Energy and Environment News Roundup – 7.22.14
A daily roundup of the most important energy, environment, and climate news from around the world.
CLIMATE
NOAA: June 2014 was the hottest in recorded history (via National Journal)
Climate change already having profound impacts on European lakes (via National Geographic)
Report: Higher seas mean extreme floods in South Carolina, North Carolina (via Miami Herald/AP)
Sunday TV shows cover climate change as much in 1H 2014 as in last four years combined (via Media Matters for America)
ENERGY POLICY
Mexican Senate approves bulk of pending energy legislation (via Reuters)
Energy issues playing greater role in foreign policy, says State Dept. envoy (via The Hill)
RENEWABLES
Wind power will deliver more than seven percent of world’s electricity by 2018 (via Navigant Research)
India seen adding wind capacity after tax credit revived (via Bloomberg)
Brazil gets $335 million wind power loan from German development bank (via Bloomberg)
Powering villages with solar instead of dirty fossil fuels (via EcoWatch)
Renewables make up over 50% of new U.S. power in First Half of 2014 (via Renew Grid)
Who finances residential solar in 2014? (via Greentech Media)
The solar industry’s tax credit conundrum (via Greentech Media)
Michigan legislators seek “energy freedom” for consumer through distributed renewables (via Midwest Energy News)
Offshore wind farms create “reef effect” perfect for marine wildlife – especially seals (via The Independent)
Renewables revolution could be in management, not technology (via Climate Central)
NATURAL GAS
Fracking opponents renew call for South African shale gas halt (via Bloomberg)
U.K. shale regulation inadequate for safety, says report (via Bloomberg)
Researchers to test how Great Plains shale reacts to fracking (via Huffington Post/AP)
California halts fracking waste injection, warns it may be contaminating aquifers (via Mother Jones)
EMISSIONS
U.K. retains target to cut carbon emissions in half by 2025 (via Bloomberg)
Legislative attempts to block EPA standards harmful to small businesses (via The Hill)
NHL outlines plan to cut emissions, fight climate change (via The Hill)
COAL
Dirty coal plants undermine EU climate leadership, says report (via RTCC)
China warns against “blind” rush to build coal-to-gas plants (via Reuters)
Germany, U.K., Poland top “dirty 30” list of EU coal-fired power stations (via The Guardian)
ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Whirlpool wants Congress to ban class action lawsuits tied to Energy Star program (via New York Times)
Florida utilities move to slash energy conservation programs (via Climate Progress)
Third-party financing was solar’s catalyst – can energy efficiency find the same model? (via Greentech Media)
Four reasons why energy efficiency programs fail (via Energy Collective)
OIL
As U.S. leads world on oil production, East Coast opens to exploration (via Sustainable Business)
DOT Secretary: New oil train rules could have wide reach (via Houston Chronicle)
Wisconsin oil train derailment clean up underway, evacuation lifted (via Reuters)
TRANSPORTATION
Opel dropping Ampera, Europe’s Chevy Volt, because of weak sales (via Autoblog Green)
First six months of 2014 U.S. EV sales show 33% year-over-year gain (via Forbes)
ABB and Volvo partner on fast-charging system for hybrid and electric buses (via Green Car Congress)
Tesla idles California plant to retool for electric SUVs (via Bloomberg)
OPINION
Carbon repeal leaves Australia isolated and vulnerable (via Renew Economy)
Disney’s “Planes” sequel is an excuse to talk to your kids about climate change (via Grist)
Why has the response to California’s drought been so weak? (via Science Blogs)
Six reasons technology alone can’t solve water scarcity (via GreenBiz)
Utilities cry “fowl” over Duck Chart and distributed solar power (via CleanTechnica)
Why Tom Steyer’s millions won’t save the planet (via Forbes)