Aloha Umbrella Friday!
Umbrellas were used in ancient Greece, Rome, Egypt, India, and the Middle East, as early as the fourth century BCE. The first recorded collapsible umbrella dates to 21 CE in China. The canopies of ancient umbrellas were built with different materials than those that are used today, being made of feathers, leaves, and leather; however, their shape was reminiscent of today's umbrellas. The term more associated with the sunshade umbrella is the parasol.
Woodfibre
            LNG project near Squamish, B.C., seeks amendments to
            environmental assessment
        A liquefied natural gas project that would produce around two
        million tonnes of the fossil fuel a year near Squamish, B.C. —
        about 64 kilometres north of Vancouver — for export is seeking
        changes from Environment and Climate Change Canada over how it
        is required to monitor for marine mammals affected by underwater
        noise, such as pile driving, during construction.
By
            2050, Washington might need to buy energy from other states
          
        If Washington reaches its goal of weaning itself from fossil
        fuels and continues its drive to replace gas-powered cars with
        electric vehicles, we will need to start importing electricity
        by 2050, according to calculations by the Washington Department
        of Commerce.
‘A
            century in the making’: Canada adds federal protection to
            Indigenous-declared marine refuge 
        When the Mamalilikulla First Nation unilaterally declared an
        Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area in their traditional
        territory in late 2021, it was as much to protect rare corals
        and sponges as reestablish connection to lands and waters from
        which the community had been forcefully removed. Now Canada is
        backing the nation, adding marine protections under federal law.
      
'A
            scientific sin': 16 Canadian salmon scientists claim DFO sea
            lice report was manipulated
        16 scientists slam a recent DFO report that found salmon farms
        had an "insignificant" impact on wild salmon infestations —
        claiming the report's authors cherry-picked data, ignored
        scientific consensus and failed to consult with experts outside
        the department. 
      
Pink
            sea urchins on the move, a sign of climate change 
        The pretty pink urchins that live in deep water off the coast of
        Vancouver Island are slowly but surely moving into shallower
        places as food sources and oxygen levels decline due to a
        warming ocean.
Big
            Oil walks back climate pledges as earnings show 2022 was
            their most profitable year ever 
        Financial results from the biggest energy companies in the world
        this week show that last year was their most profitable year
        ever, prompting many of them to scale back previous commitments
        to pivot more toward renewable energy.
Alberta is on
            a blitz to promote B.C.’s LNG industry. Critics say it’s
            time to ‘keep out’
        Alberta’s energy war room campaign to promote the
        carbon-intensive LNG industry comes as B.C. admits it will miss
        emissions targets, even without accounting for new LNG. 
      
‘We should avoid monitoring’: feds quietly backed off while Coastal GasLink pipeline work killed fish
For months, Fisheries and Oceans Canada wouldn’t say anything about its 
role in monitoring the Coastal GasLink pipeline and protecting fish 
habitat. Internal documents show the agency was keeping an eye on 
construction — until it wasn’t. 
Corps’ BP Cherry Point limit no limit at all, environmental groups say
Environmental groups are unhappy with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ 
January 23 modification to its 1996 permit that limits the volume of 
crude oil BP can handle at its Cherry Point facility. They say the 
ceiling would allow the oil company to double its shipping capacity.
      
First Nations, B.C. groups launch coalition to save Pacific salmon from extinction
First Nations Fisheries Council of B.C. is joining with the Lower Fraser
 Fisheries Alliance, the Pacific Salmon Foundation, the First Nations 
Summit and the Upper Fraser Fisheries Conservation Alliance to find 
solutions to collapsing salmon runs. 
      
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected in
        Salish Sea News and Weather which
        is compiled as a community service by Mike Sato. To subscribe at
        no cost to the weekday news clips, send your name and email to
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