Thursday, 16 August 2018

Energy and Environment: The Trump administration said weaker fuel standards would save lives. EPA experts disagree.

Energy and Environment
With Chris Mooney
 
In this June 19, 2015 photo, traffic heads eastbound on Rt 50 in Bowie, Md. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
The Trump administration said weaker fuel standards would save lives. EPA experts disagree.
An analysis by the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration, EPA experts said, used faulty assumptions.
Ryan Zinke blames 'environmental terrorist groups' for severity of California wildfires
Scientists say climate change and past fire suppression are big factors in wildfire severity.
 
How climate change is making 'red tide' algal blooms even worse
It's not just warmer oceans — sea level rise, droughts and floods all play a role in worsening toxic algal blooms.
 
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Florida declares a state of emergency as red tide kills animals and disrupts tourism
The spread of toxic algae has killed a whale shark and countless fish, threatening to upturn Florida's vital summer tourist season.
 
The next five years will be 'anomalously warm,' scientists predict
A new scientific tool predicts a boost to the planet's temperature over the next five years, above and beyond what global warming will already produce.
 
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A slimy environmental crisis roils Florida's tight Senate race
GOP candidate Rick Scott and Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson are blaming each other for the Sunshine State's toxic algae problem, which has raised health concerns and threatened tourism in Florida.
 
Federal appeals court orders EPA to ban controversial pesticide
The order would compel the agency to carry out a ban that former EPA administrator Scott Pruitt had shelved. "The time has come to put a stop to this patent evasion," a judge wrote of delays by the agency.
 
 
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