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We Have Sustainable Energy — The Problem Is The Oligarchy

February 18, 2015 By Ethan Indigo Smith 5 Comments

You can’t tell someone who knows everything, anything.

Inextricably linked to war and and disaster, the nuclear experimentation industry exemplifies every problem society has stubbornly manifest, only exaggerated and magnified beyond the pale. It causes social and environmental problems of the most hazardous and horrendous proportions, and the fact that we allow it appears to be the result of humanity’s collective mental problems. Our darker inner nature is destroying Mother Nature.

The environmental destruction of nuclear experimentation is exactly like the environmental destruction caused by global burning of petroleum products, only exponentially so.

Filed Under: Environment, Health & Lifestyle Tagged With: antinuclear, Climate change, energy, Hanford, mining, New Mexico, nuclear, nuclear bomb, nuclear energy, oligarchy, peace, renewable energy, solar, solar power, sustainable energy, War, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, wind power, WIPP

Fracked Earth News: Boston’s Hot Ocean Blizzard

February 17, 2015 By Kate Lanier Leave a Comment

Every week, Kate Lanier assembles the most important global energy and climate news, including:

New England: Off the coast of New England, sea surface temperatures “are flashing red, showing an extreme warm anomaly.” That’s a direct, immediate link to the recent record snowfall in Boston. Expect more.

California: Stunning state-wide fracking waste water test results: “concentrations of the human carcinogen benzene … [at] levels thousands of times greater than state and federal agencies consider safe.” ‘Significant’ benzene levels were in 98% of the water samples. Not only that, but CA “inadvertently” allowed frackers to inject their “flowback water into protected aquifers containing drinking water.” LA Times says “halt new operations.”

Peru: Oil contamination by Argentina’s Pluspetrol in the Peruvian Amazon so upset indigenous people that they “stormed a military base being used by Pluspetrol as a storage area.” Pluspetrol is packing up and leaving Peru—and the government “is investigating the illegal use of firearms by police during the demonstrations.”

Filed Under: Environment, Foreign Affairs, Health & Lifestyle, National News Tagged With: #NoKXL, Alaska, Alberta, Amazon, Antarctica, biomass energy, Boston, BP, BP Oil, Brazil, Burlington, California, Canada, cap and trade, Charles Pierce, Chicago, Climate change, Congress, ConocoPhillips Alaska, eminent domain, energy, England, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA, FBI, fossil fuel divestment, fossil fuels, fracking, France, gas, geoengineering, global warming, gold, Great Britain, Greece, Gulf Coast, Gulf of Mexico, Houston, hydraulic fracturing, hydroelectric, IEA, Illinois, India, intelligence, International Energy Agency, Kanawha River, Keystone XL North, KeystoneXL North, Koch Brothers, labor, labor rights, Libya, LyondellBasell, Massachusetts, National Petroleum Reserve, Nebraska, Nepal, New England, nuclear, nuclear energy, oceans, Ohio, oil, oil prices, oil trains, Ontario, Panama, Pasadena, Pebble Mine, Pennsylvania, Peru, petcoke, poaching, Rahm Emanuel, refineriess, renewable energy, Rutgers University, solar, solar power, strike, Tom Wolf, TransCanada, union, unions, United Kingdom, United Steelworkers, United Steelworkers Union, US Army Corps of Engineers, US Bureau of Land Management, USW, Vermont, West Virginia, wind power, Wisconsin

Mining The Earth & Fracking The World: Environmental Fugitives

January 6, 2015 By Kate Lanier Leave a Comment

Kate Lanier collects news of oil and gas, fracking and mining, the environment and sustainable energy from around the world including:

Worldwide: Interpol is now taking on “environmental fugitives,” including suspected crime bosses and elephant ivory smugglers. Nine wanted altogether, with two already captured. Just imagine the possibilities.

Colorado: It’s getting very ugly out there. Longmont residents voted against fracking in their community inn 2012.  Now, “state officials, energy companies and industry groups are taking Longmont and other municipalities to court, forcing local governments into what critics say are expensive, long-shot efforts to defend the measures.” Citizens are even being accused of ripping off industry.

Chile: Barrick Gold (Toronto) ran afoul of the Superintendence for the Environment concerning the Pascua Lama gold-silver mine. Fines were imposed. A lower court seemed to revoke the $16 million fine, due to regulatory misfiguring, and ordered Barrick to halt its activity at the mine. Barrick sued but the Supreme Court refused he case, putting everything back in the lap of the Superintendence for the Environment which has some re-figuring to do.

Filed Under: Environment, Foreign Affairs, National News Tagged With: #NoKXL, Alexei Kudrin, Alliance Resource Partners, Arlington, Barack Obama, California, Canada, capitalism, Chile, China, Chuck Schumer, Climate change, coal, Colorado, Comstock Resources, Congress, Democratic Party, Ecuador, Enbridge, Energiewende, energy, environment, Feisal Ali, Flanagan South, frack sand, fracked gas, Fracked Oil, fracking, gas, Germany, Human Rights, hydraulic fracturing, Interpol, ivory, Japan, Juan Cole, Kentucky, Kenya, Keystone XL, Keystone XL North, Keystone XL Pipeline, Lake Michigan, Libya, Longmont, Louisiana, methane, Mexico, mining, Native Americans, New Mexico, New York, Nigeria, North Carolina, nuclear, Ohio, oil, oil sands, oil trains, Oklahoma, Patriot Coal, Pennsylvania, Peru, pipelines, propane, Rafael Correa, Republican Party, Russia, Sally Jewell, San Angelo, Saudi Arabia, Scotland, Seaway Twin Pipeline, Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, solar power, Solomon Islands, South Dakota, sustainable energy, Tar sands, tarsands, Texas, United States Department of the Interior, Venezuela, Washington D.C, West Virginia, White House, wind power, Yankton Sioux

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