Environmental News

18 May 2012

Intel Sustainability Report: Tech Giant Commits to 10% GHG Cut

Environmental Leader - Intel has pledged to reduce its direct greenhouse gas emissions by 10 percent on a per-chip basis by 2020 compared to 2010 levels, and announced a 34 percent reduction in its total CO2 emissions last year.

Apple Data Center to be 100% Powered by Renewable Energy

Environmental Leader - Apple said it will power its 500,000-square-foot data center in Maiden, N.C., entirely with renewable energy by the end of the year.

16 May 2012

Ericsson Sustainability Report: Direct Carbon Intensity Drops 6%

Environmental Leader - Direct emissions from telecommunications firm Ericssons in-house activities totaled around 0.84 Mtonnes during 2011. This corresponds to a six percent reduction in direct emissions intensity from Ericssons activities year-on-year, according to the companys 2011 sustainability report.

15 May 2012

EU hails airline emissions tax success

The Guardian - More than 99% of major airlines comply with first step of Europe's scheme to charge them for carbon emissions.

14 May 2012

Places to Look for Energy Losses in Commercial Buildings

Environmental Leader - Data from millions of businesses, institutions and manufacturers show that sustainability issues fall into four main categories: rising energy costs, growing disposal costs, limited water supply and health concerns over the quality of indoor air. Energy is often the largest line item in an operations facility management bill.

Integrative Corporate Sustainability Vs. Additive Corporate Social Responsibility

Environmental Leader - Bas Schneiders,head of corporate sustainability and strategic sourcing, Weleda Group, discusses ethical sourcing and providing a long-term investment for suppliers Sustainable manufacturing.

25 April 2012

BP engineer's arrest may force company to reveal internal estimates on Gulf spill

The Guardian - Company disputes government figures but has fought release of its own data on how much oil leaked into Gulf of Mexico in 2010. The unveiling of the first criminal charges in the Gulf of Mexico disaster could force BP to disclose a closely guarded secret %u2013 its internal estimate of how much oil actually gushed out of its stricken well.

Interactive: MIT researchers map energy use and building material intensity across US cities

The Guardian - Urban environment experts have produced a richly detailed interactive tool for exploring material and energy use in US cities.

Minnesotas LEED Buildings Join the Energy Benchmarking Trend

Environmental Leader - A initiative launched by the Minnesota Chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council will collect, report and assess the energy performance of more than 150 commercial buildings throughout the state. The Performance Metrics Strategy Initiative was created to provide a benchmark for LEED-certified buildings in Minnesota.

24 April 2012

Mexico Passes Climate Change Law

Environmental News Network - A law recently passed by the Mexican legislature will reduce emissions of carbon dioxide by 30 percent below business-as-usual levels by 2020, and by 50 percent below 2000 levels by 2050, reported Nature. By 2024, Mexico will also derive 35 percent of its electricity from renewable resources, according to the new law.

23 April 2012

US and UK to collaborate on 'floating' turbines

The Guardian - The UK and US will work together to develop "floating" wind turbines to harness more offshore wind power at a potentially lower cost, the government said on Monday.

21 April 2012

World's most endangered tribe cries for help

The Guardian - Logging companies keen to exploit Brazil's rainforest have been accused by human rights organisations of using gunmen to wipe out the Awá, a tribe of just 355. Survival International, with backing from Colin Firth, is campaigning to stop what a judge referred to as 'genocide'

20 April 2012

Royal Caribbean Ships to Cut up to 20% of Energy, GHGs

Environmental Leader - Royal Caribbean has awarded more than $60 million in orders to automation technology group ABB, to provide power and propulsion systems for two energy-efficient cruise ships. The ships are scheduled for delivery in fall 2014 and spring 2015. ABB will supply complete electrical systems for the new ships.

Lush Cosmetics Taps the Cloud to Track Its Carbon Footprint

Environmental Leader - Lush, an international cosmetics company, has tapped cloud data management firm CloudApps to help it more accurately measure its environmental footprint. CloudApps Sustainability Suite will organize data collection and improve Lushs sustainability reporting, helping it to better manage its sustainability goals, make carbon savings and reduce operational costs, the companies say.

Earth Day Briefing: Coke, Pepsi, Whole Foods, Target, Caribou Coffee

Environmental Leader - Its that time of year again. In celebration of Earth Day on April 22 companies have been unveiling green initiatives all over the place. Heres a selection of those that caught our eye.

17 April 2012

Apple defends green credentials

The Guardian - <p class="standfirst">Greenpeace report named Apple among worst offenders for using highly polluting coal to power their data centres Apple disclosed sensitive information about energy demand at the data centre housing its iCloud service for the first time on Tuesday, defending its green credentials in the face of a campaign by Greenpeace. In a report rating 14 companies leading the migration from local computers to cloud computing, Greenpeace gave failing grades to Apple, Amazon and Microsoft for their reliance on highly polluting coal to power their data centres.

Accor Hotels Target 10% Cuts in CO2, Energy Use

Environmental Leader - Hotel operator Accor has launched a set of sustainability targets for 2015 across the groups 4,400 hotels owned and leased hotels worldwide. The announcement follows a review finding that 70 percent of Accors major account customers have integrated sustainable development criteria in their supplier policies.

Standards &amp; Compliance Briefing: LEED Comments, ISO 50001, IEC 61646, ISO 14001

Environmental Leader - Heres the latest standards and compliance news affecting corporate environmental and energy executives. Todays briefing includes eight items. The 4th public comment period for LEED 2012, the updated version of USBGCs green building program expected to launch this fall, will run from May 1 until May 15.

Market Perspectives from the LP-GP Clean Energy &amp; Sustainability Forum

Environmental Leader - The most active investors in the cleantech, renewable energy and sustainability sectors share their views on the market at the fourth annual LP-GP Forum: Clean Energy & Sustainability hosted by AltAssets.

15 April 2012

Mexico Emulates Neighbor California With 35% Clean Climate law

CleanTechnica - Joining world leaders in climate laws, Mexico just passed new legislation that catapults the poor neighbor to the south of the U.S. to a leadership role on a par with its northern neighbor, California. Mexicos General Law on Climate Change was just passed by an 128-10 overwhelming vote in its 500 member Chamber of Deputies.

13 April 2012

Marriott Headquarters LED Retrofit to Save $120,000 Annually, Deliver 2-Year ROI

Environmental Leader - GE Lighting LED retrofits at Marriott Internationals headquarters in Bethesda, Md., will reduce electricity use by 860,000 kWh, or 66 percent, and save more than $120,000 in annual combined energy and maintenance costs, GE Lighting said.

11 April 2012

Magnitude 8.6 earthquake sparks tsunami

New Scientist - A tsunami warning has been issued for the Indian Ocean, as Indonesia suffers its largest quake since 2004.

10 April 2012

Study reveals mystery behind bat disease

The Guardian - Scientists finally unravel mystery behind disease that has been killing off bat colonies in US and Canada since 2006.

Why Are Alaska Polar Bears Losing Their Fur?

Environmental News Network - Scientists are trying to determine why some polar bears in Alaska are suffering from fur loss and skin lesions, and whether the phenomenon is related to a disease that has been killing seals in the region.

9 April 2012

Building Codes: Simple Energy Savings

CleanTechnica - In energy policy, lawmakers often prefer carrots to sticks because it minimizes the opposition. But mandatory rules, like building energy codes, can save energy and pay back several times over during the useful life of buildings. The state of Illinois is poised to become a regional leader by adopting the 2012 International Energy Conservation.

EPA Proposes Carbon Dioxide Emissions Standards for New Fossil Fuel Power Plants

Environmental News Network - On March 27, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed a rule limiting carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from new power plants fired by fossil fuels such as coal or natural gas.

3 April 2012

Eco tips for a green spring clean

The Guardian - Sprucing up your home this spring? TV presenter and interior designer Julia Kendell explains how to make a house look good and still reduce its environmental impact.

1 April 2012

Japanese experts warn of earthquakes that could produce 34-metre tsunamis

The Guardian - Report following disaster last March finds waves pose bigger threat than previously thought and could inundate Pacific coast.

31 March 2012

Earth Hour 2012 - in pictures

The Guardian - Landmarks across the world switched off their lights for one hour in a bid to highlight global climate change.

28 March 2012

Fracking could foil carbon capture plans

New Scientist - Hydraulic fracturing brings us lots of natural gas, but it could also ruin the rock formations needed to store carbon dioxide underground.

27 March 2012

Footage from James Cameron's journey to the ocean's deepest point - video

The Guardian - Footage has been released from the film director's voyage to the Mariana Trench, the deepest point of the Earth's oceans.

Obama plan cuts emissions for future coal plants

The Guardian - New rules to cut carbon dioxide emissions will make it nearly impossible to build new coal power plants. The Obama administration effectively blocked the construction of any new coal-fired power plants on Tuesday, introducing rules to cut carbon dioxide emissions from the next generation of plants.

20 March 2012

US to impose tariff on Chinese solar panels in victory for domestic makers

The Guardian - American solar panel manufactuers welcome Obama administration decision, saying it exposes unfair trade practices. The Obama administration, which regularly champions America's clean energy industry, has delivered modest support for home-grown solar panel makers complaining of unfair competition from China

19 March 2012

Carbonised red mud can treat water cheaply

Environmental News Network - Red mud, a by-product of alumina industries, can be 'carbonised' for safe handling and the resulting material can be used to treat water contaminated with heavy metals, say scientists... According to their findings, after carbonisation, the capacity of red mud to remove metal contaminants, particularly lead and copper, from water improves ten-fold as compared to red mud that has been acidified, an existing method to improve the waste material.

18 March 2012

Two Affiliates to sever ties with paper company linked to endangered forests

Environmental News Network - Two affiliates of Asia Pulp & Paper (APP) have announced they are severing at least some ties with the beleaguered paper giant, according to the Northern Virginia Daily and Greenpeace, an environmental group whose recent undercover investigation found ramin, a protected species, at APP's pulp mill in Sumatra.

17 March 2012

Lyme Disease predicted to surge this year in Northeast US

Environmental News Network - Lyme disease is becoming more common in the Northeastern US, and is spreading more broadly across the eastern US. Commonly thought to be spread by Whitetail deer since is is carried by deer ticks, it is actually carried as well by field mice, chipmunks, and other small mammals.

15 March 2012

'Bigger global killer than dirty water'

The Guardian - OECD report says pollution will become biggest cause of premature death, killing an estimated 3.6 million people a year by 2050. Urban air pollution is set to become the biggest environmental cause of premature death in the coming decades, overtaking even such mass killers as poor sanitation and a lack of clean drinking water, according to a new report.

On Emissions Limits, California Goes its Own Way

Environmental News Network - Earlier this year, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) completely revamped its passenger vehicle emissions control regulations. The new Advanced Clean Cars program, which covers model years 2017 to 2025, combines several regulatory schemes into the new program: the Low Emission Vehicle (LEV) program, which governs tailpipe regulations for light duty vehicles; the Clean Fuels Outlet regulation, a largely dormant effort to promote alternative fuel availability; and the most famous, or infamous, component, the ZEV mandate requiring automakers to produce vehicles with no tailpipe emissions.

14 March 2012

California Nitrates

Environmental News Network - Nitrates are a common water pollutant most often associated with agricultural effluent and excess fertilizer. It is a common issue in many locations. One in 10 people living in California%u2019s most productive agricultural areas is at risk of exposure to harmful levels of nitrate contamination in their drinking water, according to a report released today by the University of California, Davis. The report was commissioned by the California State Water Resources Control Board.

13 March 2012

Experts Explore the Payoffs of Investing in Sustainability

Environmental Leader - In 2012, investors may want to bet on Companies that actively manage environmental risks and take advantage of associated opportunities increasingly seem to outperform those who dont in the stock market. That could be a very good thing, both for shareholders and the planet.

Drought-hit England announces first wave of emergency measures

Environmental News Network - The first emergency measures to support the drought-hit south of England were announced today in an attempt to preserve dwindling water supplies. Seven firms - Southern Water, South East Water, Thames Water, Anglian Water, Sutton and East Surrey, Veolia Central and Veolia South East - jointly announced the introduction of water restrictions from April 5, just before the Easter Bank Holiday weekend. They said it was a result of two unusually dry winters which have left waters well below normal levels. The bans will forbid hosepipes and sprinklers from being used for gardening, washing cars, filling pools and for fountains.

12 March 2012

Californian campaign pushes for labelling of GM food

The Guardian - Momentum gathers for ballot initiative that hopes to force labelling of genetically-modified ingredients %u2013 and could prompt a nationwide change in the US.

11 March 2012

Japan marks first anniversary of earthquake and tsunami

The Guardian - Japan's emperor leads nation's mourning as Tokyo comes to halt to remember tsunami, earthquake and nuclear victims Millions of people in Japan have paid tribute to the thousands of victims of the earthquake and tsunami that devastated the country's north-east coast one year ago and sparked the world's worst nuclear crisis for 25 years.

9 March 2012

Reflecting on the Winter that Never Was

Environmental News Network - In a couple weeks, the northern hemisphere will be entering the spring season, and now is a good time to reflect on this winter. For some, it feels like spring has already been here, and soon summer will be approaching. That is because for many Americans, it was the winter that never was. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), it was not the warmest winter in recent history, but it does rank pretty high. Furthermore, this winter will be marked for its amazing lack of snowfall, especially when compared with last year. The following are some highlights from around the nation.

6 March 2012

BP chief Bob Dudley gets $1.6m payout for 'turning around company'

The Guardian - Chief executive gets bonus and share payout despite the oil company paying out 5bn Pounds to cover the long-running lawsuit over the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Fight over Yosemite's 'twin valley' restoration

The Guardian - Radical plans to remove the dam and return Hetch Hetchy Valley to its natural state has pitted conservationists against San Francisco residents and their elected representatives.

3 March 2012

Diesel Exhaust linked to cancer

Environmental News Network - Heavy diesel exhaust (DE) exposure in humans may increase the risk of dying from lung cancer, according to two new studies released this week.

2 March 2012

General Motors halts production of hybrid Volt as sales flatline

The Guardian - GM announces it will stop making its award-winning Chevy Volt for five weeks, but company's overall sales unlikely to slow.

29 February 2012

No-waste circular economy is good business, ask China

New Scientist - Redesigning the economy to make it circular, so that all waste is reused or recycled would be good for business, say two new reports.

Ernst and Young: Incentives Helped Make U.S. Top for Renewable Energy Investments

Environmental Leader - Public funding helped the U.S. surpass China last year as the number one country for renewable energy investments, reversing positions held since 2009, but China maintained its position as the country with the most favorable renewable energy markets and infrastructures

Unusual Weather: Arctic Sea Ice Decline May Be Driving Snowy Winters Seen in Recent Years in N. Hemisphere

Environmental News Network - A new study led by the Georgia Institute of Technology provides further evidence of a relationship between melting ice in the Arctic regions and widespread cold outbreaks in the Northern Hemisphere. The study's findings could be used to improve seasonal forecasting of snow and temperature anomalies across northern continents. Since the level of Arctic sea ice set a new record low in 2007, significantly above-normal winter snow cover has been seen in large parts of the northern United States, northwestern and central Europe, and northern and central China. During the winters of 2009-2010 and 2010-2011, the Northern Hemisphere measured its second and third largest snow cover levels on record.

26 February 2012

BP's US trial over Deepwater Horizon oil spill is postponed for a week

The Guardian - Multibillion dollar corporate trial is put back to allow oil giant more time to discuss possible compensation deals with plaintiffs.

24 February 2012

Small Town Gets Court To Ban Fracking

Environmental News Network - This week, a New York state judge ruled that the town of Dryden, N.Y., could prohibit fracking as part of its zoning ordinance. It's one of 30 towns throughout central and southern New York that have taken the step. State environmental officials in New York placed a moratorium on fracking while they come up with new regulations to cover oil and gas drilling in the underground geological deposits.

New Apple HQ to be really green!

Environmental News Network - Last year, the late Steve Jobs revealed plans for Apple's new 'Spaceship' building to be located in Cupertino City, California. The futuristic structure should be completed in 2015 and will house approximately 13,000 employees. It may look like it's been plucked from the imagination of Philip K Dick, but what was previously the realm of science fiction has now become science fact. It promises to be one of the most technologically advanced offices in the world, being totally self-sufficient for power with the national grid acting only as backup.

23 February 2012

Illinois Researchers Identify Promising New Biofuel

Environmental News Network - Biofuel production has ratcheted up to become a major part of America's energy and agricultural industries. Corn, or maize, is by far the most widely grown crop to be converted into ethanol. However, the dominance of maize in the biofuel industry is not without its pitfalls. Now, researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have identified a temperate-tropical maize hybrid that can potentially revolutionize biofuels in this country. The maize hybrid has the potential to increase ethanol production for each unit of plant material, and minimize the environmental cost of biofuel production.

21 February 2012

Are Some Sustainable Businesses Buying Less Green?

Environmental Leader - Yes, I am quite certain some very good green companies are indeed buying fewer green products. However, despite some recent reports to the contrary, I dont believe it is because green is dying or losing steam. In fact, the people we are fortunate to work with seem every bit as committed as ever and are.

Hawaiian Earns Carbon Credits Through Engine-Washing

Environmental Leader - Hawaiian Airlines has earned aviation-based carbon credits under the Verified Carbon Standard, based in part on its use of Pratt 38; Whitney EcoPower engine-washing system. EcoPower reduces fuel burn by using atomized water to wash engines in a closed-loop system that both filters and reuses water. The system helped the carrier reduce CO2 emissions.

National Defense and President Obama's 2013 Clean Energy Budget

Environmental News Network - As far as clean energy and green jobs go, President Obama's 2013 budget includes a Christmas-in-July package of initiatives that are designed to help pull the U.S. out of recession while transitioning the economy to cleaner, safer, more reliable and less price-spikey forms of energy. Those last two items, price and reliability of supply, are especially important to the Department of Defense, which will see its rate of growth slow dramatically under the new budget.

20 February 2012

Banks and investors back calls to biggest companies to cut emissions

Environmental News Network - On behalf of 92 pension funds, asset managers, insurers and banks, the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), which holds the worlds largest collection of self-reported corporate environmental data, has sent letters to the CEOs of 415 of the worlds largest public companies calling for cost-effective management and reductions of their carbon emissions.

16 February 2012

Leaked files expose Heartland Institute's secrets

New Scientist - The tables have been well and truly turned in "deniergate", the leak of documents from a key climate-sceptic think tank in the US, says Bob Ward

Japan's megaquake disturbed creatures beneath the sea

New Scientist - The 2011 earthquake triggered the release of a methane plume from the ocean crust to the east of Japan; carrying microbes that live in the crust with it.

13 February 2012

Hurricanes deliver fatal blows to wind turbines

New Scientist - Nearly half of the US turbines soon to be built in the Atlantic and the Gulf are likely to be destroyed by hurricanes.

10 February 2012

Earth Summit is doomed to fail, say leading ecologists

New Scientist - In the run-up to Rio, top environmental scientists bemoan two decades of political failure and say the future is in the hands of grass-roots activists.

2 February 2012

India's panel price crash could spark solar revolution

New Scientist - Solar power has long had a reputation for being expensive, but the falling costs of making panels could change that.

31 January 2012

Pythons hunt Florida mammals to brink of extinction

New Scientist - In just 10 years, discarded and escaped pet pythons have almost wiped out many Everglades mammals, including bobcats and possums.

30 January 2012

Taking the long view on the world's energy supplies

New Scientist - Research into the impacts of clean energy technology is needed if we're to avoid repeating our mistakes.

27 January 2012

Repeated drought in east Africa may prompt aid rethink

New Scientist - Rainfall patterns over east Africa have changed in a way that makes severe droughts more likely %u2013 aid agencies need to rethink the way they operate.

23 January 2012

How to reduce household food waste

Ecoki - When you really think about it, how much food waste are you accumulating in your household? Do you ever clear out your fridge thinking, what is that? It can definitely be a challenge for some to reduce their household food waste. After all, we dont tend to be terribly mindful of what we are tossing.

17 January 2012

Cant stand the cold? Blame the summer.

Ecoki - If you are getting sick of the cold weather, you can blame the hot summer that just passed. New research suggests that particularly hot summers cause really cold winters.

8 January 2012

Study finds high risk earthquake locations

Ecoki - A new study has broken some important ground in the way we analyze the earth: how to spot high risk earthquake locations and what triggers them. Researchers at the University of Miami discovered what might be causing these, notably, triggered by hurricanes and typhoons, and other tropical cyclones.

31 December 2011

Easy vegan party dips for all your guests

Ecoki - With New Years Eve tonight, we are brainstorming up ideas for quick dips that all your guests will love. Whether you are vegan, vegetarian, or just love some really great food, here are our top dip recipes that are easy to throw together and guaranteed to please.

12 November 2011

Do Companies Need a Culture of Sustainability?

Environmental Leader - Stuart Hart, the S.C. Johnson chair in sustainable global enterprise at Cornell University, asks how necessary a strong corporate culture is for achieving sustainability objectives. Hart is founder and president of Enterprise for a Sustainable World.

11 November 2011

Coke Makes 100% Recycling Pledge for 2012 Olympics

Environmental Leader - Coca-Cola has promised to recycle all clear plastic PET bottles used at the London 2012 Olympics, according to news reports.

10 November 2011

Two Views of the Value of Sustainability

Environmental Leader - Sustainability is all the rage as many significantly-sized companies are evaluating it to maximize economic benefits and seeing how it can fit into company plans. We in the environmental community believe that sustainability programs almost always deliver a good return on investment (ROI) because of the long-term economic benefits of reducing waste, water and energy use.

9 November 2011

Social Business Strategies as Important as Economic Ones

Environmental Leader - Building a social purpose into a business strategy is just as important in securing long-term success as building in an economic purpose, according to an article in November%u2019s Harvard Business Review. Rosabeth Moss Kanter's article How Great Companies Think Differently, is based on the theory of institutional logic.

7 November 2011

Packaging Key to Sustainable Society

Environmental Leader - Packaging should be seen as an integral part of achieving a resource efficient society, according to a paper by packaging trade body EUROPEN.

Greenhouse Emissions Jumped 6% in 2010

Environmental Leader - Greenhouse gas emissions saw a 6 percent jump in 2010, their largest one-year rise, according to new data from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Lab. This means that emissions are now rising faster than the worst-case scenarios envisioned by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its 2007 report, according to Brad Plumer.

4 November 2011

The Three Stages of Staff Sustainability Engagement

Environmental Leader - Programs to involve staff in sustainability programs break down into three key stages, according to a report by brand consulting firm BBMG.

3 November 2011

Five Ways To Make Your Fleet Greener For Less

Environmental Leader - Once, fleet owners explored green technologies as a means for a public relations bump. Consumers liked seeing green cars and trucks on the road, and they rewarded companies who made those investments. Today, greening a fleet is becoming an economic pursuit.

31 October 2011

Facebook Faces Down Google for Title of Most Energy Efficient

CleanTechnica - Facebook and Google seem to be in an all-out war to see which company can come up with the best energy efficiency solutions for power-gobbling data centers. This round probably goes to Facebook, which just announced two new green data center strategies on two distinct tracks.

29 October 2011

How can we make this increasingly crowded world fit for its seven billionth inhabitant?

Telegraph.co.uk - Much can be done to lessen the impact of the world's population growth, argues Geoffrey Lean.

27 October 2011

International Paper Announces Green Goals

Environmental Leader - International Paper has committed to use 15 percent less energy and reduce its absolute greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent by 2020, against a 2010 baseline. The company plans to achieve these reductions by increasing manufacturing efficiency, exploring new technologies and encouraging employee engagement.

26 October 2011

Climate known: Other pollutants are cooling the planet

New Scientist - We pump all kinds of substances into the atmosphere. Some of them reflect the sun's heat back into space and so cool things down.

25 October 2011

Need for Efficiency Drives Printing Industry Toward Sustainability

Environmental Leader - When someone mentions the printing industry to you, does it bring to mind images of emissions of greenhouse gases, massive paper waste and consumption of huge amounts of energy? Today%u2019s reality is very different from those stereotypical images.

21 October 2011

Nestle, Nike, GSK Deserve Place in Sustainability Rankings

Environmental Leader - Campbells, Danone, General Electric, Glaxosmithkline, HP, Intel, Nestlé, Nike, Panasonic, Siemens, and Unilever are the companies most deserving of their top places within sustainability rankings, according to sustainability advisor Two Tomorrows. They all were rated Aaa in the Tomorrow%u2019s Value Rating 2011.

Manufacturers Jump on Board with Sustainability

Environmental Leader - The importance of sustainability to manufacturers has rocketed over the last two years, according to a study released by the American Small Manufacturers Coalition. The 2011 Next Generation Manufacturing Study, conducted by the Manufacturing Performance Institute, says that 59.2 percent of manufacturers now rate sustainability as important or highly important to there success.

14 October 2011

Economizers Shave 20% off Data Center Energy Costs

Environmental Leader - Nearly half of data centers are using economizers to provide natural cooling, and they are saving an average of 20 percent off their energy costs, according to a survey by the Green Grid.

12 October 2011

Hotel Sustainability: Moving Into a New Phase

Environmental Leader - Over the past decade, hotel operators have implemented programs to reduce the waste generated and the energy used in their daily operations. Many have been successful in saving both resources and money as well as attracting environmentally conscious guests; however, the industry as a whole has yet to make sustainability an integral part of its strategic plans.

5 October 2011

Local Support May Be the Key to Success

Environmental Leader - When looking to gain public support for your renewable energy project, developing a grassroots campaign may be your best strategy. Many people seem to have a vague understanding of what a grassroots campaign is but very few know what exactly it entails. The most basic definition describes a grassroots campaign as one that takes place [...]

3 October 2011

Patty Calkins Discusses Sustainability at Xerox

Environmental Leader - Patty Calkins, Vice President Environment, Health, Safety and Sustainability, discusses Xerox's sustainability efforts.

1 October 2011

Report: How Smaller Companies Profit From Sustainability

Environmental Leader - Sustainability is a growing priority among small- and medium-sized businesses and according to three national accounting bodies, more than half of surveyed businesses will have a sustainability strategy in place in two years time.

30 September 2011

Nike Sets Up Green Venture Capital Arm

Environmental Leader - Nike is to set up a sustainable venture capital arm in an effort to cut costs and promote green commerce.

29 September 2011

The Anatomy of Food Waste

Environmental Leader - Consider this. There is one economic sector that is essential for survival and accounts for a considerable share of our daily expenses and GHG emissions %u2013 and some 28 percent of the production in this sector (in the US) is never consumed. If you haven%u2019t guessed it already, that would be the food sector.

28 September 2011

How to Engage and Convince the C-Suite about Corporate Sustainability

Environmental Leader - Corporate sustainability makes a lot of sense. Reduce your costs and risk, increase profit, strengthen reputation, protect and conserve natural resources and social value while enhancing share value%u2026what%u2019s not to love?  So why is it that so many internal sustainability champions struggle to move their initiatives forward?  Perhaps it%u2019s not the proposition at all %u2013 [...]

27 September 2011

Most Chief Sustainability Officers Close to the Top, Report Finds

Environmental Leader - Nine out of ten CSOs are one or two steps removed from the CEO, according to a report by executive search and consulting firm Weinreb Group.

26 September 2011

Global air pollution: what is the most polluted country and city in the world?

The Guardian - The World Health Organisation reveals pollution levels around the globe. We identify the countries with a problem.

Why do we need low-carbon energy?

The Guardian - The majority of the world's man-made carbon emissions are released by the burning fossil fuels to create electricity, heat or motion. This means that it will almost certainly be impossible to reduce greenhouse gas concentrations to sustainable levels unless large quantities of low-carbon energy can be brought on-stream to substitute for fossil fuels.

24 September 2011

An Efficient Solar Harvest

Environmental News Network - Solar power could be harvested more efficiently and transported over longer distances using tiny molecular circuits based on quantum mechanics, according to research inspired by new insights into natural photosynthesis.

P&G to Advocate Coldwater Washing to 100m US Homes

Environmental Leader - Procter and Gamble Company has pledged to launch an information blitz on 100 million U.S. homes aimed at promoting coldwater clothes washing.

23 September 2011

Target, McDonald and Others Save $650m through Climate Fellowship

Environmental Leader - McDonald%u2019s, Target and 76 other organizations have found $650 million in savings and 440,000 annual metric tons of CO2 reductions through this summer%u2019s EDF Climate Corps fellowship.

More Consumers Believe Sustainability Claims But Many Still Skeptical

Environmental Leader - Americans today are more likely to believe businesses%u2019 green claims, but 39 percent still say that companies%u2019 assertions about the environment are not accurate, according to a report from GfK Roper Consulting.

20 September 2011

Current power: New tide turbines tap oceans of energy

New Scientist - The huge potential of ocean currents could at last be tapped, thanks to the latest generators now being trialled on the seabed.

19 September 2011

Why Eating Organic is the Single Greenest Thing You Can Do

Environmental News Network - "If you do just one thing -- make one conscious choice -- that can change the world, go organic.... No other single choice you can make to improve the health of your family and the planet will have greater positive repercussions for our future."

U.K. Business Increases Sustainability

Environmental Leader - U.K. companies rapidly increased the sustainability of their business practices over the last 12 months of data collection, according to a report by sustainability non-profit Forum for the Future.

16 September 2011

P.J. Simmons Discusses Corporate Sustainability Practices

Environmental Leader - P.J. Simmons is co-founder and Chairman of the Corporate Eco Forum, a network of senior Global 500 executives focused on spreading best practices in corporate sustainability and accelerating eco-innovation. He is co-author of The Green to Gold Playbook: How to Implement Sustainability Practices for Bottom-Line Results in Every Business Function,.

Water from trees cools the climate

Ecoki - New research hailing out of Carnegies Global Ecology department has discovered that evaporated water from trees helps cool the Earth as a whole not just a specific area.

12 Ways To Turn Green Intentions Into Green Actions

Environmental Leader - Eighty-two percent of consumers have good green intentions, but only 16% are dedicated to fulfilling these intentions, according to an Ogilvy study.

15 September 2011

Managing Environmental Impact with a Global Framework and Local Execution

Environmental Leader - Environmental management poses both challenges and opportunities for companies with operations around the world. The challenges can seem onerous when you consider variations in local environmental issues, regulations, infrastructure capabilities, culture and other factors. 

13 September 2011

Facebook, Amazon Panned on Energy Management and Transparency

Environmental Leader - Amazon, Netflix, Facebook and other major internet firms are failing to adequately disclose their carbon footprint, according to a report by independent analyst Verdantix. The report, Carbon Strategy Benchmark: Internet Sector, finds that Akamai, Apple and eBay outpace their global competitors on energy efficiency enhancements and transparent disclosure of carbon emissions.

Sustainability Practitioner, Subject-matter Expert or Gunslinger?

Environmental Leader - Recently I was drinking an organic fair-trade soy latte while chatting with a long-time sustainability consulting colleague of mine who asked me what I thought about the sustainability consulting shops that were popping up all over the place. The short answer %u2013 I couldn%u2019t be happier. 

9 September 2011

Data Revealed: Google Uses More Power than Salt Lake City

Environmental Leader - Google has broken its silence on energy consumption, announcing that it consumed 2,259,998 MWh in 2010. In a new section on the Google Green site, called %u201CThe Big Picture,%u201D Google also said that it generated 1.46 million metric tons of carbon dioxide last year. Average annual carbon footprint per user was about 1.46 kg CO2

7 September 2011

City Makes Recycling Compulsory for Businesses

Environmental Leader - The city of Minneapolis has introduced mandatory recycling for all businesses, workplaces and houses of worship, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reports. The rule, which came into effect on Sept. 1, requires recycling collection at least twice a month.

Sustainability Is a Brand

Environmental Leader - In order to develop true sustainability policies, companies need to understand the nexus between energy, water, bio-diversity, and green house gas emissions, as well as the wider societal impacts of their company, and then combine them into one coherent policy and reporting framework.

3 September 2011

Report: Insurers Not Ready for Climate Change

Environmental Leader - Despite broad consensus among major insurers that climate change will affect extreme weather events, only an eighth of such companies have formal policies in place to deal with growing climate change risks, according to a report issued today by business sustainability coalition Ceres.

2 September 2011

Volkswagen Investing One Billion Euros in Wind Energy

Environmental News Network - In an attempt to hedge against future rising energy prices, Volkswagen announced last week that it will invest up to one billion Euros (US$1.45 billion) in renewable energy. The announcement follows the company%u2019s decisions earlier this year to invest in other clean energy projects as well as to launch new electric vehicles.

1 September 2011

2109: a life of equality but no polar bears

The Guardian - It is going to take 98 years for there to be pay parity between men and women. But what other predictions can be made for the year 2109?

Giant pipe to pump water into the sky

The Guardian - Field test by British academics marks first step towards recreating an artificial volcano that would inject particles into the stratosphere and cool the planet. It sounds barmy, audacious or sci-fi: a tethered balloon the size of Wembley stadium suspended 20km above Earth, linked to the ground by a giant garden hose pumping hundreds of tonnes of minute chemical particles a day into the thin stratospheric air to reflect sunlight and cool the planet.

28 August 2011

The ethical price of groceries

The Guardian - Is it deemed OK to use plastic bags again? Plastic bag use is on the increase and that's very disappointing. After a dip in individual bag use from 2002 to 2009, last year we were back up to getting through 475m a month.

27 August 2011

Sustainable fish logos: not all they're made out to be

New Scientist - Some fish that the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) have certified as sustainable come from unsustainable fisheries

26 August 2011

Achieving Water Conservation: Dilution Isn't the Solution!

Environmental Leader - To conserve and better manage their water use, more and more businesses are opting for closed water systems, where every drop of water taken is reused internally.

Death by fashion: is your wardrobe poisoning the world's water supply?

Environmental News Network - A Greenpeace investigation has discovered the toxic chemical nonylphenol ethoxylate (NPE) in clothing made by 14 major brands, including Adidas, H&M, Converse and Abercrombie and Fitch. NPE breaks down to form nonylphenol in water, which disrupts hormone levels and has been known to cause fish to change gender. Due to its persistence, nonylphenol builds up in each level in the food chain, meaning humans receive the highest dosage and can suffer from hormone imbalances as a result of eating contaminated fish and water. The chemical is banned from use in textile production in the EU but in China and other Asian countries such as Vietnam, where many global clothing brands source their products from, lax restrictions mean that NPE is widely used in the dyeing process.

25 August 2011

First link between climate patterns and civil conflict

New Scientist - The first study to link global climate patterns to the onset of civil wars places El Niño on a par with factors like poverty and social exclusion

Cloud-making: Another human effect on the climate

New Scientist - Compounds released by living organisms such as trees, marine bacteria and livestock have an effect on cloud formation ­%u2013 and we might be changing it

19 August 2011

2010 Saw Largest CO2 Rise for 22 Years

Environmental Leader - Energy-related carbon dioxide emissions rebounded in 2010 but still remained six percent below 2005 levels, according to an analysis by the Energy Information Administration. Energy-related CO2 underwent a historic decline in 2009. That year the economy as measured by the real gross domestic product (GDP) fell by 3.5 percent compared to the previous year

18 August 2011

World's forests absorb almost 40 per cent of man made CO2

Telegraph.co.uk - The world's forests are much more important than previously thought in absorbing CO2, according to a paper published in Science.

Air Products Fuels Cars with Hydrogen from Wastewater

Environmental Leader - Specialty gas company Air Products has opened a hydrogen fueling station (pictured) that draws feedstock from municipal wastewater.

17 August 2011

Why We Should Put a Price Tag on Ecosystem Services

Environmental News Network - A recent article in the New York Times about the work Stanford University biology professor Gretchen Daily is doing in Africa and Costa Rica highlights the importance of ecosystem services, or putting a value on ecosystems.

The women bringing solar power to Sierra Leone

The Guardian - An Indian college has trained 12 Sierra Leonean women to become solar engineers as part of a drive to bring electricity to rural communities.

Future funerals: What a way to go

New Scientist - Ashes to ashes, gloop to frost: undertakers are devising ingenious new ways to solve an age-old problem. Helen Knight reports

Obama Announces $510m for Biofuels

Environmental Leader - The Departments of Agriculture, Energy and Navy will invest up to $510 million over the next three years to produce advanced drop-in aviation and marine biofuels to power military and commercial transportation, President Obama announced yesterday.

Biggest UK oil spill for 10 years

New Scientist - The Gannet Alpha oil rig has spilled 216 tonnes of oil into the North Sea, but the slick may disperse before it reaches the shore

There Are Only 14 Different Kinds Of Noses, Study Says

Environmental News Network - How many different shapes of human noses are there? Ten? Fifty? Hundreds? The correct answer is 14, according to Abraham Tamir, an Israeli scientist. And while the study has its limitations, it is the first-of-its-kind survey detailing the shapes of schnozes.

16 August 2011

Triple Bottom Line investing 101

Ecoki - Are you looking to balance financial, social, and environmental returns in your investing? Then Triple Bottom Line investing might be the choice for you.Investors are becoming increasingly socially conscious, putting the environment at a forefront in their financial planning.

Africa famine: soaring food prices intensifying crisis, report warns

The Guardian - World Bank says shortages and near-historic prices for staple crops have contributed to the crisis in the Horn of Africa.

12 August 2011

Your faeces, my furry friend, are blowin' in the wind

New Scientist - Go for a bracing winter's stroll in a major US city and you may be inhaling more than vehicle fumes in the air

Sustainability Software Briefing: C3, Cisco, Sensus, 1E

Environmental Leader - C3, a fledgling vendor of energy management software, says that its customers and partners now include Adobe, Constellation Energy, Dow Chemical, GE, HP and Siemens.

9 August 2011

Black gold holds a charge for green cars

New Scientist - The next generation of electric-car batteries may thrive on a secret sauce that looks like crude oil.

Coca-Cola: A Case Study In Sustainability

Environmental Leader - How does Coca-Cola integrate sustainability into their operations? For several years its facility in Brampton, Ontario, one of its largest in North America, has been transforming its manufacturing and distribution to save energy, reduce carbon footprint, water usage, and material usage. In this case study we look at the goals, implementation, and progress.

8 August 2011

Is climate change to blame for famine in the Horn of Africa? | Duncan Green

The Guardian - So is famine in the Horn of Africa linked to climate change or not? The question arises whenever "extreme weather events" hurricanes, floods, droughts hit our TV screens. It's impossible to answer with a simple yes or no but here's what we think we know so far.

6 August 2011

Prized sashimi tuna bred in captivity for first time

New Scientist - The world's biggest supplier of tuna for sashimi says it has successfully bred the endangered northern bluefin in captivity.

3 August 2011

Sellafield Mox nuclear fuel plant to close

The Guardian - The mixed-oxide fuel plant will be shut as a consequence of the Fukushima incident, with the loss of about 600 jobs The Mox nuclear fuel plant at Sellafield was closed on Wednesday , with the loss of around 600 jobs.

2 August 2011

The carbon cost of Germany's nuclear 'Nein danke!'

New Scientist - Europe's energy consumers will find themselves paying a high price for Germany's decision to get out of nuclear power, says David Strahan.

28 July 2011

OK, climate sceptics: here's the raw data you wanted

New Scientist - Climate researchers accused of hoarding temperature data have today made almost the whole lot available to dispel charges of secrecy.

27 July 2011

Don't throw these away! Recycle them instead.

Ecoki - Although we know generally what to recycle: paper, plastic, cans, and glass, there are many things we are probably throwing away that we shouldn't! Indeed, there are household items that, when they are no longer of use to us, can be recycled to help our environment.

22 July 2011

How to keep your house cool this summer

Ecoki - Here are our top tips for staying cool indoors when the weather gets a little too warm.

19 July 2011

Shipping industry agrees CO2 emission standards

New Scientist - <p>The shipping industry has become the first to set global mandatory carbon dioxide standards but they will apply only from 2019</p>

14 July 2011

Fukushima Cleanup Recruits 'Nuclear Gypsies' from Across Japan

The Guardian - Thousands of engineers and labourers have been lured by higher wages and a sense of duty. The sun has only just risen in Iwaki-Yumoto when groups of men in white T-shirts and light blue cargo pants emerge blinking into the sunlight, swapping the comfort of their air-conditioned rooms for the fierce humidity of a Japanese summer.

Best Practices: The Business Case for Sustainability Disclosure

Environmental Leader - Join Environmental Leader for a webinar on Wednesday, July 20, 2011 at 8am PDT/11am EDT, discussing best practices for sustainability disclosure. Many organizations find that financial reporting alone no longer satisfies the needs of investors, governments, supply-chain partners, and other stakeholders for information about overall organizational performance.

CO2 to Hold Steady This Year, But Rise Coming in 2012

Environmental Leader - The Energy Information Administration expects fossil-fuel CO2 emissions to remain flat in 2011, as higher petroleum and natural gas consumption is offset by a decline in coal, according to the agency%u2019s latest Short-Term Energy

13 July 2011

Hungary Introduces 'fat tax' to Boost Nation's Health

Environmental News Network - Food considered to be unhealthy, including crisps, soft drinks and chocolate bars, are now subject to a new tax in Hungary. The new law, introduced on 11 July, is aimed at "improving the health of the nation". Initially called 'the hamburger tax', the measure was dubbed 'crisps tax' or 'fat tax' after the Hungarian government decided that it would not affect fast food restaurants.

Mosquitoes Lured to their Deaths by Synthetic Odour of Smelly Feet

The Guardian - Scientists in Tanzania win funding to develop attraction traps to kill insects and combat spread of malaria in open air. Scientists have recreated the powerful whiff of smelly feet to lure mosquitoes into traps and slow the spread of malaria and other lethal diseases.

Greenpeace Report Links Western Firms to Chinese River Polluters

The Guardian - Supplier to Nike, Adidas, Puma, H&M and Lacoste accused of discharging dangerous chemicals into Chinese water systems  Video: The toxic path of electronic waste. In pictures: China blighted by industrial pollution.

The best eco-apps for iPad and iPad2

Ecoki - Whether you want to simply reduce your carbon footprint, or get a whole lot greener, these apps are for you.

Al Gore Returns with New Climate Campaign

The Guardian - Climate Reality Project aims to expose reality of global warming crisis and kicks off with a 24-hour live streamed event.

10 July 2011

6 Ways to Save at the Grocery Store

Ecoki - When you're making your way throughout the grocery store, are you really thinking about what you're buying? The cashier tells you the number, and you pay it mindlessly with a wad of cash or a swipe of the card.

8 July 2011

Germany will use Fossil Fuels to Plug Nuclear Gap

New Scientist - Germany plans to be nuclear-free by 2022 but renewables alone won't be able to make up the power deficit.

6 July 2011

The Low-Flow Toilet

Ecoki - Toilets use a lot water to get the dirty work done. However, with the advent of low-flow toilets, we can save loads, making it more efficient and saving energy, too.

1 July 2011

Sustainability Profits Companies

Environmental Leader - For most companies, that which drives up their stock values is what ultimately matters and adopting sustainability practices can do that.

30 June 2011

Supervalu to Go Zero Waste at 40 Stores

Environmental Leader - Supervalu Inc. and its Albertsons brand of supermarkets have announced that they will move 40 stores to be zero waste by the end of next February

29 June 2011

Seasonal produce 101

Ecoki - Buying in season: do you do it? You should. If you're at the grocery store picking up peaches from Peru instead of honing in on the local goodness, keep reading.

28 June 2011

Global water stress

The Guardian - Click on each country (interactive map) to see its water stress ranking, and its water consumption as a percentage of its renewable supply

27 June 2011

UK's biggest solar energy farm connects to national grid

The Guardian - Solar panels at Howbery business park in Oxfordshire to generate up to 682MWh a year

Tips for greener laundry

Ecoki - Laundry. We don't really love it; but we have to do it. Each day, we use clothing, towels, bedding and, inevitably, we have to clean it. But how can we do this in the greenest way possible?

California Ships 100% Solar Powered Rice to Japan

CleanTechnica - The U.S. agricultural sector is beginning to take on a leadership role in the transition to renewable energy.

26 June 2011

Hertz Now Offers Electric Bicycle Rentals

CleanTechnica - Rental car agencies like Hertz have started offering electric bicycle rental instead of cars, trying to develop and show a green side lately.

25 June 2011

Electric cars: kiss petrol stations goodbye

The Guardian - British Gas and npower are vying to offer home charging services for electric cars offering a green way to get around, with the chance to bypass petrol stations.

Change career by going green

The Guardian - 'Green-collar' jobs in the environmental sector are growing %u2013 and increasingly attracting professionals from other areas in search of a fresh start.

The secret to becoming a green office champion

The Guardian - To turn your office eco, recycling, investment in energy-saving equipment and a practical approach can deliver ethical and beneficial results

Electric Buses that Charge at Each Stop

CleanTechnica - Proterra developed an electric bus that avoids the high cost of long range batteries by using short range batteries and charging them at each stop.

24 June 2011

Serengeti highway cancelled

Environmental News Network - In what is being hailed as a victory for conservationists and the wildlife of the Serengeti, the Tanzanian government has cancelled plans for a controversial highway that would have dissected the Serengeti National Park.

Dozens of Countries Queue up to go Nuclear

New Scientist - While Germany, Italy and Japan reject nuclear power, developing countries and Middle Eastern oil economies are forging ahead with it

New refill scheme for wine lovers

The Guardian - A refill scheme has proved a runaway success, accounting for around half of the wine sold in a shop of one corner of Dalston, offering red, white and rosé wines that if you bring your own bottle and fill it up from the barrels in the corner of the shop you get a saving of more than 50%.

Jail Time for Clean Air Act Violator

Environmental News Network - The Clean Air Act is an environmental law but it is a law nonetheless. Breaking it will subject the violator to punishment by the courts.

23 June 2011

New Nissan Ads Shift the Way Car Buyers Evaluate Options

Environmental News Network - Many new green brands have been introduced over the years with green marketing pitches, only to realize the opportunity to link environmental product attributes with the primary reasons why consumers buy (all) products in the first place.

Attracting Backyard Wildlife

Ecoki - Take a look outside the windows into the backyard. If all you see is a manicured lawn, growing garden, and well-kept foliage, you're missing out on one key thing: wildlife. Bringing birds, bees, bunnies, and other wildlife into our backyard is a mutual benefit.

22 June 2011

Earth's oceans on course for mass extinction

New Scientist - It is all thanks to a deadly combination of climate change, overexploitation, pollution and habitat loss

21 June 2011

World's oceans move into 'extinction phase'

Telegraph.co.uk - The next generation may lose the opportunity to swim over coral reefs or eat certain species of fish, scientists have warned, as the world's oceans move into a 'phase of extinction' due to human impacts such as over-fishing and climate change.

16 June 2011

Earth's Energy Lessons from Space

The Epoch Times - Technologies developed for satellites can help citizens and national authorities find solutions to some of our planet's energy problems.

Solar Power Boosts the Sales Price of Homes

CleanTechnica - The addition of solar panels on homes increases the resale value.

15 June 2011

New microchip could prevent 'standby' energy loss

The Guardian - Japanese scientists have developed a new micro-processing chip which they claim could do away with the energy loss caused by appliances while on "standby".

Obama-How Energy Efficiency Creates Green Jobs

CleanTechnica - President Obama discussed the job creation benefits of energy efficiency policies putting a strong emphasis on the young pursuing degrees in the "hard sciences" leading us forward in the cleantech industry.

White House Pledges Smart Grid Data Access, $250m in Loans

Environmental Leader - The Obama administration yesterday announced $250 million in loans for smart-grid deployment and launched new initiatives to ensure customers access to their energy usage information.

Compliance and Standards

Environmental Leader - The world first ISO-accredited certification for carbon management professionals has been launched by the Greenhouse Gas Management Institute and Eco-Canada.

Black carbon cut would bring dramatic benefits

The Guardian - Global warming could be slowed down if governments cleaned up what's known as black carbon from industry and cooking fires, 50 of the world's leading atmospheric scientists said on Tuesday.

Google Invests in Solar Energy

CleanTechnica - Google announced today that it is investing $280 million in a rooftop solar power company.

14 June 2011

Rewards for households that produce less waste

Telegraph.co.uk - Households will be rewarded for the first time for putting out less rubbish to significantly boost recycling, especially of valuable materials like glass.

13 June 2011

Supermarkets bid to get shoppers to switch to sustainable fish

The Guardian - UK supermarkets are stepping up their efforts to encourage shoppers to buy fish from sustainable sources in a fresh attempt to alleviate pressure on threatened stocks.

10 June 2011

Google Earth Explores Ocean Depths

The Epoch Times - Google Earth has released new topographical imagery to allow users to see ocean floors in high-resolution, timed to celebrate World Oceans Day on June 8.

IBM Launch to Cut Energy Use

Environmental Leader - IBM today launched its Intelligent Building Management software, which the IT company estimates can reduce maintenance costs

8 June 2011

World Oceans Day is today, June 8th

Environmental News Network - The 8th of June is World Oceans Day, our annual chance to celebrate all things marine! World Oceans Day encourages us to consider everything that the oceans provide us.

7 June 2011

The Green Home Shopping List

Ecoki - Looking to make your home a little greener? Look no further than a few average items to add to your shopping list! Here are our top must-buys for keeping your home green, and how to use them.

Krispy Kreme Switches to Cage-Free Eggs

Environmental News Network - Fans of Krispy Kreme can enjoy their favorite guilty pleasure a little more.

6 June 2011

Blue skies and green footprint

The Guardian - This summer's festival season looks set to have a greener footprint as well as bluer skies. The Isle of Wight festival, which kicks off the season this weekend, has revealed that it cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 22% last year, while July's Lovebox in London slashed 38% from its environmental impact.

Belgian rail network gets solar boost

The Guardian - A two-mile-long Belgian rail tunnel, built to shelter trains from falling trees, will from Monday provide a double environmental benefit by hosting a unique solar power project.

3 June 2011

Energy efficient lighting introduced on roadways

CleanTechnica - For those ready to step into the world of energy-efficient LED lighting, a light has been introduced that delivers brighter and more energy-efficient illumination for enhanced visibility on local, collector and major roadways.

Congo-Brazzaville to ban plastic bags

The Guardian - Congo-Brazzaville is to ban the production, import, sale and use of plastic bags in a move to fight environmental pollution in the central African nation, the government has said.

Our green spaces are priceless

The Guardian - The government's attempt to put a monetary value on nature threatens the existence of our remaining parks and playing fields. That is because local authorities, planners and governments will always attach a higher economic importance to providing services and building houses or roads than conserving green spaces or wildlife habitats.

1 June 2011

BP among founding members of World Bank carbon fund

The Guardian - The Forest fund is designed to pay developing countries for reducing emissions caused by the destruction of their forests. BP, responsible for the loss of around 5m barrels of oil in the Gulf of Mexico last year and annual carbon emissions greater than more than 120 developing countries put together, has become the world's first company to try to profit from a new World Bank carbon fund.

Carbon levels hit new peak, research shows

The Guardian - Preliminary data from the US government shows that carbon dioxide levels peaked last week at the highest levels on record. Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere have reached a new peak despite the economic recession in western countries and assurances from politicians that they intend to cut emissions, new research has shown.

28 May 2011

Atlantic bluefin tuna put on U.S. environmental watchlist

Environmental News Network - The U.S. government put the Atlantic bluefin tuna on an environmental watchlist as a "species of concern" on Friday, and will keep checking for any impact on these fish from the 2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Dramatic Increase in Amazon Deforestation

Environmental News Network - Deforestation in the Amazon rainforest of Brazil has risen six-fold. Comparing data from March-April 2010 to the same period this year shows deforestation has increased from 103 square kilometers in 2010 to 593 square kilometers just one year later.

Wind Power Generation in 2011

Environmental News Network - The AWEA (American Wind Energy Association) indicated that the first quarter of 2011 saw over 1,100 megawatts (MW) of wind power capacity installed -- more than double the capacity installed in the first quarter of 2010.

Facebook founder's meat challenge

The Guardian - Facebook's founder and CEO sets himself a challenge to 'basically become a vegetarian' by slaughtering his own meat. Earlier this month, he surprised his 847 friends on his private Facebook page when he posted: "I just killed a pig and a goat."

18 May 2011

UK pledges to halve emissions by 2025

The Guardian - The UK announces the most ambitious targets on greenhouse gases of any developed country, after a week of cabinet rifts. The UK is to put in place the most ambitious targets on greenhouse gases of any developed country, by halving carbon dioxide emissions by 2025, after a tumultuous week of cabinet rifts on the issue.

17 May 2011

GM soy: the high cost of the quest for 'green gold'

Telegraph.co.uk - Scientists and villagers in rural Paraguay are questioning the health and environmental impact of GM soy. Louise Gray reports.

16 May 2011

Ethical shoppers don't care what's in their sandwiches - RSPCA

Telegraph.co.uk - So-called 'ethical shoppers', who insist on organic chicken for dinner parties, are quite happy to buy sandwiches with meat raised in cruel conditions, according to a new survey.

13 May 2011

US fighting machine going green

New Scientist - From biofuelled fighter jets to roll-up solar blankets, the US navy is on a mission to stop using fossil fuels.

DNA chip test will track down illegal fish

New Scientist - Relatively cheap, reliable genetic tests could soon give the authorities the means to identify fish caught from unsustainable sources.

12 May 2011

Prince Charles warns of fisheries collapse

Telegraph.co.uk - The Prince of Wales has called on consumers to only eat sustainable seafood to avoid a collapse in the world's fisheries.

Ben Fogle swims through plastic to save oceans

Telegraph.co.uk - Ben Fogle has described "swimming through a horrible slick of plastic" in the feeding grounds of the endangered blue whale.

Renewables may supply 80 per cent of our energy by 2050

New Scientist - A bullish report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change suggests an optimistic vision of the future and with the right government support . . .

11 May 2011

Huhne announces crackdown to force landlords to install green measures

Telegraph.co.uk - Thousands of landlords will face fines if they fail to install insulation under new legislation to make every home in Britain as energy efficient as possible.

10 May 2011

Fighting ocean acidification the fish tank way

New Scientist - People use quicklime to balance the pH of their fish tanks. Could governments do something similar to correct the pH of our acidifying oceans?

9 May 2011

Unnatural selection: Fish growing up fast

New Scientist - As we vacuum up stupendous numbers of fish, the nature of the ones that get away is changing at an astonishing rate, says Michael Le Page

8 May 2011

New eco-inspired iPad app for kids!

Ecoki - We sure love our technology, and when it comes to saving the environment,it's even better when they go hand-in-hand. That's why we are pretty excited when our friend at the Rainforest Alliance told us about an awesome new app for kids, designed to teach them important information about the rainforest in a really fun way!

7 May 2011

Unnatural selection: Spreading sickness

New Scientist - From fish in a British lake to lions and corals, many plants and animals have suffered devastating disease outbreaks because of human activity, says Michael Le Page.

The Battery That Keeps on Going?

CleanTechnica - Now Cui and his team of researchers have calculated a way to alternate the flow of river water and salty seawater through a battery to produce electricity that can be used for charging purposes. It might also be possible this same process can be reversed to remove salt from seawater to produce drinking water.

6 May 2011

Letters: Love-hate affair with supermarkets

The Guardian - Food security will soon be an issue for all nations. In a period of diminishing supply and increasing demand, four food retailers enjoy an increasingly powerful position. A credit crunch can be relieved in the short term by printing money; we cannot print food, it has to be grown, but why should farmers bother when the big four supermarkets have such a stranglehold on price?

Food prices driven up by global warming, study shows

The Guardian - Scientists warn that farming practices must be adapted to a warmer world and rises in global population Global warming has already harmed the world's food production and has driven up food prices by as much as 20% over recent decades, new research has revealed.

5 May 2011

Farmer wins compensation after Red Nose Day balloon kills cow

Telegraph.co.uk - A farmer has won compensation after a Red Nose Day balloon released by school pupils killed his cow.

Evolutionary push could help crops self-fertilise

New Scientist - Agriculture would be transformed if crops could produce fertiliser as legumes do. New research suggests it might be easier than we thought.

29 April 2011

Why have so many tornadoes hit the US this month?

New Scientist - April has been a deadly month for the US tornado states. New Scientist explains how severe the outbreak has been, and what has caused it.

27 April 2011

The Rainforest Alliance launches the SmartLodge

Ecoki - Interested in learning how sustainable travel and tourism benefits local communities? The Rainforest Alliance is giving us the details, along with how to respect cultural diversity and enhance environmental conservation.

26 April 2011

What is the carbon footprint of the royal wedding?

Telegraph.co.uk - The royal wedding will generate more than ten times as much greenhouse gases than Buckingham Palace in a whole year, according to the first analysis of the carbon footprint of the marriage of Prince William and Kate Middleton.

25 April 2011

42 ways to help the environment

Ecoki - Trying to figure out some easy ways to help the environment? Look no further.

21 April 2011

Donating Surplus PCs Protects Environment and Closes Digital Divide

Environmental Leader - The drive for newer, faster, better technology is generating dramatic gains in productivity 2013 but serious environmental impacts as well.

Environmental Software News: Verdiem, Ecotality, Volvo

Environmental Leader - Verdiem has extended its computer power management platform to cover Macs as well as PCs. The latest version of the software, Surveyor 5.5 includes support for Mac desktops and laptops, and improved integration with Windows 7 power management capabilities, Verdiem says.

20 April 2011

Intel Plans $25bn Efficiency Savings

Environmental Leader - Intel plans to save $25 billion by 2015 through energy-efficient IT initiatives, a company representative has said. Allyson Klein, Intel%u2019s data center group leadership marketing director, told the Express Tribune in Karachi that efficiency gains will allow the company to eliminate or prevent huge amounts of power consumption.

Renewed energy for renewable energy

The Guardian - A new wave of activists is gearing up to combat the millions the US Chamber of Commerce invests in boosting fossil fuels.

Dell Closing in on Recycling Goal

Environmental Leader - Electronics manufacturer Dell is two-thirds of the way toward its goal of recycling 1 billion pounds of e-waste by 2014, the company has announced.

Breathing Polluted Air Can Disrupt Immune System

Environmental News Network - Negative health effects from the chronic inhalation of polluted air are well known to cause cardio-respiratory disease. It can be particularly damaging to seniors, children, and people with asthma. Now according to a study from Ohio State University, breathing polluted air can also cause widespread inflammation by triggering the release of white blood cells from bone marrow into the blood stream. The influx of white blood cells can alter the integrity of the blood vessels. The white blood cells are then absorbed into fat tissues where chemicals are released that cause inflammation.

19 April 2011

Electric Cars

Environmental News Network - Will electric cars ever become the common way to drive?

Growing sugarcane could help cool Brazil

New Scientist - Converting Brazil's existing farmland to sugarcane for biofuel could slightly cool the local climate.

15 April 2011

Acidic ocean robs coral of vital building material

New Scientist - Carbon dioxide dissolved in water has pillaged the Great Barrier Reef of a compound that corals need to grow.

14 April 2011

Hot solar cells are the cool way to water and power

New Scientist - Techniques designed for cooling computer chips make for more efficient photovoltaic cells and provide cheap energy for desalination.

13 April 2011

Has BP really cleaned up the Gulf oil spill?

The Guardian - Officially, marine life is returning to normal in the Gulf of Mexico, but dead animals are still washing up on beaches and one scientist believes the damage runs much deeper.

Safeway Leads Greenpeace Seafood Rankings

Environmental Leader - Safeway has surged into first place in Greenpeace's rankings of major seafood retailers, surpassing last year's winner Target.

Study: Most Companies Now Measure Green Savings

Environmental Leader - Three out of five employers (60 percent) are measuring their cost savings from environmental programs, up from 39 percent last year, according to a survey by Buck Consultants.

12 April 2011

Water Innovation and Investment for a Sustainable Future

Environmental Leader - According to the World Health Organization, nearly a billion individuals worldwide currently do not have access to safe water and close to 3.6 million people die each year from water-related causes.

Nuclear crises: How do Fukushima and Chernobyl compare?

The Guardian - Japan has raised the severity level of its nuclear crisis from five to the maximum seven, putting the emergency at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant on a par with that at Chernobyl in 1986. Mark Tran looks at the differences between the two disasters.

China's green progress leaves US red-faced

The Guardian - China pushes ahead with an emissions trading scheme, while American initiatives remain sunk in Congressional quicksand.

Unilever Leads Sustainability Rankings

Environmental Leader - Unilever has topped rankings of the companies most committed to sustainability, in a poll carried out by consultants SustainAbility and researchers GlobeScan.

Japan upgrades crisis to Chernobyl level

The Guardian - Nuclear and industrial safety agency raises severity rating to maximum on international nuclear and radiological event scale.

11 April 2011

Earth Day 2011: what to know

Ecoki - Coming soon. April 22nd. Earth Day 2011. Earth Day 2011 is focused on the recognition of the power of millions of individual actions. Dubbed as A Billion Acts of Green, with a goal to highlight personal, organizational and corporate pledges to live and act sustainably.

8 April 2011

Ten years to save Australia's Great Barrier Reef

New Scientist - Carbon dioxide emissions must be cut within a decade to give the reef system a fighting chance of survival.

6 April 2011

Garbage-sorting robot gets its hands dirty

New Scientist - A robot that automatically categorises waste from construction and demolition projects could save valuable raw materials from landfill.

Population expert: The 11-billion-person planet

New Scientist - This year will see the world's 7-billionth person. If only population growth forecasts were as definite, says demographer John Bongaarts.

Where should the US store its nuclear waste?

New Scientist - Underground deposits of salt, shale and granite are among the options - New Scientist weighs the pros and cons of each.

5 April 2011

Eco-friendly earphones by thinksound

Ecoki - We sure love our music. iPods and MP3 players are quite constantly plugged into our ears. Unfortunately, they aren't exactly made of 100% eco-friendly materials.

31 March 2011

Japan fears radioactive contamination of marine life

The Guardian - Fukushima coastal waters sees high levels of radioactive iodine, which could build up in seaweed commonly eaten in Japan

Spain's financial crisis claims another victim: the solar power industry

The Guardian - The Spanish government has slashed its solar power subsidies . Spain had one of the world's most ambitious and generous plans to boost the amount of electricity it generates from the sun. That dream, for the solar industry at least, has turned sour.

Wind and wave energies are not renewable after all

New Scientist - Build enough wind farms to replace fossil fuels and we could do as much damage to the climate as greenhouse global warming.

Wind and wave farms could affect Earth's energy balance

New Scientist - The idea that we can draw endless supplies of clean energy from the wind and waves just doesn't add up.

Greenpeace targets Facebook employees

The Guardian - Greenpeace says it is targeting Facebook employees in a renewed campaignthat is urging the world's most successful social networking site to lead an energy revolution.

What is Green?

Environmental News Network - With more and more environmentally conscious consumers trying to choose green products, American Chemical Society scientists reported today that the first reality check has revealed that the ingredients in those products may come from a surprising source petroleum, rather than natural plant-based sources.

30 March 2011

Senate vote may end Obama's climate change ambitions

The Guardian - Four proposals seek to ban or limit US government's authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. The US Senate is due to vote as early as Wednesday on measures that would strip the Obama administration of its powers to act on climate change.

The race for clean Olympic air | H&eacute;l&egrave;ne Mulholland

The Guardian - After the smog problems of Beijing, London has still to reach agreed air quality standards ahead of 2012.

Paper Companies to Cut GHGs 15% by 2020, Raise Recycling to 70%

Environmental Leader - The American Forest and Paper Association has announced goals to increase the paper recycling rate to over 70 percent and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 15 percent by 2020, in what the group calls the most extensive set of goals of any manufacturing industry in the U.S.

BP loses laptop containing personal data of oil spill claimants

The Guardian - A BP employee has lost a laptop containing personal data belonging to thousands of Louisiana residents who filed claims for compensation after the Gulf oil spill.

Changing animals' diet can reduce emissions

The Guardian - A change of diet could help flatulent farm animals reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, a study has said.

26 March 2011

Earth Hour alert!

Ecoki - So, what did you do for Earth Hour 2011?

24 March 2011

Food waste increases UK's water footprint

New Scientist - The British waste more water than they use at home by throwing away food, a problem that is probably also true of other western nations.

22 March 2011

Lammas: The eco-village that lives off the grid - video

The Guardian - Heydon Prowse visits the pioneering off-grid Lammas project in Pembrokeshire to learn how they blend green building technology and perma-culture economics to fuel a thriving community

World Water Day: A global inundation of funds is not enough

The Guardian - One billion people lack basic water supplies and 2.6 billion lack access to sanitation. But we must invest wisely and locally.

Japan fears food contamination as battle to cool nuclear plant continues

The Guardian - Abnormal radiation levels reported in tap water, vegetables and milk with concerns that fish may also be affected.

Why Fukushima made me love nuclear power

The Guardian - You will not be surprised to hear that the events in Japan have changed my view of nuclear power. You will be surprised to hear how they have changed it. As a result of the disaster at Fukushima, I am no longer nuclear-neutral. I now support the technology.

Google funds company producing biofuel from grass

The Guardian - Business Green: Biofuel technology is an "innovative solution to one of the world's biggest problems", says Google.

19 March 2011

8 things that really do help

Ecoki - We're constantly told ways that we can be greener and help the environment. That's great and all, but which ones really do help? These eight changes really do help our planet. And here's why:

How not to change a climate sceptic's mind

New Scientist - Even the soundest evidence is not enough if it comes from a source we suspect.

17 March 2011

The megaquake connection: Are huge earthquakes linked?

New Scientist - The recent cluster of huge quakes around the Pacific Ocean has fuelled speculation that they are seismically linked. New Scientist examines the evidence.

15 March 2011

Why earthquakes are hard to predict

New Scientist - Friday's magnitude-9.0 earthquake near Japan was one of the largest ever recorded, but it struck with no warning. Why are such quakes so hard to predict?

10 March 2011

Killing weeds the natural way

Ecoki - The warmer weather is tempting us, with more mild days and no chance of a deep freeze in the near future (we hope). And if you're a gardener, this is bliss.

7 March 2011

Seven must-do cooking methods

Ecoki - These healthy eating cooking methods are guaranteed to make your meals more nutritious, and expand your expertise, too.

3 March 2011

A country with no time for climate change scepticism

New Scientist - The attitude of those at the sharp end of climate change has important lessons for us all, says Adam Corner.

Commercial buildings must disclose their energy ratings

The Guardian - Commercial buildings contribute 17% of the UK's emissions, yet have no obligation to improve efficiency, hopefully the Ecobuild exhibition will encourage businesses to make the first move.

2 March 2011

'Air hybrid' cars would be cheaper than electric hybrids, claims researcher

The Guardian - Storing energy as compressed air rather than in batteries would reduce the cost of green hybrid cars, say researchers in Sweden.

Discard this common fisheries policy and stop this waste

The Guardian - The EU has finally proposed a ban on the senseless practice of 'discard'. Now it must talk to fishermen to work out how to do this.

Homebuyers ignore efficiency labels

The Guardian - A Consumer Focus report found 79% of prospective buyers did not act on recommendations of energy performance certificates.

When did we discover man-made climate change?

The Guardian - This question and answer is part of the Guardian's ultimate climate change FAQ.

Winter woodland: Your Green shoots photographs

The Guardian - We asked for your pictures of woodland in winter, when the low sun makes for some great angles for photographers

Biofuel boom could follow oil price spike | Damian Carrington

The Guardian - When biofuels match oil on price, production could boom in the developing countries that also have the greatest need to boost food supply.

1 March 2011

What's the most eco-friendly alternative to a garden patio?

The Guardian - Decking, concrete slabs and limestone all come with environmental problems - so what's the best option?

China's take on the current issues in climate talks

Environmental News Network - China, the world's biggest greenhouse gas emitter, wants rich nations to vow bigger cuts to emissions as part of a new international deal on fighting global warming, Beijing's top climate negotiator said on Tuesday.

23 February 2011

Mobile phones boost brain activity

New Scientist - Brain activity near a phone's antenna increases during a call, but whether this is harmful is not known.

22 February 2011

UN sets out blueprint for greening the world's economy

The Guardian - A UN report outlines path to kickstart economic growth after the recession, without generating a rise in emissions

What are the main man-made greenhouse gases?

The Guardian - The strength of the Earth's greenhouse effect is determined by the concentration in the atmosphere of a handful of greenhouse gases. The one that causes the most warming overall is water vapour as human activity affects it indirectly rather than directly.

21 February 2011

Fewer Big Fish in the Sea

Environmental News Network - Fewer big, predatory fish are swimming in the world's oceans because of overfishing by humans, leaving smaller fish to thrive and double in force over the past 100 years, scientists said Friday. Big fish such as cod, tuna, and groupers have declined worldwide by two-thirds while the number of anchovies, sardines and capelin has surged in their absence, said University of British Columbia researchers.

Climate change no problem, says futurist Ray Kurzweil

The Guardian - Futurist Ray Kurzweil says "we have plenty of time" to replace fossil fuels with renewables. Author, inventor, and futurist Ray Kurzweil famously and accurately predicted that a computer would beat a man at chess by 1998, that technologies that help spread information would accelerate the collapse of the Soviet Union, and that a worldwide communications network would emerge in the mid 1990s (i.e. the internet).

20 February 2011

EU to ban six toxic chemicals in household plastics

Environmental News Network - The European Union will ban six toxic chemicals within three to five years, three of which are commonly used in plastic household items, the European Commission said on this week.

16 February 2011

The dirty history of corporate spying

The Guardian - Private spying by large corporations into the affairs of environmental groups, as revealed by the Guardian, is nothing new in the US. Last November, as Mother Jones reported, Greenpeace went into federal district court in Washington, seeking an injunction against Dow Chemical Company and Sasol North America for meddling in its internal affairs. (Sasol is the big South African energy company with operations, including chemicals, in the US.)

World Bank warns of soaring food price dangers

The Guardian - The World Bank has given a stark warning of the impact of the rising cost of food, saying an estimated 44 million people had been pushed into poverty since last summer by soaring commodity prices.

How much oil does Saudi Arabia actually have?

The Guardian - Does anyone know how much oil Saudi Arabia has left? Last week a series of US diplomatic cables from 2007-2009 and released by WikiLeaks suggested that senior US embassy staff were warning Washington that reserves could be 40% less than stated and that "peak oil" might be imminent.

15 February 2011

I eat out of bins too. So what?

The Guardian - Sasha Hall must have thought she was in luck when she found a bin outside Tesco overflowing with food. She helped herself to packets of potato waffles, pies and ham %u2013 a small fraction of the goods that had been abandoned after the store's freezers broke down. But when police arrived at the 21-year-old's home in Essex to arrest her for "theft by finding", those waffles must have looked less lucky.

Eyewitness: Population explosion

The Guardian - Photographs from the Guardian Eyewitness series

Green kitchen renovation

Ecoki - The new year often brings about two things: (1) Resolutions that we (always/sometimes/never) keep for our (health/body/mind/life). And (2) house organization and renovations. The best kind? Making the latter more eco-friendly.The benefits will include a cheaper electricity bill, a more stylish home, and, of course, some love to our awesome planet.

Barack Obama 2012 budget provides $8bn for clean energy

The Guardian - President Barack Obama proposed on Monday to boost funds for clean energy research and deployment in his 2012 budget by slashing subsidies for fossil fuels such as oil, gas and coal.

Are Anti-oxidants Keeping You Young and Infertile?

Environmental News Network - It's a tale with two endings, a conundrum for consumers of antioxidant-rich foods, drinks and facial products. What has been touted as a natural way to slow the aging process by minimizing cell damage via oxidation may be one culprit in female infertility. So suggests Professor Nava Dekel of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel.

11 February 2011

Earth economist: The food bubble is about to burst

New Scientist - We're fast draining the fresh water resources our farms rely on, warns Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute.

10 February 2011

Will intensified farming save the rainforests?

New Scientist - The idea that you can save the natural world by increasing the efficiency of agriculture is very appealing. But Fred Pearce is far from convinced

9 February 2011

BP, Other Oil Companies Update Transparency Guidelines

Environmental Leader - Oil and gas companies including BP, Chevron and ExxonMobil have contributed to updated guidance on improving transparency in environmental reporting.

What is Sustainability? Discussion by Gale Tedhams

Environmental Leader - Director, Sustainability, Green Products and Communications, Owens Corning, talks about the factors that are driving the conversation about sustainability in manufacturing.

Environmental Lessons Learned from 2010

Environmental Leader - As we enter 2011, we join much of the Western world in reflecting on the past year and making resolutions for the New Year.

Whaling in Japan is on the verge of collapse

The Guardian - The tide of public opinion in Japan has finally begun to turn against the whalers.

8 February 2011

Spain's salad growers are modern-day slaves, say charities

The Guardian - Investigation uncovers plight of migrant workers who live in appalling conditions and are paid half of legal minimum wage.

Polluted perfume could put pollinators off the scent

New Scientist - Insect pollinators are more responsive to scent than previously realised, offering a new reason for their decline and new hope to reverse the trend.

7 February 2011

Observer Ethical Awards 2011: judge Guy Watson

The Guardian - Observer Ethical Awards 2011

5 February 2011

Forestry shows us what is wrong with UK politics

The Guardian - The majority of people want to see forests protected but instead of action, they get rhetoric, spin and broken promises.

4 February 2011

After the birds vanish, plants are next to go

New Scientist - The first evidence is in to confirm that plunging bird populations could lead to the slow decline of plant species.

1 February 2011

Making life, but not as we know it

New Scientist - Can you create life from scratch using different chemical building blocks to ours? An ambitious new experiment aims to find out, says Katharine Sanderson.

30 January 2011

The Livewell diet: it's cheap, it's nutritious and it could help save the planet

The Guardian - Can you save the planet over lunch? Can the amount of chicken in your curry or milk in your coffee make a difference? Researchers now claim it can: in fact, they say, if we all switched to eating what they would like to see on our plates, we could cut Britain's greenhouse gas emissions by a quarter and be a lot healthier too.

BP to cut production amid impact of Deepwater Horizon spill

The Guardian - Bob Dudley, BP's chief executive, will scrap the company's production targets when he lays out his vision this week for a smaller, more exploration-focused company after last April's Gulf of Mexico disaster.

Can I ditch my computer and be green?

The Guardian - There is a disheartening moment when your computer makes weird noises and enforces Moore's law %u2013 which decrees that the computing power bought for a certain amount of money doubles every 18 months %u2013 by signalling its own obsolescence.

29 January 2011

Vegetarian secret weapons

Ecoki - In the last few years, there has become a trend to label some types of food as %u201Csuperfoods%u201D.

27 January 2011

Efficiency could cut world energy use over 70 per cent

New Scientist - Clean coal? Solar power? No need, according to a new study: massive energy savings can be realised simply by using less.

Bank of China Branch Cuts Paper 95%

Environmental Leader - Bank of China's London operations have reduced paper consumption by 95 percent with help from IBM, the companies have announced.

Does Your Green Company Buy Green?

Environmental Leader - It may seem like a silly question but after working with some of the oldest and greenest companies in the country, as well as some of the smallest and newest, I have noticed some great discrepancies between what a green company says or in many cases what they sell and what they do or buy.

What is the greenhouse effect?

The Guardian - One of the main factors determining the temperature of a planet, whereby gases in the atmosphere trap heat. See all questions and answers. Read about the project

26 January 2011

Who owns which ethical brand?

The Guardian - A survey published tomorrow shows consumers are largely ignorant of the companies behind ethical brands. Test your knowledge with our quiz. Which parent company is linked to which brand?

Can you put a price on nature?

The Guardian - The idea of conservation credits is now being pushed hard by government. Can it work?

Making Smart cars smarter - video

The Guardian - Scientists at Newcastle University are working on a Smart car battery that will allow the electric cars to travel the same distance as petrol and diesel cars without re-charging

25 January 2011

Green Patriot Posters

The Guardian - Green Patriot Posters is a new book of posters on the theme of sustainability by some of the world's most prominent graphic designers and artists.

23 January 2011

Going green on Valentine's Day

Ecoki - It's right around the bend. That quintessential love-filled day. You know the one, Valentine's Day. Unfortunately, all those useless red, pink and white cards can do a little damage to the environment, too. Luckily, our friends at Rainforest Alliance have put together a Green Guide to Valentine's Day.

19 January 2011

Chinese megacities foster unlikely green citizens

New Scientist - A survey shows that, in China, the urban elite is most likely to get environmental gold stars.

12 January 2011

We can feed 9 billion people in 2050

New Scientist - Future humans need not starve in order to preserve the environment, according to a major report on sustainability.

10 January 2011

CES 2011: Ford charges into electric car market with app-enabled car

The Guardian - When the range a car can drive might be limited by how charged its battery is, you need some smart technology to help you out - and that's what Ford is showing off.

Lessons on environment as important as the three Rs, says Attenborough

The Guardian - Veteran presenter says nature classes should be on a par with maths and English for children 'estranged' from the natural world Classes on the environment are just as important as lessons in maths and English for today's children, veteran natural history presenter Sir David Attenborough has told the Guardian.

9 January 2011

Your coffee and the environment

Ecoki - Your delicious, smooth morning coffee. Can't imagine waking up without it, right? Well, do you know the impact that your coffee makes to the environment? And what about the workers producing those beans? Enter: SealYourCup.org, a website launched by our friends at the Rainforest Alliance.

8 January 2011

Which is the bigger eco-villain: plastic or paper?

The Guardian - Plastic is held up as a symbol of the environmental damage of disposable culture. But does it deserve its bad reputation?

Financial problems could wipe out commercial whaling

Environmental News Network - Commercial whaling by many nations continues despite an international ban and widescale condemnation. What may end the practice, argues Peter Nolan-Smith, is that the financial incentives are starting to dry up.

5 January 2011

How to judge the 'greenest government ever'

The Guardian - How should we assess David Cameron's ambitious green pledge? Is it all about climate change, energy security and jobs? What about forests, national parks and badgers?

4 January 2011

La Nina and monsoonal winds flood northern Australia

New Scientist - A strong La Nina and an active monsoonal trough are responsible for the devastating floods in Queensland.

WikiLeaks: US targets EU over GM crops

The Guardian - US embassy cable recommends drawing up list of countries for 'retaliation' over opposition to genetic modification. The US embassy in Paris advised Washington to start a military-style trade war against any European Union country which opposed genetically modified (GM) crops, newly released WikiLeaks cables show.

Can Italy carry off its plastic bag ban?

The Guardian - Environmentalists may welcome the government's decision, but many Italians say they're unprepared for such a 'cultural change' The plastic bags ban in Italy has provoked a mixed reaction, but Stefania Prestigiacomo, the environment minister, has said there is no going back on the government's decision: "Sustainability is made of little changes to our lifestyle that don't cost us anything and can save the planet."

3 January 2011

Most Read Environmental Management and Sustainable Business Stories of 2010

Environmental Leader - With 2010 in the books, it's a good time to look back at the environmental and sustainability management stories that struck a cord with our executive readership.

2 January 2011

20 predictions for the next 25 years

The Guardian - From the web to wildlife, the economy to nanotechnology, politics to sport, the Observer's team of experts prophesy how the world will change for good or bad in the next quarter of a century.

1 January 2011

2010: The year in environment

The Guardian - The BP oil spill, climate science under the spotlight, soaring global temperatures and UN climate talks - the stories of 2010 in pictures

28 December 2010

Christmas trees could make a great green fuel

New Scientist - An air-free roasting process readies trees and other biomass to replace coal as fuel for power plants.

25 December 2010

Smoked jellyfish: The roast of Christmas future

New Scientist - Tomorrow's festive fare will be very different from today's, says gastronaut Stefan Gates, but there'll be no shortage of tasty treats on offer.

23 December 2010

2011 preview: Charge of the electric car

New Scientist - At long last, major car companies will offer electric cars as part of their regular product line.

16 December 2010

Fox News chief enforced climate change scepticism - leaked email

The Guardian - Email obtained by Media Matters reveals reporters were under orders to cast doubt on any mention of climate change

Report: Calculations put millions at risk

The Guardian - Emissions cuts of 16% by 2030 needed to have at least 70% chance of avoiding climate catastrophe, says Friends of the Earth Governments are gambling recklessly with human lives by wilfully underestimating the depth of the emission cuts they must makein the next 40 years, a new study has found.

15 December 2010

Tidal Power

Environmental News Network - Tidal power, also called tidal energy, is a form of hydropower that converts the energy of tides into electricity or other useful forms of power. The first large-scale tidal power plant (the Rance Tidal Power Station) started operation in 1966. Harnessing the power of ocean tides has long been imagined, but countries are only now putting it into practice.

Salty solar plant stores sun's heat

New Scientist - The plentiful sunshine of southern Spain is being harvested to generate electricity day and night

2010: probably the hottest year ever recorded

The Guardian - Temperature records tumbled in Russia, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Burma and Pakistan, causing heatwaves and devastated harvests. 2010 was the year of the heatwave, with record temperatures set in 17 countries. Two leading groups of scientists say it was the warmest since records began in 1850; another suggests it was the second-warmest.

14 December 2010

How to Save Money in 11 Easy Ways

Ecoki - It's always the little things that help move us in the right direction. Perhaps we lower the thermostat a couple degrees and see our energy bill drop. Maybe we cut out out mindless snacking and our pants fit a little better.

13 December 2010

Shaking off the Dominance of Energy Giants

The Guardian - Any move to a sustainable future is unlikely while it is not in the interests of the energy companies to deliver more efficiently After more than 25 years working on energy issues, I have recently come to an extraordinary personal realisation: there is very little need to have heating bills at all.

12 December 2010

A muted cheer for the Cancun agreement | Observer editorial

The Guardian - Too many issues were left unresolved for the talks to be deemed an unqualified success. But progress was undoubtedly made.

Can I buy a Christmas tree and be green?

The Guardian - Christmas trees come at a high human price, so branch out into the fairtrade option and have yourself a guilt-free Christmas.

11 December 2010

The Deal - Reaction LIVE

The Guardian - Negotiators have reached a deal at the UN climate talks in Cancun. Read the full reaction here.

10 December 2010

What exactly is the climate?

The Guardian - The first and most fundamental question in the Guardian's Ultimate climate change FAQ's.

Report an error in the ultimate cliamte change FAQ

The Guardian - We are working with various partners to ensure that The ultimate climate change FAQ is as accurate as possible. But if you are an expert in one of the topics discussed and would like to report an error or make a suggestion then please do get in touch using the form below. If you'd like to suggest a question that you would like to see the FAQ answer, please use the separate form on this page.

Green Diet

Environmental News Network - More than 7 out of 10 said it was good for restaurants to protect the environment. The only problem is that very few restaurants market themselves as green or environmentally friendly, said Jay Kandampully, co-author of the study and professor of consumer sciences at Ohio State University.

7 December 2010

Cancun Climate Change Talks: Richard Branson Calls for Global Carbon Taxes

The Guardian - Global industry should be able to remove 17bn tons of emissions by 2020, Virgin chief tells Cancun climate change summit. If governments fail to reach agreement on tackling climate change, global industry should be able to remove 17bn tons of projected CO2e emissions by 2020 and stabilise the climate, Virgin chief Richard Branson has said at the UN climate talks in Cancun. But he tempered his optimism that the world's entrepreneurs could slash emissions better than states by saying that governments had to set the framework for business to go green.

The Melt: Himalayan glaciers disappear

The Guardian - Video: Glacial melt in the Himalayas will affect over 2 billion people unless we act now to cut emissions, say the Asia Society, who made this film.

6 December 2010

Your Questions Answered

The Guardian - The world's most respected scientific bodies have stated that there is strong evidence that humans are driving the warming.

The Ultimate Climate Change FAQ: Keep Your Questions Coming

The Guardian - We hope to produce the definitive and most accessible guide to climate change, covering science, politics and economics.

New Google Earth Technology Allows Tracking of Environmental Changes

Environmental News Network - Google has unveiled an online technology that allows scientists and researchers to track and measure changes to the environment using 25 years worth of satellite data. Google Earth Engine, introduced during climate talks in Cancun, utilizes "trillions of scientific measurements" collected by NASA's LANDSAT satellite, the company said. Google is already working on applications for tracking deforestation and mapping land use trends, including the creation of the most comprehensive scale map of Mexico's forest and water resources ever made.

Exorcising the Ghosts of Copenhagen

The Guardian - UN offers assurances that rich countries will not attempt to force agreements with developing nations at the talks

4 December 2010

Great Green Gift Guide (Part I)

Ecoki - Giving gifts is one of the greatest part of the holidays; who can deny how great it is to see someone you love opening up a carefully chosen gift just for them?Lucky for us, the Rainforest Alliance let us know about their top gifts for everyone on your list!

Reflective Crops Could Cool the Planet

Environmental News Network - Planting more reflective versions of crops could cool regional temperatures in summertime, reducing the impact of increasing global temperatures in these areas, according to ongoing research. Increasing the reflectivity of crop plants by 20 percent could decrease temperatures in a given area by about one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit), said Joy Singarayer of the University of Bristol, United Kingdom.

28 November 2010

Use the profit motive to fight climate change

The Guardian - The British prime minister argues that there are huge gains to be made from a green economy.

Climate talks: what you need to know

New Scientist - The talks that are meant to fix the world's climate resume on Monday in Cancun, Mexico. New Scientist explains what's at stake and the likely outcome.

26 November 2010

Polar Bears get a Thanksgiving present this year

Environmental News Network - More than 187,000 square miles (approximately 120 million acres) along the north coast of Alaska were designated today as "critical habitat" for the polar bear as a result of a partial settlement in an ongoing lawsuit brought by the Center for Biological Diversity, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and Greenpeace against the Department of the Interior. This designation under the Endangered Species Act is intended to safeguard those coastal lands and waters under U.S. jurisdiction that are vital to the polar bears%u2019 survival and recovery.

Most wanted list of climate change culprits rewritten

New Scientist - Is China or the US the number one cause of global warming? It all depends how you look at the numbers, says a new analysis.

Glowing trees could light up city streets

New Scientist - A new genetic toolkit should make it easy to give bacteria and even plants the ability to glow %u2013 they'll make great street lights

25 November 2010

Environmental Mission Statements: Winning Ways

Environmental Leader - An environmental mission statement is the foundation of a company%u2019s sustainability efforts. It provides the organization and its stakeholders with an understanding of why protecting the natural world is important to the business. It also establishes environmental goals and describes how the company will look when their sustainability objectives are achieved.

24 November 2010

Marks and Spence Makes Progress on 2015 Eco Goals

Environmental Leader - UK retailer Marks and Spencer says it's on track to become the world's most sustainable major retailer by 2015, reports Energy Efficiency News. The retailer expects to meet half of its 180 sustainability targets by April, well ahead of schedule, according to the company's latest progress report.

23 November 2010

China bucks recession trend to keep emissions high

New Scientist - The global financial crisis caused carbon emissions to drop in 2009, but not by as much as expected as China and India kept growing

18 November 2010

Row erupts over number of big fish in the sea

New Scientist - Fisheries scientists are at odds over whether fishing fleets are depleting the oceans of large species.

17 November 2010

HP Pledges to Use 100M lbs of Recycled Plastic by 2011

Environmental Leader - HP has produced more than 1 billion ink cartridges manufactured with recycled plastic, according to the company's latest environmental update on reducing waste, materials reuse and recycling. HP also has pledged to use a total of 100 million pounds of recycled plastic in printing products by 2011 (cumulatively, since 2007).

Plan Sustainability Communications, Not Green Marketing, for 2011

Environmental Leader - I hear from lots of companies that they don't do much to promote their sustainability initiatives, citing either fear of being accused of greenwashing or the fact that they are doing it for the right reason, not for the publicity.

16 November 2010

Troposphere is warming too, decades of data show

Environmental News Network - Not only is Earth's surface warming, but the troposphere -- the lowest level of the atmosphere, where weather occurs -- is heating up too, U.S. and British meteorologists reported on Monday.

The year climate science was redefined | Mike Hulme

The Guardian - The 12 months since the leaking of emails written by climate change scientists have seen major shifts in environmental debate.

EPA is Seeking New Standards for Home Efficiency Retrofits

Environmental News Network - In seeking to establish new standards for home improvements that would increase energy efficiency, the EPA is asking for comments from the public. They have released a draft protocol which contains a series of best practice tools that would protect indoor air quality during a home energy retrofit. The goal is to devise a set of standards that would ultimately ensure health standards of building occupants during and after such a renovation.

Xerox Employees' Green Ideas Save Company $10.2 Million

Environmental News Network - One way to dismiss sustainability and any smidgen of corporate social responsibility is to shout the antiquated argument that we only have a choice between the economy and the environment. Xerox has shown that is not the case. Last year the company announced it was working on carbon neutrality; to that end, in the push to make the company more "green," Xerox encouraged its employees to share ideas on how the organization could become more efficient. Green can be lean, and the environment can lend itself to economy, to tweak the word a tad.

12 November 2010

Green machine: Markets hint at 100-year energy gap

New Scientist - A study of share prices suggests investors don't expect alternative-energy technology to take off until 2140, a century after we run out of oil.

9 November 2010

Country vs city: Green spaces are better for you

New Scientist - Country-dwellers miss out on the bustle and bright lights %u2013 but getting back to nature is good for everything from diabetes to depression.

8 November 2010

City vs country: The concrete jungle is greener

New Scientist - They may not have so many trees to hug, but city slickers lead more environmentally friendly lives than their country cousins.

2 November 2010

Natural, homemade Christmas ornaments

Ecoki - The eco-friendliest Christmas ornaments and decorations are usually made within your own home and the experts on creating holiday Christmas ornaments are about ages 4-10.

26 October 2010

Space tourism could have big impact on climate

New Scientist - Soot from suborbital spaceships could melt ice at the poles, suggest the first detailed simulations of the climatic effects of space tourism.

Halloween Costumes for Greenies [PHOTOS]

Planetsave - Halloween is coming up,  and if you haven't decided on a costume yet, it's probably a good time to start thinking about one.

Industrial farming puts ecosystems at risk of collapse, warns Prince Charles

The Guardian - Farming methods must be low-impact, organic and low-carbon to protect natural resources for the long term Prince Charles has warned that the world's ecosystems face collapse because of a dangerous over-reliance on industrial farming systems that work against nature rather than with it.

Global food crisis: prices reach record high

The Guardian - Soaring cost of staple foods such as meat, sugar, rice and wheat could cause instability in many countries

Costa Rica recognised for biodiversity protection

The Guardian - Central American nation wins 2010 Future Policy award for pioneering legal protection of natural wealth. Costa Rica was today named as the winner of the 2010 Future Policy award at a global summit on biodiversity in Nagoya, Japan. The Central American country aims to be the first developing nation to meet UN biodiversity commitments. The prize, issued by the World Future Council, was given in recognition of the country's 1998 biodiversity law, which was held up as a model for other nations to follow.

BP 'not quitting America', despite Gulf oil spill, Bob Dudley tells CBI

The Guardian - BP is rebuilding US trust after Deepwater Horizon oil spill, its chief executive tells the Confederation of British Industry. Bob Dudley, chief executive of BP, said emphatically today that the oil firm "will not be quitting America" in the wake of the devastating explosion of the Deepwater Horizon rig that caused an environmental crisis in the Gulf of Mexico and left 11 workers dead.

25 October 2010

Compostable tray heralds new era for chocolate boxes

The Guardian - Marks & Spencer launches packaging for chocolate range that can break down on the compost heap. It is perhaps the ultimate guilt-free invention for die-hard chocoholics looking to destroy the evidence of their crime. After the chocolates have been devoured, the empty tray %u2013 scourge of recyclers %u2013 can not only be put on the compost heap, but will also disappear completely if placed under a running tap.

23 October 2010

Air Pollution Control by Trees

Environmental News Network - Trees and other vegetation must use what is in their environment. So it is not surprising to find that they absorb pollutants (natural or man made) which may be absorbed successfully or may cause the vegetation to die.

21 October 2010

Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2010 winners

Telegraph.co.uk - Winning images from this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year.

Climate change battle moves to courtrooms

New Scientist - The little guys are suing energy giants for the effects of climate change %u2013 could they succeed in changing US legislation where Congress has failed?

Green machine: Trees may spell trouble for wind power

New Scientist - Burgeoning forests not only keep CO2 levels in check, they also cut wind speeds , with unfortunate effects for energy generation.

Asia tops climate change's 'most vulnerable' list

New Scientist - Ten of the 16 countries most vulnerable to climate change are in Asia; to escape the worst, move to Scandinavia, Ireland or Iceland.

13 October 2010

Green machine: Where do solar cells go when they die?

New Scientist - The first generation of solar panels is about to expire and their disposal risks tarnishing the industry's green credentials.

How much would you pay for planet Earth?

New Scientist - Putting a cash value on nature may give officials heading to a biodiversity summit the jolt they need.

8 October 2010

Veganism and the Planet

Ecoki - Believe it or not, I don%u2019t have long, unbrushed hair. I don&#8217;t don Birkenstocks through summer, sleet and snow.  I prefer hotels to camping, am not keen on picketing outside of fast food joints, and do not particularly enjoy having a pet. I do, however, eat a plant-based foods diet.

3 October 2010

Nuclear Power and GM food is Needed to Prevent Global Warming says Stewart Brand

The Guardian - 'Techno-hippy' and lifelong green Stewart Brand says a shift to nuclear power and GM food is needed to prevent global warming.

Can I Buy Bread and be Green?

The Guardian - Don't buy industrially processed bread %u2013 take matters into your own hands%u2026

1 October 2010

Mice, Men and Exercise

Environmental News Network - To exercise or not to exercise, that is the question. Perhaps it is not a question. Working on mice in the lab, researchers have found that activity level can be enhanced with "selective breeding" - the process of breeding plants and animals for particular genetic traits. Their experiments showed that mice that were bred to be good runners produced good running offspring, indicating that the offspring had inherited the trait for that activity which may be called exercise.

A New Earth?

Environmental News Network - Astronomers have found a new, potentially habitable Earth-sized planet. It is one of two new planets discovered around the star Gliese 581, some 20 light years away from our own. The planet, Gliese 581g, is located in a "habitable zone"%u2014a distance from the star where the planet receives just the right amount of stellar energy to maintain liquid water at or near the planet's surface.

24 September 2010

More than 4 million barrels of oil entered Gulf

New Scientist - First independent study shows US government got their sums right with estimate of 4.1 million barrels of oil.

23 September 2010

Pollution not to blame for rapid ocean cooling, says Phil Jones paper

The Guardian - Scientists studying a rapid cooling of the oceans around four decades ago have found that the traditional explanation for the phenomenon, which involved pollution in the atmosphere, does not stack up.

Talks may not reach a deal but there are still reasons for optimism | Andy Atkins

The Guardian - There is time to agree a new commitment period of the Kyoto protocol from 2012 if rich countries face their responsibilities. When it comes to tackling climate change, the UN climate talks are the only show in town %u2013 but based only on previous performances, the chance of any future standing ovation is looking pretty dire. The main act %u2013 Copenhagen %u2013 fell flat on its face; sideshows such as the Major Economies Forum and G20 conferences are pulling in more punters and the behemoth of climate change is already running amok %u2013 with rich and poor arguing on the sidelines over who should be more responsible for taming it.

22 September 2010

Are the climate change deniers with no evidence just naturally gullible? | George Monbiot

The Guardian - I've often been struck by the way in which people who subscribe to one set of baseless beliefs are susceptible to others, in fields that are not obviously related. The internet is awash with sites that explain how the US government destroyed the twin towers %u2013 and how alien landings have been covered up by the authorities. Many of those who insist that Barack Obama is a Muslim also believe that sex education raises the incidence of unwanted pregnancies. A rich collection of unfounded beliefs is a common characteristic of those who deny %u2013 despite the overwhelming scientific evidence %u2013 that man-made global warming is taking place. I've listed a few examples before, but I'll jog your memories.

15 September 2010

Ernst & Young Cuts Americas Carbon Footprint 15%

Environmental Leader - Ernst &; Young has achieved a 15 percent reduction in the overall carbon footprint of its member firms in the Americas from 2008 to 2009 fiscal year. The company also reported a 12 percent reduction in intensity, or carbon footprint per person, for the 41, 487 employees in the Americas.

14 September 2010

5 Reasons Why Green Marketing Is a New World

Environmental Leader - To succeed in making green marketing a reputable undertaking, boldly going where no marketer has gone before is not only a prerogative, but an obligation.

Turning Teenagers on to the Benefits of Being Green

The Guardian - A new project aims to convince teenagers of the benefits of being environmentally friendly by 2013 by making it cool!

10 September 2010

Who Are Your Green Heroes?

The Guardian - Faced with the mind-numbing bad news about the environment over recent months, a couple of us at the Guardian decided to try to cheer ourselves up by finding examples of the right kind of environmental change. We set out to find 50 green pioneers, people who are making a practical difference but whose work is not yet widely known.

Cane Toads Aren't Quite the Bad Guys We Thought

New Scientist - It's invaded Australia, but the cane toad has not triggered the ecological catastrophe that some predicted.

9 September 2010

BP's Deepwater Horizon report doesn't really spill the beans

The Guardian - Even if BP's finding of 'multiple causes' of the Gulf of Mexico disaster is accepted, it is still unclear whether the company will be found grossly negligent.

Deepwater Horizon's final moments

The Guardian - BP report highlights failures leading to biggest offshore oil spill in history.

Refurbished Rivers Bring Salmon and Trout Flooding Back

The Guardian - Numbers of fish hit record highs thanks to improved habitats and action to clean polluted waterways.

Global Insurers Want a Role in UN Climate Negotiations

Environmental Leader - Four associations on climate change initiatives, which represent more than 100 insurance companies, are urging world leaders and governments to use insurance-linked products and risk management mechanisms to help developing countries deal with the impact of climate change, reports Reuters.

PepsiCo Water Report: Water Efficiency Improves 15 %

Environmental Leader - PepsiCo has achieved a more than 15 percent improvement in water use efficiency as compared to the company's 2006 baseline, according to the company's inaugural water report .

8 September 2010

How e-Invoicing Can Save a Small Forest

Environmental Leader - At many companies, accounts payable (AP) departments are responsible for processing invoices and interacting with suppliers, ranging from small %u201Cmom and pop%u201D businesses to large multinational organizations. For some global organizations, their invoice totals can easily top thousands of sheets of paper each week.

How to Save the Reefs

Environmental News Network - The world should safeguard coral reefs with networks of small no-fishing zones to confront threats such as climate change, and shift from favoring single, big protected areas, a U.N. study showed.

Life as a Climate-Mum isn't Straightforward but it is Interesting | Gail Whiteman

The Guardian - I'm torn. Between work and family, between trying to make a difference in the world and at the same time do the dishes.

BP spreads blame for explosion

The Guardian - BP releases its report into the oil spill which followed the Deepwater Horizon explosion in the Gulf of Mexico.

Bees Stung by 'Climate Change-Linked' Early Pollination

The Guardian - Climate change may be causing flowers to open before bees emerge from hibernation leading to declines in pollination, new research suggests.

7 September 2010

Forest Carbon Stores May be Massively Overestimated

New Scientist - We may have to dramatically revise our estimates of how much carbon rainforests contain %u2013 apparently similar forests hold vastly different amounts.

1 September 2010

Conservation and Compassion: First Do No Harm.

New Scientist - In putting conservation into practice, we often cause great suffering to animals. Marc Bekoff argues that we need a new ethical perspective.

26 August 2010

Australian Capital Territory to pass tough carbon cutting laws

The Guardian - ACT's climate change and greenhouse gas reduction bill aims to cut carbon emissions by 40% by 2020 from 1990 levels.

Letters: Apple turns off the green pathway

The Guardian - Apple's decision to opt out of the UK's green ranking scheme for mobile phones (Apple bars iPhones from green ranking scheme, 25 August) illustrates neatly the challenges facing businesses and government in finding workable, universally agreed methods to reduce the "product shadows" of a huge range of consumer goods.

GM Salmon May Go on Sale in US After Public Consultation

The Guardian - Food and Drug administration begins 60-day process to approve animal critics call a 'frankenfish' Artificial meat? Food for thought by 2050.

Could a Superbee from Swindon Save the World?

The Guardian - A honeybee bred in the town could kill the mite that has wiped out billions of bees around the world.

BP frozen out of Arctic oil drilling race

The Guardian - British energy giant BP forced to abandon hopes of Greenland exploration owing to tarnished reputation from Gulf oil spill.

Time to Blame Climate Change for Extreme Weather?

New Scientist - Climate researchers are starting to put figures on how much climate change is to blame for weather events, opening the door to claims for compensation.

Are Genetically Modified Foods an Eco-Friendly Choice?

Ecoki - Is it possible to go green and eat genetically modified foods? Does eco-friendly cuisine correspond with cross-contaminated organisms? Let's get the facts straight.

24 August 2010

Pee is for Power: Your Electrifying Excretions

New Scientist - Why let your waste go to waste when it could be powering your mobile phone %u2013 or even your car?

Non Chemical Cleaning Aids That are Normally Found in the Kitchen

Ecoki - Everyday ingredients can do double duty in cleaning your home. By utilizing foods found in the pantry, you not only help out the environment, but also your health and your wallet.

17 August 2010

There will be no nuclear renaissance

The Guardian - Nuclear energy is not on the rise %u2013 the hard facts point to a continuing, slow phase-out around the world. Repeatedly in recent years there have been calls for a revival of nuclear power. Yet that renaissance never seems to come.

16 August 2010

We Can Cut Emissions While Conserving our Landscapes and Ecosystems | Dustin Benton

The Guardian - Fighting climate change is not only about energy %u2013 it's about how we want our landscapes to look, work and be worked.

Pakistan Flood Aid Pledged, Country by Country - Visualised Data

The Guardian - Pakistan will need millions in aid following the floods. Find out which countries have donated what so far - and where the funding gaps are.

14 August 2010

The New Breeds of Cars

Environmental News Network - Decades ago the only type of car was the internal combustion (gasoline)type. Other varieties have arrived such as Hybrid and electric. With the new choices are other decisions such as which one reduces most the carbon footprint (or is the most green)and which one is the most cost effective. No more is "the miles per gallon" a standard that can be applied across the board as a specification.

3 August 2010

Meat-Free Monday Are You In?

Ecoki - Paul McCartney has recently launched Meat Free Monday, an environmental campaign to raise awareness of the impact of meat production and consumption has on climate change.

14 July 2010

Another false dawn? BP faces delay in shutting off new well cap

The Guardian - BP has suffered yet another setback in its efforts to stem the flow of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, announcing it has been forced to postpone planned tests on turning off valves on a new tighter-fitting cap over the leak. The gradual shut-off was seen as the first real chance to stop the leak since the start of the environmental disaster almost three months ago.

11 July 2010

Six Ways to Drive a Little Greener

Ecoki - Driving green doesn't mean investing in a smaller, fuel-efficient car or opting for a hybrid. You can easily start driving green with what you already have. Here are six tips to help you get started:

Eco warrior's Pacific journey shows how 'dumb plastic' is killing our seas

The Guardian - "After 100 days at sea," David de Rothschild suggests, "you realise that it should be called planet Ocean rather than planet Earth." De Rothschild is speaking from the island of New Caledonia "an odd little bit of France in the South Seas" the night before his boat, the Plastiki, embarks on the final leg of a voyage that should finish in Sydney harbour in a fortnight.

4 July 2010

Redd not working? United Nations warned that corruption is undermining grants to stop logging

The Guardian - Human rights and environment groups yesterday called for a radical rethink of the United Nations scheme, known as Redd (Reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation), after it emerged that many countries were trying to cheat the system.

Major Dilemma: Can I fill up the tank and be green?

The Guardian - Now that we've all seen the pelicans smothered in crude oil courtesy of BP's deepwater drilling project in the Gulf of Mexico - a visceral depiction of the reality of humankind's addiction to hydrocarbons - the forecourt becomes a moral maze. "Ethical petrol" is an oxymoron of some magnitude. From the small-scale: Esso's pet tiger Tessa apparently died in a bare concrete enclosure in a shopping mall to the large-scale, including ExxonMobil's funding of climate-change denial and Total's links to the Burmese regime, there's plenty of fuel for criticism. If you are interested in more than profits, there are a few ways to rate oil and gas companies by something other than profit.

3 July 2010

Time-Lapse Video of BP Oil Spill, Courtesy of NASA [VIDEO]

Planetsave - NASA recently released a time-lapse video of the BP oil spill using excellent satellite images.

1 July 2010

Why do they earn so much when "they didn't know"? Flat British excuses from Hayward and Sullivan

The Guardian - It's been a humbling fortnight for top British businessmen on Capitol Hill. First BP's Tony Hayward wriggled his way through a seven-hour examination on the Gulf oil spill. Then another tarnished export, the former AIG boss Martin Sullivan, delivered a cringe-inducing performance under fire over the insurance company's implosion. Both men offered essentially the same message - critical decisions were taken at levels far below their watch. They didn't know, and couldn't have been expected to know, the details of everything that was happening in their global organisations. And when pressed on specifics, their memories proved to be faulty.

And the bad news keeps on coming: Biologists find 'dead zones' around BP oil spill in Gulf

The Guardian - Methane at 100,000 times normal levels have been creating oxygen-depleted areas devoid of life near BP's Deepwater Horizon spill, according to two independent scientists.

30 June 2010

Mandatory viewing for all BP executives: BP oil spill: live video stream

The Guardian - Watch a live video stream of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, courtesy of PBS Newshour.

29 June 2010

Moving Forestry to the Forefront of the Carbon Market

Environmental Leader - An estimated 16% of the total global GHG emissions are directly attributed to the destruction of tropical forests.

22 June 2010

Almost unbelievable: Oil firms challenge U.S. deepwater drilling ban

Environmental News Network - Oil services companies were waiting on Tuesday to see if their legal bid would succeed in overturning a six-month ban on deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mexico as more fishing areas were closed in response to the worst oil spill in U.S. history.

Don't cry for investors burned by BP

The Guardian - As ethical shareholders steered clear, other fund managers kept endorsing the oil firm's ecologically disastrous risk-taking.

15 June 2010

When is this barbaric act going to stop? Norwegian boat uses exploding harpoons to hunt whales

The Guardian - Footage from the World Society of Protection of Animals showing a minke whale suffer harpoon wounds for potentially two hours before dying

Is the oil spill like 9/11? | Poll

The Guardian - Barack Obama has compared the impact the oil spill will have on environment and energy policy to the way the terror attacks of September 11 have influenced US foreign policy. Is it a fair comparison?

Impact of B2B Green Marketing in an Increasingly Environmentally Conscious World

Environmental Leader - One could make the point that marketing is often about answering the question: %u201CWhy would someone buy your product?%u201D In B2B (business-to-business) product marketing, that question is most often answered based on one or more of the following three variables: Cheaper, Faster, Better.

11 June 2010

EPA Plans to Ban Insecticide Endosulfan Based on New Data

Environmental Leader - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) plans to ban the use of the insecticide endosulfan, which is used on vegetables, fruits, and cotton as well as on ornamental shrubs, trees, and herbaceous plants. The federal agency says the chemical can pose neurological and reproductive risks to farmworkers and wildlife and can persist in the environment.

10 June 2010

Peak Oil: Politicians have 'heads in the sand'?

The Guardian - Britain's former chief scientist has attacked politicians and industry experts who have their "heads in the sand" over dwindling oil supplies. Sir David King said governments, including the UK's, were too eager to believe the optimistic predictions of economists who tell them that "oil will be squeezed out of the ground pretty much forever".

9 June 2010

Top 9 Eco-friendly Book Picks

Ecoki - Eco-friendly book titles are now readily available. Here are our top 9 picks.

Monckton's climate denial is a gift

The Guardian - The longer this goes on, the better it will be for all those who take science seriously. Lord Monckton is digging his hole ever deeper, and dragging down into it everyone stupid enough to follow him. Those of us who do battle with climate change deniers can't inflict one tenth as much damage to their cause that Monckton wreaks every time he opens his mouth.

8 June 2010

10 Crazy Statements about the BP Oil Spill from CEO Tony Hayward, Rush Limbaugh, Sarah Palin, and Don Young

Planetsave - Unfortunately, the BP oil spill in the Gulf isn't helping everybody to learn from their mistakes (or the mistakes of those who they support). Tony Hayward, Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh and Representative Don Young have a host of ridiculously sad statements so far.

The oil firms' profits ignore the real costs

The Guardian - Has BP ever made a profit? The question looks daft. The oil company posted profits of $26bn last year. There's no doubt that BP has been pumping money into the pockets of its shareholders. The question is whether this money is what the company says it is. BP calls it profit. I call it the provision the firm should be making against future liabilities. Despite an angry letter from two US senators and a warning from Barack Obama about spending big money on their shareholders while nickel-and-diming coastal people, despite the fact that it has no idea what its total liabilities in the Gulf of Mexico will be, BP seems to be planning to pay a dividend this year. It's likely to amount to more than $10bn. As the two senators noted, by moving money "off the company's books and into investors' pockets", BP "will make it much more difficult to repay the US government and American communities".

Downloads Cut Software Industry's Global Carbon Footprint by 80%

Environmental Leader - Software downloads can cut the software industry's global carbon footprint by 80 percent.

2 June 2010

Fears grow over oil spill's long-term effects on food chain

The Guardian - As oil continues gushing from the ocean floor into the Gulf of Mexico, with no sign of stopping until a new well is finished this August, scientists, environmentalists and local residents are beginning to reckon with the reality of a massive annihilation of sea creatures and wildlife.

1 June 2010

Who do you believe? BP clashes with scientists over deep sea oil pollution

The Guardian - BP has challenged widespread scientific claims that vast plumes of oil are spreading underwater from its blown-out rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The denial comes as the oil giant prepares for a new operation to put an end to the worst oil spill in US history %u2013 which could see the leak get worse before it gets better. The company's challenge to several scientific studies is likely to put it further at odds with an increasingly angry Obama administration, which has accused it of playing down the size of the leak in an effort to limit possible fines.

The answer: BP hit by avalanche of compensation claims over US oil spill

The Guardian - Business owners claim company ignored evidence of broken seal on Deepwater Horizon well While work continues to try to staunch the flow of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, an avalanche of class action lawsuits is descending upon BP in courthouses from Texas to Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida.

31 May 2010

Gulf Coast warned oil may leak until August

Environmental News Network - U.S. government and BP officials are warning that the blown-out oil well causing an environmental disaster on the Gulf Coast may not be stopped until August as the company begins preparations on a new attempt to capture the leaking crude.

27 May 2010

Big Business Getting Serious: 6,000 U.S. Companies Support Climate Legislation

CleanTechnica - They employ about 3.5 million workers and produced about $3.5 trillion in revenue last year, they include 21 Fortune 100 companies, and all 6,000 of them support energy and climate legislation.  We are talking about the number of U.S. businesses that have joined coalitions and initiatives in support of federal legislation to improve energy efficiency and cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Biofuels learn to eat less

New Scientist - Production of bioethanol has attracted global controversy because it uses important food crops. That could be about to change.

26 May 2010

Three Stages of Sustainability Leadership

Environmental Leader - There are three stages to implementing sustainability initiatives in an organization, each requiring different organizational capabilities and leadership skills.

More Wind Farms Mean Cheaper Energy

CleanTechnica - Just as we Americans are finally really and truly internalizing the real cost of sticking with fossil fuels, due to the Gulf sea floor gusher, a timely NREL study finds wind power makes electricity that's not just cleaner, but it's also much cheaper.

25 May 2010

Obama urged to save marine life from oil

The Guardian - The Obama adminstration came under growing pressure today to save the bluefin tuna and other rare species from becoming extinct, as concern grew about the long-term environmental consequences of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

24 May 2010

India to Launch Renewable Energy Certificates Program to Stimulate Clean Energy Growth

CleanTechnica - New regulations announced by the Indian government reward the renewable energy producers not only for the generating power but also for preventing emission of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.

19 May 2010

Greenland Rising as Ice Continues to Melt

Planetsave - If the current speed with which Greenland is rising continues, the figure could be as much as two inches per year by 2025 and see Greenland become the world%u2019s largest contributor to sea level rise.

Atlantic coast now under threat as current spreads Gulf oil slick

The Guardian - There was mounting evidence last night that the scale of the oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico has grown beyond all the initial worst-case scenarios, as thousands of gallons of oil continued to gush from the sea floor.

Nestle Quits Sinar Mas after Greenpeace Campaign

Environmental Leader - Nestle announced it will cease buying palm oil from suppliers linked to deforestation after a two month campaign by Greenpeace. The campaign highlighted Nestle%u2019s relationship with the Sinar Mas Group, an Indonesian chemical and lumber products conglomerate which Greenpeace has accused of illegal deforestation practices.

14 May 2010

How to Make 25% of the World's Electricity from Solar Energy by 2050

CleanTechnica - The International Energy Agency (IEA) presented two new solar energy analyses in Valencia, Spain this week, a Solar Photovoltaic Energy Technology Roadmap and a Concentrating Solar Power Technology Roadmap. The key finding from these is that 20-25% of global electricity production could be from solar energy by 2050.

There's no right and wrong to tackling climate change

The Guardian - Mike Hulme says we need to stop looking for climate change scapegoats and start engaging in honest discussion.

13 May 2010

No Surprise here: It is worse than BP admits: Bleeding Gulf Appears Unquenchable in Leaked Video

CleanTechnica - An amateur video made by a private citizen who had himself flown over the scene, shows clear evidence that the gushing volcano of oil from the sea floor is much, much worse than BP admits. He describes, and you can see, that the booms from the many tiny boats in this vast wrecked sea are "like teacups" in the ocean.

12 May 2010

What a weird world they live in: "We had a contingency plan for Louisiana spill, and it's working"

The Guardian - BP insisted last night that its contingency plan had worked, despite coming under fire in Congress for minimising the risks of offshore drilling and trying to shirk blame for the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. With an estimated 4m gallons of oil polluting the gulf from the ruptured well, Lamar McKay, the chief executive of BP America, said the company had adequately anticipated the potential scale of any spill and that its clean-up operation had gone according to plan.

13 April 2010

Lighter and more efficient: Flexible solar power is on its way

New Scientist - Stick-on solar cells about to flop off the production line could revolutionise the business of generating electricity from sunlight.

7 April 2010

Save Thousands By Switching Printer Fonts

Environmental Leader - Large companies might save tens of thousands of dollars a year by switching to a less ink-intensive font such as Century Gothic, instead of the more common Arial.

3 April 2010

Sustainability is good for the bottom line: Environmental Initiatives Save RSC Nearly $26M in 2009

Environmental Leader - RSC Equipment Rental saved approximately $25.8 million in 2009 by implementing several environmental initiatives ranging from an equipment refurbishment program to a tire pressure equalization system, according to the company's first CSR report.

30 March 2010

U.S. Consumers Still Willing to Pay More for Green Products

Environmental Leader - More than one-third (35%) of U.S. consumers say they would pay more for environmentally-friendly products, according to a survey on green; living from market research firm Mintel.

24 March 2010

It is that easy! Ford Saves $1.2M by Shutting Down PCs

Environmental Leader - Ford Motor Company's new PC Power Management program is expected to save the automaker $1.2 million and reduce its carbon dioxide emissions by 16,000 to 25,000 metric tons annually.

23 March 2010

World Water Day Roundup: Coke, Pepsi, Nestle, Nalco, EPA & More

Environmental Leader - Global corporations, as well as the EPA, have timed major water-related initiatives with World Water Day, March 22. Here is a look at some of the announcements.

22 March 2010

Top 10 Benefits of Commercial LED Lighting

Environmental Leader - This short promotional video from Catalyst Commercial, a UK lighting firm, highlights 10 benefits for a business that switches to commercial-scale LED lighting.

17 March 2010

Simple Steps To Reducing U.S. Emissions by a Billion Tons

Environmental Leader - In an effort to get households and businesses to reduce their environmental impact, the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Garrison Institute have instituted an education campaign called Simple Steps.

25 February 2010

Litter: our legacy to future generations

The Guardian - Our grandchildren will know us by our discarded cans of Coca-Cola and packets of Walkers crisps. An organisation called "Litter Heroes" (surely the most unglamorous club in Britain?) has done something rather useful. They have traced where the crud that morons in cars chuck out of their windows originally comes from. No surprise to discover that the worst-offending brand is Coca-Cola (4.9% of all litter), followed by Walkers Crisps (4.1%) and McDonald's (3.6%).

23 February 2010

Greenpeace Criticizes Facebook for Data Center Not Using Renewable Energy

Environmental Leader - Greenpeace is leading a campaign to get Facebook to change its strategy to power its planned data center in Prineville, Oregon, with renewable energy instead of coal by rallying support from Facebook users. Facebook plans to build its highly energy-efficient data center on a cloud computing platform that is expected to lower energy consumption.

World's Biggest Companies Cause $2.2 Trillion in Environmental Damage

Environmental Leader - The estimated cost of environmental damage by 3,000 of the world's biggest companies is about $2.2 trillion in 2008, according to a report to be released this summer, reports The Guardian.

1 February 2010

Global warming: Undeniable evidence

The Guardian - The unwillingness of scientists at the University of East Anglia to release climate data to people who choose not to believe in climate change was a mistake. Science advances through openness, through the ability of others to replicate the same findings or demonstrate error in discovery and interpretation. The hacked email exchanges were an embarrassment, and the refusal to disclose data was a bad call, but neither episode casts much doubt upon the science of global warming. The evidence for climate change driven by man-made discharges of greenhouse gases is now decades old, has been independently confirmed by researchers all over the world, and is - as the energy secretary, Ed Miliband, said yesterday - overwhelming.

30 January 2010

Obama Orders Government To Slash GHG Emissions 28%

Environmental Leader - President Obama has ordered the government, the largest consumer of energy in the U.S., to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions 28 percent by 2020.

22 January 2010

Ford, Coke Among 60 Firms Testing Greenhouse Gas Protocol Standards

Environmental Leader - Sixty corporations are now measuring the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of their products and supply chains by testing a new global framework that is part of the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Initiative.

13 January 2010

US cult of greed is now a global environmental threat

The Guardian - The average American consumes more than his or her weight in products each day, fuelling a global culture of excess that is emerging as the biggest threat to the planet, according to a report published today. In its annual report, Worldwatch Institute says the cult of consumption and greed could wipe out any gains from government action on climate change or a shift to a clean energy economy.

3 December 2009

Low-carbon future: We can afford to go green

New Scientist - An exclusive study for New Scientist shows that westerners can radically cut carbon emissions and keep their lifestyles.

1 December 2009

Climategate: Environmentalists versus climate-change deniers

Environmental Leader - There are two sides to every story as evidenced by the various opinions across the Web about the recent release of hacked emails and documents from the top climate research organization in the UK.

26 November 2009

China sets first carbon emissions targets

The Guardian - China plans to slow emissions growth by up to 45%. PM Wen Jiabao to attend Copenhagen climate talks. The Chinese prime minister, Wen Jiabao, will attend the Copenhagen climate talks next month, the government said today, as it unveiled firm targets for curbing the world's biggest carbon footprint for the first time.

25 November 2009

World's last bastion of stable ice now thawing

New Scientist - The East Antarctica ice sheet, which was thought to be stable, is losing billions of tonnes of ice a year.

24 November 2009

Govts. to blame for catastrophes? Katrina court win paves way for billion-dollar payouts

New Scientist - A judge has ruled that the US federal government was to blame for much of the flooding caused by hurricane Katrina in 2005.

23 November 2009

Climate change sceptics and lobbyists put world at risk, says UK top adviser

The Guardian - Climate change sceptics and fossil fuel companies that have lobbied against action on greenhouse gas emissions have squandered the world's chance to avoid dangerous global warming, a key adviser to the government has said. Professor Bob Watson, chief scientist at the department for environment and rural affairs, said a decade of inaction on climate change meant it was now virtually impossible to limit global temperature rise to 2C. He said the delay meant the world would now do well to stabilise warming between 3C and 4C.

15 November 2009

Some good news at last? Scientists hope to turn coal into clean energy

The Guardian - Millions of tonnes of carbon dioxide could be prevented from entering the atmosphere following the discovery of a way to turn coal, grass or municipal waste more efficiently into clean fuels.

Is it possible to avoid unsustainable palm oil?

The Guardian - Palm oil is decimating the world's forests, yet producers are shirking their responsibility to move to sustainable sources.

12 November 2009

Green Building Sector to Contribute $554B to GDP from 2009-13

Environmental Leader - While the green building industry added $173 billion to the U.S. gross domestic product from 2000-08, that's just the beginning. From 2009 to 2013, that amount will more than triple to $554 billion, according to a new report from the U.S. Green Building Council and Booz Allen Hamilton.

6 November 2009

You should never leave it to the politicians...Copenhagen to be a talk-fest!

The Guardian - A global treaty to fight climate change will be postponed by at least six months and possibly a year or more, senior negotiators and politicians conceded today. In a day of gloomy statements, the world's key industrialised nations said they had abandoned hope of a legally binding treaty at the Copenhagen summit next month and had begun to plan only for a meeting of world leaders.

20 October 2009

Climate change could cause more problems than two world wars Brown warns

Telegraph.co.uk - Climate change could cause an economic crisis that would be worse than the Great Depression and the two World Wars combined says Gordon Brown the Prime Minister.

19 October 2009

World has less than five years to stop uncontrollable climate change - WWF

Telegraph.co.uk - The world has less than five years to get carbon emissions under control or runaway climate change will become inevitable the World Wildlife Fund WWF has warned.

12 October 2009

Soros Throws $1B into Cleantech

Environmental Leader - Influential investor George Soros is a big believer in the future of clean tech and energy efficiency; so much so that he has decided to invest $1 billion into the sectors. He also is creating a new organization to influence policy makers on the environment.

10 October 2009

Norway 1st Rich Nation to Commit to 40% Reductions

CleanTechnica - Norway committed to cut their greenhouse gas emissions 40% by 2020 this week. This is the most ambitious goal of any rich nation to date. Norway's prime minister Jens Stoltenberg (just re-elected) is meeting the requests of many developing nations and environmental NGOs with this commitment.

Surprising New Survey Says 92% of Americans Want Solar Power

CleanTechnica - A new survey shows that 92% of Americans think developing and using solar power is important. The results cross political boundaries and favour solar over all other energy sources.

6 October 2009

Well done Apple! Withdrawal from U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Environmental Leader - Becoming the first major consumer brand to make a big statement against the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's position on climate change, Apple has decided to leave the organization. In contrast to PMN and Exelon, the utilities that in recent weeks announced their intention not to renew their chamber memberships, Apple is making its exit with immediate effect.

1 October 2009

No rainforest, no monsoon: get ready for a warmer world

New Scientist - The world could become 4 degrees Celsius warmer in our lifetime bringing hunger, deforestation, drought and floods.

28 September 2009

$3 Billion For Energy Efficiency in California

CleanTechnica - The CPUC has just approved the largest energy efficiency program in U.S. history, authorizing $3.1 billion in consumer rebates and efficiency programs over the next three years, bringing the state closer to implementing AB32, according to Lara Ettenson, director of California Energy Efficiency Policy at the NRDC.

Antarctica, Greenland endure runaway melt

Ecoki - A new study has found runaway melt at many coastal glaciers, including ones along the coastlines of Antarctica and Greenland.

22 September 2009

Better world: Consume sceptically

New Scientist - Does your money end up in the pockets of farmers, or factory owners who use slave labour?

16 September 2009

US and Europe clash over Copenhagen deal

The Guardian - Exclusive: Key differences between the US and Europe could undermine a new worldwide treaty on global warming to replace Kyoto.

15 September 2009

An unenviable record: Australia is New World Leader in Global Warming Emissions

CleanTechnica - Australia has passed the US as the new world leader in CO2 emissions per capita. That is not the only climate change problem in Australia, though.

10 September 2009

Pot plants could purify office air

Telegraph.co.uk - Pot plants could eliminate dangerous indoor air pollution caused by photocopiers printers and air conditioning units research claims.

9 September 2009

'Contraception cheapest way to combat climate change'

Telegraph.co.uk - Here's a slightly controversial one: Contraception is almost five times cheaper as a means of preventing climate change than conventional green technologies according to research by the London School of Economics.

6 September 2009

Climate change: melting ice will trigger wave of natural disasters

The Guardian - Scientists at a London conference next week will warn of earthquakes, avalanches and volcanic eruptions as the atmosphere heats up and geology is altered. Even Britain could face being struck by tsunamis. Scientists are to outline dramatic evidence that global warming threatens the planet in a new and unexpected way %u2013 by triggering earthquakes, tsunamis, avalanches and volcanic eruptions.

3 September 2009

Consumers Backlash Against Ban on Incandescent Light Bulbs

Environmental News Network - A monumental ban on incandescent bulbs went into effect today throughout the European Union, marking a significant milestone in policy regarding consumer habits as a way to combat our collective impact on climate change. What is notable, however, isn't the potentially huge environmental impact this ban will have, but the large amount of resistance it is receiving.

25 August 2009

Major Firms Going Half-speed on CO2 Reduction

Environmental Leader - The world's largest companies' carbon-cutting targets are too modest to avoid dangerous climate change, according to a report from the Carbon Disclosure Project.

20 August 2009

Greenpeace Exposes Oil Industry's Really Dirty Face

Planetsave - We can't expect much from the oil industry, but Greenpeace's newest finding is as ugly as it gets.

15 August 2009

UN chief warns of Copenhagen failure

The Guardian - Yvo de Boer says process too slow to reach deal at close of meeting in Bonn aimed at trimming 200-page draft treaty

12 August 2009

Global Emissions Up 2%

Environmental Leader - Despite worldwide efforts to cut CO2 emissions, nations spewed 1.94 percent more CO2 emissions in 2008 than in 2007, according to new analysis by German-based renewable energy industry institute IWR, or the Institute for Renewable Energy.

8 August 2009

Consumerism is 'eating the future'

New Scientist - The main cause of the current environmental crisis is human nature, and advertising isn't helping.

Video: Aftermath of a Japanese whale hunt

New Scientist - Even Japan says the Baird's beaked whale is rare, but that doesn't stop the nation hunting the cetacean for its meat as newly released footage shows

Alaska Glaciers Shrinking Fast

Environmental News Network - Three major glaciers in Alaska and Washington state have thinned and shrunk dramatically, clear signs of a warming climate, according to a study released Thursday by the U.S. Geological Survey. The three glaciers -- Gulkana and Wolverine in Alaska and South Cascade in Washington -- are considered benchmarks for those in alpine and maritime climates because they closely parallel other glaciers in their regions. They have also been the subject of close scientific scrutiny since 1957.

3 August 2009

California must prepare for climate change, official report warns

The Guardian - Communities should rethink development, reinforce levees and conserve water, says the California Natural Resources Agency Even if the world is successful in cutting carbon emissions in the future, California needs to start preparing for rising sea levels, hotter weather and other effects of climate change, a new state report recommends. It encourages local communities to rethink future development in low-lying coastal areas, reinforce levees that protect flood-prone areas and conserve already strapped water supplies in the most populous US state.

1 August 2009

3.3 billion litres of water lost from pipes daily

Telegraph.co.uk - A "mind boggling" 3.3 billion litres of water is being lost every day from pipes across Britain new figures reveal.

29 July 2009

Human activity is driving Earth's 'sixth great extinction'

The Guardian - Population growth, pollution and invasive species are having a disastrous effect on species in the southern hemisphere, a major review by conservationists warns Earth is experiencing its "sixth great extinction event" with disease and human activity taking a devastating toll on vulnerable species, according to a major review by conservationists. Much of the southern hemisphere is suffering particularly badly, and Australia, New Zealand and neighbouring Pacific islands may become the extinction hot spots of the world, the report warns.

24 June 2009

Greenpeace Says Big Brands Destroying Rainforest

Environmental Leader - A three-year investigation by Greenpeace into Brazil's cattle industry shows that the expansion of the cattle sector is driving the deforestation of the Amazon rainforest and threatens to undermine Brazil's pledge to cut deforestation by 72 percent by 2018.

23 June 2009

53% of Consumers Would Buck Up for Solar

Environmental Leader - Electricity consumers think that solar energy should play a greater role in the US's electricity mix, and by and large they are prepared to pay more for it. Indeed, just 41 percent of those surveyed said they would not pay more for solar energy from their utility provider.

Who is the Greenest PC Maker in the World?

Environmental Leader - Analysts say going green has become a business plan for some of the biggest personal computer (PC) makers as a way to differentiate themselves from their competition, reports Reuters. The 'green' talk is going over the top as computer makers spar with one another over who has the most 'green' platform.

22 June 2009

Earth's coastlines after sea-level rise, 4000 AD

New Scientist - Even if we could freeze-frame the atmosphere as it is today, sea levels would still rise by 25 metres, says the latest study into the effects of climate change on melting ice sheets

20 June 2009

Nissan to make electric cars in U.S.

Environmental News Network - Nissan Motor Co plans to launch production of electric vehicles and their batteries in the United States to tap low-interest loans for green vehicles, the Nikkei business daily said. The overall investment is estimated at 50 billion yen ($516.4 million) and may rise to 100 billion yen, it said.

Explore how climate change might affect the US

New Scientist - The US government has released a detailed report on how climate change could affect the nation - interactive map available.

18 June 2009

Why Japan's whaling activities are not research

New Scientist - Japan has long claimed that it catches whales to further science, but this is nonsense, say Nichola Raihani and Tim Clutton-Brock

Carbon Management Drives Need for New Business Solution

Environmental Leader - A new information systems category, Carbon Management Solutions (CMS), is rapidly emerging as businesses try to understand their carbon footprint and the importance of carbon as an asset or liability, according to a new report by AltaTerra Research, Palo Alto, Calif.

3 June 2009

Methanol challenges hydrogen to be fuel of the future

New Scientist - Despite intense research, the hydrogen economy remains an elusive dream, but a greener way to manufacture methanol is a reminder there are other options

2 June 2009

The Most Destructive Project on Earth: Chevron Escapes Tar Oil Accountability

Planetsave - San Ramon, CA - Much will be said at the Chevron Corporation's shareholder conference this week; the agenda is full. However, there will be little said about Chevron's involvement in controversial projects concerning tar sand. Despite the requests of shareholders owning $31.4 billion dollars, Chevron will remain quiet, keeping the Alberta tar sand projects off the agenda.

1 June 2009

CO2 levels may cause underwater catastrophe

Telegraph.co.uk - Changes to the ocean caused by carbon dioxide emissions could lead to an "underwater catastrophe" damaging wildlife food production and livelihoods scientists are warning.

30 May 2009

Alcohol makes autos more climate-friendly

New Scientist - A slug of the hard stuff can make gasoline engines as fuel efficient as a petrol-electric hybrid, says Ford

28 May 2009

Companies Boost Recycling Efforts Despite Slow Economy

Environmental Leader - Organisations are increasingly putting more effort into their recycling programs for all types of materials such as aluminium cans, fluorescent lamps, wood waste and scrap metal. Along with saving the environment, some companies are also turning a profit.

Chrysler, Ford Seek Green Advances in Vehicles

Environmental Leader - Chrysler, which has operated from bankruptcy since April 30, is seeking another lifeline from the [US] government, as it submits a $448 million plan to accelerate development of electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids by 2010. The plan calls for $83 million toward construction of a new technology and manufacturing center in Michigan.

23 May 2009

Growing biofuel without razing the rainforest

New Scientist - You can't cultivate biofuel crops without cutting down trees, right? Not so, says Marcos Buckeridge, who tells Jan Rocha how Brazil can supply the world with green ethanol

Epic cycle ride to search for solutions to climate change throughout the Americas

Telegraph.co.uk - Environmentalists are to cycle the length of the Americas from Alaska to Argentina in search of solutions to global warming.

21 May 2009

Global warming of 7C 'could kill billions this century'

Telegraph.co.uk - Global temperatures could rise by more than 7C this century killing billions of people and leaving the world on the brink of total collapse according to new research.

20 May 2009

Australia to Build World's Largest Solar Power Station

Environmental Leader - Australia plans to build the world's largest solar power station with an output of 1000 megawatts, said Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, at a press conference at the Liddell Power Station, reports Reuters. The A$1.4 billion ($1.05 billion) investment in solar energy is part of Australia's wider A$4.65 billion clean energy initiative by the government.

16 May 2009

Land clearances turned up the heat on Australian climate

New Scientist - Thanks to deforestation by European settlers, Australia's droughts are more extreme than they would be otherwise, models suggest

14 May 2009

Climate change diagnosed as biggest global health threat

New Scientist - Doctors warn that global warming will worsen virtually every health problem we know of over the coming century

13 May 2009

Cost of solar energy will match fossil fuels by 2013

The Guardian - Solar energy will fall in price to match the cost of conventional fossil fuel electricity far sooner than previously expected, the UK's largest solar company has claimed in a new report.

12 May 2009

Toxic Dolphins Found in Miami

Planetsave - Scientists found unusually high levels of flame retardant in dolphin blubber. The closer the dolphins lived to downtown Miami, the more of the chemical was concentrated in them. The flame retardant can cause sterility in dolphins. Brominated flame retardants are applied to furniture, clothes and electronics to prevent them from burning. They also help slow the ignition of items that are in a burning room.

11 May 2009

China Outpaces U.S. in Cleaner Coal-Fired Plants

Environmental News Network - China's frenetic construction of coal-fired power plants has raised worries around the world about the effect on climate change. China now uses more coal than the United States, Europe and Japan combined, making it the world's largest emitter of gases that are warming the planet.

9 May 2009

Brazil's other big forest in dire straits

New Scientist - Often obscured by the glare of publicity that surrounds the Amazon rainforest, the Atlantic forest is a biodiversity hotspot - and it's in very bad shape

Obama's Final Budget Calls for 100% Auction of Carbon Permits

Environmental Leader - President Obama's final $3.6 trillion budget blueprint, released May 7, retains the controversial provision that all permits for carbon emissions will be auctioned. Many in Congress are pushing for at least half of the permits to be given away.

8 May 2009

E-Waste to Peak in 2015

Environmental Leader - The e-waste crisis will worsen over the next several years until 2015, when volume will peak at 73 million metric tons, according to a new report from Pike Research. However, the firm forecasts that global volumes will decline in 2016 and beyond, as a number of key e-waste initiatives begin to turn the tide.

7 May 2009

Electric City Bus Exceeds 21 MPG Equivalent

Environmental Leader - For a vehicle weighing more than 36,000 pounds (with passengers), a new electric city bus delivered an impressive equivalent of more than 21 miles per gallon. The FCBE 35 Proterra electric bus, currently going through tests in Altoona, Penn., delivers 400 percent better performance than comparable conventional and hybrid bus options, reports AutoBlogGreen.

6 May 2009

Australia delays carbon trading scheme

The Guardian - Australia's government has postponed taxing polluting industries by a year until 2011 because of the economic slowdown and concerns it would hurt business, the prime minister said today.

4 May 2009

Australia's carbon emissions trading scheme falls victim to recession

Telegraph.co.uk - Australia will delay a planned carbon emissions trading scheme by one year bowing to pressure from the opposition and major polluters to put off the project while the country fights to recover from the global recession.

30 April 2009

Humanity's carbon budget set at one trillion tonnes

New Scientist - To avoid dangerous climate change, we must burn no more than 25% of remaining fossil fuel reserves, two comprehensive new studies show

28 April 2009

How to turn greenhouse gas into a clean fuel

New Scientist - A new process converts carbon dioxide into methanol, without the need for extreme temperatures and pressures

Swine flu: Is intensive farming to blame?

The Guardian - Finger pointing towards intensive farming is spreading like the H1N1 virus itself; it's time for an urgent inquiry to find out the facts.

Oceans becoming acidic 'at fastest rate for 65 million years'

Telegraph.co.uk - The oceans are becoming more acidic at a faster rate than for 65 million years as a result of climate change a report warns.

Arctic CO2 levels growing at an 'unprecedented rate'

The Guardian - Figures from a measuring station in northern Norway show that CO2 levels are increasing by 2-3 parts per million every year. The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has reached a record high, according to the latest figures released by an internationally regarded measuring station in the Arctic.

27 April 2009

25% of North American Firms Say No to Offsets Thru 2012

Environmental Leader - A new survey indicates that more and more companies are purchasing carbon offsets. The trend is bigger in Europe than North America and elsewhere in the world, according to the Forest Carbon Offsetting Survey 2009. The survey, by EcoSecurities, sampled 120 global, multinational and regional organisations, along with 21 carbon companies, according to a press release.

The truth about climate change

The Guardian - Vested interests have tried to spread misinformation about global warming, but scientific evidence shows urgent action is needed. Many people ask how sure we are about the science of climate change. The most definitive examination of the scientific evidence is to be found in the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and its last major report published in 2007.

26 April 2009

USDA launches first survey for organic farmers

Ecoki - The USDA is set to launch it's first-ever survey of organic farming across the United States to explore organic farming and its relationship with U.S. agriculture. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced on Thursday that it's a direct response to the increasing interest in organics - from consumers to farmers, as well as businesses.

25 April 2009

Drowning in plastic: The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is twice the size of France

Telegraph.co.uk - There are now 46000 pieces of plastic per square kilometre of the world's oceans killing a million seabirds and 100000 marine mammals each year. Worse still there seems to be nothing we can do to clean it up. So how do we turn the tide?

24 April 2009

Younger Generation Passes on 'Green' to Save Cash

Environmental Leader - Though conventional wisdom suggests that the Millennial generation (ages 13-29) is leading the charge to make Earth a better place, a survey from Generate Insight finds that despite being the most environmentally educated, younger members of this generation are not taking action on what they know because they are often confused about green products.

23 April 2009

Microsoft Cutting CSR PR Budget

Environmental Leader - Microsoft is cutting its European PR budget for corporate social responsibility activities, instead applying funds to promoting products like Windows 7, Office and Xbox, reports PRWeek. PRWeek reports that similar cuts are in the works in Asia and that they are "imminent" in the United States.

Climate change could speed up as pollution decreases

Telegraph.co.uk - Global warming could speed up as the world becomes cleaner scientists have warned after new research found plants absorb more greenhouse gases when the air is polluted.

22 April 2009

Why Antarctic ice is growing despite global warming

Environmental News Network - It's the southern ozone hole whatdunit. That's why Antarctic sea ice is growing while at the other pole, Arctic ice is shrinking at record rates. It seems CFCs and other ozone-depleting chemicals have given the South Pole respite from global warming.

EPA to Begin Energy Star Ratings for Data Centers

Environmental Leader - The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is developing an energy performance rating system for data centers, tentatively planned for early 2010, according to a ComputerWorld article written by Michael Zatz, manager of Energy Star commercial buildings at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. With the rating system, data center operators will be able to assess the energy use

Prince Charles to publish attack on big business in eco book and documentary

The Guardian - The Prince of Wales is to make a scathing attack on big business' environmental impact with the launch of a new book and documentary film. The book, called Harmony, is due to be published in 2010 by HarperCollins and the prince is reportedly waiving his author's fee, although royalties will go to his charitable foundation, The Prince's Trust.

21 April 2009

Green and mean: The downside of clean energy

New Scientist - How do you choose between a wilderness and a power station? The tough choices associated with large-scale renewable energy projects are dividing the green movement

UK set to miss climate change targets

Telegraph.co.uk - The UK is set to miss climate change targets despite a reduction in greenhouse emissions caused by the recession analysts have warned.

20 April 2009

White House and Congress dither over climate

New Scientist - A bill to restrict carbon emissions in the US will be debated in a few days, but there may not be the political will to push it through.

2 April 2009

Prince calls for emergency forest funds

The Guardian - Prince Charles today urged world leaders to support an "emergency package" to save rainforests by diverting billions of pounds every year to tropical nations such as Brazil and Indonesia.

Rainforests may pump winds worldwide

New Scientist - Without forests to pump moisture around the planet, would the continents turn to desert? A new theory suggests they might

French energy company executive charged with spying on Greenpeace

The Guardian - A senior executive of the French state energy giant EDF, which now owns the main UK nuclear power operator British Energy, has been charged on suspicion of spying on the environmental group Greenpeace.

Green Technology Investments Plummet

Environmental Leader - Private-sector investments in green or sustainable technologies declined 48 percent for the first quarter of 2009, according to a new report from the Cleantech Group and Deloitte.


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