Archive for March, 2015

Gov Jerry Brown, lawmakers to announce emergency drought bill

LA Times: As California braces for a fourth consecutive year of drought, Gov. Jerry Brown and legislative leaders on Thursday will unveil a $1-billion relief plan, two sources told The Times late Wednesday. This will mark the second consecutive year in which the Legislature has had to act on emergency drought relief. In 2014, Brown signed a $687.4-million drought package, which offered aid to communities facing acute water shortages and food and housing assistance to those harmed by the drought. Brown,...

Tighter California water restrictions to impact restaurants and hotels

Guardian: As California enters year four of one of the most severe droughts in state history, officials on Tuesday welcomed a host of temporary water measures that limits landscape irrigation and restricts how restaurants and hotels use the vital resource. Under the new rules, districts that haven’t already restricted outdoor watering to two days per week are required to do so, restaurants and bars must ask customers if they want a glass of water before automatically serving one, and hotels and motels must...

How dry California? So dry taps might actually stop delivering

Grist: Could California really run dry? "It often seems impossible to imagine, but tap water shortages are a distinct possibility if mitigation efforts aren`t embraced and droughts become more frequent and intense in the coming years," meteorologist Steve Bowen of reinsurance firm Aon Benfield told USA Today. California’s rainy season is drawing to a close -- without the rain its residents had been waiting for. Though some climatologists hoped this year’s El Niño system would make a difference, the state...

Overpumping groundwater contributes to rising sea levels

Grist: Pump too much groundwater and wells go dry — that’s obvious. But there is another consequence that gets little attention as a hotter, drier planet turns increasingly to groundwater for life support: So much water is being pumped out of the ground worldwide that it is contributing to global sea-level rise, a phenomenon tied largely to warming temperatures and climate change. It happens when water is hoisted out of the earth to irrigate crops and supply towns and cities, then finds its way via...

New global disaster plan sets targets to curb risk, losses

Reuters: Governments set targets to substantially reduce deaths and economic losses from disasters at a U.N. conference in Japan on Wednesday, but critics were disappointed by the lack of a firm goal to ramp up financial support for poor countries. The non-binding agreement adopted after a marathon negotiating session, includes seven targets to measure progress on protecting people and assets that experts described as a leap forward. The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, a 15-year plan,...

Mountaintop Removal: It’s Time Bring This American Tragedy to an End

EcoWatch: An escalating series of lawsuits, government rulings, banking decisions and breakthrough health studies has brought the fate of devastating mountaintop removal mining in central Appalachia to the doorstep of state and federal decision-makers this week. Mountaintop removal is not just on the ropes—it’s down for the count—and several fronts carry the same knockout message: Given the urgent health crisis from the reckless mining operation, the federal government and the states can no longer wait to...

How farmer-led radio propagates best practice

SciDevNet: Getting farmers and farm science on air in Sub-Saharan Africa can vastly improve how agricultural knowledge is shared and taken up, says Kevin Perkins, executive director of Canadian charity Farm Radio International, in this audio interview. In Ethiopia, for example, 80 per cent of those who listened to a show on the benefits of planting the grain tef in rows started using this technique. Farm Radio International supports radio stations and farming communities in countries across Sub-Saharan Africa...

Coal Boomtowns Fade as China Declares War on Pollution

ClimateWire: The streets of this northwestern Chinese city were once packed with Ferraris, BMWs and other luxury cars. Now, they are all gone. Average housing prices here have dropped by a quarter in two years. Driving across the city's downtown, you see vacant buildings and empty restaurants. "The business of coal companies here turned south since late 2012," Yang Cheng, a local driver, explained while passing by a closed hotel. "Yulin is a coal boomtown," Yang went on. "Once coal businesses are not...

Epic Drought Drives California Businesses to ‘Connect the Drops’

EcoWatch: California’s record-breaking drought is heading into its fourth year, making headlines about water shortages, drying rivers and reservoirs, threatened fisheries, shrinking mountain snow cover, and battles between cities, consumers, agricultural interests and businesses for essential water resources. The effect of the drought has been felt across the country since the state’s agricultural output is the largest of any state, and last year California farmers had to leave half a million acres unplanted...

Climate Change Must Factor Into Decisions To Drill On Public Lands

ThinkProgress: Secretary Sally Jewell yesterday called for reform to the way that the Department of the Interior manages America’s energy resources in order to address the causes of climate change. In a bold speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Secretary Jewell outlined the Department of the Interior’s energy priorities and laid out three goals of “safe and responsible energy development, good government, and encouraging innovation” in the final two years of the Obama Administration....