Inside Trump's Plan to Bulldoze American Climate Policy – sierraclub.org

By Dana Drugmand
May 30, 2024

Rally in the Bronx. | Photo by Yuki Iwamura/AP
Conservative policy-plotters and backers of former President Donald Trump have assembled a sweeping battle plan to dismantle federal agencies and public health standards, including vital environmental protections. Should Trump retake the White House, his political allies are prepared to take a sledgehammer to US climate and environmental policies. While Trump wines and dines with oil and gas executives, a proposed policy agenda put forth by dozens of right-wing organizations threatens to squander the narrow time window we have for climate action and actively fan the flames of a world on fire, climate scientists and advocates warn.
This agenda serves as a fitting backdrop to recent revelations that Trump has promised, in exchange for $1 billion in campaign contributions, to save the fossil fuel industry billions of dollars with regulatory rollbacks. Industry lobbyists are already drafting ready-to-sign executive orders to help Trump implement that pledge. In response to these revelations, several high-ranking Democrats in Congress have launched investigations into what they say is a troubling quid pro quo.
A scientist’s warning: “Game over for climate progress”
Far-right policy advisers and think tank staffers, working under the Project 2025 presidential transition project, are organizing nothing less than a dismantling of the administrative state. Project 2025 is essentially a death sentence for federal climate and environmental protections. Everything from rules to curb hazardous air pollutants to programs that help make cleaner and more energy-efficient purchases affordable would be on the chopping block. Agencies like the EPA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) could be gutted. Peer-reviewed science would be sidelined, and polluters’ economic interests would be prioritized in government decision-making. The federal government would focus on authorizing fossil fuel production and projects while eliminating funding and programs supporting renewables like wind and solar.
According to the Project 2025 website, the goal is to be prepared to execute this agenda “on Day One of the next conservative Administration.” Trump, the expected GOP nominee, has promised to expand oil and gas drilling on his first day in office, telling Fox News host Sean Hannity that he wouldn’t be a dictator “other than day one” with immediate priorities including shutting down the southern border and “drilling, drilling, drilling.”
Should the Project 2025 policy agenda actually be implemented, “it would be game over for climate progress in the US, turning the reins of our government over to the polluters,” said Michael Mann, a prominent climate scientist and Presidential Distinguished Professor of Earth & Environmental Science at the University of Pennsylvania. “And in the absence of American leadership, global efforts to reduce carbon emissions and avoid catastrophic warming will likely fail.”
Spearheaded by the Heritage Foundation, Project 2025 includes a comprehensive conservative policy agenda, a playbook for the first 180 days of an incoming Republican presidential administration, and personnel recruitment and training. The $22 million initiative involves over 100 right-wing organizations, many with track records of disseminating climate disinformation and with documented ties to big corporate donors and industrial polluters like ExxonMobil and Koch Industries.
The policy agenda offers no strategies for reining in the carbon pollution causing planetary heating. Project 2025 and Heritage Foundation did not respond to Sierra’s inquiries. But Heritage’s Paul Dans, director of Project 2025, told The New York Times that one of its aims is to “investigate whether the dimensions of climate change exist.” In terms of the role of fossil fuels in driving climate breakdown, he told the Times: “I think the science is still out on that quite frankly.”
That is simply not true. Mann told Sierra these comments should raise alarm bells. “It underscores the threat posed to our planet by a political party that actively promotes anti-science and would sell out the entire planet for the short-term profit of the polluters and plutocrats that now rule their party.”
And the science is crystal clear that the planet is in deep peril.
Earth is facing an ecological and climate emergency with life on the planet “under siege,” scientists warn. Last year was the hottest yet on record, and global average temperatures breached the 2.7°F (1.5°C) mark over that period. In the United States, a record-breaking 28 extreme weather disasters exceeding $1 billion in damage devastated communities from Maui, Hawai’i, to Montpelier, Vermont. In the Southwest, Phoenix sweltered through its deadliest summer on record as heat killed more than 600 residents. Ocean temperatures off the southern coast of Florida reached hot tub levels, and coral reefs across the globe are currently experiencing another mass bleaching event. According to the Fifth National Climate Assessment, current climatic changes—driven primarily by heat-trapping emissions from fossil fuel use—are “unprecedented” in human history, and the effects are “worsening across every region of the United States.”
Time is rapidly running out to reverse course. “We’ve got this very narrow window between now and 2030 to meet US climate goals and to help contribute to global efforts to curtail the worst impacts of climate change,” said Rachel Cleetus, policy director in the climate and energy program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. “This is a very decisive decade for climate action.”
Here’s a closer look at some of what Project 2025 has planned for climate and energy policies and environmental protection.
Far-right policy agenda
Project 2025 proponents say they want to end President Biden’s “war on fossil fuels” and to “restore America’s energy dominance” by going all in on dirty, carbon-based energy. (In fact, US oil and gas production has reached record highs during the Biden administration, to the dismay of climate advocates.) At the Department of the Interior, the plan involves prioritizing hydrocarbon production and maximizing onshore and offshore oil and gas leasing on public lands and waters, including expansion of the Willow oil drilling project in Alaska. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) would be directed to favor fossil gas and oil and would be prohibited from considering greenhouse gas emissions in authorizing gas pipelines and liquefied natural gas export facilities.
The plan also proposes eliminating multiple clean energy programs and offices within the Department of Energy like the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, the DOE Loan Program, the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, and DOE’s Clean Energy Corps. Billions of dollars supporting clean energy technologies and infrastructure upgrades—including investments benefiting Republican-controlled states—could be at risk as Project 2025 recommends the repeal of the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, both signed into law by President Biden. The Environmental Protection Agency would be significantly downsized, with the plan recommending an immediate executive order that requires “reconsideration of the agency’s structure” including freezing existing regulations, eliminating employees, stopping all grants to community groups, and slashing the agency’s budget.
Other recommendations include ending the allowance for states to adopt California’s tailpipe emissions rules for vehicles and ending the International Civil Aviation Organization’s standards for airplane emissions. PFAS chemicals’ designation as hazardous under CERCLA would be revisited. The EPA’s use of the social cost of carbon would halt. Using funds for peer-review science not authorized by Congress would be stopped, and Inflation Reduction Act grants supporting environmental science activities would be revoked. A high priority recommendation is to try to scrap the Global Change Research Act of 1990, which requires the publication of the National Climate Assessments.
The agenda further says that NOAA should be “broken up and downsized,” claiming it has become “one of the main drivers of the climate change alarm industry.” The Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, according to the agenda, should be stripped and its climate change research “disbanded.”
At the US Agency of International Development, Project 2025’s agenda proposes axing its climate policies and programs, and suggests the agency cease funding and collaborating with “progressive foundations,” NGOs, and other institutions that advocate for climate action. And at the US Department of Agriculture, Project 2025 recommends the agency refocus its mission on efficient food production, reject prioritization of climate or environmental considerations in its work, and repeal or reform dietary guidelines so that they ignore climate or environmental issues.
This agenda aligns with Trump’s vision of maximizing deregulation and supporting fossil fuel “dominance.” According to the Trump campaign website, a second Trump administration will expedite federal drilling permits, speed up approvals for fracked gas pipelines, and open up “vast stores” of oil and gas for extraction on public lands. The campaign promises to rescind every energy and climate-related regulation that the Biden administration instituted, including rules to reduce auto emissions and improve vehicle fuel economy, energy-efficiency standards for lightbulbs and appliances, and power plant regulations. Trump further aims to provide tax breaks for oil, gas, and coal producers while axing “insane wind subsidies.” Trump will also once again remove the United States from the Paris Agreement.
“The cost of this would be in human lives”
Climate advocates say these policy proposals and plans are a recipe for disaster.
“What President Trump represents is antithetical to our mission to achieve a livable planet and climate justice for communities across the United States and around the world,” Zanagee Artis, a 24-year-old climate activist and cofounder of the youth-led climate justice organization Zero Hour, told Sierra.
Another youth climate organizer, 18-year-old Adah Crandall of Sunrise Movement, called Project 2025 “extremely dangerous.” She said, “Effectively it would roll back everything that Biden has done on climate and everything that our movement has worked so hard to win.”
Holly Burke, communications director for Evergreen Action, noted that the climate science indicates urgent action is needed.  “We need to be accelerating action right now, not moving backward,” she said. Going down the path proposed by Trump and Project 2025 “would just lock in so much harm for so many people,” she added. “It would be obviously a disaster for the climate, obviously a disaster for our economy, obviously a disaster for America’s reputation on the world stage, but most concerning of all is what it would mean for Americans who are in the line of fire when it comes to climate impacts—people living in coastal areas, people living in floodplains, communities on the fence-line of polluting facilities that would be less regulated under a future Trump administration. The cost of this would be in human lives.”
Consequences for American democracy
Several climate advocates told Sierra they are deeply concerned about how a second Trump presidency might erode American democracy, from cracking down on peaceful protests to weaponizing the Department of Justice for partisan gain and furthering the conservative capture of the courts.
“We are still at risk of losing so much—our rights to protest, our ability to organize,” Artis said.
“If we end up with another four years of a Republican presidency in November, that would be detrimental for American democracy,” said Crandall.
“My biggest worries, apart from IRA repeal, involve the potential for long-term institutional damage,” Daniel Farber, law professor and faculty director of the Center for Law, Energy, and the Environment at the University of California, Berkeley, told Sierra. “Project 2025 includes a plan to get rid of all the most expert and experienced civil servants and replace them with MAGA loyalists. I also worry about the federal courts. Trump has already appointed nearly a third of all federal appeals judges, so we could end a second term with his picks being half or more of the appeals judges.”
Mann likewise warned there could be grave consequences for democracy under a Trump 2.0 scenario. “This goes well beyond the nominal impacts on climate policy,” he said. “It would threaten the end of democratic governance in the US, and there is no path to climate progress in the US that doesn’t go through a functioning democracy.” 
 
Paid for by the Sierra Club Voter Education Fund, which seeks to raise key environmental issues in the discussions around elections and encourage the public to find out more about candidates’ positions on key environmental issues.
Dana Drugmand is a freelance environmental journalist covering topics such as climate accountability and climate change lawsuits, greenwashing and false climate solutions, plastics and petrochemicals, and environmental law and justice. In addition to Sierra, her writing has appeared in DeSmog, The New Lede, YES! Magazine, New Internationalist, Common Dreams, Truthout, and Earth Island Journal, among other outlets.
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Feeling Green with Disney's Environmental Sustainability Team – Life at Disney – Disney.com

Casey is no stranger to protecting our planet. As a coordinator of the Disney Conservation Fund (DCF) – a philanthropic segment of The Walt Disney Company that works to save wildlife, inspire action, and protect the planet by providing grant opportunities, recognizing conservationists, and engaging diverse communities – she is responsible for managing relationships with key nonprofit organizations across the globe, as well as cast member/employee engagement efforts onsite at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Theme Park.
Since its founding in 1995, the DCF has contributed more than $125 million to wildlife conservation efforts in over half the countries around the world, benefitting more than 1,000 unique species. Casey and her fellow team members lead this vital work for the company as part of the ongoing mission of Disney Planet Possible.
“I might start my day on a phone call with gorilla conservationists from the Democratic Republic of Congo, and end it by delivering Disney Conservation Fund buttons for cast members to wear on Gorilla Falls Exploration Trail that encourage guests to ask questions about the DCF and learn more about the amazing support Disney has provided to wildlife conservation efforts around the world for nearly 30 years now,” Casey said.
Her Disney journey began in the college program in 2018 and continued with an internship on the Wilderness Explorers team at Walt Disney World Resort — also known as the conservation education presenters. Inspired to continue work in the field of conservation and corporate philanthropy after her internships, Casey joined the Corporate Environmental Sustainability team in 2019.
Some of her favorite memories include connecting with and thanking guests visiting Walt Disney World Resort who contribute to the mission of the DCF – many of whom are young conservationists in the making who choose to direct their summer lemonade stand money to the initiative, or who ask their family and friends to donate in honor of their birthday.
“Early in my role as DCF coordinator, I offered to meet a child and her family in the park to make some magic and thank them in person for their generous donation to conservation,” Casey shared. “In the five years since we’ve met, she and her family have raised nearly $3,000 to contribute to conservation through the DCF, and it’s been such a treat to watch her grow up so passionate about wildlife, excited to let me know when she’s coming back to Animal Kingdom every year to continue their support. Just recently, I was able to facilitate an opportunity for her to meet an okapi, the animal that started her passion for conservation all those years ago, and it was just the most incredible, full-circle moment to be a part of.”
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Students say they've found an 'eco-friendly' way to trap and kill Japanese beetles – Phys.org


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May 29, 2024
This article has been reviewed according to Science X’s editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content’s credibility:
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by Alex Chhith, Star Tribune
Aditya Prabhu loved eating the peaches off the tree in the backyard of his mom’s house. The only problem was the plant produced only a few fruits a year because Japanese beetles in the hundreds would eat at the leaves, depleting the plant’s energy to make peaches.
“The tree would be completely covered by the Japanese beetles because of their preference of fruit trees and orchards,” the University of Minnesota computer engineering student said. “The whole point of growing them in the backyard was so we could do it organically, but we’d only have one to two peaches because the trees were so exhausted.”
Prabhu’s mother didn’t want to spray the tree with pesticides. So Prabhu, accompanied by his brother and armed with sticks, went the traditional route of knocking the invasive species off plants and into buckets filled with water and dish soap, killing the metallic-colored insects.
Prabhu wondered if there was an easier way to get rid of the beetles, while he was taking an entrepreneurship class this year. As he researched, he learned about pheromone traps that attracted Japanese beetles. But he also discovered that many of those traps can fill fast, leaving the remaining insects free to wreak havoc.
He, along with fellow student James Duquette, a finance major, designed a circular-shaped, double-netted trap with pheromones to attract Japanese beetles. When the insects step onto the net, covered with a type of insecticide, they become immobilized and fall into another net that catches them.
“If the beetles aren’t paralyzed right away and fly from the trap, they will die from the bit of solution that they touched. Plus, [the ingredients are] safe for humans and pets to be around and it’s ‘eco-friendly,'” Prabhu said.
And it solves the problem of having to change overflowing traps. When the trap fills with beetles, a gardener just has to dump them out and pick up the ones around it that didn’t fall into the netting, he said.
“The problem with traditional pheromone traps is the sheer quantity of Japanese beetles; those traps can fill up within days with hundreds of thousands of beetles. Our trap is really promising because you don’t have to [dump out] the traps as they get full,” he said. “This attracts and kills, instead of attracts and baits.”
Seems the university students aren’t the only ones who find that this idea has potential.
Prabhu and Duquette formed the company Alure LLC for their beetle trap idea and recently snagged funding for the start-up company at e-Fest, the “Shark Tank” style competition held this spring at the University of St. Thomas, the largest undergraduate student business plan competition in the world.
Elated with their success, the duo will put the funds into expanding their pilot program, Duquette said.
Next up, Prabhu and Duquette will take their creation on the road and test their models at several vineyards across Minnesota after partnering with farmers looking for more eco-friendly and cost-effective ways to manage the pests.
And, as Japanese beetles become active in late June and early July, the timing couldn’t be better.
According to the Minnesota Department of Agriculture, Japanese beetles are prevalent in the Twin Cities metro area and are known to consume plants like roses, grapes, apples, basswood and turf. They can also be a pest to soybeans and other agricultural crops.
At the core of it all, Prabhu takes pride in helping his mother solve such a pesky problem. When he was a kid, he’d help her in the garden and still does so when he goes back to Shakopee on college breaks. The product, he hopes, will help gardeners like her be able to produce fruits in abundance without having to spray large amounts of pesticides on their plants.
“I’m a huge plant lover, in large part because of her,” he said. “She’s really excited to see this in our backyard this summer.”
More information: Pilot program: alurellc.com
2024 StarTribune. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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Why Are Tiny Homes Eco-Friendly? – Green Matters

Nov. 13 2020, Published 1:41 p.m. ET
The ideas behind the tiny house movement are sound in environmental principle, at least at face value. Less space obviously means that you consume less energy, you have less stuff to collect and eventually throw out. Moving into a tiny house can absolutely reduce your environmental impact, it’s true, but are the difficulties associated with this lifestyle worth the benefit? More importantly, are the benefits of tiny homes as eco-friendly as they seem? 
Tiny homes are houses built to be no more than about 400 square feet in total; some have even been known to be as small as 60 square feet. Think of the smallest apartment you’ve ever imagined and take off a few hundred square feet, and that’s a tiny house. Many of these tiny houses are on wheels, which means they can be carted around to different places — sort of like a mobile home, only much more handsomely-appointed. 
The original tiny house thing was never meant to be the full-blown social movement it has become, and many who have chosen the lifestyle have done so for a number of interesting reasons. These reasons can be financial, environmental, or in an effort to simplify their life. Nevertheless, moving into a tiny home means a huge commitment to reducing not only your environmental impact but also your reliance on gathering material things. 
According to a study by Maria Saxton, a PhD candidate at Virginia Tech, moving into a tiny home can have one of the greatest effects on your individual environmental impact. Saxon surveyed 80 people who had moved from a full-sized home to a tiny home for at least a year prior to the study. By the end, she had concluded that those who downsized effectively reduced their energy consumption by 45 percent. 
Saxton used a number of data points to come to this conclusion. Her main calculation had to do with each person’s ecological footprint. This means how much space each of those people needed to sustain their current behavior. it included their housing requirements, transportation, food, goods, and services. It turned out that people needed far less space than they were currently living with in order to be happy.
Saxton’s study notwithstanding, tiny houses do present some environmental issues that you might not assume from just looking at them. For tiny houses that are not stationary, moving them is going to be a big task — far too big for something like a Prius or an electric car. You’ll most likely need to use a truck, potentially one with the horsepower necessary for such a task.
On top of that, since most tiny homes tend to be in rural areas, commuting to and from your place of work is likely to be more frequent than it was when you lived in the suburbs. So despite all the work you did lowering your carbon footprint, you still need to drive you and your new house around, and that takes gas.
Saxton’s study also noted an uptick in eating out among participants, mainly because the kitchen spaces were not conducive to frequent cooking. On top of that, a few participants actually admitted to recycling less since they moved into their tiny home. Their stated reasons for this were that they either did not have the space to store recyclables, or their new neighborhood lacked any sort of curbside recycling program. 
On top of all the facts mentioned above, tiny houses have some pretty obvious advantages when measured against the natural gas-guzzling, oil-burning, timber-intensive suburban mansions that stand like opulent soldiers in many suburban neighborhoods. First off, they are much smaller, requiring much less fuel and electricity to heat or cool, and far fewer natural resources to construct. 
It probably goes without saying that tiny houses are cheaper to buy, build, or relocate than your average house. Several companies are already jumping on the tiny house bandwagon and offering prefabricated tiny homes, but you can also get one built to custom specifications. On average, tiny homes can cost anywhere from $30,000 to $60,000, and they can go as high as $150,000 or as low as $8,000, according to Rocket Homes. 
Ultimately, the move to a tiny house will still come with its own ups and downs, even in terms of ecological friendliness. You will face challenges and you’ll have to make concessions that you might not have planned, but you may be better off for it. Many who have opted for this lifestyle have found the move to be both economical and cathartic. 
Until these minuscule manors become a bit more mainstream or until tiny home communities become more common in some areas, you’re likely to run into some of the same problems that many homeowners face in terms of reducing their environmental impact, albeit on a smaller scale. 
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Top Climate Change Execs to Watch in 2024: Cadmus Group's Nathan Smith – WashingtonExec

Nathan Smith and his team achieved significant milestones by aligning various business lines within Cadmus to amplify their impact on climate mitigation, adaptation, and resilience.
With decades of experience, they’ve cultivated an interdisciplinary firm capable of tackling global climate challenges. Their focus now is on leveraging these capabilities collectively to address climate issues in exceptional ways.
Cadmus recently achieved significant milestones by collaborating between its water and homeland security teams to support EPA in enhancing resilience in the water sector.
Additionally, the company used its climate resilience team to assist FEMA in preparing for and responding to more frequent and severe natural disasters caused by climate change. Furthermore, Cadmus has prioritized climate equity in global projects like the Jamaica Energy Resilience Alliance and the Reconnecting Communities Institute.
“Nathan Smith has been essential to Cadmus’ growth throughout his tenure, both as a business leader and as a subject matter expert,” said Cadmus President and CEO Ian Kline. “He brings exceptional insight and strategies to help our clients address the myriad complex challenges and opportunities presented by climate change and fosters an environment within his division that empowers rising leaders to do the same. His vision and steady leadership in the dynamic public sector market are invaluable as Cadmus expands, builds new connections between practice areas, and continues to strengthen our capabilities.”
Why Watch
In 2024, Smith’s team is focused on accelerating and maximizing the impact of critical clean energy, climate and resilience programs funded by the Inflation Reduction Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Through this work, they’re helping federal, state and local government clients develop programs that will have a lasting impact, creating a legacy that continues to positively benefit the U.S. and its citizens far beyond the present moment.
“It has become abundantly clear that climate change is not limited to a single industry or issue,” he said. “For real progress to be made in reducing the impact from climate change and building resilience going forward, climate considerations must be built into everything we do. That interconnectedness is the beacon guiding Cadmus strategy and growth and will continue to be essential to our vision in the future.”
Fun fact: A significant part of Smith’s work centers on sustainable transportation, which remains both a professional and personal passion for him. He’s dedicated to biking the 60-mile round-trip commute to the office once a week and using his electric vehicle for the remaining days.
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Hawaii Judge Orders New Environmental Review Of West Oahu Wave Pool – Honolulu Civil Beat

Opponents say the pool is a waste of water.
Opponents say the pool is a waste of water.

This story was written by Associated Press writer Jennifer Sinco Kelleher. We’re now publishing some AP stories under a new partnership that will also see Civil Beat stories distributed nationwide by the AP.
HONOLULU (AP) — A judge has halted plans for an artificial wave pool until developers can revise an environmental assessment to address concerns raised by Native Hawaiians and others who say the project is unnecessary in the birthplace of surfing and a waste of water.
In granting a temporary injunction Tuesday, Hawaii Environmental Court Judge Shirley Kawamura ordered a new review of concerns including impacts on water supply and anticipated growth in the area.
A group of Native Hawaiians and other residents filed a lawsuit last year challenging the Hawaii Community Development Authority’s approval of the 19-acre Honokea Surf Village planned for West Oahu, which found that it will have no significant environmental impacts.
Opponents of the project say the wave pool, with a capacity of 7 million gallons, isn’t needed less than 2 miles from the ocean and another existing wave pool.
Project backer and renowned Native Hawaiian waterman Brian Keaulana has said artificial waves are useful for competitive surfers to train on perfect breaks that are sometimes elusive in the ocean.
Customizable surf, he said, can also help create ideal conditions to teach surfing and lifesaving skills.
“Our goal of creating a place that combines cultural education with skill-based recreation must be done in a way that does not harm our natural resources,” he said Wednesday in a statement. “The court’s ruling allows us an opportunity to revisit the environmental concerns, especially our water resources.”
The judge said in her ruling that there was “insufficient evidence for the HCDA to determine whether there is a likelihood of irrevocable commitment of natural resources and whether secondary and cumulative impacts of water use, injection, land use changes and wildlife mitigation would likely lead to a significant impact, thereby favoring an injunction.”
The current assessment is “ambiguous as to the specific manner, time frame, and actual daily water use implicated by the initial and periodic filling of the lagoon,” the ruling said.
However, the development authority did make sufficient assessment of potential impact on historic preservation and burials, it added. The HCDA declined to comment Wednesday on the ruling.
Developers say the project would be drawing from a private water company separate from Oahu’s water utility, using a supply that was committed decades ago.
But the judge noted that they draw from the same underlying aquifer.
“Thus, additional analysis is needed to fully capture the potential cumulative impact of anticipated growth and subsequent increased competing water demand,” the ruling said.
The state attorney general’s office said it was reviewing the decision.
Healani Sonoda-Pale, one of the plaintiffs, called the ruling a “pono decision,” using a Hawaiian word that can mean “righteous.”
“Much has been made about Hawaiians being on both sides of the issue,” she said. “Building a wave pool is not a cultural practice. The threat of a wave pool … is so immense in terms of how many people it could affect.”
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Climate change, fewer farmers jeopardize Japan food security: report – Kyodo News Plus

KYODO NEWS KYODO NEWS – 12 hours ago – 10:38 | All, Japan
Japan faces growing risks to its food security due mainly to climate change and a rapid decrease in the number of domestic farmers, an annual government report on the agricultural industry said Friday.
Also citing factors such as an unstable grain supply following the Russian invasion of Ukraine and high competition in food procurement amid an increase in global population, the report said Japan’s food security is “at a historic turning point.”
According to the report, endorsed by the Cabinet on Friday, the number of people in Japan who mainly engage in agriculture was some 1.16 million in 2023 down by more than half from 2.4 million in 2000.
Of the total, only some 20 percent were under 60 years of age, it said, noting the need for measures to boost the number of farmers and introduce more advanced technology into the industry.
The report said that more than 90 percent of Japan’s agriculture, forestry and fisheries products as well as foods were transported by truck in fiscal 2023, which ended in March, and that the use of trains and ships has been enhanced in the current year.
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Top Gear could return as an eco-friendly car show, hints Richard Hammond – The Telegraph

Our next vehicle purchase will affect the planet’s future so we need information, says the show’s former presenter
Top Gear could reinvent itself as an eco-friendly car show advising people on how to make the right environmental choices, Richard Hammond has suggested.
Hammond, who presented the show with Jeremy Clarkson and James May until the trio departed in 2015, said that buying a car is a decision that affects the planet’s future.
The BBC announced in November that Top Gear would not return for the foreseeable future following the crash which left Freddie Flintoff with serious injuries.
Hammond, Clarkson and May now present The Grand Tour on Amazon Prime Video, and Clarkson recently confirmed that the show will end after the next series.
Asked if the disappearance of both programmes meant the end of the road for driving shows, Hammond told Radio Times: “I very much doubt it. Top Gear was on hiatus when we took it on so it’ll come back one day, although in what shape I don’t know.
“The decision to buy our next car is probably the most significant contribution we can make, as individuals, to the future, so we need to be informed. Maybe that’s the route it could take?”
He went on: “As for shows like The Grand Tour, I don’t think the human desire for adventure is ever going to be sated. It’ll continue in different forms, modified to suit its time.”
In the interview, Hammond recalled his own life-threatening Top Gear accident in 2006, and a second high-speed crash in 2017 while filming The Grand Tour.
They did not put him off driving stunts, he said, because he views them as “learning experiences. If everything always goes well, you never learn how to cope when something goes wrong.”
Hammond is not the first Top Gear presenter to suggest that the show should shift its focus to environmental questions and whether we need to drive cars.
Appearing on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme last year, James May said that there must be “another way of doing a show about cars that will embrace more fulsomely many of the questions being asked about cars that weren’t being asked about cars.”
He said that this could involve “greater scrutiny” of the way that cars are powered. “Like everything else in the world, cars are now under scrutiny: how they are used, how they are made, what they are made of, what they are used for, how we take responsibility for them, how they are powered.
“All these things make them a fascinating subject for this time.”
Clarkson, however, does not agree.
Writing in his column in The Sun, Clarkson said: “I sort of see what James is saying. But, naturally, I don’t agree with him. Because I think cars have never been more dull.”
He added: “The fact is that TV car shows appeal mostly to people who like cars. But it’s a struggle to like a modern car. It’s a struggle to review one as well because, if it’s electric, it’d be like reviewing a chest freezer.”
Clarkson said that driving is now a “chore” anyway, thanks to the spread of speed cameras, 20mph speed limits and Ulez charges.
In another column, Clarkson said “the problem with environmentalism” is that “it’s never rooted in reality”.
He explained: “They tell us to sell our cars and use a bicycle instead, which is fine if you’re going to the shops for a pint of milk but not if you’re going into town to buy a fridge freezer. Or if you’re going to Glasgow.”

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