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File Abstract and Progress Report for 3rd Quarter, 2012
by Matthew Cimitile published Jan 24, 2013 last modified Sep 30, 2013 10:35 AM — filed under:
Abstract and progress report from the Vendor for the Energy Forecasts Project.
Located in Research / / Q3 2012 Reporting Materials and Reviews / Q3 2012 Reporting Materials from Vendor
File Troff document Q3 2012 Reviews By Technical Oversight Team
by Bridgett Costanzo published Jan 24, 2013 last modified Sep 30, 2013 11:37 AM — filed under:
This file contains the combined technical comments of TOT members for the Energy Forecasts project.
Located in Research / / Q3 2012 Reporting Materials and Reviews / Q3 2012 Reviews by TOT Members
Project chemical/x-pdb Assessing Forest Fragmentation from Marcellus Shale Gas Development
by Matthew Cimitile published May 10, 2013 last modified Jun 04, 2015 03:44 PM — filed under: , , , ,
Expansion of drilling sites and associated infrastructure to extract natural gas from the Marcellus shale deposits has the potential to significantly reduce existing forest cover across the Marcellus field and leave what remains in a fragmented state.
Located in Research
by Matthew Cimitile published Sep 22, 2016 — filed under: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
The Central Appalachia Prosperity Project is part of the Presidential Climate Action Project to develop policy recommendations on climate and energy security, with a focus on what the next President of the United States could accomplish using his or her executive authority. The Central Appalachian Project draws on the input of America's most innovative experts to produce policy and program recommendations that are sufficiently bold to expedite the region's transition to a clean energy economy. An important component of these recommendations has been better coordination of the efforts being made by all levels of government - federal, regional, state and local.
Located in Cultural Resources / Socioeconomics / Socio-economic Projects
HTML Tile text/texmacs Projects
by Matthew Cimitile published Mar 04, 2013 last modified May 20, 2019 06:32 PM — filed under:
Located in LP Members / / Appalachian Mountains Joint Venture / Appalachian Mountains Joint Venture Showcase
File PDF document Full Proposal: Assessing Future Energy Development Across the Appalachian Mountains
by Matthew Cimitile published Aug 31, 2012 last modified Jun 29, 2022 06:20 PM — filed under: , , , ,
Scientists will employ land use change build-out scenaria for future energy development demand to quantify future impacts on forest habitats across the Appalachian LCC. We propose to create maps of wind, oil and gas, and coal development potential for the entire study area and use these maps and published projections from federal and state land management agencies to model future build-out scenaria.
Located in LP Members / / Energy Forcasts Team / Background Project and Member Information
Development by Design
by Web Editor published Feb 19, 2012 last modified Aug 12, 2019 10:56 PM — filed under:
The Central Appalachians harbor some of the most biologically diverse temperate broad‐leaf forests in the world. These forests provide large interior forest habitats, migratory pathways, and nested rare communities. But new energy development is clearing and fragmenting these precious forests. This presentation provides a briefing related to planning, monitoring, and evaluating environmental impacts of marcellus shale drilling.
Located in Training / Videos and Webinars / Theme: Planning and Foundational Tools to Aid in Landscape-level Partner Products and Regional Initiatives
Video Octet Stream Salamanders - The Hidden Jewels of Appalachia
by Joe Milmoe published Oct 01, 2012 last modified Mar 04, 2022 03:41 PM — filed under: , , , , ,
If you want to hit paydirt the Appalachian region is the world’s salamander El Dorado—home to over 70 salamander species. The Appalachian region of the eastern United States is the world's epicenter for salamander biodiversity.
Located in Training / Videos and Webinars
Assessing Future Energy Development across the Appalachians
by Matthew Cimitile published Nov 13, 2014 last modified Mar 03, 2022 08:37 PM — filed under: , ,
The Nature Conservancy - with support from the FWS - has completed a study to assist policy makers, land management agencies, and industry in assessing potential future energy development and how that may overlap with biological and ecological values.
Located in Tools & Resources
File Fact Sheet: Assessing Future Energy Development Managers Guide
by Matthew Cimitile published Mar 05, 2015 last modified Feb 01, 2018 11:27 PM — filed under: , ,
Provides a general overview of the need for the Energy Assessment research, the major products and findings that came out of the project, and the relevance of the study, models, and tools to the resource management community.
Located in Tools & Resources / Assessing Future Energy Development