Thursday, August 24, 2023

Tropical forests nearing critical temperatures thresholds

Linnea Pedersen
Wed, August 23, 2023 

The new research suggests that leaf death could become a new factor in the predicted "tipping point" where tropical forests transition due to climate change and deforestation into savannah-like landscapes. 
(Raul ARBOLEDA)


Global warming is driving leafy tropical canopies close to temperatures where they can no longer transform sunlight and CO2 into energy, threatening total collapse if the thermometer keeps climbing, according to a study Thursday.

A tiny percentage of upper canopy leaves have already crossed that threshold, reaching temperatures so high -- above 47 degrees Celsius -- as to prevent photosynthesis, the study published in Nature reported.

Currently, some leaves exceed such critical temperatures only 0.01 percent of the time, but impacts could quickly scale up because leaves warm faster than air, the researchers said.

"You heat the air by two to three degrees and the actual upper temperature of these leaves goes up by eight degrees," lead author Christopher Doughty of Northern Arizona University told journalists.

If tropical forest's average surface temperature warms 4C above current levels -- widely considered a worst-case scenario -- "we're predicting possible total leaf death," he said.

The new research suggests that leaf death could become a new factor in the predicted "tipping point" whereby tropical forests transition due to climate change and deforestation into savannah-like landscapes.

If air temperatures increase unabated by 0.03 C per year, the study projected, mass mortality among the canopies could happen in a little more than a century.

Doughty and his team used data from the NASA ECOSTRESS satellite -- designed to measure plant temperatures -- validated with ground observations, based in part on sensors attached to individual leaves.

- Increased tree death -

There remain uncertainties as to how high leaf temperatures might impact the forest as a whole, the scientists cautioned.

"Believe it or not, we don't know terribly much about why trees die," said co-author Gregory Goldsmith of Chapman University.

It doesn't take a scientist to know that when a tree loses its roots it dies, he said.

But the interactions and feedbacks between heat and drought -- and water and temperature -- on overall tree health aren't as clear.

Total leaf death might not necessarily mean total tree death.

The critical temperature at which leaves turn brown and die might also differ by species, depending on the size and thickness of their leaves and the breadth of their canopy.

But there are already concerning signs. In the Amazon, where temperatures are higher than in other tropical forests, the rate at which trees are dying has increased in recent decades.

"The Amazon is currently experiencing higher levels of mortality than Central Africa and that could possibly be due to the high temperatures we've seen there," said Doughty.

Increased fragmentation of the forests from deforestation has also been shown to make the remaining forest areas warmer.

Tropical biomes contain 45 percent of the Earth's forests, and play an outsized role in absorbing human-caused carbon pollution.

They also harbour half or more of the world's plant biodiversity, with at least 40,000 different tree species, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The fact that a few leaves are overheating at current temperatures is a "canary in the coal mine," said senior author Joshua Fisher of Chapman University.

"You want to be able to detect something happening before it's widespread," he said.

"The fact that we can do that now gives us that ability to actually do something as a collective society."

Scientists not involved in the study said it should serve as a warning that nature's capacity to adapt to climate change has limits.

"It is true that trees and other kinds of vegetation can soak up emissions and provide cooling," commented Leslie Mabon, a lecturer in environmental systems at The Open University.

"However, this study illustrates that without concerted action by humans to reduce emissions and limit global heating at the same time as protecting and enhancing nature, some functions of nature may start to break down at higher temperatures."

Researchers discover another way tropical
forests could suffer due to climate change

JULIA JACOBO
Wed, August 23, 2023 

Scientists have recently discovered a phenomenon occurring in tropical forests that could be of great concern if global warming continues unabated.

Climate change has caused the leaves on some plants in tropical forests to stop undergoing photosynthesis -- the process in which plants and other organisms use sunlight to synthesize foods from carbon dioxide and water, according to a study published Wednesday in Nature.

"When leaves reach a certain temperature, their photosynthetic machinery breaks down," Gregory Goldsmith, a professor of biology at Chapman University in Orange, California, told reporters.


PHOTO: The sun shines through the rainforest near Belem, Brazil, June 7, 2023. (Picture Alliance via Getty Images)

This study is really the first to establish the limits of these tropical forest canopies, Goldsmith said.

MORE: How climate change could hinder reforestation efforts, according to experts

The analysis indicates that tropical forests may be approaching the maximum temperature threshold for photosynthesis to work, the researchers found.

Researchers used high-resolution measurements taken from an instrument on board the International Space Station between 2018 and 2020. They also placed sensors on top of tree canopies in places like Brazil, Puerto Rico and Australia to estimate peak tropical-forest canopy temperatures.


PHOTO: The National Forest in the Carajas mountain range, Para state, Brazil, May 17, 2023. (Dado Galdieri/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

They found many of the leaves are approaching a critical temperature threshold, according to Christopher Doughty, a professor in infomatics, computing and cyber systems and lead author of the study.

The data shows that canopy temperatures peaked at around 34 degrees Celsius -- or 93.2 degrees Fahrenheit -- on average, although a small proportion of those observed exceeded 40 degrees Celsius, or 104 degrees Fahrenheit.

MORE: Forests in Brazil emitting more carbon than they absorb due to climate change: Study

Researchers are "just starting to see" these temperatures light up throughout forests, Joshua Fisher, a climate scientist with a focus on terrestrial ecosystems at Chapman University, told reporters at Monday's news conference.

The percentage of leaves that began to fail was small -- just an estimated .01% of all leaves in the forests studied, according to the study. But warming experiments predict this value will rise to 1.4% under future warming conditions.


PHOTO: Falls on Mother Cummings Rivulet in Meander Forest Reserve, Great Western Tiers, Tasmania, Australia. (Auscape/Universal Images Group via Getty)

The critical temperature beyond which photosynthetic machinery in tropical trees begins to fail averages at about 46.7 degrees Celsius or about 116 degrees Fahrenheit.

MORE: Why reforestation is a crucial part of saving the environment

Modeling suggests that tropical forests can withstand up to a 3.9 degree Celsius increase over current air temperatures before a potential tipping point is reached, which is within the worst-case scenario for climate predictions and possible, the researchers found.

"There's a potential for a tipping point in these forest," Doughty said.


PHOTO: A trail in the rain forest of El Yunque National Forest, Puerto Rico, Jan. 1, 2011. (Diego Cupolo/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Known as the the carbon sinks of the world, tropical forests serve as critical carbon storage due to their capture and pack away carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. In addition, they hold most of the world species, which is why it is important to understand future temperatures and tropical forests, Doughty said.

"There's all sorts of potential feedbacks once you start losing bits of forest," he said.

Ambitious climate change mitigation goals and reduced deforestation are needed to help forests stay below thermally critical thresholds, the authors found.


Parts of tropical rainforests could get too hot for photosynthesis, study suggests

Laura Paddison, CNN
Wed, August 23, 2023


Some leaves in tropical forests from South America to South East Asia are getting so hot they may no longer be able to photosynthesize, with big potential consequences for the world’s forests, according to a new study.

Leaves’ ability to photosynthesize – the process by which they make energy from carbon dioxide, sunlight and water – begins to fail when their temperature reaches around 46.7 degrees Celsius (116 Fahrenheit).

While this may seem high, leaves can get much hotter than the air temperature, according to the report published Wednesday in Nature by a group of scientists from countries including the US, Australia and Brazil.

The scientists used temperature data beamed down from thermal satellite sensors on the International Space Station, 400 kilometers (nearly 250 miles) above the Earth. They combined this with on-the-ground observations from leaf-warming experiments, in which scientists climbed into the canopy to painstakingly add sensors to leaves.

Rather than looking at average temperatures, the scientists were looking at extremes, said Christopher Doughty, associate professor in ecoinformatics at Northern Arizona University and a report author. They found that average forest canopy temperatures peaked at 34 degrees Celsius (93 Fahrenheit) but some exceeded 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).

Currently, 0.01% of leaves are passing the critical temperature threshold beyond which their ability to photosynthesize breaks down, the report found, potentially killing the leaf and the tree.

This percentage, while small, is poised to increase as the world warms, the report said, posing a threat to the world’s tropical forests – which cover roughly 12% of the planet and hold more than half of the world’s species. They also provide a vital role in sucking up and storing carbon and helping to regulate the global climate.

“There are all sorts of potential feedbacks once you start losing bits of forests, even leaves on individual trees,” Doughty said on a call with reporters.


Tropical rainforest in the Mobuku Valley, Uganda. - Martin Zwick/REDA&CO/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

Tropical forests can withstand around 4 degrees Celsius (7.2 Fahrenheit) of additional global warming before they reach a tipping point in terms of their ability to photosynthesize, according to the report.

If warming exceeds this level, the amount of leaves surpassing critical temperature thresholds could rise to 1.4%, potentially causing large-scale leaf loss and the death of the whole tree, the report found.

This level of warming is not expected under current climate policies, which are estimated to bring 2.7 degrees Celsius of warming above pre-industrial levels. But it is within the range of the most pessimistic climate scenarios if the world continues to burn fossil fuels.

While these figures may seem small, the risk is significant given how critical tropical trees are for life, the climate system and the planet.

“Almost all life – including humans – is dependent on photosynthesis for food either directly or indirectly,” said Kevin Collins, senior lecturer in environment and systems at the Open University, who was not involved in the research.

The findings indicate that global warming is putting this vital process at risk, he told the Science Media Centre. But, he added, there are more immediate concerns for tropical forests, including deforestation, wildfires and droughts.

Christopher Still, a forest ecosystem professor at Oregon State University, also not involved in the report, said that the research provided some novel insights. While there’s been a big focus on the impact of drought on tree loss, he told CNN, “this paper says it’s not just drought – we need to really also worry about the temperatures that leaves are reaching.”

While he acknowledged the numbers in the report are small, he added, “I would focus a little bit less on the percentages, and more on the concepts of leaves pushing up against these really high temperature conditions and how often that happens, how long it lasts and what it really means.”

Others were more cautious. Chloe Brimicombe, a climate scientist at the University of Graz in Austria, said that given how few leaves are reaching the critical temperature threshold, and how high warming would need to get before a tipping point, “this suggests in theory tropical forests are quite resilient to climate change.”

She told the Science Media Centre, “this is a simple model and trees and forest dynamics are much more complex than this.”

The report authors said despite uncertainties, the research gives important insights around how tropical forests will respond to climate change.

“It’s a little bit of a canary in the coal mine that we’re starting to see,” Joshua Fisher, a climate scientist at Chapman University and a report author, said on a call with reporters. “And you want to be able to detect something happening before it’s widespread.”

US FCC will release public comments on bid to deny Fox TV station license renewal

David Shepardson
Wed, August 23, 2023 

A man walks past the logo of Fox Networks Group during the annual MIPCOM television programme market in Cannes

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Communications Commission in an unusual move on Wednesday said it would publicly release comments on a bid by an advocacy group to deny the renewal of a licence for Fox Television Stations' Philadelphia station.

The Media and Democracy Project in July asked the U.S. telecom regulator to deny a licence renewal for WTXF-TV in Philadelphia, saying Fox News aired "false information about election fraud" about the 2020 presidential election and arguing it sowed discord and contributed "to harmful and dangerous acts on January 6" at the U.S. Capitol.

The group argued it "amounts to misconduct that violates the FCC's policy on the character required of broadcast licensees."

The FCC said it was opening a public docket allowing for release of comments and presentations, saying permitting broader participation will serve the public interest.

"For the sake of transparency, now everyone can read the filings and review the record as it develops," an FCC spokesperson said.

The Media and Democracy Project cited Fox Corp and Fox News $787.5 million settlement in April resolving a defamation lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems over whether Fox was liable for airing false claims Dominion's ballot-counting machines were used to manipulate the presidential election in favor of Democrat Joe Biden over then-President Donald Trump, a Republican.

A Fox Television spokesperson on Wednesday said the "petition to deny the license renewal of WTXF-TV is frivolous, completely without merit and asks the FCC to upend the First Amendment and long-standing FCC precedent."

Fox noted WTXF-TV/FOX 29 News Philadelphia broadcasts over 60 hours of local news and other programming weekly.

The FCC, an independent federal agency, does not license broadcast networks, but issues them to individual broadcast stations on a staggered basis for eight-year periods.

Fox cited FCC Chair Jessica Rosenworcel's comments in 2017opposing Trump's suggestion the FCC could revoke the broadcast license for Comcast's NBC over coverage of his administration.

Rosenworcel said in 2017 FCC reviews do "not involve the government making editorial decisions about content. Doing so would be an affront to our First Amendment tradition."

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Sonali Paul)

China quietly recruits overseas chip talent as US tightens curbs

Wed, August 23, 2023 




By Julie Zhu, Fanny Potkin, Eduardo Baptista and Michael Martina

HONG KONG/SINGAPORE/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - For a decade until 2018, China sought to recruit elite foreign-trained scientists under a lavishly funded program that Washington viewed as a threat to U.S. interests and technological supremacy.

Two years after it stopped promoting the Thousand Talents Plan (TTP) amid U.S. investigations of scientists, China quietly revived the initiative under a new name and format as part of a broader mission to accelerate its tech proficiency, according to three sources with knowledge of the matter and a Reuters review of over 500 government documents spanning 2019 to 2023.

The revamped recruitment drive, reported in detail by Reuters for the first time, offers perks including home-purchase subsidies and typical signing bonuses of 3 to 5 million yuan, or $420,000 to $700,000, the three people told Reuters.

China operates talent programs at various levels of government, targeting a mix of overseas Chinese and foreign experts. The primary replacement for TTP is a program called Qiming overseen by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, according to national and local policy documents, online recruitment advertisements and a person with direct knowledge of the matter who, as with others, spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the issue's sensitivity.

The race to attract tech talent comes as President Xi Jinping emphasises China's need to achieve self-reliance in semiconductors in the face of U.S. export curbs. Regulations adopted by the U.S. Commerce Department in October restrict U.S. citizens and permanent residents from supporting the development and production of advanced chips in China, among other measures.

Neither China's State Council Information Office nor the ministry responded to questions about Qiming. China has previously said its overseas recruitment through the TTP aimed to build an innovation-driven economy and promote talent mobility, while respecting intellectual property rights, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Qiming, or Enlightenment, recruits from scientific and technological fields that include "sensitive" or "classified" areas, such as semiconductors, two of the people said. Unlike its predecessor, it does not publicise awardees and is absent from central government websites, which the sources said reflected its sensitivity.

Some of the documents mention Qiming alongside Huoju, or Torch, a longstanding initiative of the Ministry of Science and Technology that focuses on creating clusters of tech companies. The ministry did not respond to a request for comment.


Qiming also operates in tandem with recruitment initiatives run by local and provincial authorities and a government-backed hiring drive by Chinese chip companies, according to two of the people and another source familiar with the matter. Reuters could not independently establish the companies involved.

The U.S. has long accused China of stealing intellectual property and technology, a charge Beijing has dismissed as politically motivated.

"Foreign adversaries and strategic competitors understand that acquiring top U.S. and Western talent is often just as good as acquiring the technology itself," said Dean Boyd, a spokesperson for the U.S. government's National Counterintelligence and Security Center, when asked about Chinese talent recruitment schemes.

"When that recruitment creates inherent conflicts of interest or commitment, that can create risks to U.S. economic and national security."

Curtailing intellectual property leakage via talent flows is difficult, said Nick Marro, a China analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, because such efforts "can run the risk of turning into ethnically-charged witch hunts".

ELITE UNIVERSITIES

China's chip industry has flourished in recent years but faces a shortage of about 200,000 people this year, including engineers and chip designers, according to a 2021 report published by the China Center for Information Industry Development, a government think tank, and the China Semiconductor Industry Association.

China's newer talent endeavours, which like the TTP focus on elite-level recruitment, favour applicants trained at top foreign institutions, three sources said.

"Most of the applicants selected for Qiming have studied at top U.S universities and have at least one Ph.D," said one of these people, adding that scientists trained at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard and Stanford universities were among those sought by China. The universities did not respond to requests for comment.

Reuters could not determine how many experts have been recruited under Qiming or associated programs, though thousands have applied, according to Reuters' review of government documents.

U.S. officials say that while talent poaching in the U.S. is not illegal, university researchers risk breaking the law if they fail to disclose affiliations with Chinese entities while receiving U.S. government funds to conduct research, illegally share proprietary information, or violate export controls.

Reuters found more than a dozen advertisements for Qiming applicants posted since 2022 on Chinese platform Zhihu and LinkedIn by people who identified themselves as recruiters.

In a February LinkedIn post, Chen Biaohua, who listed his employer as Beijing Talent Linked Information Technology, asked candidates eligible for Qiming and Huoju to email him their resumes.

The post said Chen was seeking "young talents" under 40 with a doctorate from well-known universities and overseas experience. He was also seeking applicants who held senior roles at foreign academic institutions or large companies.

Headhunting firm Hangzhou Juqi Technology posted an ad in March on ResearchGate, a social network for academics, seeking people with doctorates from top universities and experience at Fortune 500 companies to help recruit 5,000 overseas researchers for Chinese enterprises.

The ad described this effort as serving Qiming and Huoju, with each researcher able to obtain as much as 15 million yuan, or about $2.1 million, in rewards. It said that anyone who recommends a candidate who is then selected for the talent programs would receive "diamonds, bags, cars, and houses".

Chen and LinkedIn declined to comment. Questions sent to Chen's employer, as well as to Zhihu, ResearchGate and Hangzhou Juqi Technology yielded no responses.

One foreign-trained semiconductor expert at the Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT) was identified on its website as a 2021 Qiming recipient. Ma Yuanxiao is an associate professor at BIT's School of Integrated Circuits and Electronics, who did his masters at Britain's University of Nottingham between 2013 and 2015 and his Ph.D at the University of Hong Kong until 2019.

Ma and BIT did not respond to requests for comment.

OPENING WALLETS

Across China, provincial and municipal governments are pouring resources into the recruitment drive, official documents show.

One initiative is the Kunpeng Plan, run by authorities in eastern Zhejiang province, whose 2019 launch was covered in state media. The Zhejiang Daily reported in June 2022 that the program aimed to attract 200 tech experts in five years, with 48 already recruited.

In the eastern city of Wenzhou, local authorities' investment in each Kunpeng professional can reach up to 200 million yuan, including an individual reward, start-up funding and housing, according to a 2022 talent policy report by the city government.

A report by the Wenzhou branch of the Communist Party's Organization Department, which oversees personnel decisions, said its total budget in 2022 increased 49% from a year earlier, mainly because it had assigned 85 million yuan to Kunpeng and similar programs.

One Kunpeng recipient is Dawei Di, a Cambridge-educated professor at Zhejiang University whose research focuses on semiconductor optoelectronic devices, the university's journal reported in 2021.

In Huzhou, also in Zhejiang, employers that recommend candidates to Qiming can receive incentive payments of up to 1.5 million yuan from the city or district governments if those people are accepted, according to a 2021 city directive.

None of the city, provincial or Communist Party authorities, nor Di or his university, responded to queries from Reuters.

'ONE FOOT OUT'

Despite Xi's emphasis on advancing China's chip know-how, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter said many Chinese semiconductor experts overseas were wary of returning because of China's political environment and weaker position in chip development relative to the West.

"They have no idea if the programs could change overnight or lose government support," one said.

Zhuji, a county-level city in Zhejiang, reported in October 2022 that it had over 200 applicants for talent programs, mainly Qiming, but only eight successful candidates from the previous year had returned to China. Zhuji government's general office did not respond to a faxed request for comment.

Two people familiar with the matter said some Chinese scientists, especially those with foreign citizenship or permanent residency, worried that joining China's government talent programs could mean forgoing international opportunities or becoming subject to U.S. investigations.

In some cases, these people said, those experts will be offered roles at Chinese chip companies' overseas operations.

"Safer to have one foot in China, one foot out," one said.

($1 = 7.1475 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Julie Zhu, Fanny Potkin, Eduardo Baptista and Michael Martina; editing by David Crawshaw)
The little-known history of Disney’s abandoned Sierra Nevada ski resort: ‘Public agencies now have to justify what they’ve done’

Leo Collis
Wed, August 23, 2023 




If you’ve never been to Disney’s Sierra Nevada ski resort, there is a very good reason for that. Simply, it does not exist.

Walt Disney himself was a key figure in the proposals for the ski resort, which would have brought an “American Alpine Wonderland” to the Mineral King Valley site that then neighbored the Sequoia National Park, per KCET.

But the development never came to pass, and the dissension to the project brought about a significant change in United States law, in which environmental groups could sue government agencies for unethical plans.

What were the plans for the Sierra Nevada resort?

In 1965, what was then known as Walt Disney Productions proposed the construction of a five-story hotel with 1,030 rooms in Mineral King Valley, where visitors could take advantage of four-mile ski runs in addition to an ice rink, tennis courts, and a golf course.

According to KCET, it was expected the resort would bring $600 million in revenue in its first decade.

However, the resort itself and subsequent transportation needs would have led to the serious destruction of vital ecosystems and environmental beauty, and nature lovers weren’t about to let that happen.

“This is a different story if it’s not surrounded by Sequoia National Park,” said Daniel Selmi, an emeritus law professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.

“But even without the park, Disney’s ski resort would have had to be smaller,” Selmi said. “At some point, you end up with a project so big that you lose sight of the area itself. You have to make a decision — is this an area of such breathtaking beauty that 100 years from now we want people to be able to go in there and look at it and say, ‘Wow,’ without seeing [a ski resort]?”

Why did the project fail?

Despite proposals for the plan being accepted in 1965, legal action and activism soon followed.

Most notably, the Sierra Club was at the forefront of the opposition. As KCET observed, the group of nature lovers held “hike-ins” and petitioned federal officials to save the area from the destruction that would be caused by construction on the site and surrounding infrastructure.

The Sierra Club sued leaders of the Sequoia National Park and Sequoia National Forest in 1969, suggesting that Disney would have too much control of national forest land. That halted construction for three years.

After the suit failed in the Supreme Court in 1972, Sierra Club made amendments to its challenge in 1976. With the death of Walt Disney and the company under new leadership, the decades-old plans soon petered out. The project was officially mothballed by Congress in 1978, and Mineral King was integrated into Sequoia National Park.

How did the Sierra Club change the face of environmentalism?  

Not only did the actions of the Sierra Club draw significant attention to its environmental efforts because of the organization they were up against, but its legal challenges led to a change in the law.

According to the Los Angeles Times, despite Sierra Club losing its 1972 case in the Supreme Court, the subsequent ruling still established that it was legally acceptable for environmental groups to sue government agencies.

Furthermore, it shifted the Club’s perspective, as the LA Times piece noted that the battle for Mineral King Valley saw it switch from a “relatively nonconfrontational band of outdoors enthusiasts to the harder-core, more organized conservation activists known today for their legal and lobbying muscle.”

So the next time you see environmental groups challenge the government for unethical practices, just remember that it was the Sierra Club — and the misguided ambitions of Walt Disney, who was overlooking the importance of environmental conservation — that paved the way.

“The Forest Service said repeatedly they had studied Mineral King to death before deciding to put a ski area there,” Selmi said in the LA Times article. “And they hadn’t done that. Public agencies now have to justify what they’ve done in much greater depth than they did before. It’s like night and day. They have to be concerned with the law.”

FOR SALE
Canada's Trans Mountain seeks last-minute route deviation on pipeline expansion

Reuters
Updated Wed, August 23, 2023

FILE PHOTO: A pipe yard servicing government-owned oil pipeline operator Trans Mountain is seen in Kamloops



OTTAWA (Reuters) -The Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) project has asked Canadian regulators for a route deviation on a 1.3-kilometre (0.8 mile)section of pipeline in British Columbia, months before the 600,000 barrel per day project is due to start shipping crude.

The application to the Canada Energy Regulator came to light as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday said he was confident the project was a solid investment and that interest was high among Indigenous groups who wanted to buy a share of the pipeline.

The Canadian government bought the pipeline for C$4.5 billion ($3.3 billion) in 2018 to make sure the project was completed after it ran into challenges, including opposition from Indigenous peoples and environmentalists, but costs have ballooned to C$30.9 billion.

TMX is expected to start operating in the first quarter of 2024.

The regulator is weighing whether to allow Trans Mountain Corp (TMC), the government-owned corporation building the project, to deviate from its previously approved route on a section of the pipeline just south of Kamloops in southern interior British Columbia.

The proposal has encountered opposition from the local First Nation, whose traditional territory the pipeline crosses, according to TMC's application to the regulator, dated Aug. 10.

In the application TMC said it had encountered "significant technical challenges" micro-tunnelling through hard rock formations and requested to instead adjust the pipeline route and use a conventional open trench.

Last week the regulator gave TMC until end of day on Wednesday to provide more information on its request.

The expansion project will nearly triple the flow of crude from Alberta's oil sands to Burnaby, British Columbia, and is intended to unlock Asian markets for Canadian oil, which is now mostly exported to the United States.

Now that it is nearing completion, the government has approached Indigenous groups looking at buying a stake in the pipeline.

"I am very excited and interested that there are so many Indigenous groups interested in purchasing the TMX pipeline. We're engaged in conversations with them right now," Trudeau told reporters in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.

"We are confident that the business case for the Trans Mountain pipeline remains solid," he added, when asked whether the government would have to sell the pipeline for less than it cost to build it.

($1 = 1.3566 Canadian dollars)

(Reporting by Ismail Shakil and Steve Scherer in Ottawa and Nia Williams in British Columbia; Editing by Bill Berkrot and Sonali Paul)

Trans Mountain pipeline project runs into fresh construction-related hurdle


Story by The Canadian Press •

Trans Mountain pipeline project runs into fresh construction-related hurdle© Provided by The Canadian Press

CALGARY — The Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion project has run into another construction-related hurdle that could delay its completion.

The crown corporation that owns the pipeline has filed for regulatory approval to modify the route of one of the remaining stretches of pipe yet to be completed.

In its regulatory filing, Trans Mountain Corp. said it has run into engineering difficulties related to the drilling of a tunnel in B.C. and wants to alter the route slightly for a 1.3-kilometre stretch of pipe, as well as the construction method.

But the filing documents illustrate how the company is facing opposition from the Stk’emlúpsemc te Secwépemc Nation, whose traditional territory the pipeline crosses and who had agreed to the originally proposed route and construction method.

The documents state that between May and July 2023, Trans Mountain Corp. met and corresponded several times with the First Nation's leadership, who continued to express concern that the pipeline project was deviating from its previously agreed-upon route and construction method.

In its filing, Trans Mountain Corp. said it needs the regulator to make a decision as soon as possible to avoid construction delays that could result in "significantly increased construction costs" for the project.

It also warns of costs and impacts to "various third parties who are relying on the timely completion" of the project.

The Trans Mountain pipeline is Canada's only pipeline system transporting oil from Alberta to the West Coast. Its expansion, which is currently under way, will boost the pipeline's capacity to 890,000 barrels per day (bpd) from 300,000 bpd currently.

Trans Mountain Corp.'s target date for the mechanical completion of the expansion project had been sometime during the third quarter of this year, with the pipeline's in-service date expected in early 2024.

However, the project has been plagued by difficulties. The pipeline was bought by the federal government for $4.5 billion in 2018 after previous owner Kinder Morgan Canada Inc. threatened to scrap the pipeline's planned expansion project in the face of environmentalist opposition.

Its projected price tag has since spiraled, first to $12.6 billion, then to $21.4 billion, and most recently, to $30.9 billion (the most recent capital cost estimate, as of March of this year).

Trans Mountain Corp. has blamed the cost overruns on a variety of factors, including inflation, COVID-19, labour and supply chain challenges, flooding in B.C. and unexpected major archeological discoveries along the route.

The federal government has indicated it does not wish to be the long-term owner of Trans Mountain.

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed that the government is currently in talks with potential buyers. (A number of Indigenous-led initiatives and partnerships have previously expressed interest in owning the pipeline.)

"I’m very excited and interested that there are so many Indigenous groups interested in purchasing the TMX pipeline," Trudeau told reporters in Charlottetown.

"We’re engaged in conversations with them right now, it would be premature to speculate too much on that."

However, critics have suggested that Trans Mountain's mounting costs will mean the government will have to absorb a significant loss when it does sell the pipeline. Because of the way existing contractual agreements with oil shippers are structured, only a portion of the rising capital costs of the project can be passed on to oil companies in the form of increased tolls. (Tolls are the rates oil companies pay to shift product on a pipeline, and they are how the pipeline company makes money.)

A report from the Parliamentary Budget Officer last year found the federal government stands to lose money from its investment in the pipeline, and suggested that if the project were cancelled at that time, the government would need to write off more than $14 billion in assets.

Trudeau said Wednesday that the pipeline remains an important project for the Canadian economy that ensures future markets for this country's oil and gas resources.

"We are confident that the business case for the Trans Mountain pipeline remains solid," he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 23, 2023.

Amanda Stephenson, The Canadian Press


ECOCIDE
Petrobras Gets Help From Brazil’s Attorney General to Explore the Amazon

Mariana Durao
Wed, August 23, 2023


(Bloomberg) -- Brazil’s government may have lifted one of the key hurdles for Petrobras to drill at a promising offshore oil region, a move that could escalate a standoff between the oil company and environmental authorities.

A major impact study that the Ibama environmental agency is demanding isn’t necessary for the project, the attorney general’s office, or AGU, said in an opinion that was released on Tuesday. It sent the case to a mediation chamber to start a reconciliation process between the federal agencies involved.

Petroleo Brasileiro SA, as the Rio de Janeiro-based producer is known, is “fully willing” to join the mediation to solve any disagreements, it said in a message on Wednesday. The oil giant considers to have met all the necessary requirements to start work, adding that it’s open to any new requests.

In May Ibama blocked Petrobras from exploring the Foz do Amazonas basin out of environmental and social concerns. The license where Petrobras plans to drill was auctioned in 2013 and has been held up ever since.

Mines and Energy Minister Alexandre Silveira supports the exploration project and had asked the attorney general’s office to rule on if an impact study was necessary. Meanwhile, Environment Minister Marina Silva, who oversees Ibama, has raised concerns about developing a region off the coast from where the Amazon River flows into the Atlantic.

Silva has so far resisted pressure from other parts of government. The absence of a major impact study was not the only reason why Ibama has blocked Petrobras’s drilling request, the Environment Ministry said in an emailed response. It also cited “inconsistencies” in information provided by the company.

Ibama said it has received the attorney’s general’s opinion and will comment in due course.

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s administration is confronted with the competing priorities of growing the economy and protecting the environment. The debate about offshore drilling in Brazil comes as Colombia and Ecuador move to constrain the oil industry.

Ecuadorian voters passed a referendum this month to shut a major oil field in its Amazon region. Colombia’s Gustavo Petro is against exploring for oil at new areas and slammed “denialism” about climate change at an environmental summit in Brazil earlier this month.


Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin Rocket Tests Spew Enough Methane to be Spotted From Space

Frank Landymore
Wed, August 23, 2023 


Gassed Up

Things are getting kind of gassy at Blue Origin, Jeff Bezos' space tourism firm.

Case in point, Bloomberg reports that a Blue Origin facility in West Texas is regularly emitting so much methane during recent rocket tests that plumes of the stuff are being spotted from space.

The unexpected detection was made in June by Carbon Mapper, a nonprofit that scans for greenhouse gas emissions across the globe.

Using data gathered by an instrument on board the International Space Station, Carbon Mapper estimated that about 1.5 metric tons of methane were spewing out of the Blue Origin facility per hour, appearing as a conspicuous cloud on its website's map.

Without more data, there's no telling how long those emissions lasted.

Situation Normal

It's certainly no secret that methane figures into Blue Origin's plans. Its flagship rocket engine, the BE-4, uses what's known as liquefied natural gas (LNG) for propulsion, made almost entirely of methane. And according to a company spokesperson, these emissions are par for the course.

"We frequently transfer LNG from our suppliers into storage tanks at our engine test stands," the spokesperson told Bloomberg. "Everything operated normally."

Until now, though, the Bezos venture's methane footprint has remained a relative unknown. Even with Carbon Mapper's latest findings, we can't narrow down its emissions for sure, but an air permit application spotted by Bloomberg may help clue us in.

According to the document, filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (2020) in 2020, Blue Origin estimates that it will emit around 3.4 million cubic feet of LNG per year, or roughly 60 tons of methane.

Climate Driver

Methane is a greenhouse gas and a significant driver of climate change. According to the International Energy Association, methane alone is responsible for nearly a third of the Earth's warming temperatures.

Blue Origin emitting several dozen more tons of the stuff annually may not be that much in the grand scheme of things — globally, the energy industry released 135 million tons of the stuff in 2022 — but remains worth scrutinizing nonetheless.

For one, it is far from the only space firm to use methane as a rocket propellant  — SpaceX and its troubled Starship is a notable example. In fact, methane is increasingly viewed as the ideal rocket fuel by space firms due to, among many factors, its high density, stellar performance, and cost efficiency. We can expect a lot more methane-powered launches in the future, in other words.

So while space travel's environmental impact is currently believed to be relatively insignificant, there's reason to suspect that at current rates of the industry's growth, it's poised to become a massive polluter.

China slams US call to ban anti-satellite missile tests as 'fake arms control'

South China Morning Post
Wed, August 23, 2023 

Beijing on Wednesday accused a US proposal to ban anti-satellite weapons testing in space of promoting "fake arms control" and "real military expansion".

In a working paper submitted to the United Nations last week, the European Union said it planned to join a US proposal to prohibit the destructive testing of direct-ascent anti-satellite missiles (ASAT). The endorsement by the 27 EU member nations - most of them Nato allies - brings the total number of supporting countries to 35.

The EU statement comes ahead of a meeting by a UN working group on reducing space threats in Geneva next week to discuss on-orbit safety.

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The US proposal is opposed by China and Russia - both permanent members of the UN Security Council. The US, China, Russia and India have conducted the type of weapons tests that the proposal seeks to ban.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said on Wednesday that the US commitment was deceptive since it "sets no substantial limit to US military forces in outer space", and Washington had already carried out enough direct-ascent missile tests and developed other types of anti-satellite weapons.

Wang said Washington's purpose was to "maintain and enlarge its unilateral military superiority by means of multilateral commitments" and "achieve real military expansion under the guise of false arms control".

The EU said it was concerned the use of destructive ASAT might have "widespread and irreversible impacts on the outer space environment".

The EU said its commitment to supporting the ban was an "urgent and initial measure aimed at preventing damage to the outer space environment, while also contributing to the development of further measures for the prevention of an arms race in outer space".

Wang blamed the worsening security environment and intensifying space arms race on US attempts to seek dominance, rather than a specific type of weapons test.

"The US has publicly declared space to be a frontier of war, vigorously developed military forces for space, built a space military alliance and provoked confrontation among the major powers," Wang said.


The proposed ban has been promoted by the administration of US President Joe Biden. US Vice-President Kamala Harris last year announced that Washington would unilaterally end such tests and was planning to introduce a resolution to the UN.

Last December, the UN General Assembly approved a US-sponsored non-binding moratorium on destructive anti-satellite missiles, with 155 countries supporting the motion. China, Russia and seven other countries objected to the move, while India and eight other countries abstained.

In a statement on its commitment to stopping the tests, the White House mentioned a 2007 test by China, along with a similar one by Russia in November 2021, as examples of "one of the most pressing threats to the security and sustainability of space".

China has argued that the US commitment did not address the real security threats in outer space, and the ultimate solution should be a legally binding total prohibition on the deployment of weapons in space, the use of force and the threat of force against space objects.

"We hope that the countries concerned would ... abandon the Cold War mentality, stop making and implementing offensive military policies in outer space, and return to the right track of negotiating legal instruments for arms control," Wang said.

Copyright (c) 2023. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
How does Mercury retrograde affect us? Here's an astrologer's guide to survival.

Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY
Wed, August 23, 2023 



Mercury is officially in retrograde. So buckle up, the universe may have something up its sleeve. You may begin to hear astrology lovers in your life lament the retrograde and all the ways it's shaking things up in their lives.

“When we think about a mercury retrograde it’s like tripping over your own feet and missing the train and waking up too late and forgetting to eat breakfast,” Astrologer Cleo Neptune says.

This retrograde, which will last until September 14, is no different. So how can you make it easier? Here are Neptune's expert survival tips.

Learn more about each Zodiac sign

Pisces | Aquarius | Capricorn | Sagittarius | Scorpio | Libra | Virgo | Leo | Cancer | Gemini | Taurus | Aries

1. Take a deeper look at your chart

This Mercury Retrograde is in Virgo which means to know how it will affect your life, it’s important to know where Virgo is in your chart. You can look up your chart on popular sites like Co-Star or The Pattern.

“Mercury is at home in Virgo and Mercury likes chaos” Neptune warns. Virgo may be the sign of organization, but that’s often for other people’s lives and not their own, he says. They have a mess at home but they know exactly where everything is in their mess. So this mercury retrograde be sure to do the same.

“A retrograde in Virgo gives it (Mercury) the tools it needs to navigate the mess in a way that makes sense.”

2. Study the mess

Mercury retrograde makes a mess, there’s no way to avoid it. Humans are pretty futile against planetary forces. However, what you can do is study the mess and identify its underlying causes Neptune notes.

“Literally moving mess around to make it make sense is going to be this transit,” he says. “People realize the messes that exist in their life that reflect how their mind is working”

Sometimes taking a deeper look at something will start to reflect back at you some hidden truths. Maybe you discover you’re not planning ahead enough, or not giving yourself enough alone time. Whatever mess you have – physical, emotional, or otherwise, this is the time to take a magnifying glass to it.

3. Make lists

“A lot of lists need to be made,” Neptune says. When retrograde is in full swing everything is out of wack, so this is a good way to keep things straight. At the same time, recognize that progress is messy.

“Not in a philosophical way but in a literal way,” Neptune says of messy progress. He gives the metaphor of ripping apart a closet and looking at the pieces to ask “Which belongings are working and which ones are not?” If you can take that ideology and apply it to other areas of your life, your mercury retrograde may be just a little less turbulent.

4. Do something new

"Sh*t is going to hit the fan," Neptune says. But rather than plow forward with a method that is not working, this retrograde may push you to try an alternative route.

"Everyone is going to be out of wack and frustrated but in a way that will motivate them to do something new,” he says.

5. Say what you mean, and mean what you say

People with a Virgo Mercury placements are very good at giving feedback, Neptune says. So this season is a really good time to embody that quality. Don’t equivocate, give an honest opinion but do it with kindness.

“I feel like this retrograde is going to be a lot of encouraging people to criticize and to provide feedback on things that are and aren’t working in their lives,” Neptune explains.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Are we in a Mercury retrograde? Yes! Here are some ways you can cope.

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