Aloha Leonid Meteor Shower Friday!
Probably the most famous of the annual meteor showers will soon be
reaching its maximum: The Leonids. These ultrafast meteors are due to
reach their peak on Saturday morning (Nov. 18). The famous Leonid meteor shower produced one of the greatest meteor storms in living memory. Rates were as high as thousands of meteors per minute
during a 15-minute span on the morning of November 17, 1966. That
night, Leonid meteors did, briefly, fall like rain. Some who witnessed
it had a strong impression of Earth moving through space, fording the meteor stream.
Commercial
fishing groups sue 13 US tire makers over rubber
preservative that's deadly to salmon
The 13 largest U.S. tire manufacturers are facing a lawsuit from
a pair of California commercial fishing organizations that could
force the companies to stop using a chemical added to almost
every tire because it kills migrating salmon.
A
proposed 50-acre oyster farm causes concern for neighbors
Mark and Christin Herinckx had only been living in their home on
Oakland Bay for a year before they learned about the proposal by
Taylor Shellfish: a 50-acre oyster farm, the size of several
aircraft carriers, in the middle of the bay right behind their
new house.
Federal
judge dismisses lawsuit against WA’s carbon-pricing law
The private operator of a natural gas power plant in Grays
Harbor County must continue to buy pollution allowances, a
federal judge ruled, further protecting Washington’s Climate
Commitment Act against those looking to overturn the
legislation.
Debate
over Pebble mine in Alaska’s Bristol Bay region moves to
dueling Supreme Court briefs
The company seeking to develop the controversial copper mine is
sticking to its plans, despite federal action that barred
permitting for the project.
Dabob
Bay area expanded
The state Department of Natural Resources has added another 671
acres to the Dabob Bay Natural Area by moving lands into the
state’s new carbon sequestration program as the first of what
will ultimately be 2,000 acres in the program.
WA
raises $260 million in most-recent carbon-pricing auction
Washington’s latest auction of carbon-emission allowances raised
an estimated $260 million. In all, about 31.9 million carbon
allowances have been sold this year, hauling in more than $1.5
billion. Each allowance represents one metric ton of emissions
from the state’s biggest greenhouse-gas polluters.
Report
raises concerns about tracing water quality, salmon safety
The U.S. and Washington environmental agencies are not
adequately tracking how high water temperatures and
oxygen-depleting substances are harming Puget Sound’s salmon,
according to a recent Government Accountability Office report.
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
mikesato772 at gmail.com. Your email information is never shared
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