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  • Do Big Oil and Big Tobacco share a similar smokescreen?

    Stepping into the Heartland Institute’s “2008 International Conference on Climate Change” was like walking into an alternate reality. To the rest of us, climate science is settled, the solutions are sensible, and the time for action is now. But in the Marriott Grand Marquis Times Square, the only science comes from industry-funded think tanks; climate […]

  • First wolverine in 30 years spotted in California

    A camera array in California's Sierra Nevada mountains captured confirmed evidence of a wolverine for the first time in more than 30 years, a Forest Service official told colleagues yesterday.

    The photo was taken in a relatively pristine part of Tahoe National Forest that Senator Barbara Boxer and Representative Hilda Solis have proposed to protect as a Wilderness Study Area under their California Wild Heritage Act.

    wolverine

  • Grand Canyon flood supported by feds, criticized by park officials

    Federal flood control managers will let loose a rush of water through the Grand Canyon on Wednesday, which the feds say is necessary to restore sand banks and side pools, and National Park Service officials say is unnecessary, aimed at pleasing hydropower companies, and could irreparably destroy the habitat it’s meant to restore.

  • Lessons the United States can learn from the drought in Australia

    drybed-small.jpgThe brutal drought has ended over large parts of Australia -- and consumers are obsessively reducing their demand for water -- and yet water "prices are set to double in the next five to 10 years," Water Services Association Australia executive officer Ross Young told a drought briefing in Canberra.

    The focus on water conservation has never been higher:

    Water is a dinner table topic. People are quite passionate about water and they are quite concerned about water in the context of climate change.

    And the results are impressive:

  • Americans reduce gas consumption as prices continue to rise

    Shocked by high gas prices? You're not alone: according to the lead story in today's Los Angeles Times, prices are at a record high.

    The gravity-defying price of oil shot through another barrier Monday by briefly touching $103.95 a barrel in New York trading, the highest cost ever for black gold even after adjusting for inflation.

    But the experts say it's not so much a rise in demand that is pushing up the cost, but a fall in the value of the dollar.

    "I don't think it's a coincidence that the price of oil hits an all-time high around the time that the dollar hits an all-time low against the euro," said Ken Medlock, an energy studies fellow at Rice University's Baker Institute. "The amount of dollars you have to give up for a barrel of oil is going to increase because the dollar is purchasing less and less."

    In response, according to an excellent story in Monday's Wall Street Journal, Americans have at last began to turn against gasoline.

  • Ralph Nader picks running mate, ‘doomsday’ seed vault opens in Arctic, and more

    Read the articles mentioned at the end of the podcast: Mate? … Check An Eye for a Buckeye The Damages Done How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Vault Well, Shoot Read the articles mentioned at the end of the podcast: Pearly Writes Bruce Almighty

  • California waiver update

    Earlier this year I wrote about a new (EPA-sponsored) study showing that increased CO2 in the atmosphere is directly correlated with increased ozone, particulates, and carcinogens in the air. Since California suffers disproportionately from those traditional air pollutants, it follows that California does have "extraordinary and compelling conditions" in the face of climate change, and […]

  • USDA head suggests harvesting switchgrass on conservation land

    Department of Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer said Tuesday that it would be a “great idea” to allow farmers to grow and harvest biofuel-bound switchgrass on land currently set aside as wildlife habitat. More than 34 million acres in the U.S. are in the Conservation Reserve Program, which pays landowners to convert cropland to native grasses […]

  • Volkswagen’s new entry to the clean diesel fleet

    Enough election talk, it's time to put some honest-to-goodness car news in the Gristmill (so this one's for you, JMG!).

    Golf deisel hybrid coming

    Volkswagen is about to unveil a new Golf hybrid, said to feature an all-electric mode at low speed and regenerative braking to compete with the Prius and its ilk. The difference is that this is a diesel-electric hybrid, which VW says will get 69 mpg and exceed Europe's (and California's) tough emissions standards.

    The point is somewhat moot, as this internal-combusion-perpetuating monster will not be for sale in the U.S. But is this just another indicator that clean diesel cars are greener than hybrids?

    Perhaps. But filling one of these new Golfs with locally produced, organic, fair-trade biodiesel made from waste vegetable oil by a worker-owned biorefinery will certainly help.

  • EPA unions withdraw from cooperation agreement

    Union local presidents representing the vast majority of U.S. EPA employees have withdrawn from a cooperation agreement with their Bush-appointed supervisors, claiming “abuses of our good nature and trust.” In a letter to EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson, the unionized workers wrote that he retaliates against whistleblowers and ignores principles of scientific integrity “whenever political direction […]