explosion at its Texas City, Tex., refinery left 15 dead and 170 others injured, and continuing problems at...

Agroforestry could hold key to African agriculture

USA Today: Could trees to be the answer to Africa's worn-out soils? Agroforestry experts presenting at a conference in The Hague say yes. Growing crops under a canopy of "fertilizer trees" can increase grain production by two or three times in nutrient deficient ground. The trees, a unique type of acacia, fix nitrogen in the soil through their roots and go dormant during the corn, sorghum and millet-growing season, so they don't compete with farmers' crops, researchers from Nairobi said. The technique...

Undercover for animals: on the frontline of wildlife crime in the US

Mongabay: US Fish and Wildlife Service Special Agent Sheila O’Connor revealed the inside story of working in wildlife law enforcement to Laurel Neme on her "The WildLife" radio show and podcast. In the first of a two-part interview, Special Agent O’Connor talks about her adventures stopping wildlife crime--scoping out pet shops in the Chicago area for illegal tarantulas to busting a husband-wife team selling illegal pet tigers to nabbing a smuggler of literally thousands of rare and exotic animals parts from...

Barack Obama’s green agenda crushed at the ballot box

Guardian: Californians decisively rejected a measure to roll back the state's landmark climate change law yesterday, the sole win for environmentalists on a night that crushed Barack Obama's green agenda. With that lone victory in California, environmentalists managed to keep alive a model for action on climate change, preserving a 2006 law that had set ambitious targets for greenhouse gas reductions and had attracted tens of millions in clean-tech investment. But many new members of Congress are at...

Floods in the south of Thailand

Guardian: X

Flood-hit Pakistan faces more challenges from climate change, UN told

Associated Press of Pakistan: A Pakistani delegate told a UN General Assembly panel Tuesday that the "extraordinarily hard' floods in Pakistan have underscored the need to link adaptation of adverse impact of climate change to government's economic planning.Speaking in the 192-member assembly's economic committee, Farrukh Iqbal Khan, a counselor at the Pakistan Mission to the UN, also said Pakistan could face more challenges from climate change and he voiced disappointment over the slow pace of international negotiations to deal...

Algae For Biofuels: Moving From Promise To Reality, But How Fast?

redOrbit: A new report from the Energy Biosciences Institute (EBI) in Berkeley projects that development of cost-competitive algae biofuel production will require much more long-term research, development and demonstration. In the meantime, several non-fuel applications of algae could serve to advance the nascent industry. "Even with relatively favorable and forward-looking process assumptions (from cultivation to harvesting to processing), algae oil production with microalgae cultures will be expensive...