Friday, January 1, 2021

Wild Weekend Weather - January 1, 2021

 A veritable weather smorgasbord is in store for this weekend. Lots of rain and windy conditions,

There could be up to five inches of rain in the lowlands through Sunday night, with nearly eight inches in the Olympic Mountain foothills.


All this rain will create some distinct hazards:

  • A Flood Watch for the Skokomish River,
  • Localized small stream or urban flooding from storm water runoff, and
  • A Special Weather Statement for potential landslides because of saturated soils and unstable slopes, especially in the Hood Canal region.
  • Saturated soils can loosen tree roots and make make trees more prone to being blown over in strong winds.

A Small Craft Advisory is in effect through tonight for Puget Sound and Hood Canal with possible wind gusts up to 30 MPH. A Gale Warning is scheduled for tomorrow morning for wind gusts 35 MPH or higher,


A Wind Advisory has been issued for tomorrow morning through late Saturday for Mason County. The National Weather Service says winds will be between 20 and 30 MPH, with possible gusts to 40 MPH.


Looking at the University of Washington weather model, midday Saturday appears to be the timing for the strongest Mason County wind.

Monday, August 17, 2020

Colorado River Deliveries to Remain the Same — For Now (Politico)


Hopes for a boost to reservoir levels on the Colorado River after a wet winter were dashed by a dry spring and summer, Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Brenda Burman said Friday as her agency said that rules governing water deliveries in 2021 will be the same as those governing them this year.

According to the bureau's 2-year projections, Lake Mead is expected to be at elevation 1,085.28 feet on the trigger date — Jan. 1, 2021 — meaning voluntary delivery reductions agreed to by the states of Arizona, Nevada and California will remain in play, but more severe cuts will be staved off for at least another year.

Lake Powell, which stores water from the Upper Basin is projected to be at elevation 3,591.60 feet on the first of the year — 100 feet above the level at which Glen Canyon dam's turbines would be cut off.

Monday, August 10, 2020

California: Draft Environmental Impact Report Available for Wind-Energy Project in Eastern Shasta County (Redding Record Searchlight, CA)


(REDDING, CA) -- The draft environmental impact report for a controversial wind-energy project in eastern Shasta County has been published.

The public has until 5 p.m. Sept. 18 to comment on the environmental document.

Fountain Wind developer Scott Kringen addresses a full Montgomery Creek Elementary School gym at a public meeting for the Fountain Wind project in January 2019.

ConnectGen wants to build the project, called Fountain Wind, on nearly 4,500 acres six miles west of Burney and one mile west of the existing Hatchet Ridge wind project.

The new wind turbine proposal would be on leased timberland near the communities of Montgomery Creek, Round Mountain, Oak Run, Moose Camp, Big Bend and Wengler.

Per the draft EIR, Fountain Wind would feature up to 72 wind turbines that could be as high as 679 feet — higher than Shasta Dam. The project would have a maximum generating capacity of 216 megawatts, enough to power more than 200,000 homes, according to a formula from the Lawrence Livermore Labs.

Last summer, a citizens’ group that opposes the project had asked the county to place a moratorium on any more large generation projects.

Citizens in Opposition to the Fountain Wind Project said the nearly 38,000-acre forested area that the turbines would be located within is in a high fire hazard zone.

Paul Hellman, the county’s director of resource management, said he does not know when the project would come before the Planning Commission for final approval. The project would go before the Board of Supervisors if the commission’s decision is appealed.

“It’s really too early to predict that,” Hellman said of a Planning Commission date. “Once we receive all the comments, we will have to evaluate them, prepare responses, and we really don’t know until we see the magnitude of comments” how long that will take.

As COVID Talk Dominates, Fed Lawmakers Consider Energy Measures (Politico)


(WASHINGTON, DC) -- As negotiators weigh next steps, lawmakers on both sides of Congress are waiting on the sidelines with a host of energy asks they're hoping to hitch onto the next relief package. Here is a few ME are watching:

— Bipartisan House members want to include legislation, H.R. 7483 (116), to provide financial relief to rural electric cooperatives that are suffering amid the coronavirus crisis.

— More than 30 farm-state lawmakers want negotiators to include language "explicitly" directing relief to biofuel producers, including, for example, language requiring the Agriculture secretary to provide a per-gallon payment to producers for renewable fuels produced during the pandemic.

— Senate Republicans are directly urging Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to prioritize assistance for the clean energy sector, and House Democrats have also vowed to prioritize assistance to the sector in future packages. The GOP lawmakers say they would like policies that benefit "renewables, nuclear, carbon capture, efficiency, advanced transportation, and energy storage."

— House Republicans, led by Natural Resources ranking member Rob Bishop and Science ranking member Frank Lucas, are looking to include provisions to reduce foreign dependence on critical minerals. "While the insecurity of many of our country's supply chains is not new, the threat posed by America's growing import reliance for critical minerals has become particularly apparent," they write. Murkowski's bill, the American Mineral Security Act, S. 1317 (116) , made it into the Republican Covid-19 measure pushed in the Senate.

— House Democrats have also drawn a line in the sand against any proposals for federal corporate immunity that would shield businesses that reopen amid the Covid-19 pandemic from lawsuits for five years, something environmental activists have said is also tied to the fossil fuel industry.

— Meanwhile, House Democrats' have already included more than $1 billion in their own coronavirus rescue plan to help low-income households cover their water bills and would institute a moratorium on utility service shutoffs for any entity receiving federal relief funds. Democrats on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee also recently released a report warning that just 10 states have protections in place to shield their residents from having their water, gas or electric utilities shut off. The National Association of Clean Water Agencies asked for $4 billion to help cover the costs of a shutoff moratorium.

Monday, July 6, 2020

Chelan PUD Welcomes New Communicator (Northwest Public Power Association)


(WENATCHEE, WA) -- Rachel Hansen has joined Chelan PUD as senior
communications strategist and chief media contact. She is taking over from Kimberlee Craig, who retired on June 30 after 21 years at the PUD, most of that as public information officer.

Hansen comes to Chelan PUD from Cascade Medical Center in Leavenworth where she developed outreach and public engagement programs as the center’s first communications staffer. Before that she was a reporter and editor at The Wenatchee World. She also has written for Northwest travel publications and provided public relations for others, including wineries.

Craig is lucky to be moving into a different role as a contractor, helping Visitor Services Manager Debbie Gallaher and the Rocky Reach Discovery Center with communications during renovations expected to start in August. She’s excited to see the project through reopening in spring 2021.

Monday, June 29, 2020

Hispanic Leaders Will Address COVID-19 Crisis Monday June 29th, 5:00 PM at Pasco Farmers Market


(PASCO, WA)

What? Hispanic leaders from across the state, Franklin PUD and the Benton-Franklin Health District have partnered to address the COVID-19 crisis affecting the Latino community in Benton and Franklin counties. The speakers will encourage people to wear masks, encourage social distancing and educate residents on the health risks of COVID-19.

When? Monday, June 29th at 5:00 p.m.

Where? Pasco Farmers Market on 4th and Lewis in Pasco, Washington adjacent to Viera’s Bakery and across the Pasco Specialty Kitchen.

Why?  Our goal is to encourage mask-wearing & good social distancing practices in the Hispanic community. COVID-19 is spreading rapidly through the Hispanic community for various reasons. Many are essential workers, thousands are part of the agricultural industry and many come from large families where social distancing is a challenge. We are not blaming the Hispanic community for the spread. Everyone must do their part to defeat COVID-19.

Who will speak? Pasco Mayor Saul Martinez, Dr. Amy Person (BFHD), Dr. Raul Garcia (ER Doctor Lourdes), Martin Valadez (TCHCC President) Gabriel Portugal (President DPDA) LBA, WA State Legislator Alex Ybarra, Ana Peralta (Pasco Community Leader).

What will be said? Leaders will ask people from the Hispanic community to wear masks, practice social distancing and educate them on the risks of COVID-19.

Will it be conducted in English and Spanish? Yes all speakers are bilingual and will speak in English and Spanish.

Will there be Q & A when the news conference is over? Yes each speaker is available, except for Dr. Garcia, he has to leave for a scheduled engagement.

Friday, June 12, 2020

Energy Industry's Diversity Problem (Politico)


(WASHINGTON, DC) -- In the immediate aftermath of the protests that shot up across the country following the killing of George Floyd, many energy and industry groups have made public gestures of support. Oil giants like ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP and the industry group American Petroleum Institute came out with statements condemning racism, as did leaders of the wind and solar energy sectors.

But those statements came from leaders in an industry that is still predominantly white, especially in the highest management positions, Pro's Gavin Bade and Ben Lefebvre report this morning.

One 2016 study from API found nearly three-quarters of oil and gas industry workers were white. The rank and file of the wind and solar sectors are slightly more diverse, according to a 2019 report for state energy officials, but many of the highest paid jobs are dominated by white workers. The oil and gas industry as a whole also has long generated complaints that it has been hostile to women and minorities.

"Those who have statements have good statements, but from where I sit, what we want to know is what happens after your statement," said Paula Glover, head of American Association of Blacks in Energy. "Because [a statement] that says we abhor racism and inequality, it's not that it rings hollow, but if you do nothing to back that up by making change in your organization, then it's just words on the page."

Industry groups seek diversity rising. API says a majority of new oil and gas jobs through 2040 will be filled by women and people of color — though that portion is smaller for managerial and C-suite positions. Leaders in the wind and solar sector have said they plan to redouble their diversity efforts in the wake of recent protests.

But protesters from the energy sector said they want companies to not only hire more black and Latino employees but to focus business development on their communities and transform an industry culture that is often hostile to non-white workers.

"The system is not broken — it's working exactly how it should for a certain population," said Jamez Staples, a clean energy entrepreneur in North Minneapolis who attended Floyd's funeral last week. "Now that there's more people of color coming up through these systems, they're realizing that they're broken or aren't functioning well and they need to be demolished and rebuilt ... to create economic models that are more inclusive."