Archive for February, 2014

Poll: 47% of Britons say floods are a result of climate change

Blue and Green: Almost half of UK voters believe that the floods and storms that have recently affected Britain are a result of climate change, a new poll has revealed. Forty-seven per cent of the people asked said they supported the view that “the flooding was probably the result of changing weather patterns due to climate change”, while 39% disagreed. Interestingly, the survey found that respondents’ opinions on climate change are clearly divided down political lines. Labour and Lib Dem voters supported...

Antarctic glacier shrank quickly in the past

Ars Technica: We recently covered some research on Greenland’s Jakobshavn Ice Stream, the world’s fastest glacier. While nothing on Antarctica can match that speed, the continent has ice streams of its own. Many have been shrinking, too--retreating and thinning as melting at the coast pulls continental ice out to die in the sea. Of particular note is the Pine Island Glacier (PIG, for short). This massive glacier flows into the Amundsen Sea, and was the source of the 35km wide iceberg that made news last November....

The CEO of Exxon Stands Up for Homeowners Against Frackers (When He’s the Homeowner)

Wire: Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson, who bought his house with money made from oil drilling and fracking, filed a lawsuit and petitioned his Texas town council to block a water tower that would be used for fracking. Tillerson just vaulted so far into the lead for Least Self-Aware Person of 2014 that by the time December rolls around he'll still be up 45 million laps. The Wall Street Journal reports: He and his neighbors had filed suit to block the tower, saying it is illegal and would create "a noise nuisance...

Canada: Tar Sands Tailings Ponds Are Leaching Into Athabasca River, Federal Study Says

Globe and Mail: New federal research has strongly backed suspicions that toxic chemicals from Alberta's vast oil sands tailings ponds are leaching into groundwater and seeping into the Athabasca River. Leakage from oil sands tailings ponds, which now cover 176 square kilometres, has long been an issue. Industry has acknowledged that seepage can occur, and previous studies using models have estimated it at 6.5-million litres a day from a single pond. The soil around the developments contains many chemicals...

California Leaders Propose $687 Million to Alleviate Drought

Sacramento Bee: Gov. Jerry Brown and legislative leaders on Wednesday unveiled a proposal to spend roughly $687 million to alleviate the impacts of California's drought, including efforts to clean and recycle water, improve conservation, capture rain, and give emergency food and housing assistance to farmworkers who will be out of work because their fields are fallow. "The best way to make our communities more resilient to drought is to invest in projects that get the most out of every drop of water," said Senate...

Colorado Air Commissioners Hear Fears of Oil and Gas Drilling

Denver Post: Colorado officials sought public views on proposed new air-pollution rules for the oil and gas industry -- and faced a barrage of concerns. A majority of the 120 residents who signed up to testify Wednesday before state air-quality control commissioners strongly supported the rules to reduce toxic emissions. "Air pollution burns our eyes, ears, noses and throats," said Peggy Tibbets, who drove from Silt in western Colorado to testify. Federal land managers offering access to public land...

North Dakota Pipeline Rupture Spews 75 Barrels of Crude

Associated Press: Tesoro Corp. says an excavator struck an oil pipeline in western North Dakota, spilling about 75 barrels of crude, or about 3,150 gallons. The company says it happened Wednesday afternoon near Cartwright, which is west of Watford City near the Montana border. Tesoro says the release of oil has been stopped and about 70 barrels' worth of oil has been recovered. The company says there were no injuries, and no impacts to wildlife were reported.

Oklahoma Shakes—Is Fracking to Blame?

Time: It`s been a shaky week in Oklahoma. The Sooner State has experienced more than 150 earthquakes over the past week, far more than the Okies usually get. And while the vast majority of the quakes were fairly minor, one, on Feb. 16 measured 3.8 on the Richter scale, followed by a number of aftershocks. There`s been little damage reported, but the quakes jolted folks in a part of the country who aren`t accustomed to the Earth moving under their feet. "[It] felt like bombs going off," central Oklahoma...

Train Explosions Prompt Companies to Upgrade Oil Tankers Voluntarily

Fuel Fix: Oil companies are rolling ahead of federal regulators to replace old tank cars following a series of fiery accidents involving crude-carrying trains. Canadian refiner Irving Oil and San Antonio-based Tesoro Corp. have pledged to replace older crude tankers in their fleet, after the aging DOT-111 models built before 2011 were deemed prone to rupture. Phillips 66 has said all of its crude-carrying tankers meet current standards and San Antonio`s Valero Energy Corp. said all of the railcars it...

West Virginia Asks Feds to Study Possible Health Effects of Chemical Spill

CNN: Is it really safe? West Virginia's governor is asking federal authorities to do further study on the possible health effects caused by last month's chemical spill near Charleston. "It is critical this study is funded and that work begins immediately," wrote Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin in a letter Tuesday to Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. On January 9, the chemical -- 4-methylcyclohexane methanol, or MCHM -- was discovered leaking from a storage tank...