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Friday, 14 April

01:47

Wealthy Lifestyles Drain Urban Water Resources, Study Finds EcoWatch

In 2022, the news broke that Southern California celebrities were using far more than their fair share of water during an ongoing drought. Dwyane Wade and Gabrielle Union went more than 489,000 gallons over water limits in May of that year because of problems with their pool, while Sylvester Stallone drew 533 percent over his monthly water budget in a bid to save mature trees on his property.

It turns out that excesses like these are not isolated incidents. A new study published in Nature Sustainability Monday found that the pools and gardens of the wealthy pose a major threat to urban water security worldwide.

Climate change and population growth mean that water is becoming a more precious resource in big cities, but we have shown that social inequality is the biggest problem for poorer people getting access to water for their everyday needs, study co-author and University of Reading hydrologist Professor Hannah Cloke said in a press release.

The research used South Africas Cape Town as a case study. The city is both highly unequal and survived a major drought from 2015 to 2017. During this time, reservoirs shrank to 12.3 percent of normal levels, leading officials to warn people to conserve water and avoid a Day Zero at which point nothing would be left. 

The researchers used a model to look at water use across Cape Towns income brackets both before and during the drought. According to the 2020 census, Cape Town was 1.4 percent elite, 12.3 percent upper-middle income, 24.8 percent lower-middle income, 40.5 percent lower income and 21 percent informal dwellers who live in shanty...

01:43

Macron Wraps China Visit With Joint Statement on Climate and Biodiversity EcoWatch

France and China issued a joint statement April 7 reaffirming a shared commitment to act on the climate and biodiversity crises. 

The statement came on the last day of French President Emmanuel Macrons visit to China from Wednesday to Friday of last week.

The joint statement said that climate, biodiversity and combating land degradation are priorities for both China and France, Chinas state media CGTN reported. 

In the statement, both nations reaffirmed their commitments to responding with ambitious policies to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Paris Agreement and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, which set the goal of protecting 30 percent of land and water by 2030. They also harkened back to an earlier joint agreementthe Beijing Call for Biodiversity Conservation and Climate Change pledged in November of 2019.

Resolute to make unprecedented efforts to secure the future of the generations, and to step up the global efforts to tackle climate change and to speed up transition towards green and low-carbon and climate-resilient development, we, the President of the Peoples Republic of China, Xi Jinping, and the President of the French Republic, Emman...

00:21

Could biodiversity be a key to better forest carbon storage in Europe? Conservation news

This May, Scarabaeus laticollis will return to Frances southeast and to one of Europes biggest plantation forests. Eighty of these lowly Old World dung beetles, first described by the naturalist Linnaeus in 1767, will be reintroduced at the tang de Cousseau National Reserve as a first step to improving forest biodiversity there. Unlike other dung beetles, S. laticollis not only rolls dung into neat balls, but also takes them underground, recycling important soil nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorous, while dispersing grass and tree seeds. Importantly, local breeds of cattle which arent given antibiotics, resulting in drug-free dung have also been introduced to graze the land. The dung beetles arrival marks the first release under the new European Wildlife Comeback Fund (EWCF) which aims at reintroducing a variety of native animals across the continent, including keystone species like the dung beetle, the red deer (Cervus elaphus) and fallow deer (Dama dama) in the Danube Delta, Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx) in northwest Poland, and Sorraia horses (Equus ferus caballus) in Portugals Sintra-Cascais Natural Park. EWCF is a project of Rewilding Europe along with other conservation and funding partners. A key but controversial justification supports these biodiversity enhancements, according to some conservationists. Restoring natural balance to forests has the potential to boost their ability to store carbon, says Sophie Monsarrat, Rewilding Europes rewilding manager. Dung beetles in France. While they may not look important, dung beetles, of which there are around 60 species in Europe, are a keystone species. TheyThis article was originally published on Mongabay

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Thursday, 13 April

23:47

VIDEO | Fight for survival: The battle to save the last Tapanuli orangutans Conservation news

In 2017, the Tapanuli orangutan was identified as a new species of great ape and immediately became the most endangered great ape on the planet, with a total population of less than 800. The orangutans are restricted to a small area of the Batang Toru ecosystem in Indonesias North Sumatra province, where they face threats from the illegal wildlife trade, mining, conflicts with humans, and a planned hydroelectric dam.  A 2021 study found that the great apes have lost almost 97.5% of their habitat over the past 130 years. The $1.6 billion dam project, funded and built by Chinese companies and expected to supply clean electricity to North Sumatra, risks further fragmentation of their habitat and threatens to cut off the connectivity between separate population groups, making prospects for their survival even more difficult. Despite efforts by activists, locals and conservation groups, the dam project is still under construction, pushing the Tapanuli orangutan ever closer to the brink of extinction. Banner image: A female Tapanuli orangutan, the most endangered great ape on the planet. Image by Tim Laman via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 4.0).This article was originally published on Mongabay

23:00

Is the Antarctic-driven abyssal ocean overturning doomed in 2050? Watts Up With That?

Further failures by Natures review and editorial process, combined with uncritical and amplified media promotion,  have unnecessarily confused the science and public.

22:06

Climate change compounding inequalities faced by women in agriculture, FAO says Carbon Brief

Women working in agriculture tend to do so under highly unfavourable conditions often in the face of climate-induced weather shocks and in situations of conflict, a new report from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) concludes. 

The report provides insight into womens participation in agrifood systems at every step of the chain, from production to consumption. It comes more than a decade after the last publication of its kind by the FAO.

Agriculture and food systems are a significant employer for women globally and are a more critical source of livelihood for women than for men, the report says.

However, women face inequalities that constrain their full participation in the sector, it warns. They are likely to work under worse conditions than men, taking informal, part-time, labour-intensive and low-skilled jobs at higher rates, and earning 82 cents for every dollar men earn. 

Climate change and the Covid-19 pandemic have also affected womens productivity in agrifood systems, the report notes. For example, women are less likely than men to see their work demands decrease during periods of extreme heat.

Addressing inequalities and empowering women would improve their well-being and that of their households, the report says. Doing so would also reduce hunger, increase incomes and strengthen resilience. 

Despite this, the authors warn that few national policies have specific targets to address womens inequalities in agrifood systems. And while national climate pledges under the Paris Agreement have seen a modest improvement on gender equality and womens rights over the past decade, inclusion of these issues is often superficial.

Here, Carbon Brief summarises the key messages from the FAOs landmark report. 

Womens roles

The new report, The Status of Women in Agrifood Systems, is much broader than the FAOs previous work on gender, says Dr Lauren Phillips, the deputy director of the FAOs inclusive rural transformation and gender equality division. The 2011 report focused on women in agriculture alone. 

Phillips, one of the lead authors of the new report, tells Carbon Brief that, in contrast, the new iteration covers all agrifood systems and all phases of production, with data disaggreg...

20:30

Forests & finance: Protection and restoration in Cameroon and Senegal, fire threat in Angola Conservation news

New world in Angolas relic forests threatened by fires: scientists NAMBA MOUNTAINS, Angola Remote pockets of species-rich afromontane forest in Angolas Namba Mountains will be lost if nothing is done to stop uncontrolled fires that threaten to destroy them, scientists warn. These forests are believed to be relics from a time when the habitat was more widespreadduring the earths glacial cycles, the last of which ended 10,000-12,000 years ago, said Martim Melo, a researcher at the University of Portos Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources. Afromontane forests similar to those in the Namba range in the Cuanza Sul province of west-central Angola can also be found more than 2,000 kilometers away, on mountains in Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe, among others. The relic forests on Angolas Namba Mountains are home to 90 bird species, including the threatened Swierstras francolin spurfowl. Scientists surveying the area recently discovered nine new animal species previously unknown to science. Image by Zieger M via Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 4.0) Nearly 90 different species of bird live in the Namba forests. These include a healthy population of the Swierstras francolin (Pternistis swierstrai), a partridge-sized bird with black and white plumage listed as endangered on the IUCNs Red List of threatened species. Over an 11-day expedition to the forests last May, the scientists found at least nine animals new to science, including two rodents, three bats, two pygmy toads, a frog and a dragonfly. There are new thingsThis article was originally published on Mongabay

19:00

Heavier EVs not funding California Roadways Watts Up With That?

Newsoms silence on how California will finance the billions of dollars for the roads being used by those heavier EVs is an indication that he will just pass that problem on to his successor.

15:00

Teslas Entry into The Net Zero Game: Sustainable Energy for All of Earth Watts Up With That?

And if it all doesnt work in the end? Somebody elses problem.

11:00

Classifying Land Temperature Stations as Either Urban or Rural in UHI Studies Proves Nothing about Spurious Temperature Trends Watts Up With That?

studies have demonstrated that the greatest rate of warming as population increases is for nearly-rural sites, not urban

07:53

Decarbonization of the Power Sector Is Underway: Power Sector Emissions May Have Peaked in 2022 as Wind and Solar Reached Record Heights EcoWatch

According to a new report by climate and energy independent think tank Ember, global emissions from the power sector the biggest source of planet-warming carbon dioxide may have peaked last year.

In its fourth annual Global Electricity Review, the think tank studied power sector data from 78 countries, which represent 93 percent of global power demand.

It is the beginning of the end of the fossil fuel age, said Ember lead author Malgorzata Wiatros-Motyka, as Bloomberg reported.

The report found that wind and solar energy made up a record 12 percent of total global electricity generation in 2022, an increase of two percent from 2021, reported Reuters.

Last year, total energy from all renewable sources and nuclear power combined made up 39 percent of global energy generation, the report concluded. Solar was up 24 percent and wind rose by 17 percent from the year before.

Clean power growth is likely to exceed electricity demand growth in 2023; this would be the first year for this to happen outside of a recession, the report from Ember said.

Eighty percent of the increase in worldwide electricity demand was met by wind and solar.

The decarbonisation of the power sector is underway, as record growth in wind and solar drove the emissions intensity of the worlds electricity to its lowest ever level in 2022. It will be an impressive moment when power sector emissions begin to fall y...

07:00

Note to AMS and Associated Press: There is No Evidence Proving Climate Change is Causing More Home Runs in Major League Baseball Watts Up With That?

When I first read the story, and then the study at BAMS, I thought surely this must be an elaborate April Fools joke. Sadly, no.

06:59

Number of Australias Fish Species Considered Critically Endangered Doubles EcoWatch

The amount of critically endangered fish species in Australia has recently doubled after nine species were newly categorized as critically endangered in March. All nine species are part of the galaxias genus, and an additional tenth galaxias species has been labeled as endangered.

The findings present an urgent need to conserve these species. One major problem for these fish is the presence of invasive species, particularly brown and rainbow trout. Invasive fish species can crowd the critically endangered species into smaller portions of their original range or separate populations while also competing for resources.

If we are serious about stopping extinctions, then we need to tackle the major threats that are driving declines of our native animals, James Trezise, conservation director at Australias Invasive Species Council, told The Guardian. Scientists have recommended a threat abatement plan be established for freshwater pest fish, yet this hasnt happened.

The newly listed fish species include short-tail galaxias, tapered galaxias, East Gippsland galaxias and West Gippsland galaxias. Galaxiids, also known as mountain minnows, are often mistaken to be the same species, which can hinder conservation efforts. There are currently more than 40 different species of galaxiids in Australia, with many of them under threat, including the nine species now listed as critically endangered.

The nine species join another nine species for a total of 18 fish species officially recognized as critically endangered in Australia. According to Trezise, the species have greater than a 50% chance of going extinct within just two decades.

Because invasive species force the critically endangered species into small areas, these vulnerable populations are at greater risk from natural disasters, like flooding, drought or wildfires, and inbreeding. Extreme weather events are becoming more of a risk to galaxiids as climate change worsens, warned the Arthur Rylah Institute, which has been involved with galaxiid research and conservation for over 30 years.

...

06:04

The EcoWatch Guide to Earth Day 2023 EcoWatch

Since it helped launch a new era of environmental activism and policy in 1970, Earth Day has become the highlight of the green calendar.

As more and more people around the world participate, the protests, cleanups and celebrations have sprouted outward from just one Earth Day April 22 to cover an entire Earth Month. This year, the official theme from EARTHDAY.ORG is Invest in Our Planet. 

Earth Day is about the billions of individual actions taken worldwide towards a greener, more equitable future. We have the money, the ingenuity, and the resources, EARTHDAY.ORG President Kathleen Rogers said in a statement. If governments, institutions, businesses, and individuals each Invest in Our Planet by allocating time, money, innovation, and social commitment towards these areas of action we can solve climate change.

Here are some of the many ways you can invest in our planet this Earth Month. 

1. Celebrate Earth Week

This year, EARTHDAY.ORG is organizing its first ever Earth Week from April 14 to 22. This includes Earth Day Live events that anyone can access virtu...

05:11

Is there a lighter side to our possible environmental apocalypse? (commentary) Conservation news

Today Im a waterlogged Californian, but soon Ill be baked dry as a bone. The intensity of extreme drought and rainfall has sharply increased over the past 20 years, according to a new study published in the journal Nature Water. Next July Hey kids, Im putting on my Dune vapor recovery suit, is there anything you want from the abandoned gas station? Next February Hey kids, Im hooking up the shopping float to the outrigger, is there anything you want from the Interstate marina? Today, the best available science is creating the worst imaginable scenarios for our immediate futures. Unfortunately, scientists are not always the best communicators of coming disaster. If your house were on fire and your best friend was a scientist, you might not understand her urgent call warning you that a rapid oxidation process was occurring in the living room What? you might ask, to which shed frantically reply, An exothermic reaction is underway resulting in the evolution of light and heat of various intensities and never mind. I got your mother out. Shes still respirating. Waterworld is a post-apocalyptic action film about a future where polar ice caps have melted and the oceans cover nearly all of the planet, forcing humanity to live at sea in floating communities known as atolls. Image courtesy of Universal Pictures. So, when climate scientists warn us that we are crossing dangerous tipping points for the planet most people think, Tipping points? I could use some. Is 20% reallyThis article was originally published on Mongabay

05:00

Climate Justice Forum: 12th WIRT Celebrations, Spokane & Canadian Gas Pipeline Resistance, New Idaho Oil & Gas Rules, Colorado Oil Train Opposition, Derailment Aftermaths & Litigation 4-12-23 Wild Idaho Rising Tide

The Wednesday, April 12, 2023, Climate Justice Forum radio program, produced by regional, climate activists collective Wild Idaho Rising Tide (WIRT), features news, music, and reflections on the first 2023 north Idaho thunder, gratitude for twelfth WIRT anniversary celebration performers and participants, an upcoming Spokane teach-in and demonstration against Northwest gas pipeline expansion, a southern Idaho town hall about recently legislated oil and gas rules changes, protests opposing bank financing of British Columbia pipeline construction across Canada and at an annual shareholder meeting excluding indigenous land defenders, derailments and their aftermath in the Swinomish reservation and western Montana, oil and hazardous materials train resistance in Washington and Colorado, and a federal government lawsuit against Norfolk Southern over the February Ohio train wreck.  Broadcast for eleven years on progressive, volunteer, community station KRFP Radio Free Moscow, every Wednesday between 1:30 and 3 pm Pacific time, on-air at 90.3 FM and online, the show describes continent-wide, grassroots, frontline resistance to fossil fuel projects, the root causes of climate change, thanks to generous, anonymous listeners who adopted program host Helen Yost as their KRFP DJ.

Revolution Tango, 1998 Velcro Sheep

Flock, 1998 Velcro Sheep

The first thunder of 2023 over Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho, April 11, 2023 Wild Idaho Rising Tide

Thanks to the Sandpoint Reader for sharing notice, April 6, 2023 Wild Idaho Rising Tide

A thousand thanks to the Monarch Mountain Band, April 7, 2023 Wild Idaho Rising Tide

Vast gratitude to musicians extraordinaire Fiddlin Big Al and Jessica of Eclectrix, April 8, 2023 Wild Idaho Rising Tide

#StopGTNXpress! When gas pipelines leak and ignite fires, April 9, 2023 Wild Idaho Rising Tide

Sp...

04:29

Ecuador banned gas flaring over a year ago. Why is it still happening? Conservation news

A court in Ecuador ordered oil companies to stop the hazardous practice of burning natural gas at extraction sites because it was a major driver of cancer and other illnesses in nearby communities. But nearly two years have passed since that ruling, and oil companies are burning more natural gas than ever. In September 2021, a provincial court gave oil companies 18 months to eliminate gas flaring in the Amazon, most notably in the provinces of Sucumbos and Orellana, where a lawsuit had been filed by a group of young girls worried about the future of their health. Although that deadline expired at the end of March, oil companies continue to use the flares. The state of Ecuador has failed to comply with the ruling and continues to burn gas, violating the rights of the Amazon, the girls and the country, said Pablo Fajardo, an attorney representing the girls in the lawsuit and the Union of People Affected by Texaco (UDAPT), an advocacy group for victims of oil drilling in the area. Gas flares look like tall columns emitting fire into the air over oil fields. Theyre designed to burn off the excess natural gas produced during oil extraction but also contribute to climate change and pose serious health risks to people who have to breathe it in and drink the water it contaminates. One study conducted by UDAPT and environmental group Clnica Ambiental found 442 cases of cancer between 2018 and 2022 in oil-producing areas of the Amazon likeThis article was originally published on Mongabay

03:58

Blood Carbon: How a Kenyan Carbon Offset Project Harms Indigenous Pastoralists and Does Nothing About Climate Change EcoWatch

For generations, the Indigenous Samburu, Maasai, Borana and Rendille people of northern Kenya have been grazing cattle and other animals, following the rhythm of the rains and rules passed down from community elders. 

But in 2013, a conservation organization run by a white, formerly colonial family thought it could do better. It set up a project to sell carbon offsets based on the idea that replacing the unplanned grazing methods of Kenyas Indigenous communities with a more centralized approach closer to commercial ranching would actually store more carbon in the soil and help offset the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation responsible for the climate crisis. Now, a new report from Survival International backed by Indigenous Kenyans argues that the project is putting pastoralist culture and food security at risk, and likely isnt offsetting emissions either. 

We have blown a whistle so the world can hear what they are doing, Abdullahi Hajj Gonjobe of Kenyas Borana people said in a video shared by Survival International. The [international] funds they are sending to this place are destroying us, they are not helping us.

Way Off Base

The report, Blood Carbon: How a Carbon Offset Scheme Makes Millions From Indigenous Land in Northern Kenya, focuses on a carbon offset project called the...

03:00

Think We Can Model the Climate? Clouds Get in the Way! Watts Up With That?

IPCC forecasters overstate warming because they still somehow really dont understand clouds at all.

01:53

Light Pollution Could Extend Biting Season for Mosquitoes, Increasing West Nile Risk EcoWatch

The increasing problem of light pollution can have negative effects on both humans and wildlife. In people, it can cause sleep deprivation, increased stress, headaches and even anxiety.

Artificial light can attract animals like sea turtles, moths and frogs, leading them astray and making them more vulnerable to predators and exhaustion.

A new study has found that the winter dormancy period of mosquitoes that carry West Nile virus may be disrupted by urban light pollution.

This can cause mosquitoes to not survive the winter if they arent able to gain enough weight. It can also cause their dormancy period called diapause to be delayed, leading to a longer season of mosquito bites extending into the fall, Ohio State News reported.

We see the highest levels of West Nile virus transmission in the late summer and early fall in Ohio. If you have mosquitoes postponing or delaying diapause and continuing to be active longer in the year, thats at a time when the mosquitoes are most likely to be infected with West Nile virus and people could be at greatest risk of contracting it, said Megan Meuti, senior author of the study and an assistant professor of entomology at The Ohio State University, as reported by Ohio State News.

This and other earlier studies by the researcher team which consisted of first author Matthew Wolkoff and Lydia Fyie, both doctoral candidates in entomology at Ohio State were some of the first to demonstrate the effects of artificial light on the behavior of mosquitoes.

Were finding that the same urban light at night can have very different effects under different seasonal contexts, Meuti said. 

The study, Light Pollution Disrupts Seasonal Differences in the Daily Activity and Metabolic...

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Wednesday, 12 April

23:07

Chemical Analysis of East Palestine Railroad Derailment Contamination Frack Check WV

Pollution came mainly from decision to burn off contents of tank cars

East Palestine Derailment Prompts Independent Testing

From the Staff Report, Chemical Engineering Progress, April 10, 2023

In the wake of the Norfolk Southern train derailment that released hazardous chemicals into the environment in East Palestine, OH, citizens are seeking out independent testing to determine what kind of contamination the town may be facing.

Both individuals and university teams have been conducting their own sampling of the area near the chemical release. These results are still being analyzed, but initial reports suggest that there are chemicals in streams and wells in East Palestine that state and federal agencies are not looking for.

One of the biggest issues with this response has been transparency, says Andrew Whelton, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Purdue Univ. who is leading some of the independent testing. As things have become more visible, weve found out that officials havent been testing for the right chemicals.

For instance, governmental officials had not conducted indoor surface testing of homes near the spill site as of early March. A contractor for Norfolk Southern did one-time air monitoring in some homes, but residents told reporters that they were not informed that the testers were hired by the rail operator, according to The Guardian. Experts also say that these one-time, short-term air sampling tests are not sufficient to show that indoor air is safe. The tests conducted can detect certain volatile organic compounds, but do not measure other potential pollutants from the spill, such as benzene.

Experts have also raised concerns about dioxins, which are carcinogenic and highly persistent in the environment. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is requiring Norfolk Southern to test for dioxins within two miles of the spill site, although details of the testing plan are unclear.

The derailment occurred on Feb. 3, 2023, when dozens of freight train cars carrying hazardous materials, including vinyl chloride, isobutylene, and butyl acrylate went off the tracks and caught fire near the Ohio-Pennsylvania border. Several days later, officials made the decision to fl...

23:00

Climate Crisis? What Climate Crisis? Part Two: Where We are in the UK Today Watts Up With That?

We, the people, want all this climate crap stopped. Now. And we want our money back!

21:07

Scientists and fishers team up to protect Bolivian river dolphin Conservation news

Paul Van Damme and Fortuna Vargas Meja met 28 years ago in Puerto Villarroel, a village in the Bolivian department of Cochabamba. Van Damme was a Belgian marine biologist who found in the lagoons of the Bolivian Amazon the closest thing to a sea. Vargas was a native of Cochabamba who had worked as a navigator for 12 years before becoming a fisherman, so he knew well the Amazonian rivers and lagoons that so fascinated the European scientist. At that time the 1990s commercial fishing had just begun to boom in Puerto Villarroel, a municipality located on the banks of the Ichilo River in the Mamor Basin, which includes three departments of the Bolivian Amazon. In one day and a night I caught 1,200 kilograms [2645 pounds] [of fish], because there werent many of us, recalled Vargas, who is now 70 years old and has not worked as a fisherman for 15 years. Until then, the area and its forests had been well preserved and was home to a mainly Indigenous population. People from the Moxo and Yuqui Indigenous groups lived in communities along the banks of the river, living mainly off hunting, fishing and subsistence agriculture. Little by little, people from other parts of Bolivia started to move to the urban center of Puerto Villarroel and its outskirts, leading to it eventually becoming the main and largest commercial port connecting western and eastern Bolivia. Fortunato Vargas, a fisherman from Puerto Villaroel, at home. Image courtesy of WaraThis article was originally published on Mongabay

19:00

Germanys Renewable Heating Plan To Cost Many Times More Than Expected: 776 Billion Euros! Watts Up With That?

More than 1 trillion euros for a statistically insignificant climate benefit

11:00

Great Car Reset: Bidens EPA to release strict new fed emissions standard to move U.S. car market decisively toward electric vehicles Up to 2/3 of cars sold mandated to be EV by 2032 Watts Up With That?

...the only result is going to be shortages of cars and a completely altered used car market. You can look to Cuba to find out what it's like to have a raging used car market because that's what we're looking at here.

09:01

Record clean-power growth in 2023 to spark new era of fossil fuel decline Carbon Brief

The power sector is about to enter a new era of falling fossil generation as coal, oil and gas are pushed out of the grid by a record expansion of wind and solar power, according to new analysis by climate thinktank Ember. 

Wind and solar power reached a record 12% of global electricity generation last year, according to Embers global electricity review 2023. This drove up the overall share of low-carbon electricity to almost 40% of total generation.

With even faster growth set to continue this year, Ember says 2022 is likely to mark a turning point when global fossil fuel electricity generation peaked and began to fall.

The thinktank forecasts that, by the end of 2023, more than 100% of the  growth in electricity demand will be covered by low-carbon sources. 

Experts broadly agree that global electricity generation needs to be completely decarbonised by 2040 if the world is to stay on track for its climate targets. 

Ember says rapidly expanding renewables mean that the phasedown of gas as well as coal power required for this transition is now within reach. However, it also says stalling nuclear and hydropower construction needs to be reversed.

Meeting demand

Global electricity demand has been rising for decades, due to rising populations, increasing industrialisation and higher incomes.

Moreover, this trend is set to continue, particularly as more people switch their fossil fuel-driven cars and heaters to electric models. Demand will also increase as power is supplied to the 775 million people who still lack access to electricity.

To date, electricity demand growth has generally outpaced the rapid expansion of low-carbon sources, meaning emissions from the power sector have continued to rise. Any shortfall in meeting growth with low-carbon sources has been met by fossil fuels.

Yet low-carbon sources must ultimately begin to not only meet rising electricity demand but also start squeezing fossil fuels out of the mix, if global carbon targets are to be met.

In 2022, the expansion of wind and solar met 80% of the increase in electricity demand, Embers report shows. Combined with hydropower and bioenergy, renewables met 92% of the rise, coming close to covering rising demand....

08:14

Indigenous Amazon forests absorb noxious fumes and prevent diseases from wildfires, study suggests Conservation news

SO PAULOA new study published in Nature estimates that forests in Indigenous lands in Brazils Amazon have the potential to absorb over 7,000 tons of noxious fumes from forest fires every year, preventing about 15 million cases of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases annually, which would otherwise cost $2 billion to Brazils public health system. The effect on the health of populations adds to the environmental impacts of fires in the Amazon forest, which are mainly caused by deforestation and contribute to increased emissions. What was not yet known was the level of those damages, the costs and the ability of the Amazon forests in Indigenous lands to absorb the pollutants, said the studys authors. Fire-related incidence of respiratory and cardiovascular infections for the entire Brazilian Amazon on a municipality basis from 2010 to 2019. Spatially, the Arc of deforestation in the Amazon was the region with the highest average incidences of infections reported. Image courtesy of EcoHealth Alliance. The study is the first to measure how much the loss of rainforests protected by Indigenous peoples can cost human health, said Paula Prist, lead author of the study and research scientist at the EcoHealth Alliance, during a press conference last week. The study is part of compounding research pointing to the successful forest conservation efforts and environmental services Indigenous territories in the Amazon provide. The Amazon Indigenous lands ratified by the Brazilian state, which number 383, were included in the study. Based on an analysis of ten years of data, fromThis article was originally published on Mongabay

07:00

Media FAILS: Ignores Real-World Data When It Comes to Tornadoes and Climate Change Watts Up With That?

This article originally appeared in American Thinker on April 7, 2023. After the recent devastating tornadoes in the Midwest and South, some media outlets scrambled to try to link the weather events

05:18

Biogas project offers lifelines to Kenyan community, forest, and rare species Conservation news

EBURU, Kenya The twin peaks of Mount Eburu are draped with 87 square kilometers, about 34 square miles, of montane forest. Theyre home to more than 40 species of mammals, including the critically endangered mountain bongo (Tragelaphus eurycerus isaaci). Like other forest reserves in central Kenya, Eburu has suffered degradation because its also a source of food and fuel for surrounding communities. This could change, though, as a household biogas project aims to reduce demand for timber, firewood, and charcoal, by providing locals an alternative source of energy. Lydia Nyota heads one of 150 households in the village of Eburu that have begun using biogas for cooking and lighting their homes. Like most of her neighbors here, the 60-year-old used to rely on firewood and charcoal from the nearby Eburu Forest for fuel. We value this forest because it gives us rain and it hosts critically endangered species, Nyota told Mongabay. The Eburu Forest is home to more than 40 species of mammals, including the critically endangered mountain bongo. Image courtesy Tsavo National Park (Fair use.) Reserves of biodiversity Eburu is the easternmost of 22 protected forest blocks in central Kenya. Once part of the Mau Forest complex, an expanse of montane forest thats a vital source of the water that feeds lakes and rivers across the Rift Valley region, Eburu is now an island of forest surrounded by agriculture and settlements. Despite decades of encroachment, Eburus various zones shifting from acacia and lelechwa on the lower slopes,This article was originally published on Mongabay

04:47

Wild Tiger Population Rises in India EcoWatch

The numbers of wild tigers in India has more than doubled from 2010 to 2022, based on the All India Tiger Estimation (AITE) 2022 released this week. The 2022 count includes at least 3,167 wild tigers, up from 1,411 in 2010.

This years All India Tiger Estimation utilized 641,449 square kilometers of foot surveys, 32,588 camera counts and 641,102 person days to determine the tiger populations. Numbers increased from 1,411 wild tigers in 2010 and 2,461 in 2018.

Concerted efforts from tiger range countries are really encouraging, Rajesh Gopal, secretary general of Global Tiger Forum, said in a statement. The wild tiger status has registered an upward trend in some countries, and others are working hard to further strengthen their efforts.

Tigers face many threats. They experience habitat loss and must compete for space and resources as humans develop more lands. This depletion of space for tigers, which are solitary animals that need wide ranges to roam and hunt, has also led to conflicts with humans. Further, tigers face poaching by humans, and their skins, bones and other body parts are sold in the illegal wildlife trade.

Today, tiger lands represent around just 7% of the animals original range. To combat increasing threats to tigers, India launched Project Tiger in 1973. At the time, the country had nine tiger reserves established. Now, 53 tiger reserves in India span around 75,800 square kilometers of land, as reported by CNN.

In 2010 at the Global Tiger Summit, governments agreed on a target to double global tiger populations by 2022. India more than doubled its wild tiger numbers in that timeframe and ultimately contributed strongly to the global goal as well. Wild tigers in India now make up about 70% of global tiger numbers.

More work is needed in tiger conservation around the world, though. There were about 3,200...

03:53

Montana Judge Cancels Gas Power Plant Permit Over Climate Concern EcoWatch

Climate concerns motivated a Montana judge to cancel the air quality permit for a controversial natural gas power plant. 

The 175-megawatt NorthWestern Energy plant would have emitted more than 23 million tons of greenhouse gases over its 30-year or more lifespan the equivalent of adding 167,327 new cars to the roads each year something that the Montana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) did not fully consider when it issued the permit, Montana 13th Judicial District Court Judge Michael Moses ruled Thursday.

DEQs failure to analyze this issue violated the clear and unambiguous language of MEPA [the Montana Environmental Policy Act], Moses wrote. Failure to analyze this issue was arbitrary and capricious and a clear violation of MEPA.

The Sioux Falls, South Dakota-based NorthWestern Energy is building the $250 million plant along the banks of the Yellowstone River, AP News reported. However, it is controversial with the people who would live near the plant in Laurel, Montana, who have joined together to oppose it as the Thiel Road Coalition, according to a Montana Environmental Information Center (MEIC) press release. 

We are very concerned that this project will harm people who live near the proposed plant, Laurel resident and retired refinery worker Steve Krum said in the press release. Every time we have raised concerns about the impacts this plant will have on the quality of life of the neighbors and the Yellowstone River, those concerns have been dismissed. We appreciate that our concerns finally got a fair shake in court.

MEIC filed the lawsuit to block the permit alongside the Sierra Club in 2021, AP News reported. In response, the DEQ argued that state law did not give it the authority to make decisions based on global climate impacts, but Moses said it should consider how additional emissions would impact Montana. 

For example, in June 2022, a combination of heavy rainfall and snowmelt from warmer than average temperatures triggered extreme flood...

03:00

The Next Great Total Solar Eclipse on US Soil is Now Just Under a Year AwayMonday, April 8th, 2024 Watts Up With That?

If you missed the 2017 total solar eclipse or it turned out to be cloudy in your particular area then there will be another opportunity in just under a year from now on Monday, April 8th, 2024.

02:50

Report: Indonesias food estate program repeating failures of past projects Conservation news

JAKARTA When the Indonesian government announced its food estate program in 2020, it envisioned the establishment of large-scale agricultural plantations across the country. These plantations of crops like rice, cassava and potato were supposed to be the answer to what the government says is an impending global food crisis, and would help feed the worlds fourth-largest population. But a field investigation at the sites of the food estate program in the Bornean province of Central Kalimantan by independent researchers in March 2022 and February 2023 instead found sprawling plantations that had been abandoned. Three years into the program, theres no rice or cassava crops ready to be harvested, and no farmers tending their fields. Instead, wild shrubs have sprouted on these plots of lands, and excavators have started to rust away, according to the investigation by environmental NGOs Pantau Gambut and Walhi Central Kalimantan, and BBC News Indonesia. In the village of Tewai Baru, Gunung Mas district, for instance, the investigation found 600 hectares (nearly 1,500 acres) of cassava plantations withering away. Villagers told the researchers that the crops hadnt been harvested. And despite being more than a year old, well into maturity for cassava plants, these crops appeared thin and stunted, the researchers found. The cassava tubers themselves were small, about the size of a human finger. The investigation also found seven abandoned excavators that no longer worked. A cleared area for the establishment of cassava plantation as a part of the food estate program in the TewaiThis article was originally published on Mongabay

02:21

Brazilian gold miners get free rein in Venezuelas Indigenous lands Conservation news

SANTA ELENA DE UAIRN, Venezuela Standing at the brink of a man-made canyon, Jhonny Pereira, a Brazilian-born mining boss, looks down at a dozen gold miners as they plough through piles of soil and rocks. Theyre toiling in the Parkupi mine, in southern Venezuela, about 35 kilometers (about 22 miles) from the border with Brazil. There are more people here now, he tells me, almost yelling to cover the rumbling of machines that use high-pressure water jets to dislodge rock and move gravel. You know, its out of necessity; people here are starving, he says. He is one of thousands of Brazilian wildcat miners, locally known as garimpeiros, who have migrated to Venezuela in search of gold. Pereira and other garimpeiros know their mining activities destroy these pristine lands. He laments the destruction theyre causing and has made some meager attempts to restore lands. Yet, such efforts are limited, and these territories are remain scarred, while Indigenous people witness their lands being exploited and feel trapped in a place of little opportunity. Since the collapse of Venezuelas economy reduced by roughly three-quarters between 2014 and 2021 the country has increasingly relied on Brazil for imports of food, medicine, fuel, machinery and other basic supplies to keep their local population and the mines alive. Venezuelan bolivares are useless. Here, everything is paid in Brazilian reais or in gold. During the COVID-19 pandemic, when people struggled to access food and medicine, supplies still reached the mines, says a merchant,This article was originally published on Mongabay

01:45

New EPA Car Pollution Standards Could Lead to 67% New EV Sales by 2032 EcoWatch

In 2022, electric vehicles (EVs) made up just 5.8 percent of new car sales. But that number could jump as high as 67 percent by 2032 if the Biden administrations Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) follows through with tough new tailpipe emissions standards. 

The new standards, which were shared with The New York Times Saturday by two people familiar with the situation, would be the most ambitious federal climate regulation to date. 

The race to cleaner air, a safer climate and more made in America jobs is on, Environmental Defense Fund President Fred Krupp said in a statement responding to the news. 

The standards would go beyond President Joe Bidens stated goal of making sure around half of all cars sold in the U.S. by 2030 are EVs. Essentially, they would work by making vehicle emissions requirements so strict that automakers would have to boost their EV sales. 

00:54

Report sums up Bolsonaros destruction legacy and Amazons next critical steps Conservation news

After four years of environmental destruction, Brazil has reached a crossroads that will determine the fate of its biomes and its role in the global climate crisis. In its first 100 days in office, the new government has taken decisive action to undo the damage inflicted by former president Jair Bolsonaro, experts say. However, they also warn there are three crucial measures pending that need to be pushed forward this year, and that failing to do so could undermine the campaign promises of President Luiz Incio Lula da Silva. A damning new report from the Climate Observatory, a network of civil society organizations, compiled four years worth of measures by the Bolsonaro administration, in office from 2019 to 2022, ranging from the dismantling of environmental protection agencies to record high levels of deforestation. The report makes a clear conclusion: the former president deliberately tried to sabotage environmental conservation. There was a calculated plan to destroy the environment, Marcio Astrini, executive secretary of the Climate Observatory, told Mongabay by phone. We know that everything that happened was not by chance. It was a plan of destruction. Final numbers of the damage the Bolsonaro administration inflicted on Brazils environment, according to the report, include: zero Indigenous territories demarcated; a 60% increase in deforestation from the previous four-year period, the largest increase ever recorded in a presidential term; a 12.2% increase in greenhouse gas emissions from 2020 to 2021, the highest in 19 years; and a 38% decrease in the number of finesThis article was originally published on Mongabay

00:21

INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY: COMMUNICATIONS AND SOCIAL MEDIA INTERN Chesapeake Climate Action Network

DESCRIPTION

Chesapeake Climate Action Network (CCAN) works with partners across the Chesapeake region to promote renewable energy, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and stop the expansion of fossil fuel infrastructure. Our campaigns focus on passing legislation that will dramatically reduce climate change pollution across the region, while cleaning up our air, improving the health of our communities, and creating good-paying new jobs.

Were looking for smart, talented students for summer internships to stand up and take climate action. 

Were the largest and oldest grassroots group fighting for bold and just solutions to climate change in the Chesapeake region of Virginia, Washington DC, and Maryland. Weve put a stop to new coal plants in Virginia, brought 100% clean power to Washington DC, and fully banned fracking in Maryland.

OUR CAMPAIGNS

In 2023, were still fighting: to stop massive fracked-gas pipelines across the farms and forests of Virginia, to bring a Climate Stimulus to Maryland, and to enact strong climate action at the federal level.

We and our supporters surrounding the nations capital are going to keep building the powerfully diverse grassroots climate movement our region needs building local resistance, raising our voices, and taking concrete action.

OUR COMMUNICATIONS INTERNSHIP

Interns at CCAN work side-by-side with our experienced communications experts to create compelling content and run impactful media campaigns across our region. They gain valuable experience for careers in the communica...

Tuesday, 11 April

23:40

CAPS, new gas megaproject, aims to power Central Africa, but at what cost, critics ask Conservation news

More than 60% of people in Central Africa have no access to electricity. An ambitious proposal aims to change that with a network of pipelines, refineries and gas-fired power plants stretching across 11 countries in the region. But critics say the proposed Central African Pipeline System is a mistake. Nathalie Lum, chairwoman of the Central Africa Business Energy Forum (CABEF), an organization that hosts an annual conference of oil and gas corporations and regional energy ministers, told Mongabay that CAPS will help make the Central Africa region an energy poverty-free zone by 2030. Access to reliable, affordable energy can help reduce poverty, attract investments, and create jobs, while also providing an important source of revenue for governments. she said. CABEF describes itself as a platform for developing cooperation between Central African countries which aims to use natural gas, a fossil fuel, to power homes and businesses as well as the mining industry. However, a 2020 study by the International Finance Corporation, the private sector development arm of the World Bank Group, suggests that Africas onshore wind potential is enough to satisfy the entire continents current electricity demands 250 times over. The continent also has an abundance of solar energy, which is increasingly affordable to harness. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the United Nations body for assessing the science related to climate change, the unit cost of electricity from solar has declined by 85% over the past decade, while the cost of wind energy has declined byThis article was originally published on Mongabay

23:24

A Ramadan reflection on Islam and climate action (commentary) Conservation news

This month, Muslims across the world welcomed the month of Ramadan a blessed month during which they fast and strive towards nurturing God-consciousness both spiritually and through acts of goodness. This month also marked the release of the new IPCC report, which provides a how-to guide to defuse the climate time-bomb, as described by UN Secretary General Antnio Guterres. However, what characterized this report was a hopeful urgency in the call to action. The report calls for a joint commitment by all of humanity to participate in a global effort towards a radical shift in the impacts of climate change. As the IPCC Working Group II Co-Chair, Debra Roberts explained last year, Our assessment clearly shows that tackling all these different challenges involves everyoneworking together to prioritize risk reductionin this way, different interests, values and world views can be reconciled  Different perspectives, world views, and approaches to understanding and connecting with the Earths wellbeing, must cooperatively form the climate action narrative. Muslims and the Islamic world view play a role in this. The Pew Research Center identifies a global Muslim population of more than 1.9 billion, which is projected to grow significantly in the coming years. With more than 50 Muslim-majority nations in the world, along with a significant number of Muslims living in places like Europe and North America, the climate change discourse impacts Muslims bilaterally. Many Muslim nations are bearing significant impacts from climate change, while others are also living in nations that are actively contributing to climateThis article was originally published on Mongabay

23:00

Climate Emergency is Fabricated Alarmism Holding Poor Back | Conversation with Judith Curry PhD Watts Up With That?

The Kim Iversen Show LIVE | March 31, 2023 Judith Curry President and Founder of Climate Forecast Applications Network and Professor Emerita, Georgia Institute of Technology joins us to discuss

21:40

Ecuador project aims to protect Yasun park borders & Indigenous peoples Conservation news

*This report was carried out as part of a journalistic partnership between Mongabay Latam and La Barra Espaciadora de Ecuador. On Aug. 10, 2009, in the community of Los Reyes, Sandra Zabala, a local farmer, and two of her sons, Byron and Damaris Duche, were attacked with spears by people who were later identified as members of the Taromenane clan, based on the type of weapons they used. The Taromenane are one of Ecuadors Indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation (pueblos Indgenas en aislamiento voluntario, PIAV), along with the Tagaeri, who live in the buffer zone of the Yasun National Park, located in the northeastern province of Orellana, in the Ecuadorian Amazon. This was not the first time these Indigenous groups had clashed with colonos, or local settler farmers, but it was the first time that such an attack by Indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation had taken place on the borders of the agricultural frontier as opposed to inside the rainforest. Since the 1980s, confrontations provoked by the advancing activities of the logging and oil industries led to a massacre in which at least 60 individuals from PIAV groups were killed, and loggers and other workers were killed with spears. The three members of the Duche Zabala family died in the attack, with their deaths increasing intercultural tensions in the region. In an attempt to resolve the conflict, in 2013, the Ecuadorian government delineated the Strip of Diversity and Life along a 12-kilometer (7.5-mile) stretch of the western boundary ofThis article was originally published on Mongabay

20:49

COMMENTS DUE ~ Should the PLEASANT$ POWER $TATION be Bailed Out at This Time, in This Way? Frack Check WV

The cooling tower accident happened here in April 1978, 51 worker killed. Its on the Ohio River near St. Marys in Pleasants County.

DONT LET FIRST ENERGY SELL US OUT! ~~~ TAKE ACTION BY APRIL 14TH

From the West Virginians for Energy Freedom & Others, April 7, 2023

If you are a Mon Power or Potomac Edison customer, we need your voice now! Submit your comments to the West Virginia Public Service Commission opposing the Pleasants Power Station bailout before April 14th.

First Energy is scheming to keep Pleasants Power Station open by forcing it on ratepayers like you. Not only is it an out-of-date, coal-fired power station that was actually scheduled to close in 2019, but even First Energy acknowledges that the plant is expensive to operate. The worst part is that we dont even need the plant we have enough power being generated in-state already to meet our needs!

First Energy has proposed that Mon Power and Potomac Edison customers pay more to keep the plant open another year while government officials decide whether the plant is to be permanently subsidized by ratepayers. If the plant doesnt operate during that year, most families bills will go up by about $36 a year but if the plant operates, bills will go up even more.

The Pleasants plant can already sell power into a regional power market, where it has to compete with other power plants. But the plant is no longer competitive, and the plant is facing serious environmental liabilities. First Energy wants ratepayers to subsidize the plant even though customers dont need the plant, and even though First Energys own analysis acknowledges the plants many problems.

Worse, First Energys proposal would protect its own shareholders, while forcing West Virginia customers to bear all of the costs and risks. If First Energys scheme is successful, customers would be saddled with potentially massive costs and liabilities.

Weve been here before. In 2017, Mon Power requested to buy the plant from another First Energy subsidiary. The PSC and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission both recognized the proposal as a risky deal for West Virginians. And as before, this current Pleasants bailout proposal would raise customer bills.

...

19:00

110,000 Deaths A Year in South Asia Due to Rising Temperatures, Claims WHO Watts Up With That?

As for Dr Neira, she has got things totally upside down; excess deaths have been rising because of falling temperatures.

17:02

Flawed count puts glorified Javan rhinos on path to extinction, report says Conservation news

JAKARTA Every time a new Javan rhino calf is spotted, Indonesias environmental authorities issue an update of the precise population number for the near-extinct species. The rhinos entire population is confined to a single national park, filled with hundreds of camera traps that allow conservationists to monitor sightings of known, named adult rhinos as well as any new births. Since 2011, when officials started installing the camera traps, the government has reported steady growth from 35 to 72 individual Javan rhinos (Rhinoceros sondaicus). According to a new investigative report, however, the seeming precision of these numbers belies serious problems with transparency, poor management of the species, and indications that the population may in fact be declining. Among the key revelations in the report published April 11 by Indonesian nonprofit environmental NGO Auriga Nusantara is that 18 rhinos (nine females and nine males) that have not been spotted alive for years (some since 2019) are still included in the most recent population counts. Further investigation by Auriga Nusantara found that three of these 18 missing rhinos have died: one female in 2019 and a female and a male in 2021. None of these missing and dead Javan rhinos were publicly announced by either the agency that manages Ujung Kulon National Park or the Indonesian environment ministry. By contrast, the government has regularly publicized news of Javan rhino births, signaling a stable population growth. Its an unfair glorification from the government for not publishing these losses as well, Timer Manurung, theThis article was originally published on Mongabay

15:00

Artificial unintelligence and global warming Watts Up With That?

...there is very little evidence of anything resembling intelligence.

12:38

Community conservation benefits Sulawesi flying foxes, but more is needed, experts say Conservation news

After four years of conservation action, the number of flying foxes large bat species flocking to the Indonesian island of Mantawalu Daka has grown from around 8,000 to 40,000, according to PROGRES Sulawesi, an Indonesian NGO. Conservationists have worked with community members to change negative perceptions of bats and limit hunting on the island. Protecting bats can improve forest health, and since their return in greater numbers, local fishers report fish are easier to come by around the island. Our hypothesis is that the bat poop washes out to the outer area of the islands, Sheherazade, co-executive director of PROGRES Sulawesi, told Mongabay. As it does so, its thought the bat guano spurs seagrass growth, which in turn provides habitat for fish. Now, more and more fishermen report that its easier to catch fish closer to the island. Bat hunting on Mantawalu Daka and other parts of Sulawesi remains a challenge, PROGRES Sulawesis Sheherazade explained. For her, it underlines the need to expand conservation action. Photo courtesy of PROGRES Sulawesi. Flying fox ecosystem services The positive impact of nutrient-rich flying fox poop on seagrass and fish abundance needs further research, the conservationists say. Beyond that, there are several scientifically documented benefits of having these bats around. Its known, for example, that they are key pollinators of durian, an economically valuable fruit across Southeast Asia. And they also pollinate a number of other tropical plants, directly influencing the health of forest ecosystems. Flying foxes play an important role inThis article was originally published on Mongabay

11:00

Spokane Community GTN Xpress Teach-In Wild Idaho Rising Tide

Spokane Community GTN Xpress Teach-In BannerOn Wednesday evening, April 12, in Spokane, Washington, faith, spiritual, health, and environmental advocates will lead a community gathering, teach-in, and procession in opposition to the proposed Gas Transmission Northwest (GTN) Xpress fracked gas pipeline expansion [1].  The 62-year-old GTN pipeline runs under the Spokane River and through Liberty Lake, Spokane Valley, and other parts of Spokane County [2, 3].  Canadian company TC Energy, owner of the leaking Keystone and rejected Keystone XL tar sands pipelines, and its subsidiary GTN threaten to pump up to 150 million cubic feet of additional methane gas per day through the GTN pipeline that crosses north Idaho, eastern Washington, and central Oregon.

While communities throughout the Northwest shift away from coal, oil, and natural gas, fossil fuel companies like TC Energy have adopted a new tactic: bolstering the capacity of aging pipelines.  A broad, region...

Climate Hysteria in The Dark Age: Are We Seeing Glimmers of Light? Watts Up With That?

Whether these glimmers of light in the Wests dark age today are real indicators of an emerging rationality or merely the dying throes of those who are fighting an invincible green juggernaut that will crush industry and peoples livelihoods, only time will tell.

07:00

Green Energy Crunch Time: Aussie Liddell Coal Plant Closes This Month Watts Up With That?

Last winter, during a low wind deep freeze, the Aussie East Cost suffered blackouts and energy shortages. This year they'll face the same - with 1200MW less capacity.

06:17

Environmental Groups Sue to Block Unconstitutional New Law Allowing Fracking in Ohio State Parks EcoWatch

Environmental and community groups in Ohio have filed a preliminary injunction to stop the leasing of public lands including state parks to the oil and gas industry.

Ohio HB 507, which redefines methane gas as green energy and requires state parks to lease their lands for fracking, went into effect on April 7. Originally an agricultural bill with its focus on poultry, the law was quickly expanded to include granting petrochemical, agricultural and fracking rights to industry.

The groups oppose the law on a constitutional basis, in addition to their objection to the obligatory leasing of public lands for fracking, a press release from Earthjustice and the Sierra Club said.

Earthjustice is representing Sierra Club, Ohio Valley Allies and Buckeye Environmental Network in the lawsuit. Attorneys from Earthjustice and Case Western Reserve University Environmental Law Clinic are representing the Ohio Environmental Council, along with the organizations own attorneys.

It is because of the grassroots efforts of Ohioans who were shocked at the underhanded way the legislators passed an illegal amendment during the last weeks of the General Assembly in 2022, that we are filing this lawsuit today, said Cheryl Johncox, board chairperson of the Buckeye Environmental Network, according to the press release. Ohioans love their parks and forest lands and will not tolerate lawmakers turning blind eyes to what will happen to the beauty and integri...

04:11

Ocean Surface Temperatures Reach Record High of Nearly 70F EcoWatch

The global ocean surface temperature reached 21.1C (69.98F) in early April, the highest recorded ocean surface temperature since records began. The recorded high beat the previous highest ocean surface temperature of 21.0C, recorded in 2016.

The daily Sea Surface Temperature hit 21.1C on April 1 and remained there through April 6, as recorded by the Climate Reanalyzer, a tool from the University of Maines Climate Change Institute.

The current trajectory looks like its headed off the charts, smashing previous records,  Matthew England, a climate scientist at the University of New South Wales, told The Guardian.

While the previous few years, under La Nia conditions, saw slightly cooler sea surface temperatures, experts are now seeing heat rising up to the ocean surface. Global warming can further contribute to rising ocean temperatures, and globally, we are seeing an average of 0.32 F (0.18 C) warming per decade.

The record ocean surface temperatures could foreshadow El Nio conditions later in 2023. With these patterns, we could see more flooding around the Gulf Coast in the U.S. and in the southeastern part of the country. Warming ocean surface temperatures can also alter food webs and marine ecosystems.

In 2016, when the previous highest sea surface temperature was recorded, El Nio was occurring. This phenomenon typically happens when global temperatures are higher, and as The Washington Post reported, last month had a global average temperature about 0.92F higher than the normal temperature recorded for 1991 to 2020.

With La Nia, the impacts of greenhouse gas emissions and global warming are often subdued, making surface temperatures cooler.

The recent triple dip La Nia has come to an end. This prolonged period of cold was tamping down global mean surface temperatures despite the rise of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, said Mike McPhaden, a senior research scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, as reported by The Guardian. N...

03:22

East Texas Getting New $8.5 Billion Ethane Cracker Plastics Facility Frack Check WV

These ethylene production operations consume fracked ethane and also generate huge tonnages of carbon dioxide (GHG)

Chevron Phillips Chemical & QatarEnergy begin construction of $8.5 billion East Texas integrated cracker complex

From an Article by Pearl Bantillo, ICIS News, March 10, 2023

SINGAPORE (ICIS) Chevron Phillips Chemical Co (CP Chem) and QatarEnergy have started building their joint $8.5bn integrated cracker complex called Golden Triangle Polymers Plant in the US. A groundbreaking ceremony was held for the project located in Orange County, Texas, QatarEnergy said in a statement on 8 March.

We are investing $8.5 billion to build this world-scale facility, which is QatarEnergys second largest investment in the US after the more than $11 billion investment in the Golden Pass LNG [liquefied natural gas] production and export facility, which is currently under construction about 35 miles from here in Sabine Pass, Texas, said Ahmad Saeed Al-Amoodi, executive vice president for surface development & sustainability at QatarEnergy.

The project includes an ethane cracker with a 2.08m tonne/year ethylene capacity, with two downstream high density polyethylene (HDPE) units with a combined capacity of 2m tonnes/year, it said.

Scheduled for start-up in 2026, the project will be owned by Golden Triangle Polymers Company LLC, a 51:49 joint venture between CP Chem and QatarEnergy. The project and the joint venture firm were named after Texass Golden Triangle region that encompasses the community of Orange. This plant will also be, by far, the most significant economic investment in the Orange community in decades, creating jobs and supporting economic growth, Al-Amoodi added.

Based on information available on CP Chems website, the Golden Triangle Polymer Plant is expected to create more than 500 full-time jobs and about 4,500 construction jobs and generate an estimated $50bn for the community in residual economic impacts over 20 years. QatarEnergy and CP Chem made a final investment decision on the project on 16 November 2022, with plans to export the majority of its HDPE output to key markets in Asia, Europe and Latin America.

ALSO: RAS LAFFAN PROJECT IN QATAR

The two companies have a similar project worth $6bn in t...

03:00

COP28 Climate Conference Boss Promises to Introduce KPIs Watts Up With That?

The big gas COP28 boss expects tangible results and progress reports from the climate communists.

02:31

Cultivating Mushrooms by Trees Could Feed Millions While Mitigating Climate Change, Research Finds EcoWatch

Edible mushrooms are a healthy and valuable source of protein, fiber, antioxidants and selenium, a mineral that protects against infections and cell damage.

A new study by scientists from the University of Stirling in Scotland has found that growing edible mushrooms adjacent to trees can not only provide food for millions, it can mitigate climate change impacts by capturing carbon, a press release from the University of Stirling said.

We looked at the emerging field of mycoforestry, where fungi that grow in symbiosis with living trees are used to create a food crop from new tree plantings, and we found that production of fungi using this system can lead to a very significant sequestration of greenhouse gas, Honorary Professor at the University of Stirlings Faculty of Natural Sciences Paul Thomas, who was lead author of the study, said in the press release. This is a huge benefit which means that by producing this food we can actively help mitigate climate change. When we compared this to other major food groups, this is the only one that would result in such benefits all other major food categories lead to a greenhouse gas emission during production.

The study, Edible fungi crops through mycoforestry, potential for carbon negative food production and mitigation of food and forestry conflicts, written by Thomas and Dean of the Faculty of Natural Sciences professor Alistair Jump, was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Trees and mushrooms have a symbiotic relationship in which trees provide a place for the mushrooms to grow and carbohydrates to nourish the fungi. In turn, mushrooms combine their root-like mycelium with trees roots, making it easier for the trees to absor...

02:25

To build its green capital city, Indonesia runs a road through a biodiverse forest Conservation news

BALIKPAPAN/JAKARTA A clearing for the ramp to a new toll road in the Indonesian Bornean city of Balikpapan gapes open on the side of a paved highway as big trucks rumble past. Farther down this passage thats been bulldozed through a forested area on the Balikpapan Bay coast, the sound of excavators grows louder. Construction workers are cutting down trees and shunting them to the side, uncovering the soft, reddish soil, while others rest at a makeshift hut. The broad pathway leads to a high ground clearing with a view over the coast and the bay below. Here, a temporary office has been erected, with a handful of banners put up explaining what this ongoing construction represents. The toll road is being built as part of the development of Indonesias new capital city, Nusantara, here in East Kalimantan province on the island of Borneo. But experts warn that the road threatens the integrity of a protected riverside forest and the coastal mangroves and marine ecosystem that it borders. When Mongabay visited the area in October 2022, clearing for the road hadnt been completed yet. It ended at rows of thick, towering trees. But the latest satellite images reviewed by Mongabay show that the planned road has, in just a few months, cut through the coastal forests to reach a recently completed bridge from Balikpapan. In the process, the road has passed into the buffer zone of the protected Sungai Wain Forest and grazes the forest itself. A high clearingThis article was originally published on Mongabay

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