All Environment
- Environmental trouble brewing for the K-Cup?One-cup coffee giant Keurig's K-Cups are not recyclable. What K-Cup plans to do about it, and will it happen fast enough?
- Stoned rabbits? DEA agent says medical marijuana endangers bunniesCould wildlife be an unintended casualty of legalizing medical marijuana? In Utah, one DEA agent argues that weed farms are bad for rabbits, and other animals.Â
- Tale of two droughts: What California, Syria can teach about adaptation gapAnalysis of severe droughts in California and Syria offers clues to understanding the adaptation gap between rich, stable countries and poorer, less stable ones.
- US oil keeps booming despite low prices – for nowIdle drilling rigs, lay-offs, and low oil prices should mean less oil production, right?
- Could oil prices fall again?There's a chance that the recent rebound in oil prices is only temporary. Several trends are conspiring to force oil prices down for a second time.
- OPEC mulls emergency meeting amid low oil pricesSome OPEC members, concerned about the economic impact of low oil prices, say the cartel may have to call an emergency meeting sooner rather than later. But Saudi Arabia, the most influential member, is likely to veto such an idea.
- Oil refinery strike spreads across USAn oil refinery strike continues to spread across California, Texas, and elsewhere across the US. It is now the largest US oil refinery strike in nearly 35 years.
- Obama vetoes Keystone XL bill, but pipeline saga is far from overPresident Obama vetoed Republicans' bill approving the Keystone XL pipeline Tuesday, but this isn't the last we'll hear of the controversial pipeline project.Â
- Why gas prices are on the rise, againDue to a combination of union strikes, an oil refinery explosion and the winter season, gas prices are rising again.
- Rescued: 19 manatees stuck in Florida drainIn Satellite Beach, Fla, rescuers freed 19 manatees stuck in a storm drain Monday night.Â
- Mussels, clams hit by ocean acidification: how effects could be forestalledThere's a growing understanding of the factors that contribute to ocean acidification in coastal areas and how shellfish respond. A new study looks at the risks to shellfish and identifies areas where livelihoods are most at risk.
- Here’s why gas prices are rising againGas prices have been climbing for a month, but that's after prices plummeted over the previous six months, bottoming out around $2.00 a gallon in late January.
- Will oil prices fall to $10 or rebound to $100?Probably neither. The most likely scenario is that US crude oil prices will bounce around current levels for a while before gradually recovering to the $60-$70 per barrel level, Tillier writes.
- The race for the electric car's future is on [Recharge]Apple reportedly throws its hat into the electric car game; Ukraine gas security takes a hit; BP calls for a price on carbon. Catch up on global energy with Recharge.
- Germany flirts with fracking on road to renewable energyOpposition to hydraulic fracturing has been very strong in Germany, but the government is flirting with the idea of allowing oil and gas drillers to begin fracking as an answer to energy security issues.
- Explosion rocks California Exxon refinery, four injuredThe blast at an Exxon Mobil refinery Wednesday morning happened in a recently installed processing facility and the material involved was gasoline, said a Fire Department spokesman.
- Why the power grid of the future is in California and New YorkNew York and California are working to position the electric system to succeed in an environment of changing technology costs and capabilities, Crosby and Cross-Call write.
- Why oil prices will inevitably riseAnalyzing the short-term trajectory of oil prices is certainly important, Cunningham writes, but it obscures the fact that over the long-term, oil exploration companies may struggle to bring new sources of supply online.
- After fiery West Virginia train derailment, is oil by rail safe?Monday's derailment in West Virginia is the latest in a string of crude oil train mishaps that have resulted in explosions and sometimes fatalities. US shipments of crude by rail have jumped more than 4,000 percent since 2008, fueling calls for tighter safety rules.
- BP's two-word fix for global climate changeOil supermajor BP says global carbon emissions will continue to rise well above what most scientists regard as safe levels in the years to come. While there's no silver-bullet solution to the threat of climate change, the company endorses one specific policy as a way to guide efforts.