Wednesday, September 06, 2006

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Tuesday, September 5, 2006

News of Note

David Grey, the World Bank's water resources chief, warns that opposition to dams keeps poor nations poor and should be reevaluated. Read more here.


Today's News

Scientists Map Canyon Below Atlantic
A four-year study using high-tech tools has produced maps of the Hudson Canyon that will allow scientists to study many things, including whether methane gas trapped in frozen sediment below the sea floor is escaping and exacerbating global warming.

Soaring Natural Gas Prices Spur Widespread Drilling
Companies have been drilling natural gas wells at historic rates across much of the Appalachian Basin, an area that includes swathes of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky and Virginia.

'Chameleon' Schwarzenegger Shows Green in Campaign
Last week, the Republican Schwarzenegger was decidedly "green," like the color of his campaign bus, as he struck a deal with the state legislature's Democratic majority to enact a law making California the first U.S. state to cap greenhouse-gas emissions.

Author Sees Science, Religion Saving Environment
Scientist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author E.O. Wilson is out to save life on Earth -- literally -- and as a secular humanist has decided to enlist people of religious faith in his mission.

SKorea, Japan Begin Final Day of Talks on Maritime Borders
South Korea and Japan began a final day of talks Tuesday on demarcating their maritime boundaries around islets at the center of a territorial dispute, amid dimming prospects for a breakthrough.

Dutch Greenhouse Gas Emissions Now at 1990 Levels
Greenhouse gas emissions in the Netherlands fell by around 2 percent in 2005 from a year earlier and were at approximately the same level they were in 1990, a government agency said Monday.


>>>More articles at ENN.com


Network Member News

CCOF Appoints Certification Services Director
By: California Certified Organic Farmers
CCOF announces that Jake Lewin is the new Certification Services Director effective September 1, 2006. Lewin was hired for this position following an industry-wide search. He has been serving as Interim Certification Services Director since July of this year.


National Wetlands Dialogue: Making Sense of Rapanos v. United States
By: Environmental Law Institute
Given the U.S. Supreme Court's recent failure in Rapanos v. United States to carve out a definitive rule on what constitutes jurisdictional wetlands, the current edition of the National Wetlands Newsletter® (September/October 2006) offers much-needed insight and analysis on the decision. This particular issue should prove quite valuable to environmental practitioners as they eagerly await guidance on the matter from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.


Latest research findings at UC Exotic/Invasive Pests and Diseases Research Workshop
By: UC Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program
Find out about the latest research on exotic invaders by joining the University of California Exotic/Invasive Pests and Diseases Research Program (EPDRP) Workshop, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Oct. 3, at UC Riverside, Riverside Extension Center, Room E.


Island Ferries Take on Role of Research Vessels Collecting Data about Nantucket Sound
By: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) biologist Scott Gallager and colleagues have installed a package of sensors on the 235-foot freight ferry Katama to measure water quality and to photograph plankton as the ferry crisscrosses the western side of Nantucket Sound year-round, several times daily.


San Diego Declaration : Scientists Say Global Warming Limits Ability To Manage Wildland Fire
By: Association for Fire Ecology
Changes in climate will limit humans’ ability to manage wildland fire and apply prescribed fire across the landscape, according to the “San Diego Declaration on Climate Change and Fire Management,” released today by the Association for Fire Ecology, the world’s largest assembly of fire ecologists.


Methods Enable Hawaii-based Longline Swordfish Fishery to Minimize Sea Turtle Interactions
By: Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council
Action is urgently needed to prevent the loss of leatherback and loggerhead sea turtles from the Pacific Ocean. Reducing bycatch of sea turtles in pelagic longline fisheries, in parallel with activities to reduce other anthropogenic mortality sources, may contribute to their recovery.


Hurricane Damages Soar To New Levels
By: Earth Policy Institute
Damage from hurricanes is soaring off the charts, bankrupting insurance companies and depriving property owners of insurance in high-risk areas, reports Janet Larsen, Director of Research at Earth Policy Institute. During the 1960s, worldwide damage from windstorms with economic losses of $1 billion or more totaled just $4 billion. In the 1970s, the figure rose to $7 billion, and in the 1980s it topped $24 billion. Next came the 1990s, when losses from the 29 billion-dollar-plus storms soared to $113 billion. Between 2000 to 2005 hurricanes left a staggering bill of $273 billion.


Woolly Bully is Sticky Nuisance: Find Out How to Control the Pest
By: UC Statewide Integrated Pest Management Program
Researchers have found a way for growers and homeowners to save money and time by knowing when and how much insecticide to apply to control the Asian hackberry woolly aphid.


Conservation Groups Challenge Agency’s Refusal To Protect Recently Discovered Salamander
By: Center for Biological Diversity
A coalition of conservation groups filed suit in California state court on Thursday, challenging the Department of Fish and Game's (DFG's) failure to protect the recently discovered Scott Bar Salamander under California's endangered species law. Rather than herald the new species - a rare subset of a threatened species - DFG stripped the salamanders of protection, subjecting them to the immediate threat from logging operations.


The Trust for Public Land Honored for Exceptional Work Using GIS Technology
By: the Trust for Public Land
This July The Trust for Public Land (TPL, www.tpl.org) was announced as a recipient of a 2006 "Special Achievement in GIS" Award for its outstanding use of geographic information system (GIS) technology. ESRI, the world leader in GIS software, presented the award at the Twenty-sixth Annual ESRI International User Conference in San Diego, California, before thousands of GIS professionals.


Editor's Note : 'Network News' features press releases submitted directly by organizations in ENN's member network. This content is not specifically endorsed or supported by ENN and is not subject to ENN's editorial process.

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