Environmental Suits  by Roger King  

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Environmental Suits
  3. Conclusion

Introduction

Environmental Suits

US judge blocks gas drilling in Michigan forest  by John Flesher, Associated Press Writer July 12, 2008  U.S. District Judge David Lawson of Detroit ruled Thursday the agency had acted "arbitrarily and capriciously" in 2005 by giving Savoy Energy LP of Traverse City a permit to drill an exploratory well near the Au Sable River's south branch.  ...  But the judge ruled the Forest Service didn't consider how degrading the area could harm tourism, and said the agency did a "woefully inadequate" job of evaluating how the drilling might affect the Kirtland's warbler, an endangered songbird that nests in the area.    

Wind Jammers  at The Wall Street Journal  August 18, 2008  It turns out, however, that when wind and solar power do start to come on line, they face a familiar obstacle: environmentalists and many Democrats.   To wit, the greens are blocking the very transmission network needed for renewable electricity to move throughout the economy.  ...

To exploit this energy, utilities need to build transmission lines to connect their electricity to the places where consumers actually live.   ...

Only last week, Duke Energy and American Electric Power announced a $1 billion joint venture to build a mere 240 miles of transmission line in Indiana necessary to accommodate new wind farms. Yet the utilities don't expect to be able to complete the lines for six long years -- until 2014, at the earliest, because of the time necessary to obtain regulatory approval and rights-of-way, plus the obligatory lawsuits.

In California, hundreds turned out at the end of July to protest a connection between the solar and geothermal fields of the Imperial Valley to Los Angeles and Orange County. The environmental class is likewise lobbying state commissioners to kill a 150-mile link between San Diego and solar panels because it would entail a 20-mile jaunt through Anza-Borrego state park.   ... 

Wind power has also become contentious in oh-so-green Oregon, once people realized that transmission lines would cut through forests. Transmissions lines from a wind project on the Nevada-Idaho border are clogged because of possible effects on the greater sage grouse. Similar melodramas are playing out in Arizona, the Dakotas, the Carolinas, Tennessee, West Virginia, northern Maine, upstate New York, and elsewhere.   

Quoted as Saying:  at Climate Change Fraud  August 20, 2008   Loarie Greg Loarie, an environmental lawyer at Earthjustice, on why using the American pika is the perfect mammal to challenge the recent ruling that the Endangered Species Act was not intended to regulate climate change. Environmentalists filed a lawsuit Aug. 19, 2008, in U.S. District Court in Sacramento, Calif., and requested, among other things, that carbon dioxide be regulated as a pollutant.   

 

Conclusion