PA town says no to zoning for industrial park

tatamy road industrial park
Nazareth Area Intermediate School’s parking lot is visible next to the land Upper Nazareth supervisors voted against rezoning Wednesday night.

By Ryan Gaylor, Lehigh Valley News

UPPER NAZARETH TWP., Pa. — A proposed industrial park will not go forward after the Upper Nazareth Township Board of Supervisors voted Wednesday against zoning changes for the project.

About 50 people came to the meeting, where township resident Becky Bartlett gave the board a petition opposing rezoning she said included signatures from “over 130” township residents.

Of the township residents who spoke, the overwhelming majority opposed the zoning change.

Speakers cited an already traffic-choked Tatamy Rd., the proposed development’s proximity to Nazareth Area Intermediate School, and risks of the sinkhole-prone geology beneath and around the site.

Representatives for the developer suggested they may still pursue the project in the future, after negotiations allowing the township to set binding conditions for the project through zoning rules.

For now, most of the 52-acre property next to Nazareth Area Intermediate School along Tatamy Rd. will remain mostly zoned for medium-density residential development, allowing single-family homes, small apartment buildings, townhomes, and other uses.

The Northeast of the approximately T-shaped lot is zoned for extractive industries like the adjacent quarry.

It would have been the eighth project by Lehigh Valley Industrial Park, a nonprofit whose developments of the same name include a vast section of the former Bethlehem Steel plant.

Read the full story here


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Bloomberg Daily: Today’s Notes from COP28

By Will Kennedy, Bloomberg News

The most important visitor to the UAE today didn’t come anywhere near the Blue Zone. Vladimir Putin made his first trip to the Middle East since he invaded Ukraine and energy was top of the list.

His touchdown right in the middle of the biggest diplomatic event the UAE has ever hosted – where a pledge to phase down fossil fuels is the key negotiating call for many – was a real-world demonstration of the primacy the black stuff still holds in the region’s affairs. The Russian president plans to stop off in Riyadh, too, as the three OPEC+ heavyweights try to demonstrate unity.

Back at the Expo, most delegates were focused on tomorrow’s mid-COP rest day – a break from the thousands of steps racked up daily walking to, from, and around the giant site. People were debating whether to hit the beach, the giant Dubai Mall or take an 800-meter ride up the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building.

Business resumes on Friday and the second week of COP is where the negotiations take center stage. There are plenty of fights ahead. As well as the inclusion of language on the phase down of fossil fuels, COP28 CEO Adnan Amin told Bloomberg News there’s a lot of work still to do on climate finance and adaptation as the presidency tries to bridge gaps between the priorities of advanced and developing economies.

For all the anxiety about the role of fossil fuels, the UAE’s fondness for splashy announcements, and the creeping commerciality of COP, there have been significant moments in the first week.

Loss and damage got done on day one, the pledge to triple renewables has momentum and, if it’s followed through, a package on methane could mean material reductions in emissions.

America’s John Kerry has been an energetic presence all week and the veteran politician struck an upbeat tone at a mid-afternoon presser.

“We’ve had a pretty damn good week here in Dubai already,” he said. “We have some tough issues next week, but I think we have people of good faith who know that this is an international negotiation of consequence. And people will measure who steps up.”

More from COP
Kerry backs a fossil fuel phase out. The world also needs carbon capture technology to reach net zero climate targets by mid-century, the US climate envoy says.

Russia welcomes a US-led nuclear power capacity push. “Without nuclear energy it is impossible to achieve climate goals,” Deputy Economy Minister Vladimir Ilyichev says.

Do you know your NDCs from CCS? From the “Paris Agreement” to “peak emissions” and the “global stocktake,” here’s everything you need to know but have been too afraid to ask.
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Failed reservation pipeline protests led this native American to solar

For decades, Native Americans were reliant on the US government to bring them power. Now, that may be changing.

Indigenized Energy Cody Two Bears founded Indigenized Energy, a native-led energy company installing solar farms for tribal nations in the US (Credit: Indigenized Energy)Indigenized Energy Cody Two Bears founded Indigenized Energy, a native-led energy company installing solar farms for tribal nations in the US (Credit: Indigenized Energy)

By Lucy Sherriff BBC Features Correspondent

It was at Standing Rock, as he watched a fellow protester be cuffed and manhandled into a police car, that Cody Two Bears, a member of the Sioux tribe in North Dakota, decided he would build a solar farm.

“I realized I didn’t want to just talk about it, protest about it,” he says, reflecting on the months-long protests that took place in 2016, to prevent the Dakota Access Pipeline from being built on sacred tribal land. “I wanted to be about it.”­

At the time, Two Bears was on the tribal council of the Cannon Ball community of Standing Rock. He was a key member in organizing the pipeline protests, which had hoped to prevent a 1,172 mile (1,886km) long underground pipe from transporting crude oil from North Dakota to Illinois. The pipeline was eventually built despite multiple appeals to have the line shut down. However, a lawsuit brought by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe was successful, requiring a complete environmental review of the pipeline.

“I learned about the impacts of fossil fuels on communities like ours, who don’t really have a voice,” says Two Bears. “And it seems these large infrastructural projects always happen in places of low-status communities. And one came to my backyard.”

Organisations across the US are training Native American tribes how to install solar panels in a bid to bring jobs and power to reservations (Credit: Indigenized Energy)

Read the full story here


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Waste haulers seek New York rate cap increase due to rising costs

Waste Connections truck in New York
Waste Connections is one of multiple companies asking New York’s Business Integrity Commission to raise maximum price rates. The image by Eden, Janine and Jim is licensed under CC BY 2.0


By Cole Rosengren, Lead Editor, Waste Dive

New York haulers are calling for the city’s commercial waste rate cap to increase by at least 9% to help offset rising costs on multiple fronts. The current maximum price allowed is $24.21 per cubic yard or $15.89 per 100 pounds.

Comments from multiple companies cited a 9% increase in the Producer Price Index’s solid waste collection category since September 2022, along with rising costs related to disposal, labor, commercial containerization requirements, and an upcoming congestion pricing system.

Waste Connections, the National Waste & Recycling Association’s local chapter, Mr. T Carting, Century Waste Services, M&M Sanitation, and D&D Carting all weighed in following a recent hearing by the city’s Business Integrity Commission. 

Haulers throughout the industry have been raising prices to keep up with inflation and related costs in recent years, but in New York City that ability is more limited due to a regulatory process. Last year, the BIC approved a 9% increase in June and a 7% increase in October, the first time it had done so twice in one year.

The agency is required to hold a hearing on this issue every other year, but it is not obligated to make adjustments to the rate cap. In the past, adjustments have generally come multiple months after the hearings.

Read the full story here


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National greenhouse gas monitoring strategy unveiled

President Joe Biden delivers remarks during a climate event.
U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks during a climate event at the White House complex on November 14, 2023 in Washington, DC. Win McNamee via Getty Images


By Zoya Mirza, ESG Dive Editor

The White House announced on Wednesday a national system to measure, monitor, and share information related to greenhouse gas emissions, aimed at accelerating efforts to reduce the country’s carbon footprint and helping it reach its net-zero goal by 2050.

Related greenhouse gas news:
NASA, Partners Launch US Greenhouse Gas Center

The National Strategy to Advance an Integrated U.S. Greenhouse Gas Measurement, Monitoring, and Information System will be an interagency effort based on a set of national objectives to help integrate efforts by federal government agencies and non-federal entities, including city, state, and tribal governments, NGOs and the private sector.

The strategy includes improving activity-based and atmospheric-based emissions quantification and estimates; making data on greenhouse gas emissions more accessible and interoperable; and supporting the development of science-based standards to ensure consistent and accurate emissions measurements.

The national framework arrived a day before the COP28 climate summit, which President Joe Biden will not be attending — a decision that has been met with criticism, given that climate change is a cornerstone of the president’s policy agenda and his approaching reelection bid. The White House announced Wednesday that Vice President Kamala Harris would attend the summit instead.

Read the full story here


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Oregon rules on what is recyclable and what’s not

In addition to standardizing what can be collected curbside and through special programs, the new rules define “responsible” end markets and require PROs to manage materials accordingly.

Two workers in yellow hard hats stand over a conveyor belt full of recyclable materials, primarily plastics, in an industrial facility
Workers sort paper and plastic waste at Far West Recycling on Oct. 30, 2017, in Hillsboro, Oregon. Natalie Behring via Getty Images

By Megan Quinn, Waste Dive

Oregon’s Environmental Quality Commission has adopted a statewide list of items accepted for recycling and defined “responsible end markets” for such materials. These are major steps in implementing the state’s sweeping extended producer responsibility for packaging law passed in 2021.

The commission, a rulemaking board of the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, also approved numerous other rules related to the EPR law, known as the Recycling Modernization Act, on Nov. 16. Many of these rules, such as obligations for producer responsibility organizations and collection targets for specific materials, go into effect in 2025 or later.

DEQ still has plenty to do before the law can be fully implemented. A future round of rulemaking in 2024 will determine more details such as how to establish a “livable wage” for MRF employees and how to determine new operating and performance requirements for MRFs, among other details.

Oregon DEQ has been hashing out details of how to implement the state’s multifaceted EPR law since 2022. The law calls for most packaging producers to become members of a producer responsibility organization by 2025. Local governments will be able to use producer funding for improvements such as collection services and facility upgrades.

One part of the law is to create a statewide list of materials accepted for recycling, which is meant to reduce confusion about what can and cannot be recycled, DEQ has said. The approved list has several parts: One is comprised of items that local governments must collect, either through collection routes or at depots, while another part indicates the types of items for which producer responsibility organizations will need to arrange separate collection strategies. Some of the items on these sub-lists are allowed to be collected commingled.

The list was finalized after months of stakeholder meetings and hundreds of public comment submissions. Items that local governments will be required to collect curbside or at collection depots include cardboard, aluminum cans, most kinds of plastic bottles and tubs, and steel cans. The list also includes scrap metal, polycoated cartons, molded pulp packaging, and other items.

PROs will be required to provide separate recycling services for some other types of items, such as aerosol packaging, blocks of white expanded polystyrene foam, larger HDPE pails, PE film, and single-use liquid fuel canisters.

PROs will be able to suggest other materials to be added to these lists as part of the program plan. PROs will need to provide evidence that proposed materials meet the requirements of the law, or it could show how a PRO’s investment or other actions could help that material meet the requirements, said David Allaway, senior policy analyst with Oregon DEQ. 

Read the full story here


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