Records show 100 percent of Texas coal power plants contaminating groundwater – “We found contamination everywhere we looked, poisoning groundwater aquifers and recreational fishing spots across the state”

AUSTIN, Texas, 17 January 2019 (Earthjustice) – Toxic coal ash pollutants are leaking into groundwater surrounding 100 percent of Texas’s power plants for which data are available, with unsafe levels of arsenic, cobalt, lithium, and other pollutants seeping from the ash dumps, according to an analysis by the Environmental Integrity Project (EIP). Industry groundwater monitoring […]

Washington Governor Jay Inslee uses State of the State address to urge action on climate change – “This is the eleventh hour, but it is Washington state’s hour to shine”

By Joseph O’Sullivan15 January 2019 OLYMPIA (The Seattle Times) – Standing before a Washington Legislature that for years has balked at his carbon-reduction agenda, Gov. Jay Inslee implored lawmakers Tuesday to make bold moves to combat climate change. The governor’s State of the State address before a joint session of the House and Senate comes […]

Protesters disrupt confirmation hearing of proposed EPA head during Trump shutdown – Bernie Sanders grills Andrew Wheeler on climate science

By Timothy Cama16 January 2019 (The Hill) – Environmental protesters on Wednesday disrupted Andrew Wheeler’s Senate confirmation hearing to be the permanent head of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The protesters objected to Republicans on the Environment and Public Works Committee scheduling the hearing, and Wheeler participating, when the EPA is closed and most employees […]

U.S. forces employees to work on oil-drilling land sales during Trump government shutdown – “A government that prioritizes fossil fuel industry profits at all costs, while American families are left out in the cold”

By Ellie Kaufman16 January 2019 (CNN) – The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is bringing back employees who were furloughed to work on sales of land for oil and gas drilling purposes in the Gulf of Mexico, according to an updated Department of Interior shutdown plan. The plan was amended on 8 January 2019. The […]

PG&E’s bankruptcy could slow California’s fight against climate change – “This is going to put the entire state of California at risk”

By Sammy Roth 15 January 2019 (Los Angeles Times) – Climate change helped fuel the deadly fires that prompted California’s largest power company to announce Monday that it would file for bankruptcy in the face of $30 billion in potential liabilities. In a grim twist, the bankruptcy of PG&E Corp. could now slow California’s efforts […]

Americans’ health at risk as shutdown slashes EPA – “It’s a nightmare”

By Oliver Milman9 January 2019 (The Guardian) – The US government shutdown has stymied environmental testing and inspections, prompting warnings that Americans’ health is being put at increasing risk as the shutdown drags on. More than 13,000 employees at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are not at work, with just 794 people deemed essential staff […]

Visitors chainsaw iconic Joshua trees in U.S. national park – “What’s going on at Joshua Tree National Park is a travesty to this nation”

By Jeanna Bryner10 January 201 (Live Science) – Joshua trees are beautiful, but humans can be pretty awful. That’s what park rangers learned during the first week or so of the partial government shutdown.Joshua Tree National Park is about the size of Delaware, but only eight law-enforcement rangers were tasked with protecting the 1,238 square […]

Interview with climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe – “A thermometer is not liberal or conservative”

By Jonathan Watts6 January 2019 (The Guardian) – Katharine Hayhoe is an atmospheric scientist and director of the Climate Science Center at Texas Tech University. She has contributed to more than 125 scientific papers and won numerous prizes for her science communication work. In 2018 she was a contributor to the US National Climate Assessment […]

A brief guide to David Bernhardt, Ryan Zinke’s replacement at the Interior Department – Three things to know about the former oil lobbyist who’s now acting Interior secretary

By Umair Irfan3 January 2019 (Vox) – Now that Ryan Zinke has resigned as the head of the Interior Department, his deputy David Bernhardt has begun serving as acting secretary. President Donald Trump said last month he would name a permanent replacement but has yet to do so. This handover of power at Interior has […]

U.S. had world’s three costliest natural disasters in 2018, and California’s Camp Fire was the worst – “Such massive wildfires appear to be occurring more frequently as a result of climate change”

By Doyle Rice8 January 2019 (USA TODAY) – Racking up an overall damage cost of $16.5 billion, the devastating and deadly Camp Fire that ravaged California in November was the world’s costliest natural disaster in 2018. The data come from a report issued Tuesday by Munich Re, a reinsurance firm. In second and third place […]

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