For many years, haze has tarnished the views at national parks, including Colorado’s Mesa Verde and the Grand Canyon. On bad days poor air quality in Mesa Verde can cut visibility to just 20 miles. That’s a stark contrast to the clarity of the early 1900s, when visibility was up to 162 miles on a crisp, clear […]
Energy & Industry
We cannot drill our way out of this mess: A review of Arctic Voices
Arctic Voices: Resistance at the Tipping Point Subhankar Banerjee, editor. 560 pages, hardcover: $35.95. Seven Stories Press, 2012. In 2001, on the U.S. Senate floor, one of Alaska’s pro-development politicians held up a blank white piece of posterboard. “This is a picture of ANWR (the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge) as it exists for about nine […]
Birkenstocks and Stetsons
I have spent all of my adult life in Maine, where there are only two kinds of people: Mainers and people from “away.” If you weren’t born in Maine, you’ll never be a Mainer, and I’ve even heard purists say that your parents have to be from the state to gain insider status. “Just because […]
Price matters
Last winter, the Bureau of Land Management gave its approval to a large natural gas drilling project in northern New Mexico. Under the Middle Mesa plan, WPX Energy would drill and frack 53 shale gas wells on a mesa overlooking Navajo Reservoir over a five year period. The company can drill year-round, too, since the […]
Will Utah’s tar sands make it the Alberta of the high desert?
In a small alcove at the foot of eastern Utah’s Tavaputs Plateau is an old inscription left by French-Canadian mountain man Antoine Robidoux, one of the region’s earliest entrepreneurs. Chiseled into cream-colored sandstone, it reads: Passe ici le 13 Novembre, 1837Pour Etablire MaisonTraitte a la Rv. Vert ou Wiyte A few years earlier, Robidoux had […]
Coal-export schemes ignite unusual opposition, from Wyoming to India
On India’s sweltering Western coast, Bharat Patel heads a group of traditional fishermen called Machimar Adhikar Sangharsh Samiti, which loosely translates as the Association for the Struggle for Fishworkers’ Rights. Meanwhile, up in the arid breaks of southeast Montana, Mark Fix wants to preserve the rural character of his 9,700-acre ranch along the Tongue River, […]
A look inside a clean water regulator’s mind
One of the biggest water polluters in our country is the factory farm. In 2008, a Government Accountability Office report panned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for failing to know where most of these farms were located, let alone if they were releasing their manure into rivers, lakes and streams. So in early 2011, the […]
Black Sunday, 30 years later
I’m a fairly outspoken environmentalist, so what was I doing having dinner recently in Grand Junction, Colo., with retired executives from ExxonMobil, the largest oil company in the world? Well, it was kind of a reunion, since Exxon and I go back to the early 1980s, a time when I was teaching fourth grade in […]
A revision to our energy future
Last week, environmentalists settled an agreement with federal agencies over a Bush-era energy management plan, and a U.S. District Court in San Francisco is set to sign off on the agreement. Plaintiffs, including the Center for Biological Diversity, had sued federal agencies over a proposed energy pipeline and power network, part of the Energy Policy […]
Afield with a vegan gas man
“I probably don’t look like a typical oil and gas guy,” says Eric Sanford. Wearing clogs — his “driving shoes” — and a wide cloth belt that looks right out of the 1980s, he sure doesn’t. Sanford, 39, who jokingly describes himself as the “vegan son of Nebraska farmers,” grew up in a town of […]
High Noon for solar
You know what fries my bacon? In 2011, Germany installed more solar power in one year than Americans have in 50. If it were just the industrious Germans, I could probably handle it. But the laid-back, Fiat-driving Italians did the same thing. The Italians! The technology was invented at Bell Labs back in the 50s, […]
Sometimes environmentalists miss the boat
If you’re concerned about global warming, you must wonder what some environmentalists were thinking in Colorado this year: Many opposed legislation that would have yielded a rapid reduction in emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Instead, they persuaded leaders in the Colorado Senate to sequester the bill until the waning days of the Legislature’s […]
Gas tracks
The shale gas boom is making a lot of executives rich, but the quiet players making the most impressive moves during this new American energy renaissance are the railroads. By now, we’ve read how cheap natural gas has supplanted some of coal’s share of the electricity market. Railroads ship coal, and thus analysts often say […]
The Atlas of the Industrial West
Ever wanted to tour a wind farm, a giant dam or an oil and gas field? This map will help. Click on the icon of the industrial site nearest you for a bit about the site and tours, if offered, along with a link to more information. Purple = oil & gas; Aqua = dams […]
Gregory Jaczko’s resignation weakens federal nuclear regulation
Two weeks before he resigned as chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission on May 21, Gregory Jaczko publicly wrist-slapped Southern California Edison, whose two-gigawatt nuclear plant now sits idle on the Southern California coast. Utility spokesman Stephen Pickett had just announced that the troubled facility could be back online before midsummer. Jaczko swiftly dashed […]
Aging mining law handcuffs the American West
Two of my favorite western cities, Tucson, Ariz., and Boise, Idaho, share some common blessings and one common curse. The blessings include lovely mountain backdrops, vibrant universities and increasingly diverse economies. The shared curse: badly misguided mining claims upstream. I was a newspaper reporter in Boise for a short spell and when I return, I […]
The fading Arizona town of Gila Bend bets big on solar
One afternoon last April, I took a walk down Pima Street, the main drag that runs through Gila Bend, Ariz., linking the state highway from Phoenix with Interstate 8 to Yuma and beyond. It had been an unusual spring in the Southwestern deserts; abundant late-season rains spread carpets of green across rocky hillsides in the […]
Learning from the opposition
Ed Marston’s tribute to pioneering rancher Doc Hatfield was fitting; Hatfield had a major hand in promoting responsible use of Western rangelands. He helped start a movement of responsible ranchers operating in all corners of the West (HCN, 4/15/12, “Goodbye, Doc”). The less-responsible ranchers are still out there, too, and, from what I see here […]
California clean energy rules may impede imports from rest of West
When a group of Pacific Northwestern utilities teamed up to build a $580 million pair of wind farms in the Columbia Gorge a few years ago, they planned to help pay for the projects by selling excess generation and renewable energy credits to a California utility. Selling some or all of a project’s power to […]
