By John DeFore
Entries Tagged as 'Briefs'
Report argues against running cars on natural gas
December 2nd, 2008 · No Comments
Tags: Alternative Fuels · Briefs · Energy · Green Right Now
Fewer branches on greener Christmas trees
December 2nd, 2008 · No Comments
Tags: Briefs · Entertaining/Holidays · Family/Kids/Fun · Green Right Now
California Clean Tech award goes to electric-car conversion kit maker
November 24th, 2008 · No Comments
By John DeFore
While this past weekend’s Los Angeles Auto Show had autophiles lusting after tomorrow’s hot wheels, a very different California event just celebrated a company working to make yesterday’s cars a lot greener.
Tags: Briefs · Cars/Trucks · Green Right Now · Transportation
FLOW, a film about finite water
November 24th, 2008 · No Comments
By John DeFore
While you’re sitting around the table on Thursday, be sure that in addition to giving thanks for whatever combination of fowl and starches sits on the plate you also pay due respect to the water in your glass. As a new documentary insists, it’s not something to take for granted.
FLOW (the title’s an acronym for “for love of water”) is a frightening film full of outrages and dispiriting facts about the state of water here and abroad. Stocked with scary tidbits for Americans who take water safety for granted — Can it be that 40% of the brief but nasty illnesses we attribute to “something we ate” are actually caused by water? Can you believe that drugs like Prozac linger in the water supply so long they’re found in the flesh of fish? — it also travels to areas where the scene is more dire: Bolivia, where the World Bank’s insistence on water privatization led to horrible things; India, where dying of water-borne pathogens is commonplace.
Tags: Briefs · Green Right Now · Movies/DVDs · People/Projects
Green Goods: Sierra Club Socks
November 24th, 2008 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Socks, they’re a universal holiday gift. Anyone can use ‘em, and most anyone would appreciate an extra pair, which is why the Sierra Club settled on having a sock drive to help the homeless this season.
Buy a pair of Sierra Club brand socks (made by Devmir Inc., based in North Carolina) in a blend of organic cotton, bamboo and recycled synthetic fibers, and the conservation group will donate a pair to The National Coalition for the Homeless. Sierra Club also will get 10 percent of the proceeds in this mutual effort to raise money for Sierra Club and donate one million pairs of socks to people in need.
Growing tomatoes by the Rose Garden?
November 21st, 2008 · 1 Comment
By John DeFore
The world is scrutinizing every shred of news from the Obama camp these days, trying to guess who’ll have an office in the West Wing. But a group of gardeners based in Maine are more focused on what’s going to happen just outside the White House — on the lawn, in fact.
Eat the View is the name of a petition encouraging the Obamas to plant an organic garden on the White House lawn, using the produce both for the residents of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. and to feed the hungry at area food pantries.
Tags: Activists/Authors · Briefs · Celebrities/Politicians · People/Projects
Ricoh billboard brings less glitter, more green to Times Square
November 20th, 2008 · No Comments
By John DeFore
East of Las Vegas, Times Square is surely the king of flashy, attention-grabbing and power-hungry signage. Soon, though, one of the intersection’s most novel advertisements will be one that doesn’t draw a single watt from the grid.
Construction is set to begin this month on a massive billboard for copying giant Ricoh, to be mounted at the corner of 7th Avenue and 42nd Street, that will run solely on wind and solar power generated at the site.
Tags: Briefs · Business · Greener Businesses
Energy-saving, faux ice skating rink debuts in New York City
November 20th, 2008 · No Comments
By Julie Bonnin
Green Right Now
With unpredictable winter weather wreaking havoc on traditional Currier & Ives skating scenes, synthetic ice
may be the only thing that can salvage one of winter’s favorite pastimes.
So when skaters flock to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City Saturday for the Nov. 22 opening of a 150-foot rink that features a 17-foot tall stainless steel polar bear at its center, they will be gliding across a surface that feels like ice, but won’t consume huge amounts of water and refrigeration. The faux ice rink will operate through Feb. 28, and for holiday seasons to come.
Tags: Briefs · Family/Kids/Fun · Recreation/Green Hobbies
Green Test Drive: Suzuki SX4
November 19th, 2008 · No Comments
With highway fuel economy of 30 mpg, the Suzuki SX4 certainly conserves gasoline. And, more importantly these days, this compact sedan conserves cash. A comfortably well-equipped SX4 - complete with standard touch-screen navigation system - rolls off the dealer lot for l
ess than $16,000. That makes it financially competitive in its class, and as economical as most cars featured in our “30(cars) Over 30(mpg)” gallery.
Tags: Briefs · Cars/Trucks · Transportation
Shade trees slash power bills
November 19th, 2008 · No Comments
By John DeFore
Everyone knows that shade from the sun keeps you cooler, but a new study has quantified the benefit in a way homeowners might want to note. The right kind of shade, it turns out, can easily shave ten percent off your summertime electric bill.
Tags: Briefs · Cut Consumption · Energy/Water · Home/Garden · Trees/Plants/Yard
Nation’s electric grid needs an extreme makeover
November 18th, 2008 · No Comments
By John DeFore
For everyone puzzled at recent energy-independence speeches that seem to focus as much on building new electric lines as on solar research or wind power, a new report helps make one inconvenient truth clear: Without new infrastructure, switching to non-carbon power could make our electric system far less reliable than it is today.
The report was compiled by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, a self-regulatory organization focused in part on ensuring that power transmission stays blackout-free from coast to coast.
Tags: Briefs · Energy · Renewable Power/Solar/Wind
BPA turns up in “microwave safe” products
November 17th, 2008 · No Comments
BPA or Bisphenol A, the plastic additive that has been found to leach from hard plastic water and baby bottles when they are heated, also is released when certain disposable containers labeled as “microwave safe” are heated, according to an analysis by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The newspaper tested 10 disposable food containers, heating them and then testing the contents for BPA. It found that BPA leached from all of the containers, including some labeled as plastics numbers 1, 2 and 5, and not just those labeled as number 7, the identifier for polycarbonate plastic known to contain BPA.
The tests included frozen dinners, microwavable soups, baby and toddler foods - all packed in plastics that could presumably be heated.
Tags: Briefs · Food/Health · Healthier Living








