Skip to content
Grist home
Grist home
Grist home
  • An influx of jellies in strange places is not so hard to explain

    jellyfish Over Thanksgiving, I came across a news story that may represent the perfect storm of issues plaguing the oceans. A salmon farm in Northern Ireland was wiped out by a huge swarm of mauve stingers (Pelagia noctiluca), a jelly usually found in the warm Mediterranean sea.

    In a 35-foot-deep, 10-square-mile swath, the jellies stung and killed 100,000 salmon before workers could reach the pens. It must have been quite a sight. The jelly's scientific name means "light of the sea," and the creatures give off an eerie, purple-red glow. I can only imagine that, at that scale, the sea looked possessed.

    The incident may seem strange and isolated, but it touches on three major issues facing the oceans.

  • Necessity is the mother of invention … and some really bad ideas

    Mein Gott. I was so hoping that this article was from The Onion or something. Porta-nukes will power oil-shale melters, because there's just no topping the American spirit -- the willingness to take a truly abysmal idea (oil shales) and make it worse:

  • Chinese officials deny Three Gorges Dam role in landslide

    Since a landslide killed 31 people near China’s Three Gorges Dam last week, officials have been rushing to cover their bums. While acknowledging that the massive energy project’s effect on geologic activity must be monitored, a project bigwig pledged that “there will not be any major damage to the life and property of the people […]

  • U.N. hails success of billion-tree planting program

    Nature-lovin’ nations around the world planted more than 1 billion trees during 2007, meeting a kinda arbitrary goal set by the U.N. last November. The effort, boosted by Ethiopia’s planting of 700 million trees, “is a further sign of the breathtaking momentum witnessed this year on the challenge for this generation — climate change,” said […]

  • Per-person gas consumption has decreased in the last year

    On the heels of the year's biggest travel week, some interesting news:

    Consumers purchased an average 9.32 million barrels of gasoline a day in the week ended Nov. 23, down 1.7 percent from the same week last year ... It was the fifth consecutive week that demand at the pump dropped compared with a year earlier.

    The price [of gas] was 38 percent higher than a year earlier.

    That's right, population rose, but gas consumption fell, year-over-year. Measured per person, that's a decline of about 3 percent -- not huge, but still noteworthy.

    So does this mean that higher prices are starting to take a bite out of our appetite for fuel? That a slowing economy is making consumers tighten their belts? Either way, as long as it isn't a temporary blip in the data, it's a trend worth paying attention to.

  • Coal industry sponsors another presidential debate

    Tonight’s CNN/YouTube debate for the Republican presidential candidates is, like the previous CNN debate for Dems, brought to you by the coal industry. From ThinkProgress: Sponsorship of tonight’s debate appears aimed at influencing Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (R), who is leading a "crusade against coal." Crist has unveiled a plan to reduce his state’s carbon […]

  • What folks are saying about the upcoming Bali talks

    Representatives from nearly 200 nations will gather in Bali, Indonesia, next week to discuss what’s to be done about this whole climate-change thing once the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012. So what’s the word on the street? United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has been clear about his expectations: “The world’s scientists have spoken, clearly […]

  • Cheap, possibly green PC hot item at Wal-Mart

    Wal-Mart has always been a place of consumer frenzy at the beginning of the holiday shopping season, and this year is no exception. What's different is that one of the items flying off the shelf faster than they can restock it is the "Everex gPC," a cheap (less than $200) desktop computer.

  • Tell us what you think about the presidential forum

    The video from Grist’s presidential forum on climate is now available on a page that accepts comments. So go comment! One thing to watch for: check out what Hillary says at 6:33, and compare to what Edwards says at around 35:00. Are they right?

  • 2007 likely to be sixth warmest year on record, say researchers

    The year 2007 is likely to tie with 2006 as the sixth warmest year on record, say British researchers who provide data to the World Meteorological Association. The researchers had predicted a year ago that 2007 might be the hottest evah, but it’s instead likely to come in behind 1998, 2005, 2003, 2002, and 2004. […]