What’s quelling the anxiety of electric-car drivers? – High Country New, 3.20.18

Charging corridors will make an interior West electric-car road trip increasingly possible. Jessica Kutz  Gerald Espinosa vividly remembers his anxiety-riddled drive up Colorado’s McClure Pass in May 2015, watching the charge on his fully electric Fiat 500e plummet as he inched toward the 8,755-foot summit. He was in the final stretch of what normally would [...]

By |2018-03-24T09:54:52-06:00March 22nd, 2018|News|0 Comments

Should We Chill Out about Global Warming? – Scientific American, 3,8.18

Two “ecomodernists” argue that continued progress in science and other realms will help us overcome environmental problems By John Horgan Credit: redmal Getty Images I work hard to maintain my optimistic outlook. Wishful thinking works. The first step toward building a more healthy, peaceful, just world is to believe we can do it. So how do I deal [...]

By |2018-03-19T14:57:23-06:00March 19th, 2018|News|0 Comments

Lands near Chaco Canyon spared from drilling, for now – West Wise, 3.8.1

New Mexico communities are latest to feel the cost of “energy dominance” Photo: Sara Rose Tannenbaum This is the second installment of the Center for Western Priorities’ “Postcards from the West” blog series, featuring place-based about public lands in the West. Leases to drill near New Mexico’s Chaco Canyon — the epicenter of one of the great [...]

By |2018-03-14T14:07:44-06:00March 14th, 2018|News|0 Comments

Cyberwarfare Has the Electric Grid as Prime Target – Security & Sustainability, 3.5.18

by ARTURO HERRERA By Llewellyn King — Electricity is the sexiest thing you can’t see. It’s the tie that binds modern society together; makes life comfortable, even livable; and keeps everything humming, from computers to production lines. Without it civil disorder and a swift descent into hard-to-imagine chaos. Just look at Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, then [...]

By |2018-03-13T13:40:31-06:00March 13th, 2018|News|0 Comments

Trade group sees economic potential in methane emissions – ABQ Journal, 3.7.18

By Marie C. Baca / Journal Staff Writer Methane, the main component of natural gas that is often leaked by oil and gas drilling operations, is the source of about $200 million in lost gas revenue for New Mexico energy companies. (THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Scientists say methane pollution poses a public health risk [...]

By |2018-03-08T09:27:27-07:00March 8th, 2018|News|0 Comments

Zinke says Interior should be a partner with oil companies – Durango Herald, 3.6.18

 Government should shorten permitting process, secretary says By David Koenig AP Business Writer U.S. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke walks through the Western Conservation and Hunting Expo in Salt Lake City on Feb. 9. Zinke said Tuesday that his agency should be a partner with energy companies that seek to drill for oil and gas on public land. [...]

By |2018-03-07T08:46:32-07:00March 7th, 2018|News|0 Comments

Grim forecast for the Rio Grande has water managers, conservationists concerned – NM Political Report, 3.5.18

By Laura Paskus This weekend’s warm and windy conditions were good for hiking or kite-flying. But they were tough on a river everyone is already expecting to be low on runoff this spring and summer. According to the National Water and Climate Center’s forecast for the Rio Grande Basin, the water supply outlook for spring and [...]

By |2018-03-05T13:36:17-07:00March 5th, 2018|News|0 Comments

The future of the Navajo Nation will be brighter after NGS and Peabody – Navajo-Hopi Observer, 3.5.18

A bulldozer crawls over a pile of coal at Peabody’s Kayenta mine on the Navajo Nation in this 2012 photo. President Donald Trump signed an executive order that he said will help bring back mining jobs, but critics say market forces will hold back those jobs. Photo courtesy of Peabody Energy To the editor: There [...]

By |2018-03-05T13:22:40-07:00March 5th, 2018|News|0 Comments
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