Lowell nixes NH landfill contract | News | eagletribune.com
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What goes through my my mind when I read the news with my morning coffee. …Or for the Simon's Rockers in the group, this is my response journal.
In the Sea, Not All Plastic Lasts Forever – The New York Times
So styrofoam takes hundreds of years or -at best decades- to break down instead of never breaking down. A few thoughts…
Did anyone really think they stuff wouldn’t weather over the course of hundreds of years?
So it can still last hundreds of years and supposedly that is supposed to make environmentalists feel better about using it? On what planet would this be soothing info?
What about off-gassing? So-called scientists apparently glossed over that one, didn’t they?
Anychance the fact checkers at the GRey Lady might be motivated to point out that there is no “missing” plastic. Microplastic is just harder to see.
This article stinks to high heaven with bad research, misleading and outright deceptive statements and wholesale denial of contextual facts.
The peanut gallery hopes the New York Times got paid handsomely for running this advertisement for the polystyrene industry.
Taylor Energy’s Mississippi Canyon site, about 19 miles off the southeast coast of Louisiana, was toppled by Hurricane Ivan in 2004 and has since been releasing upwards of 70,000 gallons of crude oil a day, recent estimates show.
One of about 3,000 oil platforms in the western Gulf of Mexico, it’s dumped more oil into the Gulf than did the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon, and the impacts are still being tallied.
…”You’re seeing a lot of resiliency in the system but there’s still long-term issues with the sea grass and oysters,” said Daniel Andrews, with Captains for Clean Water.
…The company says it has done everything possible to stem the flow of oil and that it should no longer be held accountable for the leak.
Costs are extreme, and the technology needed to fix the massive leak does not yet exist, the company has argued in court. [Um, tough shit? They caused the mess and they are 100% responsible for cleaning it up.]
…The federal government says it could take 100 years for the leak to dissipate on its own.
But the Coast Guard, in recent months, has capped at least part of the leak, according to Renaud.
“I think right now they’re (the Coast Guard) taking a moment to celebrate that they’re containing oil that’s been spilling for 14 years,” Renaud said. “At the end of the day (the work being done now) isn’t a permanent solution, so they’re going to have to drill relief wells. “
…”We have 10 years of evidence that’s there’s way more oil than they’ve been reporting for years,” Renaud said of Taylor Energy. “It’s really a runaway situation that should have been remedied a long time ago. Either they’re really confused or their science just wasn’t very good, or they’re just trying to avoid the penalty of law.”
…The offshore oil drilling industry is largely self-regulated when it comes to recording and reporting leaks.
If a company has a leak, it must report some number to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, or BSEE, which accepts the number as being a true representation of what’s occurring in the Gulf of Mexico.
This arm of the Coast Guard tracks all spills greater than 1 barrel, or 42 gallons, and reports spills larger than 50 barrels, about 2,100 gallons.
Taylor Energy wants to walk away from 30,000 gallon a day spill in the Gulf
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“Every year, as the fire’s rage & California burns, it is the same thing-and then he comes to the Federal Government for $$$ help,” Trump said. “No more. Get your act together Governor. You don’t see close to the level of burn in other states.”
Newsom responded on Twitter that, since Trump does not believe in climate change, he is “excused from this conversation.”
California wildfires: Trump threatens to cut funding to fight fires
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State regulators were on the scene Wednesday afternoon, and they estimated that the area of the spill was 1,500 feet long by 15 feet wide. Glatt said some wetlands were affected.
…The company was still working to contain the spill Wednesday afternoon.
…It has experienced problems with spills in the past, including one in 2011 of more than 14,000 gallons of oil in southeastern North Dakota, near the South Dakota border.
In 2017, the pipeline leaked an estimated 210,000 gallons of oil onto agricultural land in northeastern South Dakota, in a rural area near the North Dakota border.
Keystone pipeline leaks oil in northeastern North Dakota – StarTribune.com
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At a probation hearing related to the utility’s deadly 2010 gas pipeline explosion in San Bruno, Judge William Alsup said the embattled utility hasn’t done enough to prevent wildfires through tree trimming and other maintenance work — even while its shareholders made millions.
“PG&E pumped out $4.5 billion in dividends and let the tree budget wither,” Alsup said.
But the judge declined to impose more sweeping changes that he’d earlier floated, including requiring PG&E to inspect its entire electrical grid.
…State fire investigators also blamed PG&E for 18 of the more than 170 wildfires that swept Northern California in October 2017. And the utility has acknowledged that its equipment likely started the 2018 Camp Fire in Butte County, which destroyed nearly 14,000 homes in the town of Paradise and killed 85 people.
…On Tuesday, the judge also directed a federal monitor to conduct random inspections of the tree-trimming program.
Judge: PG&E Paid Out Stock Dividends Instead of Trimming Trees | The California Report | KQED News
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The Netherlands-based nonprofit the Ocean Cleanup says its latest prototype was able to capture and hold debris ranging in size from huge, abandoned fishing gear, known as “ghost nets,” to tiny microplastics as small as 1 millimeter.
…The Ocean Cleanup system is a U-shaped barrier with a net-like skirt that hangs below the surface of the water. It moves with the current and collects faster moving plastics as they float by. Fish and other animals will be able to swim beneath it.
The new prototype added a parachute anchor to slow the system and increased the size of a cork line on top of the skirt to keep the plastic from washing over it.
It’s been deployed in “The Great Pacific Garbage Patch” — a concentration of trash located between Hawaii and California that’s about double the size of Texas, or three times the size of France.
Ocean Cleanup plans to build a fleet of these devices, and predicts it will be able to reduce the size of the patch by half every five years.
Nice!!!
During closing statements, Biden had the line of the night: “Look, I’m like plastic straws. I’ve been around forever; I’ve always worked, but now you’re mad at me?”
SNL’s ‘Impeachment Town Hall’ Funnier Than Expected | The Daily Wire
heh
Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg inaccurately said that “we could lose half the world’s oxygen because of what’s going on in the oceans.”
…Climate change does pose a threat to oceans, including by reducing the amount of dissolved oxygen in the water, which in some places could be cut in half. But globally, oceans are projected to lose only 1%-7% of their oxygen, and the world’s atmospheric oxygen supply is not at risk.
Buttigieg Wrong About Climate Change’s Effect on Oceans – FactCheck.org
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…The Pono tourism movement. “Pono” is a Hawaiian word having a multi-faceted meaning, but, concisely, it connotes an ethos of respect, uprightness, prosperity and well-being.
“Many travelers visiting the Hawaiian Islands don’t necessarily understand why we stay on the trail when we hike, why we care about protecting our reefs, and many of the dangers they need to be mindful of,” said Jay Talwar, HVCB’s chief marketing officer. “Rather than scold them, we felt that, if our residents shared the ‘whys’ behind appropriate behavior, then most visitors would follow along; in other words, if we don’t show them the trail, how can we expect them to stay on it? That’s what our new Kuleana Campaign aims to do.”
Hawaiian Tourism Authorities Launch New Visitor Education Campaign | TravelPulse
nice!
The Endangered Species Act protects more than 1,600 species in the USA and its territories. Since being enacted in 1973, it has saved 99% of listed species from extinction and has brought species like the gray wolf and bald eagle back from the brink.
Last month, seven environmental groups filed another lawsuit that also challenged the revisions to the Endangered Species Act.
Endangered Species Act: 17 states sue Trump over changes
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These moments of accountability on the right are rare, of course — there are dozens, hundreds more examples of attacks far uglier than this that have brought no pushback at all. But they help illustrate that Thunberg has the rare ability to tap into something human, something that, at least sporadically, can break through the media filter pushing the public into partisan camps.
…It’s important to note, as she frequently does, that Thunberg has not single-handedly created this movement. She stands on the shoulders of generations of activists before and alongside her, many of them people of color, who are, to say the least, less likely to be adopted as icons by Westerners.
…Opponents of action — generally far-right coalitions fueled by a mix of fossil-fuel cronyism and populist ethnonationalism — don’t assail it. They do everything they can to distract from it.
…That almost always involves attacking the messengers (“Al Gore has a big house”) and their proposed solutions (“the Green New Deal will take away your hamburgers”). The scientists are after grant money; the activists are undercover socialists; the leaders are hypocrites; the marchers litter. Casting doubt on the motives and authenticity of people fighting for progressive causes is the right’s primary political tool, with efforts now led out of the White House.
For climate scientists and advocates, it’s a familiar trap. Any political program sufficient to address climate change at scale is, almost by definition, going to be radical, which allows the right to dismiss it as “far left.” The go-to attack on the climate movement is that it’s a “watermelon,” green on the outside and socialist red on the inside — that climate change is just a cover story for the political program.
Thunberg has sidestepped attacks on her motives by almost entirely refraining from endorsing specific political reforms or policies.
…In characteristically vile fashion, the right in both Europe and the US has attempted to use Thunberg’s mental health against her, but the attempt has largely backfired. For one thing, it is virtually impossible to watch her speak for any length of time and maintain a good-faith belief that she is responding to social pressure from adults. She is manifestly authentic, direct in a way unique among public figures, no more subject to flattery than to coercion.
…She’s not intimidated or dazzled by social hierarchy. She just drags the focus, again and again, back to her fixation, what the grown-ups don’t want to talk about: the need for immediate action and their long-standing failure to take any.
…She takes the facts seriously, even when very few adults are modeling how to do so, even when it’s uncomfortable or inconvenient for those around her. She’s vegan, she won’t fly, and she’s devoting her young life to prodding adults into action; the default right-wing accusations of hypocrisy and duplicity simply don’t stick.
The right has established a social environment in which speaking up on climate change leads to bullying and shaming, but those tactics just don’t seem to work on Thunberg. And without them, the right has nothing to fall back on (not one of the hundreds of attacks launched at her has the courage to directly dispute the IPCC report she submitted).
In ignoring social cues, Thunberg has become one: A signal to other young people around the world that, yes, this really is an emergency, and yes, they really can and should speak up.
Greta Thunberg: why the right’s usual attacks don’t work on her – Vox
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The Trump administration is accused by at least half a dozen whistleblowers of muzzling climate and pollution science.
The air pollution experts follow in the footsteps of a separate group that reassembled to call for the government to better prepare for climate disasters. Their advice will come as EPA conducts a scheduled review of its standards for particle pollution, the tiny specks that enter the lungs and cause breathing and heart problems that can kill.
…Weak standards, Goldman said “means cities across the country wouldn’t have to do as much to keep their air clean, industry could get more permits approved, it would be easier to rollback environmental regulations”.
The finding that particle pollution is dangerous is integrated into nearly all major pollution standards, for power plants, cars and project permits, she said.
…If Trump officials can argue that particle pollution isn’t as bad as previously thought, they can strengthen industry arguments for rolling back environment and health protections.
Trump’s EPA ended the particulate matter advisory board nearly a year ago. The agency also replaced many of the academic scientists on a broader science panel with scientists from industry and conservative states.
Earlier this month, EPA chief Andrew Wheeler selected a new group of “non-member consultants” to assist that panel with work on both particle pollution and smog. About half of the new consultants are linked with industry. Their recommendations to the panel will happen behind the scenes, rather than in public meetings.
Clean-air scientists fired by EPA to reconvene in snub to Trump | Environment | The Guardian
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About 80 percent of the ice sheet’s surface is like a snowcone: A dusting of fresh snowfall covers a thick layer of old snow, called firn, that’s slowly being compressed into glacier ice but still contains plenty of air pockets. When the top of this snow cone melts in the summer, liquid water percolates down into the firn, which soaks it up like a 100-foot-thick sponge.
…They started finding dense, compacted layers of ice in core after core, just below the seasonal snow layer. It was, MacFerrin says, as if a “turtle shell” had formed over the firn.
…That summer, for the first time on record, meltwater from this part of Greenland visibly started to flow away as runoff.
…Ice slabs have already caused Greenland’s runoff zone to expand by about 26 percent, according to the new study.
…Under a worst-case scenario where carbon emissions continue to climb until the end of the century, the researchers calculated that ice slab proliferation could add up to 3 inches of sea level rise by 2100, boosting the ice sheet’s overall sea level rise contribution by nearly a third. In both a middle-of-the-road scenario where emissions peak by mid-century and the high emissions one, the amount of runoff from Greenland’s interior roughly doubles by century’s end.
…“We have never observed an ice sheet behaving this way before,” Poinar says. “It’s unprecedented in human scientific history.”
As Greenland melts, something strange is happening to the ice sheet
sigh….