Mose Buchele
Senior Correspondent, Energy & EnvironmentMose Buchele focuses on energy and environmental reporting at KUT. He has been on staff at KUT since 2009, covering local and state issues. Mose has also worked as a blogger on politics and an education reporter at his hometown paper in Western Massachusetts. He holds master's degrees in Latin American Studies and Journalism from UT Austin. You can email him at mbuchele@kut.org.
-
Dr. Vivek Goswami, a cardiologist with the Austin Heart Hospital, says doctors used to blame cold weather on the uptick in heart-related ER visits. But research has pointed to other factors.
-
Un panel de jueces ha dicho que las grandes compañías eléctricas no pueden ser consideradas responsables por no suministrar electricidad durante el apagón de 2021. La razón es el mercado energético desregulado de Texas.
-
A panel of judges has said that big power companies cannot be held liable for failure to provide electricity during the 2021 blackout. The reason is Texas’ deregulated energy market.
-
Dos enormes tormentas invernales han puesto al descubierto la creciente vulnerabilidad de las redes eléctricas estadounidenses, y se acaba el tiempo para reducir el riesgo este año.
-
Two massive winter storms have laid bare the increased vulnerability of U.S. power grids, and time is running out to reduce the risk for this year.
-
While still relatively uncommon, sightings of bald eagles have increased dramatically around Austin over the last 10 years.
-
El anuncio de normas de conservación del agua en medio de la peor sequía de Austin en más de un siglo no pareció tener ningún impacto en el uso del agua, según los datos.
-
The announcement of water conservation rules amid the worst Austin drought in over a century appeared to have no impact on water use, according to data.
-
Climate change is creating giant temperature swings from infrastructure-crippling freezes in winter to record streaks of 100-plus-degree days in the summer in Austin. How might we adapt our immediate environment, backyards, parks, etc., to mitigate the effects of the larger changes at work.KUT Considers: Climate Change and You is a live discussion with Andrea DeLong-Amaya of the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, arborist Roy Johnson from St. Edward's University, landscape architect Jennifer Orr of Studio Balcones, and John Hart Asher host Austin PBS’ "The Central Texas Gardener." Moderated by Mose Buchele. Recorded November 14, 2023, at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center.
-
Fewer butterflies have made the migration to Mexico this year, and they seem in less of a hurry to do so. Researchers believe climate change is contributing to the disruptions.