Archive for August, 2012

What’s going on with Colorado’s climate?

Denver Post: Does the recent spate of devastating wildfires, sparse rain and snowfall, and record breaking high temperatures demonstrate that the Colorado climate is changing? Are natural variations the culprit, or might it be that global warming is the reason? This debate has been taking place in our country (and the world for that matter) for well over a decade, and it continues unabated today. So which is it? Let's look at some information, and then you decide. No reasonable debate exists; the global climate...

Oklahoma heat, drought allow deadly amoeba to thrive

Associated Press: High temperatures and an ongoing drought are having an impact on more than just crops and livestock. State health officials say they are also creating ideal conditions for the growth of a tiny, single-cell organism that lives in Oklahoma's rivers, lakes and ponds and can cause a disease that is almost always fatal. The organism, Naegleria fowleri, is being blamed for the death of a 9-year-old Bryan County boy who came down with a case of primary amoebic meningoencephalitis, or PAM, after swimming...

Status of water level in Pakistan’s dams ‘highly critical’

The News: The status of water level in five major dams is "˜highly critical' with meteorological department indicating no dramatic improvement due to low rain forecast in the coming days, sources told "The News" here on Saturday. The sources in the Climate Change Ministry said the impact of fast changing climate situation has started showing its dire consequences and the office of the president has been informed about looming water crisis resulting in little likelihood of the country's reservoirs being...

Horses fall victim to hard times and dry times on the range

New York Times: The land is parched, the fields are withering and thousands of the nation’s horses are being left to fend for themselves on the dried range, abandoned by people who can no longer afford to feed them. They have been dropping dead in the Navajo reservation in the Southwest, where neighbors are battling neighbors and livestock for water, an inherently scant resource on tribal land. They have been found stumbling through state parks in Missouri, in backyards and along country roads in Illinois, and...

Climate change puts East Coast in crosshairs

USA Today: Inch by inch along parts of the Atlantic Coast, global climate change is running in what scientists warn is geology’s version of fast-forward — swamping and eroding beaches, wetlands and farm fields. Shorelines from North Carolina to Boston are in a ‘hotspot’ for sea-level rise and will see water levels rise at double the rate of most places on the planet, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The doubling is largely because of a geologic double whammy. The treasured lifestyle of residents along...

Climate change puts Atlantic coastline in crosshairs

News Journal: Inch by inch along parts of the Atlantic Coast, global climate change is running in what scientists warn is geology's version of fast-forward -- swamping and eroding beaches, wetlands and farm fields. Shorelines from North Carolina to Boston are in a 'hotspot' for sea-level rise and will see water levels rise at double the rate of most places on the planet, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The doubling is largely because of a geologic double whammy. The treasured lifestyle of residents...

Europe Thinks Again About Food

Inter Press Service: Present day European farming is based on the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), which was created over six decades ago by countries emerging from severe food shortages that swept the continent during and after the Second World War. But at a time of widespread famine, lingering droughts, and looming resource wars, experts warn that the logic behind the CAP`s theory of producing huge quantities of food, using largely industrial farming methods, needs reassessment. For one thing, Europeans are...

Climate change described in dire terms

Delmarva Daily Times: Across the mid-Atlantic and around the nation, the vocabulary of climate change has taken on the tone of a coming siege. Maryland describes its approach as "fighting climate change." New Jersey talks of resilience for those "in harm's way." Delaware considers "defenses, vulnerability, losses." All refer to adaptation and retreat, with sides bracing for battles over the rights of property owners threatened by rising water or by government action or inaction. Planners are viewing models of future...

Fracking floors energy giants

Independent: BHP Billiton is about to become the next victim of the latest asset bubble to burst – US shale gas, the rock-based hydrocarbon that is released via the controversial process of fracking. A fortnight after writing $2.84bn (£1.84bn) off the value of its Fayetteville shale gas business in Arkansas, BHP is poised to reveal on Wednesday that the charge helped push down its profits by a massive 40 per cent – to $14.2bn – in the year to June 30. The FTSE 100 mining giant was forced into the writedown...

Idaho resort town ordered to evacuate over wildfire

Reuters: Authorities on Saturday ordered the evacuation of a small mountain resort in Idaho as firefighters braced for the possibility that a wildfire that has charred 82,000 acres could reach the town of Featherville in the evening. Smoke from the Trinity Ridge Fire in the Boise National Forest blanketed roadways leading to Featherville, raising health concerns and reducing visibility, said Gary Walker, spokesman for the Elmore County Sheriff's Office. Featherville has fewer than 100 full-time residents...