News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Professor Carl Nivale Parade Report: Elks, Barkus, Mardi Paws, and more
SUMMARY: Good morning! I’m Professor Carl Nivale, here with your parade preview for March 9th. Today kicks off with the crew of Elks Orans at 11 a.m., celebrating their 90th anniversary with plenty of throws. Following them, the Mystic crew of Barkus will parade in the French Quarter at 2 p.m., featuring the 610 Stompers for the first time. Meanwhile, I will be at the Mardi Paws parade in Covington at 2 p.m., celebrating pets and their owners, with Grand Marshal NY the nutria. Additionally, the St. Patrick’s Day parade rolls in Old Town Sidell at 1 p.m. Happy parading!

Mardi Gras Expert Professor Carl Nivale has all the details on the parades rescheduled to roll Sunday, March 9, 2025,
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Strong storms possible tonight
SUMMARY: Strong storms are possible tonight across Southeast Louisiana, with showers and thunderstorms expected, particularly on the North Shore. A low-pressure system and frontal boundary are driving the stormy weather, which could bring large hail, isolated tornadoes, and damaging winds, though flooding is not anticipated. Temperatures will be in the 70s tonight, dropping into the 50s and 60s by morning. The severe weather threat is categorized as a level one marginal risk. Tomorrow’s weather will be cooler, with sunny conditions expected by Monday afternoon. Rain chances increase later in the week, particularly Thursday and Friday.

Strong storms possible tonight
Subscribe to WDSU on YouTube now for more: http://bit.ly/1n00vnY
Get more New Orleans news: http://www.wdsu.com
Like us: http://www.facebook.com/wdsutv
Follow us: http://twitter.com/wdsu
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wdsu6/
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Trump withdraws new pipeline rules inspired by CO2 leaks in Mississippi, Louisiana
Trump withdraws new pipeline rules inspired by CO2 leaks in Mississippi, Louisiana
by Tristan Baurick, Verite, Louisiana Illuminator
March 8, 2025
Nearly five years after a pipeline spewed poison gas across a Mississippi town, federal regulators appeared ready in recent weeks to institute new safety rules aimed at preventing similar accidents across the U.S.’s fast-growing network of carbon dioxide (CO2) pipelines.
But the proposed rules, unveiled five days before the end of Joe Biden’s presidency, were quietly derailed during the first weeks of President Donald Trump’s second term.
A federal pipeline safety official not authorized to speak publicly said the proposed rules were “withdrawn” in accordance with a Jan. 20 executive order that freezes all pending regulations and initiates a review process by Trump’s newly appointed agency leaders. Putting the pipeline rules in further doubt is a Feb. 19 executive order aimed at rooting out all regulations that are costly to “private parties” and impede economic development.
Trump’s choice to lead the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, which proposed the rules, is Paul Roberti, an attorney strongly backed by pipeline and energy industry groups. Roberti, who is awaiting U.S. Senate confirmation, oversaw PHMSA’s safety enforcement during Trump’s first term, a time marked by fewer citations and smaller fines than the Obama and Biden administrations.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Pipeline safety advocates still hope to push the Trump administration to approve the rules, which they say are critically important for reducing the risks of potentially deadly accidents across a growing number of states.
“It’s not dead yet,” said Paul Blackburn, an energy policy advisor for the Bold Alliance, an environmental group that tracks pipeline development. “It can be brought back by Trump, and I think the Trump administration should be pressured to do that.”
The more than 5,000 miles of CO2 pipelines in the U.S. are primarily used for enhanced oil recovery, a process that injects carbon dioxide into old oil reserves to squeeze out leftover deposits. Much of the current and predicted growth of the CO2 pipeline network is linked to the recent boom in carbon capture technologies, which allow industrial plants to store CO2 underground instead of releasing it into the air.
The CO2 pipeline network could top 66,000 miles – a thirteenfold increase – by 2050, according to a Princeton University-led study.
The Trump administration isn’t as supportive of carbon capture, but industry experts say growth will continue as companies try to meet state-level climate benchmarks.
While proponents say carbon capture will help address climate change, transporting pressurized CO2 comes with dangers, especially for rural stretches of the Midwest and Gulf Coast, where the network is concentrated.
CO2 can cause drowsiness, suffocation and sometimes death. Colorless, odorless, and heavier than air, carbon dioxide can travel undetected and at lethal concentrations over large distances.
The proposed rules would establish the first design, installation and maintenance requirements for CO2 pipelines. Companies operating pipelines would need to provide training to local police and fire departments on how to respond to CO2 leaks, and emergency communication with the public would need to be improved.
Operators would be required to plan for gas releases that could harm people within two miles of a pipeline. The proposed rules show that PHMSA finally recognizes that the threats from CO2 pipelines are different from oil and natural gas pipelines, which can spill, burn or explode, but don’t usually imperil people miles away, said Bill Caram, executive director of the Pipeline Safety Trust, a nonprofit watchdog group.
“These are relatively strong proposals,” he said. “Would these rules make CO2 pipelines completely safe? No. But it would modernize the pipelines.”
PHMSA currently has no specific standards for transporting CO2. Rules governing the CO2 pipeline network haven’t undergone significant review since 1991, according to the trust.
The proposed rules apply “lessons learned” from a 2020 pipeline rupture in Sataria, Miss., PHMSA officials said in an announcement on Jan. 15.
The rupture in the small community 30 miles northwest of Jackson forced about 200 Satartia residents to evacuate. Emergency responders found people passed out, disoriented and struggling to breathe. At least 45 people were treated at nearby hospitals.
“I have learned first-hand from affected communities in Mississippi and across America why we need stronger CO2 pipeline safety standards,” then-PHMSA Deputy Administrator Tristan Brown, a Biden appointee, said in a statement on Jan. 15. “These new requirements will be the strongest, most comprehensive standards for carbon dioxide transportation in the world and will set our nation on a safer path as we continue to address climate challenges.”
Accidental releases have occurred from CO2 pipelines 76 times since 2010, according to PHMSA data reviewed by Verite News. Of the more than 67,000 barrels of CO2 released over the past 15 years, the vast majority – about 54,000 barrels – came from pipelines owned by ExxonMobil subsidiary Denbury Inc.
Denbury operates the 925-mile pipeline network that failed in Satartia and more recently in southwest Louisiana. In April, a pipeline at a Denbury pump station near the Calcasieu Parish town of Sulphur ruptured, triggering road closures and a shelter-in-place advisory. Some residents reported feeling tired and light-headed, but local authorities reported no serious illnesses.
The pump station and pipeline weren’t equipped with alarms or other methods of alerting nearby residents when accidents occur.
Several Sulphur-area residents said they received no notice of the leak or became aware of it via Facebook posts more than an hour after the gas began to spread.
“There should have been alarms, and the whole community should have been notified,” Roishetta Ozane, a community organizer who lives near the station, told Verite in April. “I don’t trust the system we have at all.”
Unless the proposed rules are enacted, similar or worse accidents are likely, said Kenneth Clarkson, the trust’s communications director.
“In the absence of a rule, blatant regulatory shortfalls will remain, leaving the public fully exposed to the risks of CO2 pipelines,” he said.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
This article first appeared on Verite News New Orleans and is republished here under a Creative Commons license. PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: “https://veritenews.org/2025/03/07/trump-carbon-dioxide-pipeline-louisiana/”, urlref: window.location.href }); } }
Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.
The post Trump withdraws new pipeline rules inspired by CO2 leaks in Mississippi, Louisiana appeared first on lailluminator.com
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Numerous showers and an isolated thunderstorm Saturday
SUMMARY: Today is a weather impact day with cloudy skies, passing showers, and an isolated thunderstorm. Light to moderate rain is expected throughout the day, with a small chance of a stronger thunderstorm. A dense fog advisory is in effect until 10 AM, though visibility issues are minimal outside of Lakefront. Temperatures are warm, around 70°F, due to low pressure from the Gulf. By late afternoon and evening, showers will become more frequent, with some thunderstorm activity possible. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with scattered showers. Tomorrow, expect improving conditions, with some fog in the morning and decreasing clouds later.

Numerous showers and an isolated thunderstorm Saturday
Subscribe to WDSU on YouTube now for more: http://bit.ly/1n00vnY
Get more New Orleans news: http://www.wdsu.com
Like us: http://www.facebook.com/wdsutv
Follow us: http://twitter.com/wdsu
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wdsu6/
-
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed4 days ago
Remarkable Woman 2024: What Dawn Bradley-Fletcher has been up to over the year
-
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed3 days ago
March 6,2025: Rain and snow on the way
-
News from the South - Virginia News Feed6 days ago
Probation ends in termination for Va. FEMA worker caught in mass layoffs
-
News from the South - Texas News Feed4 days ago
Travis County DA failed to meet deadline to indict murder suspect | FOX 7 Austin
-
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed6 days ago
Confederate monument in Edenton will remain in place for now
-
Mississippi Today5 days ago
Key lawmaker reverses course, passes bill to give poor women earlier prenatal care
-
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed6 days ago
Timeline: Storms bring a risk of tornadoes, damaging winds to Oklahoma (March 3, 2025)
-
News from the South - South Carolina News Feed6 days ago
Ukraine’s Zelenskyy says end of war with Russia is ‘very, very far away’