海角大神

For Republicans, carbon tax isn't dead, just dormant

In this edition: The conservatives who support climate action; a move for coal miners and against stream protections; swords into plowshares (sort of).

February 7, 2017

What we're writing

Not that long ago, the Republican Party had a presidential nominee who supported action to combat global warming. Above, candidate Sen. John McCain of Arizona talks about the issue in 2008 in North Bend, Wash., (flanked by former Washington Gov. Dan Evans). Polls show that many Republicans support climate action.
Elaine Thompson/AP/File

Seen in Washington: conservatives supporting climate action

Not that long ago, the Republican Party had a presidential nominee with policies聽to combat global warming. (Sen. John McCain in 2008, above.) Trump and the Republican-led Congress aren't showing much interest in climate change, but the idea of a carbon tax is still percolating 鈥 and conservatives who back it symbolize a climate-action聽wing of the GOP that may be growing.聽//聽Zack Colman

Why a climate economist is giving carbon's 'social cost' a second look

A longtime advocate of going slow on big carbon emissions reductions is increasingly convinced that the world needs to act faster and more substantially against global warming. //聽David Iaconangelo

A move for coal miners, against stream protections

The House and Senate聽voted聽to revoke an 11th-hour Obama聽administration rule on stream protection, paving the way for a Trump signature. The mining聽industry is hailing聽the move as confirmation the聽president will make good on his campaign promise聽to 'bring the coal industry back 100 percent.' //聽David Iaconangelo

Kimmel silenced, as political and corporate pressures converge

Seed-embedded bullets sprouting flowers?

The US Army is seeking a proposal for biodegradable ammunition that will not corrode and pollute soil and water. In fact, the goal is for the training bullets to contain plant seeds that can sprout right out of the spent rounds. //聽Charlie Wood

What we're reading

A concern is that climate change may make extreme El Ni帽o events, like the 2015-16 pattern, more common, affecting the rainforest's health and its ability to store carbon dioxide. // Mongabay

The oil giant considers an old rule of investing: diversification. // Bloomberg

A garden at O'Hare International puts aeroponics on display, growing 44 types of produce used by airport restaurants. // Yale Climate Connections

The state's legislature backs a policy requiring聽utilities to buy more renewables. // The Baltimore Sun

Why a government shutdown looms as Congress splits town

Here's a tale of enterprising young scientists with ideas for turning power plant emissions into聽useful products. // Thomson Reuters Foundation

What's trending

"The Petra Nova plant captures 90% of their carbon emissions, which is 1.6 million metric tons, meaning they emit under 180,000 metric tons of gas."聽// Michael McDonald in Oilprice.com

鈥淲e know we鈥檙e still having some [water pollution] issues. It鈥檚 a lot better than it was, but is that good enough? Our intent is to continue.鈥 // Bruce Mowry, Miami Beach Engineer, as reported by聽The Miami Herald

"The V164 turbine, built by Danish energy company MHI Vestas, produced 216,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity in just 24 hours, enough to power聽240 U.S. homes for a month." // YaleEnvironment360