Archive for the ‘Water Conservation’ Category

Fossil fuel emissions behind Australia’s record-breaking spring heat

Guardian: World leaders and street protesters were struggling in a heatwave with temperatures hovering around 40C at Brisbane’s G20 meeting. Longreach in central Queensland had 13 days straight when the maximum temperature hit 40C (104F) or higher – four days longer than the town’s previous record. Down in New South Wales and Tasmania, residents fought off bushfires. A few weeks earlier, South Australia had its hottest October on record. This was the spring of 2014, Australia’s hottest September-November...

As U.S. shale sinks, pipeline fight sends woes downstream

Reuters: Within weeks, two low-profile legal disputes may determine whether an unprecedented wave of bankruptcies expected to hit U.S. oil and gas producers this year will imperil the $500 billion pipeline sector as well. In the two court fights, U.S. energy producers are trying to use Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to shed long-term contracts with the pipeline operators that gather and process shale gas before it is delivered to consumer markets. The attempts to shed the contracts by Sabine Oil &...

Toxins Found in 39% of U.S. Southeastern Streams

Environment News Service: Scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey have found toxins produced by algae, known as microcystins, in 39 percent of the small streams assessed in the southeastern United States. Their study looked at 75 streams in parts of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. "This is the first systematic stream survey of algal toxins in the southeastern United States," said Keith Loftin, the USGS research chemist who led the study. "It`s important, because it provides a better...

Lake Powell Pipeline: Keeping up with demand

Spectrum: From the upper floors of the imposing cliff-top offices of the Washington County Water Conservancy District, managers have an impressive view of the City of St. George and of the empty space beyond it that they figure to soon fill up, as well. Ron Thompson, who has worked more than three decades as the entity’s general manager, sits in a conference room and explains how he’s seen the area grow, spilling out of the main valleys of the Virgin River and its tributaries, creeping up onto the cliffsides...

A map of the most vulnerable places on the planet

Ars Technica: Climate change isn't just one, uniform transformation of the planet. Over time, some areas are going to get hotter, some wetter, some cloudier—and vice versa. This map, produced using a new system for analyzing satellite data, reveals which parts of the planet will be most affected by these changes. Published in Nature, the map shows what the researchers call a vegetation sensitivity index (VSI). The VSI is a new measure of environmental vulnerability that combines several sources of data. The first...

Nuclear dump decision: Canada asks for more environmental info from OPG

Voice: Instead of granting or denying a license to build a nuclear dump, the Canadian government has asked Ontario Power Generation for more information and additional studies. Canadian Minister of the Environment and Climate Change Catherine McKenna had been expected to make a decision on the Deep Geological Repository for Low- and Intermediate-Level Nuclear Waste, proposed for the shore of Lake Huron in the Ontario municipality of Kincardine, by March 1. Instead, McKenna made her request for more information...

The innovators: looped water system for Earth friendly shower

Guardian: When he was working on an academic project with Nasa, Mehrdad Mahdjoubi, a Swedish industrial designer, realised there could be parallels between sustainability in space and on Earth. The extremes of space required that the vital resource of water be used in the most efficient way possible. Water should also be used like this in the home, he thought. Inspired by those experiences with the space agency, Mahdjoubi created a shower system that reuses the same water in a circular loop, while two filters...

Home & dry? The flood victims who are putting up their own defences

Guardian: Government pledges to spend billions of pounds on flood defences are failing to convince vulnerable householders, who are taking matters into their own hands. The government plans to spend £2.3bn on flood management and defences over the next six years. Yet, as UK residents are warned to expect more flooding after the devastation in Cumbria, Yorkshire and Lancashire, some homeowners are installing or building their own defence systems. The Pavitts – Charlotte, 33, and Andrew, 36 – have chosen...

It’s Time To Call The Shale Gas Revolution As Well As “The Mighty Marcellus” A Bust

Counter Currents: Here's a February 4, 2016 production graph for the United States shale gas industry It's from David Hughes, who's been a natural gas geologist in Canada and the United States for over 35 years. His data are the latest government production statistics. The writer believes it is the most up-to-date graphic display of "peak shale gas" and "peak Marcellus." These events were predicted by this writer in "2015: Is It The Year Marcellus Shale Gas Peaked And Then Began Falling As Fast As It Rose?" http://www.countercurrents.org/arguimbau210515.htm...

The oil industry: From bustling to busting

Lubbock Avalanche-Journal: Just a few years ago, the oil and gas industry was booming and seemed to offer an unlimited amount of jobs, but fast forward to 2015 when oil prices hit their lowest levels in more than a decade and countless businesses are cutting costs and laying off workers. Tens of thousands of oil field workers have already been laid off throughout Texas with more coming in 2016 if oil prices remain low, according to local experts in the oil and gas industry. Those who are still employed are disheartened...