Food Fish On Their Way Out?

Not much of a fish feast for anyone with overfishing, pollutants in the waters, and eco-altering climate change…. Thanks to Catholic Online for the little reminder!

Food Fish On Their Way Out? was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

New Google Maps Help You Navigate The World’s Transit

New Google Maps features (googleblog)

A couple of sparkly infographics tout Google’s improvements to its public transit maps today.

Over the years, the information giant has been pretty thoughtful in publishing transit information for those who don’t or can’t travel by car. Apparently, that’s 70% of the world’s population, although just over 50% of Americans are carless, er, car-free, and only 35% of those who live in Luxembourg, the world leader for car ownership, lack automobiles.

New Google Maps transit coverage (googleblog)This May 2014 update concerns public transit routes and schedules for all the buses, trains, trams, and subways included in Google Maps. The transit data covers six continents, 64 countries, and more than 15,000 municipalities worldwide.

If you could take all the rides Google Maps now document in one day, says Google’s Public Transit product manager David Tattersall, you’d be traveling 200 million kilometers (about 125 million miles). World travelers, take note!

New Google Maps Help You Navigate The World’s Transit was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

Germany Reached Nearly 75% Renewable Power Use On Sunday

En route to its 2050 Energiewende goal of 80% of the nation’s power being supplied by renewables, especially spurred on by the phaseout of nuclear reactors, Germany broke another renewable energy record on Sunday, May 11, 2014. Europe’s biggest clean-energy market reached almost 75% renewable power market share noon on that day. As the Disruptive Renewables chart

Germany Reached Nearly 75% Renewable Power Use On Sunday was originally published on CleanTechnica.

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Drone Captures Fukushima Desolation Amid Cherry Blossoms

Cherry blossoms in Japan (ladyadventurer.co.uk)
Cherry blossoms in the foreground of Mount Fuji (image: ladyadventurer.co.uk)

So far, at least, the famed blossoming cherry trees of Japan don’t discriminate geographically. This time of year, they grace even the surroundings of nuclear power generators shaken by earthquake, tsunami, and meltdowns three years ago. Otherwise, though, the Fukushima landscape remains desolate. Despite widespread resettlement in other regions, over 15 thousand residents of the proximate area still cannot return to their homes.

Cleanup contractors cannot perform customary work on the ground because the risk of radiation from the wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power complex continues. Instead, drones do the close surveillance. You can catch some of the video here.

The Tokyo-based multicopter firm HEXaMedia sends its unpiloted flying cameras over Japan’s eastern coast to record the destruction caused by the incredible tsunami that followed the 9.0 Tohoku earthquake and led Fukushima’s live reactors to melt down.

In this footage, one drone overflying the Japanese ghost town of Tokioma captures this year’s cherry trees, bright pink amid the abandoned and useless wreckage of local civilization.

Says an observer:

“Tokioma had more than 15,800 residents across 6,000 houses, schools, and business, and all of them are still prevented from returning to their homes, pictured. A total of 300,000 people evacuated the Fukushima area on the east coast…. [As of August last year, 1,600 of these deaths were due to people living in temporary housing and not having access to hospitals or medical care.]”

Note: At least one of the YouTube posters (‪Shazzy Mazzy‬ of The News Insight) and Victoria Woollaston, the reporter who covered the drone tapes from the Daily Mail Online, appear skeptical about radiation dangers to life on earth: “many of these areas are said to be covered in radioactive soil,” “reports claim the soil and water in the region still contains high levels of radiation that makes the clean-up effort difficult.” This slanted “journalism” prompts unrealistic science denial. Tell it to the vapor and graves of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Drone Captures Fukushima Desolation Amid Cherry Blossoms was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

Towerless Buoyant Air Turbine May Expand Wind Energy’s Reach

We cover wind turbine news here on a regular basis, but now this excellent renewable technology, currently second only to solar, may be capable of going towerless. Altaeros Energies has developed a promising buoyant air turbine to harness high-altitude winds and deploy low-cost power from them. A group from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) [&hellip

Towerless Buoyant Air Turbine May Expand Wind Energy’s Reach was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

The IPCC’s Blockbuster 5th Climate Assessment

BREAKING: Late this evening (8 pm EST, or tomorrow, March 31, at 9 am in Tokyo), something large and unpleasant will hit the fan about climate change. At a press conference in Yokohama, the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will release its Fifth Assessment Report on impacts of human activities on current and [&hellip

The IPCC’s Blockbuster 5th Climate Assessment was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

Convenient Energizer PRO battery recharger


Energizer PRO battery recharger
Rechargeables outdo traditional batteries in terms of both total cost of use and environmental impact. Recharging is inexpensive and can be done many times. Yet how many people go to the trouble of using rechargeables regularly? It’s easy not to, with traditional batteries available at every checkout counter.

Energizer has found a new way to make recharging batteries more useful. Already known for the unmatched speed of its Energizer Recharge Rapid Charger (less than 15 minutes), the company has developed its first battery recharger with audible as well as visible alerts. Greater awareness is likely to prevent harmful overcharging. The product debuts in early April.

Heather Allen of Energizer makes the basic point about recharging here:

“Take AA batteries: if a family uses 120 alkaline AAs per year (toys, remotes, flashlights… mostly toys), they could accommodate the same battery power needs with eight rechargeable AAs, while saving money. One person making the switch from 120 to eight AAs in a year would save 112 AAs, but if just 10,000 people made a similar swap that number grows to more than one million AAs saved.”

Coming this spring is the first Energizer rechargeable battery charger that provides both audio and visual cues to battery charging status. Here are the charging status indicators for the new PRO:

Red – Batteries are less than half charged; audible beep when charging begins
Yellow – Batteries are between approximately a half and full charge
Green – Batteries are fully charged; audible beep upon completion

The small, convenient Energizer PRO recharger can charge either two or four AA or AAA NiMH rechargeable batteries simultaneously. It automatically shuts off when charging is complete and is ENERGY STAR®-certified. The suggested retail price is under $20.
 

Convenient Energizer PRO battery recharger was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

Sudden Danger In Forest Thaw (Video)


Vermont ice jam, March 2014
Occasional spring thaws began several weeks ago in parts of the country. As Lewis and Susan Case hiked along Felchner Brook in the placid, mid-March woods of Vermont, they thought they were just making a nice amateur video of a brief walk on a cloudy day.

Suddenly, things changed. A roar smacked into the peaceful silence, and Felchner Brook exploded with hurtling water, ice, and debris.

Tom Skilling, Chicago’s famed weathercaster and meteorologist, explains:

“Flooding brought on by ice dams can hit with frightening strength and speed–as illustrated by this video posted by Bill Morris, National Weather Weather Service-Chicago hydrologist.”

Morris, who reports on Illinois river floods and timing, obtained the terrifying thaw footage from colleagues at the National Weather Service office in Caribou, Maine.

Creek flooding can be spectacular, but river ice jams, like the one on the Delaware on January 9, 2014 (above) cause disaster in many parts of the country. When an ice jam breaks in a river, it can carry the force of a tsunami. The wave is many times bigger than in a small stream. Trees, rocks, and large ice chunks race along with the suddenly freed water. The experts conclude:

“The Cases were lucky because Felchner Brook is small, but anyone caught unawares by a sudden large ice jam release would have little to no chance of survival.”

Breaking ice jams have also been recorded during the past month of thaw in Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Montana, and Wyoming. See YouTube videos here.

Sudden Danger In Forest Thaw (Video) was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

Alps Study: Climate Change May Worsen Landslides

March 22, 2014, killer landslide near Seattle (photo: Kings County Sheriff’s Office). Last Saturday’s horrific mudslide 55 miles northeast of Seattle may unfortunately herald the shape of landmass movements to come, if climate change has its way with us. A new study in the European Alps elaborates. In a draft article for Elsevier’s Science of [&hellip

Alps Study: Climate Change May Worsen Landslides was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.

EPA And Army Corps Move Today To Safeguard Clean Water


Rural stream (Karen Arnold)

It doesn’t take rocket science to draw a line between pollutants in small streams and wetlands and water quality downstream. Today, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers have united to propose a rule that will strengthen the Clean Water Act, applied to safeguard American water quality since 1972.

The rule will improve protection of the water that one in three Americans rely on to drink. It will apply to over half of America’s streams and 20 million acres of wetlands and will close an increasingly troubling loophole in the law on cooling water permits and oil spill contingency plans, among other impacts.

Polluting industries have led challenges to the Clean Water Act all the way the Supreme Court in 2001 and 2006. Their efforts increased confusion about and complexity within administration of the Act. In September 2013, the EPA moved forward on the issues, releasing a report that makes the scientific case for the rule by demonstrating the vital connection between smaller streams and wetlands and downstream waters. Citizens submitted over 150,000 public comments in support of the findings.

Predictably, oil, gas, and electric utilities, as well as some agriculture, construction, mining, and manufacturing interests, object to the proposed EPA-Army Corps rule. Owners of thousands of miles of fuel pipelines that transect wetlands, factory farms whose manure and fertilizers run off into surface water, and Big Coal, which empties mountaintops into watercourses, oppose the measure.

The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, which represents the interests of independent not-for-profit, member-owned electric generation, transmission, and distribution utilities, has voiced some of their concerns:

“Such an expansion of Clean Water Act rules would have significant impacts on co-ops by increasing the number and costs of permits needed for distribution and transportation corridor construction and maintenance and substations.”

NRECA serves 40 million people (only 12% of the nation’s population) across the US, yet it owns 42% of America’s electric distribution lines, which cover 75% of the country. Paradoxically, the electric cooperatives are more renewable-friendly than the utility sector as a whole (11% vs 8%).

As conservative forces often do, NRECA states its intentions in an apparently environment-friendly way: “to take all appropriate actions to protect the interests of electric cooperatives and their members to ensure that any Clean Water Act requirements allow utilities as much flexibility as possible to meet environmental goals to enhance water quality through scientifically sound, cost-effective methods.” Key words of debate here: “flexibility,” “scientifically sound,” and “cost-effective.”

Environmental interests note that the commonsense clean water rule does not protect any “new” waters not historically covered under the Clean Water Act. Also, it is consistent with the Supreme Court’s narrow readings of Clean Water Act jurisdiction.

Margie Alt, executive director of Environment America, a federation of 29 statewide, citizen-funded environmental advocacy organizations, comments:

“Whether we look back to the recent spill in West Virginia that left 300,000 people without drinking water [followed intensively by PlanetSave] or ahead to the dead zones that will blight Lake Erie and the Chesapeake Bay this summer, it’s obvious that our waterways are not as clean or safe as we need them to be—-for our drinking water, for recreation, or for the health of our ecosystems and wildlife. Today’s action by the EPA will help ensure that all our waterways get the protection they need so we can enjoy them for years to come.”

Says EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy:

“We are clarifying protection for the upstream waters that are absolutely vital to downstream communities. Clean water is essential to every single American, from families who rely on safe places to swim and healthy fish to eat, to farmers who need abundant and reliable sources of water to grow their crops, to hunters and fishermen who depend on healthy waters for recreation and their work, and to businesses that need a steady supply of water for operations.”

The Huffington Post published “Clearer Protections for Clean Water,” an explanatory blog by McCarthy, less than an hour ago.

The rule should help protect American waters from harmful development and previously unchecked pollution by energy companies. The EPA-Army Corps proposal is now under review at the White House Office of Management and Budget, which must approve it before publication in the Federal Register and acceptance of public comments.

       

EPA And Army Corps Move Today To Safeguard Clean Water was originally posted on: PlanetSave. To read more from Planetsave, join thousands of others and subscribe to our free RSS feed, follow us on Facebook (also free), follow us on Twitter, or just visit our homepage.