It Depends on What the Meanings of “Are” Are

Bill Clinton once famously said that the truthfulness of a statement depended on "what the meaning of 'is' is." There's a similar usage issue in a recent spat over climate data. A  dispute between Roger Pielke and RealClimate seems to turn in part on whether a statement about current climate trends has to be proven by data from the present and immediate past, or whether it can refer to a longer-term trend.  Pielke blasts a commentator for saying certain climate chang...

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Bush administration forest planning rules struck down — again

For much of the past decade, the Department of Agriculture regulations governing land and resource management planning in the national forests have been a kind of political ping-pong ball, bounced back and forth between administrations, and between the executive branch and the courts. Now the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California has taken another swat at that ball. The planning rules are important because they govern the adoption of plans for in...

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Habitat loss still the key conservation concern

Some time ago, I noted this essay in Slate by environmental journalist Brendan Borrell, arguing that our current obsession with climate change is inhibiting more important conservation work. A new report from the International Union for the Conservation of Nature provides some support for Borrell's position. The IUCN periodically updates its Red List of Threatened Species. The most recent update to the list was last fall; this report provides an analysis of the revised ...

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Killing rats kills eagles in Alaska

There really is no free lunch in the world of environmental restoration, and often the consequences are difficult to predict. Last month, Scientific American reported that 41 bald eagles were found dead on Rat Island in the western Aleutians after an aggressive rat extermination effort. Rat Island was so named because it had been overrun with Norway rats descended from the survivors of a 1780 shipwreck. Because the rats were devastating native ground-nesting birds, th...

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Waxman hospitalized in LA, “feeling much better”

Just a quick post to note this story and wish Rep. Waxman, who is back in his LA district this week, a speedy recovery....

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Eight Profiles in Courage

Eight Republicans voted to pass the Waxman-Markey bill in the House.  Some conservative groups are already threatening to punish them for this deviation from party orthodoxy.  (That sort of self-destructive retaliation used to be typical of the Democrats, who used it as part of their arsenal of weapons for shooting themselves in the foot.)  A refreshingly different perspective is presented in an op. ed. written by Michael Gerson, who spent six years as a policy advise...

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Solar Energy on the Fast Track

Yesterday, U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Nevada Senator Harry Reid announced a series of initiatives to create a “fast track” for the development of utility scale solar energy facilities on Western public lands.  This will include designating certain tracts of land as especially promising based on solar potential and land use compatibility, funding environmental studies, opening new solar energy permitting offices, and speeding up project review.  Areas u...

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Climate change breaking news: EPA grants California waiver to regulate GHG emissions from cars

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has taken an important step toward addressing climate change and improving our nation's automobile fuel economy, by granting California and at least 14 other states a waiver allowing them to regulate automobile greenhouse gas emissions.  This was not unexpected, given the recent passage of federal legislation with standards similar to the proposed California regulations and apparent softening of opposition from the auto industry....

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Do Religion and Environmentalism Mix?

I'm in Ohio this week for the biennial "Kallah" of ALEPH, the organizational home of the Jewish Renewal movement.  This has led to an interesting question about the relation of religion and environmentalism. I'm taking a class given by Arthur Waskow on what he calls "eco-Judaism," which is a pretty self-explanatory phrase: Waskow believes that Jewish theology in general (and Biblical theology in particular) strongly tilts in favor of ecological consciousness. But I'm ...

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“Betraying the Planet”

Paul Krugman has a terrific op. ed with that title in the today's Times.  Here's the gist: Do you remember the days when Bush administration officials claimed that terrorism posed an “existential threat” to America, a threat in whose face normal rules no longer applied? That was hyperbole — but the existential threat from climate change is all too real. Yet the deniers are choosing, willfully, to ignore that threat, placing future generations of Americans in grav...

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