The West: Wildlands, Democrats , Republicans, Energy Exploration

 

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“Western Democrats have found success recasting environmentalism as a 

defense of threatened water supplies, fishing spots and hunting 

grounds. As a result, the party may hold the advantage this fall in 

the region’s key Congressional races. The simultaneous rise of 

Western energy production and the Western Democrat is no coincidence.”

 

“Republicans created a monster for themselves,” said Rick Ridder, a 

Colorado-based Democratic consultant. “They put public policy in 

direct conflict with their base voters.”

 

“…industry workers upbraided officials for considering rules that 

could slow gas drilling along the Colorado-New Mexico border. 

Century-old antigovernment emotions are now aimed at state regulators 

– and much of the vitriol comes from working-class Democrats.”

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NYTimes

Drilling for Defeat?

By DAVID SIROTA

Published: May 18, 2008

 

Nearly two decades ago, Republicans won the West by linking Democrats 

to environmentalists, who supposedly cared more for the spotted owl 

and other favored species than they did for the jobs of loggers or 

miners. But now, as a boom in natural-gas drilling reshapes the 

region, Western Democrats have found success recasting 

environmentalism as a defense of threatened water supplies, fishing 

spots and hunting grounds. As a result, the party may hold the 

advantage this fall in the region’s key Congressional races. The 

simultaneous rise of Western energy production and the Western 

Democrat is no coincidence.

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Knutson: Climate Change to Decrease Atlantic Hurricane Frequency?

 

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“… it is not the numbers that matter, it is 

also the intensity, duration and size,” he says.

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Nature

18 May 2008

 

News

 

Climate change ‘to make Atlantic hurricanes rarer’

 

Increasing frequency of storms in past 25 years 

may not continue, although average severity may 

grow.

 

Hurricanes may become rarer in the Atlantic 

throughout the 21st century if the world 

continues to warm, suggests a new study.

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Excessive Reactive Nitrogen in Environment Alarms Environmental Scientists

 

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“… and due to the interactions of nitrogen and 

carbon, makes the challenge of providing food and 

energy to the world’s peoples without harming the 

global environment a tremendous challenge,”….

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        Web address:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080515145419.htm

 

Excessive Reactive Nitrogen in Environment Alarms Environmental Scientists

 

ScienceDaily (May 18, 2008) – While human-caused 

global climate change has long been a concern for 

environmental scientists and is a well-known 

public policy issue, the problem of excessive 

reactive nitrogen in the environment is 

little-known beyond a growing circle of 

environmental scientists who study how the 

element cycles through the environment and 

negatively alters local and global ecosystems and 

potentially harms human health.

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An Epidemic of Extinctions: Decimation of Life on Earth

 

Published on Friday, May 16, 2008 by The Independent/UK 

An Epidemic of Extinctions: Decimation of Life on Earth

 

The world’s species are declining at a rate “unprecedented since the extinction of the dinosaurs”, a census of the animal kingdom has revealed. The Living Planet Index out today shows the devastating impact of humanity as biodiversity has plummeted by almost a third in the 35 years to 2005.

 

The report, produced by WWF, the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and the Global Footprint Network, says land species have declined by 25 per cent, marine life by 28 per cent, and freshwater species by 29 per cent.

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