Forget the candy bars: Green school fund-raisers are hot
January 9th, 2009 · No Comments
By Melissa Segrest
Green Right Now
They’ve sold the candy bars. They’ve sold the wrapping paper. Perhaps they’ve even sold cookie dough (not healthy) or had car washes (not good during droughts). The problem with typical school fund-raisers is that the kids just end up selling more stuff - at a time when the world could benefit from a little less stuff.
Thus, a green wave of school fund-raising efforts has washed across the country, and companies are springing up to meet that demand. Eco-friendly firms will provide everything from stainless steel water bottles to fair-trade T-shirts, energy-efficient light bulbs to recycled wrapping paper as alternative, Earth-friendly ways of raising money.
No small number of them were launched by environmentally sensitive parents who didn’t like what they saw their kids selling to friends and family.
Tags: · CFLs, Free-trade products, Green Schools Initiative, Recycled electronics, Recycled gift wrap
Solar power for the Grand Canyon
January 9th, 2009 · No Comments
By John DeFore
Green Right Now
It seems like a no-brainer that national parks, those monuments to America’s natural beauty, would be powered by renewable resources. But renewable-power installations aren’t free, and the park system isn’t the best-funded part of the U.S. government.
The Grand Canyon, at least, is now starting to get with the program. This spring, the visitor center at the Grand Canyon National Park will draw a healthy chunk of its energy from the sun.
Tags: · APS, Grand Canyon National Park, Solar Power
Green design, in this case it’s for the birds
January 6th, 2009 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
The National Audubon Society headquarters in New York City has distinguished itself as a builder not just of avian habitats, but of green, sustainable office spaces too, earning a LEED Platinum rating from the U.S. Green Building Council.
In fact, the society’s 27,500-square-foot headquarters at 225 Varick Street received the highest [...]
Tags: · Audubon Society, green building, LEED, New York City, U.S. Green Building Council
Some high tech ways to conserve water
December 31st, 2008 · No Comments
By Tomas Roman
KGO-San Francisco
The recent storms haven’t done enough to replenish the water supply in Santa Clara County, so the county is asking for more voluntary conservation. Now some businesses are taking the extra step of installing new technology to save water.
>> Read more
Tags: · KGO, San Francisco, Santa Clara County, Tomas Roman
California leaders positioned to green U.S. policy
December 29th, 2008 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
For years, California has been a leader of environmental policy — writing it’s own stricter rules for pesticide controls, air pollution and waste disposal as it sees fit, regardless of whether the nation is following along.
In the 1990s, the state pushed the leading edge of a technology that many of us wish had been pursued more aggressively when it hosted a test of modern electric cars, a fairly successful experiment that was regrettably shoved into neutral by U.S. automakers.
Tags: · Barbara Boxer, Bay Area, California, Henry Waxman, Los Angeles, Nancy Pelosi, Nancy Sutley, San Francisco, Steven Chu
Bay Area exceeding air standards
December 23rd, 2008 · No Comments
By David Louie
KGO-San Francisco
The Bay Area is on notice that it’s exceeding new federal air standards for asthma-aggravating particles.
Federal transportation funding is on the line if the Bay Area doesn’t shape up. The problem is nearly invisible soot in the area that can lead not only to asthma, but also to bronchitis and heart disease.
>> Watch now
Tags: · Air Pollution, KGO, San Francisco
Audubon’s Christmas Bird Count in full flight
December 22nd, 2008 · No Comments
By Harriet Blake
Green Right Now
Geoff LeBaron gets paid to count birds, among other things. And this is an especially busy time of year for him and all bird watchers. From Dec. 14 through Jan. 5 the National Audubon Society conducts its annual Christmas Bird Count. LeBaron has served as its director since 1987.
“It’s neat to be able to work for the National Audubon Society in this [endeavor] that brings birding and ornithology together,” LeBaron says, explaining that ornithologists like himself are trained scientists who study what birds do, while birders are folks, also like himself, who are captivated by watching birds. Not all ornithologists, he points out, enjoy birdwatching as a pastime.
Tags: · Audubon Society, Christmas Bird Count, DDT, endangered wildlife, pesticides
Help for landowners who could be victimized by natural gas drilling
December 17th, 2008 · No Comments
Drill, baby, drill may be what’s on the minds of gas companies, but if you’re a landowner of a potential gas site, you probably have a lot of questions.
Thanks to a new software application that’s being test marketed by MIT, landowners may now extract data to see if the gas companies’ proposals to drill are fair and safe. The software tool, called the Landman Report Card (LRC), will help landowners in any state navigate the government and corporate databases, as well as get feedback from other landowners who’ve been in similar situations. And they can do all this before agreeing to a drilling contract.
The term “land man” refers to an oil company representative who often times shows up on the doorstep of unsuspecting property owners who’ve been targeted as having prospective drill sites.
“People often will sign the day the land man shows up at the door,” says MIT professor Chris Csikszentmihalyi. “There are lots of negotiations that people can do, that they often don’t know they can.”
Csikszentmihalyi , co-director of MIT’s Center for Future Civic Media, and Sara Wylie, a grad student in the Science , Technology and Society Program, are the directors of the Landman Report Card project, which is coming to fruition just as natural gas exploration in America gains traction as a potential energy source that doesn’t rely on foreign oil — affecting land and homeowners from New York to Texas to the Rocky Mountains states.
Tags: · Colorado, fracking, Landman Report Card, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, natural gas drilling, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, water contamination, West Virginia
Greener city buses clear the air, but choices aren’t always clear
December 15th, 2008 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
You’ve heard the saying, “it’s easy being green.” Maybe sometimes. But not always, and not if you’re the Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) agency, which finds itself tangling with a green dilemma.
DART, which serves Dallas and 11 other cities in the region, has been planning to replace its aging bus fleet with 537 shiny new buses. It’s a great opportunity to go green with the entire fleet.
But after taking bids this fall and updating the research, the agency members are locked in debate over what type of buses are “cleaner” and which ones make the most sense environmentally and economically. The answer is not readily apparent. Like potential car buyers on the threshold of a dealership showroom, the bus-buying members of DART find themselves puzzling over the new technologies and old perceptions.
Tags: · Buses, Clean Air, compressed natural gas, Dallas Area Rapid Transit, Diesel, Mass Transit, Metropolitan Transit Authority
Rice University team will turn Hurricane Ike waste into soil-enriching “biochar”
December 13th, 2008 · 1 Comment
By Julie Bonnin and Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
At this time of year, when many municipalities are gearing up for holiday tree recycling programs, the city of Houston is dealing with something far more monumental - more than 5.6 million cubic tons of tree waste left behind after Hurricane Ike swept through Southeast Texas in early September.
The city turned some of the debris into mulch, but launched a contest in October, Recycle Ike, to spark ideas for keeping the remaining tree waste from simply being disposed of in landfills.
The winners, announced last week, are a Rice University team of students and scientists who will create a biomass charcoal from the tree remains. The group was among more than 200 entrants from around the world that submitted ideas.
Tags: · biochar, biomass, Carbon sequestration, green waste, Houston, Hurricane Ike, methane capture, pyrolysis, Rice University
Audubon and Toyota team up to help restore habitats in NYC and Philadelphia
December 8th, 2008 · No Comments
By Clint Williams
Green Right Now
Horseshoe crabs - believe it or not - scuttle about in Jamaica Bay, a 20,000-acre maze of marshland, islands and water that forms the southern boundary of Brooklyn. There would be more if they could find a place to breed.
Decades of debris have piled up on the bay’s beaches, blocking the path to egg-laying sites for the prehistoric-looking crabs. But things will soon get better for horseshoe crabs in New York City - and blue-winged warblers in Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley, and marbled godwits along the Mendocino Coast of northern California - because of TogetherGreen, an initiative of the National Audubon Society paid for by Toyota.
The program awarded TogetherGreen Conservation Innovation Grants totaling $1.4 million this fall. The grants, ranging from $5,000 to $68,000, will fund 41 projects in 24 states. As you might expect from Audubon, many of the funded projects benefit birds.
Tags: · Audubon Society, Jamaica Bay, Lehigh Gap Nature Center, Lehigh Valley, New York City, Philadephia, TogetherGreen, Toyota
Toronto aims big, with planned bans of plastics and toxic waste disclosure law
December 4th, 2008 · No Comments
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Guess what city just mandated that businesses disclose their toxic chemicals, put a five cent price tag on plastic bags and set up a future ban on the sale of bottled water at city-owned centers as well as plastic take-out food containers?
Portland? San Francisco? They’ve taken some similar measures. But no, the latest municipality to get aggressive with consumer waste is Toronto, Canada’s largest and apparently greenest city.
This week the Toronto City Council set in motion a sweeping effort aimed at reducing the number of plastic disposables - grocery bags, water bottles and take-out cartons - that wind up in the local landfill.
Tags: · disposable containers, plastic bags, Toronto, toxic waste




