Archive for March 4th, 2012

Enbridge says no timeline for pipeline restart

Reuters: Enbridge Inc said on Sunday a key segment of its oil pipeline system in the U.S. Midwest will remain shut down for up to four more days after a deadly vehicle accident in Illinois caused an oil leak and fire, likely squeezing supplies for refiners in the region. The shutdown of Enbridge's 318,000 barrel a day Line 14/64, which extends to Griffith, Indiana, from Superior, Wisconsin, is also expected to pressure already-weak prices for Canadian crude this week as supplies back up in Alberta, market...

Turkey’s birdlife suffering consequences of conservation crisis

Todays Zaman: The ongoing freeze in Turkey has brought life to a standstill in many parts of the country over the past two months. However, beyond the road closures, traffic chaos, electricity blackouts, commuter frustration and general winter blues, Turkey's birds have been facing a quiet battle for survival in some of the coldest temperatures to have gripped the country in decades. Many experts say this situation is being compounded by the lack of attention dedicated to protecting refuge areas. For brazen...

United States: Kitzhaber’s new 10-year energy plan draft floats big ideas to reactivate green energy

Oregonian: Solar power remains only a tiny part of the energy supply picture in Oregon. For all the green energy sound and fury of the past decade -- Oregon's headlong recruitment of wind and solar companies, its controversial tax breaks, its aggressive mandates for renewable power -- change to the overall supply of electricity has been painfully slow to come. Sure, the Columbia Plateau is now draped in wind turbines. But they still supply only 3 percent of Oregon's electricity. Solar and geothermal are...

United Kingdom: Ancient woodlands under threat from new planning laws, campaigners warn

Guardian: More than 200 ancient woodlands are currently under threat from development, and many more could be at risk without changes to the proposed planning reforms, campaigners are warning. The Woodland Trust said 630 ancient woods had been threatened by development such as quarries and roads in the past decade, with 111 sites lost in 10 years due to weaknesses in planning policy, and 225 still under threat. New maps from the trust show dozens of woodlands dating back more than 400 years at risk around...

At least 37 dead as tornadoes batter American Midwest

Independent: A string of violent tornadoes touched down across the United States, flattening small towns from the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes, cutting off rural communities and killing more than 30 people. Yesterday, as daylight allowed mile after mile of wreckage to be sifted, the death toll was rising. An unknown number of people are still missing. Searches in Indiana led to the discovery of a two-year-old girl lying alone in a cornfield. It was thought that she had been sucked up and swept across land...

Clean-Energy Plan Seen Benefiting Natural Gas Suppliers

Bloomberg: Senator Jeff Bingaman proposed a measure that would require electricity providers to deliver an increasing share of less-carbon intensive energy over the period of 2015 to 2035. Photo: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg Senator Jeff Bingaman proposed a measure that would require electricity providers to deliver an increasing share of less-carbon intensive energy over the period of 2015 to 2035. Photo: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg Natural gas, which already is edging aside coal in American electricity generation,...

Enbridge shuts U.S. oil pipeline after fire, spill

Reuters: Enbridge Inc shut down a key segment of the main Canada-to-United States oil pipeline for an undetermined period on Saturday after a deadly vehicle accident caused a fire at an Illinois pumping station. The Canadian company said it was forced to shut down the 318,000 barrel-a-day "14/64" line between Superior, Wisconsin, and Griffith, Indiana, after the early-morning collision, which caused a blaze and a spill of crude near New Lenox, Illinois. That's equivalent to about 3 percent of total U.S....

United Kingdom: Water levels in 250 stretches of river are dangerously low

Independent: Nearly 250 stretches of Britain's most important rivers are at risk of drought because too much water is being taken out of them. The Environment Agency has revealed that parts of inland waterways in England and Wales are on the danger list with spring barely begun because of "abstraction pressures". The list, which includes the Thames, Severn, Humber and Wear, emerged only days after Caroline Spelman, the Environment Secretary, declared that the South-east was officially in drought. Millions...