California hydropower plant forced to shut down as water levels fall at Lake Oroville
CNN
A major California hydroelectric power plant has been forced to shut down due to low water levels for the first time since it opened in 1967, officials said Thursday, as the state grapples with an unrelenting drought.
The decision to shut down the Edward Hyatt Power Plant at Lake Oroville -- the state's second-largest reservoir -- comes after drought and heat exacerbated by the climate crisis caused lake water levels to plunge to all-time lows. "This is just one of many unprecedented impacts we are experiencing in California as a result of our climate-induced drought," California Department of Water Resources Director Karla Nemeth said Thursday in a news release. "California and much of the western part of the United States are experiencing the impacts of accelerated climate change including record-low reservoir levels due to dramatically reduced runoff this spring."Venezuelan authorities are investigating opposition leader Maria Corina Machado for alleged treason after she expressed support for a US bipartisan bill that seeks to block Washington from doing business with any entity that has commercial ties with the government of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro.
Tulsi Gabbard, Donald Trump’s pick to lead the intelligence community, was briefly placed on a Transportation Security Administration list that prompts additional security screening before flights after her overseas travel patterns and foreign connections triggered a government algorithm earlier this year, three sources familiar with the matter told CNN.