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  • Sad news for peak oil disciples

    Sad news for peak oil disciples
    Financial Post (blog)
    Martin Pelletier: Don’t expect a return to the days of ultra low oil prices, but at least we’re headed in the right direction with regards to minimizing the probability of
    See all stories on this topic »

  • IMF chief Christine Lagarde warns world risks triple crisis

    IMF chief Christine Lagarde warns world risks triple crisis

    Lagarde says world risks falling incomes, environmental damage and social unrest without more sustainable approach to growth

    IMF managing director Christine Lagarde

    ‘Great uncertainty hangs over global prospects,’ warned IMF managing director Christine Lagarde. Photograph: Ints Kalnins/Reuters

    Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund, has warned that the world risks a triple crisis of declining incomes, environmental damage and social unrest unless countries adopt a more sustainable approach to economic growth.

    Ahead of the Rio+20 Earth summit later this month, she said the rich should restrain their demands for higher incomes while there are still 200 million people worldwide looking for a job and poverty is on the rise.

    Giving her clearest backing yet to green taxes and a range of measures to protect the environment, she argued for taxes on petrol-guzzling cars among a range of green measures to tackle climate change.

    “It has been 20 years since world leaders first went to Rio to commit to the noble goal of protecting the planet for future generations. And now, 20 years on, we will be journeying back to Rio to affirm our commitment to sustainable development – the idea that we should strive for economic growth, environmental protection and social progress at the same time,” she said in a speech in Washington on Tuesday.

    “The idea that different economic, environmental and social objectives can be seen as distinct aspects of a single vision, essential parts of a connected whole.”

    But she said the current economic crisis in Europe and slowing growth worldwide, coupled with the growing threat from climate change and social tensions could wreck the efforts of leaders to chart a more sustainable future.

    “Over the past four years, we have been mired in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. And we are not out of it yet.

    “In fact, tensions are on the rise again, and financial stability risks have once more moved front and centre. Great uncertainty hangs over global prospects.

    “Too many regions today are still stuck in a trap of low growth and high unemployment,” she said.

    “Right now, 200 million people worldwide cannot find work, including 75 million young people trying to take their first step on the ladder of success.

    “So we need a strategy that is good for stability and good for growth – where stability is conducive to growth and growth facilitates stability.”

    Lagarde, a right-wing former French finance minister, recently caused a storm of controversy after she accused Europeans of blocking progress to end the current financial crisis. Asked if she sympathised with Greeks impoverished by austerity measurers demanded by Brussels, she said the children of Niger were more her concern. It also emerged that Lagarde pays no tax on her $467,940 (£298,675) a year salary.

    Ahead of the summit, she said taxes on petrol and other carbon fuels could raise billions of dollars for green investment projects. “Right now, less than 10% of worldwide greenhouse gas emissions are covered by formal pricing programmes. Only a handful of cities charge for the use of gridlocked roads. Farmers in rich countries are undercharged – if charged at all – for increasingly scarce water resources.”

    She added: “Many countries continue to subsidise polluting energy systems. These subsidies are costly for the budget and costly for the planet. Countries should reduce them. But in doing so, they must protect vulnerable groups by tightly focusing subsidies on products used by poorer people, and by strengthening social safety nets.”

  • Climate change to alter global fire risk

    ScienceDaily: Earth Science News


    Climate change to alter global fire risk

    Posted: 12 Jun 2012 11:48 AM PDT

    Climate change is widely expected to disrupt future fire patterns around the world, with some regions, such as the western United States, seeing more frequent fires within the next 30 years, according to a new analysis. The study used 16 different climate change models to generate what the researchers said is one of the most comprehensive projections to date of how climate change might affect global fire patterns.

    Satellite sees smoke from Siberian fires reach the US coast

    Posted: 12 Jun 2012 07:16 AM PDT

    Fires burning in Siberia recently sent smoke across the Pacific Ocean and into the US and Canada. Images of data taken by the nation’s newest Earth-observing satellite tracked aerosols from the fires taking six days to reach America’s shores.
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  • Ancient volcanoes destroyed ozone

    Ancient volcanoes destroyed ozone
    Science News
    Volcanoes at tropical latitudes are good at injecting the stuff they erupt into the stratosphere, some 16 kilometers up. When elements such as chlorine and bromine reach that high, they help trigger a series of reactions in which ozone’s three oxygen
    See all stories on this topic »
    How microbes found living off gasses on a volcano gives a clue to how life
    Daily Mail
    By Daily Mail Reporter Microbes have been discovered living in Martian-like conditions on volcanoes in South America with no water, extreme temperatures and such high UV radiation that most tiny organisms would be killed instantly.
    See all stories on this topic »

    Daily Mail
    Volcanoes could damage ozone layer
    UPI.com
    They based that on the levels of the chemicals released from 14 volcanoes in Nicaragua during the past 70000 years, LiveScience.com reported Tuesday. Bromine and chlorine “love to react — especially with ozone,” researcher Kirstin Kruger,
    See all stories on this topic »
  • Court: Nuclear Regulatory Commission Must Assess Spent Fuel Storage Dangers

    News 4 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    Court: Nuclear Regulatory Commission Must Assess Spent Fuel Storage Dangers
    Environment News Service
    After four to six years of use in a reactor, nuclear fuel rods can no longer efficiently produce energy and are considered spent nuclear fuel, the court explained. Fuel rods are hot when removed from reactors and emit enough radiation to be fatal in
    See all stories on this topic »

    Environment News Service
    Were US– India relations oversold?
    Foreign Policy (blog)
    Their critique has been given unearned momentum by the Indian parliament, which passed nuclear liability legislation that does not meet international standards, effectively making it impossible for US companies to build civilian-nuclear plants in India
    See all stories on this topic »
    Iran Swears It’s Building Nuke Subs
    Wired News (blog)
    First, Iran will have to miniaturize the country’s nuclear technology into a safe and working power plant capable of powering a sub. Second, one does not just install a nuclear plant onto a submarine. Iran will have to build a new sub from scratch
    See all stories on this topic »

    Wired News (blog)
    Japan Used Claims of Inaccuracy To Divert Release of Critical Radioactive
    Spyghana.com
    Japanese officials have failed to justify why it took them over a month to disclose large-scale releases of radioactive material in mid-March at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. A special government tool had been producing critical
    See all stories on this topic »

     


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  • Severe weather warning for Wales and south-west with more rain forecast

    More proof of changing weather patterns due to Climate and ocean warming.

    Severe weather warning for Wales and south-west with more rain forecast

    Incessant downpours continue to bring risk of flooding across England and Wales as 250 homes are cut off in West Sussex

    Flooding hits UK

    Resident John Sanson looks at a flooded road in Felpham, near Bognor Regis, in West Sussex. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA

    More torrential showers are expected to sweep across Britain on Wednesday, bringing the risk of flooding to areas that have so far escaped the deluge.

    The Met Office said parts of south-west England were likely to bear the brunt of the next wave of heavy showers, with up to 60mm (more than 2in) of rain, about the average for all of June, threatening to fall in Cornwall.

    Further effects of the recent weather were predicted for west Wales, still mopping up after the “once-in-a-lifetime” floods that wreaked havoc over the weekend. Up to 30mm of rain could fall on the saturated ground.

    And scientists were investigating whether the rain could have swept potentially harmful metals, such as lead and zinc, from old mines into farmer’s fields and close to villages and towns.

    Surveyors were checking roads, bridges and dams that might have been damaged in the downpour and the Welsh government promised to treat sympathetically any appeals from local authorities to help with rebuilding.

    The Met Office issued a severe weather warning for Wales and for the south-west of England. Andy Page, the chief forecaster, said: “Due to the nature of showers some areas will miss them altogether, but where they do occur large amounts of rainfall are possible in a short space of time which has the potential to cause flooding.”

    David Bunt, the Environment Agency‘s emergency planning manager for the south-west region, said: “We are keeping a close watch on river levels, as the weekend’s heavy rain has left many areas more vulnerable to flooding.

    “Environment Agency teams have been working round the clock, with other emergency responders, checking flood defences, clearing blockages, monitoring river levels and issuing flood alerts or flood warnings where necessary.”

    By Tuesday night more than 30 flood alerts (signalling flooding a possibility) were in place in all areas of England except the north-west. Four of the more serious flood warnings had been issued, two in the south-east, two in Bedfordshire.

    One of the worst affected areas in England was West Sussex, where firefighters had to use boats to reach about 250 homes cut off in Elmer, near Bognor Regis. More than 30 people were rescued from holiday parks in Sussex.

    People who had been driven out of their homes were sheltered in rest centres and in bed and breakfast accommodation.

    Some schools were closed and A-roads shut. There were lengthy delays on the M3 in Hampshire after two lanes were closed because of flooding.

    It was not only people who found themselves in danger. The RSPCA rescued a herd of 21 cows marooned on a patch of high ground when the river Arun broke its banks in West Sussex.

    In the Welsh assembly, Carl Sargeant, minister for local government and communities, said the devastation in west Wales had been astonishing. He said that at one point a device to measure flow recorded 250 tonnes of water passing every second.

    Sargeant said he was shocked at reports of some insurance company representatives telling people to put furniture contaminated with raw sewage back into their homes, and he said officials would be talking with the industry to make sure people got the right advice.

    Assembly members representing some of the areas that were affected expressed concern that tourism in west and mid Wales would be harmed by the pictures of devastation being transmitted around the world. Sergeant emphasised that the flooding was very localised and Wales was “open for business”.