Archive for September 22nd, 2013

Mexico to revise 2014 budget after storms, death toll around 115

Reuters: Mexico's Congress will revise its proposed 2014 budget in the wake of some of the worst storm damage in decades, President Enrique Pena Nieto said on Sunday as the death toll from widespread flooding and mudslides rose to some 115. The government earlier this month said it aimed to run a budget deficit this year and next as it forges ahead with spending on infrastructure. It must now find additional funds to repair roads and infrastructure hammered by the storms. Pena Nieto said Mexico's Congress...

Mexican army searches for bodies in flood and landslide-hit La Pintada

Associated Press: Fourteen hours per body. That's how long rescue crews with shovels, hydraulic equipment and anything they can muster are averaging to find the victims of a massive landslide that took half the remote coffee-growing village of La Pintada, leaving 68 people missing. The Mexican army's emergency response and rescue team slogged in several feet of mud with five rescue dogs on Sunday, recovering a third body, a man found wedged under the collapsed roof of dirt-filled home. Lieutenant Carlos Alberto...

California’s water house of cards

LA Times: Gov. Jerry Brown's Office of Planning and Research convened a meeting this month of groundwater experts from the University of California to determine what is currently known about the state's underground water reserves and how they may be changing in the future. This and other recent overtures from the office are strong indications of the governor's growing interest in the state's complete water picture. That picture is increasingly threatened, in particular where groundwater is concerned. California...

Canadian resource minister: US still needs us

CNBC: The United States is likely to remain partly reliant on Canada for oil and gas on its road to energy independence, Canadian Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver told CNBC in an interview this week. Both the U.S. and Canada are emerging players in the worldwide natural gas export market. A U.S. shale boom is helping the world's biggest energy consumer become less reliant on energy imports, but "the U.S. will still need Canada," Oliver said. Shale gas development is booming around the world,...

Canada: Climate change demands budget change

Sault Star: As Ezra Levant demon stated in a Sun Media column this week, it's still possible to believe climate change is an elaborate hoax concocted by leftist scientists. But as torrential rains demonstrated the night of Sept. 9, denial won't let anybody off the financial hook for the damage nature has been doing lately. A mammoth and no doubt hugely expensive effort continues to restore a rail bed that was obliterated by flood waters at the Algoma Central Railway bridge over Great Northern Road in Sault...

Roaring waters, deep scars: ‘It chewed us up’

New York Times: In the Colorado mountains, the floodwaters struck Jamestown like an invading army. Houses tumbled into the churning Little James Creek. A torrent of rocks and mud crushed Joey Howlett, 72, in his home. People rushed into the rain in pajamas, children in their arms, to shouts of “Get out! Get out!” About fifty miles downstream in the blue-collar city of Evans, the flood filled up poor neighborhoods like a stoppered sink. The rain-swollen South Platte poured into enclaves of Hispanic immigrants....

Food Waste Worsens Greenhouse Gas Emissions: FAO

Climate News Network: The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates the direct cost to producers of food that goes to waste is currently $750 billion annually, a figure that excludes wasted fish and seafood. But the FAO says the waste not only causes huge economic losses but is also doing very significant damage to natural resources -- climate, water, land and biodiversity. Without accounting for greenhouse gas emissions from land use change, the carbon footprint of food produced and not eaten is estimated...

Damage done to our climate can’t be changed, but we can adapt and mitigate

Delmarva Now: “Better late than never” is a phrase that might be applied to our dawning understanding and acceptance of sea-level rise and its effects on our Delmarva Peninsula. For at least 20 years now warnings have periodically been raised about global warming. These warnings have been met with mocking and disbelief for many years, and still are viewed in this light by many. Indeed, the phenomenon that is now also referred to as climate change is still met with skepticism by many. It’s understandable...

Rutgers fish surveys show effects of climate change

Philadelphia Inquirer: On a dark night in the middle of a wide marsh near Tuckerton, N.J., a team of Rutgers University researchers lowered a net over the railing of an old wooden bridge. Then they turned off their flashlights and waited. Below, in Little Sheepshead Creek, the incoming tide was washing hundreds of tiny fish larvae into the net. By now - 24 years after these weekly surveys began - Rutgers ichthyologist Ken Able is seeing the unmistakable effects of warming oceans and climate change. Especially...

As China’s Largest Typhoon Strikes, Evidence Of Human-Caused Climate Change Mounts

Forbes: In the South China Sea, the biggest typhoon in 30 years is bearing down on Hong Kong and southeast China’s most populous regions. Waves of 45 feet were reported with wind gusts up to 140 miles per hour. Guangdong province, home to 109 million inhabitants, most of them along the coast, will see around 10 inches of rain between Sunday evening and Monday afternoon. And although the typhoon has lost its “super storm” status since touching ground in Taiwan Saturday, it will go down as the strongest...