Environment

This category contains 56 posts

Keystone pipeline: Not dead yet

From the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC): Just two weeks after President Obama killed a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, Republican leaders in Congress are trying to force its approval by attaching it to the payroll tax bill and other unrelated legislation.

I’m number 2,331,808,246 … approximately

Big in the media this week: The world population will reach an estimated 7 billion on October 31. I’m not sure why that’s such big news, other than 7 billion being a nice round number. It’s the sort of thing you’d expect only statisticians to get excited about. Except … except that the rate of … Continue reading »

Cantaloupe packing house likely source of listeria outbreak

Today, finally, I’m seeing the FDA explanation of how those Jensen Farms cantaloupes from Holly, Colo., were contaminated with listeria. Had the contamination occurred in the fields, I was prepared to consider the farm not directly responsible. However, it appears the cantaloupes were infected in the packing house, under conditions that should not have existed. … Continue reading »

The red baby carriage

Extraordinarily effective ad, I think — the American Lung Association ad about asthma and the Clean Air Act. The one with the red baby carriage and the sound of a coughing, asthmatic infant. Every time it runs I end up short of breath and reaching for that baby …

The Morganza Spillway: Denying the river

The Morganza Spillway. It seems to get mentioned in every story about the flooding along the Mississippi River. So I finally went to Wikipedia to find out what it is, exactly, and why it’s so important. By the time I finished following links and reading, I’d learned quite a bit about the actual flow of … Continue reading »

Earth Day 2011

««« ♦ »»» Teach your children what we have taught our children – that the earth is our mother. Whatever befalls the earth befalls the sons and daughters of the earth. If men spit upon the ground, they spit upon themselves. This we know. The earth does not belong to us; we belong to the … Continue reading »

About that California radiation thing

Count on the media to keep stirring the pot. They report on radiation from Japan; people on the West Coast get concerned. They report that people on the West Coast are concerned; everyone gets more concerned. The more the media talk about it and try to explain it, the more people get worked up about … Continue reading »

Colorado wolf count back to zero

In February 2009 I wrote excitedly that one of Yellowstone’s wolves had, according to her tracking collar, made her way through five states and finally into Colorado. I began dreaming of someday seeing wolves reestablished in Rocky Mountain National Park. Of course, I should have known better. Today I learned the wandering wolf was found … Continue reading »

Surprise, the oil isn’t gone

Remember that little “oops” of an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico over the summer? That wee little incident that BP and the U.S. government kept insisting wasn’t as bad as we all knew it was? The one they assured us was all better now? Of course we didn’t believe the whole mess was … Continue reading »

Western wolves mean water

Restoring wolves to Yellowstone National Park has brought an unexpected benefit — wetlands. When wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone in 1995, naturalists hoped to get more wolves. And they did. The number of wolves grew from the original 66 to an estimated 1,700 today. But what no one anticipated was that the wolves would, in … Continue reading »

You can’t fool all the people all the time

Of course it isn’t all gone, like BP and our government have said. You didn’t believe, and neither did I, that several months’ worth of gooey BP oil spewing into the Gulf of Mexico just disappeared — miraculously vanished — a day or two after the well was capped. Sure enough, scientists are saying that … Continue reading »

Who do you trust?

This week BP finally got its oil-spewing hole in the Gulf of Mexico shut down. The final cementing via a relief well is still to come, but the flow has been stopped. And, miraculously, most of the three or four months’ worth of oil is suddenly gone! BP, who couldn’t seem to get anything right … Continue reading »

Great news for wolves

I just received an email from Defenders of Wildlife, although I am not a member. It states, in part: As a result of a lawsuit brought in federal court by Defenders of Wildlife and other conservation groups, wolves in Greater Yellowstone and the Northern Rockies are again protected under the Endangered Species Act. A federal … Continue reading »

Ding dong, the witch is dead

BP CEO Tony Hayward is out. Fired, resigned, reassigned. Small comfort to those injured, perhaps irreparably, by BP’s gulf oil spill. Small comfort to Americans outraged by his pompous, arrogant, defiant attitude about the whole mess. Nor is there any comfort in knowing his replacement, Robert Dudley, is a rather easy-going, low-key American. I’ve no … Continue reading »

Summer news snooze

The Mosque at Ground Zero The “mosque at Ground Zero” isn’t. It isn’t a mosque and it isn’t at Ground Zero. Or at least that’s what I’ve heard. Whether it’s a mosque or a Muslim cultural center or whatever, a map in one report clearly showed the proposed structure is three blocks from Ground Zero. … Continue reading »

BP installing a new cap today … big whoop

Flash! BP is installing a wondrous new containment cap on their leaking well today. This cap is expected to contain most, if not all, of the spewing oil. Really? They want a medal or something? They should have been prepared to do this the day after the well blew out.

Wave power is here

Wave power. An endless supply of energy surging across our oceans. If only we could harness it … A company called Aquamarine Power has done just that with a device they call Oyster. Oyster 1 is already in place, generating power on the coast of Scotland, and Oyster 2 is being built this year. This … Continue reading »

I’d like to show my child the mountains

The peaks, the clouds, the storms, the animals, the streams. A hummingbird, a pine cone, a bugling elk, white water, clouds forming in a valley far below, driving into the clouds. The wind sighing in the pines, the streams roaring and burbling, aspen leaves clacking together in the breeze, the sights and sounds of nothing … Continue reading »

Great idea, except for that last part

Scientists have come up with a new idea for protecting Louisiana’s coastal marshlands from encroaching oil — release more water into the Mississippi River. Water flowing from the mouth of the river creates a current that has been helping to keep the oil away from the coast. But as the seasons change, the current will … Continue reading »

Eight presidents and umpteen promises later

Jon Stewart is probably my favorite news commentator these days. I know, he really hosts The Daily Show on the Comedy Network. But his faux news program hits the mark so often and so well that you really aren’t news if he doesn’t mention you. When President Obama used his oil-spill–inspired Oval Office address the … Continue reading »

pied wooden type

Hic Sunt Dracones

This Is Colorado

'Half Mountain Sentinels' by Erik Stensland

'Half Mountain Sentinels' by Erik Stensland, Estes Park, Colo. Half Mountain is in Rocky Mountain National Park.

Enter your email address to receive new post alerts via email:

Subscribe Via Twitter

Click to get new post alerts via Twitter:
Follow PiedType on Twitter

Oops!

Please report broken links via the contact form. Thx.