Thursday, April 19, 2018

Energy News Digest for April 19, 2018


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SHELTON FORECAST & WEATHER ALERTS




HOT SHOTS – TODAY’S TOP FIVE STORIES

Town Hall Meeting Set on Future of Columbia River Treaty (Sunnyside Daily Sun, WA)

Tree Felled across Transmission lines – Excavator Blamed for Island-Wide Blackout in Puerto Rico (Sacramento Bee, CA)

High-Voltage Power Lines Will Pass near Idaho Bird Sanctuary (Associated Press)

Southern-Resident Killer Whales’ Inbreeding May Devastate the Population (Seattle Times, WA – Paywall Advisory)

Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Power Plants Plunge, EPA Report Shows (Washington Examiner)

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS (Details Below)
  • Town Hall Meeting Set on Future of Columbia River Treaty
  • Tree Felled across Transmission lines – Excavator Blamed for Island-Wide Blackout in Puerto Rico
  • High-Voltage Power Lines Will Pass near Idaho Bird Sanctuary
  • Chelan PUD Board Sets New Fees, Charges for Unauthorized Crypto Miners
  • A Tip of the Hard Hat to Bonneville Power Administration Line Crews
  • Bonneville Power Administration Agenda for May 1 Quarterly Business Review announced
  • Warden Farmer Announces Run for Grant PUD Commission
  • Schweitzer Electric Power Research Center Set for Purdue Discovery Park
  • Nevada: Regulators Claim Energy Choice Ballot Question Will Cost Millions to Implement, Raise Electric Bills for Residential Customers
  • House Panel Advances Bills to Guard Energy Grid from Cyberattacks
  • Women in Power: The Future of the Sector’s Leadership
  • Southern-Resident Killer Whales’ Inbreeding May Devastate the Population
  • Students Learn About Life Cycle of Salmon
  • Forget Rising Interest Rates, Banks Are Still Loving Solar Power
  • The Time Has Come for Battery Net Metering
  • Dams Provide Renewable Energy But Also Take Toll on the Environment
  • Wind Industry Blows past Records, But Trouble Looms
  • What It’s Like to Live in America without Broadband Internet
  • Space Heater Likely to Blame for Yakima Garage Fire
  • Pollution Forces Shellfish Limits in Commercial Areas of Grays Harbor, Kitsap, Pierce, & Thurston Counties
  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Power Plants Plunge, EPA Report Shows
  • How Big Forests Solve Global Problems
  • Anatomy of a PR Response: How Starbucks Is Handling Its Philadelphia Crisis
  • Teacher Uprisings Harness Social Media in Fight for Funding
  • Facebook Is Trying to Exclude 1.5 Billion Users from Stricter Privacy Regulations
  • Is It Too Late to Stop the Rise of Marijuana, Inc.?
  • Washington State Unemployment Rate at 4.8 Percent
  • ‘Operation Human Freight’ Busts Prostitution, Trafficking Ring in Lewis County
  • Is This the Future of Seattle Transit? A Look at Vancouver, BC — A City That Figured It Out Years Ago
WORD OF THE DAY

Invidious • \in-VID-ee-us\ • Adjective – 1: Tending to cause discontent, animosity, or envy 2: envious 3a: of an unpleasant or objectionable nature: obnoxious *b: of a kind to cause harm or resentment.

“You’re wearing a silly hat,” thundered Octavio during the morning session on energy conservation. Ignoring the remark, the hardy presenter droned on about heat pumps and cost savings. “You’re mother wears army boots,” marked the next salvo in Octavio’s barrage of invidious comments. His barking, irrelevant comments were the only points that kept the attendees awake. Unfortunately for the presenter, the only things the attendees remembered were something about boots and hats.

ENERGY & UTILITY ISSUES

Town Hall Meeting Set on Future of Columbia River Treaty (Sunnyside Daily Sun, WA)

Tree Felled across Transmission lines – Excavator Blamed for Island-Wide Blackout in Puerto Rico (Sacramento Bee, CA)

High-Voltage Power Lines Will Pass near Idaho Bird Sanctuary (Associated Press)

Chelan PUD Board Sets New Fees, Charges for Unauthorized Crypto Miners (American Public Power Association)

A Tip of the Hard Hat to Bonneville Power Administration Line Crews (Bonneville Power Administration)

Bonneville Power Administration Agenda for May 1 Quarterly Business Review announced (Bonneville Power Administration)

Warden Farmer Announces Run for Grant PUD Commission (Columbia Basin Herald, Moses Lake, WA)

Schweitzer Electric Power Research Center Set for Purdue Discovery Park (Associated Press)

Nevada: Regulators Claim Energy Choice Ballot Question Will Cost Millions to Implement, Raise Electric Bills for Residential Customers (Nevada Independent, Las Vegas)

House Panel Advances Bills to Guard Energy Grid from Cyberattacks (The Hill, Washington, DC)

Women in Power: The Future of the Sector’s Leadership (Utility Dive)

FISH & WILDLIFE

Southern-Resident Killer Whales’ Inbreeding May Devastate the Population (Seattle Times, WA – Paywall Advisory)

Students Learn About Life Cycle of Salmon (Skagit Valley Herald, Mt Vernon, WA)

RENEWABLE ENERGY & SELF STORAGE

Forget Rising Interest Rates, Banks Are Still Loving Solar Power (Bloomberg News)

The Time Has Come for Battery Net Metering (Green Tech Media)

Dams Provide Renewable Energy But Also Take Toll on the Environment (Accuweather)

Wind Industry Blows past Records, But Trouble Looms   (E&E Publishing, via National Wind Watch)

TECHNOLOGY & TELECOMMUNICATIONS

What It’s Like to Live in America without Broadband Internet (Motherboard)

CONSERVATION & EFFICIENCY

Space Heater Likely to Blame for Yakima Garage Fire (KNDO/KNDU,-TV, Tri-Cities, WA)

ENVIRONMENTAL FOOT LOCKER

Pollution Forces Shellfish Limits in Commercial Areas of Grays Harbor, Kitsap, Pierce, & Thurston Counties (KBKW Radio, Aberdeen, WA)

CLIMATE CHANGE SEQUESTRATION VAULT

Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Power Plants Plunge, EPA Report Shows (Washington Examiner)

How Big Forests Solve Global Problems (NY Times)

PUBLIC RELATIONS, MARKETING & MEDIA

Anatomy of a PR Response: How Starbucks Is Handling Its Philadelphia Crisis (Washington Post)

Teacher Uprisings Harness Social Media in Fight for Funding (Associated Press)

Facebook Is Trying to Exclude 1.5 Billion Users from Stricter Privacy Regulations (Gizmodo)

KILOWATTS FOR CANNABIS

Is It Too Late to Stop the Rise of Marijuana, Inc.? (Atlantic Magazine)

GENERAL NEWS

Washington State Unemployment Rate at 4.8 Percent (Associated Press)

‘Operation Human Freight’ Busts Prostitution, Trafficking Ring in Lewis County (KMAS Radio, Shelton, WA)

Is This the Future of Seattle Transit? A Look at Vancouver, BC — A City That Figured It Out Years Ago (Seattle Times, WA – Paywall Advisory)

ALLIGATORS IN THE SEWER – DIVERSIONS

A Heartbreaking Story with a Heartwarming Finale: Cat Walks 12 Miles to Get Home to Family – Then They Ask Shelter to Euthanize Him

Watch This Guy Try to Eat 117-Year-Old Beef from an Army Ration

She Wore a Dinosaur Puppet During a Military Oath. It Got Her & a Colonel Removed from the Job.

Neighborhood Calls for Help after Getting Buried in Tumbleweed Takeover

SONG OF THE DAY

Sons of the Pioneers – Tumbling Tumbleweeds

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LINKS & PAYWALL ADVISORY

Links in the news digest lead to current stories. Media organizations update their websites regularly, which may result in broken links. There may be paywall barriers, unless you are willing to fork over some dough or if you have a clean browser history.