Environment
- • 100%www.bbc.com Amazon drought: 'We've never seen anything like this'
This year's heat and drought in the Amazon intensify worries that it is approaching a tipping point.
>The Amazon rainforest experienced its worst drought on record in 2023. Many villages became unreachable by river, wildfires raged and wildlife died. Some scientists worry events like these are a sign that the world’s biggest forest is fast approaching a point of no return. > >As the cracked and baking river bank towers up on either side of us, Oliveira Tikuna is starting to have doubts about this journey. He’s trying to get to his village, in a metal canoe built to navigate the smallest creeks of the Amazon. > >Bom Jesus de Igapo Grande is a community of 40 families in the middle of the forest and has been badly affected by the worst drought recorded in the region. > >There was no water to shower. Bananas, cassava, chestnuts and acai crops spoiled because they can’t get to the city fast enough. > >And the head of the village, Oliveira’s father, warned anyone elderly or unwell to move closer to town, because they are dangerously far from a hospital. > >Oliveira wanted to show us what was happening. He warned it would be a long trip. > >But as we turn from the broad Solimões river into the creek that winds towards his village, even he is taken aback. In parts it’s reduced to a trickle no more than 1m (3.3ft) wide. Before long, the boat is lodged in the river bed. It’s time to get out and pull. > >. . .
- www.minnpost.com On 'Cancer Road,' a group of southeastern Minnesota families ask if nitrate exposure is to blame - MinnPost
The amount of nitrogen applied to U.S. corn crops has increased 120 million pounds annually since 2000, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).
In Minnesota alone, authorities in 2017 found elevated levels of nitrates in 80 public water systems. In Iowa, 55,000 drinking water wells were contaminated with elevated nitrate concentrations, according to 2017 data. Private water wells serve about one-third of Wisconsin families; state authorities in 2022 found 10 percent of them exceed the 10 ppm nitrate safety limit.
- grist.org Electrifying your home is about to get a lot cheaper
Rebates from the IRA could help low- and middle-income households save thousands on heat pumps, weatherstripping, and other efficiency improvements.
- • 100%
'Eco-friendly' straws contain potentially toxic chemicals – posing a threat to people and wildlife.
theconversation.com ‘Eco-friendly’ straws contain potentially toxic chemicals – posing a threat to people and wildlifePaper and bamboo straws contain ‘forever chemicals’ – maybe threatening the health of people and wildlife.
- minnesotareformer.com U.S. Supreme Court has put precious wetlands in peril • Minnesota Reformer
The court removed isolated wetlands as Waters of the United States. Yet scientists have documented that most waters — including isolated wetlands — are connected.
The U.S. Supreme Court court recently struck down the EPA’s definition of waters of the United States, or WOTUS, the term for what waters and wetlands the federal government had authority to regulate under the Clean Water Act.
- www.pewresearch.org Why Some Americans Do Not See Urgency on Climate Change
As the Earth’s temperature continues to rise, climate change remains a lower priority for some Americans, and a subset of the public rejects that it’s happening at all. To better understand the perspectives of those who see less urgency to address climate change, the Center conducted a series of in-...
My conclusion: these people are beyond help.
How's the air in your area? Eastern Iowa is gross at the moment.
- • 100%phys.org Fungi stores a third of carbon from fossil fuel emissions and could be essential to reaching net zero, new study reveals
Mycorrhizal fungi have been supporting life on land for at least 450 million years by helping to supply plants with soil nutrients essential for growth. In recent years, scientists have found that in addition to forming symbiotic relationships with nearly all land plants, these fungi are important c...
cross-posted from: https://midwest.social/post/607801
> . . . > >In a meta-analysis published June 5 in the journal Current Biology, scientists estimate that as much as 13.12 gigatons of carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2e) fixed by terrestrial plants is allocated to mycorrhizal fungi annually—roughly equivalent to 36% of yearly global fossil fuel emissions. > >Because 70% to 90% of land plants form symbiotic relationships with mycorrhizal fungi, researchers have long surmised that there must be a large amount of carbon moving into the soil through their networks. > >"We always suspected that we may have been overlooking a major carbon pool," says author Heidi Hawkins, research lead at Conservation South Africa and research associate on plant-soil-microbe interactions at the University of Cape Town. "Understandably, much focus has been placed on protecting and restoring forests as a natural way to mitigate climate change. But little attention has been paid to the fate of the vast amounts of carbon dioxide that are moved from the atmosphere during photosynthesis by those plants and sent below ground to mycorrhizal fungi." > > . . .
Would it be more Eco Friendly to get an old, extremely rusted bicycle serviced up properly, or to just buy a new bicycle?
- • 100%palmoildetectives.com Research about boycotts: do they work and why participate in them?
Corporates, certification lobbyists and all individuals with a financial stake in the profitability of corporate entities will naturally decry that boycotts are a waste of time and ineffective. How…
- • 100%www.theguardian.com This ‘climate-friendly’ fuel comes with an astronomical cancer risk
Almost half of products cleared so far under a new US federal ‘biofuels’ program are not, in fact, biofuels
- • 100%www.technologyreview.com A startup says it’s begun releasing particles into the atmosphere, in an effort to tweak the climate
Make Sunsets is already attempting to earn revenue for geoengineering, a move likely to provoke widespread criticism.
- www.latimes.com Colorado River crisis is so bad, lakes Mead and Powell are unlikely to refill in our lifetimes
One California water manager says Colorado River reservoirs aren't likely to refill. Scientists agree that the region needs to plan for a drier future.
- www.theguardian.com Colombia announces halt on fossil fuel exploration for a greener economy
The minister for mines, Irene Vélez, told world leaders the country will shift away from fossil fuels to begin a sustainable chapter
- www.commondreams.org Despite Net-Zero Vows, Wall Street 'Climate Arsonists' Still Pumping Billions Into Fossil Fuels | Common Dreams
"It is business as usual for most banks and investors who continue to support fossil fuel developers without any restrictions, despite their high-profile commitments to carbon neutrality."
- www.washingtonpost.com How dark money groups led Ohio to redefine gas as ‘green energy’
Conservative, pro-gas groups waged a covert campaign for Ohio to redefine natural gas as a source of "green energy." They hope other states follow suit.
- www.washingtonpost.com Arizona city cuts off a neighborhood’s water supply amid drought
Historic shortages of Colorado River water and a bitter political feud have conspired to leave a Scottsdale, Ariz., neighborhood in a desperate scramble to find enough water to sustain themselves.
- grist.org Exxon's models predicting climate change were spot on — 40 years ago
A new study finds that Exxon’s projections were as good as any academic's.
- www.theguardian.com Environmental group sues New York for approving crypto mining facility
Lawsuit argues move to allow energy-intensive cryptocurrency miner to take over power plant violates state’s 2019 climate law
- www.theguardian.com How did we save the ozone layer?
A UN report has found the Earth’s ozone layer is on course to be healed within the next 40 years. Madeleine Finlay speaks to atmospheric scientist Paul Newman about this momentous achievement and whether it really is the end of the story
- www.washingtonpost.com Analysis | California’s weather is what climate change looks like
The state was in drought. Then it was underwater. Welcome to the new normal.
- www.politico.eu It’s gettin’ hot in here: Europe’s year of climate extremes
2022 was Europe’s second-warmest year on record and brought its hottest-ever summer.
- www.nytimes.com U.S. Carbon Emissions Grew in 2022 (Published 2023)
Emissions ticked up 1.3 percent last year, even as renewables surpassed coal.