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<p><font size="+2"><i><b>April 20, 2022</b></i></font><br>
</p>
<i>[ NYT reports ] </i><br>
<b>Biden Restores Climate to Landmark Environmental Law, Reversing
Trump</b><br>
A new rule requires agencies to analyze the climate impacts of
proposed highways, pipelines and other projects, and gives local
communities more input...<br>
- -<br>
The final rule announced Tuesday would require federal agencies to
conduct an analysis of the greenhouse gases that could be emitted
over the lifetime of a proposed project, as well as how climate
change might affect new highways, bridges and other infrastructure,
according to the White House Council on Environmental Quality. The
rule, which takes effect in 30 days, would also ensure agencies give
communities directly affected by projects a greater role in the
approval process...<br>
- -<br>
The final rule announced Tuesday would require federal agencies to
conduct an analysis of the greenhouse gases that could be emitted
over the lifetime of a proposed project, as well as how climate
change might affect new highways, bridges and other infrastructure,
according to the White House Council on Environmental Quality. The
rule, which takes effect in 30 days, would also ensure agencies give
communities directly affected by projects a greater role in the
approval process...<br>
- -<br>
The new rule also proposes giving federal agencies the authority to
work closely with communities to develop alternative approaches to
projects. Historically, the law’s process has been one of the most
important tools available to local communities to try to amend or
stop projects that could cause significant harm.<br>
<br>
The final rule represents the first phase of a two-step regulatory
process. Administration officials said that, in the coming months,
it would propose another set of broader changes to the law.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/19/climate/biden-climate-nepa-trump.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/19/climate/biden-climate-nepa-trump.html</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ 1h 25 min video Check your local PBS station or click link
below ] </i><br>
<b>THE POWER OF BIG OIL - PART ONE: DENIAL</b><br>
Apr. 19, 2022 - - 1h 25m<br>
FRONTLINE examines the fossil fuel industry’s history of casting
doubt and delaying action on climate change. This three-part series
traces decades of missed opportunities and the ongoing attempts to
hold Big Oil to account.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/film/the-power-of-big-oil/">https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/film/the-power-of-big-oil/</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ the Senator heads a small family monopoly that will benefit -
coal ]</i><br>
<b>Joe Manchin Warns Against Turning to Iran for Oil as Biden Eyes
Deal</b><br>
Senator Joe Manchin warned the Biden administration against turning
to Iran for oil as the White House continues to eye a new nuclear
deal with the country.<br>
<br>
The United States has been in negotiations to restore the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (colloquially known as the Iran Deal)
for months after exiting in 2018 under former President Donald
Trump, but no plan has been reached yet.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.newsweek.com/joe-manchin-warns-against-turning-iran-oil-biden-eyes-deal-1699062">https://www.newsweek.com/joe-manchin-warns-against-turning-iran-oil-biden-eyes-deal-1699062</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ report from Space.com - real event could make a nice Sci Fi
movie plot ] </i><br>
<b>New message to aliens will reflect on Earth in danger of climate
crisis</b><br>
By Keith Cooper -- April 19, 2020<br>
A new attempt to reach out to intelligent life in the universe will
broadcast information and music about our environment.<br>
A radio signal designed to bring Earth's climate crisis to the
attention of alien life will be beamed to the TRAPPIST-1 planetary
system in October.<br>
<br>
The message has been devised by METI International, a group of
scientists, sociologists, historians, anthropologists and artists
who have come together with a common belief that humanity would
benefit from beaming messages to the stars rather than just waiting
to receive a message from aliens. (METI stands for Messaging
Extraterrestrial Intelligence, as opposed to SETI, the more passive
Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence.) The Goonhilly Satellite
Earth Station in Cornwall, U.K., will broadcast the climate-change
message on Oct. 4 to coincide with the beginning of World Space
Week, which this year has the theme of "Space and Sustainability."<br>
<br>
"Any aliens receiving our message won't be surprised to hear about
our climate crisis," Douglas Vakoch, President of METI
International, told Space.com. "They've had decades to observe our
plight from afar."...<br>
- -<br>
The TRAPPIST-1 system is 39 light-years away, so if anyone there
does detect a message, we should not expect a reply for at least 78
years. However, the likelihood is that technologically advanced
alien life will be far older than we humans, since the universe is
13.8 billion years old and we're just newcomers on the scene. . .<br>
- -<br>
The message's authors hope that this age gap could offer hope for
humans facing the climate crisis. If an alien species has managed to
survive perhaps millions or even billions of years, then experts
assume that they will have long ago solved any climate issues they
may have faced and would now exist in a stable society. Hearing from
such aliens might give us confidence that we can solve our own
climate problems. Furthermore, Vakoch said he thinks that they may
be intrigued to hear from a younger species — us — who are
experiencing a stage in their development that the aliens' distant
ancestors may also have experienced.<br>
<br>
"By giving aliens insight into the mind of a species that is
uncertain about its future, but that is still ready to reach out, we
may be offering unique insights to a civilization that has long
since left behind such instability and uncertainty," Vakoch said.
"Our candid self-reflection may just be intriguing enough to prompt
a response."...<br>
- -<br>
This year's broadcast will be the second interstellar message that
METI International have transmitted; the first was the Sónar Calling
message in 2018, sent in conjunction with the Sónar music festival
in Barcelona. Other notable interstellar transmissions include Frank
Drake's famous Arecibo Message sent in 1974 and four messages beamed
into space from the Evpatoria radio telescope in Crimea by the late
Russian radio astronomer Alexander Zaitsev.<br>
<br>
Some SETI experts condemn actively sending messages to
extraterrestrial life. Many researchers consider such communications
unauthorized diplomacy that could potentially spell danger for
humans because we cannot predict what the consequences of making
contact with technological aliens would be for our society.<br>
<br>
If one is to send a message, the TRAPPIST-1 system is a good choice,
since it is home to seven rocky worlds orbiting a red dwarf star.
Several of the system's planets may be habitable, with planet 'e'
being the most promising to support life as we know it.<br>
<br>
However it's unlikely that METI International will hit pay dirt so
soon. "If we get a reply from we'll know that the universe is
chock-full of intelligent life," Vakoch said. "More realistically,
we may need to repeat transmissions like the one to TRAPPIST-1 to
hundreds, thousands, even millions of stars before we reach one that
is inhabited by radio astronomers."<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.space.com/climate-change-message-to-aliens">https://www.space.com/climate-change-message-to-aliens</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<br>
<i>[ war calamities as both trauma and opportunity for innovative
change - opinion from Foreign Policy journal ] </i><br>
<b>The Ukraine Crisis Offers a Rare Chance for Energy and Climate
Cooperation</b><br>
Russia’s war in Ukraine has exposed some difficult truths about the
world’s energy needs.<br>
By Jason Bordoff, a columnist at Foreign Policy, and Meghan L.
O’Sullivan, the Jeane Kirkpatrick professor of the Practice of
International Affairs at the Harvard Kennedy School.<br>
APRIL 18, 2022<br>
- -<br>
A key reason for the lower oil prices was the Biden administration’s
recent announcement of the largest release of oil in U.S. history
from the nation’s strategic stockpiles, followed by a smaller, but
still sizable, release from European countries. In explaining this
move, U.S. President Joe Biden acknowledged a difficult truth: More
fossil fuels are required at this time to meet the world’s current
energy needs. But Biden also acknowledged another difficult truth:
The world needs to move much more quickly toward a clean energy
future.<br>
<br>
This energy two-step is the only way the world can successfully
navigate both the current crisis with Russia and ensure a cleaner
energy future. Achieving both of these objectives will take forming
a coalition that bridges the current divides in the energy debate as
well as brings together climate scientists, environmentalists,
national security hawks, and the oil and gas industry in support of
meeting energy needs today but sharply reducing demand for fossil
fuels tomorrow.<br>
<br>
While talk of any bipartisan coalition may seem pollyannish, there
is a precedent for such a coalition. In 2004, in the wake of the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the U.S. invasion of Iraq,
conservative national security hawks reached out to environmental
activists to urge Congress to cut oil use in half by 2025 because
oil imports were both a national security and environmental risk.
Nearly 20 years later, this coalition—which lost its glue due to the
U.S. fracking boom—is hardly remembered, and U.S. oil demand remains
unchanged...<br>
- -<br>
Shale oil and gas are actually well suited to the transition because
their production declines very steeply when absent continued
investment. As a result, shale production can be more quickly phased
down as clean energy causes oil and gas use to fall. The investments
that are needed include not only those that support supply in the
United States but also expand LNG shipments to Europe if that
continent is to meet its energy needs securely without reverting to
coal.<br>
<br>
On the other side of the grand bargain, the oil and gas industry
needs to get on board with the energy transition more fully and
acknowledge that reliance on such fuels over the medium and long
term poses hazards to the United States’ environment, economy, and
national security. Doing so offers an opportunity for industry to
acknowledge the inevitable course toward a clean energy future,
especially as the growing urgency to address climate change and
dramatic cost declines in clean energy will now combine with the
national security imperative to reduce oil and gas use made evident
by the Ukraine crisis.<br>
<br>
Measures to boost oil and gas production in the short term should be
met not only with stringent requirements for high environmental
standards, such as eliminating methane leaks and flaring, but also
with binding commitments by companies to immediately support
stronger measures that will reduce oil and gas use over the longer
term.<br>
<br>
Strong policy signals, backed by a wider consensus, including
industry, and judicious government permitting will help ensure that
any additional investments in hydrocarbon infrastructure do not
exceed what is needed to meet energy needs while also accelerating a
transition.<br>
<br>
This will require more than paying lip service to bills with little
chance of passing; in exchange for an easier time supplying energy
today, it will require oil and gas companies to support a broader
variety of measures to reduce hydrocarbon use in the future, such as
the clean energy components of Biden’s Build Back Better
legislation.<br>
<br>
The long-term climate benefits of such measures would vastly exceed
the emissions associated with the additional infrastructure and
production needed to keep the lights and heat on today. Moreover,
companies should disclose their lobbying on climate to ensure their
private efforts on Capitol Hill are aligned with their public
statements.<br>
<br>
The energy transition will be as complex and geopolitically fraught
as it is necessary. Smoothing its jagged path requires more societal
consensus. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, for all its tragedy,
offers an opportunity to forge such a consensus—not by lurching to
the left or to the right but by bringing together a motley coalition
to collectively seize the future without forsaking the present.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/04/18/ukraine-russia-war-oil-energy-climate-gas-prices/">https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/04/18/ukraine-russia-war-oil-energy-climate-gas-prices/</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ happens anywhere on Earth ]</i><br>
<b>Cooking Releases Aerosols in Atmosphere That Pollutes the
Environment: Study</b><br>
By IANS14 - April 18, 2022<br>
Organic aerosols released in cooking may stay in the atmosphere for
several days because of nanostructures formed by fatty acids, finds
a study.<br>
<br>
These aerosols have long been associated with poor air quality in
urban areas, but their impact on human-made climate change is hard
to gauge. That's because of the diverse range of molecules found
within aerosols and their varying interactions with the environment.<br>
<br>
"Cooking aerosols account for up to 10 per cent of particulate
matter (PM) emissions. Finding accurate ways to predict their
behaviour will give us much more precise ways to also assess their
contribution to climate change," said lead author Dr Christian
Pfrang of the University of Birmingham.<br>
<br>
Experts at the Universities of Birmingham and Bath probed the
behaviour of thin films of oleic acid — an unsaturated fatty acid
commonly released when cooking.<br>
<br>
In the study, published in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, they
used a theoretical model combined with experimental data to predict
the amount of aerosols generated from cooking that may hang around
in the environment.<br>
<br>
"We're increasingly finding out how molecules like these fatty acids
from cooking can organise themselves into bilayers and other regular
shapes and stacks within aerosol droplets that float in the air, and
how this completely changes how fast they degrade, how long they
persist in the atmosphere, and how they affect pollution and
weather," said co-author Dr Adam Squires, of the University of Bath.<br>
<br>
Previous research suggests that gas cooking produces about twice as
much PM2.5 as electric. It also produces nitrogen oxides (NOx),
including nitrogen oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon
monoxide (CO), and formaldehyde (CH2O or HCHO). All of these
pollutants are health risks if not properly managed.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://weather.com/en-IN/india/pollution/news/2022-04-18-cooking-releases-aerosols-in-atmosphere">https://weather.com/en-IN/india/pollution/news/2022-04-18-cooking-releases-aerosols-in-atmosphere</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><i>[ another new podcast about our situation ]</i><br>
<b>‘We’re trying to turn the magnet towards optimism’: Cate
Blanchett on her new climate crisis podcast</b><br>
Miranda Sawyer<br>
Sun 17 Apr 2022<br>
In Climate of Change, old friends actor Cate Blanchett and clean
energy entrepreneur Danny Kennedy aim to offer ordinary people
real-life solutions to environmental disaster<br>
<br>
Cate Blanchett is Australian. I mention this fact because I’d
forgotten it, somehow, so her manner of speaking – upbeat,
front-footed, Aussie-accented – comes as a surprise. And I’ve
spent quite some time hearing her talk over the past couple of
days, as she has a new podcast, Climate of Change, which she hosts
with her friend Danny Kennedy, another Australian. Kennedy is the
CEO of an environmental non-profit, New Energy Nexus, and runs the
California Clean Energy Fund. Their podcast, as you may have
guessed from the title, is about the climate emergency. But before
you come over all world-weary and what’s-the-point, before you get
tetchy about preachy celebrities telling us stuff we already know,
you might as well stop. Blanchett is already there.<br>
<br>
“You can recycle up the wazoo, Miranda,” she says (told you she’s
Australian), “but it can just make you feel more cross and
isolated and panicky… I get that. What we’re trying to do with the
podcast is to turn the magnet towards optimism in these incredibly
pessimistic times.”<br>
<br>
We’re talking via video link, but Blanchett has her camera turned
off. Kennedy, who’s in his office in Oakland, California, hasn’t
and he wanders around, showing us the view from the window (just
some more offices, really). Blanchett’s location is a secret, due
to heavy-handed PRs and her natural privacy, though I’d guess
she’s in the UK (she lives in Sussex).<br>
- -<br>
She and Kennedy made Climate of Change earlier this year, mostly
in a studio in east London. They have some strong guests: Adam
McKay, the director of Don’t Look Up, makes an appearance, as does
Prince William, to talk about his Earthshot prize. (He explains it
very well, actually; it sounds much more interesting than I’d
realised.) Still, at the start of the series, in common with many
climate emergency podcasts, the discussion can feel rather broad,
with smudgy chat about tech and innovation and the “disruptive
decade”. At one point, someone says: “We are the stories we tell
ourselves”, which might be true but doesn’t help that much with
the gas bill. By episode two, however, the show is focusing on
real-life solutions and these are undoubtedly encouraging. We meet
a Filipino woman who’s designed a clean energy lamp that local
fisherpeople can use; the Londoner who’s brought gardening to
train stations; the designer of living sea walls that encourage
plants and fish to thrive. One California company, OhmConnect, has
such a good idea about reducing at-home use of electricity that I
try to sign up. But it’s not yet available in the UK...<br>
- -<br>
What they’re trying to do with the podcast, says Kennedy, is
appeal to people like me. To show us tired recyclers that the
answers to environmental catastrophe are already out there. “I
think the choir has heard the doom and gloom song for a long
time,” he says, “and sung it from the song sheet, like a good
choir would. What they haven’t been taught is the song about
solutions and the fact we’ve got them.”<br>
<br>
“A lot of people are feeling fatigued,” says Blanchett. “I think
we need a sense of, ‘No, don’t worry, these changes are
happening.’ Because they are.”<br>
<br>
Blanchett and Kennedy met in Sydney in the early 1990s. They were
part of the same social circle – Kennedy wrote a play with Andrew
Upton, now Blanchett’s husband. Later, in 2008, Blanchett and
Upton were appointed co-artistic directors of Sydney Theatre
Company and decided to try to make the building, an old
timber-and-glass warehouse, as ecologically sound as possible.
They enlisted Kennedy to help. He brought in consultants – “one
guy called Gavin Gilchrist: Cate, if you recall, the fellow who
did the toilet flushes” – and helped redo the insulation to make
the building “tighter and better, even though it was a pretty old,
leaky, wooden construction”...<br>
- -<br>
The biggest proposal was the installation of solar energy panels,
which proved difficult to get past heritage rules and the general
cynicism of Sydney’s county council. “We were met by a lot of
internal scepticism and external opposition,” remembers Blanchett.
“You know: ‘What has this to do with a cultural institution, what
does it have to do with making theatre, why are we bothering?’ So
we thought: ‘OK, we’ll be at the theatre company for 10 years and
we have a whole suite of ambitions. And the solar panels will
probably be the last one we achieve, if we do.’ And it was the
first one we achieved.”<br>
<br>
It took two years. There are now 1,906 solar panels powering
lights, ventilation and air con across the building. Kennedy
thinks that Blanchett and Upton’s theatre project was “a
catalystic moment” that kickstarted a sense in Australia that
solar power was viable and cost-effective; the country is now, he
says, the biggest solar market in the developed world. Blanchett
thinks of it as a “symbolic gesture” that, when added to an
industry shift, “all adds up”.<br>
<br>
So she and Kennedy have known each other for ages (Blanchett
recently found some old photos of his daughters when they were
little) and then, last summer, Kennedy came to stay with Blanchett
and her family in Cornwall. They took him to the Eden Project,
which he loved, and the podcast project was started there. They
visited “these old mines that are engaged in modern, clean-energy
transition minerals and materials production – I’m a geek, I love
that,” he says. For Blanchett, the show was “a much more primal
urge. We sort of had to. I had so many questions.”...<br>
- -<br>
The biggest proposal was the installation of solar energy panels,
which proved difficult to get past heritage rules and the general
cynicism of Sydney’s county council. “We were met by a lot of
internal scepticism and external opposition,” remembers Blanchett.
“You know: ‘What has this to do with a cultural institution, what
does it have to do with making theatre, why are we bothering?’ So
we thought: ‘OK, we’ll be at the theatre company for 10 years and
we have a whole suite of ambitions. And the solar panels will
probably be the last one we achieve, if we do.’ And it was the
first one we achieved.”<br>
<br>
It took two years. There are now 1,906 solar panels powering
lights, ventilation and air con across the building. Kennedy
thinks that Blanchett and Upton’s theatre project was “a
catalystic moment” that kickstarted a sense in Australia that
solar power was viable and cost-effective; the country is now, he
says, the biggest solar market in the developed world. Blanchett
thinks of it as a “symbolic gesture” that, when added to an
industry shift, “all adds up”.<br>
<br>
So she and Kennedy have known each other for ages (Blanchett
recently found some old photos of his daughters when they were
little) and then, last summer, Kennedy came to stay with Blanchett
and her family in Cornwall. They took him to the Eden Project,
which he loved, and the podcast project was started there. They
visited “these old mines that are engaged in modern, clean-energy
transition minerals and materials production – I’m a geek, I love
that,” he says. For Blanchett, the show was “a much more primal
urge. We sort of had to. I had so many questions.”<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://climate.nasa.gov/news/3154/international-sea-level-satellite-takes-over-from-predecessor/">https://climate.nasa.gov/news/3154/international-sea-level-satellite-takes-over-from-predecessor/</a><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ media discussion with a respected historian ]</i><br>
<b>Capitalism & the Apocalypse: Mike Davis in Conversation</b><br>
Apr 15, 2022<br>
Haymarket Books<br>
Join Salvage and Haymarket Books for a discussion of Capitalism
& the Apocalypse with writer and activist Mike Davis.<br>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------<br>
<blockquote>Ice shelves larger than the largest U.S. states
collapse, and barely make headlines. Imperial powers return to
brinksmanship and open conflict, and our politicians assure us
they are ready and willing to build more charnel houses. Plague
floats like a film over our collective future, and we’re asked to
face it with a stiff upper lip for the sake of the Economy. And
these are just the most recent of the festering horrors to grow
from capitalism and threaten the very existence of humanity.As the
profit system has spawned disaster after disaster, few analysts,
pundits, or commentators can claim to have addressed the mounting
number of catastrophes with as much insight or clarity as Mike
Davis. And none have combined his unflinching honesty with an
unwavering commitment to the necessity of a revolutionary break
from our entire social system.From his magisterial City of Quartz,
to the more recent The Monster Enters, Davis has been cataloging
and raging against capitalism’s slow burning (though rapidly
accelerating) apocalypse(s) in his invaluable books for decades.
He will join our Salvage Live hosts, Annie Olaloku-Teriba and
Richard Seymour, for an urgent discussion of the crises we face,
and what it means to confront them with eyes open and desolation
in our hearts.<br>
</blockquote>
---------------------------------------------------------------------<br>
Speakers:<br>
Mike Davis is professor emeritus of creative writing at UC
Riverside. He joined the San Diego chapter of the Congress of Racial
Equality in 1962 at age 16 and the struggle for racial and social
equality has remained the lodestar of his life. His City of Quartz:
Excavating the Future in Los Angeles challenged reigning
celebrations of the city from the perspectives of its lost radical
past and insurrectionary future. His wide-ranging work has married
science, archival research, personal experience, and creative
writing with razor-sharp critiques of empires and ruling classes.<br>
<br>
Annie Olaloku-Teriba is a writer and podcaster whose research
focuses on how neoliberalism has transformed the theory and practice
of ‘race.’<br>
<br>
Richard Seymour is a writer and broadcaster from Northern Ireland
and the author of numerous books about politics including Against
Austerity and Corbyn: The Strange Rebirth of Radical Politics. His
writing appears in The New York Times, the London Review of Books,
the Guardian, Prospect, Jacobin, and innumerable other places
including his own Patreon. He is an editor at Salvage magazine.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KSQ3UYl29D0">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KSQ3UYl29D0</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ The news archive - looking back at a significant event ]</i><br>
<font size="5"><b>April 20, 2002</b></font><br>
The Guardian reports:<br>
"The head of the international scientific panel on climate change,
which has called for urgent action to curb global warming, was
deposed yesterday after a campaign by the Bush administration,
Exxon-Mobil and other energy companies to get him replaced.<br>
<br>
"At a plenary session of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) in Geneva, Robert Watson, a British-born US
atmospheric scientist who has been its chairman since 1996, was
replaced by an Indian railway engineer and environmentalist, R K
Pachauri.<br>
<br>
"Dr Pachauri received 76 votes to Dr. Watson's 49 after a
behind-the-scenes diplomatic campaign by the US to persuade
developing countries to vote against Dr Watson, according to
diplomats. The British delegation argued for Dr Watson and Dr
Pachauri to share the chairmanship.<br>
<br>
"The US campaign came to light after the disclosure of a
confidential memorandum from the world's biggest oil company,
Exxon-Mobil, to the White House, proposing a strategy for his
removal."<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.theguardian.com/world/2002/apr/20/internationaleducationnews.climatechange">http://www.theguardian.com/world/2002/apr/20/internationaleducationnews.climatechange</a><br>
<br>
<p>======================================= <br>
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