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Thursday, 23 March

00:00

World Energy Data Confirms Fossil Fuels Will Dominate Future Global Energy Use Watts Up With That?

The OECD nations cannot stop this from happening and despite their nefarious efforts otherwise cannot conceal this global energy growth and fuel use (as well as emissions growth) reality.

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Wednesday, 22 March

20:37

When a red snapper is more than just a fish: Q&A fisheries scientist Elle Wibisono Conservation news

JAKARTA It was heaven, says Indonesian fisheries scientist Alyssa Elle Wibisono, describing her first ever scuba diving experience in the Komodo Islands when she was a high school student. The vibrant schools of fish were so new and amazing to her that the experience marked her starting point into the world of marine conservation. I didnt know yet how it was going to look like, I mean I was still in high school, but I knew that I wanted to work in the field one way or another, she tells Mongabay in a recent interview. For a little over a decade, the fundamental pathway she chose to achieve her passionate goal of protecting Indonesias marine ecosystem was through academia. Wibisono started her undergraduate studies in 2009 with a focus on marine biology and conservation at Wellesley College in the U.S., before going on to get her Ph.D. in sustainable fisheries management in 2020 at the University of Rhode Island. Elle Wibisono, center, interviewing traditional Indonesian fishers. Image courtesy of Elle Wibisono. Wibisono currently works as a senior manager for marine protected area and fisheries for Indonesia at the Washington, D.C.-based NGO Conservation International. She also managed fisher projects in eastern parts of the country with another NGO, The Nature Conservancy (TNC) Indonesia. In those years of diving deep into marine conservation in Indonesia, Wibisono took in as much nuance as possible about the convoluted issue in a way that she says has allowed her to be more empathetic aboutThis article was originally published on Mongabay

20:00

In Calakmul, water troughs offer possible solution to human-wildlife conflict Conservation news

Like many beekeepers living in the vicinity of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, Alejandro Oliveros Lpez has a wildlife problem. To keep ants at bay and provide water to their bees, keepers place bowls at the foot of their apiaries. But when water is scarce, these attract a wide range of wild animals, from tapirs to wild cats. Driven by climate change, this issue keeps worsening as the dry season gets longer. Basically, they drink the water, because during the dry season, the natural water sources dry up, Oliveros Lpez said. So, if a tapir comes, drinks the water and knocks over the tank to bathe itself, it can cause us a lot of problems. The cats are the same because they drink a lot of water. To help reduce this problem and protect both wildlife and beekeepers livelihoods, conservationists are using water troughs, known locally as bebederos, to keep wildlife from coming into conflict with farmers. The idea of the project is that we provide water to both the bees and the animals, and try to avoid these kinds of problems, said Carlos Delgado-Martnez, a PhD student with the National Autonomous University of Mexico and member of the Ocelot Working Group, whose team is implementing water troughs. Were placing the bebederos near the apiaries but not close enough that the animals get too close. Calakmuls water conflict The Calakmul Biosphere Reserve is one of Mexicos largest protected areas, covering more than 700,000 hectares (approximately 1.8 million acres). Since the reserve doesntThis article was originally published on Mongabay

20:00

Claim: Climate Skeptics Have Long Intimidated Scientists from Full Disclosure Watts Up With That?

All the muted climate claims of previous years apparently represent climate scientists holding back for fear of intimidation.

19:19

DRCs endangered bonobos face another threat to their survival: malaria Conservation news

Gorillas and chimpanzees, like humans, have long been known to suffer from malaria. But evidence of the parasites effects on bonobos, one of humankinds closest genetic relatives, has been scant. Now, new research suggests that bonobos do suffer from malaria infection, and that the disease could threaten the survival of some of the species wild populations. An international team of scientists examined bonobo fecal samples collected from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) the only country where bonobos (Pan paniscus) occur and stored in the laboratory of virologist Beatrice Hahn at the University of Pennsylvania. For ten of the sites included in the study, only one fecal sample out of more than 1,400 analyzed tested positive for evidence of malaria parasites. But among a population living on either side of the Lomami River, a major tributary of the Congo River that runs parallel to it in the central DRC, 38% of bonobos had evidence of malaria parasites in their feces. It wasnt immediately clear to the researchers what cost the disease has on the Lomami River bonobos, known to the researchers as the TL2 population; telltale signs such as lethargy or reduced reproductive ability are hard to detect in the field. But malaria had evidently exacted a price in the past: the bonobos possessed variants of an immune gene that likely protect them against severe cases of malaria. There would have to be a cost for natural selection to favor those immune variants, said Emily Wroblewski, assistant professorThis article was originally published on Mongabay

16:00

Atmospheric water vapor (TPW) and climate change Watts Up With That?

By Andy May In the latest IPCC major report, AR6, they report: a best estimate of equilibrium climate sensitivity of 3C, with a very likely range of 2C to 5C.[1]

12:29

For rescued rhino calves in Nepal, return to the wild is a fraught option Conservation news

CHITWAN The chirping of birds is interrupted by the rustling of leaves and the sound of breaking twigs. Its breakfast time at the office of the National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC) in Sauraha on the fringes of Nepals Chitwan National Park. As trust officials munch their bread with sips of tea, three juvenile rhinos tuck into their own meal, grazing under the watchful eye of their caretaker. One of the rhinos even tries to finish off the leftovers of a human breakfast. These greater one-horned rhinos (Rhinoceros unicornis), now habituated to living with humans, were rescued from different parts of the national park after being separated from their mothers. Officials now face the daunting challenge of sending them back out into the wild, ensuring that they can survive amid threats from predators and poachers. Juvenile rhinos Pushpa and Anjali graze as Pooja watches on in Chitwan, Nepal. Image courtesy of Rama Mishra. Theyve named the three rhinos, all females, Pushpa, Anjali and Pooja. Pushpa was rescued three years ago, Anjali two years ago, and Pooja in October last year. All of them were only a week-old when they were brought to the trust. Generally, female rhinos in their first pregnancy are inexperienced about motherhood and they dont provide adequate care to their calf, said Dr. Amir Sadaula, a veterinarian with the NTNC. Sometimes the mother dies during delivery and other times calves get separated from their mothers due to attacks by predators such as tigers or natural calamitiesThis article was originally published on Mongabay

12:00

Book Review: A Tale of Two Climates Watts Up With That?

"A Tale of Two Climates" is suitable for use as a coffee table book. Leave it around for visitors to pick up and leaf throughalmost every page has a graphic of some sort that will catch their eye and text that will inform them.

09:45

Can we fix our failing food systems? Agroecology has answers Conservation news

Overproduction of cash crops, vast monocultures of chemical-dependent grains and massive animal agriculture operations are putting major stress not just on U.S. farmland where theyre contributing to soil erosion, groundwater depletion and climate change but these practices are also impacting areas such as the Brazilian Cerrado, where more than half the huge savanna has been converted to soy. Compounding these issues is the fact that roughly a third of all food produced in the U.S. is wasted, a statistic that also bears out globally. As the 2023 growing season begins in the Northern Hemisphere, author and food journalist Tom Philpott whose most recent book, Perilous Bounty: The Looming Collapse of American Farming and How We Can Prevent It, details these problems joins the Mongabay Newscast to talk about the most problematic practices, how they permeate the worlds food systems and how techniques like agroecology and agroforestry could change the game and provide a way out. Listen here: Agroecology is a sustainable agriculture practice based on Indigenous and traditional methods of growing food that can address most of the aforementioned challenges while slowing the biodiversity crisis, according to the IPCCs 2022 report. Its methods can increase the nutrient profile of soils, protect it from erosion and provide a more diversified set of crops for farmers to sell. The question is, why dont we do it? Philpott, who nowadays dives into these topics as a research associate for the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future, says quarterlyThis article was originally published on Mongabay

08:24

Global Forest Coalition: IPCC report clearly shows there is no room for carbon offsets in climate change policy Global Justice Ecology Project

Global Forest Coalition: IPCC report clearly shows there is no room for carbon offsets in climate change policy March 21, 2023 marks both the International Day of Forests and the release of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) sixth synthesis report. GJEP has denounced the false solutions put forward by the UNs annual Climate []

The post Global Forest Coalition: IPCC report clearly shows there is no room for carbon offsets in climate change policy appeared first on Global Justice Ecology Project.

08:00

The 1.5 C Temperature Fiction, Already Exceeded Watts Up With That?

...temperatures tend to cycle at a decadal scale and by much more than 1.5 C.

06:58

Sea level rise looms, even for the best-prepared country on Earth Conservation news

THE HAGUE, Netherlands A misty rain blows against my face as I follow Farah Obaidullah along Scheveningen Beach in the northwest part of The Hague. Despite the wind and drizzle, the shoreline feels calm. Gray waves roll into the sand like long, deep breaths. Machines have raked the beach into a well-manicured carpet of grains and shell fragments. But about a year ago, in February 2022, Scheveningen looked very different as Storm Eunice battered the coastline with high-speed winds and fierce waves. The sea was amazing just how wild it gets and how ferocious, says Obaidullah, who strides quickly over the beach, an old Greenpeace beanie pulled over her bobbed curls. You dont really want to be out near the sea at that time. But I walked outside in the aftermath of Eunice, and the sand had literally taken over the boulevard and the beach bars. Storm Eunice ravaged the Netherlands with winds of up to 128 kilometers per hour (80 miles per hour) and sea levels reaching 2.2 meters (7.2 feet) above their normal height. It damaged buildings, toppled trees and killed three people. But while the sand blew across the coast, the tide and storm surge never reached the town of Scheveningens infrastructure, thanks to interventions made a couple of decades ago in anticipation of sea level rise and extreme weather events like this. (Left) Preparation for Storm Eunice at Scheveningen. (Right) Aftermath of Eunice at Scheveningen. Photos by Farah Obaidullah. In 2003, experts identified theThis article was originally published on Mongabay

06:26

Biden Asserts Pension Fund Managers Can Consider ESG Factors, With First Veto EcoWatch

President Joe Biden used his veto power on Monday for the first time since becoming president to reject a bill passed by the majority-Republican Congress that would have reversed a Labor Department rule involving environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations for investment fund managers.

The proposed legislation would have stopped pension fund managers from being able to base their investment decisions on factors like climate change and the overpaying of executives, Biden said in a video posted on Twitter.

I just signed this veto because the legislation passed by the Congress would put at risk the retirement savings of individuals across the country, Biden said in the video.

Congress passed the bill by a vote of 50 to 46 on March 1. The Republican majority included the votes of West Virginias Joe Manchin and Montanas Jon Tester, both Democratic senators who face reelection next year in states that lean Republican.

Despite a clear and bipartisan rejection of the rule from Congress, President Biden is choosing to put his administrations progressive agenda above the well-being of the American people, Manchin said in a statement, as Reuters reported.

Plans covered by the vetoed bill include $12 trillion in investments for 150 million Americans.

It is clear that President Biden wants Wall Street to use your hard-earned money not to grow your savings, but to fund a far-left political agenda. That will hurt seniors and workers, said Republican Speaker of the House of Representatives Kevin McCarthy in a statement, as reported by Reuters.

Biden and Democrats said that it was Republicans who were trying to prevent the consideration of factors that went against their agenda.

This bill would risk your retirement savings by making it illegal to consider risk factors MAGA House Republicans dont like. Your plan m...

05:37

For Dutch farming crisis, agroforestry offers solutions: Q&A with Lennart Fuchs & Mark Buiter Conservation news

Last year, farmer protests erupted throughout the Netherlands, riding a wave of rural anger at government plans to drastically halve nitrogen emissions by downsizing and closing farms. This quickly swept the newly founded agrarian party, the Farmer-Citizen Movement (BoerBurgerBeweging, or BBB), to victory in last weeks provincial elections, making it the countrys biggest political party. In the face of the farmer and nitrogen crisis, Dutch agriculture and environmental experts are calling for a change to the food system in a way that both reduces nitrogen emissions while addressing the financial and livelihood concerns of farmers, many of whom are in debt. As they say in Dutch, You cant be green if you are in the red, says Lennart Fuchs, an agriculture researcher at Wageningen University & Research in the Netherlands. Among the solutions the experts propose are agroforestry systems that harmoniously integrate reduced livestock with profitable trees and crops such as hazelnut, walnut, cider apple and timber trees, Fuchs tells Mongabay in an interview. Also known as silvopasture, this is a climate change solution that reduces emissions and can bring large returns on investments by producing multiple streams of income. A computer-generated image of what a future farm could look like in the Netherlands if it used an agroforestry system. Image by Lennart Fuchs. The Netherlands has long been a global agricultural powerhouse, and farms there have often been managed by the same families for generations. Home to some 17.5 million people, the country is Europes largest meat exporter and theThis article was originally published on Mongabay

04:33

Mountain-Dwelling Species Losing Habitats Rapidly, Study Finds EcoWatch

Mountain forests are important habitats for many species, but a new study has found that habitat loss in these areas has been rapidly accelerating since 2000. In that time, more than 78.1 million hectares (approximately 193 million acres) of mountain forests have been lost, equaling an area greater than the size of Texas.

A team of scientists from Leeds University in the UK and the Southern University of Science and Technology in China studied changes in mountain forests annually from 2001 to 2018, analyzing losses and gains in tree cover. 

The researchers estimated a rate of change and compared the changes across varying elevations. They also compared changes in different types of mountain forests, including boreal, temperate and tropical forests. The tropical forests had the most loss and quickest rate of loss, but this type of forest also had the fastest tree regrowth rate.

Overall, mountain forest loss increased 50% in 2010 to 2018 compared to 2001 to 2009. From 2010 to 2018, mountain forest loss accelerated to about 5.2 million hectares per year, primarily due to logging. Other factors that contributed to forest loss included wildfires, slash-and-burn cultivation and agricultural expansion.

Asia, South America, Africa, Europe and Australia experienced significant mountain forest loss, while the authors observed less forest loss in North America and Oceania.

More than 85% of mammals, birds and amphibians live in mountainous areas, meaning widespread forest loss could impact biodiversity.

Knowledge of the dynamics of forest loss along elevation gradients worldwide is crucial for understanding how and where the amount of forested area available for forest species will change as they shift in response to warming, the authors wrote, as reported by ScienceDaily.

While the authors found less forest loss in protected areas compared to unprotected areas, these protected areas were still impacted by shifting cultivation, agriculture and commercial forestry. 

The study authors noted that protected areas need to be established in large enough zones to allow natural movements and sufficient space for ranging species, to best protect...

04:31

400,000 Gallons of Contaminated Water Leaked From Minnesota Nuclear Plant EcoWatch

A nuclear plant in Minnesota has leaked around 400,000 gallons of water contaminated with tritium, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) reported Thursday. 

The leak was first detected by the plants owner Xcel Energy in November of 2022, but state officials only informed the public last week. 

Our top priority is protecting residents and the environment, and the MPCA is working closely with other state agencies to oversee Xcel Energys monitoring data and cleanup activities, MPCA assistant commissioner for land and strategic initiatives Kirk Koudelka said in a statement. We are working to ensure this cleanup is concluded as thoroughly as possible with minimal or no risk to drinking water supplies.

Tritium is a radioactive form of hydrogen, but the radiation it emits is on par with common food items, Xcel Energy said in a statement. However, exposure to massive amounts can increase cancer risk, according to the Canadian government. It is naturally present in the atmosphere, but is also a common byproduct of nuclear energy, MPCA said. 

Xcel Energy first noticed the leak when groundwater testing turned up unusual results and sourced it to a leaky pipe connecting two buildings in its Monticello nuclear plant. The leak was contained before it contaminated either the Mississippi River or local drinking water sources. So far, Xcel said it had cleaned up around 25 percent of the leak and would continue working into the next year. 

We have taken comprehensive measures to address this situation on-site at the plant. While this leak does not pose a risk to the public or the environment, we take this very seriously and are working to safely address the situation, Xcel EnergyMinnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota President Chris Clark said in a statement posted on the company website.. We continue to gather and treat all potentially affected water while regularly monitoring nearby groundwater sources. We will continue to partner with local groundwater specialists, and we remain in close cooperation with state and federal regulators and our local community throughout the remediation effort. 

The company reported the leak to both state officials and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) as well as the state on Nov. 22 of last year....

04:23

As crop-raiding animals reach an all-time high, food-crisis hit Sri Lanka looks for solutions Conservation news

COLOMBO Arjuna Jinadasa owns a plot of land full of coconut trees in Kurunegala, in northwestern Sri Lanka, where he enjoys a good produce of about 3,000 coconuts a month. With Sri Lankas traditional cuisine heavily reliant on coconut milk, its a crop with high demand. Jinadasa has made healthy profits from his plantation until recently when daily aerial attacks by monkeys started to impact the harvest. These monkeys destroy at least 200 young coconuts daily, and now my monthly yield is reduced to about 250 coconuts, says Jinadasa. The farmer tried many non-lethal methods to keep the raiding monkeys away, but the success was short-lived, as the primates got used to them. Two toque macaques (Macaca sinica) feeding on human food waste in north-central Sri Lanka. Image by Malaka Rodrigo. Sri Lanka has three species of monkeys, but the endemic toque macaque (Macaca sinica) is also the most problematic. Coconut plantations in many areas are also often subjected to aerial attacks by grizzled giant squirrels (Ratufa macroura), as they eat young coconuts. Sri Lankas minister of agriculture, Mahinda Amaraweera, says nearly 100 million coconuts are destroyed by monkeys and giant squirrels each year, causing a loss of about 6,638 million Sri Lankan rupees ($19.3 million). Amaraweera makes this comment based on a preliminary estimate of crop damage caused by wild animals compiled by the Hector Kobbekaduwa Agrarian Research and Training Institute. The report is based on data gathered by the Agrarian Development Department, and it lists coconut as theThis article was originally published on Mongabay

04:00

STEVE MILLOY: Biden Uses His First Veto to Sacrifice Americans Retirement Savings at The Altar Of ESG Watts Up With That?

The new Biden rule permits retirement savings to be placed into an ESG investment vehicle, without consent from the employee.

03:48

Local Emergency Planning was Inadequate at East Palestine, OH Frack Check WV

Norfolk Southern Railroad train wreck involved the release of highly toxic chemicals

Ohio Train Derailment Raises Questions about Local Disaster Planning Across the USA

From the Author ~ Michael Barrick, Appalachian Chronicle, March 12, 2023

EAST PALESTINE, OHIO As the people of East Palestine attempt to put their lives back together following the crash of a Norfolk Southern freight train full of hazardous chemicals in their tiny community on Feb. 3, 2023, politicians have expressed outrage. Lacking initiative, though, little if nothing will result from the faux anger of the politicians owned by corporate interests. So, its up to the local citizens to start asking some tough questions if they hope to have their community recover from this tragedy.

In short, the last people needed in East Palestine are politicians. They are simply in the way of rescue and recovery efforts. What the citizens do need is greater awareness of how prepared local emergency response officials were for this predictable event. They are in the best position to know the communitys hazards and how response and recovery should unfold for them.

Or are they? If, like far too many other communities across the nation, they have put emergency planning on the back burner, then they, too, have culpability in a disastrous incident. So, the people of East Palestine and any community in the United States need to first understand how community preparedness and response is supposed to work. Then, they need to start asking questions of their county leaders to see if their community is aligned with best practices.

All Disasters Begin and End Locally

It is a maxim among emergency preparedness officials that all disasters begin and end locally. Whether it is literally a local disaster because it impacts only a local community or segment of it, so it is also true with massive natural and man-made disasters. One never knows when or where the horribly unexpected a tornado, a school shooting, or a train derailment will happen in their own backyard.

The recent disaster in East Palestine is the ultimate example of this principle. While there has been understandable community anger with Norfolk Southern officials, there are others who are also responsible for the response that happened when those cars left the track loca...

03:22

Battery Data Genome: A Path to a Brighter Renewable Battery Future EcoWatch

The Battery Data Genome (BDG) project aims to compile as much technical data about renewable batteries as possible. Similar to the Human Genome Project (HGP), the BDG is led by researchers at the Department of Energys Argonne and Idaho Laboratories as well as researchers in Europe. The process would capture data about batteries from battery makers and analyze the data using AI, to allow for faster and more efficient breakthroughs in the renewable battery space, as the global energy sector moves towards a more battery-centric future. 

This call-to-action, as Argonne distinguished fellow and Joint Center for Energy Storage Research Director George Crabtree described on the Argonne website, will collect and house data from every step of the battery lifecycle, from discovery to development to manufacturing and all manner of deployments. The goals are scientific breakthroughs, usable by both the private and public sectors, to make batteries from small to large scale more efficient and longer lasting. 

We interviewed Sue Babinec, one of the co-authors of the call-to-action, and a battery scientist and electrochemist at Argonne.

Susan Babinec / Argonne National Laboratory

How does the Battery Data Genome compare to the Human Genome Project? 

It is a transformational idea. If you look at the HGP, when you go back twenty years, people said were going to decode the body and share this information and it will unleash capabilities to change the world. Its large, its audacious, its aspirational, and its v...

02:48

UN denounces new attacks on Indigenous people in Nicaraguas largest reserve Conservation news

A wave of violence against Indigenous people in Nicaragua this month has drawn international outcry over the governments lack of action against land invaders committing human rights violations and destroying some of the countrys most important forests. Groups believed to be connected to cattle ranching, logging and illegal mining launched several attacks in March against Mayangna and Miskitu Indigenous communities living in and around the Bosaws Biosphere Reserve, the largest protected area in Nicaragua. The increasing number of settlers and land traffickers on (Mayangna) Sauni As territory hasnt stopped, the Indigenous territorial government said in a letter to officials. The environmental destruction has been unstoppable, leading to disastrous consequences for human lives and the greater wellbeing of the communities. The 2-million-hectare (4.9-million-acre) Bosaws Biosphere Reserve borders the North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region, an area created in the 1980s to give Indigenous groups self-governance. But their vast stretches of uninhabited forests have drawn settlers (known locally as colonos) looking to profit from the areas natural resources. For years, Indigenous communities have been trying to fend off the settlers, who have resorted to shootings, kidnappings and intimidation to take over the land. On March 11, armed settlers killed at least six Mayangna Sauni As men in the Wilu community while injuring one other, who was sent to the hospital, according to the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, which denounced the attacks. Several other members of the community are still missing. Mayangna Sauni As territory. (Photo courtesy of LarryThis article was originally published on Mongabay

02:18

Indonesian campaigns getting money from illegal logging, mining, watchdog says Conservation news

JAKARTA Funds from illegal logging, mining and fishing are flowing into election campaigns in Indonesia, authorities have revealed. The announcement by the national anti-money-laundering watchdog, known as the PPATK, during a parliamentary hearing comes less than a year before the country is scheduled to hold legislative and presidential elections. PPATK head Ivan Yustiavandana said his agency had found indications that candidates in the 2014 and 2019 elections used money raised from the illegal extraction of natural resources to fund their campaigns. He did not identify the candidates, including whether they ran in the legislative or presidential elections those years. We cant disclose the amount here, but its huge, Ivan told lawmakers in Jakarta on Feb. 14. The original crime itself is trillions of rupiah [in amount], because its related to many crimes that are linked to natural resources, and this money goes into certain individuals who we suspect as political persons. Official data show that illegal logging costs the country 35 trillion rupiah ($2.3 billion) in state losses each year, while illegal mining results in 3.6 trillion rupiah ($233 million) in state losses. Ivan said the PPATK is working together with the countrys General Elections Commission, or KPU, and the Elections Supervisory Agency, or Bawaslu, in investigating the flow of money. Responding to the findings, lawmaker Arsul Sani from the PPP party called on the PPATK to provide a detailed report on its findings, including identifying the parties that benefited from these funds. This could then form the basisThis article was originally published on Mongabay

02:08

Feds Send Nevada $2.4 Million for Cloud Seeding EcoWatch

Cloud seeding is a geoengineering technique that involves using planes and cannons that shoot silver iodide into clouds, causing a reaction that makes storm clouds create 5 to 15 percent more precipitation.

Utah and Colorado have been cloud seeding in the Upper Colorado River Basin for decades, spending between $1 and $1.5 million each year, and New Mexico recently began approving cloud seeding permits. Frank McDonough, a scientist at the nonprofit Desert Research Institute, tells AP that the research thats come out over the last 10 years or so really seems to have convinced [states] that cloud seeding is a legitimate way to increase snowpack and subsequent water resources.

The federal funding comes at a critical time as the Colorado River basins key reservoirs reach record lows, and Western cities and industries struggle to conserve water even as supplies continue to shrink.

For a Deeper Dive

AP, Explainer: Yale Environment 360

For more climate change and clean energy news, you can follow Climate Nexus on Twitter and Facebook, sign up for daily Hot News, and visit their news site, Nexus Media News.

The post Feds Send Nevada $2.4 Million for Cloud Seeding appeared first on EcoWatch.

01:59

The Wild American Chestnut Is On Its Way Back STOPGETREES.ORG

The Wild American Chestnut Is On Its Way Back This article, written by Anne Petermann and Steve Taylor, originally appeared in the Spring 2023 edition of Heartwood communitys biannual newsletter Heartbeat. By Anne Petermann and Steve Taylor MAINE On his land in western Maine, naturalist Bernd Heinrich is surrounded by American chestnut trees and []

The post The Wild American Chestnut Is On Its Way Back appeared first on STOPGETREES.ORG.

01:43

Guest post: How the energy crisis is boosting heat pumps in Europe Carbon Brief

Heat pumps are widely seen as the most important technology when it comes to decarbonising heating. Organisations including the International Energy Agency and McKinsey see heat pumps providing most of our heating needs in the future, on the path to net-zero emissions. 

Until recently, heat pump sales had been struggling to take off, but this is changing rapidly. In a previous Carbon Brief guest post we reported double-digit growth in 2021.

Since then, Russias invasion of Ukraine, the resulting energy crisis and related policy interventions have boosted installations in Europe even further, to unprecedented new highs.

For the first time in 2022, heat pump sales in Europe reached 3m, up 0.8m (38%) from a year earlier and doubling since 2019. Sales doubled in a single year in Poland, Czech Republic and Belgium.

One main driver is cost: gas and oil prices skyrocketed in 2022 and even though electricity prices also increased sharply in many countries, running costs tipped in favour of heat pumps.

With further policy changes likely to continue supporting the rollout of heat pumps, we look at their current and potential future adoption across Europe.

Expanding markets

Initial figures for Europe show that 3m heat pumps were installed in 2022, up 38% year-on-year. This builds on a 34% increase in 2021, which was, in turn, much higher than the previous norm of around 10% per year. This acceleration is shown in the figure below.

...

01:12

Carbon credits from award-winning Kenyan offset suspended by Verra Conservation news

Carbon offset certifier Verra has suspended issuance of credits from an award-winning project in Kenya, Mongabay has learned, after serious questions were raised about its validation and methodology. Indigenous rights advocacy group Survival International released a report March 16 saying that the offset, called the Northern Kenya Grassland Carbon Project, cant accurately count its carbon savings and is altering long-standing Indigenous livestock grazing practices. In a statement emailed to Mongabay, the Northern Rangelands Trust (NRT), a Kenya-based conservation group that manages the offset, criticized the Survival International report, saying it uses scant cherry-picked evidence to question an exceptionally complex and detailed model. The project, which claims to increase carbon storage in the soil of northern Kenyas savanna grasslands by managing the grazing patterns of livestock herds, has been a darling of offset supporters since it began generating credits for carbon markets in 2021. At last years COP27 climate conference, it was awarded the prestigious Triple Gold distinction by the Climate, Community & Biodiversity Alliance; in his speech to conference attendees, Kenyan President William Ruto called it exemplary. But Survival Internationals investigation found that third-party validators hired to assess the project had raised more than 100 findings a euphemism for concerns in the review process before Verra ultimately decided to verify the carbon credits it generated. An Indigenous Borana herder at the Biliqo Bulesa Conservancy in northern Kenya. Biliqo Bulesa is one of the conservancies participating in the offset. Image by NRC/Raimond Duijsens via Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0). EarlierThis article was originally published on Mongabay

00:48

The Wild American Chestnut Is On Its Way Back Global Justice Ecology Project

The Wild American Chestnut Is On Its Way Back This article, written by Anne Petermann and Steve Taylor, originally appeared in the Spring 2023 edition of Heartwood communitys biannual newsletter Heartbeat. By Anne Petermann and Steve Taylor MAINE On his land in western Maine, naturalist Bernd Heinrich is surrounded by American chestnut trees and []

The post The Wild American Chestnut Is On Its Way Back appeared first on Global Justice Ecology Project.

00:00

The Science of Dryness & California Droughts & Fire Watts Up With That?

A public succumbing to fear mongering and lies only opens the door for bad solutions and government tyranny.

Tuesday, 21 March

22:40

Is it safe to eat? Bangladesh fish exposed to hormones, antibiotics and toxic waste Conservation news

DHAKA Bangladesh has recently achieved remarkable success in freshwater fish production due to its fast-growing aquaculture, securing third place in global freshwater fish farming. The country produced more than 1.25 million metric tons of freshwater fish in 2020 while it was only 440,000 metric tons in 1980, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organizations 2022 report on global fisheries and aquaculture. To increase fish production to meet the protein demand of its growing population, Bangladesh has been using antibiotics and pesticides in fish culture and applying hormones in artificial fish breeding, which makes its food safety questionable. Bacterial, viral, fungal and parasitic diseases often hit aquaculture production in Bangladesh and that is why fish farmers regularly use aqua-chemicals like antibiotics and pesticides to cut disease burden in fish farming. A woman feeding fish at her pond in Jessore, Bangladesh. Photo by Yousuf Tushar / WorldFish Via Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0). The aqua-chemicals are mainly applied to prevent and treat bacterial, fungal and parasitic diseases. Those are also used to improve water quality and increase the productivity of fish culture ponds or act as growth promoters. Despite contributing to the growth and development of the aquaculture sector, the use of these chemicals has been criticized for the potential adverse impacts on the environment and human health as well. A 2021 survey, conducted via face-to-face interviews with fish farmers in Rajshahi district of Bangladesh, found that farmers used nine active antibiotic ingredients in finfish rearing. However, most of theThis article was originally published on Mongabay

21:14

New MPA Tic-Toc Golfo Corcovado a safe haven for blue whales in Chile Conservation news

Chile has a new marine protected area (MPA) in Patagonia that will safeguard an important feeding and breeding area for blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus), a species listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). The countrys Council of Ministers for Sustainability approved the Tic-Toc Golfo Corcovado Marine Park in Northern Patagonia in December 2021. The new MPA finally came to fruition in July 2022, after more than two decades of conservation efforts spearheaded by scientists and conservationists, when the Chilean government issued a decree officially establishing it. Located south of the island of Chilo in the Gulf of Corcovado, the MPA spans 100,000 hectares (247,100 acres). The area is frequented not only by blue whales, but also by humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae), sei whales (Balaenoptera borealis), at least two species of dolphin, including Peales (Lagenorhynchus australis) and Chilean (Cephalorhynchus eutropia), the South American sea lion (Otaria flavescens) and colonies of penguins. It is also visited by the black-browed albatross (Thalassarche melanophris), the southern royal albatross (Diomedea epomophora) and the sooty shearwater (Ardenna grisea) all birds that feature in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Whales under siege A few years ago, scientists confirmed that Chilean Northern Patagonia is the most important feeding and breeding area for the Eastern South Pacific population of blue whales during the austral summer. This would turn out to be a key discovery in protecting this globally unique blue whale population, which is now composed of just a few hundredThis article was originally published on Mongabay

20:31

'Last chance to secure our survival' What's new

'Last chance to secure our survival'

Channel
News
brendan 21st March 2023
Teaser Media

20:00

Netherlands Votes NO to the Climate Activist War on Farmers Watts Up With That?

A new political party which represents farmers who are fed up with police shooting at their kids and threatened evictions for daring to work the land has won a "monster" endorsement from Dutch voters.

18:35

Sagarmatha microbes may survive harsh conditions for decades Conservation news

KATHMANDU  The South Col in the Sagarmatha (Mount Everest) region faces blasts of unrelenting winds that sweep away almost everything in their path, including snow. Located nearly 8,000 meters (26,000 feet) above sea level, the southeastern ridge of this desolate terrain is where mountaineers heading to worlds tallest peak make their final camp. A recent study published in the journal Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, shows that even the winds havent swept away a trail of tough microbes that can survive the harsh conditions on the Roof of the World for decades, if not centuries, left behind by mountaineers in the area. Some of the microbes we found were possibly transported by humans when they sneeze or cough, said Steve Schmidt, co-author on the paper and professor of ecology and evolutionary biology. The concern, with all the pollution thats going on Everest, is that these microbes arent going to go away, he told Mongabay, adding that he himself didnt go to Sagarmatha to collect soil samples there. Through his previous work, Schmidt had established ties with researchers on their way to Sagarmatha to set up the worlds highest weather station on South Col in May 2019 as part of the National Geographic and Rolex Perpetual Planet Everest Expedition (April to May 2019).  He requested collections of soil samples, to which Baker Perry, co-author and professor of geography at Appalachian State University, obliged. As part of the study, three surface sediment samples from the South Col were collected by members ofThis article was originally published on Mongabay

18:23

Biden signs legislation to declassify information about Covid origins CHANGING TIMES

US president Joe Biden has signed the COVID-19 Origin Act of 2023 into law. The Act requires the Director of National Intelligence to declassify information relating to the origin of Covid-19.

The US Senate voted unanimously to pass the bill on March 1 and, on March 10, the House of Representatives approved the bill with 419 votes in favour. Sixteen representatives didnt vote.

The bill was introduced by Republican Senator Josh Hawley on behalf of himself and Republican Senator Mike Braun. It was co-sponsored by Republican senators Mike Lee, Roger Marshall, and Rick Scott.

The legislation specifically refers to the declassification of all information relating to potential links between the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) and the origin of Covid-19, activities performed by the WIV with or on behalf of the Peoples Liberation Army, coronavirus research or other related activities performed at the WIV prior to the outbreak of Covid-19, and all information about the researchers at the WIV who fell ill in autumn 2019.

It states that the required information should be provided within 90 days of the legislations enactment and that there should only be such redactions as the Director determines necessary to...

16:00

Legalized Climate Grifting Watts Up With That?

In short, nothing about renewable energy is clean, renewable, sustainable, fair or equitable.

12:00

IPCC Issues their Annual Final Climate Warning Watts Up With That?

UN climate warnings are like the village communist predicting the imminent demise of capitalism every week - and about as likely to happen.

09:40

IPCC warns of last chance to limit climate change via drastic emissions cuts Conservation news

Humans must make deep, rapid, and sustained cuts to greenhouse gas emissions to avoid the worst effects of climate change, according to the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The IPCCs March 20 assessment warns that the 2020s will be perhaps the last chance to keep the global rise in temperature within 1.5 Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels. (The current global temperature is 1.1 C, or 2 F, warmer than in the mid-19th century.) Researchers say halting global warming at this level provides the best chance for staving off its worst potential impacts, including extreme storms, droughts and sea-level rise. And yet greenhouse gas emissions have continued to tick upward. The report and many observers highlights the conclusion that fossil fuel use must end as soon as possible. Fossil fuel producers and their financiers must understand one simple truth: Pursuing mega-profits when so many people are losing their lives and rights, now and in the future, is totally unacceptable, U.N. Secretary-General Antnio Guterres told the Human Rights Council in February. Unless humanity kicks its addiction to fossil fuels now, critical climate tipping points will crush the human rights of generations to come. The IPCC report calls for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels and notes the drastic cost reductions in renewable energy that could facilitate that transition. Image by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay. This publication is the sixth synthesis report, which IPCC produces every six to seven years. The authorsThis article was originally published on Mongabay

08:33

This Is the Make-or-Break Decade for Climate Action, IPCC Warns EcoWatch

Decisions made this decade will largely determine whether world leaders can limit global warming to 1.5 or two degrees Celsius of warming below pre-industrial levels and avoid the increasingly more drastic impacts of the climate crisis

Thats one key takeaway from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Changes (IPCC) Synthesis Report of the findings gathered in its Sixth Assessment Cycle. The Summary for Policymakers, released Monday, found that all economic sectors would need to launch rapid and deep and, in most cases, immediate cuts in greenhouse gas emissions before 2030 in order to have a more than 50 percent chance of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius or a more than 67 percent chance of limiting it to two degrees Celsius of warming. However, the IPCC emphasized that it is entirely possible to improve the global outlook if world leaders act urgently.

Mainstreaming effective and equitable climate action will not only reduce losses and damages for nature and people, it will also provide wider benefits, IPCC Chair Hoesung Lee said in a press release. This Synthesis Report underscores the urgency of taking more ambitious action and shows that, if we act now, we can still secure a liveable sustainable future for all.

08:29

A liquid biofuels primer: Carbon-cutting hopes vs. real-world impacts Conservation news

As climate change has escalated over the decades, the demand for efficient liquid biofuels, especially to power the transportation sector, has grown more urgent, placing increased pressure on fragile ecosystems, even leading to outright bans. Three generations of biofuels have been explored with corn, soy, palm oil, grasses, algae and many other organic sources tried but with most failing to fully live up to their promise. Still, biofuels remain a go-to climate solution for policymakers who view them as a green, carbon-cutting transition route to wean the world off fossil fuels. Globally, investment in liquid biofuels hovered around $4 billion over the past decade, doubling in 2021 to more than $8 billion, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA), and more is needed to unlock the potential of advanced biofuels, it states. Over the years, a range of government policies has subsidized or supported the industry to the tune of billions of dollars in some cases. Recently, the U.S. governments Sustainable Aviation Fuel Grand Challenge, for example, pledged around $4.3 billion to support research and help fuel producers develop clean biofuels. Despite these efforts, three stumbling blocks have kept some biofuels from going mainstream and others mired in controversy: thorny technological problems, the inability to achieve cost-efficient upscaling, and environmental harm (ranging from deforestation to pollution). An ethanol production plant in Indiana, U.S. Debate over whether biofuels truly provide climate benefits continues, with various studies achieving contradictory results. Image by cassini83 via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain). A studyThis article was originally published on Mongabay

08:00

Scottish Couple Plan to Drive From Pole to Pole in an Electric Vehicle Watts Up With That?

They plan to bring a portable wind turbine to charge the vehicle when sunlight is unavailable.

07:59

EU Solar Companies Say New Plans to Boost Domestic Products Over Imports Would Hamper Solar Progress EcoWatch

European solar companies disapprove of local content rules in the European Commissions proposed Net Zero Industry Act that effectively limit Chinese imports, saying the rules will make the transition to clean energy more difficult.

The rules require governments to reduce public funding and consumer subsidies for renewables projects if companies import a particular product from a country that makes up more than 65 percent of the EU market share of that product, reported the Financial Times.

The act says European solar companies have an insufficiently diversified supply, with 80 percent of the European markets supply chain coming from China.

If we dont want to risk slowing solar deployment, we need a bigger carrot, especially in terms of financing solar plants in Europe, said Dries Acke, policy director at SolarPower Europe, as E&E News reported. Last weeks subsidy rule revision doesnt include support for running solar factories, when European manufacturers face some of the highest energy prices in the world.

As the EU jostled to find substitutes for Russian gas last year, the bloc installed a record more than 40 gigawatts of solar panels, which the commission said it was able to do by importing more than twice as many from China, reported the Financial Times.

Lukas Pauly, managing director at German green tech company Enpal, said that if subsidies for products that dont come from the EU are cut, installations would suffer.

Until we have built up enough capacity in Europe, reducing subsidies would slow down the renewable transition, Pauly said, as the Financial Times reported.

According to an estimate by the International Energy Agency, European-produced solar panels would cost more tha...

07:25

Millions of Fish Dead in Australia River Following Low Oxygen Levels, High Temperatures EcoWatch

In Menindee, New South Wales, millions of dead fish have been found in the Darling River. Local authorities and scientists say the die-off event is likely due to high temperatures and low oxygen levels as water from recent floods recedes.

The dead fish are primarily bony herring, or bony bream, and also include murray cod, carp, golden perch and silver perch.

These fish deaths are related to low oxygen levels in the water (hypoxia) as flood waters recede, the New South Wales Department of Primary Industries posted on Facebook. Significant volumes of fish including Carp and Bony Herring, nutrients and organic matter from the floodplain are being concentrated back into the river channel.

According to the Department of Primary Industries, the area has experienced widespread flooding. As the flood waters recede, oxygen in the water depletes. The situation is worsened by a local heat wave, which causes fish to require more oxygen, but the warmer water holds less oxygen.

The department noted that bony herring population tends to boom during floods and often then sees significant decrease as flood waters recede, especially as this species is more vulnerable to low oxygen levels and high temperatures. Similar incidents happened in 2018 and 2019, Reuters reported, where thousands of fish died from extreme temperature changes and poor water quality.

The region has been dealing with high temperatures and flooding, and residents are now grappling with the sight and smell of dead fish in the local river.

Weve just sort of started to clean up, and then this has happened, and thats sort of youre walking around in a dried-up mess and then youre smelling this putrid smell. Its a terrible smell and horrible to see all those dead fish, said local resident Jan Dening, as reported by NBC News.

Locals are also concerned about potential health impacts of the dead fish in the river.

The stink was terrible. I nearly had to put a mask on, local nature photographer Geoff Looney told NBC News. I was worried about my own health. That water right in the top comes down to our...

04:48

Five years since the death of Sudan, new film highlights hope for rhinos Conservation news

Sudan, a 45-year-old rhino believed to be the worlds last surviving male northern white rhino (Ceratotherium simum cottoni), died five years ago at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya on March 19, 2018. He had been battling ill health for months, and after his condition worsened considerably, veterinarians decided to euthanize him. Since then, an international consortium of scientists and conservationists known as the BioRescue Project a consortium made up of Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (Leibniz-IZW) in Germany; Safari Park Dvr Krlov in the Czech Republic; the Kenya Wildlife Service; and Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya have been working to bring the species back from extinction through in vitro fertilization and stem cell research. They have already created 24 viable embryos using eggs from the last two female white rhinos that are still alive, and the frozen sperm of deceased male northern white rhinos like Sudan. To mark the occasion, photographer Ami Vitale has released a new short film, Remembering Sudan, which will be screened at upcoming film festivals and can be viewed online, heres the trailer: Though the northern white rhino is functionally extinct following the loss of the last male of the species, conservationists like Vitale find great hope in BioRescue, and in the power of humanity to react positively: What happens next is in all of our hands, Vitale told Mongabay by email when reflecting on the anniversary. Whats going to save us all is to get beyond our routine ways of thinking.This article was originally published on Mongabay

04:15

In Chiles Patagonia, another salmon plant angers water defenders Conservation news

A recently opened salmon processing plant in southern Chile is raising concerns about whether environmental regulations were properly carried out to prevent contamination of marine ecosystems and clean drinking water. The Dumestre salmon plant near the city of Puerto Natales is receiving backlash from conservationists and residents who say the facility is at risk of dumping waste in the fjords and channels of southern Chile. Some residents, including Indigenous Kawesqar, also complain that the plant made an aggressive push into the area without properly consulting them. This plant just crowns the salmon industry as a powerful invader of Patagonia, said Loreto Vsquez Salvador, of the ltima Esperanza Citizen Association, an activist group that has been fighting the plant. Aquaculture (the farming or cultivation of freshwater and marine species) has become a growing environmental concern over recent decades as Chile climbs the list of the worlds largest producers of salmon and trout. Many aquaculture methods have been known to deplete oxygen in the water, killing off coral reefs and compromising other fish populations with antibiotics. The Dumestre plant, operated by Australis Seafoods, started construction in 2019 and opened last December following years of protests from locals even after they were promised hundreds of local jobs. The Dumestre salmon plant near the city of Puerto Natales. (Photo via Agrupacin Ciudadana de ltima Esperanza) With the ability to process over 70,000 tons of salmon per year, the Dumestre operation needs around 350 ships to travel through the Seoret canal per year, accordingThis article was originally published on Mongabay

04:00

Column: The Humanitarian Horror That Electrify Everything Would Unleash Watts Up With That?

Electrify everything is a barbaric and stupid concept that, if even partially adopted, will outright kill large swathes of humanity when harsh weather strikes.

03:58

EU Seeks to Boost Domestic Green Energy Production With Net Zero Industry Act EcoWatch

The European Union on Thursday unveiled its plan to become a major global player in the green energy transition

Its Net Zero Industry Act sets a goal of manufacturing at least 40 percent of its own clean technology by 2030.

We need a regulatory environment that allows us to scale up the clean energy transition quickly, President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement shared on the European Commission website. The Net-Zero Industry Act will do just that. It will create the best conditions for those sectors that are crucial for us to reach net-zero by 2050: technologies like wind turbines, heat pumps, solar panels, renewable hydrogen as well as CO2 storage. Demand is growing in Europe and globally, and we are acting now to make sure we can meet more of this demand with European supply. 

M...

03:21

Exceptional surge in methane emissions from wetlands worries scientists Carbon Brief

Methane emissions from wetlands have risen faster this century than in even the most pessimistic climate scenarios, new research finds.

From the Arctic to the tropics, wetlands encompass around 6% of the planets surface. These waterlogged soils are the planets largest natural source of methane a potent greenhouse gas that plays a key role in global temperature rise.

As climate change raises global temperatures and disrupts rainfall patterns, wetlands are releasing methane into the atmosphere more rapidly a phenomenon known as the wetland methane feedback.

New research, published as a brief communication in Nature Climate Change, finds that 2020-21 marked exceptional growth in wetland methane emissions.

The paper adds that tropical wetlands in particular are hotspots of methane wetland emissions, with South America the largest contributor to increased tropical wetland emissions over the 21st century.

Meanwhile, a separate study also published in Nature Climate Change finds that global warming is also affecting wetland emissions of carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide.

The paper concludes that warming undermines the mitigation potential of pristine wetlands even for a limited temperature increase of 1.5-2C.

The wetland methane feedback

Methane is a potent greenhouse gas that has caused around 30% of all human-caused global warming since the Industrial Revolution. Most methane emissions come from human activity including from the fossil fuel industry, landfill sites and agriculture.

In 2021, the US, EU, Indonesia, Canada, Brazil, UK and many others signed the Global Methane Pledge promising to cut their methane emissions by 30% over 2020-30. 

Meanwhile, a report published last year by the International Energy Agencys global methane tracker concluded that the most cost-effective opportunities for methane abatement are in the energy sector, especially in oil and gas operations.

However, 40% of met...

02:21

Smi rights must not be sacrificed for green energy goals of Europe (commentary) Conservation news

Growing up in Gllivare/ Vhtjer, a Swedish village in Spmi, north of the Arctic Circle, the threats facing Smi people were a daily reality. We are Europes only Indigenous people, but colonialism means our territory, Spmi, is split across four countries: Sweden, Finland, Norway and Russia. But across these national borders, the same pressures bear down on us, from mining to forestry and wind farms. Fish drying outside a Smi cabin. Image by Jan-Eerik Paadar / Smediggi Saamelaiskrjt (the Smi Parliament) via Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0). For outsiders commercial gain, our land has been seized, our people displaced, and the reindeer herding thats been the foundation of our lives for millennia, eroded. Adjacent to my village is Malmberget, a scene of deep mine iron ore extraction, and a little over 100 kilometers away is Kiruna, the worlds largest underground iron mine. Both are owned by Luossavaara-Kiirunavaara AB (LKAB), the 100% state-owned Swedish mining company. Kiruna is one of the nine out of 12 mines in the north of Sweden which are on Smi land. These mines as well as the infrastructure accompanying them have caused pollution, devastated ecosystems, poisoned the lichen that our reindeer survive on, and  taken away our reindeer grazing areas. A Smi herd of reindeer in Finland. Image by Smediggi Saamelaiskrjt (the Smi parliament) via Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0). More mining Now a new danger has emerged. European Union policymakers want to secure the critical raw materials which its Member States need for the green energyThis article was originally published on Mongabay

00:56

Bearded pigs a cultural keystone species for Borneos Indigenous groups: Study Conservation news

Bearded pigs play a prominent role in the lives of many people living on the island of Borneo. For some ethnic groups, theyre a hunters most-prized quarry, providing an important source of protein, and a shared pig is often a central part of community celebrations. Now, a recent study provides quantitative evidence for the first time that Bornean bearded pigs (Sus barbatus) can persist even in areas where theyre highly sought-after by local Indigenous groups. For thousands of years, the bearded pig has been hunted, said David Kurz, a conservation scientist and postdoctoral fellow at Trinity College in the U.S. and the lead author of the study published Feb. 17 in the journal npj Biodiversity. We know that from archaeological evidence. Prior research has also shown that hunting affects the movements of bearded pigs and the areas they frequent. Kurz and his colleagues wanted to know whether the pigs presence could be tied to specific social and cultural factors in the areas where they occur. Bearded pigs (Sus barbatus) play a prominent role in the lives of many people living on the island of Borneo. Scientists have found evidence that its been hunted for thousands of years. Image courtesy of Mike Prince via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0). Bearded pigs (Sus barbatus) play a prominent role in the lives of many people living on the island of Borneo. Scientists have found evidence that its been hunted for thousands of years. Image courtesy of Jessica Suarez. The team began with cameraThis article was originally published on Mongabay

00:25

Texas Education Officials Weaken Climate Science in Textbooks EcoWatch

The Texas State Board of Education changed its guidelines last month to emphasize the positive aspects of fossil fuels in science textbooks, Scott Waldman reported last week. The Republican-controlled board approved changes proposed by climate denier Patricia Hardy, who wants teachers to offer both sides of climate science.

The edits aim to portray the Earths warming temperatures as the result of natural fluctuations, Waldman wrote, flying in the face of the consensus among climate researchers that humans are causing it by burning fossil fuels. While the board guide isnt legally binding, it certainly deters school districts from covering climate because they try to play it safe and dont want to weigh into politics generally, according to Carisa Lopez of the Texas Freedom Network, adding that it certainly politicizes, deeply, climate change. It politicizes science.

The Texas State Board of Education consists of five Democratic party members and 10 Republicans, including a Shell Oil lawyer Will Hickman and oil-field service company CEO Aaron Kinsey, who worked with Hardy on the changes. Our schools are paid for by the fossil fuel industry for the most part, Hardy told Waldman.

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00:00

NY Climate Act Cap and Invest Plan Going Off the Rails Watts Up With That?

In New York and elsewhere climate justice considerations are making their way into legislation

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