|
|
 |
 |
 |
A forum for current and emerging environmental and conservation issues in Minnesota.
Archive for June, 2008
Monday, June 23rd, 2008
By Michael Noble, executive director, Fresh Energy
If the vice chairman of a major American corporation told reporters that global warming is “a total crock of shit,” you might write him off as a dangerous, anti-environmental lunatic. If he said that advocating for higher efficiency mileage standards is “like trying to address the obesity problem in this country by forcing clothing manufacturers to sell smaller, tighter sizes,” you would know he represented an auto company. (more…)
Posted in Energy | 1 Comment »
Friday, June 20th, 2008
Now that the 2008 Farm Bill is officially law, it’s important to make sure all that work sustainable ag groups like LSP put into some of the legislation’s key components does not go to waste. Talk is cheap in Congress — implementation out here on real farms is what gets things done. The overall legislation is still less than Grade A work, but initiatives like the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program (BFRDP) are truly precedent-setting and innovative — two words not usually associated with federal ag legislation. If BFRDP even begins to live up to its billing, this new Farm Bill will begin to make up for all its other shortcomings. To get an idea of what I’m talking about, check out our latest BFRDP fact sheet.
Posted in Food and Sustainable Agriculture | 3 Comments »
Thursday, June 19th, 2008
By Erin Stojan Ruccolo, program coordinator, Fresh Energy
Twenty years ago this week, NASA climate scientist James Hansen testified to Congress about the human causes of global warming. Grist, the environmental news blog (“a beacon in the smog”), is writing a three-part series to commemorate this milestone in global warming policy (the third part will be released tomorrow on Grist.org). (more…)
Posted in Energy | Comments Welcome »
Friday, June 13th, 2008
On a sunny (remember sun?) spring afternoon a few weeks ago, Karola and Rick Dalen were giving me a tour of their Northern Harvest Farm near the northeast Minnesota community of Wrenshall when they stopped in front of a large bunker-like structure with earth piled up on three sides. It turns out that this 80 x 30 foot behemoth served as a community root cellar decades ago, back when Wrenshall farmers grew a lot of cabbages and other vegetables for Duluth-Superior. The Dalens are doing their best to prove that those days when the Lake Superior region was more self-sufficient in food are not just agronomic history. (more…)
Posted in Food and Sustainable Agriculture | Comments Welcome »
Friday, June 13th, 2008
You know what they say about imitation and flattery.
In 2007, Minnesota led the effort to provide uniform protection for new or expanding water usage within the Great Lakes basin, by being the first state in the region to endorse the Great Lakes Compact.
(more…)
Posted in Great Lakes | Comments Welcome »
Thursday, June 12th, 2008
Conservation Minnesota has launched a new web page dedicated to reporting the condition of the state’s beaches just in time for summer beach going season.
State law does not require swimming beaches to be regularly tested – or posted when there is pollution – but some counties, districts, and cities choose to do so. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency also monitors Lake Superior beaches during the summer. The beach data page pulls data from these different sources and compiles it in one easy-to-use page. The report is available here.
This new tool follows the spring launch of Check My Lake, a site that allows people to easily look up whether their local lake is too polluted for swimming or fishing
Posted in Water | Comments Welcome »
Thursday, June 12th, 2008
By Rick Fuentes, senior media relations specialist, Fresh Energy
I’ve always liked roller coasters. Especially the ones with big drops or loop-d-loops. (more…)
Posted in Energy | Comments Welcome »
Tuesday, June 10th, 2008
Blogger Maria Surma Manka (Maria Energia to her readers) was invited by the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) to cover their WINDPOWER 2008 conference in Houston during the first week of June.
Posted in Energy | Comments Welcome »
Friday, June 6th, 2008
One night last August, Art and Jean Thicke’s hilltop farm in southeast Minnesota was pounded by 15 inches of rain. This was the same storm that dumped record amounts of precipitation on hilly land throughout southeast Minnesota, southwest Wisconsin and northeast Iowa. While driving to the Thicke farm the other day to attend a Farm Beginnings field day, I could still see the results of that downpour in the region: washed out trees and damaged earthen dams, ruined homes, silted-in ditches and, most of all, eroded fields. This storm created great gashes on the land and caused entire hillsides to slump. Soil that took centuries to build was lost in a matter of hours. It set me to wondering: how did a certain little pond on the Thicke farm weather the storm? (more…)
Posted in Food and Sustainable Agriculture | Comments Welcome »
Thursday, June 5th, 2008
By Carin Skoog, global warming solutions coordinator, Fresh Energy
Despite attempts by opposition to stall meaningful discussion of America’s Climate Security Act (S. 3036) sponsored by Senators Warner (R-VA), Lieberman (I-CT), and Boxer (D-CA), the U.S. Senate is making history this week with the first bipartisan climate bill to receive serious attention by Congress. (more…)
Posted in Energy | Comments Welcome »
|
 |
|