Speaker: Peter Gleick
Title: An update on the vulnerability of U.S. water resources to climate
change: From the Mississippi River floods to growing shortages in the
West
The scientific evidence supporting growing impacts of human-induced
climate change on U.S. water resources continues to strengthen. Dr.
Peter Gleick, one of the nation’s leading experts on climate and water,
will discuss recent reports on increased precipitation intensity in
North America, the Mississippi River flood events, the new Department of
Interior assessment of climate and western river basins, and efforts to
prepare for climate and water risks facing cities, farmers, and natural
systems. He will also explore some of the adverse implications of recent
budget decisions for emergency preparedness and warning systems, weather
forecasting, military preparedness, and national response to extreme
events.
American Association for the Advancement of Science
American Meteorological Society
1324 Longworth
09/05/2011 at 02:00PM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 31/10/2008 at 05:02PM
The House Committee on Global Warming and Energy Independence has issued
a report, Past is
Prologue,
listing many of the energy and environmental regulations, rulemakings,
and notices the Bush administration is expected to issue (or in some
cases, illegally avoid issuing) in its final months in office. As R.
Jeffrey Smith writes in the Washington
Post,
“The new rules would be among the most controversial deregulatory steps
of the Bush era and could be difficult for his successor to undo.”
Here’s a partial list:
- The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) plans to finalize an
NSR rule before the end of the
administration that would essentially exempt all existing power plants
from having to install new pollution control technology when these
plants are updated.
- In a separate NSR rule,
EPA plans to exempt so-called “fugitive”
emissions – meaning emissions that don’t come out of the end of a
stack such as volatile organic compounds emitted from leaking pipes
and fittings at petroleum refineries – from consideration in
determining whether NSR is triggered.
- EPA is also set to finalize a third rule
weakening the NSR program, by allowing
so-called “batch process facilities” – like oil refineries and
chemical plants – to artificially ignore certain emissions when
determining when NSR is triggered.
- EPA is also working towards weakening air
pollution regulations on power plants and other emissions sources
adjacent to national parks and other pristine, so-called “Class I”
areas. By changing the modeling of new power plants’ impact on air
quality in national parks – using annual emissions averages as opposed
to shorter daily or monthly periods – the
EPA rule will make it easier for such plants
to be built close to parks.
- The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) issued
proposed regulations to implement the EISA
fuel economy standards (increase by the maximum feasible amount each
year, such that it reaches at least 35 miles per gallon by 2020) in
April 2008, and final regulations are expected soon. If
NHTSA used EIA’s
higher gasoline price scenario—a range of $3.14/gallon in 2016 to
$3.74/gallon in 2030—the technology is available to cost-effectively
achieve a much higher fleet wide fuel economy of nearly 35 mpg in 2015
– instead of the 31.6 mpg in 2015 under the lower gas prices used in
NHTSA’s proposed rule.
- EPA is expected to issue proposed
regulations soon on the renewable fuels provisions passed in
EISA that required America’s fuel supply to
include 36 billion gallons of renewable fuels by 2022 – together with
more specific volumetric requirements and lifecycle greenhouse gas
benchmarks for “advanced” renewable fuels, cellulosic ethanol, and
biodiesel.
- The Department of the Interior (DOI) has already telegraphed its
intention to gut the Endangered Species Act by rushing through 300,000
comments on proposed rules in 32 hours, then providing a mere 10-day
public comment period on the Environmental Assessment of the proposed
rules change. The proposed rules would take expert scientific review
out of many Endangered Species Act (ESA) processes, and could exempt
the effects of global warming pollution on threatened or endangered
species.
- DOI intends to finalize new regulations
governing commercial development of oil shale on more than 2 million
acres of public lands in the West.
- DOI’s Office of Surface Mining is expected
before the end of the administration to issue a final rule that would
extend the current rule (which requires a 100-foot buffer zone around
streams to protect them from mining practices) so that it also applies
to all other bodies of water, such as lakes, ponds and wetlands. But
the rule would also exempt many harmful practices – such as permanent
coal waste disposal facilities – and could even allow for changing a
waterway’s flow.
- EPA has already missed several deadlines to
finalize a rule addressing whether concentrated animal feeding
operations (CAFOs) are required to obtain permits under the Clean
Water Act.
- EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers may
issue a revised guidance memo on how to interpret the phrase “waters
of the United States” in the Clean Water Act, which determines what
water bodies are subject to regulation under the Act.
- Under the Omnibus appropriations bill for FY
2008, EPA was directed to establish a mandatory reporting rule
for greenhouse gas emissions, using its existing authority under the
Clean Air Act, by September 2008. EPA has
been working on a proposed rule, which may or may not be issued before
the end of the Bush administration. EPA will
not issue a final rule before the end of the administration.
At the hearing, Chairman Feinstein will call for passage of legislation
she has sponsored to close a loophole that has allowed oil and gas
companies to pay no royalty payments for drilling on the Outer
Continental Shelf for leases negotiated in 1998 and 1999. This measure
to close the loophole was stripped from the
FY2008 Interior Appropriations bill.
Under this provision, the companies who have not renegotiated their
existing contracts will have a choice.
- They can keep their existing leases royalty-free if they so choose,
but be barred from bidding on new contracts, or
- They can agree to renegotiate these leases in good faith and be able
to participate in the bidding for new leases.
Witnesses
- C. Stephen Allred, Assistant Secretary for Lands and Minerals
Management, Department of the Interior
- Randall Luthi, Director, Minerals Management Service
Senate Appropriations Committee
Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Subcommittee
124 Dirksen
26/02/2008 at 10:00AM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 25/02/2008 at 08:19PM
Randall Luthi, the controversial chief of the Department of Interior’s
Minerals Management Service, will be testifying at a Senate
Appropriations subcommittee tomorrow morning. His decision to hold the
Chukchi Sea drilling lease
sale
two weeks ago, the first offshore sale in over a decade, while the Fish
& Wildlife Service continues to delay its ruling on the endangerment of
polar bears, has garnered
protests
from government scientists, environmental groups and Congressional
Democrats.
Sen. Feinstein, the chair of the subcommittee, released the following
statement:
At the hearing, Chairman Feinstein will call for passage of
legislation she has sponsored to close a loophole that has allowed oil
and gas companies to pay no royalty payments for drilling on the Outer
Continental Shelf for leases negotiated in 1998 and 1999. This measure
to close the loophole was stripped from the
FY2008 Interior Appropriations bill.
Feinstein has been pushing for this legislation at least since
2006,
since the loophole in 1998 and 1999 leases issued under the Deep Water
Royalty Relief Act of 1995 was discussed in Congressional
hearings.