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Credit –
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A new study sees forests slowly creeping north. Courtesy NASA Observant people who’ve driven through Canada their entire lives may have noticed a shift in their natural surroundings. That is, it’s greener: A huge portion of the country, roughly equal to the area of the entire United States, is sprouting thick, luscious new coats of trees and bushland. Scientists monitoring the Northern American landmass from space have seen it happen over the past three decades, and now they’ve released data fingering climate change for the unusual boom in vegetation. Writing in Nature Climate Change, researchers with the NASA-funded study say that winters above the U.S.-Canada border are warming up quicker than the summers. That’s causing the seasons to blend together, thawing out the ground for longer periods of time and supporting an eruption of “vigorously productive vegetation” covering about 3.5 million square miles. This burgeoning green bandana wrapped around America’s forehead is making the landscape surrounding Canadian cities look more like that of their American brethren. Here’s how one of the researchers describes it: The temperature and vegetation at northern latitudes increasingly resemble those found several degrees of latitude farther south as recently as 30 years ago…. “Arctic plant growth during the early 1980s reference period equaled that of lands north of 64 degrees north. Today, just 30 years later, it equals that of lands above 57 degrees north – a reduction in vegetation seasonality of about seven degrees south in latitude,” says co-author Prof. Terry Chapin, Professor Emeritus, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. The change equates to a distance of approximately 480 miles southward. How’s that? Over at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, Compton Tucker, who participated in the study, says that it’s “like Winnipeg, Manitoba, moving to Minneapolis-Saint Paul in only 30 years.” The flight center’s computer-visualization gurus have put together this neat map of the growth explosion, which has infested 34 to 41 percent of the north’s vegetated lands. Green and blue areas represent new plantlife, orange and red show decreases in vegetation and yellow means there’s been no measurable change in the past three decades: Courtesy NASA So is now the time for Canadian loggers to throw their chainsaws in the air with glee? Not really. There are still plenty of variables that could hobble or shift the vegetation eruption over coming decades. These are highly dependent on how climate change could disrupt ecosystems: Harsher droughts during the summer could take their toll on tree health, for instance, as could more frequent and widespread wildfires. There’s also the possibility of ramped-up infestations by plant-killing pests and fungi, which are likely to love a warmer, greenhouse-gas flooded climate.
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Climate Change Is Making Canada Look More Like the United States
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Climate Change Is Making Canada Look More Like the United States

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With year-round high temperatures and less than two inches of rain on average a month, the desert town of Lancaster, Calif., just north of Los Angeles, seems like a great place for solar. But Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris isn’t taking any chances (which is exactly what you would expect from a mayor named R. Rex Parris).
Parris, a Republican, is “hell-bent on branding his sprawling Antelope Valley community not just as the solar capital of California but as the ‘solar energy capital of the world,’” according to Mother Nature Network.
The mayor is proposing a zoning change that would require houses built after Jan. 1, 2014, to include solar-power systems. Lancaster has long been a solar leader, but Parris is trying to take it to a whole ‘nother level, pending the city council’s vote.
The zoning changes would also streamline permitting for solar installations, and would implement a few other interesting requirements. For instance, as GreenTech Media reports, model homes in developments would have to display the kinds of solar available to different home designs, and developers building housing tracts in phases would need to build each phase’s solar capacity before moving on to the next phase.
Builders could also qualify by buying solar credits from other generating facilities, but they’d have to be within the city of Lancaster.
“I want to offer the builders some flexibility,” Parris told ReWire. “New developments require catchbasins for flood runoff, and the builders could put the solar panels there if they choose. Or they could use rooftops. Whatever works.”
“I believe global warming is going to be solved in neighborhoods, not by nations,” Parris continued. “I want Lancaster to be part of that.”
In an address at the World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi in January, the mayor acknowledged the flack he might get from the building industry: “We will just have to take the heat.” R. Rex Parris did not, in fact, drop the mic after that comment, but he really should have.
Susie Cagle writes and draws news for Grist. She also writes and draws tweets for
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California town could require solar power on every new house

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Less than two months ago, The New York Times dissolved its environment desk, eliminating its two environment editor positions and reassigning those editors and seven reporters.
Now the paper is swinging the hatchet again, shutting down the Green blog that had been home to original environmental reporting every weekday. The news was announced in a brief post on the blog today:
The Times is discontinuing the Green blog, which was created to track environmental and energy news and to foster lively discussion of developments in both areas. This change will allow us to direct production resources to other online projects. But we will forge ahead with our aggressive reporting on environmental and energy topics, including climate change, land use, threatened ecosystems, government policy, the fossil fuel industries, the growing renewables sector and consumer choices.
The paper says environmental policy news will move to the Caucus blog and energy technology news will move to the Bits blog.
But a Times insider tells Grist that the decision probably means an end to the significant amount of freelance reporting that appeared in the Green blog.
The insider, who’s not authorized to speak on the record about the blog’s closure, says, “I’m not 100 percent sure that we’re going to spend as much time on the environment as in the past. To a large extent that depends on the news. The paper is plastic — it reorganizes itself to meet the requirements of the world around us.”
With that world getting warmer and weirder by the day, there shouldn’t be any shortage of climate and environmental news to report. If the Gray Lady is serious about keeping her green tint, that is.
Lisa Hymas is senior editor at Grist. You can follow her on
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