When will the Texas drought end? – ‘We’ve probably got a least another couple years’

By Terrence Henry 3 June 2013 (NPR) – Sno Cone stands are open, school’s almost out, and thermostats across the state are getting closer and closer to reading a hundred, if they haven’t already. As another summer approaches, Texans are wondering what kind of season is in store. If the forecasts of meteorologist Chris Coleman […]

Hawaii trade winds have dropped 28 percent since 1970s – Maui had driest April on record in 2013

By AUDREY McAVOY 3 June 2013 HONOLULU (Associated Press) – Part of what makes living in Hawaii so pleasant is the gentle breeze. Arriving from the northeast, it’s light enough that it is barely noticeable but strong enough to chase away the humidity. It’s a natural draw to the outdoors. It is not uncommon to […]

Soil around Fukushima to be frozen to stop groundwater leaking in – Disaster poses ‘an unprecedented challenge in the world’

By Mark Willacy31 May 2013 (ABC) – The Japanese government has ordered the operator of the Fukushima nuclear plant to freeze the soil around its crippled reactor buildings to stop groundwater seeping in and becoming contaminated. Every day another 400 tonnes of groundwater forces its way into the plant, becomes contaminated with radioactivity and needs […]

Blight sweeping Central America coffee plantations puts thousands out of work – Climate change causing rust fungus to spread to higher elevations that once were too cool and dry

By Tim Johnson3 June 2013 SAN PEDRO YEPOCAPA, Guatemala (McClatchy) –  Across Central America, even as rains arrive, many coffee plantations contain only spindly, nearly defoliated bushes, the result of a blight known as coffee leaf rust whose devastation, so far, has yet to affect the prices of premium highland coffee that baristas serve around […]

Peru funded illegal Amazon rainforest road: Global Witness

By David Hill    24 May 2013 (Guardian) – The local government in one of the remotest parts of the Peruvian Amazon has allegedly funded the illegal clearing of rainforest at the start of the proposed route for a controversial highway that would run through the country’s biggest national park. According to a report by Global […]

U.S. Atlantic puffin population in peril as fish stocks shift, ocean waters heat up

PORTLAND, Maine, 2 June 2013 (Associated Press) – The Atlantic puffin population is at risk in the United States, and there are signs the seabirds are in distress in other parts of the world. In the Gulf of Maine, the comical-looking seabirds have been dying of starvation and losing body weight, possibly because of shifting […]

Where the Millennium Development Goals fell short: valuing Nature

Dr. Fred Boltz 29 May 2013 (Conservation International) – This week in New York City, the 27 members of the high-level panel of eminent persons appointed by the U.N. Secretary General will deliver a report providing recommendations on the post-2015 development agenda. This is a critical opportunity to address the inadequacies of the Millennium Development […]

170 indigenous people from the Xingu river region again occupy Belo Monte dam construction site – Forceful eviction authorized by local judge

[Petition: Peace and Respect in the Amazon] By Gabriel Elizondo30 May 2013 Sao Paulo, Brazil (Al Jazeera) – It’s another standoff in the Amazon, and it could get very ugly very fast. On Monday, 170 indigenous people armed with bows and arrows from the Xingu river region again occupied a work site at the controversial […]

Richest 1 percent control 39 percent of world’s wealth and growing

[cf. Shadow banking grows to $67 trillion industry, regulators say] By Robert Frank31 May 2013 (CNBC) – The wealthiest 1 percent now control 39 percent of the world’s wealth, and their share is likely to grow in the coming years, according to a new report. The world’s total private wealth grew 7.8 percent last year […]

Loss of big fruit-eating birds impacting trees in endangered rainforests –‘Habitat loss and species extinction is causing drastic changes in the composition and structure of ecosystems’

31 May 2013 (mongabay.com) – The extinction of large, fruit-eating birds in fragments of Brazil’s Atlantic rainforest has caused palm trees to produce smaller seeds over the past century, impacting forest ecology, finds a study published in the journal Science. The researchers — led by Mauro Galetti from Brazil’s Universidade Estadual Paulista — looked at […]

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