The Paris climate agreement is entering into force. Now comes the hard part. |
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The European Parliament voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to ratify the Paris climate accord, a move that will make the sweeping international agreement a legal reality long before even those who negotiated it expected. Washington Post. Oct 05
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Americans bought more EVs last month than ever before. |
US plug-in vehicle sales reached a quarterly record for the three-month period that ended September 30, as demand improved for plug-in models such as the Tesla Model S battery-electric vehicle and the Chevrolet Volt extended-range plug-in, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). AutoBlog. Oct 09
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McConnell vows to keep up pro-coal fight during next administration. |
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Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said he won’t back down from fighting certain environmental regulations during the next president’s term. The Hill, District of Columbia. Oct 08
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Saved by 20 miles: Hurricane Matthew could have been much worse in Florida. |
Hurricane Matthew continues to batter the coast of Florida as it crawls northward, but the devastation could have been much worse if the hurricane had passed 20 miles closer to the Space Coast shore, according to meteorologists. Florida Today, Florida. Oct 08
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Seas rising but Florida keeps building on the coast. |
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Sea level rise as a result of global warming is not stopping developers of Florida’s coast.ClimateWire. Oct 07
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Analysis: Why did the Obamas fail to take on corporate agriculture? |
Eight years ago this month, I published in these pages an open letter to the next president titled, “Farmer in Chief.” “It may surprise you to learn,” it began, “that among the issues that will occupy much of your time in the coming years is one you barely mentioned during the campaign: food.” New York Times. Oct 08
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Oil clout ebbs in Alaska as billions in tax credits are cut. |
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Four decades after unlocking America’s biggest oilfield, Alaska and its drillers are drifting apart. Bloomberg Markets Magazine. Oct 08
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How a former reporter is helping big oil and gas frack the news. |
Oil and gas industry officials and regulators looking to influence media coverage of fracking, a controversial method for extracting natural gas, have received advice from someone who really knows how newsrooms work: a former Denver Post investigative reporter. Huffington Post. Oct 08
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Syrian seed bank gets new home away from war. |
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A major seed bank in Aleppo, Syria, holds genes that might help researchers breed crops to survive climate change. But the conflict tearing the country apart has rendered the bank largely inaccessible for the past four years. Nature. Oct 05
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Californians stopped saving so much water this summer. |
Mandatory water cuts ended in most California cities this summer, and the results have been predictable. In August, Golden State city-dwellers used just 18 percent less water than they did in the same month in 2013, the Los Angeles Times reports. Pacific Standard. Oct 08
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Six scientists, 1,000 miles, one prize: The Arctic bumblebee. |
One hundred miles north of the Arctic Circle, by the side of a dusty road, two women in anti-mosquito head nets peer at a queen bumblebee buzzing furiously in a plastic tube. New York Times. Oct 08
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How global warming is changing how we play outside. |
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Climate change is affecting America’s recreation meccas—from Yosemite to Yellowstone—in profound ways. As the planet heats up and weather patterns shift, so will the ways we interact with the outdoors. Outside. Oct 03
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This scientist just shredded conservatives for making up ‘absurd’ Hurricane Matthew conspiracies. |
A scientist from the Earth System Science Center at Pennsylvania State University slammed conservative conspiracy mongers like Matt Drudge and Rush Limbaugh for urging people not to evacuate ahead of Hurricane Matthew. Raw Story. Oct 08
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India ratifies Paris climate change agreement. |
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India, which accounts for about 4.5 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, ratified the Paris climate change agreement Sunday at the United Nations, officials said. Associated Press. Oct 03
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Hurricane protection project underway near New Orleans. |
The federal government will pay a firm more than $7 million to tear out and replant trees in a forested part of Avondale, a task intended to complement the West Bank's hurricane protection project. New Orleans Times-Picayune, Louisiana. Oct 08
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In rural Bangladesh, solar power dents poverty. |
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Microfinance and small rooftop panels can transform lives in a country where the electric grid reaches just 25 percent of the population. New York Times. Oct 04
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North Sea oil spills reach record high. |
Spills from North Sea oil rigs have reached a 14-year high, according to a UK Government report obtained by the Sunday Herald. Herald Scotland, United Kingdom. Oct 09
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Next ‘renewable energy’: Burning forests, if Senators get their way. |
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The president’s Clean Power Plan is being fought by 28 states, and a bipartisan group of senators who want burning wood for electricity to be considered carbon neutral. New York Times. Oct 04
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Warning to forest destroyers: This scientist will catch you. |
Matthew Hansen uses satellites to spot deforestation as it happens. Nature. Oct 05
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Bringing light to the darkness: Illiterate women trained as solar technicians. |
There are 1.2 billion people in the world living without electricity. An Indian organization hopes to change that by training illiterate woman to become solar technicians. Der Spiegel. Oct 04
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