They’re Ba-ack… But Fixed Fee Hikes Still Getting Nixed

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Like a batter who loves to swing for the fences no matter what, power companies keep swinging for big increases in mandatory fixed fees on electricity customers—and mostly keep striking out. Last year, state utilities commissions rejected or scaled back 85% of the more than 30 proposals from […]

A Race to Document Rare Plants Before These Cliffs Are Ground to Dust

Published by The New York Times Science & Environment The species native to Cambodia’s limestone karsts exist nowhere else. Now these unique environments are being pulverized for cement. Read the full article at: http://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/13/science/cambodia-karsts-plants.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Monarch Population Dips While EPA Re-Approves Pesticide Use

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund The monarch butterfly population has declined yet again to 2.91 hectares—almost 30% less than last year’s population. The monarch population has been in steady decline for the past 20 years—reaching a high of over 20 hectares in 1997 and plunging to 0.67 hectares in 2014. Last year’s count […]

Latin America Green News: 2/2 – 2/9/2017

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Paving the Amazon with roads, fires in Chile threaten bees, Mexico might soon have an electric taxi  To get the weekly Latin America Green News blog delivered directly to your email, subscribe here. February 2 – 9, 2017 Special Report on Chile’s Rivers Chilean Patagonia is known around the […]

What Would Mark the End of America’s Moral Leadership in World Affairs?

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Giuseppe Milo/Flickr In 1630, as waves buffeted the ship carrying him and his fellow Puritans across the ocean to the nascent Massachusetts Bay Colony, a lay minister named John Winthrop delivered a sermon introducing one of the most enduring tropes in American political rhetoric. In “A Model of […]

New study shows 27% decrease in area occupied by monarch butterflies

Published by the World Wildlife Fund The latest survey of monarch butterfly’s winter habitat in Mexico is a stark reminder that these butterflies are in need of protection: The area occupied by the butterfly colonies has decreased 27% compared to last year’s survey, which is conducted every winter at the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve. The forest […]

Court Affirms Need To Protect Water Quality Even In Drought

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund During the last three years of California’s drought, the state and federal agencies charged with protecting fishable, swimmable, and drinkable water quality for all Californians have utterly failed to do their job. The results have been disastrous: more toxic algae blooms are infecting California’s waterways than ever before; […]

Scott Pruitt on Ocean Acidification: Wrong Again

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Scott Pruitt on Ocean Acidification:  Wrong Again Much has been written about how Scott Pruitt, President Trump’s nominee to head the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), has tried to reject the science of climate change.  Pruitt’s answers to Senators’ questions about ocean acidification – another destructive effect of carbon […]

Good News for Public Lands! (No, Really!)

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Bob Wick, BLM/Flickr Almost two weeks ago, a bill arrived in the House of Representatives called the Disposal of Excess Federal Lands Act of 2017. If that title alone doesn’t have you quaking in your hiking boots, here are the details: Introduced by Utah Representative Jason Chaffetz, the […]

The Saddest ‘Emoji’ of All

Published by Ocean Conservancy Emoji – “a small digital image or icon used to express an idea, emotion, etc., in electronic communication.” But for veterinarians and staff at Lowry Park Zoo in Tampa, Florida, Emoji was so much more. Emoji was a two-week old orphaned Florida manatee that was found 15 pounds underweight when Zoo staff […]

Snow leopard range countries gear up for climate-smart conservation

Published by the World Wildlife Fund Delegates from the 12 snow leopard range countries met in Kathmandu to strengthen their commitment to snow leopard conservation and chart a way forward to secure a future for this elusive and endangered cat. With climate change threatening all of the Third Pole—the high mountains in Asia that are home […]

Vaquita population drops to 30 individuals

Published by the World Wildlife Fund There is grim news for the world’s most endangered porpoise. A survey conducted last summer and just released last week estimates vaquita numbers are as low as 30 individuals. That’s half of what the vaquita population was just last year. And less than a third of its population in 2014. Why […]

Latin America Green News: 1/27 – 2/2/2017

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Extreme fires persist in Chile, EU supports renewable projects in Colombia, warming temperatures threatens future of coffee market To get the weekly Latin America Green News blog delivered directly to your email, subscribe here. January 27 – February 2, 2017 Forests Chile continues to be ravished by extreme […]

Trump’s Attack on Endangered Species Really Stings

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Dan Mullen/Flickr I wanted to bring you the story of Bombus affinis, the first bumblebee species to receive Endangered Species Act protections in the history of the United States. I wanted to tell you that although populations of this bee have declined by 87 percent since the late […]

Our Warming World on Her Shoulders

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Nazario Graziano, colagene.com When farmers returned to war-torn northern Uganda in 2008, they had to figure out how to begin again. A local cotton gin backed by social entrepreneurs from abroad offered some hope. The Gulu Agricultural Development Company (GADC) would train the returning farmers to grow cotton […]

U.S. Hunters Auction African Hunts for $$ to Lobby Trump

Published by the Environmental News Service CAPE TOWN, South Africa, February 1, 2017 (ENS) – Safari Club International, America’s most powerful hunting lobby group, this week will auction the lives of 280 South African animals to raise funds to lobby the Trump administration against measures protecting threatened species, such as the Big Five: elephant, rhino, […]

Played on Ivory Keys, This Is What Elephant Extinction Sounds Like

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Antique 1921 player piano with ivory keys and custom die-cut vellum score based on the artist’s predictive algorithm Jenny Kendler Elephants are extinct. If that sentence became fact, how would you feel? Artist Jenny Kendler’s “Music for Elephants: A Eulogy for the Future” attempts to evoke the grief […]

A Smart, Sustainable & Affordable Cooling Future for India

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Co-authored with Karan Chouksey With 2016 as yet another record breaking year for global temperatures, communities across India are grappling with rising temperatures and the deadly threats from extreme temperatures. Rising temperatures are creating a surge in cooling demand that poses a tremendous challenge to meet peak electricity […]

Trump’s “America First” Energy Plan Leaves America Behind

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund On the eve of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources confirmation vote for Rick Perry to be Secretary of Energy, it’s important to take a close look at the Trump administration’s plans for America’s energy future. The administration’s new webpage on “An America First Energy Plan” is—like […]

WWF leads snare removal from injured female gorilla

Published by the World Wildlife Fund Wusa was a dedicated gorilla mother, doing her best to care for her three-month-old infant. But WWF staffers noticed something amiss with the adult gorilla in the Dzanag-Sangha Protected Areas of the Central African Republic. Her wrist was caught in a metal snare. Snares are generally intended to catch small […]

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