Archive for March, 2013

Massachusetts Democrats blast billionaire’s bid to stir Senate race

Reuters: Both Democratic contenders in Massachusetts' April Senate primary are pushing back against a former hedge fund manager turned environmental activist who is trying to make the proposed Keystone XL pipeline an issue in the race. While the pipeline, which would carry crude from Canada's tar sands to Texas refineries, is not due to come anywhere near the New England state, California billionaire Tom Steyer is threatening a campaign to make it a wedge issue ahead of the April 30 primary. Steyer,...

UN wants Tanzania to bulk up efforts to protect fragile Earth

Citizen: Dar es Salaam. The UN yesterday called for joint global efforts towards the preservation of ecosystems saying they play a major role in climate change adaptation. The deputy executive secretary for the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), Mr Richard Kinley, said in Dar es Salaam that the world is on the verge of the climate crisis. He told the UNFCCC international workshop on ecosystem-based approaches for adaptation to climate change that nobody is immune from the impact of...

Are land grabs really water grabs?

CNN: Millions of hectares of land have been acquired in the past few years across Africa by investors who are moving into large-scale agriculture to take advantage of potential windfall gains. Popularly these deals have become known as "land grabbing," but they could just as well have been framed as "water grabs." The current global rush for agricultural land grew partly in response to increased global food prices since 2007. Global capital is finding its way to agricultural investments on the basis...

Roads could help protect the environment rather than destroy it, argues Nature paper

Mongabay: Rapidly expanding road networks are causing large-scale damage to forests but proper infrastructure planning and implementation could actually turn them into a net positive for the environment, argue researchers writing in the journal Science. William Laurance and Andrew Balmford highlight the severe environmental impacts of roads in wilderness areas, including fostering illegal logging, poaching, colonization, and land speculation. "More than 95% of deforestation, fires and atmospheric carbon...

Population growth greatly affecting access to safe water in Uganda

New Vision: Eight months ago, Uganda's population was estimated at 34.1 million people. Out of this, 5.01 million live in urban areas while 29.9 million, which is 85.3%, reside in rural areas. Which means more than three quarters of Ugandans live in rural areas. According to Water Aid Uganda, 9.3 million people in Uganda do not have access to safe water. Around 26,000 children die every year from diarrhoea which is caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation in Uganda. Without access to water, many farmers...

Working together, we’re saving Tampa Bay

Tampa Bay Times: In 1990, Tampa Bay was designated an Estuary of National Significance by Congress, joining a small group of the nation's most beloved -- and troubled -- waterways. Like its sister estuaries of New York Harbor, Puget Sound and San Francisco Bay, Tampa Bay had been pummeled by decades of dredging, development and disregard. The bay was so polluted that it was the subject of a 60 Minutes expose. At the time it entered the National Estuary Program, Tampa Bay already had a dedicated corps of scientists,...

Sierra Club blasts plan to improve fracking in the Northeast

Associated Press: The Sierra Club and some other environmental groups are harshly criticizing a new partnership that aims to create tough new standards for fracking. The criticism Thursday came a day after two of the nation's biggest oil and gas companies made peace with some national and regional environmental groups, agreeing to go through an independent review of their shale oil and gas drilling operations in the Northeast. If Shell Oil, Chevron Appalachia and other companies are found to be abiding by a...

Company: Utah Tar Sands Poised to Yield Oil

Salt Lake Tribune: For years, industry has mined paving material from the aptly named Asphalt Ridge southeast of Vernal. Soon it could also yield the state’s first commercial volumes of oil from tar sands under a California company’s plans to process mined ore at the site near the Colorado state line. Join the Discussion Post a Comment MCW Energy Group executives say they expect to produce 250 barrels a day at the site later this year under an agreement with Temple Mountain Energy Inc., which will supply the ore....

Shell’s CEO Says Gas Will Lead Way

Boston Globe: Peter Voser, chief executive of the global energy company Royal Dutch Shell, said Thursday that the United States and the world need to increase the use of solar panels, wind turbines, and other renewable energy-generating sources to meet the growing demand for power, but abundant natural gas supplies present the most straightforward way to a cleaner future. Natural gas has had a major resurgence in the United States, where a controversial and water-intensive drilling technique known as hydraulic...

Snow forecast for much of Britain as onset of spring fails to shift bad weather

Press Association: There will be no let-up in the bad weather over the weekend, with snow across much of Britain and flooding expected in the south-west. On Thursday night emergency services responded to a surge in weather-related call-outs as heavy rainfall continued to blight communities. The Environment Agency said it was monitoring river levels and was expecting to issue flood alerts and possibly more serious flood warnings for the south-west. Cornwall council set up a designated control room to handle...