Environment

Portland State professor and team to get millions for wave energy testing off Oregon coast

BY: - February 1, 2022

The U.S. Department of Energy is putting $25 million into eight projects from teams across the country, including one in Oregon, that could advance technology to turn ocean waves into electricity.  They’ll be the first round of projects tested at PacWave, a new wave-energy test facility off the coast of Newport that was developed by […]

Some of the most powerful and consistent winds in the world are located off the southwest Oregon coast, according to the Oregon Department of Energy.

State Energy Department exploring potential for floating offshore wind farms

BY: - January 25, 2022

Oregon joins California, Maine and countries such as Norway, Portugal and Japan in exploring a future of deep-water floating wind farms as a source of clean energy.  The state Energy Department recently published a draft study looking into the challenges and benefits of generating up to three gigawatts of energy each year from deep-water floating […]

Thieves stealing water for grow operations could face tougher Oregon penalties

BY: - January 24, 2022

A bill from the House Committee On Agriculture, Land Use, and Water will tackle increasing instances of water theft for illegal cannabis operations in the state. State Rep. Ken Helm, D-Washington County, introduced the bill that would empower the director of the state Water Resources Department to seek court-issued search warrants to investigate water theft.  […]

Forest Service in ‘paradigm shift’ to use logging, controlled burns to prevent wildfires

BY: - January 18, 2022

WASHINGTON –  The Biden administration will announce Tuesday it is using $3 billion from last year’s infrastructure law to revamp the federal approach to wildfire management, introducing a 10-year plan to deal with the large swaths of the West scientists consider most at risk of destructive blazes.  Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, a former Iowa governor, is […]

COMMENTARY
THIS MIGHT BE SINGLE USE

The Klamath Basin has two possible fates – a report explores where each takes the area

BY: - January 14, 2022

Here’s a recipe for concentrated depression. The embattled and seriously troubled Klamath Basin, a center of social and environmental pathologies for two decades and more, facing a future, three decades hence, where climate change could make conditions far worse. You could spin a dystopian novel from that. Or you could tell a more optimistic story. […]

DEQ fines Port of Morrow $1.3 million for ‘reckless’ pumping of nitrate-laced water on farms

BY: and - January 11, 2022

State officials said Tuesday that the Port of Morrow in northeast Oregon for years has spread excessive amounts of nitrate-laced wastewater on area farmlands in a way that contaminates groundwater and was “reckless” in doing so. The state Department of Environmental Quality made that finding in announcing one of its largest pollution fines ever, levying […]

Medical marijuana was approved by Oregon voters in 1998, and the possession and use of recreational marijuana has been legal in the state since mid-2015.

Oregon Department of Agriculture enforces new federal hemp rules for state growers

BY: - January 7, 2022

Hemp growers in the state will now need to abide by several new federal regulations that will be overseen by the Oregon Department of Agriculture.  The changes come at a time of growing concerns over illegal marijuana operations in parts of southern Oregon. Both hemp and marijuana are cannabis plants, similar in appearance and smell […]

Snow plow

Hazardous conditions curtail travel in parts of the state

BY: - January 5, 2022

Snow and ice are hammering parts of the state, while temperatures warm in others, creating a mix of hazardous driving conditions. “It’s a little bit of everything,” said Bobbi Doan, spokesperson for the Office of Emergency Management. “Where they don’t have snow and ice, they have heavy rain.”  The office issued a warning to the […]

Electric vehicle charging

State doubles rebate on electric vehicles for low and moderate income Oregonians

BY: - January 5, 2022

Beginning this year, qualifying Oregonians will get higher rebates for buying an electric car or a plug-in hybrid. The Department of Environmental Quality announced this week that it has doubled the refund under a program for lower-income buyers from $2,500 to $5,000. Individuals have to earn less than $52,000 a year; the income cap for […]

Drought cracks soil between crop rows

Some Democrats push to rescue climate plan in Biden spending package

BY: - January 4, 2022

WASHINGTON – A group of congressional Democrats on Tuesday called for preserving the climate portions of President Joe Biden’s stalled domestic spending bill as Democrats in the U.S. Senate rewrite the measure. U.S. Sens. Brian Schatz of Hawaii, Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, Tina Smith of Minnesota and John Hickenlooper of Colorado, along with Reps. […]

A snow plow works on clearing Oregon 11 between Pendleton to Washington state

Snow, wind and ice shut parts of 10 highways in eastern Oregon

BY: - January 3, 2022

Early Monday, wind whipped through the Columbia River Gorge as snow fell and ice formed on Interstate 84. The Oregon Department of Transportation had about 20 people working on the freeway east of Troutdale, trying to clear it up.  Plows pushed away snow while crews applied salt, de-icer and sand. But that wasn’t enough to […]

With China closed off as recycling outlet, Oregon puts task force to work on tightening laws

BY: - December 29, 2021

Buy a bottle of dish soap, a jug of milk or a takeout container of Chinese food, and you’ll find an embossed triangular symbol of three arrows around a number. The chasing arrows, a relic of recycling laws passed decades ago, would appear to indicate that an item could be dropped in a curbside recycling […]