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JLN Environmental/Energy
March 31, 2016  
 
Jim Kharouf Jim Kharouf
Editor-in-Chief
John Lothian News
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In today's edition, learn about how to launch a campaign - to fight climate change. The answer? Use the same-sex marriage playbook. Also, a turning point: 20 state Attorneys General have launched an unprecedented, multi-state effort to investigate and prosecute the “high-funded and morally vacant forces” that have stymied attempts to combat global warming—starting with holding ExxonMobil and other industry giants accountable for fraud and suppression of key climate science. Finally, in the Carbon section, another campaign: Trump agrees with Cruz! On what? Both are against a carbon tax.

 
     

“The reason there is all this focus is that this is arguably the most important environmental regulation ever. ”

Richard L. Revesz, the director of the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law, in the New York Times' story Climate Policy’s Advocates Take Page From Same-Sex Marriage Playbook

     
 

Climate Policy’s Advocates Take Page From Same-Sex Marriage Playbook
By Coral Davenport - The New York Times
Two months ahead of a federal court hearing on President Obama’s signature climate change rule, a coordinated public relations offensive has begun — modeled after the same-sex marriage campaign — to influence the outcome of the case.
http://nyti.ms/21TPQOy

20 Attorneys General Launch Climate Fraud Investigation of Exxon
By Lauren McCauley Common Dreams
In a move many are hailing as a “turning point” in the climate fight, 20 state Attorneys General on Tuesday launched an unprecedented, multi-state effort to investigate and prosecute the “high-funded and morally vacant forces” that have stymied attempts to combat global warming—starting with holding ExxonMobil and other industry giants accountable for fraud and suppression of key climate science.
http://bit.ly/1ZL94qf

Green Climate Fund vows to up its game
By Sanjay Kumar - Nature
The Green Climate Fund (GCF) has had an inauspicious start to life — but 2016 could be the year it springs into action.
http://bit.ly/1UUMo7g

This Program Will Make Cutting Carbon Emissions Lucrative For Farmers
By Natasha Geiling - Think Progress
When Mark Isbell, a third-generation rice farmer in central Arkansas, tallies up his profits for this year, he’ll count a few extra dollars from a unique source: the greenhouse gases that his 3,200-acre farm didn’t emit.
http://bit.ly/25x6OHc

British health systems 'unprepared for devastating effects of climate change'
The Guardian
British health systems are unprepared for the “devastating” effects of climate change, leading health bodies have warned.
http://bit.ly/1RJqct6




Events  

Navigating the American Carbon World (NACW) 2016
Climate Action Reserve
May 4-6, 2016
San Diego, California
http://goo.gl/Ah5s1I

CARBON EXPO 2016
Global Carbon Market Fair and Conference
May 25-27, 2016
Cologne
http://jlne.ws/1mg8bqR

Cleantech Innovate Scotland
June 9, 2016
http://jlne.ws/1mg6nOG



 
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Editor-at-Large
 


Carbon

The enormous carbon footprint of food that we never even eat
By Chelsea Harvey - The Washington Post
Discussions about how to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions frequently center on clean energy, more efficient transportation and sustainable agriculture.
http://wapo.st/1RJPUe4

Renewables are incapable of replacing hydrocarbons at scale
By Kathleen Hartnett White - The Hill
Conspicuously missing from public chatter about the climate issue is recognition of the staggering costs and likely insurmountable engineering challenges of these grand plans to decarbonize human society within several decades.
http://bit.ly/1PFSIYe

Trump Finds Common Ground With Cruz in Opposition to Carbon Tax
By Jennifer A Dlouhy - Bloomberg
Donald Trump and Ted Cruz oppose a carbon tax, putting them in league with the Republican National Committee on the issue but at odds with some oil companies and economists who view a levy on those heat-trapping emissions as an effective way to combat climate change.
http://bloom.bg/1RyQFrh

Desert mangroves: stars of carbon sequestration
By Jason Thomson - The Christian Science Monitor
Mangroves, “botanical amphibians” that occupy a world on the cusp of land and sea, have long been considered a neglected, under-appreciated form of forest, providing untold services for nature and mankind alike.
http://bit.ly/1WYzVNQ

 
Natural Gas/Coal

$1tn could be wasted on 'unneeded' new coal plants, report warns
By Damian Carrington - The Guardian
Almost $1tn of investment in new coal-fired power stations could be wasted if growing concerns about climate change and air pollution leave the plants unused, according to a new report.
http://bit.ly/1MC7N2i

China has the most coal plants in the world—and half the time they’re doing absolutely nothing
By Cassie Werber - Quartz
There’s many a paradox in the world of coal. It’s the most polluting fossil fuel, and most governments agree that it doesn’t present a long-term solution to the need for energy to power an ever-more-developed and populous world.
http://bit.ly/1MC7Z1K

EPA Aims to Cut Methane Leaks From Natural Gas Companies
By Michael Biesecker - Associated Press
The Obama administration on Wednesday announced a new partnership with 41 energy companies that have agreed to voluntarily reduce methane emissions from natural gas operations to help combat climate change.
http://abcn.ws/1V6ATs7

 
Power

EDF board member calls for Hinkley Point C project to be postponed
By Terry Macalister and Julia Kollewe - The Guardian
An EDF board member has called for the £18bn Hinkley Point C nuclear power station to be postponed, in the latest sign of discord at the top of the French energy company over the troubled project.
http://bit.ly/25wJzgp

China’s State Grid Envisions Global Wind-and-Sun Power Network
By Biran Spegele - The Wall Street Journal
China’s State Grid Corp. already dominates its home market, operating most of the electricity grid that powers the world’s second-largest economy.
http://on.wsj.com/1omNiLu

Australia to feed Ukraine nuclear power plants
By Cecilia Jamasmie - Mining
Australia and Ukraine are set to sign a cooperation agreement in nuclear energy, which will see Canberra supplying the necessary uranium to feed the European country’s nuclear power plants.
http://bit.ly/1omNsmh

World’s first triple geo-PV-solar thermal power plant unveiled in Nevada
By Adilya Zaripova - PV
Stillwater power plant, the first triple hybrid facility in the world, combining geothermal, photovoltaic and solar thermal power generation, was inaugurated in Nevada.
http://bit.ly/21UaEFB

 
CleanTech

2016's Top Ten Tech Cars: Hyundai Tucson Fuel Cell
By Lawrence Ulrich - Spectrum
Hydrogen cars have been such a tease. For decades, carmakers have held out the hope of clean energy, free of fossil fuels and tailpipe emissions, without telling us where the hydrogen will come from and what it will cost.
http://bit.ly/1ZLEe0H

Fuel Cells 2016: ‘Within Striking Distance’ of Profitability
By Eric Wesoff - GTM
In keeping with GTM tradition, here's a just-updated list of the top three profitable publicly held fuel-cell firms.
http://bit.ly/1VU2XQm

 
Water

Water problems in Asia’s future?
By Peter Dizikes - MIT News
Economic and population growth on top of climate change could lead to serious water shortages across a broad swath of Asia by the year 2050, a newly published study by MIT scientists has found.
http://bit.ly/1PGiqfe

Stanford researchers show fracking's impact to drinking water sources
By Rob Jordan - Stanford News
Only one industry is allowed to inject toxic chemicals into underground sources of drinking water – hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking."
http://stanford.io/1M1bVZR

How New York Gets Its Water
By Emily S. Rueb - The New York Times
Revelations about tainted water have sparked worry across the country.
http://nyti.ms/1MTMCUu

 
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