Thursday, July 29, 2010

Keystone XL Pipeline: A Failure of Environmental Security

by RLMiller

The Keystone XL pipeline, under construction, will transport oil from the Athabasca tar sands in Alberta, Canada across 2000 miles of the midwestern United States and ultimately to the Gulf Coast.  The State Department issued a Presidential permit in 2008.  However, last week the Environmental Protection Agency gave the project its lowest possible rating, and Monday the Department of Energy raised additional concerns.  Tuesday, the State Department took the rare step of delaying its final permits, at least through the end of the year.

The Gulf oilpocalypse has, perhaps, begun to focus attention on environmental security: the idea that potential harms to the environment can't be remedied by "polluter pays" fines and damages, but instead are threats to our national interest.  Just as energy security asserts a national interest in keeping oil flowing, environmental security asserts a national interest in pristine skies and plentiful water for generations to come.  The Keystone pipeline is one huge threat.



continued at Daily Kos...

Project Gulf Impact - Telling Their Stories

by Ellinorianne

There's a lot of speculation about the long term impact of the oil left behind from the massive oil gusher in the Gulf.  There are still questions about the relief wells, the cap and whether the oil will really be held at bay for the long term.

And then you have the millions of gallons of dispersant, Corexit, that was sprayed in the air and over water, it was used profusely in a way that hadn't been done in any previous spills.

There have been dairies about the health of the workers, the residents, etc. but not many.  I wrote about the early diagnosis of the health issues facing workers and residents being a syndrome known as tilt.  The people suffering are being shouted down by skeptics, you can see it my diary that I reference.  The more doubt given to their symptoms and their health issues, the less BP, etc. will have to actually pay and be responsible for what they are doing.



continued at Daily Kos...

eKos: The Permanent Dust Bowl

by FishOutofWater

Texas, the southern plains and the southwest will become a permanent dust bowl, if greenhouse gas emissions, causing climate change continue, unabated. In Texas, average temperatures 5 degrees Fahrenheit hotter, combined with permanent drought, will cause rivers and aquifers to dry up and crops to wither and die. Evaporation will far exceed precipitation. Parched cities will be hard pressed to find adequate water supplies for household and business needs. Conventional power generation methods will not have adequate water supplies for producing electricity.



continued at Daily Kos...

Rand Paul: Mountaintop removal IMPROVES the land

by Eclectablog

Unreal.

Paul believes mountaintop removal just needs a little rebranding. "I think they should name it something better," he says. "The top ends up flatter, but we're not talking about Mount Everest. We're talking about these little knobby hills that are everywhere out here. And I've seen the reclaimed lands. One of them is 800 acres, with a sports complex on it, elk roaming, covered in grass." Most people, he continues, "would say the land is of enhanced value, because now you can build on it."

Hat tip to RLMiller whose tweet today clued me in on this freak show. I hope I haven't stolen her thunder.



continued at Daily Kos...

Dalian, China: Pipeline Explosion, A Yellow Sea of Oil

by War on Error

We have some disaster company:

July 21, 2010:  Five days ago, in the northeastern port city of Dalian, China, two oil pipelines exploded, sending flames hundreds of feet into the air and burning for over 15 hours,....

an estimate of 1,500 tons (400,000 gallons....

The oil slick has now grown to at least 430 square kilometers (165 sq mi), forcing beaches and port facilities to close

Horrifying images are emerging from China, where an emergency worker nearly drowned in oil while working to contain a spill that now covers over 150 square miles off the coast of China.

http://www.boston.com/...



continued at Daily Kos...

An Ecosystem View of Climate Change

by matching mole

This may not be exactly what some people might expect from the title.  I'm not going to include a lot of alarming facts and figures or dire predictions.  Instead I'm going to introduce the basics of ecosystem ecology and show how CO2 accumulation and climate change fit into that picture.  I am a professional biologist with a fairly strong background in ecology.  However I am not an ecosystem ecologist so if any of you are, and catch me in an error please point it out.

This is intended for people without a strong science background.  I'm assuming that most of the more environmentally inclined will find this trivial.  I'm hoping that it will give some of you a broader perspective on the issue.



continued at Daily Kos...

Bikes in Istanbul?

by citisven

A while ago I wrote about a bicycle tour I took as part of the Ecocity World Summit last December in Istanbul. It was organized by Bisikletliler, the Istanbul and Turkish Cyclist Association, and afterward I got to speak to their founder and captain, Murat Suyabatmaz, about the challenges and opportunities of bringing bicycle infrastructure and culture to a rapidly growing megalopolis of currently 15 million.

Parts of the interview are integrated in a piece entitled Istanbul and Bicycling, Like Dark Bread It's Good For Everyone I just posted yesterday on sfgate.com, but I thought our talk was inspiring and educating enough to post it here in its entirety.

 title=



continued at Daily Kos...

Future? What Future?

by Edger


These are three of the cheerful passages in the article. If you've never read the whole thing I'd recommend it...

The Delusion Revolution: We're on the Road to Extinction and in Denial
By Robert Jensen

Imagine that you are riding comfortably on a sleek train. You look out the window and see that not too far ahead the tracks end abruptly and that the train will derail if it continues moving ahead. You suggest that the train stop immediately and that the passengers go forward on foot. This will require a major shift in everyone's way of traveling, of course, but it appears to you to be the only realistic option; to continue barreling forward is to court catastrophic consequences. But when you propose this course of action, others who have grown comfortable riding on the train say, "Well, we like the train, and arguing that we should get off is not realistic."



continued at Daily Kos...

UPDATE x5: Dam *NOT* breached?? Tony the Tiger still dead.

by Brainwrap

This is bad. Really, really bad:

A Michigan State Police emergency management official said this evening that the viscous flow of oil has breached the Morrow Dam and is bearing down on a federally designated pollution zone on the Kalamazoo River, potentially adding to the cost of the disaster's cleanup.

Tom Sands, the deputy state director of emergency management and homeland security for the Michigan State Police, said he saw a light sheen of oil past the Morrow Dam near Galesburg during a flyover this afternoon.

That would mean that the oil is closer to a Superfund site, an Environmental Protection Agency designation for heavily polluted areas. And Gov. Jennifer Granholm, who spoke to reporters tonight along with Sands, said the presence of oil at a Superfund site "completely explodes the amount of money needed to address" the spill.



continued at Daily Kos...

Global Warming: Effing Scary! Complex! Easy!

by A Siegel

Lafeminista's Global Warming: Are you f***ing scared yet? highlights yet another reason for grave concern about the impacts of our using the atmosphere as a trash pit: we are killing life in the ocean as

Scientists have discovered that the phytoplankton of the oceans has declined by about 40 per cent over the past century, with much of the loss occurring since the 1950s. They believe the change is linked with rising sea temperatures and global warming.

Should we mention acidification of the oceans? Accelerating extinction rates? Ever-more disrupted weather patterns globally that, among other things, are hurting agricultural production? Stronger storms? Rising seas? ....

At a core level, if you are a parent and unconcerned about what this means for your child's life (your own as well), well, you are living with blinders on.

Global Warming should effing scare us ...

Yet, it doesn't because it also so complex ...

And, sigh, it shouldn't have to because the solution paths are so clear ...



continued at Daily Kos...

Clean up gas drilling, support FRAC act

by carolh11

Browsing the homepage top stories that included the article regarding the stripped down version of the Energy Bill, I noticed this important line regarding the future of natural gas.

"Providing incentives for turning the nation‘s heavy truck fleet to natural gas and toward electrification of the nation‘s transportation sector."

Those who support natural gas exploration and extraction as a clean energy resource might not have seen "Gaslands".  Or you may have, but the writing is on the wall, and I concede that natural gas will be in our future, but it does not mean that I am not concerned with "how" we get to it.



continued at Daily Kos...

BP Catastrophe Liveblog Mothership: 65

by Gulf Watchers

The current ROV DIARY: Daily Kos Gulf Watchers ROV # 248 - Day 100 - Stars on the Water - KHowell

Rules of the Road

  • We take volunteers for subsequent diaries in the sub diaries or ROV's as we have playfully coined them.
  • 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 Pam LaPier's diary 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!



continued at Daily Kos...

Global Warming: Are you f***ing scared yet?

by LaFeminista

Well you should be.

Still we go on belching out pollution on a daily basis with little or no regard for the future. We merrily hack down the rain forests that might just help alleviate the problem, we watch the coral reefs die and sigh.

However this is nothing compared to a recent report

Scientists have discovered that the phytoplankton of the oceans has declined by about 40 per cent over the past century, with much of the loss occurring since the 1950s. They believe the change is linked with rising sea temperatures and global warming.

I will let that sink in, the basis of the oceans food web has been reduced by 40%. Phytoplankton are the building block upon which all life in the ocean depends.

Are you fucking scared yet? Well you really should be.

We are relentlessly destroying our habitat by throwing oil at it, by carving off tops of mountains, digging up whole areas for tar sands, belching carbon dioxide into the air like there is no tomorrow.

So if you see the ocean turning blue start to worry, because that deep green is the very heart of our oceans.



continued at Daily Kos...

Good news about Utah tar sands boondoggle {Earthship Wednesday}

by eKos

eKosLogo

Welcome to the eKos Earthship, your one-stop-shop for green diaries and series.

Tonight's editor: LaughingPlanet

••
••

Most people know eating meat leaves a larger carbon footprint.
Or does it? A new Mother Jones article from the NN10 shwag bag questions our assumptions. Also, what about milk & dairy? We seem to hear a lot about meat, but are not all animal foods impactful with regards to climate change?

And the late-breaking Utah tar sands news simply must be the top story after the groundswell of support from this lovely community yesterday.

••
••

Beneath the fold you will find news and notes, community announcements, and our eco-diary roundup.

All views expressed by today's editor do not necessarily represent those of eKos or eKos listed diarists.



continued at Daily Kos...