EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"W.Va. Studying Link Between Quakes, Disposal Wells"
AP, 09/02/2010Eight small earthquakes in central West Virginia since April have Chesapeake Energy and the state Department of Environmental Protection discussing the possibility of seismic monitoring near a disposal well for gas-drilling fluids."
"Judge Orders Pricey Selenium Cleanup at 2 Coal Mines"
McClatchy, 09/02/2010"A federal judge has ordered Patriot Coal Corp. to spend millions of dollars to clean up selenium pollution at two surface coal mines in West Virginia. Environmental groups said it was the first time a court had demanded restrictions on selenium, a trace mineral commonly discharged from Appalachian surface mines, where the tops of mountains are blown away to expose coal."
"Report Warns of Man-Made Threats to Grand Canyon National Park"
CNN, 08/25/2010Grand Canyon National Park is threatened by factors ranging from climate change and mining to flyovers and management of the Colorado River.
"Tribal Lands Struggle To Bring Clean Power Online"
NPR, 08/20/2010Campo Kumeyaay Nation, a small tribe in the desert mountains east of San Diego, benefitted from the casino that opened in 2001. Now it wants to build a 25-turbine wind farm called Kumeyaay 1, the only large-scale renewable energy plant on Indian land in the country. But a big problem is the tribe's tax status: as a sovereign nation it can not receive the federal tax credits that make such projects feasible.
"The Life and Death of Desert Rock"
High Country News, 08/18/2010"The Navajo Nation's proposed coal plant always rested on shaky ground. Now, it may collapse entirely."
Budget Gaps: "This State Park Brought To You by..."
Stateline, 08/18/2010"Volunteering in state parks has long been a staple of the Boy Scouts experience. But in Georgia this year, as the Boy Scouts celebrate their 100th anniversary by building bridges and park benches, maintaining trails and cleaning up waterways, the ongoing event is unusual in one respect: It’s sponsored by Verizon Wireless."
"Much Oil Remains in Gulf, Researchers Estimate"
Wall St. Journal, 08/17/2010"Researchers at the University of Georgia said Monday that more than three-quarters of the oil spilled in the Gulf of Mexico following the Deepwater Horizon drilling-rig explosion could still be in the Gulf threatening fisheries and marine life, disputing government statements that much of the oil had been safely dispersed."
"Exclusive Golf Course Is Organic, So Weeds Get In"
NYTimes, 08/17/2010"EDGARTOWN, Mass. — Standing alongside the 13th green at the Vineyard Golf Club on Martha’s Vineyard, Jeff Carlson spotted a small broadleaf weed between his feet. As the superintendent charged with maintaining the club grounds, he instinctively bent to pluck it, then stopped."
"For the Everglades, a Dream Loses Much of Its Grandeur"
NYTimes, 08/13/2010"In the end, Gov. Charlie Crist’s effort to buy huge swaths of sugar company land for the Everglades restoration was just too much: too much money, too much land to handle, and too much of a fight with critics and the courts."
"Analysis: Rare Earth Monopoly A Boon To Chinese Clean Tech Firms"
Reuters, 08/13/2010"In the race to build hybrid cars and wind turbines to feed growing demand for green technology, China has one clear advantage, it holds the world's largest reserves of rare earth metals and dominates global production."
"Interior Releases More of Leaked List of Potential National Monuments"
Greenwire, 08/12/2010"The Interior Department has released the rest of a partially leaked document listing potential sites for new national monuments, but the move did nothing to quell Republican accusations that the Obama administration is plotting to lock up public lands."
"AK Rep. Young Wants To Strip EPA of Authority in Peeble Mine Deal"
Anchorage Daily News, 08/10/2010"The opponents of Pebble, the giant copper and gold prospect in Southwest Alaska, have asked the federal Environmental Protection Agency to invoke its potent and rarely used power to block the potential mine. But U.S. Rep. Don Young late last month filed legislation seeking to strip the EPA of that authority."
"Alaska Fishermen Circle Their Boats To Fight Mine"
LA Times, 08/04/2010"Dillingham, Alaska -- It is an unfortunate coincidence of geography that this lush region of wild rivers, grassy tundra and windy sea is home to two competing treasures of almost unimaginable value: the world's largest sockeye salmon run, supporting a fishery worth $440 million a year; and in the hills behind it, a massive deposit of copper, molybdemum and gold worth at least $300 billion."
"Rush On for 'Rare Earths' as U.S. Firms Seek to Counter Chinese Monopoly"
Greenwire, 07/26/2010"About an hour's drive southwest of Las Vegas, on a private 2,200-acre desert patch flanked by Clark Mountain and the Mojave National Preserve, lies an idled mine many consider to be a linchpin in the U.S. push for energy independence and national security."

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