Energy and Environment News Roundup – 7.9.13
A daily roundup of the most important energy, environment, and climate news from around the world.
EMISSIONS
China says it will not set carbon cap (via Renewable Energy World)
Blueprint for Russia’s carbon market should be ready by end of 2013 (via RTCC)
DOE fielding aircraft-based study of aerosols generated by wildfires in US (via Green Car Congress)
Colorado mulls oil and gas air pollution rules as residents erupt (via Denver Post)
Website tracks 20 Minnesota cities’ greenhouse gas emissions (via Star-Tribune)
COAL
China’s reliance on coal reduces life expectancy 5.5 years (via The Guardian)
RENEWABLES
Navigant: Solar price to reach grid parity worldwide in 2020 (via Energy Manager Today)
Future of UK offshore wind power in “serious doubt” (via The Guardian)
Germany to pull plug on solar subsidies by 2018 (via Phys.org)
Renewables rise to 15% in Australia as power demand and emissions fall (via Renew Economy)
India risks Spain’s solar slump with move to cut tariff (via Bloomberg)
Los Angeles kicks off second round of solar feed-in tariff (via CleanTechnica)
Georgia Power to buy output from 38MW solar project (via Renew Grid)
NUCLEAR
Nearly half of Japanese cities near nuclear plants would allow resumption (via United Press International)
Japan moves closer to restarting its nuclear reactors (via The Guardian)
World’s first floating nuclear power plant to begin operating in Russia in 2016 (via Russia Times)
CLIMATE
Climate change to spawn more and stronger hurricanes (via USA Today)
Pacific Island nations meet in Fiji to discuss 2015 climate adaptation strategy (via RTCC)
Nigeria kickstarts adaptation efforts to head off climate disasters (via Thompson-Reuters)
Stressed native UK trees on the march as climate change collapses seasons (via ClimateWire)
Climate change could spark small mammal invasion (via Scientific American)
Climate change might be enabling beetles’ rise against pine trees (via MPR News)
OIL
US well sites in 2012 discharged more oil than Valdez (via EnergyWire)
Quebec disaster highlights risk of moving crude oil by rail (via Washington Post)
TRANSPORTATION
ABB to build world’s largest network of EV fast-charging stations in Netherlands (via Green Car Congress)
Ethanol critics rev up efforts to repeal biofuel rules on gasoline (via Omaha World-Herald)
Tesla Motors to join Nasdaq 100 (via Bloomberg)
NATURAL GAS/FRACKING
Fracking ban halts first shale gas project in Spain (via Christian Science Monitor)
West Virginia natural gas well explosion kills at least five (via Reuters)
ENVIRONMENT
Insurance companies given severe weather warning (via Climate Central)
Southwest US forests may never recover from megafires (via The Atlantic)
Hundreds evacuated as wildfire threatens Alaskan towns (via Anchorage Daily News)
KEYSTONE XL
Obama’s Keystone approval could hinge on Canada’s climate measures (via Houston Chronicle)
State Department admits it doesn’t know exact Keystone XL route (via DeSmog Blog)
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Energy efficiency saves Scottish homeowners £1 billion (via BusinessGreen)
DOE to toughen energy efficiency standards for new federal buildings (via The Hill)
World’s largest LED retrofit saves 80% for GM (via CleanTechnica)
GREEN BUSINESS
Majority of EU citizens back green product labeling; 77% would pay premium (via BusinessGreen)
POLITICS
Obama waves veto pen at House Energy Department spending bill (via The Hill)
Utility 2.0: Can political activism and microtargeting boost clean energy? (via Greentech Media)
“Nuclear option” decision arrives for Sen. Reid on Obama nominations (via The Hill)
OPINION
Solar costs and grid prices on collision course (via CleanTechnica)
Google becomes a big energy player (via Houston Chronicle)
Survey: 76% of consumers don’t trust their utility (via Greentech Media)
Why France is the next big smart meter market (via Navigant Research)
Divestment: old tactic in new climate campaign (via New York Times)