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The pivotal role of a tiny hydropower plant in preserving the Colorado River's future

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Saturday, May 18, 2024

A sprawling water district that serves residents, ranchers and recreators on the Western Slope of the Rocky Mountains is preparing to invest a mammoth $98.5 million on a tiny hydropower plant in a bipartisan, multi-sectorial effort to help secure the Colorado River's future. In the coming weeks, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) is expected to sign into law a comprehensive water conservation bill that would include a $20 million state contribution through the Colorado Water Conservation Board to the overall purchase of the water rights associated with the Shoshone Generating Station. This sum would cover a significant share of the total purchase and sale agreement signed in December by the Colorado River Water Conservation District, which represents 15 counties on the Western Slope, with the Public Service Company of Colorado, a subsidiary of Xcel Energy. The deal has earned vast support from voices that would not usually come together as a united front: the farmers, whitewater rafters and environmental advocates who may have diverse motivations, but whose efforts could safeguard the river for its 40 million users downstream. "Every interest group out there in western Colorado who cares about the greater river — they see great advantages to preserving the flows on the river," Andy Mueller, general manager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District, told The Hill. The Shoshone station, a Glenwood Springs, Colo., mainstay since 1909, has a small capacity of just 15 megawatts but is "one of the oldest hydroelectric plants in western Colorado that relies on the river flow rather than water stored in a reservoir," according to Xcel. As a basis of comparison, the Glen Canyon Dam at Lake Powell has a capacity of 1,320 megawatts, while the Hoover Dam at Lake Mead has a capacity of 2,080 megawatts, according to the federal Bureau of Reclamation. Both of those facilities do rely on water stored in reservoirs. The importance of tiny Shoshone is tied to the Western concept of “water rights” that stems from the mid-19th century homesteading and gold rush era. Also known as "prior appropriation," this system was built upon a first-come, first-serve hierarchy and is not based on proximity to a river — meaning that those with more “junior” status are the first to give up water during a shortage. This approach allowed farmers, miners and other landowners to claim and divert water for “beneficial use,” such as irrigation, industry and power production. But if a decade passes without putting that right to beneficial use, the owner loses the title in what the Colorado Department of Water Resources deems a "water rights abandonment." Despite its small size, the Shoshone Generating Station also holds the Upper Colorado River's most senior "non-consumptive" water right, which dictates that every drop used by the power facility must go back into the river. But because Shoshone’s maintenance is expensive, Western Slope stakeholders have long feared that its rights could be sold to an upstream entity in the higher-populated Eastern Slope, resulting in a diversion of water that would otherwise flow downstream. However, if the purchase agreement is finalized, it would place the power station’s rights in the public’s hands: a senior appropriation from 1902 and a second, more junior allocation from 1929. The retention of Shoshone’s senior status, Mueller explained, would prevent the river from being "siphoned out of the headwaters." Secure river flow would also strengthen the fish population, supporting the survival of both sport fishing and endangered animals, he said. Mueller emphasized the need to further the success of a federal, state and community partnership initiative called the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program, which has helped revive floundering fish populations. A robust river would also give reliable access to high-quality resources to both farmers who irrigate their lands and cities that withdraw and then discharge treated water into the system, Mueller explained. The knock-on effects, he added, would persist downstream, by preventing cuts from the physical amount of water flowing “from the headwaters all the way to Lake Powell." “By preserving this right, we are assisting the functioning of the entire Colorado River system,” he said. The deadline for closing the transaction is Dec. 31, 2027, by which time the Colorado River District must not only secure all the necessary funding, but it also must negotiate what’s called "an instream flow agreement” with the Colorado Water Conservation Board. In simpler terms, the parties need to redefine what constitutes a "beneficial use” for the Shoshone water rights. While the Colorado River District plans to lease the water to Xcel for now, cessation of power generation for more than a decade would currently lead to a water rights abandonment.  The board has been approving instream flows, natural flows for environmental purposes, as a beneficial use since 1973.  But such authorizations must occur in one of Colorado's "water courts," specialized forums that preside over each of the state’s seven river basins. Mueller explained that the Colorado River District is now working with the state and plans to file a request in water court to add this new beneficiary to the existing decree, while maintaining the same 1902 senior appropriation date. Doing so, Mueller reiterated, would be vital for any future incident in which hydropower production is suspended. "This instream flow will remain in place and will keep the river functioning and flowing the exact same way that it has for the last 120 years," he said. Hattie Johnson, Southern Rockies restoration director for American Whitewater, echoed these sentiments, noting that "having a flowing, functioning, healthy river helps everybody.” Johnson, whose organization promotes river conservation and safe recreation, noted that such a waterway is “a fun one to paddle on,” emphasizing how those who do recreate on rivers “are empowered and excited to protect” them. As far as funding is concerned, the Colorado River District has collected a sizable number of pledges toward the $98.5 million total sales price — plus an additional $500,000 in transaction costs — but still has some fundraising to do. By the end of last month, the partners had raised $48.05 million, including the $20 million from the Colorado Water Conservation Board, $20 million from the district's Community Funding Partnership and the remainder from Western Slope communities. The buyers are hoping to secure the remaining $49 million through the Bureau of Reclamation, with $4 million possibly coming from Inflation Reduction Act funds designated for drought mitigation.  “We think there's incredible value to the federal government from this transaction,” Mueller said. Johnson, meanwhile, expressed hopes that the message of cross-sectoral support “is received across the board." Recognizing that there is still much to accomplish, she described the efforts to date as "a really cool example of what folks can do when they come together on something." The partnership to protect the Shoshone water rights developed following more than a century of debate and looming uncertainty over Eastern versus Western slope usage of the Colorado River. "The legal right to appropriate and transport water from one watershed to another has been attacked since statehood," water rights lawyer Jim Lochhead said in a 1987 article on the subject. Such challenges, he explained, stem back to an 1882 case in which judges recognized "Colorado's arid nature and the 'imperative necessity' of allowing diversion of water for beneficial use elsewhere." "The Eastern Slope is relatively arid, whereas the Western Slope provides a snowpack which sustains the entire Colorado River," Lochhead wrote.  Because the Eastern Slope also "holds the bulk of the state's population and economic activity," it has “outstripped its local water supply” with growth, causing officials to look toward the Western Slope for more resources. Part of the reason it is so important to the Colorado River District to secure the Shoshone rights is due precisely to these circumstances — concerns that in the case of a future sale, Front Range communities on the Eastern Slope might rush to ramp up their water security, Mueller explained. While Mueller credited Denver for already developing a robust water portfolio, he looked toward areas south of the capital, such as Douglas County, that are actively seeking alternate supplies. "Let me be really clear, we don't want to deprive any of our population centers or cities or industries of water — we understand how connected we are," Mueller said. "We also think there are responsible ways we can all develop, as we continue to grow to make sure that we live within the means of the Colorado River."

A sprawling water district that serves residents, ranchers and recreators on the Western Slope of the Rocky Mountains is preparing to invest a mammoth $98.5 million on a tiny hydropower plant in a bipartisan, multi-sectorial effort to help secure the Colorado River's future. In the coming weeks, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) is expected to...

A sprawling water district that serves residents, ranchers and recreators on the Western Slope of the Rocky Mountains is preparing to invest a mammoth $98.5 million on a tiny hydropower plant in a bipartisan, multi-sectorial effort to help secure the Colorado River's future.

In the coming weeks, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) is expected to sign into law a comprehensive water conservation bill that would include a $20 million state contribution through the Colorado Water Conservation Board to the overall purchase of the water rights associated with the Shoshone Generating Station.

This sum would cover a significant share of the total purchase and sale agreement signed in December by the Colorado River Water Conservation District, which represents 15 counties on the Western Slope, with the Public Service Company of Colorado, a subsidiary of Xcel Energy.

The deal has earned vast support from voices that would not usually come together as a united front: the farmers, whitewater rafters and environmental advocates who may have diverse motivations, but whose efforts could safeguard the river for its 40 million users downstream.

"Every interest group out there in western Colorado who cares about the greater river — they see great advantages to preserving the flows on the river," Andy Mueller, general manager of the Colorado River Water Conservation District, told The Hill.

The Shoshone station, a Glenwood Springs, Colo., mainstay since 1909, has a small capacity of just 15 megawatts but is "one of the oldest hydroelectric plants in western Colorado that relies on the river flow rather than water stored in a reservoir," according to Xcel.

As a basis of comparison, the Glen Canyon Dam at Lake Powell has a capacity of 1,320 megawatts, while the Hoover Dam at Lake Mead has a capacity of 2,080 megawatts, according to the federal Bureau of Reclamation. Both of those facilities do rely on water stored in reservoirs.

The importance of tiny Shoshone is tied to the Western concept of “water rights” that stems from the mid-19th century homesteading and gold rush era. Also known as "prior appropriation," this system was built upon a first-come, first-serve hierarchy and is not based on proximity to a river — meaning that those with more “junior” status are the first to give up water during a shortage.

This approach allowed farmers, miners and other landowners to claim and divert water for “beneficial use,” such as irrigation, industry and power production. But if a decade passes without putting that right to beneficial use, the owner loses the title in what the Colorado Department of Water Resources deems a "water rights abandonment."

Despite its small size, the Shoshone Generating Station also holds the Upper Colorado River's most senior "non-consumptive" water right, which dictates that every drop used by the power facility must go back into the river.

But because Shoshone’s maintenance is expensive, Western Slope stakeholders have long feared that its rights could be sold to an upstream entity in the higher-populated Eastern Slope, resulting in a diversion of water that would otherwise flow downstream.

However, if the purchase agreement is finalized, it would place the power station’s rights in the public’s hands: a senior appropriation from 1902 and a second, more junior allocation from 1929.

The retention of Shoshone’s senior status, Mueller explained, would prevent the river from being "siphoned out of the headwaters." Secure river flow would also strengthen the fish population, supporting the survival of both sport fishing and endangered animals, he said.

Mueller emphasized the need to further the success of a federal, state and community partnership initiative called the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program, which has helped revive floundering fish populations.

A robust river would also give reliable access to high-quality resources to both farmers who irrigate their lands and cities that withdraw and then discharge treated water into the system, Mueller explained. The knock-on effects, he added, would persist downstream, by preventing cuts from the physical amount of water flowing “from the headwaters all the way to Lake Powell."

“By preserving this right, we are assisting the functioning of the entire Colorado River system,” he said.

The deadline for closing the transaction is Dec. 31, 2027, by which time the Colorado River District must not only secure all the necessary funding, but it also must negotiate what’s called "an instream flow agreement” with the Colorado Water Conservation Board.

In simpler terms, the parties need to redefine what constitutes a "beneficial use” for the Shoshone water rights. While the Colorado River District plans to lease the water to Xcel for now, cessation of power generation for more than a decade would currently lead to a water rights abandonment. 

The board has been approving instream flows, natural flows for environmental purposes, as a beneficial use since 1973.  But such authorizations must occur in one of Colorado's "water courts," specialized forums that preside over each of the state’s seven river basins.

Mueller explained that the Colorado River District is now working with the state and plans to file a request in water court to add this new beneficiary to the existing decree, while maintaining the same 1902 senior appropriation date.

Doing so, Mueller reiterated, would be vital for any future incident in which hydropower production is suspended.

"This instream flow will remain in place and will keep the river functioning and flowing the exact same way that it has for the last 120 years," he said.

Hattie Johnson, Southern Rockies restoration director for American Whitewater, echoed these sentiments, noting that "having a flowing, functioning, healthy river helps everybody.”

Johnson, whose organization promotes river conservation and safe recreation, noted that such a waterway is “a fun one to paddle on,” emphasizing how those who do recreate on rivers “are empowered and excited to protect” them.

As far as funding is concerned, the Colorado River District has collected a sizable number of pledges toward the $98.5 million total sales price — plus an additional $500,000 in transaction costs — but still has some fundraising to do.

By the end of last month, the partners had raised $48.05 million, including the $20 million from the Colorado Water Conservation Board, $20 million from the district's Community Funding Partnership and the remainder from Western Slope communities.

The buyers are hoping to secure the remaining $49 million through the Bureau of Reclamation, with $4 million possibly coming from Inflation Reduction Act funds designated for drought mitigation. 

“We think there's incredible value to the federal government from this transaction,” Mueller said.

Johnson, meanwhile, expressed hopes that the message of cross-sectoral support “is received across the board." Recognizing that there is still much to accomplish, she described the efforts to date as "a really cool example of what folks can do when they come together on something."

The partnership to protect the Shoshone water rights developed following more than a century of debate and looming uncertainty over Eastern versus Western slope usage of the Colorado River.

"The legal right to appropriate and transport water from one watershed to another has been attacked since statehood," water rights lawyer Jim Lochhead said in a 1987 article on the subject.

Such challenges, he explained, stem back to an 1882 case in which judges recognized "Colorado's arid nature and the 'imperative necessity' of allowing diversion of water for beneficial use elsewhere."

"The Eastern Slope is relatively arid, whereas the Western Slope provides a snowpack which sustains the entire Colorado River," Lochhead wrote. 

Because the Eastern Slope also "holds the bulk of the state's population and economic activity," it has “outstripped its local water supply” with growth, causing officials to look toward the Western Slope for more resources.

Part of the reason it is so important to the Colorado River District to secure the Shoshone rights is due precisely to these circumstances — concerns that in the case of a future sale, Front Range communities on the Eastern Slope might rush to ramp up their water security, Mueller explained.

While Mueller credited Denver for already developing a robust water portfolio, he looked toward areas south of the capital, such as Douglas County, that are actively seeking alternate supplies.

"Let me be really clear, we don't want to deprive any of our population centers or cities or industries of water — we understand how connected we are," Mueller said.

"We also think there are responsible ways we can all develop, as we continue to grow to make sure that we live within the means of the Colorado River."

Read the full story here.
Photos courtesy of

South Korea's Mountain of Plastic Waste Shows Limits of Recycling

By Joyce LeeSEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea has won international praise for its recycling efforts, but as it prepares to host talks for a global...

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea has won international praise for its recycling efforts, but as it prepares to host talks for a global plastic waste agreement, experts say the country's approach highlights its limits.When the talks known as INC-5 kick off in Busan next week, debate is expected to centre around whether a U.N. treaty should seek to limit the amount of plastic being made in the first place.Opponents of such an approach, including major plastic and petrochemical producers like Saudi Arabia and China, have argued in previous rounds that countries should focus on less contentious topics, such as plastic waste management.South Korea says that it recycles 73% of its plastic waste, compared to about 5%-6% in the United States, and the country might seem to be a model for a waste management approach.The bi-monthly MIT Technology Review magazine has rated South Korea as "one of the world’s best recycling economies", and the only Asian country out of the top 10 on its Green Future Index in 2022.But environmental activists and members of the waste management industry say the recycling numbers don't tell the whole story.South Korea's claimed rate of 73% "is a false number, because it just counts plastic waste that arrived at the recycling screening facility - whether it is recycled, incinerated, or landfilled afterward, we don't know," said Seo Hee-won, a researcher at local activist group Climate Change Center.Greenpeace estimates South Korea recycles only 27% of its total plastic waste. The environment ministry says the definition of waste, recycling methods and statistical calculation vary from country to country, making it difficult to evaluate uniformly.South Korea's plastic waste generation increased from 9.6 million tonnes in 2019 to 12.6 million tonnes in 2022, a 31% jump in three years partly due to increased plastic packaging of food, gifts and other online orders that mushroomed during the pandemic, activists said. Data for 2023 has not been released.A significant amount of that plastic is not being recycled, according to industry and government sources and activists, sometimes for financial reasons.At a shuttered plastic recycling site in Asan, about 85 km (53 miles) south of Seoul, a mountain of about 19,000 tonnes of finely ground plastic waste is piled up untreated, emitting a slightly noxious smell. Local officials said the owner had run into money problems, but could not provide details."It will probably take more than 2-3 billion won ($1.43 million-$2.14 million) to remove," said an Asan regional government official. "The owner is believed unable to pay, so the cleanup is low priority for us."Reuters has reported that more than 90% of plastic waste gets dumped or incinerated because there is no cheap way to repurpose it, according to a 2017 study.South Korean government's regulations on single-use plastic products have also been criticised for being inconsistent. In November 2023, the environment ministry eased restrictions on single-use plastic including straws and bags, rolling back rules it had strengthened just a year earlier."South Korea lacks concrete goals toward reducing plastic use outright, and reusing plastic," said Hong Su-yeol, director of Resource Circulation Society and Economy Institute and an expert on the country's waste management.Nara Kim, a Seoul-based campaigner for plastic use reduction at Greenpeace, said South Korea's culture of valuing elaborate packaging of gifts and other items needs to change, while other activists pointed to the influence of the country's petrochemical producers."Companies are the ones that pay the money, the taxes," said a recycling industry official who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue, adding that this enabled them to wield influence. "The environment ministry is the weakest ministry in the government."The environment ministry said South Korea manages waste over the entire cycle from generation to recycling and final disposal.The government has made some moves to encourage Korea Inc to recycle, including its petrochemical industry that ranks fifth in global market share.President Yoon Suk Yeol said at the G-20 summit on Tuesday that "efforts to reduce plastic pollution must also be made" for sustainable development, and that his government will support next week's talks.The government has changed regulations to allow companies like leading petrochemical producer LG Chem to generate naphtha, its primary feedstock, by recycling plastic via pyrolysis. SK Chemicals' depolymerisation chemical recycling output has already been used in products such as water bottles as well as tyres for high-end EVs.Pyrolysis involves heating waste plastic to extremely high temperatures causing it to break down into molecules that can be repurposed as a fuel or to create second-life plastic products. But the process is costly, and there is also criticism that it increases carbon emissions."Companies have to be behind this," said Jorg Weberndorfer, Minister Counsellor at the trade section of the EU Delegation to South Korea."You need companies who really believe in this and want to have this change. I think there should be an alliance between public authorities and companies."(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)Copyright 2024 Thomson Reuters.

Japan's Mount Fuji Eyes China-Made Tram to Transport Hikers, Source Says

By Mariko KatsumuraTOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese authorities seeking to reduce the carbon footprint and overcrowding at Mount Fuji will propose a...

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese authorities seeking to reduce the carbon footprint and overcrowding at Mount Fuji will propose a trackless, rubber-tyred tram system made by China's CRRC to transport climbers, a person with direct knowledge of the plan said.The new proposal, which has not been previously reported, would replace the original plan to build a light-rail system connecting the base to the fifth hiking station of the popular Yoshida Trail to the top after a local city and other parties, voiced concern over its environmental and cost impact.Yamanashi Prefecture, home of the most popular route used by climbers of the 3,776-metre (12,3388-foot) volcano, is set to announce the plan soon, the person told Reuters, asking for anonymity because the information is not yet public.Mount Fuji, which straddles Yamanashi and Shizuoka prefectures, is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Japan, whose numbers have surged in recent years.Pollution from the constant stream of tourist buses and cars arriving at the fifth station, as well as overcrowding on the trails, have become headaches for authorities seeking to clean up the site, which Japanese people hold sacred.Mount Fuji was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2013, further boosting its appeal. But the distinction came on the condition that Japan reduce overcrowding, environmental harm from visitors, and fix the artificial landscape, such as the large parking lots constructed to accommodate tourists.Shanghai-listed CRRC's "Autonomous Rapid Transit" is a new-generation tram that uses magnetic road markings and can be operated unmanned.Yamanashi prefecture plans to use locally produced hydrogen to power the tram, the source said. The transit system is expected to slash the project's cost by as much as 40% from the roughly 140 billion yen ($895 million) estimated for the rail system, said the source.The new plan would allow the prefecture to use the existing Fuji Subaru Line toll road and prohibit the entry of all private vehicles and sightseeing buses, the person said. The prefecture hopes to conduct a pilot run as early as the next fiscal year starting in April.Yamanashi is also aiming to build a tram network that would extend to local municipalities and connect to a magnetic levitation rail system planned by Central Japan Railway in the 2030s, the person said.Yamanashi prefecture declined to comment on the plan.During the summer climbing season between July to September this year, the mountain hosted 204,316 climbers. Authorities have said they hoped to control the number of visitors through a public transit system.(Reporting by Mariko Katsumura; Editing by Chang-Ran Kim and Christian Schmollinger)Copyright 2024 Thomson Reuters.

‘The Mountain Wagtail’: How Pollution and Mining Are Destroying Kyrgyzstan

As mining operations destroy millennia-old glaciers, Kyrgyzstani director Begaly Nargozu’s new film reflects a disappearing landscape and culture. The post ‘The Mountain Wagtail’: How Pollution and Mining Are Destroying Kyrgyzstan appeared first on The Revelator.

Every winter young Altyn, the protagonist of Kyrgyzstani director Begaly Nargozu’s 2023 film The Mountain Wagtail, would mount her horse, leave her village in the valley, and head to the syrt, an unchanging landscape of snow and glaciers stretching across the mountaintops of Kyrgyzstan, to help her nomadic grandparents herd their yaks. Altyn’s innocent, kind-hearted nature — nurtured by the beauty of the icy landscape and her grandparents’ reverence for it — is tested when, in the twilight of her teenage years, she moves to the capital of Bishkek to attend university. Staying with her older sister, a fully urbanized entrepreneur with a disdain for all things rural, Altyn soon finds herself confronted by all the trappings and evils of modern-day society, from substance abuse and sexual assault to domestic violence and environmental pollution. The Mountain Wagtail premiered in 2023 and has recently played at ecology-themed Sprouts Film Festival in Amsterdam and other film festivals across Europe and Asia. Nargozu says his village, like Altyn’s unnamed hometown, is surrounded by “holy mountains which hundreds of people visit every day to pray and ask for a better life.” His tale of Altyn’s journey to the city echoes the journeys of many young Kyrgyzstani women as heavy industry and mining operations turn the countryside increasingly inhospitable. “Tons of dust rise into the air each day from mining development and settle on the surrounding glaciers,” he tells The Revelator. “Millions of cubes of ice are melted, billions of tons of harmful substances are poured into rivers. Every year, there are fewer pastures and grasslands. The traditional pastoral life of the highlands is being destroyed, and so people leave the mountains and go to the cities, where living conditions are poorer still.” In addition to a lack of affordable housing, unauthorized construction, and poor waste management, Bishkek’s air quality is among the worst in the world, resulting in roughly 4,000 premature deaths each year. Contributing factors range from factory and vehicle emissions to the country’s continued and widespread use of coal. Sharing the blame is Bishkek’s landfill, originally dug by the Soviet Union, which was too small to keep up with the city’s growing population and, as a result, regularly caught fire and filled the air with toxic fumes. (After years of struggling to procure international investment and circumvent government corruption, a new landfill opened in 2023.) Historically, says Nargozu, “the Kyrgyz did not treat the mountains as consumers; they did not look for valuable materials there, blowing up anything and everything. On the contrary, they worshiped and prayed to them, living for thousands of years without major problems with nature, in harmony.” According to Nargozu, it was only with the advent of the colonization of imperial Russia that the extraction of valuable metals and toxic substances from the Kyrgyz mountains on an industrial scale began. Official film poster for The Mountain Wagtail. The distinction at the center of The Mountain Wagtail isn’t between urban and rural but syrt and non-syrt. Altyn’s village, though isolated, pastoral, and idyllic by western standards, is presented as a kind of Bishkek writ small: a sign of the future that awaits the Kyrgyzstani countryside.  Only the syrt remains free of the spiritual corruption radiating from Bishkek. Up there, accompanied only by snow, sun, yaks, and an ecologist researching the melting glaciers, Altyn’s grandparents live in unceasing peace and happiness. The only couple in the film that treats one another with kindness and respect, Nargozu’s screenplay refers to them as “celestial beings.” But they are also an endangered species. The Mountain Wagtail’s mixed reception inside Kyrgyzstan reflects the hold heavy industry has on the country and its culture. When Nargozu showed the film at the Ala-Too cinema in the capital in 2023, he says it was warmly received by creatives and the intelligentsia. Government officials were less enthusiastic, though. When the film began receiving awards from international festivals, Nargozu said they asked him: “Why spread negativity about Kyrgyzstan throughout the world? We need to be more patriotic and show only our good side.” “It looks depressing,” Nargozu says of Kyrgyzstan’s future. “Every year we export tons and tons of pure gold, yet we remain among the poorest countries of the world. Should we continue to mine gold if — instead of happiness — it only brings us closer to environmental disaster?” In search of answers, he looks to the same place Altyn does when she feels lost — the syrt: “Maybe we need to live like our ancestors, protecting nature and the traditional, pastoral way of life of the mountaineers.” In The Mountain Wagtail, he uses the color white to symbolize the natural purity of the Mongu-Ata glacier as well as Altyn’s moral purity. “Just as rivers originate from mountain lakes and glaciers, so Altyn’s spiritual purity begins with her grandfather and grandmother. She is their spiritual heir,” Nargozu says. “The film begins with the snow-capped syrt and white-topped mountain peaks and ends at the Mongu-Ata glacier and the sacred silver lake Kumush-Kol. Such is the fate of Altyn, who descends from the snow-white mountains and, having gone through a series of trials in the city, returns to her own roots, to the traditional way of life and fundamental values ​​of her people.” Watch the trailer to Mountain Wagtail below: Trailer: The Mountain Wagtail | SproutsFF24 from Sprouts Film Festival on Vimeo. Scroll down to find our “Republish” button Previously in The Revelator: The Story of Plastic: New Film Exposes the Source of Our Plastic Crisis The post ‘The Mountain Wagtail’: How Pollution and Mining Are Destroying Kyrgyzstan appeared first on The Revelator.

Air quality alert issued for Oregon Saturday

On Friday at 11 p.m. an air quality alert was issued valid until Saturday at 8 p.m. for Tualatin Valley, West Hills and Chehalem Mountains, Inner Portland Metro, East Portland Metro and Outer Southeast Portland Metro.

On Friday at 11 p.m. an air quality alert was issued valid until Saturday at 8 p.m. for Tualatin Valley, West Hills and Chehalem Mountains, Inner Portland Metro, East Portland Metro and Outer Southeast Portland Metro."The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality has issued an Air Quality Advisory, which is in effect until 8 p.m. Saturday. An Air Quality Advisory for Ozone has been issued. High levels of ozone in the lower atmosphere in the region combined with forecasted conditions will cause air quality to reach unhealthy levels at times through 8 p.m. Saturday. Pollutants in smoke can cause burning eyes, runny nose, aggravate heart and lung diseases, and aggravate other serious health problems. Limit outdoor activities and keep children indoors if it is smoky. Please follow medical advice if you have a heart or lung condition," says the National Weather Service.Guidance for air quality alerts: Insights from the weather serviceWhen an air quality alert is in effect, following the weather service guidance is pivotal. Here are some simple tips from the weather service for safeguarding your well-being:Retreat indoors whenever feasible:If you can, take refuge indoors, especially if you have respiratory concerns, underlying health conditions, or belong to the senior or child demographics.Minimize outdoor exposure:When you can't avoid going outdoors, keep outdoor activities to the bare essentials. Reducing your time outdoors is the key.Mitigate pollution sources:Be mindful of activities that increase pollution, like driving cars, operating gas-powered lawnmowers, or using motorized vehicles. Limit their usage during air quality alerts.A no to open burning:Resist the urge to burn debris or any other materials during an air quality alert. This practice only adds to the air pollution problem.Stay informed:Keep yourself well-informed by tuning in to NOAA Weather Radio or your preferred weather news outlet. Staying in the loop empowers you to make informed decisions regarding outdoor engagements during air quality alerts.Respiratory health caution:If you have respiratory problems or underlying health conditions, exercise extra caution. These conditions can increase your vulnerability to adverse effects from poor air quality.By adhering to the recommendations from the weather service, you can enhance your safety during air quality alerts and reduce your exposure to potentially harmful pollutants. Stay vigilant, stay protected, and prioritize your health above all else.Advance Local Weather Alerts is a service provided by United Robots, which uses machine learning to compile the latest data from the National Weather Service.

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