Archive for January, 2016

‘It’s all just poison now’: Flint reels as families struggle water crisis

Guardian: Annette Williams is careful to hold her granddaughter Sharell’s head at bath time, to keep the two-year-old from taking a gulp of toxic water. Though most people no longer drink what flows through Flint’s corroded pipes, many families have little choice but to bathe in it. Related: 'Please do not drink the water': Flint in crisis – in pictures Sharell has been sick for months – ear infections, skin rashes and coughs. Williams cooks all her meals using bottled water, and has taught the eldest...

Was 2015 a record wildfire year?

Washington Post: Wildfires scorched a vast swath of the American wilderness last year. But whether the 10 million acres that burned is a record, as the Obama administration recently announced, or an exaggeration, as some environmentalists claim, is a source of heated debate in a long-running fight over how to manage the nation’s forests. A network of about 30 small environmental groups that view wildfires as a natural part of the ecology – and think more should be allowed to burn – consider the U.S. Forest Service’s...

Deadly snowstorm buries much of East Coast

CNN: What a difference a day makes. Residents in many East Coast cities were digging out beneath blue skies on Sunday after whipping winds and a massive blizzard clobbered the region. But top officials warned that danger lingered even as the storm headed out into the Atlantic Ocean. Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said that dropping temperatures still pose a risk. "We will see continued slick and dangerous roadways, so continue to stay off the road," she told reporters Sunday evening. Baltimore Mayor...

Two irrational responses to climate change: Witch hunts and denial

LA Times: In late August 1589, a dozen of the fittest ships in the Danish fleet set across a tempestuous North Sea to carry a 14-year-old princess bride to her new husband and new home. King James VI of Scotland had seen Anna of Denmark only in a miniature portrait before arranging a marriage by proxy in her country. Following her wedding-sans-groom in a palace by the sea, Anna boarded the ship of Danish Admiral Peter Munch to travel to her Scottish kingdom. They met typical storms until close to Scotland,...

Rhino poaching stats ‘don’t reflect facts’

IOL: The minister of environmental affairs described it as "great cause for optimism". But for rhino expert Tom Milliken, the slightly reduced rhino statistics reveal only how deeply poaching is entrenched. On Thursday, the minister, Edna Molewa, announced that poachers had slaughtered 1 175 of the animals last year -- marginally down from the record 1 215 in 2014. This was the first decline in rhino poaching figures since 2007. But Milliken, of Traffic, the global wildlife trade monitoring network,...

Massive blizzard paralyzes New York and Washington, 19 dead

Reuters: Millions of residents, business owners and workers began digging out on Sunday from a massive blizzard that brought Washington, New York and other northeastern U.S. cities to a standstill, killing at least 19 people in several states. The storm was the second-biggest in New York City history, with 26.8 inches (68 cm) by midnight Saturday, just shy of the record 26.9 inches set in 2006, the National Weather Service said. Thirteen people were killed in weather-related car crashes in Arkansas,...

Regulators approve health study on huge California gas leak

Reuters: Regional air quality regulators in California voted on Saturday to require the utility responsible for a ruptured underground pipeline in the Los Angeles area to underwrite an independent study on the health effects of a huge methane leak from the site. The natural gas leak in Aliso Canyon, just outside the Los Angeles neighborhood of Porter Ranch, began on Oct. 23 and ranks as the worst ever in California. Odorized methane fumes sickened scores of people and led to the temporary relocation...

?Stalled construction costs 30 Meter Telescope millions

Pacific Business: The team behind the $1.4 billion telescope project planned for Mauna Kea has invested $170 million to date for construction and manufacturing, according to Stone. “We spent eight years now getting the permit, and on Dec. 2 it was invalidated,” he said. “We went through the process, did everything we were asked to do, and it turned out that that was evidently not the right process, so now we’re waiting on what the process needs to be.” The Hawaii Supreme Court decided last month that the TMT...

TMT official: Fate of project rests with state

Hawaii Tribune: The executive director of the embattled Thirty Meter Telescope said Friday he wants to move forward with the project but is waiting to hear from state agencies about how to proceed after the Hawaii Supreme Court invalidated a key construction permit. The $1.4 billion project has been in limbo since April, when throngs of protesters opposed to building the telescope atop Mauna Kea-- held sacred by many Native Hawaiians -- blocked construction crews. Protesters showed up in force again in June during...

Climate change, flooding topics of concern at Aquarium of the Pacific panel

Press Telegram: About 200 Long Beach residents got a close look at how climate change is affecting the local area Saturday morning. The League of Women Voters, Long Beach Area, organized a presentation on climate change, water use, flooding, El Niño and other climate-related issues at the Aquarium of the Pacific. Speakers included Jerry Schubel, the aquarium’s president and CEO; Timu Gallien, of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Juliette Hart of USC’s Dornslife/Sea Grant Program; John D.S. Allen, Director...