Archive for September 26th, 2014
After Hurricane Sandy, N.J. Cities Rethink Proximity To The Water
Posted by Washington Post: Juliet Eilperin on September 26th, 2014
National Public Radio: Melissa Block talks to Monique Coleman of Woodbridge, N.J., about why her family is leaving their home. After three huge floods in three consecutive years, they've taken a buyout from the state.
Treated Fracking Wastewater is Still Toxic
Posted by Nature World: Jenna Iacurci on September 26th, 2014
Nature World: A new study has shockingly shown that fracking wastewater, even after being treated, is still contaminating drinking water.
Wastewater from hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," and its toxic byproducts have long been an issue, especially for those who are concerned that flowback may be contaminating their groundwater.
Fracking involves injecting millions of gallons of fluids into shale rock formations to release oil and gas. The wastewater generated during this process is highly radioactive...
Trees Threaten Growing Grasslands
Posted by Nature World: Jenna Iacurci on September 26th, 2014
Nature World: Trees are currently threatening growing grasslands, turning tallgrass prairies into shrublands and forests, and a pair of researchers is concerned that if nothing is done to stop or slow down this process, an important part of the ecosystem may soon be lost.
Two Kansas State University biologists, doctoral student Allison Veach and professor Walter Dodds, are researching grassland streams and the expansion of nearby woody vegetation, such as trees and shrubs, to see what can be done to save growing...
One in 40 living in areas likely to be underwater by 2100
Posted by Blue and Green: Tom Revell on September 26th, 2014
Blue and Green: Some 147 to 216 million people are currently living on land that will be below sea level or regular flood levels by 2100 if climate change continues unabated, a new analysis has warned.
The study, lead by Climate Central, identified the countries most at risk from rising sea levels if climate change is not curbed and if greenhouse gas emissions continue at the current rate.
This would melt ice sheets and glaciers around the world, topping up the seas, while thermal expansion – which causes...
The Most Important Drop of Water
Posted by EcoWatch: None Given on September 26th, 2014
EcoWatch: La Gota Más Importante (The Most Important Drop Of Water), a documentary part of the Action4Climate video competition, takes the complex subject of climate change and breaks it down in a way that even a child can understand it. Filmmakers Abdel Filós, Alberto Pascual, Guillermo Pérez, Raiza Segundo and Edgar Muñoz blend common experiences of people living in Panama with the perspectives of experts who discuss issues including sea level rise, energy efficiency and the importance of voting. The film...
United Kingdom: Government frees up fracking rules, despite 99 per cent opposition
Posted by BusinessGreen: Jessica Shankleman on September 26th, 2014
BusinessGreen: The government is pressing ahead with plans to allow shale gas companies to drill under people's homes without their consent, despite 99 per cent of respondents opposing the consultation proposals.
The Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) yesterday confirmed it would change the trespass laws for shale and geothermal developers, arguing the controversial underground drilling access regulations were necessary to accelerate the shift to a low carbon economy.
According to the response...
India: Indian court cancels coal mining licences in corruption crackdown
Posted by RTCC: Sophie Yeo on September 26th, 2014
RTCC: The supreme court of India yesterday cancelled the licenses of 214 coal blocks, which it said the government had allocated illegally.
The move grants a temporary reprieve to areas of the Mahan forest that were set to be felled to make way for an open cast coal mine. British-registered companies Essar and Hindalco had been granted permission to clear the area.
It could also make domestic coal production more expensive in India, a country which is struggling to address energy shortages.
But...
Could Fracking Boom Drive Silica Sand Mining Operations in 12 More States?
Posted by International Business Times: Maria Gallucci on September 26th, 2014
International Business Times: Victoria Trinko says she hasn’t opened the windows to her home in Bloomer, Wisconsin, in more than two years. That’s around the time a mining company began churning up silica sand a half-mile from her family farm, filling the air with tiny particles and making it harder for her to breathe. “I could feel dust clinging to my face and gritty particles on my teeth,” Trinko recalls.
Silica sand is one of many ingredients used in the hydraulic fracturing process. During fracking, operators blast thousands...
Drought Has 14 Communities on the Brink of Waterlessness in California
Posted by LA Times: Hector Becerra on September 26th, 2014
LA Times: Under the blistering Central Valley sun, Filiberta Sanchez and her toddler granddaughter strolled down a Parkwood sidewalk lined with yellow weeds, dying grass and trees more fit for kindling than shade.
"It was very pretty here, very pretty," said Sanchez, 56, as little Jenny crunched a fistful of parched dirt and pine needles she grabbed from the ground. "Now everything's dry."
Parkwood's last well dried up in July. County officials, after much hand-wringing, made a deal with the city of...
UN climate summit reveals India’s hypocrisy on saving forests
Posted by Guardian: Climate Forests on September 26th, 2014
Guardian: On Tuesday, India’s minister for environment, forests, and climate change, Prakash Javadekar, scoffed at the idea of the country reducing emissions to counter climate change. He held the US chiefly responsible for the climate crisis, and therefore it had to bear the responsibility for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. That has been India’s position on climate change at international negotiations for a while.
Developed nations have polluted the atmosphere and brought the planet to the crisis it...