Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2025 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $78,901
97%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 97%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: ecology

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • PG&E customers face $532M bill for dam removal some don't want

    05/29/2025 7:52:58 AM PDT · by cuz1961 · 23 replies
    SF Gate ^ | 5/29/2025 | Matt LaFever,
    ...Pacific Gas and Electric Company has finally revealed the staggering price tag for dismantling the century-old hydroelectric facility: $532 million. That’s the estimated cost PG&E submitted to state regulators on May 15, a half-billion-dollar teardown that will be funded by PG&E customers, many of whom also risk losing the year-round water supply the system delivers to 600,000 people across Northern California. ...Tony Gigliotti, PG&E’s senior licensing project manager, told SFGATE the half-billion-dollar figure is still a “very high-level estimate,” but it’s meant to reflect the full scope of the task ahead. “We did the best we could with the information...
  • The Inherent Leftism of National Socialism

    05/10/2025 5:21:56 AM PDT · by Olympiad Fisherman · 17 replies
    Jacob Pursely - You Tube Channel ^ | 5/10/2025 | Jacob Pursely
    Dr. R. Mark Musser shows the result of a non-biblical worldview that was inherent within National Socialism wherein elements of radical environmentalism, veganism, green sustainability, euthanasia, eugenics, transhumanism, and Social Darwinian biology and ecology all played a very surprising role in what otherwise became known as the Holocaust.
  • New Bill Introduced to Protect Salmon in the Klamath River Watershed

    01/19/2025 7:30:00 AM PST · by cuz1961 · 21 replies
    Redheaded Blackbelt ^ | 1/17/2025 | Kym Kemp
    , Assemblymember Chris Rogers (D-Santa Rosa) introduced his first bill as a member of the California State Assembly. AB 263 is an important measure to protect salmon populations in the Klamath River watershed and provide local agricultural operations with more certainty on river flows. This measure was introduced in partnership with the Karuk and Yurok Tribes, as well as the California Coastkeeper Alliance.
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposes 760,000 acres of critical habitat to protect foothill yellow-legged frogs in California

    01/14/2025 7:39:16 AM PST · by cuz1961 · 36 replies
    Action News Now ^ | 1/13/2025 | Matt Wreden
    SACRAMENTO, Calif. - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed the designation of 760,071 acres of critical habitat to protect the imperiled foothill yellow-legged frog under the Endangered Species Act. The Center for Biological Diversity says this proposal aims to safeguard vital habitats for the frog's conservation and recovery across the Sierra Nevada, and along the central and southern California coast. This proposal follows a petition and lawsuits filed by the Center for Biological Diversity, which has long advocated for the protection of these frogs. The designated areas will protect essential habitats for four populations of foothill yellow-legged frogs...
  • Transitioning away from fossil fuels

    12/28/2023 2:19:03 AM PST · by Jyotishi · 48 replies
    The Pioneer ^ | Sunday, December 24, 2023 | B. K. Singh
    OPINION The USA, Canada, Australia, Norway and the UK which had the moral responsibility to rapidly phase out oil and gas production are responsible for planned expansion from new oil and gas fields for next decade and half. How can these countries advise India to cut on coal consumption? Our greenhouse gas emission is nearly 3 Giga tonnes of CO2 equivalent annually. We are distant third behind the two top emitters China with 14 Giga tonnes and the US with 8 Giga tonnes Among the important outcomes, COP 28 text proposes to triple renewable energy capacity and double the global...
  • In Quest for Battery Metals, U.S. Takes On Cobalt's 'Inconvenient Truth'

    08/24/2023 5:51:45 AM PDT · by Alas Babylon! · 27 replies
    Wall St Journal via MSN ^ | 24 Aug 2023 | Alexandra Wexler, Yusuf Khan
    The U.S. is turning to a much-criticized source as it races to secure supplies of battery metals to meet the growing demand for electric vehicles. To do so, it is homing in on cobalt from the Democratic Republic of Congo’s informal mining sector, where miners, sometimes including children, often work with no safety equipment in dangerous, hand-dug mines. Congo supplies around 70% of the world’s cobalt, a key metal in the lithium-ion batteries used in EVs, with about a third of that coming from these so-called artisanal miners. The U.S. Agency for International Development said earlier this year that it...
  • Study: Hey, these offshore wind farms aren't good for the ecosystem

    12/04/2022 9:23:42 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 24 replies
    Hotair ^ | 12/04/2022 | Jazz Shaw
    There are wind farms being put up all over the place these days, including in many rural areas of the United States. But the offshore wind farms that have been constructed in the North Sea by various European power companies have created a forest of towers rising up over the waves. But that’s not a problem, right? After all, this is the “clean energy” we were all promised and we’re saving the planet so everyone can feel better about themselves. The Biden administration recently announced plans to accelerate offshore wind farm construction in the name of “environmental justice, biodiversity, and...
  • A rare and endangered seahorse has been found living beneath the Opera House

    09/05/2022 9:15:14 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 12 replies
    TimeOut ^ | Maya Skidmore
    Finally, some good news.In very, very good news for seahorses, Sydney Harbour, and Sydneysiders, for the first time in recorded history, scientists have discovered an endangered seahorse species living quietly beneath the Opera House. In 2019, the Opera House installed a series of artificial modular reefs on the underside of their building, with scientists hoping to increase marine biodiversity across the entirety of Sydney Harbour. In early August, marine scientists inspected the living artificial reefs for the first time in a year, and happened across a pretty remarkable discovery: an endangered White’s Seahorse, a tiny species that generally lives closer...
  • Test detects petroleum product in Pearl Harbor-Hickam water but big questions remain

    12/02/2021 5:24:53 PM PST · by Jyotishi · 26 replies
    Hawaii News Now ^ | December 1, 2021 | HNN Staff
    Honolulu (HawaiiNewsNow) -- A Hawaii lab has detected a petroleum product in a water sample collected from the Pearl Harbor-Hickam system -- a worrisome finding that comes as the investigation into the source of the fuel-like odor and oily sheen from the water continues. It’s the first confirmation of what military households and other impacted residents have been reporting for days: That their water smells like fuel and has made them sick. But the results also raise more questions, including how much petroleum is present and what kind it is. Environmental Health Deputy Director Kathleen Ho stressed the results are...
  • Record Coral Cover Of Great Barrier Reef Shames Climate Alarmists, Media

    07/26/2021 8:34:43 PM PDT · by Zakeet · 21 replies
    Climate Change Dispatch ^ | July 23, 3021 | Peter Ridd
    The annual data on coral cover for the Great Barrier Reef, produced by the Australian Institute of Marine Science, was released on Monday showing the amount of coral on the reef is at record high levels. Record high, despite all the doom stories by our reef science and management institutions. Like all other data on the reef, this shows it is in robust health. For example, coral growth rates have, if anything, increased over the past 100 years, and measurements of farm pesticides reaching the reef show levels so low that they cannot be detected with the most ultra-sensitive equipment....
  • Pope Francis considers adding ‘ecological sin’ to Catholic Church Catechism

    11/18/2019 7:17:40 AM PST · by SeekAndFind · 32 replies
    Energy Live News ^ | 11/17/2019 | Jonny Bairstow
    Pope Francis is considering adding ‘ecological sin’ to the official teachings of the Catholic Church. He said there are plans to update the Catechism of the Catholic Church to include environmental damages that risk “the common home” of humanity. The spiritual leader called on the global community to recognise ecocide as a “fifth category of crime against peace” and stressed corporations must not go unpunished if they cause harm to the planet. He said the term ‘ecocide’ covers “the massive contamination of air, land and water resources, the large-scale destruction of flora and fauna and any action capable of producing...
  • Donald Trump raises stink, claiming garbage from India reaches Los Angeles

    11/13/2019 3:23:55 PM PST · by Jyotishi · 22 replies
    The Economic Times ^ | Wednesday, November 13, 2019 | Chidanand Rajghatta, TNN
    Trump was particularly agitated that the rest of the world, particularly developing countries such as China and India, had corralled Washington into the Paris Accord on climate change and put the onus on the US to clean up the planet while themsel... (This story originally appeared in The Times of India https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/donald-trump-raises-stink-claiming-garbage-from-india-reaches-los-angeles/articleshow/72043638.cms on Nov 13, 2019) WASHINGTON: As if its own woes with air pollution is not enough of a headache, New Delhi has to deal with another pointless stink bomb: US President Donald Trump claimed on Tuesday that garbage from India is floating all the way to Los Angeles....
  • California’s bishops call for ecological conversion

    06/18/2019 2:21:31 PM PDT · by Marchmain · 26 replies
    Crux website ^ | June 18, 2019 | Christopher White
    Catholic bishops of California have released a major pastoral statement calling for statewide ecological conversion... ...call to action on how all residents of the state are able to live out particular “ecological vocations”... ...consider ways to divest from fossil fuels and to pursue more energy efficient practices...
  • Lawsuit Launched Challenging Texas Highway Project's Threat to Endangered Salamanders

    03/03/2019 11:12:39 PM PST · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 14 replies
    The Center for Biological Diversity ^ | February 28, 2019 | Jenny Loda and Kelly Davis
    AUSTIN, Texas— The Center for Biological Diversity and Save Our Springs Alliance today filed a notice of intent to sue the Texas Department of Transportation and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service over an Austin highway construction project’s threats to the federally endangered Austin blind and Barton Springs salamanders. The conservation groups recently learned that the MoPac Intersections Project has exposed at least 21 underground caves, sink holes and other karst features that provide habitat for the endangered salamanders. There is a high risk that construction will pollute the two species’ habitat by introducing silt and pollutants to the subsurface. The...
  • PETA: Border Wall 'Death-Inducing,' Even for Birds and Butterflies

    02/11/2019 6:22:34 AM PST · by Zakeet · 26 replies
    Breitbart ^ | February 10, 2019 | Penny Starr
    People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is weighing in on the proposed wall on the U.S. border with Mexico, claiming it would be “death-inducing” for a number of species. [Snip] PETA opposes a border wall because it spells certain death by starvation and thirst and the end of access to foraging and nesting ground—as well as blocking the migratory paths. [Snip] Even the conservative National Wildlife Federation called the wall "one of the biggest potential ecological disasters of our time." [Snip] "You think a bird's just going to fly over a wall, but that's not necessarily the case,"...
  • Mark Musser's "Nazi Ecology" Interview

    01/13/2019 8:10:29 AM PST · by Olympiad Fisherman · 4 replies
    Anomicage: The John Age Show ^ | 1-12-2019 | Mark Musser
    In this episode, we talk with Mark Musser who is the author of "Nazi Ecology." His work connects many aspects of our current ecological movements to the early German Green movement together with its surprising ties to National Socialism. He also outlines the various theoretical approaches that influenced ecology under National Socialism which persist throughout the environmental movement(s) even today ...
  • Kroger ditching plastic bags by 2025, company says

    08/24/2018 8:01:01 AM PDT · by oldvirginian · 104 replies
    FOX News ^ | August 23 2018 | Associated Press
    The nation's largest grocery chain will be plastic-bag free at all of its nearly 2,800 stores by 2025. Kroger Co., which orders about 6 billion bags each year, will begin phasing out their use immediately at one of its chains based in Seattle, a city that has been proactive on reducing plastic use. The company, based in Cincinnati, operates 2,779 stores in 35 states and the District of Columbia, serving almost 9 million people daily through two dozen different grocery chains. Kroger is seeking customer feedback and will be working with outside groups throughout the transition. It will begin phasing...
  • Chem. weapons dumped at sea corroding but haven't yet released toxic contents [Hawaii 2010 news] TR

    04/14/2018 11:25:57 AM PDT · by Jyotishi · 27 replies
    DMZ Hawaii ^ | July 28, 2010 | Kyle
    Full title: Researchers report that chemical weapons dumped at sea are corroding but have not yet released toxic contents KyleJuly 28, 2010DMZ Hawaii http://www.dmzhawaii.org/dmz-legacy-site-two/?p=7485  University of Hawai'i researchers have concluded a three year research project to determine whether chemical munitions dumped at sea off O'ahu pose a threat to the health of humans or the environment. Documents disclosed by the Army in 2007 reported that approximately 16,000 munitions containing 2,558 tons of chemical agents were dumped at three deep-water sites off Oahu.   The chemical agent included lewisite, mustard, cyanogen chloride and cyanide. According to the Honolulu Star Advertiser article: http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/breaking/99399389.html...
  • Novel Hydrogel-Based Solar Vapor Generator Yields Clean Drinking Water

    04/04/2018 9:37:30 AM PDT · by Wonder Warthog · 28 replies
    R & D Magazine ^ | 04/03/2018 | Kenny Walter
    Finding a cheap and effective water purification process would have global implications. A research team from the University of Texas at Austin’s Cockrell School of Engineering has developed a new cost-effective and compact technology that combines gel-polymer hybrid materials to improve the purification process for drinking water. The new materials possess both hydrophilic—an attraction to water—qualities and semiconducting, or solar-absorbing properties. This enables the hydrogel to produce clean, safe drinking water from virtually any source, whether it's from the oceans or contaminated supplies. “We have essentially rewritten the entire approach to conventional solar water evaporation,” Guihua Yu, associate professor of...
  • 'BioBlitz' Scientists to Survey California Desert Valley

    04/06/2017 2:53:53 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 12 replies
    KOB4 ^ | 4/6
    Scientists will fan out across a California desert valley this weekend to take an inventory of everything there that flies, hops, runs, swims or grows in the dirt. It's been 45 years since researchers last scoured Amargosa Valley near the northern edge of the Mojave Desert. That accounting of species led to federal protections within the remote region and new scientific understanding of its biodiversity. Over three days, experts in a variety of fields will once again tally birds, bats, toads, crickets, coyotes, lichen and native plants, said Sophie Parker, a senior scientist with the Nature Conservancy.