A nonprofit group that tracks oil and gas development has created an interactive map to show how close CO2 pipelines in Great Plains states come to environmentally and ecologically sensitive areas.
The map includes Indigenous land that hasn't been included in similar previous projects.
Ted Auch, Midwest program director for the FracTracker Alliance, said it focuses on Indigenous areas but goes further, showing in detail how close proposed CO2 pipelines would come to soybean and ethanol facilities, for example, but also to private land.
He said the interactive map is an improvement over existing ones.
"Which is to say that you could look at it as a static image, but you can't interact with or manipulate the data in terms of, like, scrolling in, scrolling out, finding addresses - you know, that kind of thing," said Auch. "It's available as a PDF or a JPG. So, what we've done is, we've taken that stuff and we've digitized it and we've included it on this map, so that people can actually - spatially and in real time - interact with the data itself."
The Great Plains Action Society says CO2 pipelines pose risks that disproportionately affect Indigenous communities and people of color.
Auch said FracTracker is working on another version that takes a deeper look at the proximity of pipelines to the Winnebago reservation south of Sioux City.
Energy companies say the pipelines are a safe and effective way to capture carbon from industrial processes, and store it underground, reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Auch said the interactive map will give farmers and other landowners near the proposed pipelines what they need to understand what's happening on their land, leveling the information playing field with corporate interests.
"You have these large, multinational corporations, and then on the other side of the ledger are small, medium-sized frontline or Indigenous groups that either have small budgets or no budgets," said Auch, "and don't have the capacity, the time, or the expertise to develop maps to inform their organizing activism or advocacy."
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in Omaha is making a livestream available as it hears oral arguments today in a case involving Iowa landowners affected by CO2 pipeline proposals, some of whom face seizure of their property by eminent domain if the Summit Carbon Solutions project moves forward.
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Nevada climate advocates say the impacts of climate change are only getting worse in the Silver State. They're now demanding Congress make it a priority and address what they call a dire situation.
Rep. Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas, introduced the Extreme Weather and Heat Response Modernization Act earlier this year and said it will provide the Federal Emergency Management Agency the "flexibility" to expand mitigation measures against extreme heat, which includes cooling centers. The legislation has made it out of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee with bipartisan support. Titus said if it doesn't pass this term, she vows it'll be one of the first pieces of legislation she will introduce in the upcoming session. Titus says extreme heat and drought go hand in hand.
"The Colorado River contributes greatly to our economy; $104 trillion is the annual economic activity that comes from things that relate to the Colorado River," Titus said. "It sustains 16 million jobs throughout the seven states that are part of the Colorado River Basin," she explained.
Titus contends that keeping the river and Lake Mead sound will be a positive for tourism, jobs and agriculture in Nevada and throughout the Western U.S. This week the U.S. House passed the Water Resources Development Act which Titus says includes provisions that will help sustain water resources in Nevada. The bill faced little opposition and now heads to the Senate, before being sent to the president.
Roberto Renteria, a member of the nonprofit Make the Road Nevada, said this year the Silver State endured increased extreme weather events such as record-breaking wildfires and relentless heat waves, making it difficult for folks to endure.
"These are not climactic events, they are urgent calls for action. The wildfires have burned more than 58,000 acres in our state, putting at risk our communities, wildlife and economic vitality," he said.
Renteria added the extreme heat simply cannot be ignored and contends the public health crisis disproportionately impacts those who work outside as well as those with low socio-economic status.
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The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and its partners have received a $4.5 million grant from the federal America the Beautiful Challenge program to restore more than 2,000 acres of oak and prairie land up and down the Willamette Valley. The project will draw on partnerships across 22 public, private and tribal sites to restore native plant species such as camas, and reduce fuel for wildfires.
Lindsay McClary, restoration ecologist with the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, said these oak and prairie lands have deep cultural significance as a source of food, medicine and hunting grounds.
"Really, these landscapes were maintained by traditional tribal practices and they were relied upon as such. So restoring these habitats is really like restoring cultural life ways to the Willamette Valley," she explained.
Once widespread, only 7% of oak habitat and 1% of prairie habitat remain in the state. This is in part due to the impacts of fire suppression, so one piece of the restoration plan is prescribed burning.
McClary said Kalapuya fire practices shaped the Willamette Valley, and that removal of fire has invited in too much plant growth, making the area more susceptible to wildfires, and added that oak and prairie habitats require constant disturbance, and the role of fire in ecosystems is often misunderstood.
"I think this project is really going to help shift and change that social conversation where we can embrace fire as an important tool when it's done correctly," she continued. "And it's going to lead to a reduction of those catastrophic wildfires that nobody wants to live through and experience."
Oak trees are known to support biodiversity like few other trees are able to. From large wildlife who graze on the acorns down to the many species of fungus that grow with them, oak trees are known to support at least 2,300 species. McClary said slowing down and observing the trees, will help people more fully appreciate them.
"From top to bottom, there's a whole little city of creatures that are existing or relying on a single oak that we really just don't notice," she said.
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Christmas, it turns out, is for the birds, at least for those that will be counted this year in the National Audubon Society's Christmas Bird Count.
The nearly monthlong bird count takes place around the country. Birders will go through a circled area with a 15-mile radius, counting the number of birds they see or hear.
Steve Sheffield, professor of biology at Bowie State University and vice president of the Maryland Ornithological Society, said the data gathered across the country will help map the trends and movements in bird populations.
"You can look at the population trends of each of the species and see where they're headed, whether their trajectory is up or down or whether they're stable," Sheffield outlined. "You can also look at where you are seeing the numbers. You're getting an idea of how the birds are moving due to climate change."
For counters who can identify bird calls, Sheffield noted they only need to hear a bird in order to count it, which helps with species flying silently, such as owls.
Sheffield emphasized collecting a century's worth of data is invaluable to bird conservation efforts. Birds, he added, are often a strong indicator of the overall health of ecosystems and are easily found and measured the world over.
One of the trends the bird count tracks is what Sheffield called "irruptive species," those forced to move south because food supplies in their local ecosystems run low.
"We get these birds showing up, like snowy owls, evening grosbeaks, purple finches, red-breasted nuthatches," Sheffield observed. "You could go several years and you won't find any of them. All of a sudden, one year, you have many of those species. That tells you some information about their habitat conditions."
The bird count begins Dec. 14 and goes through Jan. 5. The count is conducted by thousands of volunteers in more than 20 countries in the Western Hemisphere.
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