Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Methane Cycle: Gas Production and Gas Release

by gmoke

Methane (CH4) is a much more effective greenhouse gas than CO2.  Methane is also fuel, natural gas.  Methane can be made from animal and human dung as well as other kinds of waste.
In Nepal, it is known as Gobar Gas:
“Gobar” is the Nepali word for cow dung. The “Gas” refers to biogas derived from the natural decay of dung, other waste products, and any biomass. In Nepal, villagers use buffalo, cow, human, and other waste products for biogas production. Pig and chicken dung are used in some places, as are raw kitchen wastes, including rotted vegetation....
The Nepalese government built nearly 200 small biogas plants in 1975/6, but decentralized methane digestion truly took off in 1992 when the Dutch group, SNV, launched a large program, including subsidy mechanisms and microfinance schemes, which led to the installation of approximately 204,000 units to date.
Michael Yon wonders if this could also work in Afghanistan.


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We did this. All of us.

by Kitsap River

One of my favorite birds, and one I saw often in the salt marshes of San Francisco Bay (those few which haven't been developed over), is the magnificent Great Egret. We often had snowy egrets, their somewhat smaller cousins, as marsh visitors as well, and those were perhaps more common than the larger great egrets, but it's hard not to catch one's breath at the gorgeous and very large great egret as it takes flight. Only the great blue heron surpasses it in size as a salt marsh wader.
egret in flight



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Introducing the eKos Library!

by patrickz

Photobucket

What am I talking about? Really it's a blog on Blogger that has all diary intros, titles, tags and links from the eKos database posted in a nice, shiny, easy to navigate format.

This is my way of making the eKos database available for public viewing. It is not meant to replace or compete with anything. Every post at the blog has a link back to the Daily Kos diary at the end of the intro. Nothing is posted from the body of your diary. Think of it as a repository for Daily Kos eco-diary information, with easy access back to those diaries.

Sure, you can always use the Daily Kos search engine to find those older diaries on DK, but I think you'll find that this has some advantages, some of which I'll describe beneath the fold.



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Air Pollution 103 - Reactive Organic Compounds

by ashowboat

This is the third is a series on air pollution. The first installment that discussed general air pollution and the Clean Air Act (CAA) is here and the second installment that went into detail about photochemical smog or ozone is here.

Today's installment is about one of the precursors to photochemical smog, reactive organic compounds (ROC).



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sigh, he did not say anything. (update w/video)

by icebergslim

I know everyone many in this community are split.

Those Some believe everything Obama says is gold and those some that criticize him for being lackluster.

But tonight.  I expected some specifics, I wanted a WIN, but got an inspiring, la-de-da speech.

Nothing of specifics.

Now if I missed the absolute specifics, then clue me in.



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Breaking: Global Cooling Proven

by FishOutofWater

Legitimate climate scientists cannot deny the truth of global cooling.*

Remote Sensing Systems analysis of NASA satellite data show much cooler temperatures for the past 15 years than the previous 15 years.



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Tell the people

by Laurence Lewis

The president will speak tonight, and let's hope he doesn't just mention climate change in passing. Let's hope he really focuses on the big picture. All he has to do is point to some recent news. A deadly flood in Arkansas. Record rains in Oklahoma City. Record flooding in Tennessee and New England.

As one observer noted:

I find it systematically tends to get underplayed and it often gets underplayed by my fellow scientists. Because one of the opening statements, which I’m sure you’ve probably heard is "Well you can’t attribute a single event to climate change." But there is a systematic influence on all of these weather events now-a-days because of the fact that there is this extra water vapor lurking around in the atmosphere than there used to be say 30 years ago. It’s about a 4% extra amount, it invigorates the storms, it provides plenty of moisture for these storms and it’s unfortunate that the public is not associating these with the fact that this is one manifestation of climate change. And the prospects are that these kinds of things will only get bigger and worse in the future.

Some radical leftist enviro type who doesn't understand basic science? Actually, that quote is from Dr. Kevin Trenberth, head of the Climate Analysis Section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. From an interview he just gave Joseph Romm, of Climate Progress. Who explains:

The latest record-smashing superstorm makes his comments even more timely — see Capital Climate’s "Oklahoma City Paralyzed By Flash Floods."  As with Tennessee, New England, and Georgia, what makes OK’s deluge doubly remarkable is that it was not the remnant of a tropical storm (see "Weather Channel expert on Georgia’s record-smashing global-warming-type deluge").

Extreme weather without the usual extreme causes. But the extreme causes will be getting even more extreme. It's been known for years that climate change could lead to stronger than ever hurricanes. And now, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is predicting a stronger than usual hurricane season, for this year. The International Research Institute for Climate and Society, at Columbia University, elaborates:

The forecast for above-normal hurricane activity has remained high in part because of the dissipation of the 2009-10 El Niño and increased likelihood for La Niña conditions starting in the fall of 2010. In general, La Niña conditions tend to increase the chances for hurricanes in the Atlantic, while El Niño conditions tend to suppress them.

But the strongest influence on the forecast has to do with what's going on in the surface waters of the Atlantic Ocean. During the month of April, the surface temperatures in the Atlantic, where the majority of hurricanes develop, rose to nearly 1.5 degrees Celsius above the 30 year average- the highest levels ever recorded. In fact, April marks the third consecutive month that temperatures in this region of the Atlantic broke long term records. This is important because in general, hurricanes use warm-water temperatures as fuel to grow and get stronger.

"These abnormally high sea-surface temperatures do not bode well for a quiet start to the hurricane season," says Tony Barnston, IRI's lead forecaster. "Taken in combination with the increased likelihood for a developing La Niña during the latter stages of the hurricane season, the entire season may be lengthened this year."

And just to bring it all home, Science Daily had this, last month:

Hurricanes could snap offshore oil pipelines in the Gulf of Mexico and other hurricane-prone areas, since the storms whip up strong underwater currents, a new study suggests.

These pipelines could crack or rupture unless they are buried or their supporting foundations are built to withstand these hurricane-induced currents. "Major oil leaks from damaged pipelines could have irreversible impacts on the ocean environment," the researchers warn in their study, to be published on 10 June in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union (AGU).

The message is simple and easy to explain. You like what you're seeing in the Gulf of Mexico? Well, climate change has a very good chance of making this but the beginning. The crisis in the Gulf is about offshore oil drilling, but it's also about oil. It's about climate change. It's about our addiction to fossil fuels. And this is the moment to do something about it.

This is the moment to seize the moment, to galvanize the nation into being ready to do something about climate change. Something real. Finally. This is the moment to tell the people.



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The Hottest May on Record-Updated

by colorado bob 1

June 15, 2010

The combined global land and ocean surface temperature was the warmest on record for May, March-May (Northern Hemisphere spring-Southern Hemisphere autumn), and the period January-May according to NOAA. Worldwide average land surface temperature for May and March-May was the warmest on record while the global ocean surface temperatures for both May and March-May were second warmest on record, behind 1998.

NOAA: May Global Temperature is Warmest on Record Spring and January-May also post record breaking temps



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Photos: When the cold and detached president met the angry people

by blackwaterdog

"So, yes, we’re emerging from the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Yes, we’re a nation at war. Yes, we’re now battling the worst economic -- environmental disaster in American history.  Any one of these challenges alone would test our country. Confronting them all at once might overwhelm a lesser nation. But look around you.  Look at the person standing next to you.  You look around and you see the strength and resilience that will carry us through".
(President Obama, Naval Air Technical Training Center Pensacola, Florida, June 15, 2010).



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NW Natural Gas:  Public Meeting Thursday on Palomar Pipeline

by Cedwyn

Well, whaddaya know.  It seems like the protest of the Palomar Pipeline the other week definitely caught NW Natural's attention.  They will be holding a public meeting this Thursday:

The Public Meeting will be held at NW Natural, 220 NW Second, 4th Floor Hospitality East Room: 6-7PM.

Please forward this info to, like, everyone you know in the general Pacific Northwest.  The more people who know about it, the more people who will show.  I, for one, hope the room is SRO and overflowing down the stairs.  



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Rachel Maddow ridicules BP's latest lies, affixes blame to Dubya

by LaughingPlanet

bp2

Aghast at the temerity of the rich white men running BP, Rachel Maddow took it upon herself to call them on their latest (greatest?) audacity.

Last night, Maddow could barely contain her outrage about the obscenely dishonest and disingenuous spin vomited up by BP fat cat Doug Suttles, who was interviewed on a helicopter (!) by NBC News correspondent Tom Costello.

Eventually getting all schoolteacher by bringing us to the big video board to illustrate the extent of the wrongness, Maddow makes it very clear that the lying liars were indeed so full of shit that their eyes turned brown.

Mr. Suttles? Yesterday you were known as "Chief Operating Officer of BP Exploration and Production."

From now on you will be known as Ms. Maddow's b*** the rich white guy PWNED by Rachel Maddow.

Video and some transcript below.



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Beyond Pathetic: BP Hiding Oiled Animal Carcasses Washing Up On Gulf Beaches?

by Edger

Crossposted from Antemedius

RawStory reports today that on MSNBC's Countdown with Keith Olbermann Monday night, Marine toxicologist Riki Ott alleged that British Petroleum (BP) is trying to discourage or disallow public and media from seeing some of the horrific results of their oil leak by removing oiled animal carcasses from Gulf beaches.



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More proof that BP cut corners

by Jed Lewison

BP's motto might as well have been: "Safety first, except when it comes to everything else." NYT:

Internal BP documents, including an e-mail message calling the well drilled by the Deepwater Horizon a “nightmare,” show a pattern of risky choices made to save time and money in the weeks before the disastrous April 20 blowout, according to a letter sent to the oil  company by the leaders of a House committee on Monday.

The leaders of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce cited five areas in which the company had made decisions that “increased the danger of a catastrophic well,” including the choice for the design of the well, preparations for and tests of the cement job and assurances that the well was properly sealed on the top.

Taken together, the documents offer the strongest case yet that BP bears much of the responsibility for the catastrophic explosion that killed 11 workers and the still-unchecked leaking of millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.

Among the decisions by BP that led to the disaster:

  1. BP saved $7 to $10 million by using a cheaper -- but less reliable -- method to complete the well casing. The so-called "tapered string" meant the well had less capacity to resist upward pressure caused by gas bubbles.
  1. BP ignored advice from Halliburton to deploy devices that would have given the well additional stability because they would have taken too long -- 10 hours -- to install.
  1. BP did not fully circulate drilling mud which would have created better conditions for doing cement work. The reason: fully circulating the drilling mud would have taken 12 hours.
  1. BP did not run a comprehensive test on the cementing job even though its own engineers had grave concerns about the quality of the cement work. Again, the reason was time: the test would have taken 12 hours.

Clearly, BP and its employees were optimizing their decisions around short-term goals. They were willing to take huge risks to achieve near-term objectives and weren't particularly concerned with potential downsides. In this respect, they were operating very much like the traders at AIG who took bigger and bigger bets until they brought the house down. Of course, every time the AIG traders made a bet, they pocketed some of the proceeds, and when they brought the house down, the government was their to prop them back up.

In recent days, BP has tried to follow in Wall Street's footsteps by positioning itself as "too big to fail," arguing that pensioners in Great Britain depend on its dividends, and saying that if it goes bankrupt, it won't be able to pay any damage claims.

That line of reasoning is nonsense. Sure, if we go easy on BP they can pay a big dividend. But the notion that they will pay more in damages if we don't ask them to cover the cost of all the damages that they have inflicted is bizarre, at best.

Worse, going easy on BP would set a precedent that what they did was acceptable, a simple "accident" as Rand Paul would put it. If we want to prevent future disasters like this, we must hold BP accountable, forcing them to pay every dime they owe and to face punishment for whatever laws they may have broken.

The goal isn't to put BP out of business, but if holding them accountable puts them out of business, so what? Other oil companies will come in and fill the market void, and they'll do so with the full knowledge that if they screw up like BP, they'll face the same consequences.

To reduce the risk of future disasters, there's no question that we need to improve regulation and to develop alternatives to oil, but BP must also suffer the consequences of its actions. For the most part, the Administration is now saying all the right things, and tonight's Oval Office address should be no different, but the real test will be in the coming months: will BP be forced to pay, or will they be allowed to walk away?



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Reinventing the Whale - The Real Reason for Reviving Commercial Whaling

by Ellinorianne

The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society released a new report today that outlines why whaling Countries are pushing for open commercial whaling and it's not innocuous nor is it about culture or sustainability.

And we cannot allow it.

Reinventing the Whale – released today reveals the real reason behind the whaling nations desire to lift the whaling moratorium – they have long-term plans to develop new commercial applications for whale oil including in pharmaceuticals and animal feed.



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LIVEBLOG: BP et al Hse hearings w/Markey et al

by Gorette

We have a panel of five oil corporation executives in Congress.

Squirming. Looking quite tense. Did they sleep at all. The BP executive's eyes dart from face to face as he seeks to assess the opinions, the mood. Doesn't like what he sees.

We have a room full of members of the Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment. Republicans mostly slam the hearings, saying that if we can't find out how to stop the leak we should not be bothering having this hearing.

Hearings like this are important in that they show the difference between Republicans and Democrats!

They go from Rep. Barton to Rep. Waxman. I'll add a few comments made earlier on the ROV blog.

BP Oilpocalypse ROV #98. Don't forget to Rec theMothership, BP Catastrophe Liveblog..

C-Span3 Live Stream



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A Day In The Life Of A Pod

by Pam LaPier

I'm trying to do some diaries that highlight the species of marine and coastal life in the Gulf of Mexico. I think it's important to always remember what's at stake when we mess with nature.

Please keep our mothership afloat and recommend here

Information from The American Cetacean Society

The sperm whale is the largest odontocete, or toothed whale. It has been portrayed frequently in art and literature as a symbol of the great whales, and is best known as the leviathan Moby Dick in Melville's novel by that name. Unique in appearance, the sperm whale seems to have social characteristics that, to date, also appear to be unique among whales. Sperm whales are among the deepest diving cetaceans, and are found in all oceans of the world. Females and their young travel in permanent units, whereas the much larger males rove between breeding and feeding grounds, as well as among groups of females when breeding.



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BP: It's not the first time an Oil Company got around Federal Regulation

by theRoaringGirl

In September of 1968, just far enough outside the 3-mile limit of the Santa Barbara coast, an oil/gas drilling rig was built. There was no choice. California had regulations for off-shore  drilling that exceeded what the U.S. Government had in place. For a couple of reasons. One reason was earthquakes, the other reason was earthquakes Union Oil built the A-21 rig 5 miles out from shore. In January 1969, a scant 4 months after it was built and began drilling 3500 feet down, it blew.



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Halliburton Sold Nuclear Tech To Iran

by Stranded Wind

 When they're not shitting all over the Gulf of Mexico our old friends Halliburton are found selling nuclear technology to Iran.

 



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Niger Delta: Exxon-Mobile, Shell, BP: Oil for Nothing

by LaFeminista

It goes to show the economic might of the US and the advantage of having a relatively uncorrupted government and legal system when dealing with industrial pollution on a catastrophic scale.

The US government is demanding BP set aside $20 billion in a fund for the clean up of the Gulf blow-out.

Say we take the worst case of 100,000 barrels a day or around 12,500 tons a day.

This gives a total of 690,000 tons since the spill began, low end estimates are around a quarter of that say 175,000 tons. Horrifying to say the least no matter which figure you take, and it may well destroy BP as a company, however:

This pales into insignificance compared to the Niger Delta where significant environmental vandalism has been going on for nearly 50 years.

In 2006 alone approximately 1,500,000 tons were spilt into the delta.

Nigerian sweet crude probably the best there is provides around 40% of our oil requirement in the US.

The whole oil pipework system, hundreds of miles of it, are rotting and falling apart. Drilling is moving towards more isolated and deeper areas, thus compounding the problem.

And you know what?

Nobody really gives a damn.

Compensation so far $0, if you exclude buying the Nigerian Government.



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Final Update #11: The Week in Editorial Cartoons - BP is the New BS

by JekyllnHyde


THE WEEK IN EDITORIAL CARTOONS
This weekly diary takes a look at the past week's important news stories from the perspective of our leading editorial cartoonists (including a few foreign ones) with analysis and commentary added in by me.
When evaluating a cartoon, ask yourself these questions:
  1. Does a cartoon add to my existing knowledge base and help crystallize my thinking about the issue depicted?
  1. Does the cartoonist have any obvious biases that distort reality?
  1. Is the cartoonist reflecting prevailing public opinion or trying to shape it?
The answers will help determine the effectiveness of the cartoonist's message.
:: ::

Taylor Jones, Politicalcartoons.com, Buy this cartoon


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BP Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership: #21

by Liveblog

The current ROV DIARY: BP Oilpocalypse ROV #98

Rules of the Road

  • Let's keep this a meta diary. To volunteer to host a liveblog submersible (ROV), leave a comment here.
  • Please rec this mothership diary, not the ROVs.
  • Please be kind to fellow kossacks who may have limited bandwidth and refrain from posting images or videos.

PLEASE visit Crashing Vor and Pam LaPier's diaries to find out how you can help the Gulf now and in the future. We don't have to be idle! And thanks to Crashing Vor and Pam LaPier for working on this!

To repeat: please refrain from commenting in this mothership diary, unless you're volunteering for a submersible shift.



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