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*
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
E This Week: December 16, 2014
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: "E-The Environmental Magazine" <ethisweek@earthtalk.org> Date: Dec 16, 2014 8:22 AM Subject: E This Week: December 16, 2014 To: <aquarianm@gmail.com> Cc:
Announcing the launch of our new website EarthTalk.org
We're proud to bring you the latest web property from Earth Action Network, the brand new EarthTalk.org website, featuring new Q&As on a wide range of environmental topics as well as fresh content from the trusted writers and producers who brought you E The Environmental Magazine since 1990.
Of course, we rely on donations from readers like you to allow us to keep producing the award-winning, trend-setting content that E The Environmental Magazine has been known for since we started it a quarter century ago. And in 2015 we'll be expanding our reach beyond the 1,700 print and web outlets that already run our content by delving into radio and YouTube in a big way. But it won't be possible without the support of readers and fans like you. Please consider rounding out your charitable giving in 2014 with a tax-deductible donation to Earth Action Network, the 501(c)3 non-profit publisher of Emagazine.com, EarthTalk.org and the EarthTalk Q&A column.
So says Jennifer Turner of the Woodrow Wilson Institute's China Environment Forum in this EarthTalk original video interview... Interviewed by Ethan Goffman
It's good fertilizer, it combats drought, slows groundwater depletion, bypasses sewage treatment plants and reconnects you with nature. So why wouldn't you pee in your garden? By Sarah "Steve" Mosko
This 10-minute production shows how stocking lakes with non-native species for recreational fishing in Washington State and elsewhere around the U.S. may be compromising the integrity of our most remote and pristine ecosystems.... By Lauren Owens
You'd think that finding far less plastic pollution on the ocean's surface than scientists expected would be something to cheer about. The reality, however, is that this is likely bad news... By Sarah "Steve" Mosko
Sign onto Forecast the Fact's petition on MoveOn.org asking PBS to remove climate deniers like David Koch from its affiliates' boards... Forecast the Facts
Biochar is a naturally occurring, fine-grained, highly porous form of charcoal derived from the process of baking biomass—and researchers now think it could be key to restoring degraded agricultural and contaminated soils, all the while taking a bite out of global warming through carbon sequestration... EarthTalk
This content is brought to you free by E-The Environmental Magazine,
which is published by Earth Action Network, Inc., a non-profit 501 (c) (3) organization.
Our address is 28 Knight Street, Norwalk, CT 06851.
No comments:
Post a Comment