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FPF commends ABC for fighting back against FCC censorship

Common Dreams - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 10:55

ABC is accusing the Federal Communications Commission of violating the First Amendment and chilling press freedom, in a regulatory filing in its dispute with the FCC over whether “The View” is a bona fide news program exempt from the agency’s equal time requirement.
The following can be attributed to Freedom of the Press Foundation Chief of Advocacy Seth Stern:

“We commend ABC for standing up for itself and the First Amendment. The legal theories the FCC asserts against broadcast licensees are frivolous and unconstitutional, and FCC Chair Brendan Carr knows it, but he hopes broadcast licensees will nonetheless self-censor rather than pick a fight.

“It’s about time news outlets start telling Carr and his Donald Trump lapel pin to kick rocks. Otherwise, he’ll continue manufacturing bogus pretexts to harass and jawbone licensees that air content his boss doesn’t like. News outlets should be emboldened after seeing The New York Times, Media Matters, The Washington Post, and others go on offense against the administration in court and win. Carr won’t stop until a judge forces him to, and hopefully ABC plans to make that happen, both here and in Carr’s equally ridiculous retaliatory license renewal proceeding in response to comedian Jimmy Kimmel’s jokes.”
Categories: F. Left News

Solving the Gridlock: America’s Electric Supply Chain Opportunity

Rocky Mountain Institute - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 10:49

Demand for key grid hardware has soared since 2019, due to large load growth, integration of new energy generation resources, and investment to modernize the aging grid. This demand is driving up equipment lead times and prices. In fact, if you need a large power transformer, you may have to wait up to four years. The stakes are high for American businesses and consumers: the grid supply chain crunch is already impacting utility bills, threatening reliability, and stalling critical projects, from power plants and data centers to new housing construction.

While recent investment announcements in domestic grid component manufacturing will help ease shortages in the coming years, these developments on their own are not enough to secure America’s grid supply chain. Policymakers can leverage a range of proven industrial policy tools to boost the capacity, coordination, and competitiveness of US grid component manufacturing. Addressing the gridlock is an opportunity to reinvigorate domestic manufacturing, strengthen US energy security, improve energy affordability, and propel economic growth.

The post Solving the Gridlock: America’s Electric Supply Chain Opportunity appeared first on RMI.

Communities Across the South Unite Against Drax

Dogwood Alliance - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 10:03

For over a decade, the biomass industry has sold a lie. They’ve been lying to Southern communities and decision-makers. This is especially true of the UK company Drax. They’ve violated […]

The post Communities Across the South Unite Against Drax first appeared on Dogwood Alliance.
Categories: G1. Progressive Green

Building on a Continent of Birds: CAF’s Northern Regional Hub and Bird-Friendly Architecture

Audubon Society - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 09:57
Every spring and fall, millions of migratory birds cross the American continent along major natural corridors known as flyways. These flyways connect ecosystems, economies, and cultures from the...
Categories: G3. Big Green

Interior bypasses court injunction at behest of oil donor

Western Priorities - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 09:56

Emails obtained by Public Domain and Fieldnotes show the Interior department worked closely with Continental Resources to secure drilling permits in Converse County, Wyoming, despite a court injunction restricting new drilling on public land there. Continental Resources supplied the Bureau of Land Management with a playbook to bypass environmental restrictions meant to protect the county’s groundwater, and the BLM has since rushed to issue over 70 permits to Continental using the loophole.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum received $250,000 in campaign donations from Continental Resources, which is controlled by billionaire oil tycoon Harold Hamm, when he ran for president in 2023. Burgum has also received around $50,000 in oil royalties from land he leased to Hamm’s company.

“This reminds me of the days of the Bush-Cheney administration’s massive push to drill the West, when it was obvious that the oil industry was calling the shots when it came to public land management,” Erik Molvar, executive director of Western Watersheds Project, told Public Domain. “But we never had such direct and obvious proof that oil corporations were giving the orders, and BLM officials at the highest levels were obediently carrying them out.”

CWP says goodbye to executive director

In the latest episode of the Center for Western Priorities’ podcast, The Landscape, we say goodbye to former Executive Director Jennifer Rokala. In a conversation with the entire CWP team, Jen reflects on the highs and lows of leading CWP for 11 years, what she’s most proud of, and what gives her hope for the future of America’s public lands. Listen now wherever you get podcasts or watch on YouTube.

Quick hits How many federal public lands jobs did the Mountain West lose?

KUNC

Congressman seeks probe of $11 million no-bid contract for Park Service fountain revamp

E&E News

Opinion: Pikes Peak region’s outdoors future depends on LWCF funding

Colorado Sun

Navajo Nation residents push back on possible copper mine

KNAU

How controlled burns can help save taxpayers billions

Grist

This fight unfolding in southern Utah could have implications for states trying to take over federal lands

Bloomberg

Shared ground: Coalition forms to promote affordable housing on public lands

Deseret News

Wildfire is an increasing threat to the West’s recreation economy, according to new research

The Conversation

Quote of the day

Proposed budget cuts and growing bureaucratic obstacles are threatening to slow or stop LWCF-funded projects across the country… Whatever your politics, that should concern you. LWCF has never been a partisan program. It was built on a bipartisan foundation and has delivered results under presidents and Congresses of both parties for 60 years.”

—David Leinweber, founder of Pikes Peak Outdoor Recreation Alliance, Colorado Sun

Picture This

@Interior

Big Stone National Wildlife Refuge offers a chance to unplug from the stresses of daily life and reconnect with Minnesota’s tallgrass prairie.

Photos by Mike Budd / USFWS

Feature image: Interior Secretary Doug Burgum (left) and oil tycoon Harold Hamm (right); Source: Burgum photo by Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia, Hamm photo by david_shankbone via Flickr

The post Interior bypasses court injunction at behest of oil donor appeared first on Center for Western Priorities.

Categories: G2. Local Greens

Down to Earth: March 2026

Montana Environmental Information Center - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 09:09

Click the icon at the bottom right to view the issue full screen. March 2026

The post Down to Earth: March 2026 appeared first on Montana Environmental Information Center - MEIC.

Categories: G2. Local Greens

MEIC’s Nick Fitzmaurice Explains How NorthWestern Energy Keeps Getting Away with Raising Montana Customer’s Rates

Montana Environmental Information Center - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 09:03

Don’t be fooled by NorthWestern Energy and the PSC’s spin on the latest rate increase to Montanan’s energy bills. In November 2025, the Montana Public Service Commission (PSC) announced it denied $43 million in rate increases to NorthWestern Energy “to the benefit of Montana customers.” So why are Montana customers still paying more? MEIC’s Energy …

The post MEIC’s Nick Fitzmaurice Explains How NorthWestern Energy Keeps Getting Away with Raising Montana Customer’s Rates appeared first on Montana Environmental Information Center - MEIC.

Categories: G2. Local Greens

Call for applications to design a campaign strategy 

AFSA - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 07:10

1. Background and Context

Secure land tenure, agroecology, and ecological restoration are deeply interconnected pillars of sustainable development in Africa. Evidence from AFSA’s work across the continent demonstrates that when communities, particularly smallholder farmers, pastoralists, women, youth, and Indigenous Peoples, have recognized and protected rights to land, they are more likely to invest in long-term practices that regenerate soils, conserve biodiversity, and build resilience to climate shocks.

Agroecology provides a proven framework for such practices by combining traditional knowledge with ecological principles to restore degraded landscapes while advancing food sovereignty. Ecological restoration, in turn, thrives where tenure security empowers communities to steward their territories.

It is against this backdrop that AFSA is commissioning this consultancy to develop a campaign strategy that bridges grassroots struggles with continental and global policy spaces, while amplifying community voices and driving systemic change.

The Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (AFSA) is inviting consultants to submit a technical and financial proposal for a consultancy to design and develop a comprehensive campaign strategy for the Protect Our Land, Restore Our Soil Campaign, which AFSA plans to roll out in mid-2026 over a three-year period.

AFSA is seeking an experienced consultant (or team) with a strong background in land governance, agroecology, food sovereignty, ecological restoration, food system advocacy, and movement-building in Africa, and we believe your expertise aligns well with the scope and ambition of this assignment.

2. Objective of the Assignment

Develop and design a campaign strategy to build a continental campaign and movement that places secure land tenure and ecological restoration at the centre of Africa’s transformation.

3. Scope of Work

The consultancy will entail the following components:

a) Background Paper Development

  • Synthesize evidence on the interconnections between secure land tenure, agroecology, food sovereignty, and ecological restoration.
  • Review AFSA documentation, relevant continental and national policy frameworks, and community testimonies.

b) Campaign Strategy Design

  • Develop a robust campaign strategy aimed at:
    • Shifting public and political narratives
    • Mobilizing diverse constituencies
    • Influencing policy processes
    • Building sustained public pressure for land governance reforms.
  • The strategy should prioritize:
    • Protection of communal land rights
    • Prevention of land grabbing
    • Promotion of agroecology as a pathway to healthy soils, climate resilience, and food sovereignty.

4. Expected Deliverables

The consultant will be expected to deliver the following outputs:

  1. Inception Report
    • Detailed work plan, methodology, and stakeholder engagement approach.
  2. Background Paper
    • A comprehensive, well-referenced paper linking land tenure security, food sovereignty, and ecological soil restoration as the foundation of the campaign.
  3. Campaign Strategy Package, including:
    • Strategic framework and advocacy roadmap of the campaign
    • Three-year implementation plan
    • Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning (MEL) framework
    • Branding and communications toolkit.
  4. Validation and Final Outputs
    • Validation meeting and report
    • Final (approved and launched) campaign strategy
    • Translated background paper and campaign strategy (English French).

5. Proposed Methodology

The consultancy is expected to apply a mixed-method approach, integrating doctrinal analysis and participatory techniques, including:

  • Desk Review of scholarly literature, policy documents, and AFSA materials (Agenda 2063, AU Land Governance Strategy, Malabo Commitments, etc.);
  • Participatory Research and human-centred design approaches through virtual FGDs with farmers, pastoralists, women, youth, and Indigenous communities;
  • Key Informant Interviews with policymakers, CSOs, traditional leaders, land and agronomy professionals, AFSA Land working group, regional bodies, and funders;
  • Stakeholder Consultations and Co-creation Workshops;
  • Iterative Drafting and Validation with the AFSA Secretariat and steering committee.

 8. Submission Requirements

Kindly submit here your brief details here (https://forms.gle/gboWrxyGe7zrSE8cA) within 5 days (or not later than May 13). Please don’t attach CVs, technical proposals, financial proposal at this stage. We’ll invite selected candidates to submit these 1 week after the closing date.

Please feel free to reach out to me via admin@afsafrica.org if you require any clarification.

We look forward to receiving your proposal and potentially working together to advance land justice, agroecology, and ecological restoration across Africa.

Categories: A3. Agroecology

April Jobs Report Shows Uneven Labor Market Growth As Inflation Outpaces Wages

Common Dreams - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 07:07

Today’s jobs report shows the labor market added 115,000 jobs in April, while the number of jobs added across February and March was revised down by 16,000. Since the start of 2026, job gains have averaged just 76,000 per month. The unemployment rate held at 4.3%, near its highest level in four years. Though topline job growth figures may appear steady, this report revealed average wages grew by just 0.2% last month, which next week’s inflation print will almost certainly confirm are behind rising prices.

Groundwork’s Managing Director of Policy and Advocacy Elizabeth Pancotti released the following statement:

“While the president touts this lukewarm headline jobs report, Americans can look at their own paychecks to take the temperature of the labor market. Price hikes fueled by Trump’s senseless war and misguided tariffs are forcing Americans to stretch already-thin budgets to the brink. Working families are being crushed under the weight of Trump’s misguided economic agenda as wages slip behind the skyrocketing price of gas, groceries, and everyday goods.”

Categories: F. Left News

Among Flowering Plants, Thousands of Evolutionary Oddities at Risk of Extinction

Yale Environment 360 - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 06:50

A new study identifies thousands of flowering plants belonging to rare and ancient lineages that are in urgent need of protection. 

Read more on E360 →

Categories: H. Green News

Regen Nutrition Project Measures Real Food Nutrient Density

Food Tank - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 06:00

The Nutrient Density Initiative (NDI) and Edacious are leading the Regen Nutrition Project to explore how food production practices influence the nutritional quality of foods.

NDI teamed up with Edacious, a company that provides food testing and analysis, to launch the Regen Nutrition Project in 2024. The project invites NDI’s 50-plus members—including food companies and farmers committed to producing regeneratively—to test samples of their products at Edacious’ food lab.

Edacious’ food analysis technology compares the nutrient content of regeneratively-produced foods with conventional crops to help companies demonstrate the benefits of regenerative practices.

The data “will be critical for demonstrating that eco-friendly practices that build healthy soil and work in synergy with natural systems ultimately produce foods with higher nutrient density,” Mary Purdy, Managing Director of NDI tells Food Tank.

This is particularly important at a time when producers are facing skepticism that labels reflect real differences, Eric Smith, Founder and CEO of Edacious, says. “For producers, nutrition data is becoming a way to validate practices they already believe in—and to communicate that value credibly in the marketplace,” he tells Food Tank.

Edacious and the NDI also developed a Nutrient Density Data Explorer to visualize the nutrient data collected. It breaks down the nutrient content of the samples sent in by NDI members and compares them alongside conventional retail samples.

“We want it to be useful to farmers, researchers, brands, and policymakers alike: a tool that highlights how much variability actually exists in foods, where regenerative systems may be showing early signals of improved nutrient density, and where more research is needed,” Smith says.

Results from the Data Explorer show that regeneratively-produced samples have lower fat content, a better balance of Omega-6 to Omega-3, more protein, and no heavy metals, compared to conventional samples. The project has collected data on proteins in their pilot, and they are looking forward to expanding to grains and produce next.

According to a study in the journal Foods, commercial produce such as apples, oranges, tomatoes, and potatoes have lost up to 25 to 50 percent of their nutrient density in the last 50 to 70 years. And research from the Institute of Environmental Sciences reveals that the climate crisis further threatens nutritional quality.

“As concern about health continues to rise, this evidence becomes a powerful lever for changing purchasing decisions, not only at the consumer level, but also among those with significant purchasing power, including institutions, food service and food is medicine, providers, and retailers,” Purdy tells Food Tank.

Smith makes clear that the goal of the project isn’t to create “perfect foods.” It’s “to shift the conversation toward transparency, context, and continuous improvement, so that nutrition becomes a measurable, valued outcome of how we grow and produce food.”

Articles like the one you just read are made possible through the generosity of Food Tank members. Can we please count on you to be part of our growing movement? Become a member today by clicking here.

Photo courtesy of Meizhi Lang, Unsplash

The post Regen Nutrition Project Measures Real Food Nutrient Density appeared first on Food Tank.

Categories: A3. Agroecology

Join Food Tank at COP31 in Antalya, Turkey

Food Tank - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 05:57

Between November 9 to November 20, Food Tank will be on the ground in Antalya, Turkey for the U.N. Climate Change Conference (COP 31) as we push decision makers to center food and agriculture in climate solutions.

Building on our past COP programming, Food Tank will organize a series multi-stakeholder dinners, host an evening of farmer storytelling, engage with climate negotiators, and much more. Check back here for more details about our COP31 plans as they become available!

To request an invitation, suggest a speaker, or explore partnership opportunities, please reach out to Food Tank’s Events Director Kenzie Wade at kenzie@foodtank.com.

The post Join Food Tank at COP31 in Antalya, Turkey appeared first on Food Tank.

Categories: A3. Agroecology

Join Food Tank at Climate Week NYC

Food Tank - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 05:55

From September 19 to September 25, Food Tank will be back in New York for Climate Week NYC 2026 with WNYC.

The weeklong series of programming will include panel discussions, live performances, networking receptions, and delicious food as we discuss the many solutions that will make our food and agriculture systems an answer to the climate crisis. Summits will touch on themes including soil health, farmland conservation, the private sector’s role in driving climate action, food and nutrition security, and much more.

Last year’s Climate Week NYC programming brought together more than 300 chefs, journalists, academics, CEOs, farmers, advocates and Broadway performers. And in 2026, we’re looking forward to making an even greater impact. Check back here for more details about our Climate Week plans as they become available!

To request an invitation, suggest a speaker, or explore partnership opportunities, please reach out to Food Tank’s Events Director Kenzie Wade at kenzie@foodtank.com.

The post Join Food Tank at Climate Week NYC appeared first on Food Tank.

Categories: A3. Agroecology

When Environment Shapes Mental Health: A Rio Grande Valley Perspective

Mental Health Awareness Month frequently focuses on therapy and diagnosis, but in the Rio Grande Valley, mental health is inseparable from environmental realities. In Hidalgo, Starr, Willacy, and Cameron counties, conditions like extreme heat, air pollution, flooding risk, food insecurity, and limited behavioral health access converge to shape mental health.

These are not abstract public health concerns; they are daily realities that shape anxiety, depression, and recovery across communities. When families worry about whether their homes are safe, their air is clean, and their next meal is secure, mental health cannot be separated from environmental and social conditions.

Mental Health Awareness Month should expand our knowledge of mental health. It is not simply an individual concern; it is essentially shaped by local environmental and organizational factors that produce sustained psychological strain in the Rio Grande Valley.

Across the region, environmental insecurity goes beyond hurricanes, flooding, and extreme heat. Environmental insecurity goes beyond hurricanes, flooding, and extreme heat. It includes poor air quality, unstable housing, food insecurity, and limited behavioral health services. In South Texas, these stressors combine. They lead to chronic stress, fatigue, and psychological distress, often neglected by traditional mental health frameworks. State of the Air report identified the Brownsville–Harlingen–Raymondville area as one of the most polluted regions in the United States for year-round particle pollution, ranking 16th nationally (American Lung Association, 2025). These patterns reflect sustained exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) across parts of the Rio Grande Valley, including surrounding border communities.

PM2.5 exposure is especially concerning because these microscopic particles can penetrate deep into the lungs and enter the bloodstream. Long-term exposure is linked to heart and lung disease and systemic inflammation. This increases the risk of anxiety and depression.

For communities facing economic and social stress, pollution adds a further layer to the mental health burden. Households are forced to make tradeoffs between nutrition, housing, utilities, and healthcare; the resulting stress contributes to anxiety, depression, and a persistent sense of instability. For children and families, food insecurity is not only a physical health issue, but also a chronic psychological stressor that affects development, emotional management, and long-term psychological well-being.

For residents in Starr and Willacy counties, where poverty rates remain among the highest in Texas, think Starr and Willacy counties, poverty rates are among the highest in Texas. These problems worsen with limited healthcare and behavioral health services. Ecoanxiety here are real. It reflects distress and uncertainty caused by extreme heat, flooding, and poor air quality. Physiological burden of chronic stress. Elevated allostatic load has been strongly associated with anxiety, depression, and other stress-related conditions (McEwen & Akil, 2020). For many individuals in the Rio Grande Valley, stress is not episodic, it is continuous, formed by environmental and structural conditions that are difficult to avoid.

As we observe Mental Health Awareness Month, it is critical to broaden the conversation. To properly address mental health in the Rio Grande Valley, we must acknowledge the environmental systems that shape it and promote policies that support air quality, climate resilience, food security, and environmental justice as vital factors of mental health. Dealing with these environmental and community factors is essential to reducing the mental health burden in South Texas.

About the Author:

Dr. Aaron Salinas is an Assistant Professor at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley in Edinburg, Texas. With over a decade of experience in academia, he is dedicated to advancing nursing education and promoting student success. In addition to his academic role, Dr. Salinas is a dual board-certified Nurse Practitioner, credentialed as both a Family Nurse Practitioner and a Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner. He provides patient care as part of the UT Health Rio Grande Valley team at the University Health Center and collaborates with a local psychiatrist and pediatrician through consultation services.

References:

American Lung Association. (2025). State of the air 2025. https://www.lung.org/research/sota

McEwen, B. S., & Akil, H. (2020). Revisiting the stress concept: Implications for affective disorders. Journal of Neuroscience, 40(1), 12–21.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (2024). Health and environmental effects of particulate matter (PM2.5). https://www.epa.gov/pm-pollution

 

The post When Environment Shapes Mental Health: A Rio Grande Valley Perspective appeared first on ANHE.

Categories: A2. Green Unionism

Environmental protection depends on more than regulation

Resilience - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 01:00
Wetlands, rivers and ecosystems do not stop functioning when legal definitions change. The long-term stability of environmental protection may depend less on enforcement than on cultural attitudes toward nature itself.

We have entered the age of consequences for climate and energy inaction: An interview with Richard Heinberg

Resilience - Fri, 05/08/2026 - 01:00
In the final part of this three-part interview series, Richard Heinberg reflects on decades of ignored warnings about energy descent and economic collapse, calling for a voluntary relocalization of economics and politics.

Operation Trust Me Bro: Let Them Drink Ka$h Bourbon

Common Dreams - Thu, 05/07/2026 - 21:37


With no grown-ups in sight, a feckless war lurches and whipsaws on, run by a regime full of clowns, drunks, losers, grifters, all steadfastly defying the will of the people. Trump rants, Hegseth lies, Rubio punts, and shameless, "bad paranoid mess" Ka$h Patel, who actually likes to spell his name that way, is gifting bottles of personally branded bourbon - "KASH PATEL, FBI Director," boasting "strong notes of insecurity" - on all sides. Nothing to see here.

The dizzying pivots on Iran go on, with Dear Leader "paralyzed" by what he started and can't for the life of him figure out how to end. The military blockade of Iran's ports is "the greatest military maneuver in history"; also, if Iran doesn't give in to his demands, they will be "blown off the face of the earth." The "already legendary Epic Fury" is almost over, and the Hormuz Strait will be "OPEN TO ALL" if Iran just agrees to the 14-point US plan they dismiss as "a wish-list." One day, Project Freedom is "a gift to the world" that will get all 2,000 stranded ships through the Strait; the next day, with two ships through and Navy commanders resisting, he pulls the plug in the name of an almost-here "complete and final agreement" that doesn't exist. It turns out he veered away because the Saudis, angry and mistrustful, wouldn't let him use their bases or air space; NATO countries are also increasingly.barring the US from their bases. Iran's chief negotiator: "Operation Trust Me Bro failed.”

There’s more bad if unsurprising news: Pete and Donnie "lied through their teeth" about how the war's gone: Iranian airstrikes did far more damage to US military sites - hitting or destroying at least 228 hangars, barracks, fuel depots, aircraft, key radar, defense, communication systems - than they've acknowledged, and Iran's military might is far from "obliterated." The lies flew through, in part, because they “requested” that several large satellite imagery providers withhold images of the war to tightly control a bogus “winning” narrative. The result, critics say: “Not since Vietnam has there been a more systematic effort by an administration to lie about the costs, consequences, and results of a war.” Meanwhile, NATO is increasingly moving on without the US - who can blame them - and even Australia is pissed at the economic chaos: “Interest Rates Rise Because Some (Emotionally-Stunted) Fuckwit in America Wasn’t Hugged Enough As A Child."

Amidst the carnage, a “once-in-a-lifetime stupid“ Trump posts bonkers AI memes - Biden as ”COWARD," Obama as ”TRAITOR" - and proof the Iran war is shorter than Afghanistan: "Wow! Study this chart!“ His clowns flail. Todd Blanche wants SCOTUS to let the DOJ trash E. Jean Carroll's $83.3 million win. Howard Lutnick told the House his relationship with Epstein was "inexplicable.” Hegseth still inexplicably pursues Mark Kelly for obeying the law though multiple judges tell him to stop; Pete also posted a cringe video of "performative dipshittery wrapped in fictional jingoism," insisting a proposed $1.5 trillion military budget is “putting the American taxpayer first.” Also: "Arsenal for freedom" WTF? GOP tax cuts for the rich and slashing of Obamacare tax credits will see millions lose health care and food stamps, which they call cutting fraud: "Let them eat ballrooms." ICE promises, "Mass deportations are coming." America wants none of this shit.

They also likely don't want much of what Trump's FBI - which boasts, "Law and order is back," complete with vows to hunt down "bad guys" at the World Cup - is selling. Especially given its alleged director, fresh off drunken drunken revels celebrating with his hockey "friends" in Milan and reportedly, perennially panicking about being fired after a series of scandals, is now facing yet more bad press thanks toThe Atlantic's Sarah Fitzpatrick, who's been lauded as "a fearless badass" for staying on his sketchy trail. Her first story, on April 17, cited two dozen FBI sources "alarmed" by Patel's erratic behavior, "conspicuous inebriation and unexplained absences" after nights of boozing. Patel responded with a sputtering, typo-riddled, $250-million lawsuit charging Fitzpatrick and The Atlantic with an elaborate, organized-crime-like conspiracy. The FBI also reportedly launched a criminal leak investigation, usually reserved for "insider threats" involving classified documents, into who told Fitzpatrick what.

This week, Fitzpatrick followed up with another boozy story: Patel travels with a stash of personalized, bespoke, presumably taxpayer-funded Ka$h Patel bourbon he regularly hands out wherever he goes, including on official FBI business. The bottles bear the label, “KASH PATEL FBI DIRECTOR” with the rendering of an FBI shield; around it, text reads, with his preferred spelling, Director Ka$h Patel. An eagle holds the shield in its talons; sometimes the 750-milliliter bottles bear Patel’s signature. They also bear the imprint of Kentucky distillery Woodford Reserve, who have helped out MAGA before. In 2025, they gifted bottles to attendees of the 2025 inauguration luncheon, part of the swag arranged by Mitch McConnell's team. They also created a commemorative "Trump Presidential Woodford Reserve Whiskey, part of their Spirited Gifts line. It's unclear to what extent they've been impacted by or spared from Trump's infamous tariffs.

Patel is already known to have "a great affection" for swag: "He is known as being very merch forward." The Ka$h-branded crap on his website - “Choose Freedom. Shop Based" - has included t-shirts, beanies, faux-camo Fight with Kash hoodies, Fight With Kash Punisher scarf, “Justice for All” #J6PC tees to support Jan, 6 rioters, “government gangsters” playing cards, tacky juvenile "Steel Wall Art," and his children's book The Plot Against the King, about a heroic wizard, Kash the Distinguished Discoverer, who helps "King Donald" uncover conspiracies and crush his enemies. Profits supposedly go to a non-profit Kash Patel Foundation that “supports whistleblowers, education, defamation cases, etc." Patel was also already a bourbon fan during Trump's first term; he reportedly kept a barrel of bourbon at the National Security Council which was regularly brought out to celebrate successes.

In her account, Fitzpatrick lists places and occasions, including FBI events, where Patel has given out bottles of his bourbon. She reports that, when a bottle went missing during a March FBI "training seminar" with Ultimate Fighting Championship athletes in Quantico, Virginia, the incident caused Patel to "lose his mind"; he was so angry he threatened to make his staff take polygraph tests and face prosecution if they were found to have been involved. The FBI did not deny Patel gives out the whiskey; they defended the gifts as "routine" within the FBI, where Bureau officials "exchange commemorative items in formal gift settings consistent with ethics rules." A spokesperson "declined to clarify which ethical rules he is following, or which past directors also did it. When Fitzpatrick asked a former longtime senior official if he'd ever seen personally branded booze gifted, "He burst out laughing."

Several current and former FBI leaders said the action was "unheard-of," noting, "The FBI has traditionally had a zero-tolerance approach to unauthorized use of alcohol on the job or its misuse off duty.” Said one, "Handing out bottles of liquor at our premier law-enforcement agency - it makes me frightened for the country." Others called it "weird," "uncomfortable," "a "shitshow," "a misunderstanding of the Bureau's culture of quiet professionalism," “demoralizing because it suggests one set of standards for the director and another for the rest of the Bureau." Then again, said one, "If you make allegations against Patel, you're screwed." "The Kash Patel bourbon has strong notes of insecurity, narcissism, incompetence and alcohol-fueled national security risk,” wrote Dem lawmakers online. "Pairs well with taxpayer-funded getaways and the occasional SWAT-assisted wake-up call.”

"I knew one day I'd have to watch powerful men burn the world down. I just didn't expect them to be such losers." - Rebecca Shaw in The Guardian

Ka$h Patel, FBI Director and MoonshinerPhoto from The Atlantic

Categories: F. Left News

Water Quality – campaign overview

Friends of Gualala River - Thu, 05/07/2026 - 15:57

This article is a brief overview.
See all of the articles from the Water Quality campaign.

Historically, the Gualala River was home to abundant coho salmon and steelhead trout populations that numbered in the tens of thousands. Today, the endangered coho salmon are all but gone and threatened steelhead are struggling to survive in the home river they evolved and adapted to over millennia. The dwindling salmonid population is a critical indicator of the declining health of the Gualala River, and its 300 square mile watershed, and continues to be at the core of Friends of Gualala River’s work.

FoGR is working with state agencies to reduce water quality impairments from both sediment pollution and pollution from stormwater run-off containing toxic tire grit (6PPD).

Adult coho salmon; photo by NOAA Fisheries Sediment (TMDL)

In 2001, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) listed the Gualala River as impaired under the Clean Water Act due to excessive sediment and high temperatures – both conditions that hamper fish spawning and create unhealthy conditions for fish throughout their lifespan. The chief sources of sediment are roads, landslides, and legacy timber harvesting practices.

California agencies failed to develop plans to reduce sediment and temperature for 20 years. In 2021, FoGR petitioned the State Water Resources Control Board and North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board to incorporate the EPA’s Gualala River Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) for sediment into the North Coast Basin Plan and to develop and implement an action plan specifying how sediment pollution will be reduced throughout the watershed. That petition was successful. FoGR achieved a major accomplishment that will help improve water quality and reduce sediment pollution in the Gualala River and its tributaries – a pivotal step in assisting salmonid recovery efforts.

Now that FoGR has successfully negotiated an agreement, work can begin in earnest to restore the impaired Gualala River and its tributaries. The Regional Water Board adopted the Action Plan for the Gualala River Sediment TMDL in February, 2026, and is developing a Gualala Roads Assessment Order, a watershed-specific order that will address sediment pollution by requiring the inventory, assessment, and prioritization of sediment-generating roads.

Sediment from the remains of a timber company’s summer crossing sheds into the North Fork during winter flows. (Photo courtesy of FoGR) Stormwater (6PPD)

In 2020 FoGR learned of a chemical found in tire grit that pollutes stormwater and kills a number of different aquatic species. It is especially toxic to coho salmon— 40 parts per trillion in a quart of stormwater kills juvenile coho. Information has been pouring out of the State of Washington where the effects of 6 PPD were first discovered as scientists race to learn more about how the compound kills and what can be done about it.

In 2022, CA Urban Streams Alliance-The Stream Team (The Stream Team) expanded its long-standing watershed monitoring program and began collaborating with Friends of Gualala River (FoGR) to investigate 6PPD-Quinone (6PPD-Q)—a tire-derived pollutant highly toxic to Coho Salmon and Steelhead—in the Gualala River estuary.

In May of 2024 the team of volunteers ran their first samples and discovered that stormwater runoff from the downtown area of Gualala contains high levels of 6PPD-Q, confirming their suspicions. “It makes sense,” says Baker. “Even though Gualala is a small town in a rural area, we have concentrated traffic, especially trucks, trailers, and other heavy vehicles all using Highway 1.”

Storm-event samples were collected at four sites upstream and downstream of major road surfaces and analyzed for 6PPD-Q, zinc, oil and grease, and standard field parameters. Results show elevated 6PPD-Q (up to 170 ng/L), zinc, conductivity, and turbidity, with highest concentrations at sites influenced by Highway 1, gas stations, and parking lots.


Categories: G2. Local Greens

Jennifer Rokala on 11 years fighting for public lands at CWP

Western Priorities - Thu, 05/07/2026 - 14:00

In this special episode of The Landscape, the entire Center for Western Priorities team joins us for an interview with Jennifer Rokala, CWP’s outgoing executive director, to celebrate her 11 years leading the organization. Jen reflects on key victories throughout her tenure at CWP, the organization’s evolution as a communications-driven conservation hub, and her advice for Aaron as he steps into the role of executive director.

Plus, the team talks about the best food in the West. Here are the restaurants mentioned during this episode:

  • Hot Tomato Pizza – Fruita, Colorado
  • Bin 707 – Grand Junction, Colorado
  • Eegee’s – Tucson, Arizona
  • Taco Party – Grand Junction, Colorado
  • Rome Station – Rome, Oregon
  • BirdHouse – Page, Arizona
News Resources

Produced by Aaron Weiss, Lauren Bogard, Kate Groetzinger, and Lilly Bock-Brownstein
Feedback: podcast@westernpriorities.org
Music: Purple Planet
Featured image: Center for Western Priorities team

The post Jennifer Rokala on 11 years fighting for public lands at CWP appeared first on Center for Western Priorities.

Categories: G2. Local Greens

Shell’s War-Volatility Jackpot: Nothing Says “Energy Transition” Like $6.9 Billion and Another Fossil-Fuel Shopping Trip

Royal Dutch Shell Plc .com - Thu, 05/07/2026 - 11:46
AI image concept: A giant Shell logo-shaped cash register sitting on an oil-slicked shoreline, ringing up “$6.9bn” while distant tankers pass through a smoky, war-lit Strait of Hormuz. In the foreground, a tiny green sapling labelled “transition” is being watered with a golden petrol pump nozzle

DISCLAIMER: This article is opinion/commentary. It is not financial advice, investment advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. It relies on publicly available reporting, company statements, and cited sources. Site wide disclaimer also applies.

The war dividend nobody wants to call a war dividend

There are quarters when an oil major merely makes money, and then there are quarters when the geopolitical horror show performs like an unpaid member of the trading desk.

Shell’s first quarter of 2026 appears to sit firmly in the second category. The company reported adjusted earnings of about $6.9 billion, more than double the previous quarter and above analyst expectations, helped by market volatility linked to the Iran war and disruption across global energy routes. The Times reported that Shell’s adjusted profits rose 23% year-on-year and were more than double the previous quarter, with trading, refining, marketing and gas-market volatility doing much of the heavy lifting.

So there it is: another majestic chapter in the sacred corporate scripture of “operational performance”, where instability becomes opportunity, crisis becomes margin, and the planet is invited to admire the spreadsheet.

Shell’s official line, naturally, was polished to a boardroom shine. In its first-quarter release, chief executive Wael Sawan said the company delivered “strong results” in a quarter marked by “unprecedented disruption in global energy markets”.   Translation, for those without a refinery-grade euphemism filter: the world shook, prices swung, traders pounced, and shareholders got another warm bath.

The company also raised its dividend by 5% and announced a $3 billion share buyback, though that buyback was smaller than some previous rounds.   The result is a familiar tableau: public anxiety over energy security on one side, private capital returns on the other, and Shell standing in the middle looking solemn while counting.

The war dividend nobody wants to call a war dividend

Let us be precise. Shell did not cause the Iran war. Shell is not being accused here of causing the conflict. But when oil and gas markets convulse, companies with enormous trading operations can benefit from the volatility. That is not a conspiracy theory; it is the business model doing yoga.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Shell’s chemicals and products division, which includes oil trading, produced $1.93 billion in adjusted profit in the first quarter, compared with $449 million a year earlier, with trading boosted by volatile markets.   Bloomberg had already reported in April that Shell said its oil trading results were “significantly higher” than in the previous quarter as the Middle East conflict disrupted global energy markets.

This is the part where the industry asks everyone to be mature. Energy markets are complicated. Supply security matters. Traders provide liquidity. Pipelines do not run on hashtags. All true. Also true: the spectacle of a fossil-fuel giant harvesting bumper earnings from war-driven volatility while continuing to brand itself as a steward of the energy transition is the sort of thing satire struggles to improve upon.

Even Shell’s operational side took hits. Reports noted damage and disruption affecting Shell’s Middle East-linked gas operations, including the Pearl gas-to-liquids facility in Qatar, with production impacts expected to continue.   Yet the earnings machine still roared. Apparently, if one part of the fossil empire catches fire, another part can sell tickets to the flames.

The transition that keeps finding new oil and gas to love

Shell’s climate messaging remains an exquisitely engineered balancing act: one foot planted on “net zero by 2050”, the other pressing firmly on the accelerator of oil, LNG and gas expansion.

Shell says its target is to become a net-zero emissions energy business by 2050, and its 2024 Energy Transition Strategy says the company aims to provide energy today while building the energy system of the future.   It also says it will continue efforts to halve Scope 1 and 2 operational emissions by 2030 compared with 2016.

Fine. But the climate problem is not limited to the emissions from Shell’s own boilers, platforms and office lights. The really vast emissions come when customers burn the oil and gas. And this is where the corporate choreography gets less Swan Lake and more oil tanker reversing into a wind farm.

In April 2026, Shell announced an agreement to acquire Canadian gas producer ARC Resources, a company focused on the Montney shale basin in British Columbia and Alberta.   The Times characterised the deal as a strategic move to strengthen Shell’s shale portfolio and reserves, in a context where investors were watching reserve life and future production closely.

Shell buying more gas assets while talking about transition is not a contradiction, according to Shell. It is “energy security”. It is “resilience”. It is “value”. It is every corporate noun in the drawer except the obvious one: expansion.

This is an old Shell habit. The Reuters source supplied for this piece points back to Shell’s 2007 move to buy out minority shareholders in Shell Canada, then one of Canada’s major oil, gas and oil-sands producers and refiners. Reuters reported at the time that some minority shareholders argued the offer undervalued the Canadian unit’s prospects.   Nearly two decades later, the geography changes, the buzzwords evolve, and the gravitational pull remains the same: hydrocarbons, preferably in large quantities.

Investors: the silent choir in very expensive seats

No discussion of Shell is complete without mentioning the institutional money standing quietly behind the curtain, applauding with spreadsheets.

MarketScreener’s shareholder data for Shell lists major holders including Norges Bank Investment Management at about 3.24%, The Vanguard Group at about 3.23%, BlackRock Investment Management (UK) at about 2.69%, BlackRock Advisors (UK) at about 1.56%, and SSgA Funds Management at about 1.54%.

These are not fringe investors. These are the heavy furniture of global capitalism: pension money, index money, sovereign wealth money, passive money that somehow manages to be very passive until dividends arrive.

This matters because Shell’s strategy is not performed in an empty theatre. It is performed for investors who have often rewarded discipline, buybacks, dividends and fossil-fuel cash generation. In plain English: Shell is not improvising alone. It is dancing for an audience that knows the steps.

And the steps are obvious: keep the oil-and-gas engine profitable, trim or discipline lower-return green ventures, talk about net zero at a safe altitude, and return cash aggressively enough that major shareholders do not start throwing chairs.

The courtroom wobble and the climate credibility gap

Shell’s climate record is not merely a matter of campaign slogans. It has been fought over in court.

In 2021, a Dutch district court ordered Shell to cut its worldwide aggregate net carbon emissions by 45% by 2030 compared with 2019 levels. In November 2024, The Hague Court of Appeal overturned that specific order. Shell welcomed the ruling, saying its 2050 net-zero target remained central to strategy and that it continued work to halve operational emissions by 2030.

Shell’s legal win, however, did not magically decarbonise its business model. It removed a specific court-imposed target. It did not remove the atmosphere, the carbon budget, the physics, or the awkward fact that “we’ll get there by 2050” has become the corporate climate equivalent of “the cheque is in the post”.

The court appeal ruling gave Shell breathing room. Shell appears to have used some of that breathing room to inhale more gas.

Energy security: the industry’s favourite magic cloak

The phrase “energy security” now performs heroic labour for the fossil-fuel sector. It can mean keeping homes heated, factories powered and supply chains functioning. It can also mean giving oil and gas companies a gleaming moral vocabulary for doing what they already wanted to do.

Shell’s 2025 Annual Report page says the report covers financial, operational, strategic and sustainability performance, and Shell’s chair said the company was becoming more competitive and resilient in a “fragmented and complex” world.   That language is not accidental. Fragmentation and complexity are now the corporate weather system in which oil majors thrive: storm clouds above, buybacks below.

The company’s defenders will say the world still needs oil and gas. They are not wrong. The world does still consume vast quantities of both. But that argument becomes rather less noble when used to justify every fresh fossil investment, every new gas basin, every LNG growth narrative, and every shareholder payout wrapped in a transition ribbon.

At some point, “meeting demand” begins to look suspiciously like preserving demand.

The green costume, the black liquid

Shell has invested in lower-carbon businesses, EV charging, biofuels, hydrogen and carbon capture. Shell itself says it planned to invest $10–15 billion in low-carbon energy solutions between 2023 and the end of 2025, and that it invested $5.6 billion in low-carbon solutions in 2023.

But the question is not whether Shell has any green spending. The question is whether the company’s overall direction is compatible with the speed and scale of decarbonisation required. A fossil-fuel giant can place solar panels in the brochure while continuing to build its future around gas, trading and hydrocarbon extraction. The brochure may be greener. The business model still smells of crude.

The Q1 2026 numbers sharpen the point. Shell’s profit surge did not come from a sudden global outbreak of wind turbines. It came from fossil markets doing what fossil markets do in crisis: spiking, convulsing, rewarding those positioned to profit from scarcity and fear.

Shell did not invent that system. It merely sits magnificently inside it, polishing the brass.

Conclusion: Shell’s transition is going exactly where the money tells it to go

Shell wants to be seen as pragmatic. In a sense, it is. It is pragmatically following the cash. It is pragmatically rewarding shareholders. It is pragmatically using “energy security” as the all-purpose password for continued fossil-fuel relevance.

The problem is that climate stability is not impressed by pragmatism measured in quarterly returns. Nor is the public likely to be charmed forever by the spectacle of oil majors banking billions from volatility while asking everyone else to admire their net-zero mood board.

Shell’s first quarter of 2026 is not just a financial event. It is a morality play with an investor deck: war volatility, bumper profits, shareholder payouts, gas acquisitions, climate pledges and a transition strategy that seems permanently stuck in the departure lounge.

Shell says it is building the energy system of the future. Perhaps. But judging by the cash register, the future still has a very large oil slick underneath it.

Spoof Shell PR Spin: “Please Stop Calling It a War Windfall, We Prefer ‘Geopolitical Value Creation’”

Shell today proudly confirmed that it remains fully committed to delivering more value with fewer awkward questions.

In a quarter marked by unprecedented global disruption, Shell’s world-class trading teams demonstrated the company’s unique ability to transform market chaos into shareholder comfort. While some observers have described this as “profiting from volatility linked to war”, Shell prefers the more responsible phrase: resilience-led monetisation of unfortunate events beyond our control.

We remain deeply committed to the energy transition, which is why we continue to say “net zero by 2050” at regular intervals while investing in the oil and gas required to keep civilisation, industry analysts, and dividend expectations functioning.

Our recent Canadian gas acquisition should not be misunderstood as fossil-fuel expansion. It is a carefully calibrated act of transition-adjacent hydrocarbon stewardship. Gas, as everyone in our investor relations department knows, is not really a fossil fuel when described in a soothing enough voice.

Shell thanks its shareholders, including major global asset managers and institutional investors, for their continued confidence in our strategy of balancing climate ambition, energy security and extremely large sums of money.

Spoof Bot-Reaction / Comment Section

@DividendDruid: Amazing quarter. Thoughts and prayers to volatility, the unsung hero of shareholder returns.

@NetZeroByWhenever: Shell’s transition plan is very clear: transition from last quarter’s profits to much bigger profits.

@FossilFuelFan1978: People complain, but without oil companies, who would bravely monetise geopolitical instability?

@GreenwashDetector: I love when companies say “lower emissions” while buying more gas. Very minimalist climate policy. Barely there.

@IndexFundGhost: As a passive investor, I passively receive the benefits and actively deny responsibility.

@EnergySecurityEnjoyer: Every time someone says “energy security”, a buyback gets its wings.

@PlanetaryBoundaries: I have reviewed the quarterly results and would like to resign from Earth.

@ShellPRIntern: Please remember: it is not a fossil-fuel expansion strategy. It is a molecule-forward resilience platform.

@CashRegisterAtHormuz: Ding.

@ActualClimateScience: This comment has been delayed due to insufficient investor enthusiasm.

Shell’s War-Volatility Jackpot: Nothing Says “Energy Transition” Like $6.9 Billion and Another Fossil-Fuel Shopping Trip was first posted on May 7, 2026 at 7:46 pm.
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