Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Wyoming -"


3 mentions found


But the decline in support for Ms. Harris in some of the country’s most liberal areas is particularly notable. For example, in Fulton County, which contains most of Atlanta, Ms. Harris gained about 4,500 votes, but Mr. Trump gained more than 7,400. He similarly outran Ms. Harris where she made gains in Wake County, N.C., Lancaster County, Pa., and Montgomery County, Texas. In Milwaukee County in swing-state Wisconsin, Ms. Harris lost 1,200 voters compared with Mr. Biden’s total in 2020, while Mr. Trump gained more than 3,500. But he lost votes, as did Ms. Harris, in majority-Black counties, especially those in the South where turnout dropped overall.
Persons: Harris, Biden, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris’s, Joseph R, Iowa Kan, Trump, Larry Sabato, Mr, Sabato, , Trump Harris, Eli Murray, Elena Shao, Charlie Smart, Christine Zhang, Biden’s, Christine Zhang Ms, Joel Benenson, Barack Obama’s, ” Mr, Benenson, Harris Trump, John McLaughlin, pollster, McLaughlin, Organizations: Trump, New York Times, Hawaii Idaho Ill, N.D . Ohio Okla, D.C, Biden, Mr, Harris Trump, Democratic, Lean Democratic, Lean Republican, Center, Politics, University of Virginia, Florida’s Miami, Republican, Republicans, Harris Trump Arizona, Indiana, Nebraska, Washington, of Columbia Locations: Ala, Alaska, Calif, Colo, Conn, Del, Fla . Ga, Hawaii Idaho, Ind, Iowa, Ky, La . Maine Md, Mass, Mich, Minn, Miss, Mo, Mont, Neb, N.H . N.J, N.M, N.Y, N.C, N.D . Ohio, N.D . Ohio Okla ., Pa, S.D . Tenn . Texas Utah, Va, Wash, W.Va . Wis, Wyo, Chicago, Los Angeles and New York, Texas, Florida, New Jersey, New York, Georgia, Fulton County, Atlanta, Wake County, Lancaster County, Montgomery County , Texas, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Charlotte, Flint, Scranton, Dade County, Miami, Fresno County, Pinellas County, Fla, Black, Michigan, Nevada, Carolina, Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Hampshire, Jersey, Mexico, York, Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Wyoming
April 28 (Reuters) - Louisiana's application to obtain enforcement authority over carbon capture wells has gone to the Federal Register for public comment, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said on Friday, a key step in receiving "so-called" primacy and speeding up the permitting process. The EPA currently manages permitting for most Class VI wells across the United States, which are used to store carbon dioxide. Carbon capture and sequestration is viewed by many as a critical technology in helping reduce emissions and slow global warming. States that have received primacy over Class VI wells - so far just North Dakota and Wyoming - have been able to cut the permitting process to months from years. Several major oil and gas companies, including Talos Energy (TALO.N) and Occidental Petroleum (OXY.N), have carbon capture and sequestration projects planned for Louisiana.
But the state's water infrastructure, mostly built in the 20th Century when the population was barely half of today's 40 million, is ill-equipped for the new situation. On Dec. 14, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California declared a drought emergency for all 19 million people in the region. Despite a deluge that by one estimate has been expected to dump more than 20 trillion gallons (80 trillion liters), the state's major reservoirs remain well below their historic average. INFRASTRUCTURE DEFICITThe state's infrastructure, largely a network of cement canals, lacks the capacity to capture excess stormwater. Even as the Colorado River basin faces its own drought, and the atmospheric rivers provide no relief, the Colorado River suffers more from overuse than from a lack of precipitation.
Total: 3