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June 2008
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June 5, 2008

Carbon Footprints Of Top 100 Metro Areas Researched By Brookings

Filed under: Climate Change, Publications — Laura B. @ 10:34 am

Read the full story at Environmental Leader.

Large metro areas offer greater energy and carbon efficiency than nonmetropolitan areas, and metro areas have development patterns that show promise for reducing carbon emissions, according to a new report (PDF) from The Brookings Institution. The report quantifies transportation and residential carbon emissions for the 100 largest U.S. metropolitan areas carbon profiles of the 100 here), finding that metro area residents have smaller carbon footprints than the average American, although metro footprints vary widely.

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How to be a “Green” converter

Filed under: Green Business, Printing Industry — Laura B. @ 10:23 am

Read the full story in Converting Magazine.

Cocktail-party conversation almost always includes those comments or questions meant to impress fellow attendees. But instead of talking about that new sailboat you just bought or hearing about where the best diving is on the Great Barrier Reef, you might just hear, “My carbon footprint is smaller than yours.”

From individuals to companies large and small, it seems as if the trendy focus today is on calling out your eco-status. No one wants to appear to be an energy glutton, a materials waster or (heaven forbid) an actual polluter, especially not businesses that are relying more and more on the positive marketing aspects of a “green” reputation.

But just exactly, how does one “do sustainability,” and for package printers and manufacturers serving consumer packaged-goods makers (CPGs), retailers and ultimately consumers, how does one do “green” converting? For the answer, the Sustainability in Packaging 2008 conference this spring, organized by Intertech/Pira and co-sponsored by Converting and Packaging Digest, provided the insights of a dozen plenary speakers and six breakout sessions ranging from green design and recycling to sustainability metrics and bioplastics.

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More Companies Give Employees Energy-Saving Incentives

Filed under: Green Business — Laura B. @ 10:21 am

Read the full story at Environmental Leader.

An increasing number of companies are offering their employees incentives for saving energy, like gas cards and telecommuting options, the News Observer reports.

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BT Pledges 80% Emissions Cut, Links Financial And Environmental Performance

Filed under: Climate Change, Green Business — Laura B. @ 10:11 am

Read the full story at Environmental Leader.

BT has announced plans to cut its carbon emissions by 80 percent by 2020 and published a “Climate Stabilization Intensity Target,” that creates a relationship between BT’s CO2 emissions and its financial performance so that they become interdependent.

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Consumers Tap Whole Foods, Burt’s Bees, Trader Joe’s As Top Green Brands

Filed under: Green Business — Laura B. @ 10:10 am

Read the full story at Environmental Leader.

A survey, conducted in the US and the UK, indicates the environment has taken a back seat to the economy for more than 75 percent of Americans and 66 percent of Britons.

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HSBC HQ Goes Solar

Filed under: Green Business, Solar Energy — Laura B. @ 10:09 am

Read the full story at Environmental Leader.

As part of its $90 million Global Environmental Efficiency Program launched last year, HSBC ’s Canary Wharf office tower has become the tallest corporate headquarter building in Europe to feature solar panels. Covering 617 square meters of the roof of the building, it is also the largest installation of photovoltaic panels on a corporate office in London, the company announced.

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Harvesting Energy –Going Green! New York Marriott Downtown is First Hotel in New York City to Install Energy-Efficient Tri-generation Plant

Filed under: Energy, Hospitality Industry — Laura B. @ 10:07 am

Read the press release.

In a major initiative to reduce energy and carbon emissions significantly, the New York Marriott Downtown, a 500-room full-service Marriott hotel managed by Marriott International, Inc. (NYSE:MAR) and owned by Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc., celebrated the inauguration of its new “microturbine farm” with a ribbon cutting on June 3, 2008 in Lower Manhattan.

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Texas School Districts Make Pest Control ‘Dean’s List’

Filed under: Pest Management, Schools — Laura B. @ 10:06 am

Read the press release.

Two North Texas school districts, with help from Texas AgriLife Extension Service, have earned national recognition for controlling pests safely and efficiently from the IPM Institute of North America.

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New high school installs energy-saving lighting

Filed under: Energy, Schools — Laura B. @ 10:01 am

Read the full story in the Las Vegas Business Press.

A little past 11 on a Tuesday morning, a line of rooftop mirrors at the still-under construction Desert Oasis High School lurched slightly clockwise as if part of a mechanical chorus line.

Though not visible from the inside or on the ground, the mirrors — three each attached at different angles to poles and housed inside clear acrylic domes — are a key feature in trying to reduce energy consumption at the new school. Called active daylighting, the mirrors track the sun’s arc during the day, reflecting the light downward into the building to reduce the need for electric lights.

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Small appliances banned from schools, offices to save energy

Filed under: Energy, Schools — Laura B. @ 9:50 am

Read the full story in the West Volusia News-Journal.

Some of the creature comforts many Volusia County school employees have come to enjoy in their work spaces — personal refrigerators, microwaves, coffee pots, desk lamps and fans — are on their way out to save energy and money.

Employees have until June 10 to remove the items, according to a memo Superintendent Margaret Smith sent out last week. A standard policy on where and how many such appliances may be placed in central locations of schools and district offices is still being developed.

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State bills schools for energy overuse

Filed under: Energy, Schools — Laura B. @ 9:48 am

Read the full story in the Honolulu Advertiser.

About 124 schools are being asked to pay as much as $26,000 for “excessive” energy usage following a yearlong effort by the state Department of Education to reduce electricity consumption.

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9 Southland schools win grants from BP

Filed under: Energy, Funding Opportunities, Schools — Laura B. @ 9:47 am

Read the full story in the Southtown Star.

BP’s “A+ for Energy” competition gives nearly $500,000 in grants to teachers for innovative and eco-friendly classroom activities. Nine schools in the Southland were among the winners announced Tuesday.

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House approves funds for ‘green’ schools

Filed under: Green Building, Schools — Laura B. @ 9:45 am

Read the full story from the Associated Press.

The House on Wednesday committed more than $20 billion over the next five years to help states build and renovate schools to make them more energy-efficient and good for the environment.

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Lighting an Efficient Future, Minus the Mercury

Filed under: Green Products, Lighting, Mercury — Laura B. @ 9:37 am

Read the full story from Worldwatch.

More and more countries are banning incandescent light bulbs in favor of energy-efficient compact fluorescent lamps, or CFLs. But options to recycle the mercury-laden alternatives are often scarce.

A variety of European Union recycling regulations make it unlawful for EU residents to dispose of CFLs in the trash. In the United States, some states are following suit, though most localities rely on consumers to voluntarily mail the bulbs back to manufacturers for recycling. In developing countries, recycling is less available, and proper landfills often do not even exist in the event that the bulbs are discarded as trash.

To reduce hazardous waste at its source, leading CFL manufacturers have committed to reduce the mercury content of their products. Martin Goetzeler, CEO of Munich-based Osram, said his company aims to cut the mercury content of its CFLs by half in the coming years. “It should be part of any new technology that hazardous substances are regulated,” he said. “And we should use the lowest levels [of toxins].”

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The latest issue of GreenerBuilding

Filed under: Green Building, Green Business — Laura B. @ 9:35 am

A full-color, graphic version of this newsletter is available online at http://greenerbuildings.com/enewsletters/2008/greenerbuildings/index.html.

Napa Winery Basks in Solar Power
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24841
Napa-based Far Niente flipped the switch on a solar energy system that will supply all of the winery’s needs. The system relies on a combination of land-mounted and “Floatovoltaic” solar arrays that are expected to generate 400 kilowatts at peak output.

80-Year Old Building Earns ‘Double-Platinum’
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24778
The Christman Building, formerly known as the Mutual Building, earned LEED-Platinum certification under the Commercial Interiors (CI) and Core and Shell rating systems.

Carpet and Rug Institute’s Green Carpet Testing Recognized as National Standard
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24978
The Carpet and Rug Institute’s Green Label carpet testing program has helped the group become a certification body for indoor air quality.

Three Citi Locations Earn LEED Pre-Certification
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24920
Citi has received LEED pre-certification for a branch prototype, with three branches earning certification and 27 more hoping to get certified.

SF Economy Would Take a Hit Under Proposed Building Codes: Report
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24608
The city’s ambitious green building code would be the most stringent in the country but not without a short-term price tag, according to a new report from San Francisco’s Office of Economic Analysis. San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom disagreed, citing the potential for green collar job creation.

Kraft Distribution Center Earns Gold LEED-CI Certification
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24716
The company has received its first LEED certification for a distribution center it designed in conjunction with ProLogis.

Florida’s Disney Hotels All Achieve State’s Green Lodging Designation
By Glenn Hasek, Green Lodging News
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24571
All 24 Walt Disney hotels have earned the Florida Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) Green Lodging Program designation for their energy-efficiency and facility management efforts.

LEED 2009 on the Horizon
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/24539
The U.S. Green Building Council has started seeking public comment on LEED 2009, the latest incarnation of the current certification systems for commercial buildings. The final, updated versions of the New Construction, Existing Buildings, Operations and Maintenance, Commercial Interiors, Core and Shell and Schools could be released in late 2008.

Job Opportunities for the Green Economy
http://greenerbuildings.com/node/25020
A snapshot of some of the jobs than have the potential to be turned into green jobs as the country invests in green issues like building retrofits, wind power and solar power.

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Capturing King Coal: Deploying Carbon Capture and Storage Systems in the U.S. at Scale

Filed under: Climate Change, Publications — Laura B. @ 9:31 am

Hiranya Fernando, John Venezia, Clay Rigdon, Preeti Verma. Capturing King Coal: Deploying Carbon Capture and Storage Systems in the U.S. at Scale. Washington, DC : World Resources Institute, 2008. (Online at http://www.wri.org/publication/capturing-king-coal)

Abstract: Coal is a key fuel source for current and future electric power generation. Coal becomes even more critical when cost of electricity and security of supply issues are viewed in light of other fuel sources such as gas or uranium. Yet coal combustion produces about 1.9 billion tons of CO2 per year in the U.S., roughly equivalent to all CO2 emissions from U.S. transport per annum. The burning of coal, with more CO2 emissions per unit of energy produced than any other fossil fuel, has significant adverse climate change impacts.

One way to reduce carbon emissions from coal-fired power is to capture and store it permanently underground, a process called carbon capture and storage (CCS), also called carbon sequestration. CCS has captured the attention of policymakers, power generators, and environmentalists because of its potential as a bridging technology that will permit the continued use of coal as a fuel source while not contributing to a further destabilization of the climate. A great deal of work is underway to develop and improve the technologies, legal frameworks, and policies required for wide-scale deployment of CCS systems.

The main reason for this interest is that several major world economies, including the U.S., China, and India depend heavily on coal as an energy source. Alternative means of moving to a zero-carbon power mix, including wind or solar (which are dispersed and have variable output) and nuclear power (which raises difficult questions of security and waste disposal) require wrenching changes to our energy systems. CCS apparently offers the prospect of staving off climate disaster while maintaining something near the status quo. Coal can remain central to the energy mix, and CCS makes this possible.

But does it? There is in fact considerable complexity involved in deploying a national CCS system at the scale necessary to achieve significant emissions reductions. Indeed, it amounts to no less fundamental a transformation of the country’s energy infrastructure than would a huge-scale adoption of wind energy, for instance. The objective of this paper is to examine the challenges of this transformation under the four broad categories of technology, policy, legal and regulatory framework, and investment, and their implications for CCS as part of the solution to mitigate adverse climate change impacts.

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Bayer Partners with Carnegie Science Center to Create New Environmental Curriculum for Children and Teens

Filed under: Schools — Laura B. @ 9:26 am

Read the press release.

To help foster a new generation of environmentally literate elementary-, middle- and high-school students, Bayer Corporation, as part of its Making Science Make Sense(R) initiative, has teamed with Carnegie Science Center on World Environment Day to create a new six-week environmental curriculum for the Science in Your Neighborhood (SIYN) program that is scheduled to launch this summer in city neighborhoods and at the Science Center.

The new program is designed to connect at-risk teens with academic and career opportunities in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields and help them become science literate. By joining with the Science Center on this initiative, Bayer is continuing its support of programs that help diversify the STEM pipeline by bringing more females and underrepresented minorities into STEM fields.

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More Talking Than Listening in the Senate Debate About Climate Change

Filed under: Climate Change — Laura B. @ 9:07 am

Read the full story in the New York Times.

Even for the Senate, where members are well-known to prefer talking to listening, the amount of unilateral jabbering on the climate change bill has been remarkable.

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Testing the Toxicity of Nanomaterials

Filed under: Environmental Health, Nanotechnology — Laura B. @ 8:49 am

Read the full story in Technology Review.

In light of mounting concerns regarding the potential toxicity of some nanomaterials, scientists have designed a rapid screening tool to help predict which ones are likely to be harmful. Hundreds of nanotechnology-based products are already on the market–in everything from sunscreens and cosmetics to paints and car bumpers–and many more are in the pipeline. However, studies assessing the safety of nanomaterials are limited. As a result, scientists and policy makers have been calling for more systematic reviews of the risks that these nanoscale materials might pose to human health.

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Environmentally Friendly Bombs Planned

Filed under: Green Government, Research — Laura B. @ 8:45 am

Read the full story at LiveScience.

New explosives could be more powerful and safer to handle than TNT and other conventional explosives and would also be more environmentally friendly.

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ENERGY STAR Helps Change Military Light Bulbs and Recycle Old Refrigerators

Filed under: Energy, Green Government — Laura B. @ 8:44 am

Read the full story from EERE’s State Energy Program.

Two ENERGY STAR campaigns continue the push to reduce energy use and energy bills while reducing greenhouse gases.

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Alabama Brings Energy Efficiency to the Farm

Filed under: Agriculture, Alternative Fuels, Energy, Renewable Energy — Laura B. @ 8:43 am

Read the full story in EERE’s Conservation Update.

Agriculture is Alabama’s largest and one of its most energy intensive industries. The Alabama Agriculture Energy Program helps to secure the future of farming in the state by providing farmers with technologies and techniques needed to compete in the global economy. The program promotes the adoption of cutting-edge renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies by the farming community through demonstration projects involving energy crops, biofuels, and renewable heat and power sources.

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Estidama initiative to make Abu Dhabi the sustainability capital of the Middle East

Filed under: Green Building, International — Laura B. @ 8:41 am

Read the press release.

The Abu Dhabi Urban Planning Council (UPC), alongside the Environment Agency – Abu Dhabi (EAD), Abu Dhabi Municipality, and Masdar, announce ‘Estidama’, the program for sustainable buildings and communities for the Emirate of Abu Dhabi.

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National Restaurant Association Launches Conserve Initiative to Educate and Inspire Restaurants to “Go Green”

Filed under: Food Service Industry, Green Business, Web Resources — Laura B. @ 8:35 am

Read the press release.

The National Restaurant Association today is launching “Conserve: Solutions for Sustainability,” an initiative designed to support the nation’s nearly one million restaurant and foodservice locations as they become more eco-friendly, at the Association’s annual Restaurant, Hotel-Motel Show in Chicago. The $558 billion restaurant industry is committed to finding solutions to lessen its environmental impact while maintaining economic vitality. The Conserve Web site will educate restaurateurs on how taking small steps over time – or bigger steps for those who choose to do so – can make a difference for the future of our planet, as well as be positive for business.

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