Archive for November, 2013
13 Arrested Blocking Highway at Site of Spectra Energy Pipeline
Posted by EcoWatch: None Given on November 3rd, 2013
EcoWatch: Thirteen people were arrested yesterday for blocking the West Side Highway adjacent to the site where Spectra Energy has completed a natural gas pipeline entering Manhattan, NY from New Jersey.
Thanks to the Environment TV crew for capturing this direct action on video.
According to the Sane Energy Project, the “New Jersey-New York Expansion Project” is a high-pressure gas pipeline, varying in diameter from 42-30? routed up the New Jersey shoreline, through the edge of Staten Island, under...
What Happens When the World Dries Out
Posted by Climate News Network: Tim Radford on November 3rd, 2013
Climate News Network: A warmer, drier world will be bad news for those people who already live on the edge. Higher temperatures will do more than evaporate the soil moisture: they will alter the natural soil chemistry as well.
Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo of the Universidad Pablo de Olavide, in Seville, Spain, and fellow scientists report in Nature that they looked at soil samples from 224 dryland ecosystem plots in every continent except Antarctica.
Drylands matter: they account for more than 40 percent of the planet's...
Leaked IPCC Report Predicts More Food Shortages, War and Disease From Warming
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on November 3rd, 2013
Associated Press: Starvation, poverty, flooding, heat waves, droughts, war and disease already lead to human tragedies. They're likely to worsen as the world warms from man-made climate change, a leaked draft of an international scientific report forecasts.
The Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will issue a report next March on how global warming is already affecting the way people live and what will happen in the future, including a worldwide drop in income. A leaked copy of a...
Leaked Climate Change Report Predicts Violent, Poorer, Sicker Future
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on November 2nd, 2013
Associated Press: Starvation, poverty, flooding, heat waves, droughts, war and disease already lead to human tragedies. They're likely to worsen as the world warms from man-made climate change, a leaked draft of an international scientific report forecasts.
The Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will issue a report next March on how global warming is already affecting the way people live and what will happen in the future, including a worldwide drop in income. A leaked copy of a...
Warming report sees violent, sicker, poorer future
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on November 2nd, 2013
Associated Press: A leaked draft of an international scientific report forecasts that man-made global warming likely will worsen already existing human tragedies of war, starvation, poverty, flooding, extreme weather and disease. The Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will issue a report next March on how global warming is already affecting the way people live and what will happen in the future, including a worldwide drop in income. A leaked copy of a draft of the report's summary...
North Dakota oil boom brings worry to Theodore Roosevelt National Park
Posted by LA Times: Becca Clemons on November 2nd, 2013
LA Times: On a stretch of ranchland nestled in the North Dakota Badlands, under dark, star-filled night skies, serene landscape and solitude, Theodore Roosevelt formed his strong conservationist ideals more than a century ago.
But the night skies around the former president's Elkhorn Ranch, referred to as the "cradle of conservation" by environmentalists and historians, now glow orange. From some of the highest points in what is now Theodore Roosevelt National Park, dozens of natural gas flares are visible...
Off the Shelf: ‘The Frackers’ and the Birth of an Energy Boom
Posted by New York Times: Bryan Burrough on November 2nd, 2013
New York Times: One could argue that, except for the Internet, the most important technological advance of the last two decades has been hydraulic fracturing, widely known as fracking. Practically overnight, it seems, this drilling technique has produced so much oil and gas beneath American soil that we are at the brink of something once thought unattainable: true energy independence. And its repercussions, for geopolitics, the environment and other areas, are only now being grasped. In “The Frackers,” Gregory...
Protecting Rivers, Reducing Climate Vulnerability
Posted by Huffington Post: Peter Bosshard on November 2nd, 2013
Huffington Post: The mountain valleys of the North Indian state of Uttarakhand have been heavily developed with hydropower projects, tourism resorts and other infrastructure. When a cloudburst hit the state in June 2013, the choked rivers were unable to cope with the ravaging floods. Flashfloods washed away hundreds of buildings, bridges and dams, claimed more than 5,000 lives and caused an estimated damage of $50 billion.
Climate change will bring more extreme weather events such as droughts and the cloudburst...
Global warming to pinch Salt Lake City water supply
Posted by Summit County: Bob Berwyn on November 2nd, 2013
Summit County: By now it’s no secret that global warming will have a significant impact on water supplies in parts of the world, and regions where water is already scarce will be first to feel the pinch That includes the interior West, where winter snowpack provides critical water storage. Already, projections show that spring runoff is coming much earlier than just a few years ago, and that, in many areas, more of the total annual precipitation is falling as rain. In a new study, a team of researchers tried...
Study to focus on Arctic after Greenland Sea found have warmed 10 times faster than global ocean
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on November 2nd, 2013
Australian Broadcasting Corporation: Scientists have revealed plans to examine temperature changes in the Arctic Ocean after a long-term study found the Greenland Sea is warming 10 times faster than the global ocean.
Scientists from Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) analysed temperature data from the Greenland Sea between 1950 and 2010.
Their results show that during the past 30 years water temperatures between two kilometres deep and the ocean floor have risen by 0.3 degrees Celsius.
Dr Raquel Somavilla Cabrillo, AWI...