News Posted
Recycle Lithium Today for Tomorrow's Cars
posted by Betsy Jordan 1 year ago
Part of the appeal, one of the green credentials of lithium, is its recyclability. Religiously recycled, much of the lithium stashed away in batteries should be able to be recovered, reprocessed and reused.
News Voted
Recycle Lithium Today for Tomorrow's Cars
posted by Betsy Jordan 1 year ago
Part of the appeal, one of the green credentials of lithium, is its recyclability. Religiously recycled, much of the lithium stashed away in batteries should be able to be recovered, reprocessed and reused.
Today is National Start Walking Day!!
posted by Betsy Jordan 1 year ago
get out there and walk people!! Today begins National Start Walking Day to become active and heart healthy, especially in the workplace. Find out more about this event at American Heart Association http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=3053117
Green news harvest: Parsing the EPA new coal plant decision
posted by caha 1 year ago
A sampling of green-tech news with quick commentary. EPA Coal Decision Levels Playing Field for Wind, Solar - Wired.com
A good parsing of the EPA coal ruling's impact on clean tech. My sense is that we should expect more legal wranglings over EPA oversight over greenhouse gas emissions. More here.
# Renewable energy may end up scarred, but stronger - International Herald Tribune
Another pulse-check on the renewable energy industry, again showing concerns in short term and optimism over long term.
# UK coal agrees to windfarm venture - The Independent
Expense is #1 reason people will not buy or convert to green homes
posted by Danny DeMichele 1 year ago
As I suspected for a while, this is going to be a problem getting people to go green. According to the article below, 36% wont go green because of the high cost associated with it. I believe the government needs to help out! Front the costs and make homeowners pay them back as they are saving money! What do you think?
Article:
Google crunches numbers on clean-energy policy
posted by caha 1 year ago
In just over 20 years, the U.S. could wean itself from coal and oil for electricity generation and nearly halve its gasoline consumption, according to an analysis done by energy experts at Google.
The search giant's Google.org philanthropy on Thursday released updated numbers and policy recommendations on how the U.S. could dramatically change its energy consumption by 2030.
According to its Clean Energy by 2030 Web site:




