Tag Archives: Natural Resources

Boy, 8, rescued after being buried under sand at northern Indiana park

Emergency crews in northern Indiana have found a boy who fell into a hole in the sand near the Lake Michigan shoreline near Mount Baldy in Michigan City.

The boy’s condition isn’t known. The News Dispatch of Michigan City reports he was taken to Franciscan St. Anthony Health Medical Center.

They 8-year-old boy fell into the hole Friday around 4:30 p.m. Central Time. He was buried under 11 feet of sand a few hours later.

A spokesman National Park Service, Bruce Rowe, says the boy’s family saw the boy after he had fallen into the hole and tried to dig him out.

Michigan City police, fire and Department of Natural Resources used heavy equipment to try to find the child.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Groups: Tanzania gov't kicking Maasai off land

Activists say Tanzania‘s government is preparing to kick Maasai tribesmen off their land near the country’s most famous wildlife park to allow a company from the United Arab Emirates to use the land for hunting.

Tanzania‘s Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism announced last week it is shrinking the size of the Loliondo Game Controlled Areas.

Sarah Gilbertz of Survival International said the land is leased to the Ortello Business Corporation of the United Arab Emirates to use for trophy hunting.

Will Davies, spokesman for the activist group Avaaz, said up to 68,000 Maasai villagers could be driven off their land. Avaaz posted a petition on its website to help the Maasai. It had more than 1.1 million signatures Friday.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

The Utica's Potential Glimpsed in Chesapeake's Results

By Arjun Sreekumar, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

After discovering the Utica Shale in 2010, Chesapeake Energy was initially highly optimistic about the play’s hydrocarbon potential. Though it has since dialed back its expectations, its most recent well results in the play are highly encouraging.

Chesapeake remains the largest leasehold owner in the play, commanding roughly 1 million net acres. It is also by far the most active driller, having drilled more than 240 wells to date – representing about three-quarters of all wells drilled in the entire play.  

However, due to infrastructure constraints, the company is selling production from just 54 of those wells and is therefore only producing 75 million cubic feet of gas equivalent per day net to the company.  

Chesapeake expects infrastructure constraints to ease substantially, which it reckons should allow for a substantial ramp-up in production.

Infrastructure additions bode well for Utica production
A few of the coming improvements in gas processing infrastructure will include Dominion‘s natrium processing plant in Marshall County, W.V. – expected to go on line shortly – and three processing trains at Momentum’s Kensington plant in Columbiana County, Ohio, two of which are expected to be operational before the end of the year.

Chesapeake is not alone in pointing out the Utica’s lack of processing infrastructure as a major hindrance. Several operators, including CONSOL Energy , have cited infrastructure constraints as the single biggest reason for Utica producers’ reluctance in bringing new wells on line.

But that looks set to change shortly, as a handful of companies are eager to provide Utica producers with the infrastructure they so desperately require. For instance, midstream company Williams Partners , through a 48% stake in a privately held company, plans on shelling out roughly $380 million over the next couple of years on a joint venture with Dominion that will provide pipelines and processing services to Utica producers.

Chesapeake’s Utica wells
As evidence of the play’s potential, acting CEO and COO Steve Dixon highlighted recent well results in Carroll County, Ohio: “We drilled six wells from a common pad with average 24-hour stricted test rates of 1250 BOE per day, which includes 310 barrels of oil. 200 barrels of NGL with ethane not recovered and 4.4 mmcf of natural gas per day. This is a flowing tubing pressures exceeding 3000 [PSI].”

He added that well production data recently submitted to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, in compliance with the department’s annual disclosure of Ohio production data, is “not indicative of the productive capacity of the initial wells drilled.” 

Assuming the timely start-up of crucial gas processing infrastructure in subsequent months, Chesapeake reckons it can produce more than 330 million cubic feet of gas equivalent or 55,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day from the Utica by year’s end. That implies production would more than quadruple from current levels.

What next?
Chesapeake’s operations in the Utica this year will be focused primarily on drilling within the play’s wet gas …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Landslide affects 34 homes on scenic Washington island

Residents of a hillside overlooking scenic Puget Sound heard the thunder of a large landslide Wednesday that knocked one home off its foundation, and isolated or threatened more than two dozen others on Whidbey Island, about 50 miles north of Seattle.

No one was injured when the slide broke loose about 4 a.m. in the Ledgewood community. Thirty-four homes were ordered evacuated.

After geologists made a preliminary assessment, residents of about 15 homes higher up the hillside were told Wednesday evening that they could return, said Central Whidbey Fire and Rescue Chief Ed Hartin. Seventeen homes were evacuated along that road and officials are still concerned about two, Hartin said.

An older man who escaped from the damaged home was evacuated by rescuers in an all-terrain vehicle, Hartin said. Rescuers reached the man by cutting across property owned by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. Ballmer’s property was not threatened by the slide, the chief said.

Ballmer was not available for comment, Microsoft spokesman Pete Wootton said Wednesday night.

Some people were completely cut off from their properties.

Many of the homes are summer cabins or weekend getaways and were unoccupied. Some are larger, upscale properties and others are more modest dwellings.

Eleven people from 16 homes along a road close to the water were evacuated by boat because the road was blocked by the landslide, Hartin said.

Officials remain “quite concerned” about two houses in that area in addition to the one knocked off its foundation. Those 16 homes remained evacuated late Wednesday.

“Being cut off from the road, water and power,” residents had to leave, Island County Sheriff Mark Brown said earlier. “It’s a pretty massive mudslide.”

Another 20 to 25 people were evacuated from the 17 homes higher up the hill.

The slide area remains unstable.

“This afternoon, small bits were sloughing off the bluff,” the chief said. “There’s no guarantee that will continue to be small amounts.”

A geotechnical engineer working for Island County and state Department of Natural Resources geologists took a preliminary look at the area Wednesday and hoped to complete a fuller assessment Thursday.

Area residents were briefed on the status of their homes at a meeting Wednesday night.

There has been no significant rain in recent days, but the area has been prone to slides in the past.

“The west side of the island is prone to slides because of soil conditions and water movement in the ground,” Hartin said.

“We have no specific cause as to `why here, why now, why this big.’ “

The slide area extends about 400 to 500 yards across the hillside and down 600 or 700 yards to the water, Hartin said.

Residents who heard the slide about eight miles south of Coupeville described it to KOMO-TV as sounding like thunder.

“It was a mix of rumbling and snapping trees,” Hartin said. “We were hearing the same thing when we arrived.”

Whidbey Island is about 35 miles long, north to south, and just a mile or two wide in places east to west.

A ferry ride away from the Seattle area, the island offers picturesque farm and water views and …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Nearly 3 dozen homes evacuated in Wash. landslide

Geologists and engineers are assessing the stability of a scenic Puget Sound area after a large landside thundered down a hillside, knocking one house off its foundation and threatening others.

That heavily damaged home and 33 others were ordered evacuated after the slide broke loose early Wednesday in the Ledgewood community on Whidbey Island, about 50 miles north of Seattle.

No one was injured.

After geologists took an initial look, residents of about 15 homes higher up the hillside were told Wednesday evening that they could return, said Central Whidbey Fire and Rescue Chief Ed Hartin. Seventeen homes were evacuated along that road and officials were still concerned about two, Hartin said.

Eleven people from 16 homes along a road close to the water were evacuated by boat because the road was blocked by the landslide, Hartin said.

Officials remain concerned about two houses in that area in addition to the one knocked off its foundation. Those 16 homes remained evacuated late Wednesday.

An older man who escaped from the damaged home was evacuated by rescuers in an all-terrain vehicle, Hartin said. Rescuers reached the man by cutting across property belonging to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer. Ballmer’s property was not threatened by the slide, the chief said.

Ballmer was not available for comment, Microsoft spokesman Pete Wootton said Wednesday night.

Many of the homes are summer cabins or weekend getaways and were unoccupied. Some are larger, upscale properties and others are more modest dwellings.

The slide area remains unstable.

A geotechnical engineer working for Island County and state Department of Natural Resources geologists took a preliminary look at the area Wednesday and hoped to complete a fuller assessment Thursday.

Area residents were briefed on the status of their homes at a meeting Wednesday night.

There has been no significant rain in recent days, but the area has been prone to slides in the past.

“The west side of the island … is prone to slides because of soil conditions and water …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Police search for boy suspects in Ga. baby killing

Police were combing school records and canvassing a coastal Georgia neighborhood Friday for a pair of suspects between 10 and 15 years old accused of killing a baby in a stroller and wounding his mother in an attempted robbery.

The mother, Sherry West, told WAWS-TV that two boys approached her and demanded money Thursday morning while she was walking near her home in Brunswick, about 80 miles south of Savannah.

West said she insisted she didn’t have any money and tried to protect her son, Antonio, before one of the boys opened fire.

“I put my arms over my baby and he shoves me, and then he shot my baby right in the head,” West said.

West was shot in the leg.

“This is obviously a terrible day in Brunswick,” Brunswick Mayor Bryan Thompson said. “Please call if you know something. You are complicit in this crime.”

Police spokesman Todd Rhodes gave few details about the investigation Friday, but said no weapon has been found and that investigators were checking school records for leads.

Several people in the neighborhood called 911 after they heard the gunshots fired, but Rhodes said investigators believed that the mother was the only witness to what happened. Rhodes described the neighborhood as safe

“Understand this: There is no clear motive right now,” he said.

He urged anyone with information to call Brunswick police. There is a $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction.

Officers from a SWAT team checked vacant houses as investigators tried to find possible witnesses. The Georgia Department of Natural Resources provided a helicopter for the search. A sketch artist from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation was being sent to Brunswick.

“We will not rest until somebody has been arrested for this senseless act,” Rhodes said.

The boy’s father, Louis Santiago, told the TV station he wishes he could have been there to protect his family.

“He was special,” Santiago said. “He had the bluest, bluest eyes.”

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Wisconsin limits use of nude beach to cut down on sex, drugs

Wisconsin authorities announced Tuesday they will shut down one of nation’s most popular nude beaches on weekdays after struggling for years to curtail sex and drugs on the sandbar and surrounding woods.

Nudists from around the country have been traveling to the public beach on the Wisconsin River near Mazomanie, about 25 miles northwest of Madison, for decades as word spread that prosecutors in ultra-liberal Dane County wouldn’t go after anyone for showing skin. But visitors haven’t stopped at just stripping down. They’ve been slipping off into the woods for trysts and drugs.

Authorities say that’s crossing the line, but they haven’t been able to stop the shenanigans. Their frustration reached a tipping point Tuesday, when the state Department of Natural Resources announced it will close the beach, the islands immediately off it and the surrounding woods to the public on weekdays, when wardens say troublemakers tend to operate unseen. The closures begin immediately. The area will remain open on weekends, though.

Bob Morton, executive director of the Austin, Tex.-based Naturist Action Committee, which lobbies on behalf of nudists, has visited the beach several times. He criticized the DNR for not consulting with beachgoers before closing the area.

“Honestly, we’re on their side when it comes to enforcing things that are lewd and lascivious,” Morton said. “There’s something to be said about consulting the users of the place. There’s got to be more to this somewhere.”

Nate Kroeplin, who supervises DNR law enforcement in Dane County, said wardens reviewed data on citations and determined most violations happen on weekdays, when fewer people are around to police each other’s behavior. Of the 92 citations wardens issued for disorderly conduct or drugs in the beach area between 2008 and 2012, 83 were given on weekdays, he said.

“Obviously we’re disappointed when we have to shut any portion of our property down,” he said. “But our ultimate goal is to have a safe place anybody can feel comfortable using. And with the current activity going on down there, that’s just not the case.”

The beach has been a problem for wardens for years. The DNR purchased the area in 1949 in an effort to open up more land for public hunting, fishing and recreation. Droves of nudists claimed the beach as their own, though, emboldened by local prosecutors’ indifference. Wisconsin law makes exposing one’s genitals a misdemeanor, but a long line of Dane County district attorneys have said naked people must cause some kind of disturbance before they can be prosecuted. The DNR estimates as many as 70,000 people, some from as far away as Florida, have visited the beach some summers.

With all the skin has come sex and drugs. Warden arrest reports tell graphic stories of oral sex and mutual masturbation.

The agency closed the area at night and banned beach camping in the late 1990s. Authorities also installed a gate blocking vehicles in hopes of stopping people from driving down to the beach in search of quick sex.

In 2007, wardens closed off parts of the woods around the beach …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Wisconsin’s Nude Beach Closure Due To Insane Amount Of Sex, Drugs

By The Huffington Post News Editors

MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin officials say they will close down a well-known nude beach on weekdays to reduce problems with outdoor sex and drug use.

Nudists from around the country have been traveling to the beach near Mazomanie for decades, and the state Department of Natural Resources has been struggling for years to curtail sex and drug use there. Wardens arrested 26 people for illicit sex and 16 people for drugs during just nine days of surveillance in 2011.

Read More…
More on Nude

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Wis. limits use of nude beach to reduce sex, drugs

Wisconsin officials say they will close down a well-known nude beach on weekdays to reduce problems with outdoor sex and drug use.

Nudists from around the country have been traveling to the beach near Mazomanie for decades, and the state Department of Natural Resources has been struggling for years to curtail sex and drug use there. Wardens arrested 26 people for illicit sex and 16 people for drugs during just nine days of surveillance in 2011.

The agency announced Tuesday it will close the beach, surrounding islands and wooded areas on weekdays beginning immediately. Warden Nate Kroeplin says that’s when most of the illegal activity takes place.

The beach will remain open on weekends from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

IceWEB Engages Source Capital Group

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

IceWEB Engages Source Capital Group

-Seasoned Investment Bankers to Advise on M&A Transactions-

STERLING, Va.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– IceWEB, Inc. (OTC BB:IWEB), an award-winning Unified Data Storage appliance provider for cloud and virtual environments that features highly secure, scalableIceBOXTMPrivate and Hybrid Cloud solutions, announced today that the Company has engaged Source Capital Group, Inc., (SCG) a boutique investment banking firm based in Westport, CT focused on Communications, Clean Tech, Natural Resources and Energy industry verticals. As part of its mandate, Source Capital will advise IceWEB on potential merger and acquisition transactions.

“We look forward to benefiting from Source Capital‘s industry knowledge and depth of experience as they serve as an advisor on our M&A activity,” stated IceWEB’s CEO, Rob Howe. “With SCG‘s deep knowledge and expertise in investment banking, along with proficiency in our industry, we know the firm will be able to guide us well in strategically positioning our company. In fact, in just a matter of several business days, we have already held discussions with a number of potential candidates for merger, acquisition and/or joint venture which could dramatically accelerate our model and position us well for significant growth.”

Vik Grover, CFA, Director of SCG‘s TMT Practice, has over 15 years experience in the Communications field. Before working in investment banking, Grover was with Thomas Weisel Partners and Needham & Co. as a Senior Research Analyst covering Communications Services, including Internet service providers (ISPs), voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) and Internet infrastructure.

“The cloud services market is literally erupting with growth. A sea change is at hand, evidenced by a tidal wave of traffic shifting from the desktop and enterprise LAN and WAN environments to the cloud. The marriage of IceWEB’s low cost storage software solution for private clouds and BYOD to CTC’s Tier I Network Access Point (NAP) and broadband access business positions the combined companies well for superior growth during the coming years.,” Grover stated.

For more information please call 800-465-4637 or visit www.IceWEB.com. To become part of the Company’s e-mail list for industry updates and press releases, please send an e-mail to ir@iceweb.com.

This press release may contain forward-looking statements, which are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. In some cases you can identify those so-called “forward looking statements” by words such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “expects,” “plans,” “targets,” “believes,” “anticipates,” “estimates,” “predicts,” “potential,” or “continue” or …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Orosur Mining Inc.: Appointment of Director

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Orosur Mining Inc.: Appointment of Director

SANTIAGO, Chile–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Orosur Mining Inc (‘OMI‘ or the ‘Company’) (TSX: OMI) (AIM: OMI), the South American focused gold explorer and producer, today announces the appointment of a new Non-Executive Director, Rafael Vergara, 49, who lives in Santiago, Chile.

Rafael Vergara is a partner of the Santiago law firm, Carey y Cía. and head of their Natural Resources, Energy and Environment Group. His practice focuses on natural resources, mining, water rights, energy, environment, surface lands, project financing, corporate/commercial, municipal and planning, health and medicines.

Since 1996, Mr. Vergara has been Professor of Mining Law at the Universidad de Chile, and from 2003 at the Universidad de Los Andes. He has given special courses on mining law organized by the Judiciary Academy of Chile, for judges and members of the Courts of Appeals. He has also presented papers on Chilean energy and natural resources regulations at numerous meetings, both in Chile and abroad. Currently he is member of the panel of the Arbitration Center of the Santiago Chamber of Commerce.

Mr. Vergara is also a member of the Chilean Bar Association, of the legal committee of the National Mining Association (SONAMI), of the Inter-Pacific Bar Association, of the International Bar Association, of the Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation, and of the informal association Abogados Mineros Latinoamericanos (AMLA).

Tony Shearer, Chairman, said: “I am delighted to welcome Rafael to the Board. He brings with him a wealth of expertise in mining and the law in South America, and will be an excellent addition to the Board as we focus on bringing value to shareholders.”

The Board of the Company now comprises Tony Shearer as Chairman with Rafael Vergara, Eric Roth, Roger Davey, Julio Porteiro (all independent Non-Executive Directors), Ignacio Salazar (Chief Financial Officer) and David Fowler (Chief Executive).

Save as disclosed in the Appendix below, there is no other information required to be disclosed under Schedule Two, paragraph (g) of the AIM Rules for Companies.

Appendix

Information provided in accordance with paragraph (g) of Schedule 2 to the AIM rules:

1. Details of full name and age: Mr. Rafael Vergara, aged 49

2. Names of all companies and partnerships of which the director has been a director or partner at any time in the previous five years, indicating …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance