Archive for September, 2014

Where does Hillary Clinton stand on fracking?

Grist: Hillary Clinton never actually said the word "fracking" during her keynote address at the National Clean Energy Summit in Nevada on Thursday, but she still clearly laid out her views on the technique: She`s all for it. She says it needs to be conducted and regulated properly so it doesn`t cause excessive environmental harm, but she believes that can be done. Which puts her totally in line with President Obama, and out of line with most of the environmental community. During her address, Clinton...

BP ‘grossly negligent’ in 2010 U.S. spill, fines could be $18 billion

Reuters: A U.S. judge has decided that BP Plc was “grossly negligent” and “reckless” in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill four years ago, a ruling that could add nearly $18 billion in fines to more than $42 billion in charges the company took for the worst offshore environmental disaster in U.S. history. BP said it would appeal Thursday’s ruling by U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier in New Orleans, Louisiana, who held a trial without a jury last year to determine who was responsible for the April 20, 2010 rig...

Warming ocean temperatures may not bring rain to parched California

Reuters: The Pacific Ocean phenomenon called El Nino, which can lead to storms in the U.S. Southwest and other places, will likely start soon, but may not bring hoped-for relief to drought-parched California, U.S. government meteorologists said on Thursday. Scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said in a report the likelihood was increasing that El Nino, characterized by a warming of the ocean temperature in the eastern Pacific near the equator, would be weak this year. A...

BP could face $18bn in extra fines after US ruling Gulf Mexico spill

Guardian: BP could face up to $18bn (£11bn) in further fines after being found guilty of gross negligence for the Deepwater Horizon blowout that killed 11 workers and led to millions of barrels of oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico. The oil firm had repeatedly expressed confidence it could avoid such a damning verdict over America's biggest offshore oil accident but a US district judge, Carl Barbier, ruled on Thursday that BP had been reckless as well as negligent. The long-awaited decision from the...

BP’s reckless conduct caused Deepwater Horizon oil spill, judge rules

Associated Press: BP bears the majority of responsibility among the companies involved in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, a federal judge ruled Thursday, citing the energy giant’s reckless conduct over the disaster in a ruling that exposes it to billions of dollars in penalties. BP plc already has agreed to pay billions of dollars in criminal fines and compensation to people and businesses affected by the disaster, the worst-ever US oil spill. But US district Judge Carl Barbier’s ruling could nearly quadruple...

Green party to position itself as the real left of UK politics

Guardian: The Green party is positioning itself as the “real opposition” to the coalition, opening up a bitter fight with Labour on the left wing of UK politics, as the party’s key figures prepare to contest general election seats in parliament. Caroline Lucas, the party’s only MP, will tell the Green party conference in Birmingham on Saturday that Labour has failed to oppose the Tories and Liberal Democrats on a wide variety of issues, from the creeping privatisation of the National Health Service to free...

Study links humans to warming trend in Pacific Northwest

KATU: Humans are the link to a warming world, according to researchers at Oregon State University and University of Idaho. Philip Mote, director of OSU's Oregon Climate Services, worked with two other scientists to publish the study that links global warming directly to humans. "We put stuff in the atmosphere, green house gasses and also pollutants that reflect sunlight and form clouds, and that increase in heat-trapping gasses, is the only thing that can explain the large warming trend since 1950,'...

Residents worry urban drilling will turn downtowns into oil towns

National Public Radio: Dawn Gioia lives just two blocks away from City Hall in Brighton, Colo., just north of Denver. She never expected to receive a thick envelope from Mid-Con Energy in the mail, proposing she sell mineral rights for oil and gas drilling. At first, she thought it was a scam. "One of these forms asks you for all your tax information and Social Security numbers, so that was something that sort of caught me off guard," she says. The packet also included a lease for her mineral rights. The terms...

Fracking in China: Just add water

Christian Science Monitor: China holds the largest reserves of shale gas in the world, but much of it may never get developed because of one major obstacle: water scarcity. A new report from the World Resources Institute (WRI) says China suffers from high water stress, which may prevent it from ever fully developing its vast shale gas resources. China is sitting on 1,115 trillion cubic feet of technically recoverable shale gas resources, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, but much of it is located...

Ban fracking from national parks, say majority of UK public

Guardian: Fracking should be completely banned from national parks, according to a strong majority of the UK public. The controversial issue of shale gas exploration in some of the country’s most precious landscapes forced ministers in July to claim they were tightening planning guidance on drilling in national parks, but a new poll for the Guardian shows the public has been unmoved by the assurances. The poll, conducted by Panelbase, shows 60% of people think fracking should not be allowed in national...