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Contact us with comments on the Newsletter: Technical Editorial | |||||||
Monday, October 24, 2005 | |||||||
Louisiana Wants Illinois Mud as Building Block for Devastated Marshes Mud from the Illinois River may soon be transported south to Louisiana to fill in wetlands tattered and punctured by Hurricane Katrina. Environmental Activist Carole King To Testify on Idaho Wilderness -- As Opposition Witness To singer and environmental activist Carole King, a bill in Congress that aims to create more protected wilderness in Idaho doesn't go far enough in making sure the land is actually safe. U.S. Menus, Romans May Aid Future Fish Stocks Americans scorned lobster until the 1880s while the ancient Romans loved fish so much that their catches depleted the Mediterranean, according to a study that may give clues about how to restore damaged world fish stocks. Debris from Hurricanes May Be Used To Fight Coastal Erosion in Louisiana The mountains of debris created by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita could be the very stuff to protect Louisiana's ravaged coastline and keep hurricanes at bay. Japan Struggling To Meet CO2 Emissions Target Japan's greenhouse gas emissions fell slightly last fiscal year, but the country is far from achieving its target for reducing carbon dioxide emissions, a government report said Friday. Earthquake Dramatizes Human Ecological Assault on the Himalayas This month's massive earthquake did not destroy Mohammad Shafi Mir's house and bury his mother, but what followed seconds later did: a torrent of boulders thundering down a mountainside. Delta Waters After Katrina Now OK for Recreation, Officials Say While casting a nervous eye at Hurricane Wilma, federal and state officials reported Friday that the latest pollution data in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina indicated for the first time that the Mississippi Delta was again a safe place to swim. Suriname Denies UK Bird Flu Parrot Infected There A parrot from Suriname that was infected with bird flu and died in quarantine in Britain, did not contract the disease in the South American country, a Suriname government official said Saturday. Devastated by Donna 45 Years Ago, Town on Edge of Everglades Nervously Waits for Wilma This town that bills itself the "Stone Crab Capital of the World" never fully recovered from Hurricane Donna's devastation in 1960, when flood damage was so severe that the county government was moved 30 miles north to Naples. More Use of Oil Eyed for Power Plants Massachusetts environmental officials, hoping to stave off natural gas shortages and blackouts, are weighing whether to let four gas-powered plants switch to dirtier oil up to 50 percent more often this winter in a move that could sharply increase pollution. Toyota Scrambling To Produce Hybrids To Meet Growing Demand Inventor's New Drying Process Could Boost the Value of Coal
British Scientist James Lovelock Proposes Nuclear Power as Medicine for Sick Planet WSDWTF 2006 Goes Well American Trucking Association Endorses B5; ATA Resolution Recognizes Biodiesel as an Effective Part of Solution to Fuel Woes WSDWTF 2006 Goes Well IFAW Pushes “Haley’s Rule” to Prevent Tiger Attacks in Kansas Read all Non-Profit News
The Green Guide Offers Free Advice to Consumers for One Week Canon U.S.A. Receives Fourth Consecutive WasteWise Award from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; EPA Cites Company As Large Business Partner of the Year Ottman Named 2005 Environmental Champion Internal Hydro International Displayed Powerful, Small Hydro Production Energy Unit Amnesty International USA Partners with Organic Bouquet; Eco-flowers Help Promote International Campaign for Human Rights Read all Company News |
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A personal quest to promote the use of wind energy and hydrogen technology in the Great Lakes area of the United States. The Great Lakes area is in a unique position to become an energy exporting region through these and other renewable energy technologies. *Update 2014: Just do it everywhere - Dan*
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