Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
New U.S. oil and gas drilling to unleash 1,000 coal plants’ worth of pollution by 2050
Amid mounting calls to phase out fossil
fuels in the face of rapidly worsening climate change, the United States
is ramping up oil and gas drilling faster than any other country,
threatening to add 1,000 coal plants’ worth of planet-warming gases by
the middle of the century, according to a report released Wednesday. By 2030, the U.S. is on track to produce 60 percent of the world’s new oil and gas supply, an expansion at least four times larger than in any other country. By 2050, the country’s newly tapped reserves are projected to spew 120 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere. The findings ― from a report authored by the nonprofit Oil Change International and
endorsed by researchers at more than a dozen environmental groups ― are
based on industry projections collected by the data service Rystad
Energy and compared with climate models used by the United Nations’
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the world’s leading
climate research body. Nearly 90 percent of new U.S. oil and gas drilling through 2050 is expected to depend on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, the controversial technique that blasts bedrock with chemical- and sand-laced water, creating cracks that release previously inaccessible fuels. Upward of 60 percent of the emissions enabled by new U.S. drilling would come from two major fracking hot spots ― the Permian Basin, a massive field stretching from Texas to New Mexico; and the Appalachian Basin, encompassing most of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Ohio.
Continued extraction in the Permian Basin alone would use up 10 percent of the emissions that remain in the entire world’s carbon budget to keep warming within 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit...MORE
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