Apr 28, 2011 Reuters
The worst drought in more than 40 years intensified across Texas over the last week, with high winds and heat causing "massive crop losses," with little relief in sight, according to weather experts Thursday. Details here.
Friday, April 29, 2011
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Larry Tries Again to Draw Attention to the Manitoba Flooding & Climate Change Connection
PUBLISHER'S COMMENT:
Below is my letter to Terry McLeod, host of the CBC Radio "Information Radio," morning show in Winnipeg. It is in response to an invitation he extended to listeners to comment on the current flood situation.
I'm not holding my breath that it will be used. My record in having such letters/emails see the light of day "on the air," especially on the climate change topic, has not been too good! I hope they will prove me wrong this time! l.p.
==========
Dear Terry,
Perhaps it's high-time for us to recognize the link between climate change and the increasingly serious floods we are facing in our province and elsewhere. Climate change is caused by humans. We are creating too many greenhouse gases by, among other things, the vehicles we drive and the planes we fly in. These, in turn are warming the planet and creating more extreme weather events such as the flooding which has definitely been on the increase in both frequency and intensity.
Wouldn't it be better to start putting more emphasis on sustainable energy which would reduce our reliance on fossil fuels? Instead, we are expanding the airport, pressing on with massive transportation corridors and exploring for oil, a decidedly non-sustainable source, at record levels!
We also need to think about just who is suggesting the "link" I refer to. Is it just me? Hardly!
Larry Powell
Roblin, MB
Below is my letter to Terry McLeod, host of the CBC Radio "Information Radio," morning show in Winnipeg. It is in response to an invitation he extended to listeners to comment on the current flood situation.
I'm not holding my breath that it will be used. My record in having such letters/emails see the light of day "on the air," especially on the climate change topic, has not been too good! I hope they will prove me wrong this time! l.p.
==========
Dear Terry,
Perhaps it's high-time for us to recognize the link between climate change and the increasingly serious floods we are facing in our province and elsewhere. Climate change is caused by humans. We are creating too many greenhouse gases by, among other things, the vehicles we drive and the planes we fly in. These, in turn are warming the planet and creating more extreme weather events such as the flooding which has definitely been on the increase in both frequency and intensity.
Wouldn't it be better to start putting more emphasis on sustainable energy which would reduce our reliance on fossil fuels? Instead, we are expanding the airport, pressing on with massive transportation corridors and exploring for oil, a decidedly non-sustainable source, at record levels!
We also need to think about just who is suggesting the "link" I refer to. Is it just me? Hardly!
- Environment Canada's Chief climatolotist, Dave Phillips is saying it.
- Peer-reviewed articles in the Journal Nature are saying it.
- The Winnipeg-based International Institute for Sustainable Development is saying it.
- The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is saying it.
- Thousands of climate scientists around the world are saying it.
Larry Powell
Roblin, MB
Monday, April 25, 2011
Last Members of Manitoba First Nation Leaving as Reserve Monitors Flood
By: The Canadian Press 04/25/2011
WINNIPEG - The last residents of a Manitoba reserve on the U.S. border were leaving Monday if they weren't needed to monitor flooding, said the man in charge of the evacuation.
Howard Nelson said about 800 members of the Roseau River First Nation would have traded life on the reserve south of Winnipeg for that in city hotels.
He said the evacuees could be there for five to 10 days, but it was hard to predict because the road into the community might be closed by flooding.
However, the water on Monday was still almost two metres below the top of a protective dike.
Nelson said pumps were being used to get water out of almost 30 flooded basements in low-lying areas.
This year's spring flooding has forced about 1,600 people to leave their homes in Manitoba — most from Roseau River and the Peguis First Nation along the Fisher River near Lake Winnipeg.
=====
The number of people displaced by the flooding is only a fraction of what it was in the "flood of the century" in '97.
That's the good news.
Fact is, floodwaters also cover a larger area of the province than ever-before experienced. Several communities in the Red River Valley are still bracing for water levels which will eclipse those of the flood of '09. And that will be the second-worst flooding in a-century-&-a-half! l.p.
WINNIPEG - The last residents of a Manitoba reserve on the U.S. border were leaving Monday if they weren't needed to monitor flooding, said the man in charge of the evacuation.
Howard Nelson said about 800 members of the Roseau River First Nation would have traded life on the reserve south of Winnipeg for that in city hotels.
He said the evacuees could be there for five to 10 days, but it was hard to predict because the road into the community might be closed by flooding.
However, the water on Monday was still almost two metres below the top of a protective dike.
Nelson said pumps were being used to get water out of almost 30 flooded basements in low-lying areas.
This year's spring flooding has forced about 1,600 people to leave their homes in Manitoba — most from Roseau River and the Peguis First Nation along the Fisher River near Lake Winnipeg.
=====
The number of people displaced by the flooding is only a fraction of what it was in the "flood of the century" in '97.
That's the good news.
Fact is, floodwaters also cover a larger area of the province than ever-before experienced. Several communities in the Red River Valley are still bracing for water levels which will eclipse those of the flood of '09. And that will be the second-worst flooding in a-century-&-a-half! l.p.
The normally tranquil Boggy Creek, near Roblin (above), is now swollen to a torrent. About a kilometer downstream, it empties into Lake of the Prairies on the Assiniboine River. (l.p. video)
BP Getting $13 Billion Tax Break? {TAKE ACTION}
Last Wednesday, it was determined that BP would be getting $13 billion in tax credits. It is not clear if BP is even going to pay any taxes at all or if it will actually get money from the government after this. Why is BP getting so much money? Because of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico….
Yeah, that’s right, BP got to write off its losses from the oil spill. Residents and animals are suffering (if they haven’t already suffered and died) from this unprecedented disaster, the country is struggling, and BP gets to skip tax season because it’s own mistake caused it to lose money.
$13 billion is hard to even comprehend. But let’s put it this way: it’s about equal to the EPA’s annual budget, which just got slashed considerably by a Tea-Party-wacky Congress, and it’s equal to about 1/3 of the total budget cuts our government has put forward for 2011.
Now, though, one of my favorite sites, CREDO Action, is pushing BP to take responsibility for its mess and not write it off. You can sign it’s petition here.
Yeah, that’s right, BP got to write off its losses from the oil spill. Residents and animals are suffering (if they haven’t already suffered and died) from this unprecedented disaster, the country is struggling, and BP gets to skip tax season because it’s own mistake caused it to lose money.
$13 billion is hard to even comprehend. But let’s put it this way: it’s about equal to the EPA’s annual budget, which just got slashed considerably by a Tea-Party-wacky Congress, and it’s equal to about 1/3 of the total budget cuts our government has put forward for 2011.
Now, though, one of my favorite sites, CREDO Action, is pushing BP to take responsibility for its mess and not write it off. You can sign it’s petition here.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Second Garbage Patch Confirmed in Atlantic Ocean
Joshua S Hill - Planetsave
Planet Earth’s oceans now have a second confirmed garbage patch filled with plastic "remains."
Details here.
Planet Earth’s oceans now have a second confirmed garbage patch filled with plastic "remains."
Details here.
Truth Comes out on 'Fracking' Toxins
By Andrew Nikiforuk, 20 Apr'11 TheTyee.ca
Who finally tells us the nasty chemicals used for shale gas drilling in Western Canada? The US Congress. Details here.
Who finally tells us the nasty chemicals used for shale gas drilling in Western Canada? The US Congress. Details here.
Earth Day 2011: Peace with Earth Day
Apr 22'11 - Ecological Internet
A Re-Declaration of a "Planetary Ecological Emergency." Details here.
A Re-Declaration of a "Planetary Ecological Emergency." Details here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
-
Are hungry kids a priority for the Harper government? by Larry Powell The forum (for the riding of Dauphin - Swan River - Neepawa) w...
-
by Larry Powell Planet In Peril has sorted through some of the confusion surrounding the absence of Robert Sopuck, the Conservative M...
-
Larry Powell Powell is a veteran, award-winning journalist based in Shoal Lake, Manitoba, Canada. He specialize in stories about agriculture...