Guest blogger Christine Grant spent six months abroad studying biking in the world’s great cycling cities. Read the 10 lessons she learned, including: “It’s the infrastructure, stupid!”, “It’s safer than a sofa,” and ”Turn streets into backyards.” Read them all, and see her photos from around the world.
1. A useful plan to put BCs ferries on new course
Vancouver Sun | Transportation
2. Port of St. Helens approves coal export
The Oregonian | Coal
3. CA air board to vote on landmark electric-car rules
San Jose Mercury News | Electric Cars
4. TriMet considering major fare changes
The Oregonian | Transit
5. Homeless vet population falling
USA Today | Housing
6. Waning subsidies for clean energy projects
New York Times | Energy
7. Some WA wheat farmers back GMO labeling
The Seattle Times | Food
8. Portland’s cabbies ain’t got it so good
Portland Mercury | Economy
9. Views: Does California need high-speed rail?
New York Times | Transit
10. How to manage US forests, version 3.1
New York Times | Forests
Weekend Reading 1/27/12
Editor’s note: We’re curious what readers think of this series. Is it useful? What do you like most? How can we make it better? Leave a note in comments.
Eric dP:
My top recommendation this week goes to James Wells’ righteous rant at Daily Kos, “Pretty Much the Dumbest Idea Ever.” Wells unleashes a real fire-breather on the Northwest coal export plans:
The plan is to dig up two trillion pounds of rocks and
The Cleverness of the “Barrel Fee”
If you’re out to raise money for transportation projects, one of the more clever methods is the so-called “barrel fee” that is the centerpiece of Governor Gregoire’s new transportation package. It’s structured in such a way that it minimizes impacts on Washington by effectively off-loading the costs to oil companies and out-of-state drivers. In fact, my back-of-the-envelope estimate is that for every dollar residents pay, the state will net roughly $2.20 in revenue.
Now, whether this is a good thing or a bad thing depends on your point of view. read more »
What Coal Dust Looks Like in Alaska
We’ve already seen how coal dust looks near export terminals at Point Roberts and Prince Rupert, British Columbia. Now let’s take a gander at the export facility at Seward, Alaska.
As a 2010 article in the Anchorage Daily News calls it:
When the north wind blows in Seward, dust flies off a large pile of coal and
Recent Coal Export Trends: Q3 2011
Here’s a look at the latest coal report from the US EIA, taking us up through the third quarter of 2011. In this chart, you see the past 15 years of quarterly data.
I’m showing Customs Districts here, not ports. The Port of Seattle does not move coal. But some coal does get exported out of the Seattle Customs District region by way of the rail crossing at Blaine, Washington. It is, by all accounts, Powder River Basin coal heading to BC’s Westshore Terminal … read more »


