Archive for January, 2016

Will snow become a thing of the past as the climate warms?

BBC: Snowmageddon has become something of an annual tradition. Barely a year goes by without someone, somewhere, finding themselves on the receiving end of a severe snowstorm. The latest unlucky people, of course, are the inhabitants of New York. Given that the world is getting steadily warmer as a result of man-made climate change, this strikes many people as pretty weird. Surely we should not be seeing so many extreme snowstorms if the world is getting warmer? One response, which arrives almost...

Denmark preps for climate change by building parks transform into ponds

Grist: The Danes may be among the happiest people in the world, but it’s going to take more than a good attitude to prepare for Denmark’s coming deluge. Climate change has big plans for the country, including loads and loads of heavy downpours. In just the past five years, Denmark`s capital, Copenhagen, has been hit by two alleged "100-year floods" -- in other words, floods so disastrous, they’re only supposed to occur once a century. So what`s the best way to paddle a waterlogged city to safety? Here`s...

Model explains huge recurring rainstorms in tropical Indian and Pacific oceans

ScienceDaily: El Niño is fairly well understood, and by now it's a household word. But another huge system in the tropical Indian and Pacific oceans, which wreaks similar havoc in world weather, is relatively unknown and is just beginning to be explained. University of Washington scientists have published a mathematical model that could help explain and forecast the Madden-Julian Oscillation, a massive cluster of thunderstorms that plays a role in global weather. "Over the Indian Ocean and the Western Pacific...

Oil price plunge threatens shale revolution

Agence France-Presse: Producers of oil and gas from once hard-to-tap shale deposits are now facing the payback of the energy revolution they wrought: ultra-low prices forcing them out of business. This year is expected to be a make-or-break year for US shale producers, after the 70 percent plunge in crude prices, with many at risk of failure. Dozens of shale drillers sought bankruptcy protection in the last year as low oil prices made their operations uncompetitive and they could not pay debts. But many are holding...

Watershed project conserves Himachal’s ecology, boosts economy

Indo-Asian News Service: The World Bank-funded Mid-Himalayan Watershed Development Project in Himachal Pradesh has helped preserve natural resources and prevent soil erosion besides ensuring substantial improvement in the local economy. The project was started in October 2005 in 10 districts, a government spokesperson told IANS. Initially, 602 gram panchayats of 42 development blocks were covered. However, considering the fruitful results, another 108 panchayats that were covered under a micro watershed programme were...

Bernie bashes Hillary on Keystone and other pipelines

Grist: Bernie Sanders came after Hillary Clinton on climate change and energy issues on Monday night. At a Democratic candidate town hall forum in Iowa, Sanders argued that he has the judgment to be president, pointing out that, unlike Clinton, he was correct from the start in opposing both the Iraq War and Keystone XL. “On day one, I said the Keystone Pipeline is a dumb idea,” said Sanders - who, as it happens, looks remarkably like Larry David doing Bernie Sanders. "I think the Bakken pipeline, and...

Black Lives Matters calls Flint water crisis an act of “state violence”

Grist: As Michigan`s neglect and indifference toward the Flint water crisis continues to make headlines, activists and social justice groups are throwing their support behind the residents still suffering from lead-contaminated water supply. The most recent of these advocates is Black Lives Matter: On Friday, the group released a solidarity statement linking the Flint water crisis to other instances of environmental racism and called the human-made disaster an example of state violence. The statement...

2 Offices Won’t Investigate New York Constitutional Amendment on Adirondack Mining

New York Times: The offices of the New York attorney general and inspector general have declined to open investigations into the 2013 constitutional amendment that allowed a private company, NYCO Minerals, to conduct open-pit mining on state land in the Adirondack Mountains. Protect the Adirondacks, one of several environmental groups that opposed the amendment, requested the inquiries, accusing state officials of violating the New York Constitution by advocating the amendment. The group obtained hundreds of documents...

Ohio water system operator failed to notify public of unsafe lead levels

Associated Press: Ohio is sending pallets of bottled water and testing kits to several communities after environmental officials said the operator of a small water system failed to notify the public for months that unsafe levels of lead had been found in some homes. The state Environmental Protection Agency issued an emergency order Monday forbidding James Bates from working at the Sebring village water treatment plant and informing him that the agency intends to revoke his operating license for endangering the public...

Pressure building on global water supply

ScienceDaily: If current trends continue, domestic and industrial water demand would more than double by the year 2050, and continue to increase after that, according to a new study published in the journal Geoscientific Model Development. The study introduces the first scenarios from the IIASA Water Futures and Solutions (WFaS) initiative, a multi-year interdisciplinary research project focusing on global water challenges and solutions, and explains the methodology and models used by the research initiative....