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To: locogringo who wrote (830399)1/16/2015 7:00:31 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 1577019
 
Price of Electricity Hits Record High – Just as Obama Promised
Posted by Jim Hoft on Friday, January 16, 2015, 3:34 PM
A rare campaign promise kept..
In January 2008 Barack Obama told the San Francisco Chronicle:

“Under my plan of a cap and trade system electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket. Businesses would have to retrofit their operations. That will cost money. They will pass that cost onto consumers.”

He promised that his plan would cause electricity rates to skyrocket.



Mission accomplished.

In 2014 the price of electricity hit a record high.
CNS News reported:

Even as gasoline prices plummeted and the overall energy price index calculated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics declined, electricity prices bucked the trend in the United States in 2014.

Data released today by the BLS indicates that the electricity price indexes hit all-time highs for the month of December and for the year. 2014 was the most-expensive year ever for electricity in the United States.

The annual price index for electricity, published by BLS today, was 208.020. That was up from 200.750 in 2013.


Electricity rates have skyrocketed under Barack Obama – just as he promised.



To: locogringo who wrote (830399)1/16/2015 7:19:15 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 1577019
 
"Really? Is it via the CO2 in the air or the nitrogen level?"

Most often drought and famine. Up north, thawing permafrost and less lichen. In some places, ocean water on the streets..

Sao Paulo’s Reservoirs are Drying Out When they Should Be Filling Up
It’s the rainy season for Brazil. But, thus far, adequate rains have not come.

A persistent high pressure system has lingered over Brazil. A blocking high of the kind that has now become so common with global temperatures spiking to more than +0.8 C above 1880s averages — thickening heat domes and granting these powerful weather systems an ever greater inertia. A set of circumstances that has set off a plethora of very severe droughts ranging the globe since the early 2000s.

During early 2015, Brazil’s own persistent atmospheric block re-strengthened over an Amazon whose water re-circulating abilities have been crippled by a combined deforestation and ever more prevalent wildfires. Ever since late December, the high has warded off cold front after cold front. The result is a terrible extension of the worst drought to impact Brazil in at least 80 years.

https://robertscribbler.wordpress.com/2015/01/12/januarys-rainfall-forecast-cut-in-half-sao-paulos-reservoirs-are-drying-out-when-they-should-be-filling-up/







This new report based on scores of personal testimonies from refugees in Eastern Africa finds that climate change can make people more vulnerable and can also play a part in driving them into areas of conflict and ultimately across borders and into exile. "Climate change, vulnerability and human mobility: Perspectives of refugees from the East and Horn of Africa" is the first issue of the newly established UNU-EHS Report series.




http://www.ehs.unu.edu/article/read/climate-change-vulnerability-and-human-mobility







Inupiaq people are watching in horror as climate change claims their homes. Having endured repeated flooding and erosion from sea-ice melting and permafrost thaw, the 400 residents of Kivalina, an Alaskan village on a low barrier island in the Chukchi Sea, voted in 1998 and in 2000 to relocate — together — to coastal sites on higher ground. More than a decade and a half later, Kivalina remains in limbo, its move stymied by institutional, financial and physical barriers 1

nature.com

Climate Change Threatens Reindeer and Arctic People
climate.org

Drowning Kiribati
businessweek.com

Miami Hopes Storm Pumps, Seawall Will Protect Against Rising Seas
Message 29868208



To: locogringo who wrote (830399)1/16/2015 11:41:43 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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locogringo

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Obama Model Economy completely collapsing in Venezuela.

SAN CRISTOBAL (Reuters) - Masked youths are once again blocking streets and burning tires in the Venezuelan city of San Cristobal, the epicenter of last year's massive anti-government protests.

The groups are small and the unrest contained, but dissent is rising in this volatile Andean city, a barometer of frustration with nationwide shortages that are putting pressure on the socialist government of Nicolas Maduro.


Students, who also accuse the government of corruption and repression but whom Maduro labels "coupsters," are threatening to unleash larger demonstrations again.

"It's time," Deiby Jaimes, 21, said from behind a barricade of burning trash as police gazed down from their hilltop perch. "There's a social, economic and political crisis. Economically we're completely lost and in a delirium."

But Jaimes and other students said they were restraining themselves to see if other Venezuelans also take to the streets. View gallery


Masked students block a street as they clash with national guards during a protest against the gover …

Last year's protests split the opposition and failed to attract widespread support from Venezuela's poor, meaning mainstream anti-government leaders like Henrique Capriles are calling for less radical tactics including peaceful rallies and a good showing at an upcoming parliamentary vote.

"People are scared," said Jaimes, an accounting student, as dozens around him knocked rocks together menacingly. "But fear is disappearing due to shortages. We're expecting a social explosion."

High demand and a Christmas lull in distribution have aggravated shortages across the nation of 30 million people. Queues sometimes snake around entire blocks, prompting isolated scuffles for coveted milk or diapers.

Although there has been scattered violence around the OPEC nation, many eyes are once again on the opposition hotbed of San Cristobal, where clusters of demonstrators have been facing off with security forces since the New Year.

It was here that the attempted rape of a student last year prompted protests that spread into a wave of national demonstrations.
View gallery

Students clash with national guards during a protest against the government in San Cristobal January …

Major General Efrain Velasco Lugo, who is in charge of security for the western Andean region, called the protesters misguided delinquents. "They want to torch the city again."

Their motto, he added, can be boiled down to "because I think differently to you, I'm going to topple you."

Indeed, Maduro says right-wing foes, encouraged by the United States and compliant foreign media, are plotting an "economic coup" to topple his socialist government. Protesters retort they are decrying flawed policies, like currency controls that have crimped imports and led to shortages.

Army officials said on Thursday 18 protesters had been arrested in San Cristobal, capital of Tachira state, in the last 10 days, with six currently behind bars.

Rights group Penal Forum said 56 demonstrators were arrested nationally this year, with most now released.
iew gallery

National guards control the entrance of a private supermarket as people line up to enter in San Cris …

A national guard shot a protester in the chest on Thursday night during clashes in San Cristobal, a student leader said. Reuters could not immediately verify the information.

The situation remains a far cry from unrest between February and May that left 43 dead and hundreds injured during the biggest disturbances in more than a decade. Victims included demonstrators, government supporters and security officials.

COMBATIVE 'CORDIAL CITY'

Still, the mood is increasingly combative in San Cristobal, traditionally known as the "cordial city," as life becomes a series of queues.

Taxi driver Luis Perez wakes up around 5 a.m. to wait in line for gasoline. V
iew gallery

People line up to buy basic goods at a supermarket in San Cristobal January 14, 2015. REUTERS/Carlos …

"We produce so much oil, and look how we're suffering," he said as he finally filled up his creaking blue 1982 Chevrolet.

"We need a change of government," he added before paying less than 2 cents a liter for the world's cheapest gasoline.

Roughly 15 percent of fuel in Tachira is smuggled out of the state, estimates Nellyver Lugo, a ruling party state legislator who heads a commission on gasoline. Lack of spare parts for trucks and tricky contract negotiations reduced supplies this year, she added.

Up to 25 percent of food is smuggled out for sale at a hefty profit in Colombia, the army says, citing discoveries of subsidized flour stashed in tires or rice in engines.

Even once-fervent "Chavistas" are becoming skeptical as inflation and shortages threaten anti-poverty advances under the late Hugo Chavez's 1999-2013 rule.
View gallery

A man is detained by police during a protest against the government in San Cristobal January 15, 201 …

"There was a lot of hope, but things didn't pan out the way we wanted," Ronald, a government employee who would not give his last name, said as he stood in line clutching scarce toilet paper. "Now we're paying the price. I hope they implement changes."

But Maduro, whose approval levels have steadily eroded since his 2013 election, has so far balked at implementing pressing but unpopular measures such as raising gasoline prices or unifying a baffling three-tiered currency control system.

Sinking oil prices have compounded Venezuela's cash crunch, prompting fears that the nation may have to default. An impending national parliamentary election has raised the stakes further.

With Maduro out of the country for the last 10 days on an apparently unsuccessful trip to lobby for an oil supply cut, Venezuela's perennially fragmented opposition is scrambling to unite and call for peaceful protests.

"The government is weaker," 24-year-old student leader Reinaldo Manrique said, standing next to a charred bus near the University of the Andes.

"It won't survive an explosion like last year's."