The department is trying to keep up as it’s on track to break last year’s record of 929 building permits totaling nearly $358 million.
At the end of September, the department had already approved 856 permits totaling nearly $288 million.
The department is trying to keep up as it’s on track to break last year’s record of 929 building permits totaling nearly $358 million.
At the end of September, the department had already approved 856 permits totaling nearly $288 million.
Williston State College officially opened its new Learning Commons, a facility located in Stevens Hall. Formerly the college’s library, the Learning Commons is located on the second floor of the building and took months to fully renovate, creating a space which is conducive to studying and research.
According to a WSC press release, the new facility provides students with the latest technologies which they can work with and use in an environment that is not only functional, but comfortable as well. The facility is furnished with sofas surrounding a fireplace, tables and chairs where students can work in groups and a countertop outfitted with new technologies.Go to the link for the rest of the story; sounds like the only thing they need in the "Learning Commons" is a Starbucks.
Exxon Mobil Corporation, Royal Dutch Shell, and BP are among the six companies that have applied to the United States government for crude oil export licenses, says The Financial Times.
American exports could substantially affect oil trading patterns among North America, Europe and West Africa along with exerting pressure on prices of Brent in particular and other crudes.BP already has a license, I believe, to export US oil to Canada (recently announced, posted, if I recall correctly).
My database showed the following number of permits (may or may not include salt water disposal wells):The pace of permitting has increased significantly since June 1, 2012.
- 2012: 2,093 (est) -- based on 866 permits issued as of May 31, 2012
- 2011: 1,940
- 2010: 1,684
- 2009: 629
- 2008: 956
- 2007: 497
- 2006: 422
The Obama administration has formally adopted a plan to help create large-scale solar energy plants, offering incentives for solar developers to cluster projects on 285,000 acres of federal land in the western U.S and opening an additional 19 million acres of the Mojave Desert for new power plants.
The plan places 445 square miles of public land in play for utility-scale solar facilities. The program, announced Friday by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar at an event in Las Vegas, will apply to new projects only and not the 17 solar facilities already awarded permits or the 78 currently in the approval pipeline.Environmentalists should love this. No dual-use once those solar farms are in place. Solar panels preclude dual use. Desert tortoises will have lots of shade under those panels.