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Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania took the stage at Wissahickon High School in the Philadelphia suburbs on Monday to the roars of his fellow Democrats, a campaign appearance and an audition all in one. As he enthusiastically shouted out his support for Vice President Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign, the pro-Palestinian demonstrators who had dogged Democratic politicians last spring were nowhere in evidence. There was only the adoration of an audience from his native Montgomery County, which the Democratic ticket must carry by sizable margins in November to win Pennsylvania. But as Ms. Harris prepares to name her running mate ahead of a rally on Tuesday in Philadelphia, those protests are very much part of the calculus surrounding Mr. Shapiro, who is believed to be on her shortlist of potential running mates. An effort by a motley group of left-wing and pro-Palestinian activists to derail his nomination has presented the Harris campaign with a decision as the vice president prepares to make one of most significant choices of her career: Should she take the opportunity to stand up to her far-left flank in an appeal to the center of the party and to independents, or should she shy away from inflaming an issue that has divided and bedeviled the party — Israel’s war in Gaza?
Persons: Josh Shapiro, Kamala Harris’s, Harris, Shapiro Organizations: Pennsylvania, Wissahickon, School, Democratic Locations: Philadelphia, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, inflaming, Gaza
Mr. Vance’s stumbles have come after a remarkable two weeks when Mr. Trump survived an assassination attempt, and then rallied the party — and even some skeptics — behind him. Then, in a sense, Mr. Trump and Mr. Vance were the victims of that success. Image Mr. Vance, center right, and Mr. Trump at the Republican National Convention earlier this month. Some of Mr. Vance’s comments on some conservative podcasts veered into serious policy critiques that trucked in antisemitic tropes and racial stereotypes. Still, the Harris campaign was happy with the bruises they had inflicted.
Persons: JD Vance, Ohio, Donald J, Vance, Trump, deriding, Vance’s, Harris, “ I’ve, , , Kamala Harris, Biden, Doug Mills, pushback, Dave Portnoy, Steven Cheung, “ We’re, Jean Carroll, Jennifer Aniston, Tucker Carlson, they’ve, Hillary Clinton’s “, Rupert Murdoch, Doug Burgum, Hiroko Masuike, Carlson, Harris’s, , Mr, Kelly, ” George Soros, Soros, Taylor Van Kirk, Brian Schatz, Chris Murphy, Trump’s, Marco Rubio, ” Mr, Rubio, they’re, ” Sarafina Organizations: Trump, Democratic, Republican National Convention, Republican, New York Times, Barstool Sports, Publicly, Fox News, The, Mr, Credit, CNN, Democrat, Democratic National Committee Locations: Ohio, Middletown , Ohio, Milwaukee, New York, North Dakota, SiriusXM, Columbus, California, Hawaii, Connecticut, Florida
Mr. Vance’s stumbles have come after a remarkable two weeks when Mr. Trump survived an assassination attempt and then rallied the party — and even some skeptics — behind him. Then, in a sense, Mr. Trump and Mr. Vance became the victims of that success. Some of Mr. Vance’s comments on some conservative podcasts veered into serious policy critiques that trucked in antisemitic tropes and racial stereotypes. The Harris campaign has been able to keep the spotlight on the momentum behind her fledgling presidential run — and away from Mr. Trump. Still, the Harris campaign was happy with the bruises they had inflicted.
Persons: JD Vance, Ohio, Donald J, Vance, Trump, deriding, Vance’s, Harris, “ I’ve, , , Kamala Harris, Biden, Doug Mills, pushback, Dave Portnoy, Steven Cheung, Mr, Cheung, “ We’re, Jean Carroll, Jennifer Aniston, Tucker Carlson, they’ve, Hillary Clinton’s “, Rupert Murdoch, Doug Burgum, Hiroko Masuike, Carlson, Harris’s, , Kelly, ” Mr, ” George Soros, Soros, Taylor Van Kirk, William Martin, Brian Schatz, Chris Murphy, Trump’s, Marco Rubio, Rubio, they’re, ” Sarafina Organizations: Trump, Democratic, Republican National Convention, Republican, New York Times, Barstool Sports, Publicly, Fox News, The, Mr, Credit, CNN, Senate, Democrat, Democratic National Committee Locations: Ohio, Middletown , Ohio, Milwaukee, New York, North Dakota, SiriusXM, Columbus, California, Hawaii, Connecticut, Florida
Fact-Checking Trump’s Speech and More: Day 4 of the Republican National Convention Share full articleImage Former President Donald J. Trump on the fourth day of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee. Credit... Hiroko Masuike/The New York TimesFormer President Donald J. Trump accepted his party’s nomination during the final night of the Republican National Convention on Thursday, delivering a freewheeling, factually challenged and often ad-libbed speech. Mr. Trump began by describing in detail the assassination attempt that left him with a bandaged ear. Then, he essentially staged a campaign rally, repeating familiar boasts and delving into a cascade of false and misleading claims about his own record and the state of the border, the economy and the world. Here’s a fact-check of his remarks.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Hiroko Masuike Organizations: Republican, Republican National Convention, Milwaukee . Credit, New York Times Locations: Milwaukee .
Calling plastic pollution one of the world’s most pressing environmental problems, the Biden administration on Friday said that the federal government, the biggest buyer of consumer goods in the world, would phase out purchases of single-use plastics. The administration also said it planned tougher regulations on plastic manufacturing, which releases planet-warming greenhouse gases and other dangerous pollutants. The efforts, which the White House called the first comprehensive strategy to tackle plastic use nationwide, aim to reduce demand for disposable plastic items while also helping to create a market for substitutes that are reusable, compostable or more easily recyclable.
Persons: Biden
TuesdaySeveral Senate candidates and House leaders joined Mr. Trump in the box over the course of Tuesday night. Eric Trump Donald J. Trump Senator J.D. Mr. Trump responded with applause, flanked by Mr. Vance and Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the House majority leader. Walt Nauta, Trump’s valet Vanessa Trump Massad Boulos Ronan Anthony Villency Linda McMahon, business executive Kimberly Guilfoyle Kai Trump Eric Trump Lara Trump Michael Boulos Issac Perlmutter Laura Perlmutter Donald Trump Jr. Usha Vance Donald J. Trump Gov. Vance, Ohio Melania Trump Eric Trump Donald Trump Jr. Photo by Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times
Persons: Hiroko Masuike, Donald J, Trump’s, Trump, J.D, Vance of, Byron Donalds of, Katie Britt, Ala, Sarah Boulos, Ronan Anthony Villency, Massad Boulos, Tiffany’s, David Sacks, Donald Trump Jr, Kimberly Guilfoyle Eric Trump Lara Trump Tiffany Trump Michael Boulos, Tiffany's, Tucker Carlson, Byron Donalds, Ohio Mike Johnson, Kelly Johnson, Mike Johnson’s, Trump Sarah Boulos, Kimberly’s, Eric Trump Donald Trump Jr, Kimberly Guilfoyle Lara Trump Tiffany Trump Michael Boulos, Ohio Tucker Carlson, Trump Mike Johnson, Eric Trump, Lara Trump, Kimberly Guilfoyle, Tiffany Trump, Michael Boulos, Donald Trump , Jr, Vance, Mike Johnson, Massad, Ken Paxton, Markwayne Mullin, Okla, Marsha Blackburn, Ronny Jackson, Rick Scott, Brian Mast, Anna Paulina Luna, Matt Gaetz, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Cory Mills, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, Ark, Eric Trump Donald J, Tom Emmer, Elise Stefanik, Tiffany Trump Michael Boulos Eric Trump Donald J, Steve Scalise, Kyle Yunaska, Lara Trump’s, Robert Luke Yunaska, Michael Boulos Tiffany Trump Eric Trump Linda Ann Sykes, Lee Zeldin, Jim Banks, Eric Schmitt, Haiyun Jiang, Glenn Youngkin, Marco Rubio, Callista Gingrich, Newt Gingrich, Mary Miller, Dale Strong, Nicole Malliotakis, Lisa McClain, Callista Gingrich Amber Rose, Troy Nehls, Troy Nehls , Texas Ronan Anthony Villency Mike Johnson Isaac Perlmutter, Laura Perlmutter, Lauren Boebert, Jeanette Rubio, Marco Rubio’s, Greg Abbott, Monica De La, Monica De La Cruz , Texas Newt Gingrich, Todd Heisler, Vance’s, Usha Vance, Doug Burgum, Kai Trump, Trump's, ” Walt Nauta, Jason Smith, Mo, Boris Epshteyn, Ronan Anthony Villency Kai Trump Vanessa Trump, Kimberly Guilfoyle Linda McMahon, Lara Trump Usha Vance Eric Trump Michae, Laura Perlmutter Issac Perlmutter Donald J, Mike Johnson Gov, Texas Bev Vance, Walt Nauta, Vanessa Trump Massad Boulos Ronan Anthony Villency Linda McMahon, Kimberly Guilfoyle Kai Trump Eric Trump Lara Trump Michael Boulos Issac Perlmutter Laura Perlmutter Donald Trump Jr, Usha Vance Donald J, Mike Johnson Bev Vance, Jamie Kelter Davis, Ivanka, Jared Kushner, Melania, Ronan Anthony Villency Steve Witkoff, Dan Bongino, Kai Trump Laura Olaya, Tiffany Trump Michael, Vanessa Trump Jared Kushner Ivanka Trump, Hulk’s, Hulk Hogan Kimberly Guilfoyle Lara Trump Usha Vance, Vance , Ohio Melania Trump Eric Trump Donald Trump Jr Organizations: New York Times, Republican, Convention, Fox News, Trump, New York, House, Mr, Republicans, Rep, Michael, Tiffany Trump Gov, Texas Rep, Trump Rep, Gov, Republican National Committee, Ill, Monica De La Cruz , Texas Gov, Trump Gov, The New York, The New York Times, Daily Locations: Trump’s, Vance of Ohio, Byron Donalds of Florida, Fla, Vance, Ohio, Ala, Ken Paxton , Texas, Tenn, Texas, Ga, Vance , Ohio, Minn, N.Y, Massad, Louisiana, Bird , Iowa, La, Ind, Mo, Virginia, Marco Rubio of Florida, Mich, Troy Nehls , Texas, Colo, Monica De La Cruz , Texas, Va . Rep, North Dakota
And with 12 new Japanese sponsors, Japanese-language stadium tours and new Japanese menu items, the Dodgers are making the most of the Ohtani effect. A mural showing Los Angeles Dodgers player Shohei Ohtani is painted on the side of the Miyako Hotel in Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles. “He’s just a phenomenal individual, right?” said Judy Clow, who brought her brother from Japan to a Japanese-language tour at Dodger Stadium. My gosh!”Shohei Ohtani warms up before a preseason game against the Los Angeles Angels at Dodger Stadium on March 24, 2024. Some of the six new Japanese-language tour guides at Dodger Stadium actually worked at Angels Stadium previously, serving the same fans.
Persons: There’s, Takayo Hizume, CNN it’s, Shohei, Robyn Beck, , Hizume, Ohtani, Los Angeles –, Akira Yuhara, ” Yuhara, swindling, “ He’s, , Judy Clow, Harry, Christine Gerriets, ” Gerriets, Kay Ponak, Norma Galeana, CNN Mihana Hayashi, takoyaki, Hayashi, Nanoha, , giveaways, Stan Kasten, ” Kasten, Kasten, Robert Vargas, Vin Scully, ” Vargas, “ Ohtani, Adam Burke, Hiroko Hinata, Natasha Chen, CNN Yuhara, Miyako, Don Tahara, Shania Baweja, Jason Kravarik Organizations: Los Angeles CNN, Dodgers, Ohtani’s, CNN, Angeles Dodgers, Getty, Dodger, Los Angeles Angels, Angels, Daiso, Toyo, Far, Los, Los Angeles Tourism, LA Tourism, Ohtani's Dodgers, Far Bar Locations: Japan, Los Angeles, California, Pacific, Miyako, Little Tokyo, AFP, , South Korea, Southern California, LA, Anaheim, guacamole, Nagoya, Asian, Japanese
Two vans loaded with precision instruments trundled along the streets of New York and New Jersey in the heat earlier this week, sniffing for toxic chemicals in the air. They detected spikes in methane, a potent greenhouse gas, most likely from leaks, or from natural-gas-burning buses. And all along the ride, they logged elevated levels of ozone, the main ingredient of smog, as well as cancer-causing formaldehyde — both of which form readily in hot weather. The bottom line: The streets are dotted with pollution hot spots. And the heat makes pollution worse.
Persons: , Peter DeCarlo, Johns Hopkins University who’s Organizations: Johns Hopkins University Locations: New York, New Jersey
They’re a familiar sight in Amazon packages: The plastic air pillows designed to keep products safe in transit, but that also end up in landfills by the billions. Now, under pressure from environmentalists to cut down on its use of plastic packaging, the world’s largest online retailer is close to replacing all of its puffy plastic pillows with recycled paper filler. Amazon says the move will avoid the use of almost 15 billion air pillows a year in North America. It is the Seattle-based retail giant’s “largest plastic packaging reduction effort” to date, the retail giant said in a news release on Thursday. It’s just one way companies are responding to an outcry from people and environmental groups over retailers’ use of plastic packaging, particularly as online shopping continues to surge.
Persons: They’re, It’s Locations: North America, Seattle
Lucy Yu wasn’t sure if she had smoke in her lungs or was having an anxiety attack. Five days earlier, on the Fourth of July, she had raced out of her bookstore in Manhattan’s Chinatown as it filled with smoke. She had assembled a team of friends to pack up the books that weren’t damaged beyond repair and put them in storage. She walked outside and sat down on a stoop next door, as her friends comforted her and brought her water. Her once-vibrant store, Yu & Me Books, needed a gut renovation to remove mold and smoke residue.
Persons: Lucy Yu wasn’t, Yu Locations: Chinatown
The defense lawyer minced no words as he addressed a room full of plastic-industry executives. Prepare for a wave of lawsuits​ with​ potentially “astronomical” costs​. Gross was referring to PFAS, the “forever chemicals” that have emerged as one of the major pollution issues of our time. Used for decades in countless everyday objects — cosmetics, takeout containers, frying pans — PFAS have been linked to serious health risks including cancer. “Weed out people and find the right witness to represent your company.”A spokesman for Mr. Gross’s employer, MG+M The Law Firm, which defends companies in high-stakes litigation, didn’t respond to questions about Mr. Gross’s remarks and said he was unavailable to discuss them.
Persons: Brian Gross, Gross, ” Mr, , “ Weed, Gross’s Organizations: The New York Times, , Law Locations: United States
“I woke up, I said, ‘I wonder, will it be hostile or will it be friendly?’” Mr. Trump said. It was a love fest.”As is often the case during Mr. Trump's speeches, the truth was a bit more complex. But Mr. Trump observed that Mr. Levitt had exited his business too early and was unable to make a comeback when he wanted to years later. The reason, Mr. Trump said, was that he had squandered his momentum. “You have to always keep moving forward,” Mr. Trump said.
Persons: Miles, Donald J, Trump, , , , Biden, Hiroko Masuike, Trump’s, , Unprompted, Mr, Indiana Mitchell, Rafael Brito, ” Mr, Brito, Melvin Howard, William Levitt, Levitt, ” Jeffery C, Mays Organizations: New York State, Trump, South Bronx . Credit, New York Times, Dominican, Queens, New York Police Department Locations: Bronx, New York, York City, Crotona, Florida, “ New York, South Bronx, United States, Dominican Republic, , Central Park, Long
But often over the last month, his presidential campaign has ventured into politically hostile territory: New York City. “It does feel like he’s almost going out there door to door.”Image Mr. Trump brought pizzas to a firehouse in Midtown Manhattan. Credit... Hiroko Masuike/The New York TimesWorking within the trial schedule, Mr. Trump’s aides have also looked to use its constraints to their advantage. Image Union workers outside a construction site in Manhattan last month during Mr. Trump’s visit. Credit... Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times Image The Trump campaign has cited his crowds as proof of his popularity in deep-blue New York.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, , George Arzt, Edward I, Koch, Hiroko Masuike, Brian Hughes, Mr, Trump’s, ” Jason Miller, Biden, Miller, Bill de Blasio, de, Hank Sheinkopf, Sheinkopf, , ” Nicholas Nehamas Organizations: Trump, Midtown Manhattan ., New York Times, New Yorker, Democratic, New, Madison, Garden, Credit Locations: New York City, Harlem, Midtown Manhattan, Manhattan, New York, Midtown, Florida, York, Yorkers, Bronx, Crotona Park, Michigan, Wisconsin, Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania, Wildwood , N.J, bodega
Higher interest rates in the United States and other countries mean investors can make bigger returns on investments there than they can in Japan. This encourages carry trades, in which investors borrow money in yen to invest it in higher-yielding assets priced in other currencies. That weakens the Japanese currency. A Big Mac costs 50% more in the next cheapest G10 currency, the New Zealand dollar, than it does in yen, he added. … and lots of drawbacksBut the falling yen has caused much pain at home and not just for small businesses like Japan Fraise.
Persons: hasn’t, Hiroko Ishikawa, “ It’s, ” Ishikawa, , we’re, We’re, Himari Semans, That’s, ” Nigel Green, Kit Juckes, Warren Buffett, ” Sean Callow, , Sato Hitomi, Semans, I’ve, , Laura He, Chris Lau Organizations: Tokyo CNN, US, Reserve, CNN, Nikkei, Bank of Japan, deVere, greenback, Labor, Societe Generale, New Zealand, Japan’s National Tourism Organization, Tokyo’s Locations: Hong Kong, Tokyo, Japan, United States, Sydney, Hawaii
Making Flying Cleaner
  + stars: | 2024-05-02 | by ( Manuela Andreoni | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Flying is just about the most polluting thing many of us do. This week the Biden administration announced new moves to make aviation cleaner, proposing guidelines for how fuel producers can qualify for tax credits as part of a program to increase production of more sustainable jet fuel, my colleagues Max Bearak and Dionne Searcey wrote. The guidelines are not yet final, but what caught my attention is that they allow corn-based ethanol to be part of the answer. Among experts, ethanol can be divisive and its environmental benefits are fiercely debated, even two decades after the U.S. started mixing it with gasoline. Today, I want to lay out why the aviation industry generates so much pollution and explain the debate over ethanol.
Persons: Hiroko Tabuchi, Max Bearak, Dionne Searcey Organizations: Google, Biden Locations: New York, San Francisco, Cameroon, U.S
The Biden administration on Tuesday adopted stricter energy-efficiency standards for residential water heaters, the most consequential move in a flurry of changes designed to reduce the energy used by many common appliances including stoves, dishwashers and lightbulbs. The Department of Energy said the new standards, taken together, will save American households and businesses nearly $1 trillion over 30 years, and save the average family $100 a year or more through lower utility bills. The changes will also cut greenhouse gas emissions, the agency said, by an amount equivalent to taking 18 million gas-burning cars off the road over that time. However, the changes have come under withering attack by Republican lawmakers who claim the new rules will make appliances costlier in the short term. Republican politicians and their allies have accused the administration of planning to ban gas stoves, for example, and conservative groups have blamed environmental rules for what it claimed was the decline of the American dishwasher.
Persons: Biden Organizations: Department of Energy, Republican, Appliances, Laundry
The fight over the future of plastics
  + stars: | 2024-04-25 | by ( Hiroko Tabuchi | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Earlier this week in Ottawa, the Vinyl Institute, a major plastic industry group, hosted a reception for delegates who are negotiating what would be the first global treaty to tackle the world’s mounting plastic waste problem. There were cocktails and hors d’oeuvres. And signs with the message that plastics save lives. Scientists have increasingly raised the alarm over the risks that the chemicals used in plastic pose to human health and the environment. Ahead of the latest round of talks, European researchers published a database of more than 16,000 chemicals plastics can contain, many of which have been linked to cancer risks and damage to the human immune system.
Persons: Domenic DeCaria, DeCaria Organizations: Vinyl Institute, Times Locations: Ottawa
By 2025, Nestle promises not to use any plastic in its products that isn’t recyclable. By that same year, L’Oreal says all of its packaging will be “refillable, reusable, recyclable or compostable.”And by 2030, Procter & Gamble pledges that it will halve its use of virgin plastic resin made from petroleum. To get there, these companies and others are promoting a new generation of recycling plants, called “advanced” or “chemical” recycling, that promise to recycle many more products than can be recycled today. So far, advanced recycling is struggling to deliver on its promise. Nevertheless, the new technology is being hailed by the plastics industry as a solution to an exploding global waste problem.
Persons: Nestle, L’Oreal Organizations: Procter, Gamble
They’re vast expanses that can be as big as towns: open landfills where household waste ends up, whether it’s vegetable scraps or old appliances. These landfills also belch methane, a powerful, planet-warming gas, on average at almost three times the rate reported to federal regulators, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Science. The study measured methane emissions at about 20 percent of about 1,200 large, operating landfills in the United States. It adds to a growing body of evidence that landfills are a significant driver of climate change, said Riley Duren, founder of the public-private partnership Carbon Mapper, who took part in the study. “We’ve largely been in the dark, as a society, about actual emissions from landfills,” said Mr. Duren, a former NASA engineer and scientist.
Persons: Riley Duren, “ We’ve, Organizations: Carbon, NASA Locations: United States, Duren
CNN —Shigeichi Negishi, the entrepreneur who invented the world’s first karaoke machine, has died aged 100. Negishi, whose 1967 “Sparko Box” prototype is among several devices credited with ushering in Japan’s karaoke craze, died from natural causes in January. His death, which was made public last week, was confirmed to CNN by Shiro Kataoka, managing director of the All-Japan Karaoke Industrialist Association. “When I asked the factory engineer, he said, ‘It’s easy,’” Negishi recalled in an account published by the All-Japan Karaoke Industrialist Association, an industry body for Japan’s karaoke operators. Subsequent developments, including the introduction of video karaoke and networked karaoke systems, helped the phenomenon spread across Asia and the world in the following decades.
Persons: Shigeichi Negishi, Shiro Kataoka, Negishi, , ” Negishi, Leon Harris, Matt Alt, Yoshio Kodama’s, , , I’d, Association’s, ” Shigeichi Negishi, Hiroko Yoda, Daisuke Inoue, Inoue Organizations: CNN, Japan Karaoke, Association ., Association, Locations: Japan, Tokyo, Asia
Court Temporarily Halts S.E.C.’s New Climate Rules
  + stars: | 2024-03-15 | by ( Hiroko Tabuchi | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
A federal court on Friday temporarily halted new rules from the Securities Exchange Commission that require public companies to disclose more about the business risks they face from climate change, siding with two oil and gas companies that criticized the requirements as costly and arbitrary. this month, the rules require some publicly traded companies to disclose their climate risks, and how much greenhouse gas emissions they produce. Ten Republican-led states have also sued to stop the rules. to effectively regulate the controversial issue of climate change,” the two companies wrote in their petition. They were “arbitrary and capricious,” the two companies said, and violated the First Amendment, which protects free speech, by “effectively mandating discussions about climate change.”
Persons: , Organizations: Securities Exchange Commission, Industry, U.S . Chamber of Commerce, U.S ., Appeals, Fifth Circuit, Republican, Fifth, Liberty Energy, Nomad Proppant Locations: U.S
The Bahrain deal comes just months after the United States joined nearly 200 other nations in a promise to transition away from fossil fuels, the burning of which is dangerously overheating the planet. It also comes as Mr. Biden is working to shore up support from climate-minded voters as he runs for re-election. In February, plans to finance the Bahrain projects prompted two of the bank’s climate advisers to resign. The Bahrain project is one of several controversial overseas fossil fuel ventures that ExIm Bank is currently considering. Also being considered are a natural gas export project in Papua New Guinea and an offshore pipeline in Guyana, alongside some projects related to renewable energy like a zinc-lead mine in Greenland.
Persons: Biden, Biden’s Organizations: United States, ExIm Locations: Bahrain, Papua New Guinea, Guyana, Greenland
Oil and gas producers in major oil fields across the United States may be emitting three times as much planet-warming methane gas as official estimates, according to new research published Wednesday, the latest study to suggest that emissions from the fossil fuel sector may be grossly undercounted. In some parts of New Mexico, more than 9 percent of the natural gas produced was escaping into the atmosphere, researchers said in the study, published in the journal, Nature. Methane is the main component of natural gas, and when released unburned into the atmosphere it acts as an extremely powerful greenhouse gas. It can warm the planet more than 80 times as much as the same amount of carbon dioxide over a 20-year period. The release of methane — often through leaks at well sites or gas processing plants, along pipelines or in other energy facilities — is bad news for global warming, which is already causing higher sea levels, fiercer storms, more intense droughts and a greater loss of biodiversity around the world.
Locations: United States, New Mexico
On Monday, a California man became the first in the nation to be arrested and charged with smuggling the powerful gases into the United States, a felony offense, according to the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California. Mr. Hart then posted the refrigerants for sale on OfferUp, Facebook Marketplace and other sites, and sold them for a profit, federal agents say. Mr. Hart pleaded not guilty. He faces charges of conspiracy, importation contrary to law and sale of merchandise imported contrary to law. Attempts to reach lawyers for Mr. Hart were unsuccessful.
Persons: Michael Hart, Hart Organizations: Craigslist, United States Attorney’s Office, Southern, Southern District of, Facebook Locations: California, United States, United, Southern District, Southern District of California, San Diego, coolants, Mexico
Gas sensor housing Infrared sensor Spectrometer Tracking an Invisible Climate Menace From 360 Miles Above There will soon be a new eye in the sky that’s designed to detect emissions of methane, an invisible yet potent gas that is dangerously heating the world. MethaneSAT will sweep the globe using a high-resolution infrared sensor to detect and track methane leaks from oil and gas sites worldwide. Scientists estimate that human-caused methane emissions are responsible for up to 30 percent of the global warming being experienced today. Figuring out where methane emissions are happening, how big they are and who’s responsible has been a challenge. Methane also seeps from natural sources, like flooded wetlands, but the majority of methane emissions today come from human activity.
Persons: , Steven Hamburg, , Dr, Hamburg, MethaneSAT, , Drew Shindell, wasn’t, Biden, Bjorn Otto Sverdrup Organizations: Environmental Defense Fund, Google, Duke University, MethaneSAT, Union, Oil, Climate Initiative, Star Locations: Texas, United States
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