Archive for July 28th, 2012

Canada: Canadian Premiers’ summit sidetracked by pipeline row

Globe and Mail: Quebec's Jean Charest and Newfoundland and Labrador's Kathy Dunderdale have emerged from the premiers' summit as two unlikely allies, warning their Western counterparts not to let the dispute over the controversial Northern Gateway pipeline escalate. Behind closed doors on Friday morning, it was a reluctant Mr. Charest who acted as a statesman, urging the premiers to stand together instead of standing off. He did not want to get involved in other premiers' business - but he had seen this script...

Extreme Drought Areas in US Nearly Triple in One Week

Tree Hugger: The drought gets worse: The US Drought Monitor reports that areas on the nation under extreme drought conditions in key agricultural states has tripled in the past week. Furthermore, the amount of land experiencing drought conditions more broadly has increased to nearly two-thirds of the nation, up from 56% just a week ago. Phys.org quotes Brian Fuchs of Drought Monitor: That expansion of D3 or extreme conditions intensified quite rapidly and we went from 11.9% to 28.9% in just one week. For...

In time of drought, China reaches out to Ukraine to guarantee food supplies

Voice of America: The worst drought in half a century is hitting corn and wheat harvests in the United States, the world's largest food exporter. So China, a major food importer, is turning to a new source of supply - Ukraine, a nation once known as the breadbasket of Europe. The drought in the United States reinforces expert forecasts that world food supplies will steadily tighten this decade, and that prices will rise. When grain prices go up, so do the prices of bread, milk, eggs and meat. When that happened...

TransCanada gets key go-ahead for final southern leg of pipeline project

Washington Post: While rejecting TransCanada's initial Keystone XL pipeline application to build the pipeline across the border from Canada, President Obama has embraced the southern leg of the project, which would ease a bottleneck that is slowing the movement of oil supplies from Canada and North Dakota to refineries on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. On March 22 in the Cushing, Okla., oil terminal and pipeline crossroads, Obama directed agencies "to cut through the red tape, break through the bureaucratic...

Keystone XL pipeline is issue of property rights for some ranchers

Washington Post: John Harter stood on his ranch in the flat sun, a stiff breeze muffling the sound of his voice. Small sandy mounds rose behind him. In front, lay pasture and grazing cattle. At an old well, he stopped to point to water just five or six feet below the surface. Now he looked back at the row of tall cottonwood trees where his pickup truck was parked. The Keystone XL pipeline would come through right here, he said. He doesn’t want it to, and he’s even fought to stop it. It’s not a question of how much...

The Coming Food Crisis: Blame Ethanol?

Forbes: A series of spikes in global food prices resulted in riots in 2008 and contributed to violent uprisings in North Africa and the Middle East in 2011. The culprit is a matter of considerable and frequently heated debate, but the most commonly cited candidates include market speculators, global warming and aggressive government renewable fuel mandates. If you believe the folks at the New England Complex Systems Institute in Cambridge, Mass., the global food supply system is stumbling into a drought-induced...

On the Missouri River, drought’s effects are diluted by tapping northern reserves

Kansas City Star: In times like these, you might have to dip into your savings. That's true even for the Missouri River. The Big Muddy has run through this year's supply of snowpack and rain and is now drawing on reserves held in lakes upriver in North Dakota and Montana. Those reservoirs insulate the Missouri from droughts like the one hurting rivers and streams across the U.S. this year. While the Mississippi fell to 15 feet below normal near Memphis last week, the Missouri stayed level, except for a one-foot...

California ranchers hit by Midwest drought

San Francisco Chronicle: California ranchers may be hit harder by the drought in the nation's heartland than farmers in the corn belt. Most corn farmers have subsidized crop insurance, a program so generous that farmers who lose their entire crop could wind up making more money than if there were no drought at all. Cattle ranchers across the country, however, are seeing the price of corn, hay and other feed skyrocket as a result of diminished yield, forcing many of them to slaughter their animals now rather than later....