State News

Out West, a New Kind of Water War

DeeDee Correll
Thursday, April 2, 2009
ANDY CROSS, xx
Paul Sandifer tries his hand at fly fishing in the Arkansas River in downtown Salida, CO.

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Paul Sandifer tries his hand at fly fishing in the Arkansas River in downtown Salida, CO.
Reporting from Denver -- In rural Chaffee County, Colo., one of the world's largest beverage companies has discovered water it deems fit for a bottle: clean and crisp, with the mountain spring flavor people are willing to pay for.

Nestle Waters North America wants to tap an aquifer feeding a pair of springs near Salida, southwest of Colorado Springs, and draw 65 million gallons of water per year to bottle and sell under its Arrowhead brand.

 
But many mountain residents say Nestle should go bottle someone else's water.

"I'm afraid they will pump and pump until they suck it dry," said Michele Riggio, a Salida physical therapist who has led the opposition.

The conflict is the latest skirmish in an ongoing battle against the bottled water industry, which has enjoyed strong growth over the last decade thanks to the beverage's popularity among consumers who eschew tap water and soft drinks.

As companies like Nestle, which operates 50 spring sites around the country, seek to acquire new water sources, communities have increasingly resisted, said Noah Hall, a law professor at Wayne State University in Detroit and an expert in water law.

"By the nature of its business -- taking water out of the ground and putting it in a bottle and selling it -- Nestle is a lightning rod for opposition wherever they go," Hall said, citing conflicts in Florida, Maine, New Hampshire, Washington and California.

Such conflicts seem to have more to do with larger social concerns than the specific projects, said Bruce Lauerman, a natural resources manager for Nestle, a division of the Switzerland-based company.

"It's more a debate about corporations, who owns the water, and what is the best and highest use of water," he said.

Because a good supply of spring water isn't easy to come by, Nestle and other companies are reluctant to let one go without a fight, Hall said. Such conflicts usually wind up in court, where he said judges rarely denied water companies the right to at least some water.

"The opponents don't usually come away satisfied. They want to run them out of town, and that almost never happens," Hall said.

In Chaffee County, with a population of about 17,000, Nestle's research led it several years ago to the Ruby Mountain and Bighorn springs, Lauerman said.

The company wanted a local source for water it sells in the western U.S. -- a product that Nestle has been trucking from California to other states.

Nestle's plan in Colorado is to extract water from the aquifer, pipe it several miles to a truck stop, then send it to a bottling facility in Denver. Because it will be taking water that otherwise would flow into the Arkansas River, Nestle intends to replenish the river with water purchased from the Denver-area city of Aurora.

The plan, Nestle officials say, leaves more than enough water. Nestle will extract less than 10% of the average spring flows, and snowmelt and precipitation will recharge the aquifer, Lauerman said.

The company also intends to restore the land around the springs, including an old fishery, to its natural habitat and preserve 100 acres of land, a plan praised by state wildlife officials.

Nestle also touts the economic benefits to Chaffee County, saying it would provide short-term construction jobs and about $80,000 in annual taxes, as well as donations to charities.

But many residents regard Nestle's assurances with skepticism. And what happens, they ask, if there's a drought?

"They're taking and not giving," said Riggio, who learned of Nestle's plan soon after viewing the documentary "Flow," which examines the world's dwindling fresh water supply. The film reinforced her conviction that water should not be wasted on "the very unsustainable practice of putting water in bottles and trucking it all over the place."

"I think tap water is just fine," said Riggio, 45.

She and other residents, who have packed county meetings to protest the project, also question whether the county will realize much economic benefit and worry that Nestle's trucks, making 25 round trips per day, will snarl traffic on mountain passes.

Frank McMurry, a rancher who sold Nestle the Bighorn springs property in 2007 for $860,000, and other supporters of the project said it could spur businesses to invest in the area. They dismiss worries that it could deplete water supplies or worsen traffic.

McMurry, a longtime resident, noted that some of the biggest opponents of the project were newcomers.

"They got their spot in heaven and don't want any change," said McMurry, 70. "The old-timers -- and there's not many of us left -- you never see them protesting. But by God, the longhairs and the ponytails come out of the woodwork just to protest something."

Chaffee County commissioners will consider the proposal this month. County development director Don Reimer said one topic of interest will be the possible effect on the aquifer.

And as always seems to happen with water in the West, there are varied opinions. Several reports have drawn different conclusions on the potential effects on the watershed.

Correll writes for The Times.

Duke set to give N.C. Coast $1 Million

Bruce Henderson
Tuesday, March 3, 2009

 Duke Energy will donate $1 million to help a fragile coastal N.C. peninsula adapt to climate change, the Nature Conservancy will announce today.

 

The money from one of the United States' largest utility sources of carbon dioxide, the gas linked to global warming, will help the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge cope with rising sea levels.

 

The refuge sits on the 2,100-square-mile Albemarle Peninsula, just inside the Outer Banks. The peninsula has very high vulnerability to sea-level rise, one of the hallmarks of climate change, the Environmental Protection Agency said in a January report.

 

About two-thirds of the peninsula is less than five feet above sea level. Erosion is gnawing away up to 25 feet of shoreline a year.

 

The 152,000-acre Alligator River refuge is feeling the effects of advancing saltwater, said Mike Bryant, manager of the refuge.

 

Aerial photographs show lost shoreline, he said. Man-made ditches dug years ago to drain the low-lying land are growing wider nearest Albemarle Sound. Forests are dying and changing to marsh as saltwater creeps farther inland.

 

“All we want to do is make sure the rate of change isn't being accelerated by man-made features like the ditches,” Bryant said.

 

Devices to manage the flow of water in the ditches will help restore the natural hydrology, he said. The conservancy also plans to plant marsh grasses and restore wetlands as a buffer to rising seas, and build oyster reefs to absorb pounding waves.

 

It's the first such grant by Duke for climate-change research, CEO Jim Rogers said Monday. Duke has a long relationship with the Nature Conservancy.

 

Rogers called the gift an investment not only in minimizing future warming but in adapting to climate changes that have already begun.

 

“Quite frankly, this is something we think is worthy of our investment and will allow them to come up with solutions to address it,” he said.

 

The Nature Conservancy has a 30-year history on the peninsula, helping protect 540,000 acres now mostly owned by the federal government. It's home to endangered red wolves and a wealth of wildlife, from black bears to migratory songbirds.

 

“Duke Energy's generous gift will help us protect that investment against rising sea levels,” said Katherine Skinner, executive director of the conservancy's N.C. field office.

 

Other donors will contribute another $250,000 toward the sea-level project, the first of its kind by the conservancy. The group hopes to install a manager to oversee the project by mid- to late summer, and may expand the work to other refuges.

 

Elsewhere on the peninsula, the EPA reported, saltwater is killing Atlantic white cedars, and some farmers say salt is affecting their fields as peat soils break down. N.C. State University researchers are experimenting with salt-tolerant soybeans. As much as 1 million acres in the area could be underwater by 2100, some experts predict.

Students go to D.C. to lobby Climate Bill

Everdeen Mason
Tuesday, March 3, 2009

 WASHINGTON - The temperature in Washington, D.C. hit record lows Sunday and it snowed almost five inches. Regardless, thousands turned out for Monday's Power Shift '09 Lobby Day, where students met with their state politicians and lobbied them to sign the house Climate Bill.

 
This kind of devotion fueled Power Shift '09, an environmental youth summit in Washington, D.C. The four-day conference, which ended Monday, focused on tying environmentalism with other aspects of life, and taught 12,000 young people how to lobby Congress.
 
"This whole weekend we were just getting the training to prepare for Monday," said Keith Poole, an Ohio resident. Poole, a veteran of the climate change movement, traveled to Ohio from California as part of BioTour, whose bus runs on waste vegetable oil, biodiesel and solar panels.
 
"They gave us a list of people who are undecided [about the bill]," Poole said. "We're going to try and lobby those people."
 
Poole said the lobby process would only be a five or 10 minute meeting, and would most likely be with an aide representing the legislators.
 
"We'll tell them who we are, what we're doing here, why we feel compelled and why they should agree with us," he said.
 
Close to 50 Ohio students had the opportunity to talk to Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown's aide Monday about a new climate bill.
 
The aide "told us about what Brown had already been doing, … trying to make us complacent with what they'd already been working on," said Mattie Reitman, a Columbus local and member of the Student Environmental Coalition.
 
"If Sherrod Brown is so interested in economics, he should not put any money in coal because it's an economic dead end," Reitman said.
 
Reitman said the student consensus at the summit was that while economics are important, the concern should be about the environment.
 
Corey Zanotti, a student at Ohio State, couldn't stay for Lobby Day Monday because he had to come back for classes, so he started his Lobby Day at 1 a.m. Sunday.
 
"Six thousand of us marched to the White House," said the sophomore in computer science and engineering. "We tried to wake Obama up."
 
Zanotti also attended a speech by Ralph Nader at the convention.
 
"He said we have to make it a movement and not a trend. Seeing someone in a suit is different," he said. "I've seen so many hippies talking about climate change. The only way to beat corporations is by involving everyone."
 
Zanotti said another way to "beat corporations" would be to unite other campuses. There were many workshops about what other campuses are doing.
 
UCLA "used competitiveness between branches to get people to go green," Zanotti said. "At another campus, the president was on his hands and knees sorting recycling. Gee is invested in all this coal, and that's why I can't see this happening at OSU."
 
Jason Biser, a sophomore in psychology, was more optimistic. He spent his day learning about the ties between the green movement and spirituality.
 
The workshop "'Awakening the Dreamer' spoke a lot about social justice, environmentalism and spiritual fulfillment and how they are interrelated," Biser said. "I consider myself pretty spiritual so I'm pretty excited. We went over a lot of the same elements as other workshops but included the spiritual element - which seems to be the most human element."

Michigan to get millions to make homes more energy efficient

TODD SPANGLER
Thursday, March 12, 2009

WASHINGTON – And the dollars just keep on coming. 

The White House announced today that Michigan is set to get more than $325 million in funds to help people weatherize their home and make them more energy efficient. It’s part of an $8-billion slice of the stimulus bill Congress passed earlier this year to get the economy moving again.

The idea is that by making homes and buildings more energy efficient, the nation will not only cut down on greenhouse gases but also put people to work. It also allows people to cut their heating and cooling bills.

Michigan’s allotment includes $243 million for programs that allow people to weatherize their homes, with an average investment of up to $6,500 per home in energy-efficiency upgrades. The money will be available for families making up to twice the federal poverty level – or about $44,000 a year for a family of four, according to the White House.

Another $82 million will go to the State Energy Program, available as rebates to consumers for home energy audits or other energy-saving improvements; development of renewable energy projects for clean electricity generation and alternative fuels; promotion of energy-efficient products with the Energy Star label; efficiency upgrades for state and local government buildings; and other state efforts to help save families money on their energy bills.

Inaction on Climate Change could be very Costly for Oregon

Bill Barnes, Randall Bluffstone, Dave Ervin, and Don Negri
Saturday, March 7, 2009

The state legislature is currently considering a suite of carbon emission reduction bills and some legislators seem to conclude that the costs of reducing are prohibitive. Yet, they might be reaching this conclusion without considering the costs of NOT reducing emissions. Pay a little now or pay a whole lot more in the near future. That’s the message of research we have been involved with that assesses the likely costs of climate change for Oregon families.

The Program on Climate Economics of the Climate Leadership Initiative at the University of Oregon analyzed the costs to Oregon households of allowing climate change to proceed uncontrolled. A team of economists and scientists, led by ECONorthwest, an economic consulting firm, found that uncontrolled climate change could impose significant costs on Oregon. Rising temperatures will adversely impact public health, including more asthma and heat related illnesses, and will reduce the productivity of workers. More frequent winter floods and wildfires are likely to damage buildings and reduce property values. There will also be some direct expenses, such as higher costs for health care, air conditioning and supplying clean water.

After examining these and other issues the team estimates that by 2020 each Oregon family could spend $2,070 a year - more than 4 percent of the current median household income - on climate change-related costs. That’s a $3.5 billion annual price tag for the state. By 2040, per family expenditures could increase to 6 percent and by 2080 additional costs are estimated to consume 10 percent of average family income, totaling $13.7 billion per year. These estimates reflect the best science on global warming from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

These costs are purposefully conservative, because the team did not assess all costs and included only the highest-probability effects of climate-change, including flood and storm damage, reduced food production, increased wildfires, health expenditures and energy related costs. Many other effects, like more variable weather and increased pathogens had to be ignored because of insufficient data. In addition, the team did not assess costs to Oregon families and businesses from climate impacts occurring outside the state. The state also faces the real risk of far larger, even catastrophic effects due to climate change.

The U.S. as a whole and nations across the globe will need to reduce emissions dramatically to prevent the worse effects of climate change, and we all have to do our part. By acting locally Oregon can provide critical leadership along with other states willing to take firm action. Acting now will also stimulate Oregon’s research and technology development capacity in sure-to-be-growing green business fields.

One thing is clear. Complacency only increases the costs and jeopardizes our children’s future. Indeed, there is no business-as-usual economy for Oregon under a business–as-usual approach to climate change. It is time to adopt strong emission reduction policies for our state.

Climate scientist Ronald Stouffer to cap Bucknell’s Focus the Nation events

Sam Alcorn
Thursday, January 8, 2009

LEWISBURG, Pa. – Internationally recognized climate scientist Ronald Stouffer will cap a day-long program at Bucknell University designed to raise climate change awareness.

Part of the Focus the Nation teach-in that is taking place primarily on college and university campuses across the United States, Stouffer’s talk, “The Role of the Oceans in Climate Change,” will be given at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, in Trout Auditorium. The talk is free and open to the public.

Energy Trust of Oregon USDA to help Oregonians apply for Rural Energy for America (REAP) grants for solar energy systems

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Energy Trust wants to help Oregon rural small businesses and agricultural producers apply for USDA Rural Energy for America (REAP) grants for solar energy systems. The nonprofit will provide information about its grant-writing assistance at free information sessions in Bend/Redmond, Medford/White City, Pendleton and Corvallis/Lebanon. Participants interested in proceeding with an application may then register for grant-writing workshops and review sessions, facilitated by experienced grant-writing consultants.
 
The free information sessions will be held in:

New group works on climate in Sound

Jack Zeiger
Monday, November 3, 2008

There's a new citizen group in South Sound that has formed to fight climate change at the local level.

Olympia Climate Action is a group of local citizens who got together initially to plan and have Step It Up Day on April 14, 2007, which took place in Sylvester Park and Olympia Timberland Regional Library. After the event, the group decided to stay together and continue working on climate change in South Sound.

Giffords' clear win raises question: What's it mean?

Daniel Scarpinato
Sunday, November 9, 2008
PHOENIX — A day after he lost his bid for U.S. Congress, state Senate President Tim Bee was back here at the Capitol — no paranoid campaign aides, no national talking points, no more high stakes.
Just private meetings in a quiet, sparse Capitol with Gov. Janet Napolitano about a lame-duck legislative session.
 

Udall defeats Pearce in heated Senate race

Steve Terrell
Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Win considered crucial for Democrats to build filibuster-proof Senate

As polls and national pundits have been predicting for weeks, Democrat Tom Udall cruised to an easy victory over Republican Steve Pearce in the race to replace Republican Pete Domenici in the U.S. Senate.

National television networks and The Associated Press called the race only minutes after polls closed in New Mexico — so fast even some Udall staffers joked about being nervous about the early numbers.

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