A number of Latin American countries are ramping up their adoption of electric buses this year, with Chile leading the way. The country recently added 200 new electric buses to its fleet, with an expected 500 more to follow next year, as it aims to have a fully electric public transport system by 2040.
Following what goes on with oil and gas exploitation in and around Adrian, Michigan since 2013 - and how these events in our little city connect to the global environmental situation... - with the occasional sidetrack to other related environmental issues in Lenawee county, Michigan and how those relate to global issues.
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Electric buses surge in Latin America, Chile all-electric by 2040 - Electrek
Strategic lawsuit against public participation - Wikipedia
A strategic lawsuit against public participation (SLAPP) is a lawsuit that is intended to censor, intimidate, and silence critics by burdening them with the cost of a legal defense until they abandon their criticism or opposition.
Strategic lawsuit against public participation - WikipediaMichigan and other red states have no anti-SLAPP laws! Shame!
For centuries the rivers sustained Aboriginal culture. Now they are dry, elders despair | Australia news | The Guardian
Driving across a bone-dry riverbed at Walgett, it’s easy to believe the worst predictions of climate disaster are happening as the temperature gauge on the car dashboard hits 49C.
Two rivers meet outside Walgett in north-west New South Wales: the Barwon and the Namoi. They are major tributaries in the Murray Darling system.
But they’re both empty, and this has never happened before.

The empty Barwon River
For centuries the rivers sustained Aboriginal culture. Now they are dry, elders despair | Australia news | The Guardian
Two rivers meet outside Walgett in north-west New South Wales: the Barwon and the Namoi. They are major tributaries in the Murray Darling system.
But they’re both empty, and this has never happened before.

The empty Barwon River
For centuries the rivers sustained Aboriginal culture. Now they are dry, elders despair | Australia news | The Guardian
Four scientists make creativity a key to communicating their research » Yale Climate Connections
Cartoons and imaginative use of video, art, and graphics help get their message across.
This month’s “This is Not Cool” original video, produced by independent videographer and YCC regular contributor Peter Sinclair, explores the creative science communication initiatives of four different scientists.
Four scientists make creativity a key to communicating their research » Yale Climate Connections
This month’s “This is Not Cool” original video, produced by independent videographer and YCC regular contributor Peter Sinclair, explores the creative science communication initiatives of four different scientists.
Four scientists make creativity a key to communicating their research » Yale Climate Connections
Friday, May 24, 2019
Wind energy: turbines are getting taller, bigger, and more powerful - Vox
The declining price of solar power gets more press, but there are big things happening in wind technology too. And I mean big.
The math on wind turbines is pretty simple: Bigger is better. Specifically, there are two ways to produce more power from the wind in a given area.
The first is with bigger rotors and blades to cover a wider area. That increases the capacity of the turbine, i.e., its total potential production.
The second is to get the blades up higher into the atmosphere, where the wind blows more steadily. That increases the turbine’s “capacity factor,” i.e., the amount of power it actually produces relative to its total potential (or more colloquially: how often it runs).
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The GE Haliade-X, a big-ass wind turbine. GE
Wind energy: turbines are getting taller, bigger, and more powerful - Vox
The math on wind turbines is pretty simple: Bigger is better. Specifically, there are two ways to produce more power from the wind in a given area.
The first is with bigger rotors and blades to cover a wider area. That increases the capacity of the turbine, i.e., its total potential production.
The second is to get the blades up higher into the atmosphere, where the wind blows more steadily. That increases the turbine’s “capacity factor,” i.e., the amount of power it actually produces relative to its total potential (or more colloquially: how often it runs).
The GE Haliade-X, a big-ass wind turbine. GE
Wind energy: turbines are getting taller, bigger, and more powerful - Vox
E.P.A. Plans to Get Thousands of Pollution Deaths Off the Books by Changing Its Math - The New York Times
WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency plans to change the way it calculates the health risks of air pollution, a shift that would make it easier to roll back a key climate change rule because it would result in far fewer predicted deaths from pollution, according to five people with knowledge of the agency’s plans.

The Hunter power plant in Castle Dale, Utah, which burns an estimated 4.5 million tons of coal a year.CreditCreditBrandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times
The E.P.A. had originally forecast that eliminating the Obama-era rule, the Clean Power Plan, and replacing it with a new measure would have resulted in an additional 1,400 premature deaths per year. The new analytical model would significantly reduce that number and would most likely be used by the Trump administration to defend further rollbacks of air pollution rules if it is formally adopted.
E.P.A. Plans to Get Thousands of Pollution Deaths Off the Books by Changing Its Math - The New York Times

The Hunter power plant in Castle Dale, Utah, which burns an estimated 4.5 million tons of coal a year.CreditCreditBrandon Thibodeaux for The New York Times
The E.P.A. had originally forecast that eliminating the Obama-era rule, the Clean Power Plan, and replacing it with a new measure would have resulted in an additional 1,400 premature deaths per year. The new analytical model would significantly reduce that number and would most likely be used by the Trump administration to defend further rollbacks of air pollution rules if it is formally adopted.
E.P.A. Plans to Get Thousands of Pollution Deaths Off the Books by Changing Its Math - The New York Times
Climate change: Global sea level rise could be bigger than expected - BBC News
Scientists believe that global sea levels could rise far more than predicted, due to accelerating melting in Greenland and Antarctica. The long-held view has been that the world's seas would rise by a maximum of just under a metre by 2100. This new study, based on expert opinions, projects that the real level may be around double that figure. This could lead to the displacement of hundreds of millions of people, the authors say.

JONATHAN BAMBER: A small boat in the Illulissat Icefjord in western Greenland, dwarfed by icebergs that have calved from Greenland's largest glacier, Jacobshavn Isbrae
Antarctic instability 'is spreading'
Thousands of penguin chicks wiped out
Warning from 'Antarctica's last forests'
Climate change: Global sea level rise could be bigger than expected - BBC News

JONATHAN BAMBER: A small boat in the Illulissat Icefjord in western Greenland, dwarfed by icebergs that have calved from Greenland's largest glacier, Jacobshavn Isbrae
Antarctic instability 'is spreading'
Thousands of penguin chicks wiped out
Warning from 'Antarctica's last forests'
Climate change: Global sea level rise could be bigger than expected - BBC News
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