Archive Page 19 of 23



plants’ cleanup may create side-effect (AP)

 

The Omaha Public Power District's coal-fired power plant is seen in Nebraska City, Neb., Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2007. Scrubbers at the new plant being built on the site will inject chemicals to reduce airborne pollutants, but by doing so will change the composition of the ash produced in the process, and cut the ash's usefulness. The ash will end up in a landfill because it could not be used in cement, for example, because the interaction of the chemicals may keep the concrete from hardening. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)AP – As the nation’s coal-fired power plants work to create cleaner skies, they’ll likely fill up landfills with millions more tons of potentially harmful ash.

plants’ cleanup may create side-effect (AP)

U.N. climate talks focus on business end

Not that the U.N. really has so much (or any) real power, but it’s another start.

AP – It’s the business end of climate change: ensuring that the $20 trillion the world will spend on energy over the next two decades is as environmentally friendly as possible.

U.N. climate talks focus on business end (AP)

Recycle Your Electronics in Manhattan September 9th through NYCWasteLess

Recycle Your Electronics

If not donating unwanted electronics for reuse, drop off your unwanted or broken electronics for recycling. Only the following items will be accepted:

  • electr-icons-orange-200 computers & laptops
  • monitors
  • printers & scanners (desktop only) 
  • keyboards & mice
  • TVs
  • VCRs & DVD players
  • cell phones

Other kinds of electronics won’t be accepted. Only NYC residents (no businesses allowed*) may drop off material (limit five pieces per vehicle). The first 100 people to drop off electronics will receive a $5 Best Buy gift card.

All dropped off items will be recycled through contracted vendors and all data on hard drives will be destroyed; no scavenging will be permitted and no tax-deduction receipts will be given out.

While safe to use, electronics contain hazardous materials, such as lead, mercury, arsenic, and cadmium. Recycling your unwanted electronic equipment keeps these hazardous materials out of the waste stream and the environment.

MANHATTAN
Sunday, September 9, 2007
8am – 2pm
Union Square North Plaza (southeast corner of 17th St. and Broadway; cars enter at 16th St & Union Square West).

More dates and all the information from NYCWastele$$ can be found here. (Thanks Todd!)

DriWater: Time-Release Water for Irrigation

irrigation It sounds counter-intuitive (dry water?), but Sonoma-based DriWater‘s innovative product ? a gelatinous substance consisting of 98% purified water and 2% cellulose gum ? does just that: provide an irrigation solution that delivers a reliable source of moisture directly to a plant’s roots, when needed, without requiring a permanent water source. When placed in the ground, the DriWater gels are inserted into tubes buried next to the roots of a young plant. Enzymes naturally produced by the bacteria found in the soil then begin to break down the cellulose holding the gels together ? resulting in the gel converting to liquid and be…

DriWater: Time-Release Water for Irrigation

Sundarbans Arms Itself Against Global Warming

sundarbans.jpg Photo credit: Frances Voon The residents of the Sundabarans, an alluvial archipelago spread across Bangladesh and West Bengal in India, harbor not a single doubt in their minds that climate change is real and is happening. They’ve seen it for themselves: In the past two decades alone, four of their islands have sunk into the sea, displacing 6,000 families from their villages. Rising sea levels, coastal erosion

Sundarbans Arms Itself Against Global Warming

Sony Develops Environmentally Friendly Battery

Sony said Friday that it had developed a bio-conscious battery that is encased in vegetable-based plastic and runs on sugars. The sugars are poured into the battery, and are then broken down by enzymes in order to create electricity.

Sony Develops Environmentally Friendly Battery

Coccoina Eco-Friendly Glue

sjwglue.jpg Just in time for the back-to-school crew, See Jane Work bring in Cocoina’s Almond Scented Paste. Nontoxic, non-solvent, and acid-free, it even tastes of marzipan for the paste-eater in your life. Used in schools in Italy since the 1930s, the $8 imported paste comes in a vintage-style silver tin and includes a stiff bristle. You can also get it in the form of a $3 glue stick for handy toting about. Coccoina Eco-Friendly Glue

One Bulb to Rule Them All

Celebrities Natalie Portman, Chloe Sevigny, and Kyra Sedgewick enlighten us about CFLs.

One Bulb to Rule Them All