Texas

Energy and Environment Reporting for Texas

Yearly Archives: 2012

Texas Drought Outlook Improving

Photo courtesy of the National Weather Service. This photo has been edited to only depict the continental U.S.

Seasonal drought forcast from the national weatehr service.

Today the National Weather Service offered a glimmer of hope to Texans bracing for another hot and dry summer.

In its three month seasonal drought outlook the service has moved much of Central Texas out of the area where the service is predicting “persistent drought.”

Instead that portion of Texas is now bathed in glorious green on the service’s map, indicating that the region may actually see drought improvement.

“I’ve never seen this on the maps in a long time,” said LCRA meteorologist Bob Rose.

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Latest Victim of the Texas Drought: Striped Bass

Photo by Jeff Heimsath for StateImpact Texas.

A lone angler fishes Lake Buchanan, February 2012.

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department announced today that the Dundee State Fish Hatchery in Wichita Falls, Texas, will be “suspended effective immediately” because there isn’t enough water to operate during the ongoing drought.

“Although many parts of the state recently received good rains, the area west of Wichita Falls around Lakes Kemp and Diversion did not,” Todd Engeling, director of hatchery operations for the department, said in a statement. As we reported in February, the hatchery is responsible for much of Texas’ striped bass supply. More from our earlier report:

“There are four hatcheries in the state run by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and supplies up to five million striped bass fingerlings (or baby fish) per year.  Unlike most other species of sport fish in Texas, striped bass do not naturally procreate in the state. Without the stocking program the populations will steadily decline and disappear in Texas.”

Texas Parks and Wildlife says they will adjust production at their other hatcheries to shift away from largemouth bass “to produce striped bass and hybrid striped bass fingerlings.”

Upcycling Across Borders: How U.S. School Buses Become Camionetas

Where do school buses go when they die? It might surprise you to learn that most American school buses don’t die at all; they’re often reborn as public transportation south of the border.

The story of one aging school bus that was sold off and driven to Guatamela to begin a new life as an ornate shuttle is the subject of a new film that premiered at the SXSW Film Festival this week, La Camioneta. Through this one bus, the film examines how one country’s trash becomes another’s treasure, the importance of mass transportation in a country with widespread poverty and how violence and gang warfare threaten the safety and viability of that transportation.

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As Natural Gas Prices Drop, Could Economy be at Risk?

Photo Courtesy of Arthur Berman

Arthur Berman is the head of Labryth Consulting, a Geological consulting firm.

People see a lot of different things when they look at the American natural gas industry. Some see potential environmental dangers. Others see it as a bridge to renewable energy. President Obama envisions more than 600 thousand new jobs from it. But when Arthur Berman looks at the natural gas industry, he sees an iceberg on the open sea.

“We gotta turn to miss that iceburg, but we sure better start turning ten or 15 miles away from it or else we’re gonna hit it,” Berman, a geologist who consults for energy companies, told StateImpact Texas.

So it’s no surprise that lately Berman’s developed a reputation as the “Debbie Downer” of the natural gas industry. For one thing, he doesn’t think the U.S. has as much of it as has been estimated (up to a hundred years). Berman estimates that reserves could only meet demand for the next 23 years.

For another, he believes that all the cheerleading for gas has left U.S. financial markets in danger. Here’s how: the rush to extract has brought down natural gas prices. That’s meant less profit for drillers and gas companies. But some of those companies continue to drill. Berman says you’ve got to leave the shale fields of South Texas, and pay a visit to Wall Street to figure it out.

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Green Energy: The Army, Renewables, and Texas

Photo by Mose Buchele/StateImpact Texas

Under Secretary of the Army, Dr. Joseph W. Westphal, toured UT Austin last week.

If you happened to see an entourage of uniformed military personnel touring the University of Texas at Austin earlier this month, it might have been a visit by Dr. Joseph Westphal, the Under Secretary of the U.S. Army.

Westphal was on campus touring research facilities and talking about military-academic research partnerships. With President Obama recently touting the Department of Defense’s progress in “clean energy” in his State of the Union address, it seemed like a good time to ask the Under Secretary some questions about what the Army’s doing when it comes to renewable research.

StateImpact Texas’ Mose Buchele got the chance to speak with him after the tour.

StateImpact Texas: What role do you think the Army could play in research into renewable energy?

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Willow Park May Be Added to Superfund Sites

Photo courtesy of EPA

Al Armendariz is the regional administrator for the EPA.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced today that it wants to add Willow Park, Texas (a small town east of Fort Worth), to its National Priorities List (NPL) of Superfund sites. Those sites are specially-designated areas of hazardous waste pollution that receive priority funding and cleanup assistance from the federal government.

What happened in Willow Park? Here’s the EPA release:

“In 2006, routine sampling of a well in the city of Willow Park’s water system showed concentrations of trichloroethene (TCE) to be above health-based safety levels. Subsequent tests showed that public water supply and five private wells all had elevated TCE levels. These water sources are all within a one-mile radius of the site, which extends for a half-mile along Russell Road. The city of Willow Park shut down the wells and installed a carbon filter to provide safe drinking water for affected residents. The source of the contamination has not been identified.”

“Today we’re taking an important step toward restoring contaminated property and protecting people’s health and our environment,” EPA Regional Administrator Al Armendariz said in the release. “Cleaning up hazardous waste in our communities and returning properties to environmental and economic vitality are EPA priorities.”

The EPA says they will have a public comment period on the decision for 60 days.

Tar Sands to Texas: Will Keystone XL’s Heavy Crude Mean More Pollution?

Dave Fehling/StateImpact Texas

Patricia Gonzales at her home in Pasadena

Standing outside her tidy house in Pasadena, Texas, Patricia Gonzales succinctly sums up her community’s dilemma: “No one is saying we don’t want the jobs. It’s just that we don’t want the pollution coming with it.”

Her home is just two miles from the Houston Ship Channel, which is lined with the biggest concentration of petrochemical plants and oil refineries in the nation.

Gonzales was talking about her latest concern: the Keystone XL pipeline. If completed, it will bring millions of barrels of Canadian crude to refineries in Houston and Port Arthur. But the crude, from the tar sands mined in Alberta, is a heavier, dirtier variety than “sweet crude” from places like West Texas.

“We’re already in the highest level of the polluted [places in] the United States and you bring in more. And you want us to accept that?” Gonzales posed to StateImpact Texas.

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LCRA Water Plan Goes to TCEQ for Approval

Photo courtesy of LCRA

LCRA General Manager Becky Motal says the new plan will help protect LCRA customers during severe droughts

A new plan that would significantly change how water is managed in the Highland Lakes region of Central Texas was sent to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) for review and approval today. The plan was adopted by the Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA) in late February. The TCEQ now has up to a year to look over the plan, but the actual approval may only take a few months.

The new plan would change how water is allocated from Lakes Buchanan and Travis, the two main reservoirs for water in Central Texas (including the city of Austin). Under the changes being proposed, less water would be diverted for agricultural use during dry periods (when certain requirements aren’t met for how much water is in the lakes at a given time), and more water reserved for municipal and commercial use.

It took 18 months for a group representing the various interests that depend on the lake — farmers, municipalities, industry and lake residents and businesses, to name a few — to agree on a plan to present to the LCRA. The board at the LCRA approved that plan on February 22, with ten on the board in favor and five against, with all of the against votes coming from LCRA board members that represent counties downstream of Austin and the Highland Lakes. Continue Reading

The ‘Canary in the Coal Mine’ of Climate Change: Dying Glaciers

http://vimeo.com/10526855

Imagine a mass the size of Manhattan breaking off a mountain and falling into the ocean. It’s an event few have witnessed, but nature photographer James Balog and his crew got to see just that while filming a new documentary about the waning of glaciers across the globe.

That film, ‘Chasing Ice,’ is screening at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas this week. It provides a fascinating glimpse into the rapid recession of glaciers in the face of climate change. Balog and his team capture intense moments where gigantic pieces of glaciers “calve,” or break off into the sea.

But even more fascinating is a robust effort by Balog to capture over time the disappearance of the glaciers. Using dozens of digital cameras powered by miniature solar panels, the photographer and his team set up glacier monitoring stations (in some very remote, treacherous locations) that took a picture of each glacier every day. They called it the Extreme Ice Survey. Even in the span of one year, the regression is stark. Seen over several years, it’s even more so. Edited together, the images show huge masses of ice slowly deflating like a balloon. (And there are helpful visual comparisons in the film to show the scale of just how much regression has occurred.) In some cases, the crew have to hike back to their cameras to pan, as the glaciers have disappeared so much that they’re no longer in view. Continue Reading

The Farmer vs. the Pipeline, Round 4: Restraining Order Lost Again

Photo by Flickr user Stuck in Customs/Creative Commons

Pipeline companies are finding themselves with a new obstacle: defenders of private property rights.

Once again, the farmer fighting the Keystone XL pipeline has had her restraining order against the company behind the pipeline dissolved. You can read the ruling by the Sixth Court of Appeals in Texarkana, below.

If you’re confused (and who could blame you), here’s the timeline: a few weeks ago, Crawford got a temporary restraining order against TransCanada, the company behind the pipeline, which would have prevented the company from starting construction on her land. But that restraining order was later dissolved by the courts on Feb. 24, and the company announced it intended to go ahead and start construction on a southern portion of the pipeline from Cushing, Oklahoma to Port Arthur, Texas. Then last Friday, an appeals court reinstated the restraining order after an appeal by Crawford, preventing construction from taking place. But today it’s been dissolved yet again.

The court says in the new decision that they had reinstated the restraining order “in an abundance of caution” and now that they’ve had time to review the appeal, they believe the it should be dissolved. Continue Reading

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