Congress may ask cruise ships to clean up their act
October 23rd, 2009
Green Right Now Reports
One could count a thousand ways humans have soiled the planet, from shearing off mountaintops to mine coal to dredging the bottom of the ocean with heavy, coral-destroying equipment.
Congress zeroed in on one needless waste stream, this past week introducing legislation in both houses to stop cruise ships from releasing untreated sewage into the ocean.
The Senate’s Clean Cruise Ship Act, proposed by Assistant Senate Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) would extend the Clean Water Act to regulate the millions of gallons of waste water from cruise ships. The net effect would be a ban on the release of raw, untreated sewage.
Related Topics: · Clean Cruise Ship Act, Clean Water Act, cruise ships, ocean pollution, polluted ocean waters, Rep. Sam Farr, Senator Dick Durbin, sewage water
With GamesThatGive, fun meets philanthropy
October 2nd, 2009
By Tom Kessler
Green Right Now
Adam Archer thinks the world would be a much better place if people would only spend more time playing games on their computers and mobile phones. And he may just be right.
Archer, the founder and CEO of GamesThatGive, has a simple but compelling proposition: You sign on to play casual games on the site, designate a charity you want to support, and then sit back and have 70 percent of the revenue from advertising on those games go to your charity.
Related Topics: · Dominos Pizza, DoSomething, Feeding America, GamesThatGive, Mastercard, Pepsi, the United Way, the US Fund for UNICEF
LA activists fight plans for NFL stadium
September 8th, 2009
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Lobbyists for Los Angeles County will work against state legislation that would ease environmental and planning regulations to make way for a proposed 75,000-seat professional football stadium in the city of Industry. >> Read the full story
Related Topics: · Ed Roski, Gloria Molina, Los Angeles County, Majestic Realty Co., Mark Ridley-Thomas, NFL
Environmentalists and golf courses push to green their greens
July 6th, 2009
By Melissa Segrest
Green Right Now

Golf courses and environmentalists have had – and still have – a rather rocky relationship.
The land that courses are built on and their impact on habitats has been fiercely debated. As huge users of pesticides, fertilizers and water, golf courses have faced criticism for fouling the environment with chemical-filled runoff, potentially harming humans and wildlife and wasting huge quantities of precious water, even in drought-plagued areas.
Related Topics: · American Society of Golf Course Architects, Arbor Day Foundation, Arbor Links, Audobon Sanctuary Program, Converted Organics, Environmental Institute for Golf, Golf and The Environment Institute, golf course, golf course and environment, golf course and fertilizer, golf course and habitat, golf course and pesticides, golf course and water use, United States Golf Association, Vineyard Golf Club, Wildlife Links
New Pa. handbook helps golf courses get green
June 23rd, 2009
From Green Right Now Reports
When it comes to employing green practices, golf courses have been pretty much buried in a sand trap. That could change, with the help of a new best practices handbook from the Pennsylvania Environmental Council (PEC) and LandStudies, Inc.
Golf course superintendents can now take advantage of the new Water Resources Best Management Practices Handbook to help make their courses truly green. The handbook includes a detailed description of each recommended practice, its environmental benefit, and a local example with contact information so that superintendents can learn first-hand how to install the practice. There also are links to additional online resources.
“Pennsylvania has over 800 public and private golf courses covering thousands of acres of open space, streams and ponds,” Don Welsh, president & CEO of the Pennsylvania Environmental Council, said in a statement. “With this Handbook, superintendents can improve water quality and watershed habitat at their courses using proven best management practices that in many cases will also lower maintenance costs.”
Related Topics: · LandStudies Inc., Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection's G, Pennsylvania Environmental Council
Nike’s Zoom leaves a smaller carbon sneaker-print
April 24th, 2009
From Green Right Now Reports
Phoenix Sun’s all-star guard and environmental advocate Steve Nash worked with Nike to this week launch the new Zoom MVP Trash Talk that is made from scrap materials left over from the footwear manufacturing process.
The shoe also will be packaged in Nike’s new Considered Design shoebox, made from 100 percent recycled [...]
Related Topics: · Nike, Nike Zoom MVP Trash Talk, Steve Nash
Golf courses get greener with robot mower
February 18th, 2009
By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now
Consider golfing in a downturn: On the one hand, golfers might find the club a great place to forget their troubles. On the other hand, country clubs are sure to be tightening their beltways, just like everyone else.
We recently stumbled on one way country clubs might keep their greens tidy, while keeping green,
and saving cash – a triple win! Simply, it’s a robot.
Related Topics: · Carbon Emissions, country clubs, golf, Precise Path Robotics
Slideshow: Lighting with natural daylight
December 29th, 2008
The following photos are all projects by Natural Lighting Co. in Phoenix. The designs, manufactures and installs daylighting systems in schools, commercial, industrial, military and retail environments. There are no electrical lights in use in any of these photos.

Photo: Natural Lighting Co.
Arizona Department of Transportation
Related Topics: · Natural Lighting Co.
EPA Green Power winner profile: Powdr Resorts
October 26th, 2008
From the Environmental Protection Agency
The 2008 Green Power Leadership Awards were presented in conjunction with the National Renewable Energy Marketing Conference, held October 26-29 in Denver, Colorado.
Green Power Purchasing Award
Headquartered in Park City, Utah, Powdr Resorts owns seven resort complexes across the United States, including Park City Mountain Resort in Utah, Killington Resort and Pico Resort in Vermont, Mt. Bachelor in Oregon, Boreal Resort and Soda Springs Resort in California, Las Vegas Ski and Snowboard Resort in Nevada, and Gorgoza Park, a tubing park in Utah. Powdr Resorts’ annual purchase of nearly 50 million kilowatt-hours of wind-derived renewable energy certificates (RECs) is enough to supply 100 percent of the operation’s total electricity use.
Related Topics: · EPA, Powdr Resorts
EPA Green Power winner profile: The Philadelphia Phillies
October 26th, 2008
From the Environmental Protection Agency
The 2008 Green Power Leadership Awards were presented in conjunction with the National Renewable Energy Marketing Conference, held October 26-29 in Denver, Colorado.
Green Power Purchasing Award
The Philadelphia Phillies are the first Major League Baseball team to join EPA’s Green
Power Partnership. The club currently buys 20 million kilowatt-hours annually, enough to power 100 percent of the annual electricity use for Citizens Bank Park. The Phillies’ purchase of renewable energy certificates (RECs) are from wind and biomass resources.
Related Topics: · EPA, The Philadelphia Phillies
Making movies green at Plymouth Rock
October 20th, 2008
By John DeFore
Hollywood is known for conspicuous environmentalism, but its legendary movie studios were built many decades before anyone thought about a production’s environmental impact. Now a team including former Paramount Pictures president David Kirkpatrick hopes to change that by building “the first all-union built, green, SMART studio facility in the world” — in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
The team behind Plymouth Rock Studios announced this month that it “has registered its entire development project with the United States Green Building Council (USGBC) in order to pursue campus-wide, new construction certification under Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED(R)) standards.”
Related Topics: · Gensler architects, LEED, Massachusetts, movie studio, Plymouth Rock Studios, Solar Power, Wind Power






