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January 8, 2008

Make Iraq a Green Zone

Filed under: International, Renewable Energy — Laura B. @ 3:09 pm

Read the full story at SustainableBusiness.com.

There is no good solution to the pain of Iraq, and there may be no good or sufficient solution to the enormously greater problem of atmospheric carbon and climate change. Mitigating climate change must be at the core of everything our society does for the foreseeable future – including the way the U.S. does foreign policy and foreign assistance. That includes America’s plans for ending the war in Iraq and addressing the challenges of the Middle East.

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Real Estate Brokers Learn Green

Filed under: Green Building — Laura B. @ 3:07 pm

Read the full story at SustainableBusiness.com.

As more green buildings come on the market and as more tenants and homeowners demand them, the realtor community has taken notice. Now viewed as the next big trend in the industry, green building was the theme at this year’s Northeast Real Estate Conference & Expo. 200 realtors attended an introductory seminar on green real estate and clearly wanted more.

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ThinkPark: Tokyo’s First Step Toward Green Urbanism

Filed under: Green Building, International — Laura B. @ 2:58 pm

Read the full story from SustainableBusiness.com.

The developers of this new Japanese highrise took a chance by adding green building elements to their design. With nearly full tenancy on opening last month, these pioneers have blazed a trail for others to follow.

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Greensburg, Kansas Commits to LEED Platinum

Filed under: Green Building — Laura B. @ 2:56 pm

Read the full story from SustainableBusiness.com.

The city of Greensburg, Kansas has passed a resolution to certify all city-owned buildings LEED® Platinum, making it the first city in the U.S. to pass such a resolution. LEED Platinum is the highest rating a building can achieve under the USGBC’s LEED Green Building Rating System.

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Survey Shows Increasing Practice of Sustainable Design

Filed under: Green Building — Laura B. @ 2:56 pm

Read the full story from SustainableBusiness.com.

It wasn’t long ago that green building was held up because clients weren’t demanding it. That seems to have changed according to an American Institute of Architects survey.

The 2007 Autodesk/AIA Green Index, an annual survey, shows that green building has taken a firm hold on the industry and has captured the attention of both architects and their clients. The survey reports 70% of architects say client demand is the leading driver of green building and that the primary reason these owners and developers are demanding greener buildings is for reduced operating costs. Architects are responding by significantly increasing their use of sustainable elements such as high-efficiency HVAC systems, recycled building materials and using software to model energy usage.

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Electronics Industry May Be Cleaning Up Its Act

Filed under: Computing/Consumer electronics, Electronics Industry — Laura B. @ 2:54 pm

Read the full story from SustainableBusiness.com.

For years environmentalists have criticized the electronics industry for the amount of waste and toxic materials it introduces into he environment. But recent announcements show that the industry may finally be reacting to the sea change of public opinion that seems to be driving green initiatives in industries across the board.

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Survey: Automotive Industry Recognizing Change

Filed under: Automotive industry, Transportation — Laura B. @ 2:53 pm

Read the full story from SustainableBusiness.com.

The auto industry appears to finally be shifting its focus away from heavy SUVs and trucks after several years of increasing fuel prices have affected consumer habits and new legislation in the U.S. and abroad are changing the playing field.

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Climate Champion

Filed under: Climate Change — Laura B. @ 2:52 pm

Read the full story in Plenty Magazine.

Fire insurance? Check. Climate insurance? Not yet. Nobel Prize winner Terry Root says it’s time for that to change

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Green Garage

Filed under: Green Lifestyle, Transportation — Laura B. @ 2:49 pm

Read the full story in Plenty Magazine.

An auto repair shop in San Francisco caters almost exclusively to hybrids — and their eco-obsessed owners

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Go Team: Getting Bottled Water Out of Kids’ Sports

Filed under: Green Lifestyle, Schools — Laura B. @ 2:48 pm

Read the full commentary in E: The Environmental Magazine.

In my town and most of the towns where my kids’ teams have played, there aren’t any recycling bins for bottles. We can certainly encourage our towns and leagues to make recycling a priority. But there’s actually a much better solution, one that will make a significant impact on our environment, locally and globally: Reduce the amount of bottled water and bottled sports drinks our kids consume.

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Reduce Costs by Using Low Impact Development Practices

Filed under: Smart Growth, Water — Laura B. @ 2:44 pm

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has released a new report Reducing Stormwater Costs through Low Impact Development (LID) Strategies and Practices, which contains 17 case studies from across North America that show the economic viability of LID practices. Using these practices in construction projects can lower costs while improving environmental results.

LID practices are innovative stormwater management practices to manage urban stormwater runoff at its source. The goal is to mimic the way water moved through an area before it was developed by using design techniques that infiltrate, evapotranspirate, and reuse runoff close to its source. Some common LID practices include rain gardens, grassed swales, cisterns, rain barrels, permeable pavements and green roofs. LID practices increasingly are used by communities across the country to help protect and restore water quality.

The report highlights examples that, in most cases, reduce project costs while improving environmental performance. Total capital savings ranged from 15 to 80 percent, with a few exceptions in which LID project costs were higher than conventional stormwater management costs. As LID practices become more common, it is likely that they will become cheaper to use.

For a copy of the report: http://www.epa.gov/owow/nps/lid/costs07/

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A+ for Energy

Filed under: Energy, Funding Opportunities, Schools — Laura B. @ 11:59 am

The A+ for Energy® program was developed by BP to recognize teachers for innovation and excellence in teaching energy and/or energy conservation in the classroom. Any public or private preK-12 teacher currently teaching in an accredited or licensed school, in one of the eligible program locations, is encouraged to apply. The application deadline is March 7, 2008.

BP will award up to $4 million in grants and scholarships to preK-12 teachers for innovative classroom, after-school, extra-curricular, or summer projects focused on energy and/or energy conservation aligned with the application criteria. Grants will be awarded directly to teachers, reflecting the budget request submitted with the application.

Everything you need to apply, including a checklist of what to attach with your application, can be found in the “How to apply” section of the website.

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Cell Phone Recycling is an Easy Call

Filed under: Computing/Consumer electronics, Recycling — Laura B. @ 11:47 am

The nation’s leading cell phone makers, service providers, and retailers have teamed up with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to answer America’s call for easy cell phone recycling. As part of EPA’s Plug-In to eCycling program, partners supporting the cell phone recycling campaign include AT&T Wireless, Best Buy, LG Electronics, Motorola, Nokia, Office Depot, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Sprint, Staples, and T-Mobile.

“Thanks to our Plug-In partners’ efforts, recycling an old cell phone has become a quick and easy way for Americans to help protect the environment,” said Susan Bodine, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response. “By dropping it off at a store or sending it through the mail, Americans have more recycling options today than ever before.”

To kick-off the campaign, EPA released today a series of print public service announcements, “Recycle Your Cell Phone. It’s An Easy Call,” which highlight the convenience and environmental and social benefits of recycling a cell phone. EPA also introduced a podcast that addresses many common questions on cell phone recycling.

EPA started the campaign because many consumers still do not know where or how they can recycle their unwanted cell phones. Consequently, less than 20 percent of unwanted cell phones are recycled each year.

Recycling a cell phone offers an opportunity for everyone to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions, save energy, and conserve natural resources. An estimated 100 to 130 million cell phones are no longer being used, many languishing in storage. If Americans recycled 100 million phones, we could save enough upstream energy to power more than 194,000 U.S. households for a year. If consumers were able to reuse those 100 million cell phones, the environmental savings would be even greater, saving enough energy to power more than 370,000 U.S. homes each year.

Plug-In To eCycling is a voluntary partnership between EPA and electronics manufacturers, retailers, and service providers to offer consumers more opportunities to donate or recycle their used electronics. In 2007, as part of their commitment to the program, retailers and electronics manufacturers voluntarily recycled more than 47 million pounds of electronics, mostly computers and televisions. For example, in 2007 Staples and Office Depot both launched in-store electronics take back programs across the continental U.S. and Sony teamed up with Waste Management Inc. to expand local TV recycling opportunities. Efforts like these have helped the Plug-In program to recycle more than 142 million pounds of electronics since 2003.

Information about the cell phone recycling campaign
http://www.epa.gov/cellphone

Information about the Plug-In to eCycling program
http://www.epa.gov/plug-in/

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Study Links Carbon Dioxide Emissions to Mortality

Filed under: Air, Environmental Health, Research — Laura B. @ 11:11 am

Read the full story in Environmental Protection.

A Stanford University scientist said he has outlined the direct links between increased levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and increases in human mortality, using a state-of-the-art computer model of the atmosphere that incorporates scores of physical and chemical environmental processes.

According to Mark Jacobson, the new study details how, for each increase of 1 degree Celsius caused by carbon dioxide, the resulting air pollution would lead annually to about 1,000 additional deaths and many more cases of respiratory illness and asthma in the United States. Worldwide, upward of 20,000 air-pollution-related deaths per year per degree Celsius may be due to this greenhouse gas, the researcher stated.

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U.S. Government Revises Research Plan for Climate Change

Filed under: Climate Change, Research — Laura B. @ 11:09 am

Read the full story in Environmental Protection.

The U.S. Climate Change Science Program Revised Research Plan Summary is available in the Federal Register and online for review and comment by the public. Comments received by Feb. 26 will be considered during the preparation of the final revised research plan and the forthcoming scientific assessment.

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The Home Energy Saver

Filed under: Energy, Green Building, Green Lifestyle, Schools, Web Resources — Laura B. @ 11:07 am

The Home Energy Saver is designed to help consumers identify the best ways to save energy in their homes, and find the resources to make the savings happen. The tool quickly computes a home’s energy use on-line based on methods developed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Users can estimate how much energy and money can be saved and how much emissions can be reduced by implementing energy-efficiency improvements. All end uses (heating, cooling, major appliances, lighting, and miscellaneous uses) are included.

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New brownfield laws will help small communities

Filed under: Brownfields, Great Lakes Region — Laura B. @ 10:05 am

Read the full story in the Bay City Times.

Recent changes to Michigan brownfield laws may awaken sleeping giants in Essexville and other smaller communities.

Up until the changes became law in late December, only 100 so-called “core communities” could take advantage of tools that allow developers to be reimbursed for cleaning up or demolishing old industrial properties -Â called brownfields.

Now, every community in Michigan can use tax incentives to redevelop such properties, including places like Essexville, which wasn’t among the 100 communities covered under the old law.

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Pondering wind energy possibilities

Filed under: Great Lakes Region, Wind Energy — Laura B. @ 10:04 am

Read the full story in the Muskegon Chronicle.

Muskegon’s future might be blowing in the wind. Literally. And it could mean hundreds of new jobs and the development of energy that is both plentiful and clean.

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Minnesota: Alternative fuel

Filed under: Biofuels, Great Lakes Region — Laura B. @ 10:02 am

Read the full story in the Grand Forks Herald.

Twin Cities’ residents who took a record 77 millions bus rides last year can thank their rural cousins for providing an increasing amount of the fuel.

Soybean fields that dot the Minnesota landscape from Canada to Iowa more and more are the source of an oil that when mixed with diesel fuels the buses.

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States eye stricter curbs on Great Lakes water

Filed under: Great Lakes Region, Water — Laura B. @ 10:00 am

Read the full story in the Christian Science Monitor.

Lake levels reached record lows last year, and the region worries that fast-growing states and communities will try to grab its water.

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Is California’s Environmental Policy Worth Fighting For?

Filed under: Climate Change, Policy — Laura B. @ 9:57 am

Read the full post in the Freakonomics blog.

…from an economic standpoint, is Schwarzenegger’s move a good idea for the state? In their new working paper “Too Good to Be True? An Examination of Three Economic Assessments of California Climate Change Policy,” the economists Robert Stavins, Judson Jaffe, and Todd Schatzki examine California’s Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, which purports to reduce the state’s total emissions by 25 percent, bringing emissions back to their 1990 level by 2020. The authors review in detail the studies used as justification for enacting the policy, all of which found that the state could meet its 2020 target at no net economic cost.

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Climate Change and Frog Deaths

Filed under: Climate Change, Research — Laura B. @ 9:55 am

Read the full story in The Scientist.

Biologists agree that amphibian populations are undergoing massive extinctions – they just can’t agree on why.

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Climate Change

Filed under: Climate Change, Research — Laura B. @ 9:54 am

Read the full story in The Scientist.

As Earth’s climate warms, the effects are showing up in the planet’s biological systems, from the lowliest soil microbes to the grandest coral reefs. We set five of our writers loose to find research probing this dynamic. They turned up studies exploring everything from shell formation of tiny marine organisms to fruit fly genetics to coral immunity to the dynamics of soil decomposition to the spread of human diseases. We also enlisted the help of University of Alaska, Fairbanks climate researcher F. Stuart Chapin to put the affects of climate change in context. It’s a two-way street, he writes: Just as global warming affects living things, those living things can magnify the effects on the atmosphere. Chapin also suggests where climate science and policy need to go in the future.

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EPA Plan for New Risk Reviews Opens Door to Intensified Scrutiny

Filed under: Environment, Metal Finishing Industry, Regulation — Laura B. @ 9:52 am

Read the full story in Metal Finishing.

EPA’s just unveiled plan for reviewing a score of new chemicals under its Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) program—which forms the basis for many regulatory standards—is opening the door to the agency facing close public scrutiny over what data to include in the reviews even before the administration unveils a long-awaited framework for reviewing agency risk studies that will likely codify opportunities for public input. That’s according to a newly released Inside EPA Weekly report.

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Metal Finishing Organic Guidebook Now Available Online

Filed under: Metal Finishing Industry, Web Resources — Laura B. @ 9:51 am

Metal Finishing is pleased to announce the launch of its first-ever digital edition of the 2007/2008 Organic Finishing Guidebook & Directory, the most comprehensive reference source for painters and powder coaters.

The digital edition, which can be accessed by visit www.metalfinishing.com and clicking on the appropriate side tab or the more prominent banner ad, represents an extension of the print version. It is designed to make access to information on paint and powder coating products and technology even easier. Here’s a glimpse of what it entails: a listing more than 800 companies and their products; chapters on a variety of paint and powder coating topics, including pre-treatment, coating materials, application methods, systems and equipment, stripping, and testing.

An added bonus: Viewers can click on the website addresses on the ads, which takes them right to the advertisers’ websites! Ditto for any ad that has an e-mail address; Microsoft Outlook will pop up, thereby enabling the viewer to e-mail a question or information request to a particular company. Plus, anyone can go straight to an article from the table of contents simply by hovering the cursor over a particular article and then clicking on the headline.

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The latest issue of GreenBuzz

Filed under: Green Business — Laura B. @ 9:50 am

For a full-color, graphic version of this newsletter, go to
http://www.greenbiz.com/enewsletter.

McDonald’s Uses Restaurants as Green Laboratories
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36474
Last year, the fast food chain experimented with a range of environmental improvements at stores around the world, from renewable energy in Europe to green buildings in South America.

Small Businesses to Get Energy Efficiency Help
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36471
The energy bill signed into law last month includes provisions that will offer low-cost loans to small businesses working on energy efficiency projects for their operations.

Toyota: A Hybrid Model for Every Vehicle Series
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36484
Days after designating a Mississippi manufacturing facility a model of sustainable practices, Toyota’s president said the company plans to offer a hybrid model in every vehicle series.

U.C. San Diego Joins Chicago Climate Exchange
http://www.greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36481
As part of a larger, overall conservation strategy, UCSD will be the first West Coast university to take part in the country’s only voluntary, legally binding trading system for greenhouse gases.

GM Launches Future Tech Blog
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36476
General Motors launched a blog Thursday that will highlight next-generation technologies and environment-related discussion.

LexisNexis Climate Change Center Offers News and Analysis
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36468
The new Environmental Law and Climate Change Center covers state and federal court decisions, regulations and more.

Biggest U.K. Supercomputer Can Be Used to Model Climate Change
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36475
HECToR operates at up to 60 teraflops and can be used to model climates, financial markets and biological processes.

Nike, Gap Among Sustainability Reporting Finalists
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36473
Ceres and the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants have named the sustainability reports of 21 companies contenders for their seventh awards program.

Calif. Leads Legal Challenge Against EPA
http://greenbiz.com/news/news_third.cfm?NewsID=36469
California led a coalition of states and non-profits that sued the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Wednesday over its refusal to let the states set tougher auto-related greenhouse gas emissions regulations.

Understanding “green” business practices
http://www.greenbiz.com/toolbox/reports_third.cfm?LINKADVID=95835
This guide will look at how modern IT and communications can help your business to act in a more environmentally-friendly way. Making a difference is easier than you think.

A Five-Step Program for Sustainability
By John Davies
http://www.greenbiz.com/news/columns_third.cfm?NewsID=36478
Although countless news articles suggest that “business” as a whole is focused on sustainability, the reality is that this will only happen one company at a time. These five steps can get any organization on the path to green.

Democratizing Technology: Be Careful What You Wish For
By Brad Allenby
http://www.greenbiz.com/news/columns_third.cfm?NewsID=36479
The trend toward individual participation in all things technological will surely have some benefits, but given the reins, the public may choose its SUV desires over the planet’s hybrid needs.

CleanTech Investing: The Green Gold Rush
By GLOBE-Net
http://www.greenbiz.com/news/columns_third.cfm?NewsID=36480
Venture capitalists are increasingly investing large sums of money into the clean technology market and into businesses promoting renewable energy technologies and energy efficiency. As positive a development as this is, gold rushes are temporary phenomena, and many are concerned that this green bubble might burst just like the dotcom or housing bubbles of recent years.

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Solvay Indupa invests in sugar-cane-derived ethylene for PVC

Filed under: Biofuels, Plastics — Laura B. @ 9:09 am

Read the full story in Modern Plastics.

Solvay Indupa (Buenos Aires, Argentina), one of the largest polyvinyl chloride (PVC) suppliers in the Mercosur region, will invest a further $135 million to expand and increase the competitiveness of its PVC plant in Santo Andre, Brazil. This second stage of expansion, following the plan announced in August 2006, comprises the creation of an integrated plant to produce ethylene with ethanol originating from sugar cane. Ethylene and chlorine are the two main feedstocks needed to manufacture PVC.

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