Archive for January, 2013
New Video Explains Climate Threat from Keystone XL Tar Sands Pipeline
Posted by EcoWatch: Danielle Droitsch, Natural Resources Defense Council on January 28th, 2013
EcoWatch: A new video released by Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and 350.org explains how the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline is a lynchpin enabling the climate intensive tar sands industry to grow unimpeded. The video discusses cutting edge research from Oil Change International showing how tar sands oil causes more carbon pollution than originally estimated.
Recently, four energy experts and climate scientists from Canada and the U.S. traveled to Washington DC with an urgent message: if we are...
Over $8 billion invested in watersheds in 2011
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on January 28th, 2013
Mongabay: Unlike cars, hamburgers, and computers, clean drinking water is a requirement for human survival. In a bid to safeguard this essential resource, more and more nations are moving toward protecting ecosystems, such as forests, wetlands, and streams. In fact, according to a new report by Forest Trends' Ecosystem Marketplace, nations spent $8.17 billion in 2011 to secure freshwater by conserving watersheds.
"80 percent of the world is now facing significant threats to water security. We are witnessing...
United Kingdom: Blacklist used by construction firms to disrupt environmental protests
Posted by Guardian: Matthew Taylor on January 28th, 2013
Guardian: Hundreds of environmental activists were on a secret "blacklist" used by construction firms in an attempt to disrupt high-profile protests against road building and other developments.
Files on more than 200 campaigners were held alongside a list of more than 3,000 construction workers who had raised legitimate health and safety concerns or belonged to a trade union.
Last week MPs said the list had deprived thousands of people of work and driven some families to destitution. Evidence of the...
Argentina: Buenos Aires Mayor Slammed for Slow Pace on “Zero Waste” Targets
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on January 28th, 2013
Inter Press Service: The garbage strewn across many streets and sidewalks in the Argentine capital reflects the inefficiency of a waste collection and treatment system that, paradoxically, has become increasingly costly for the city’s residents, say civil society groups and opposition parties. The garbage crisis in Buenos Aires is a result of the saturation of the city’s landfills, due to increased levels of consumption over the last decade, and substandard collection service, with compactor trucks that tend to leave...
United States should lead on climate change
Posted by Kansas City Star: Editorial on January 28th, 2013
Kansas City Star: President Barack Obama called on Americans last week to renew the battle against climate change.
This line from his inaugural address garnered deserved attention: "We will respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations."
But pause the tape right there.
First, Obama in his four years as president already has taken several actions aimed at reducing carbon emissions, primarily through increased fuel efficiency rules...
Scientists could name every species on Earth in 50 years
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on January 28th, 2013
Mongabay: A bold new paper in Science argues that the world's species could be named and described before they vanish into extinction, though the threat of eventual extinction will remain for many, especially as climate change worsens. The scientists say that contrary to popular belief, there are more taxonomists working than ever before and there are likely less species on Earth than often reported, making finding and naming the world's species within reach this century.
"Our findings are potentially good...
On Cape Cod, climate change casts a wide shadow
Posted by Daily Climate: Jennifer Weeks on January 28th, 2013
Daily Climate: Near the outer tip of Cape Cod, a small cottage faces west across the bay toward the mainland. Built in 1950, it measures 776 square feet – smaller than many one-bedroom apartments. It has no garage and sits on less than an acre of land at the end of a dirt road.
The house is for sale. List price: $1.5 million.
The price tag is extra-high because this is one of a few hundred private properties within the Cape Cod National Seashore, a 40-mile stretch of undeveloped coast that runs up Cape Cod's...
Cities alter weather for thousands of miles downwind, study finds
Posted by Daily Climate: Brett Israel on January 28th, 2013
Daily Climate: Had a slushy ski trip to the mountains this winter? The nearest big city might be to blame.
A region's weather can be swayed by the nearest big city, even if it's 1,000 miles away, according to new research. Scientists found that the heat streaming from major metropolitan areas can widen the jet stream and tweak other workings of the atmosphere, according to the study, published Sunday in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Many of the northern hemisphere's cities lie directly under major atmospheric...
Drought seen worsening in U.S. Plains and west Midwest
Posted by Reuters: Sam Nelson on January 28th, 2013
Reuters: Dry weather continues to plague the drought-stricken U.S. Plains and western Midwest with only light showers and snowfall expected this week, an agricultural meteorologist said on Monday.
"The Plains and the northwest Midwest will still struggle with drought, there's not a whole lot of relief seen," said John Dee, meteorologist for Global Weather Monitoring.
Dee said there would be some light rain in the eastern portions of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas late Monday and Tuesday, with heavier rainfall...
Heavy rain and strong winds prompt UK flood warnings
Posted by Guardian: Steven Morris on January 28th, 2013
Guardian: Two spells of very heavy rain and winds of up to 80mph are expected to cause flooding and travel problems in some parts of the UK over the next few days. Up to 7.5cm (3in) of rain is due to drench areas of south-west England, where many rivers and streams are already full because of melting snow and the weeks of soggy weather before the cold snap. Staff at the Environment Agency are particularly concerned that by Tuesday there could be quite serious flooding in Devon, Somerset and parts of south-east...