Monthly Archives: March 2009

Mountaintop removal . . . and other debacles

Just by not being Dubya, President Obama has made a good start. But the record so far, according to this release from PEER, is mixed on key issues like montaintop removal coal mining.

By simply not being George W. Bush, President Barack Obama has already made a huge difference.  Gone is the sense that each week brings a new secret industry-backed scheme to plunder the earth and pad profits.  Instead, the new measure is how much progress we can make – rather than how much damage we can avoid.

On issues like energy efficiency standards and mercury pollution, there have been clear steps forward.  In other areas the progress has been, shall we say, ambiguous.  Look at three examples:

  • On the Endangered Species Act (ESA), the administration has negated (but not yet repealed) Bush midnight regulations gutting key requirements.  Then, Interior Secretary Salazar went ahead with Bush plans to remove ESA protections from wolves throughout the Rockies, except for Wyoming (whose management plan of shoot-to-kill could not pass muster);
  • On mountain-top removal coal mining, EPA announces with great fanfare that it is registering its “considerable concern regarding the environmental impact these projects would have on fragile habitats and streams”.  The next day, it issues a “clarification” that the agency “is not halting, holding or placing a moratorium on any of the mining permit applications.  Plain and simple.  EPA has issued comments on two pending permit applications.”  The following day, the permits are approved while EPA has no further comment; and . . . (PEER/org).

Mexican wolves Web site up and running

Thisdsc_0187-11 is a welcome development. I was introduced to lobos when we visited Sevilleta National Wildlife Refuge in southcentral N.M. a few years back. And I took this photo of a stuffed lobo while in the refuge visitor center.

Activists praise dimming lights

I’ve never been a big fan of the World Wildlife Fund, but the Fund generated a fun worldwide event the other night. Here’s a wire service’s account of the one-hour “dimming the lights” feature, designed to call attention to global warming.

TNC says it’ll sell Adirondack land to pension fund

dsc03144And the fund, notes this Press-Republican (Plattsburgh, N.Y.) article, is into “sustainable forestry.” Whatever that is.

There is a good reason why

New York’s Forest Preserve doesn’t allow logging.

Cap-and-trade crucial to sound energy plan

This op-ed, from the Pocono Record paper, was authored by Ed Perry, a retired U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist and global warming outreach coordinator for the National Wildlife Federation.

Green jobs, good jobs

Great climate change-related op-ed here from a recent edition of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

North Pole under seige by global warming

A fine NY Times editorial.

Redoubt’s eruptions continue

And the ash is now smothering recreationally important areas along the Kenai Peninsula. Among our prized posessions is a copy of the May 19, 1980 front page of The (Portland) Oregonian newspaper that highlights the eruption of Mt. St. Helens. Here’s the Anchorage Daily News’ coverage.

Satellites, Google Earth proving to be potent conservation tools

Read Yale Univeristy’s Environment 360 article.

Mont. bills make it easier for polluters

That’s the sorrowful message of this nice op-ed from the Missoula, Mont., Missoulian newspaer. So much for fighting dirty power plants in Montana. saw this on Ralph Maughan’s Wildlife News and just had to post here.