GREENHOUSE GASES: EPA to announce that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare

An endangerment finding from the EPA would be a win for Copenhagen. More from The Hill:

EPA is expected to issue a formal finding today that greenhouse gases endanger public health and welfare, which sets the stage for the agency to regulate the emissions under its existing power.

.       .       .

The so-called endangerment finding stems from a major 2007 Supreme Court decision that enables EPA to limit the emissions if it finds that greenhouses gases are indeed a danger. The agency issued a preliminary finding in April.

The EPA announcement could also give U.S. negotiators more leverage at the international climate talks in Copenhagen that begin today, demonstrating domestic action even though Congress has not completed a final bill to curb emissions.

Of course the so-called United States Chamber of Commerce doesn’t support an endangerment finding, because the Chamber believes that climate change regulations will hurt businesses. However, the impacts of climate change—and from environmental degradation and exploitation—will cost (and is currently costing) small businesses and families. The Chamber’s positions are shortsighted and lack prudence, because their position on climate change isn’t based on the science and observations of what’s really occurring. From the New York Times:

The move gives President Obama a significant tool to combat the gases blamed for the heating of the planet even while Congress remains stalled on economy-wide global warming legislation.

The E.P.A. finding also will allow Mr. Obama to tell delegates at the United Nations climate change conference that began today in Copenhagen that the United States is moving aggressively to address the problem.

.       .       .

Industry groups and the United States Chamber of Commerce have objected to the proposed regulations, saying they would damage the economy and drive jobs overseas. Some groups are likely to file lawsuits challenging the new regulations, which could delay their effective date for some years.

Thomas J. Donohue, the president of the Chamber of Commerce, said that the endangerment finding “could result in a top-down command-and-control regime that will choke off growth by adding new mandates to virtually every major construction and renovation project.” He said that his group supports “rational” federal legislation and an international agreement to control global carbon emissions.

Update: EPA officially announces endangerment finding:

Video: EPA: Greenhouse Gases Endanger Human Health:

On the Net:

  1. EPA: Greenhouse Gases Threaten Public Health and the Environment / Science overwhelmingly shows greenhouse gas concentrations at unprecedented levels due to human activity
  2. TODAY: Administrator Jackson to Make Significant Climate Announcement
  3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

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VIDEO: Cat receives endless joy by flushing the toilet

In being an environmentally responsible pet owner, cats shouldn’t be left outside, because they’ll devastate small animal populations. However, hunting and killing small native creatures aren’t a housecat’s sole environmentally unfriendly vice. Apparently, some cats can’t resist the modern day wonder of water flushing down a toilet. In the video below, a housecat obsessively flushes the toilet, watches in amazement, and then repeats the process over and over. It’s a example of very comical cat behavior.

There’s even a song to celebrate this obsessive kitty behavior:

He’s a cat, flushing the toilet, he’s a cat . . . He does not care if he’s wasting water. He likes to push the handle and watch the water go down. He’s a cat, flushing the toilet, he’s a cat . . .

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INVASIVE SPECIES: Asian carp threaten Lake Michigan, State of Michigan may take legal action to close Ship Canal

Recently, DNA evidence by Notre Dame University scientists seems to confirm that Asian carp have breached the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ electrical fish barrier, which protects Lake Michigan from invasive species such as the Asian carp.

As a result of the recent evidence illustrating a possible barrier breach, an area of the Ship Canal was temporarily poisoned with rotenone. So far, after the poisoning of the Ship Canal, “none of the prolific two species of Asian carp, the Bighead carp and the Silver carp, have turned up in the huge fish kill that began overnight along 6 miles of the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal southwest of the city.” However, the carp may already be in Lake Michigan, so the “barriers and the effort is too little, and, or too late.”

The Asian carp problem is also prompting legal action. Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm wants Attorney General Mike Cox to “take legal action to try to close the Chicago shipping canal if other efforts to block the migration of Asian carp into Lake Michigan don’t work.”

Farmers originally used Asian carp to control overgrowth of aquatic weeds. However, the voracious carp “were introduced [by] southern fish farms more than 10 years ago [when] flooding sent the fish into the Mississippi River, where they have thrived and migrated northward, overtaking native fish along the way.” More from Reuters:

Along some stretches of the Illinois River, the carp make up 95 percent of the biomass and they are considered poor for eating or as a game fish. Silver carp, which leap into the air when disturbed by passing motorboats, have injured boaters.

Two electrical barriers in the canal were erected in 2002 and 2006 to shock any fish, particularly carp, that try to swim up the canal to Lake Michigan. The newer barrier is being switched off to perform maintenance on it.

To give themselves a window to complete the task and keep any carp at bay below the barrier, authorities dumped into the canal more than 2,000 pounds (900 kg) of the natural poison rotenone that prevents fish gills from absorbing oxygen.

The toxin, which is used as a broad-spectrum insecticide and pesticide, kills fish and freshwater snails but does not harm other animals. It dissipates within two days, though authorities planned to introduce a neutralizing agent to speed up the process.

Video: Fears mount over carp and Great Lakes

Video: Asian Carp Lake Invasions

Video: Granholm to Cox: stop the Asian carp

Video: Biologist Dr. Dan O’Keefe, a Michigan Sea Grant SW District Extention Educator, says it’s inevitable that Asian carp will breach electrical barrier and eventually reach Lake Michigan

Video: Wild Jumping Carp On Illinois River

UPDATE 1 (4 Dec. 09): Video: Bighead Asian carp found in Chicago

On the net:

  1. Asian Carp Management
  2. Asian Carp and the Great Lakes
  3. Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal Aquatic Nuisance Species Dispersal Barriers


Photo source for attribution. The author or licensor of this image does not endorse my work or me and their image is protected under an attribution license.

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RENEWABLE ENERGY: Cape Wind to negotiate deal with utility

Image: An offshore wind farm situated in the Baltic Sea near Samsø, Denmark.

The utility, National Grid, has offered to start negotiations in order to formulate a deal to purchase power from Cape Wind. At issue, is the cost of energy from the offshore wind project. If the deal is successful, it will help Cape Wind obtain funding.

If Cape Wind achieves final review, it has the possibility to become the United States’ first offshore wind farm. However, the project has been plagued with NIMBYism, politics, and most recently “the Wampanoag tribes of Mashpee and Aquinnah [claim] that Nantucket Sound should be included on the National Register of Historic places as a traditional cultural property.” More from the Boston Globe:

Yesterday, Governor Deval Patrick’s administration said the yet-to-be-built offshore wind farm has secured a long-term customer for its electricity: National Grid. It’s the kind of deal opponents had doubted the project could get.

“For Cape Wind, this is a tremendous step forward . . . [to say] yes, we can sell the power,’’ said Laurie Jodziewicz, manager of siting policy at the American Wind Energy Association, which today is wrapping up a two-day workshop in Boston on offshore wind power.

The agreement is one of several recent developments that could advance the project.

Key Massachusetts officials, including Democratic US Representative Edward J. Markey, have urged President Obama to push for federal approval of Cape Wind before next week’s United Nations climate summit in Copenhagen. World leaders could hammer out a blueprint for lowering greenhouse gas emissions and using more renewable power, such as energy from the 130 turbines Cape Wind wants to erect in Nantucket Sound.


Video via NECN


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