Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Manitoba communities brace for possible major spring flooding

CBCnews
Manitobans are no strangers to floods. Here, campers make the most of soggy 
conditions in Neepawa, 2014. PinP photo.

The City of Brandon is already preparing for potential spring flooding. Story here.

Saturday, January 28, 2017

'Dante's Inferno' in Chile: Destructive Fires Rage in Record Heat

EcoWatch
Records tumble in infernos in Chile. Details here.

Friday, January 27, 2017

Mongolia: Lethal livestock plague now hitting endangered antelope, warns UN agency

UN News Centre
The international pledge to eradicate a devastating livestock disease affecting mostly sheep and goats has taken on new urgency in the wake of a mass die-off of a rare Mongolian antelope, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Story here.

Mongolian antelope. 
Image from Wikipedia.

Manitoba rewrites hog barn regulations

The Western Producer

Manitoba is removing “impractical and costly” regulations in an effort to revive its hog industry. Story here.

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Trump administration backs off plan to scrub climate pages from EPA website

The Washington Post

The Trump administration on Wednesday backed away from plans to take down some climate-change information from the Environmental Protection Agency’s website, which employees said had been planned for this week. But political appointees are exerting more oversight over the agency’s scientific communications. Details here.

One of the last Obama-era climate reports had a troubling update about the rising seas

The Washington Post

A Mexican beach. PinP photo.
new report, released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration on the last day of Barack Obama’s presidency, presents a series of updated estimates for future sea-level rise, both in the United States and worldwide. It suggests that, under extreme future climate change, global sea levels could rise by more than eight feet by the end of the century — one of the highest estimates yet to be presented in a federal report.  Details here.

With the Rise of Trump, Is It Game Over for the Climate Fight?

YaleEnvironment360 - Bill McKibbon

PinP photo.
Donald Trump’s ascension to the presidency is a stunning blow to hopes for avoiding the worst impacts of global warming. But a broad-based, grassroots movement committed to cutting emissions and promoting clean energy must continue and intensify – the stakes are simply too high to give up. Details here.