Thursday, September 13, 2018

Another hurricane is about to batter our coast. Trump is complicit.


The Washington Post
Hurricane Florence. A NASA photo.
With depressingly ironic timing, the Trump administration has recently announced a plan to roll back federal rules on methane, a potent greenhouse gas that is the main component in natural gas. When it comes to extreme weather, Mr. Trump is complicit. More here.

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Global hunger continues to rise, new UN report says


World Food Programme
A woman receives food rations at a refugee camp in Kenya. Kate Holt/AusAID


Progress made in the past decade has been reversed, with climate extremes such as droughts and floods identified as a main cause. More here.

A Season of Smoke



Monday, September 10, 2018

ASF - a deadly hog disease - has now been confirmed on Romania’s largest pig farm: 140,000 pigs culled


PIG PROGRESS
The virus was confirmed on the farm, which consists of 3 adjacent properties in the southern county of Braila, Romania after water samples were sent to the authorities. Story here.
-30-
In Hogs We Trust - a critique of Manitoba's runaway hog industry.
Part 111 - From Malaysia to Manitoba - the global magnitude of livestock diseases.




Sunday, September 9, 2018

Wildfires make their own weather, and that matters for fire management


ScienceNews
A wildfire on the Ashcroft reserve in B.C, 2017. Shawn Cahill.
New prediction tools zero in on how blazes throw embers and make weather that fans the flames. Story here.

Saturday, September 8, 2018

No record yields for potatoes on the Canadian Prairies this year!


Western Producer
A potato harvester at work in southern Manitoba. A PinP photo.
The hot, dry weather Western Canada experienced this summer, is blamed. Story here.

Thursday, September 6, 2018

One of the biggest tsunamis ever recorded was set off three years ago by a melting glacier


The Washington Post
A rare and extreme tsunami ripped across an Alaskan fjord three years ago after 180 million tons of mountain rock fell into the water, driving a devastating wave that stripped shorelines of trees and reached heights greater than 600 feet, a large team of scientists documented on Thursday. The October 2015 cataclysm in Taan Fiord in southeastern Alaska appears to have been the fourth-highest tsunami recorded in the past century, and its origins — linked to the retreat of a glacier — suggest that it’s the kind of event we may see more often because of a warming climate.The new study even bluntly calls it a “hazard occasioned by climate change.” Story here.

Health Canada probes claim that government officials helped pesticide company overturn a ban

CANADA'S                                                                                                                                ...