Fighting Goliath, The Story Of How Texans Slowed The Coal Rush
April 4th, 2008
By Shermakaye Bass
It’s no surprise that Big Energy gets the role of Goliath in Mat Hames’ and George Sledge’s Fighting Goliath: The Texas Coal Wars, a documentary produced and narrated by Robert Redford and The Redford Center at Sundance Preserve that follows a recent chain of events in which coal companies tried to fast [...]
Related Topics:
Share Your Stories About Going Green
March 11th, 2008
With Earth Day coming next month, we want to hear what you’re doing to go green right now. Share success stories, offer tips or just words of encouragement for others. Just click the link below for instructions on how to post your voice comment using your wireless phone. And check back to listen to what [...]
Related Topics:
Ships Ah-Oy! Pollution From Tankers Projected To Double
March 10th, 2008
By Harriet Blake
Photo: Port of Long Beach
In 1989 the Exxon Valdez spilled 10.8 million gallons of crude oil into Alaska’s pristine Prince William Sound slathering wildlife and the untouched rocky shores with an inky, sticky coating of oil. The event created a powerful visual image of the sort of damage ocean ships can cause. A [...]
Related Topics:
Lone Star State Bucking EPA Rules?
January 23rd, 2008
By John DeFore
Environmentalists in Texas aren’t pleased with the way the state handles pollution regulation, and they’re lobbying for change — not in the Austin statehouse, but with those tasked with regulating it at the Environmental Protection Agency.
Related Topics:
Are You Awake Yet?
December 4th, 2007
By Tom Kessler
Live Earth – the Concerts for a Climate in Crisis arrives in stores today as a 2 DVD/1 CD highlights package of last July’s historic global event that brought together entertainers for concerts in eight international cities. It captures many inspirational performances, particularly those from Linkin Park (pictured), Foo Fighters, Melissa [...]
Related Topics:
Change Your Tissues: Save Forests And Birds
November 26th, 2007
By Barbara Kessler
Environmentalists have long been nudging consumers to think about the real cost of the paper products that they use, to understand that toilet paper and paper towels exact a price in the loss of the trees required to make them.
This green price tag is highest when manufacturers of household paper goods use [...]
Related Topics:
The Demise Of Plastic Grocery Bags?
November 21st, 2007
By Harriet Blake
The day is coming when grocery shoppers will no longer be asked the familiar question, “paper or plastic?” Or if they are, the question will be about a different kind of plastic and a new sort of paper.
The current standard grocery store plastic bag, which is made of a limited resource – [...]
Related Topics:
The Future That Might Have Been: How The Electric Car Vanished
November 6th, 2007
By John DeFore
Readers who share entrepreneur Shai Agassi’s enthusiasm for a future of all-electric autos might get hot under the collar viewing Chris Paine’s 2006 documentary Who Killed the Electric Car? If you thought the hurdles to phasing out gas-guzzlers were mostly technological, the film is a brutal eye-opener.
Structured like a whodunit, the movie first [...]
Related Topics:
Hung Out To Dry: The Clothesline Reconsidered
July 9th, 2007
By Barbara Kessler
Drying the laundry on the clothesline faded into disfavor sometime in the mid 20th Century when it descended from the commonplace to become a mark of poverty, even shame.
Consider the vernacular: You wouldn’t want to be “hung out to dry” or caught “airing dirty laundry in public.” Or would you? [...]
Related Topics:
Step It Up 2007
March 30th, 2007
By Barbara Kessler
U.S. lawmakers, both Democrats and Republicans, are poised to enact controls to reduce carbon emissions that would ease global warming…and that’s heating up some serious activism in the United States.
In Vermont, a group of young organizers has decided to seize the moment and push for Congress to take the boldest possible steps on [...]
Related Topics:



