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Dot Earth Blog: The Adirondack Park and Conservation on a Crowding Planet

A populated park as a model for Earth in the Anthropocene. Link –  Dot Earth Blog: The Adirondack Park and Conservation on a Crowding Planet ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: The Other Climate Science GapA Populated Park and Conservation in the AnthropoceneThe Other Climate Science Gap ;

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Dot Earth Blog: The Adirondack Park and Conservation on a Crowding Planet

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World Briefing | Asia: Indonesia: A Logging Ban Is Extended

Indonesia has approved a two-year extension to a landmark ban on clearing primary rain forests and peatlands, an official said Thursday. Source article:  World Briefing | Asia: Indonesia: A Logging Ban Is Extended ; ;Related ArticlesEconomic Scene: Insurers Stray From the Conservative Line on Climate ChangeDot Earth Blog: The Other Climate Science GapInterior Proposes New Rules for Fracking on U.S. Land ;

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World Briefing | Asia: Indonesia: A Logging Ban Is Extended

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Interior Proposes New Rules for Fracking on U.S. Land

The proposal, which would allow some drilling fluids to be kept secret, did not please environmental advocates or the oil and gas industry. Originally posted here:   Interior Proposes New Rules for Fracking on U.S. Land ; ;Related ArticlesEconomic Scene: Insurers Stray From the Conservative Line on Climate ChangeWorld Briefing | Asia: Indonesia: A Logging Ban Is ExtendedDot Earth Blog: The Other Climate Science Gap ;

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Interior Proposes New Rules for Fracking on U.S. Land

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Which States Use the Most Green Energy?

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A wave of ALEC-backed bills could stall bringing more states up to snuff. California and Texas might be leading the nation’s rollout of solar and wind power, respectively, but Washington, where hydroelectric dams provide over 60 percent of the state’s energy, was the country’s biggest user of renewable power in 2011, according to new statistics released last week by the federal Energy Information Administration. Hydro continued to be the overwhelmingly dominant source of renewable power consumed nationwide, accounting for 67 percent of the total, followed by wind with 25 percent, geothermal with 4.5 percent, and solar with 3.5 percent. The new EIA data is the latest official snapshot of how states nationwide make use of renewable power, from industrial-scale generation to rooftop solar panels, and reveals an incredible gulf between leaders like Washington, California, and Oregon, and states like Rhode Island and Mississippi that use hardly any. The gap is partly explained by the relative size of states’ energy markets, but not entirely: Washington uses less power overall than New York, for example, but far outstrips it on renewables (the exact proportions won’t be available until EIA releases total state consumption figures later this month). Still, the actual availability of resources—how much sun shines or wind blows—is far less important than the marching orders passed down from statehouses to electric utilities, says Rhone Resch, head of the Solar Energy Industries Association. “Without some carrot or stick, there’s little reason to pick [renewables] up” in many states, he says; even given the quickly falling price of clean energy technology, natural gas made cheap by fracking is still an attractive option for many utilities. More than half of the 29 states that require utilities to purchase renewable power are currently considering legislation to pare back those mandates, in many cases pushed by (surprise, suprise) the American Legislative Exchange Council. “We’re opposed to these mandates, and 2013 will be the most active year ever in terms of efforts to repeal them,” ALEC energy task force director Todd Wynn recently told Bloomberg. But so far the tide seems to be turning against that campaign: This week the Minnesota legislature will consider two versions of a bill passed by the House and Senate that would require utilities to get 1-4 percent of their power from solar by 2025 (solar made up less than one percent of Minnesota’s renewable power in 2011); last month North Carolina, the same state that outlawed talking about sea level rise, surprised green energy advocates by voting down a proposal to ax the state’s renewable mandates, followed a few days later by a vote in Colorado to increase rural communities’ access to renewables. But challenges remain ahead in some of the very states that already rank relatively low for renewables consumption, including Connecticut, Missouri, and Ohio. Karin Wadsack, director of a Northern Arizona University-based project to monitor these legislative battles, says the time is now for states to start mixing in more clean energy. “If you have all these utilities sticking with gas, coal, and nuclear, then you create a situation where 20 years from now they aren’t prepared to deal with the increased climate risk,” she says. “Electricity is a huge piece of the climate puzzle, so [utilities] need to be learning what to do with renewables.” There’s always the option that Congress could set a renewables standard on the national level—a group of senators took a failed stab at one in 2010 only a few months after Republicans killed the infamous cap-and-trade bill. But don’t hold your breath, Wadsack says: “I don’t know that I would call it a pipe dream. But I wouldn’t see it happening in our current set of national priorities.”

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Which States Use the Most Green Energy?

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Which States Use the Most Green Energy?

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Economic Scene: Insurers Stray From the Conservative Line on Climate Change

A new institute, financed by the insurance industry, not only believes in global warming but also supports a carbon tax to combat it. View original article: Economic Scene: Insurers Stray From the Conservative Line on Climate Change ; ;Related ArticlesVIDEO: 97% of Climate Scientists Can’t Be WrongSenate Panel Advances Nominee for E.P.A.Protected: Meet The Climate Trolls: a Three-Part Climate Desk Series ;

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Economic Scene: Insurers Stray From the Conservative Line on Climate Change

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Obama may delay Keystone decision until 2014

Obama may delay Keystone decision until 2014

Jim Barber

Kick … kick … kick …

The Obama administration has been procrastinating on its decision on the Keystone XL pipeline for years — and now comes word that it may kick the can even further down the road. From Reuters:

The Obama administration is unlikely to make a decision on the Canada-to-Nebraska Keystone XL pipeline until late this year as it painstakingly weighs the project’s impact on the environment and on energy security, a U.S. official and analysts said on Friday.

The decision may not be made until November, December or even early 2014, said a U.S. official … who did not want to be named given the sensitive nature of the project.

Analysts agreed that a decision would not be made by this summer as the State Department had suggested when it issued an environmental review on the pipeline on March 1.

If Obama can just delay until Jan. 20, 2017, then finally it’ll be somebody else’s problem.

Lisa Hymas is senior editor at Grist. You can follow her on

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Obama may delay Keystone decision until 2014

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Cutting Carbon Dioxide Isn’t Enough

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We have to invest in technology to remove the CO2 already in the atmosphere. ishmatt/Flickr According to data being gathered at the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii, which has been monitoring atmospheric carbon dioxide since 1958, the CO2 concentration in the Earth’s atmosphere officially exceeded the 400 parts per million mark last week, a value not attained on Earth since humans were first human. This ominous milestone comes at a time when the evidence that human activity is resulting in unprecedented climate change is now overwhelming. More important, perhaps, even if all greenhouse gas production ceased immediately, this elevated carbon dioxide level would persist in the atmosphere for thousands of years. Indeed, even moving relatively quickly toward a carbon-neutral economy will still result in a net increase in CO2 in the atmosphere for the foreseeable future. But that is moot, because we are nowhere close to moving quickly in this regard anyway. Fossil fuel reserves have effectively increased, due to improved technologies for extraction, and investment in alternative energy sources has been limited due to artificially low prices on carbon-based energy. As a result, 2012 was likely another record year for human-induced CO2 production. To keep reading, click here.

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Cutting Carbon Dioxide Isn’t Enough

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Dot Earth Blog: More on a Sensitive Climate Question

A fresh look at studies finding a less potent warming from the continuing buildup of greenhouse gases. From:  Dot Earth Blog: More on a Sensitive Climate Question ; ;Related ArticlesMore on a Sensitive Climate QuestionDot Earth Blog: My Lucky StrokeDot Earth Blog: Fresh Analysis of the Pace of Warming and Sea-Level Rise ;

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Dot Earth Blog: More on a Sensitive Climate Question

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Bend, Stretch, Reach, Teach, Reveal, Reflect, Rejoice, Repeat

A short guide to limiting big regrets on the human journey. This article is from:  Bend, Stretch, Reach, Teach, Reveal, Reflect, Rejoice, Repeat ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: Bend, Stretch, Reach, Teach, Reveal, Reflect, Rejoice, RepeatDot Earth Blog: Fresh Analysis of the Pace of Warming and Sea-Level RiseFresh Analysis of the Pace of Warming and Sea-Level Rise ;

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Bend, Stretch, Reach, Teach, Reveal, Reflect, Rejoice, Repeat

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Disease Threatens Florida’s Citrus Industry

Efforts to find a way to stop the spread of citrus greening have failed, and the damage is growing increasingly extensive, especially to oranges. Originally posted here –  Disease Threatens Florida’s Citrus Industry ; ;Related ArticlesPolitico to Test a Pay Wall With Some Readers of Its SiteRepublicans Block Vote on Nominee to Lead E.P.A.Staten Island Residents Want City to Do More to Eliminate Post-Storm Mold in Homes ;

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Disease Threatens Florida’s Citrus Industry

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