Archive for December 25th, 2012

Texas Man Takes Last Stand Against Keystone XL Pipeline

National Public Radio: An east Texas landowner was so determined to block the Keystone XL pipeline from coming through his forest that he took to his trees and built an elaborate network of treehouses eight stories above the ground. "It popped into my head a long time ago, actually," says 45-year-old David Daniel. "If I had to climb my butt on top of a tree and sit there, I would. It started with that." It turned out to be Daniel's last stand in a long battle against the Keystone XL, a pipeline project that would...

NY shale gas rush unlikely in 2013 if gov gives OK

Associated Press: After more than four years of environmental review marked by escalating battles between industry and anti-drilling protesters, New York regulators appear likely to complete strict new regulations for shale gas development by the end of February. But it remains to be seen if drilling actually begins. Gov. Andrew Cuomo and his Department of Environmental Conservation have refused to say whether a 4 1/2 -year moratorium on high-volume hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, will be lifted when regulations...

Storm brings white Christmas, tornado threat to central U.S

Reuters: A major winter storm brought a rare white Christmas to the southern U.S. plains on Tuesday, contributing to a 21-vehicle pile-up that shut down a major highway in Oklahoma. The storm system surging east from Kansas and the Texas Panhandle includes the threat of tornados and severe thunderstorms along its southern fringe, from southeast Texas to Alabama, the National Weather Service said. The storm is expected to bring blizzard conditions and 6 to 8 inches of snow as it strengthens and moves...

What to pay attention to as the California fracking debate heats up

KQED: Last week, California issued draft regulations for fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, an increasingly popular but controversial method of oil and natural gas retrieval. How does fracking work? KQED Science's Lauren Sommer explains: Millions of gallons of water, mixed with sand and chemicals, are injected underground at high pressure. That cracks the rocks, letting the oil out. Around the country, hydraulic fracturing has led to record levels of oil and gas production. Workers change the pipes...

UK flood fears heightened by new downpours

BBC: Rain has returned to south-west England, bringing flooding and high river levels to areas already saturated by heavy downpours. Christmas Eve was wet in parts of England, Wales and Scotland, with Wales and the South East of England set for a very wet Christmas Day. The rail network in the South West of England suffered major disruption. Operator First Great Western advised customers not to attempt to travel west of Taunton in either direction. The Environment Agency has issued about 160...

Is the Amazon Rainforest drying out?

Scientific American: For tropical ecologist Gregory Asner, flying over the Peruvian Amazon from the town of Tarapoto is like traveling back in time. Modern houses, rice paddies and oil palm plantations give way to steep, forested mountains and then to green, unbroken forest that curves toward the horizon. Suddenly the tree canopy below the twin-engine plane turns a mottled gray-brown, a sign of drought damage that he estimates may affect as many as half the trees. In this remote corner of Peru’s Ucayali region,...

Iraq calls for Arab action on climate change

Agence France-Presse: Iraq's most senior energy official called for coordinated Arab action on climate change while Egypt's environment minister proposed a regional green fund at a conference in Baghdad on Monday. Deputy Prime Minister for Energy Affairs Hussein al-Shahristani warned of the risk of flooding, and also pointed to desertification and sandstorms affecting Iraq in his call for regional efforts to combat climate change. The two-day conference comes after the World Bank warned in a report this month that global...

Australia: Here’s a hot tip, it’s time for global warming’s just deserts

The Age: VICTORIA will be a hotter and drier place by mid-century, with more desert and fewer temperate regions because of the impacts of global warming, new scientific analysis has found. In a major report, Victoria's Commissioner for Environmental Sustainability, Kate Auty, warns the changes will put infrastructure and biodiversity at risk, and leave agriculture and endangered species exposed. New climate modelling and analysis by the CSIRO and the Bureau of the Meteorology was carried out for the...

Growing body of climate science spells a challenge for ski resorts

WBUR: Since its start, the nation`s ski industry has contended with the variability of the weather. But new science is calling into question whether climate trends could, before very long, put many New England ski resorts out of business for good. The industry doesn`t necessarily buy the science, but some are at least planning for change. Climate Change`s Impact On Business On a sunny day at Shawnee Peak, a family-sized mountain about an hour northwest of Portland, Maine, faithful early-season...

Climate change, fracking to take center stage in 2013

Marketplace: As the year comes to a close, we're looking ahead to what's next in 2013. We've got predictions for Washington, health care, and investing, but where are we headed when it comes to energy and the environment? Marketplace sustainability reporter Scott Tong shares his take on a few hot button issues coming to the fore. On what's next for fracking: "A lot of people are thinking about this. It's happening in their backyards, so the inherent opposition to it is going to get louder. The federal...