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Inside Yingli, the Giant Chinese Solar Company Sponsoring the World Cup

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You’ve seen their logos on the sidelines, now get a peak inside the company trying to transform the world. It takes about two hours by car from the Chinese capital Beijing to get to the smog-blanketed city of Baoding. I don’t mean to be rude, but it’s nothing much to speak of, typical of the Northeast’s expanse of industrial wastelands, threaded together by super-highways. So we were surprised to find that Baoding—where air pollution registers at hazardous levels for more than a quarter of the year—was also home to the sprawling campus of the world’s top solar panel manufacturer, Yingli. We had landed, it seemed, in the very epicenter of China’s clean tech revolution. After weeks of negotiations, my colleague Jaeah Lee and I were finally granted access to film this exclusive footage at Yingli’s headquarters in the fall of 2013. What awaited inside blew our socks off: acres of high-tech solar wizardry attended to by an impressive fleet of skilled workers, and an understandably boastful management. In the video above, we take you behind-the-scenes of Yingli, and put a face to the name you’ve been seeing in the background of World Cup games: In 2010, Yingli became the first renewable energy company, and the first Chinese company, to partner with the tournament.

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Inside Yingli, the Giant Chinese Solar Company Sponsoring the World Cup

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Inside Yingli, the Giant Chinese Solar Company Sponsoring the World Cup

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Protecting Parrotfish on the Path to a Caribbean Reef Revival

Marine scientists see parrotfish protection as a vital step toward restoration of Caribbean reefs after decades of devastation. Source:   Protecting Parrotfish on the Path to a Caribbean Reef Revival ; ;Related ArticlesEcology in the Age of Us – Double-Decker River InvadersKeeping Track of Hurricane ArthurThe Agriculture Secretary Sees a Smart (Phone) Solution to GMO Labeling Fight ;

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Protecting Parrotfish on the Path to a Caribbean Reef Revival

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We’re Fishing the Oceans Dry. It’s Time to Reconsider Fish Farms.

Mother Jones

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When I meet Kenny Belov mid-morning at San Francisco’s Fisherman’s Wharf, the boats that would normally be out at sea chasing salmon sit tethered to their docks. The steady breeze coursing through the bay belies choppier conditions farther out—so rough that the local fishermen threw in the towel for the fifth morning in a row. Belov scans the horizon as he explains this, feet away from the warehouse of his sustainable seafood company, TwoXSea. Because his business hinges on what local fishermen can bring in, he’s used to coping with wild fish shortages.

But unlike these fishermen, Belov has a stash of treasure in his warehouse, as he soon shows me: a golf-cart-size container of plump trout, their glossy bodies still taut from rigor mortis. The night before, Belov drove north to Humboldt to help “chill kill” the fish by submerging them live into barrels of slushy ice water. Belov can count on shipments of these McFarland Springs trout every week—because he helped grow them himself on a farm.

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We’re Fishing the Oceans Dry. It’s Time to Reconsider Fish Farms.

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ScienceTake | Navigating Air and Water

For flying and swimming creatures obstructions can be something to avoid, or reference points to keep nearby. Excerpt from:  ScienceTake | Navigating Air and Water ; ;Related ArticlesOur Inability To Deal With Climate Change Is Going to Kill the PenguinsThese Maps Show How Many Brutally Hot Days You Will Suffer When You’re OldHardcore Capitalists Warn That Climate Change Is A Big Deal For American Businesses ;

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ScienceTake | Navigating Air and Water

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The Next Generation of GM Crops Has Arrived

And so has the controversy. Maciek/Flickr The first of a new generation of genetically modified crops is poised to win government approval in the United States, igniting a controversy that may continue for years, and foreshadowing the future of genetically modified crops. The agribusiness industry says the plants—soy and corn engineered to tolerate two herbicides, rather than one—are a safe, necessary tool to help farmers fight so-called superweeds. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Agriculture appear to agree. However, many health and environmental groups say the crops represent yet another step on what they call a pesticide treadmill: an approach to farming that relies on ever-larger amounts of chemical use, threatening to create even more superweeds and flood America’s landscapes with potentially harmful compounds. Public comments on the Environmental Protection Agency’s draft review of the crops will be accepted until June 30. As of now, both the EPA and USDA’s reviews favor approval. Their final decisions are expected later this summer. To keep reading, click here. Credit – The Next Generation of GM Crops Has Arrived Related Articles“Almost Everything It Wanted”There Are 1,401 Uninspected High-Risk Oil and Gas Wells.Here’s What the Battle Over Iraqi Oil Means for America

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The Next Generation of GM Crops Has Arrived

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Greenpeace Executive to Commute by Train Instead of Plane

Move follows Guardian revelations about Pascal Husting’s flights from home in Luxembourg to offices in Amsterdam. Kitty Terwolbeck/Flickr Greenpeace has said its international programme director will no longer commute to work by plane. Mike Townsley, head of communications at Greenpeace International, said that Pascal Husting would no longer travel 250 miles from Luxembourg to Amsterdam by plane several times a month, but would take the train instead. In a statement, Husting said: “To be frank I’m embarrassed, it was a misjudgment, there’s no doubt about it. It was meant to be a temporary arrangement so I could do the job and be with my family because my kids are so young, but that’s not good enough. The job ended up lasting longer than I expected it would, but I should have been taking the train from day one. That’s happening now.” On Monday, the Guardian revealed details of the flights, which John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK, defended in a blogpost. “As for Pascal’s air travel. Well it’s a really tough one. Was it the right decision to allow him to use air travel to try to balance his job with the needs of his family for a while?” To keep reading, click here. Original article:   Greenpeace Executive to Commute by Train Instead of Plane ; ;Related Articles“Almost Everything It Wanted”There Are 1,401 Uninspected High-Risk Oil and Gas Wells.Why David Brat is Completely Wrong About Climate Science ;

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Greenpeace Executive to Commute by Train Instead of Plane

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“Almost Everything It Wanted”

A slight setback at the Supreme Court doesn’t change the fact that we’re winning the war on carbon pollution. gvgoebel/Flickr The political war surrounding the government’s efforts to limit emissions is ending not with a bang but a whimper. “It bears mention that EPA is getting almost everything it wanted in this case,” Justice Antonin Scalia said on Monday while announcing the 5–4 verdict in Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA. Technically, though, the ruling was a slight loss for the EPA. The majority found that the agency’s efforts to force any fixed operation that emits pollutants to get permission before it expands was an overreach of the agency’s authority. But the ruling also upheld the ability of the EPA to force power plants and other operations that emit pollutants to adhere to its new standards. The way Scalia saw it, the decision lets the EPA regulate 83 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, instead of the 86 percent it could regulate under the authority it abrogated unto itself. “To permit the extra 3 percent, however, we would have to recognize a power in EPA and other government agencies to revise clear statutory terms,” Scalia said, adding that would contradict “the principle that Congress, not the president, makes the law.” To keep reading, click here. Source:  “Almost Everything It Wanted” ; ;Related ArticlesThere Are 1,401 Uninspected High-Risk Oil and Gas Wells.Why David Brat is Completely Wrong About Climate ScienceBipartisan Report Tallies High Toll on Economy From Global Warming ;

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“Almost Everything It Wanted”

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There Are 1,401 Uninspected High-Risk Oil and Gas Wells.

The government is failing to conduct key safety inspections on new oil and gas wells on federal and Native American land. Oil covers the ground after a 2010 well blowout near Cheyenne, Wyoming. The state leads the nation for uninspected wells on federal land. (The inspection status of this particular well is unknown.) AP Johnson County, Wyoming, is the kind of remote, quiet Western community where life revolves around cattle—it was the site of an infamous 19th-century armed battle between cowboys and suspected cattle rustlers. The county ranks only 11th statewide for oil production, but it holds the No. 1 ranking nationwide for a more ignominious distinction: It has 249 new, high-risk oil and gas wells that the federal government has failed to inspect for compliance with safety and environmental standards. Johnson County may have the most uninspected wells, but it’s far from the only place where the problem exists. In fact, of all 3,486 oil and gas wells drilled on federal and Native American land from 2009 to 2012 that were identified by the Bureau of Land Management as high risk for pollution, 40 percent were not inspected at the most important stage of their development, according to records the BLM provided to Climate Desk. “In a perfect world, we’d love to get to all those wells,” said Steven Wells, chief of the BLM’s Fluid Minerals Division. “Unfortunately we’ve been fighting an uphill battle. We hope that at some point we’ll be able to catch up.” The map and chart below identify where these wells are located, by county: In May, the Government Accountability Office estimated that an even larger share of new wells on federal land—57 percent—were not inspected. While the revised 40 percent figure, which was first reported by the Associated Press, is lower, it’s “still not a very good number,” acknowledged BLM spokesperson Bev Winston. Between 2009 and 2012, the BLM tagged 3,486 new oil and gas wells as “high-priority,” meaning they are deserving of special scrutiny because of their proximity to ecologically sensitive areas like watersheds and forests, or because they tap into geologically volatile formations that increase the likelihood of an explosion or toxic gas leak. The data includes both conventional and unconventional wells and does not indicate how many of the wells were hydraulically fractured, or fracked. According to the GAO report, the agency’s own rules call for all high-priority wells on federal and Native American land to be inspected during the drilling stage. That’s the only time when key facets of a well’s construction—whether the well casing is properly sealed, or whether a blowout preventer is correctly installed, for example—can be adequately inspected. Once the well is drilled, retroactive inspection becomes difficult or impossible, according to a BLM engineer. Because the window for drilling inspections at any given well opens and closes so quickly, the BLM is often spread too thin to get to all of them, the engineer said. Some wells receive inspections later on to check the functioning of their machinery, but the drilling stage is the only opportunity to scrutinize a well’s construction. Wells agreed that BLM field offices are forced to triage their inspection efforts due to a shortage of boots on the ground. The staffing problem has only gotten worse in recent years, he said, as federal budget cuts have coincided with aggressive efforts by the booming energy industry to hire the best engineers away from government jobs. “We’re scattered, and you can’t be everywhere at once,” Wells said. Wyoming led the nation with the highest proportion of uninspected wells. Although the state was one of the nation’s top oil producers from 2009 to 2012, 45 percent of its new, high-priority wells drilled during that window were not inspected. Wyoming is the state with the most BLM-managed wells, Wells said, so “just by sheer numbers, they have the most number of wells to miss.” See the article here: There Are 1,401 Uninspected High-Risk Oil and Gas Wells. Related ArticlesWhy David Brat is Completely Wrong About Climate ScienceHurricane Cristina Just Set A Scary RecordHere’s What the Battle Over Iraqi Oil Means for America

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There Are 1,401 Uninspected High-Risk Oil and Gas Wells.

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