BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Two companies fined more than half a million dollars by the state of North Dakota for improperly dumping sewage in the western oil patch have reached an agreement with federal prosecutors to pay more fines.
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BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Two companies fined more than half a million dollars by the state of North Dakota for improperly dumping sewage in the western oil patch have reached an agreement with federal prosecutors to pay more fines.
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April 21, 1:11 PM
Rob Gillies and his team gather data on Nepal’s changing climate for a research project. They log temperatures, raindrops and snow. They pump the numbers into powerful computers and read the trend lines the computers ... Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 2:14 PM
New Yorkers’ food scraps will soon be turned into electricity, thanks to a new initiative announced Sunday by the office of Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 2:12 PM
A stunning expose by 100Reporters and Environmental Health News underscores how far some companies will go to squelch a scientific review of the impact of their products. Delete the scoop?
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From
grist.org
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Today, 2:07 PM
Lawmakers have given a Hong Kong company rights to build a canal intended to rival Panama's. As you might imagine, there would be huge eco-downsides. Delete the scoop?
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High-frequency trading is bad for everybody, including high-frequency traders, according to new research from a university that produces economic reports that are sold early to high-frequency traders. Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 1:51 PM
Implantée en Inde depuis quatre ans, Prakti Design est une entreprise sociale spécialisée dans l'invention de fours propres et économes en énergie à destination des populations les plus pauvres. Via Jón Sallé
Jón Sallé's curator insight,
Today, 5:36 AM
le lien vers la campagne pour que vous aussi souteniez ce beau projet ! http://www.kisskissbankbank.com/fr/projects/nano-prakti-un-four-qui-sauve-des-vies Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 1:47 PM
"A la lumière d'un article d'Option finance - que lisent notamment les décideurs - l'empreinte carbone se retrouve dans le top 10 des indicateurs de pilotage !" Via Laurence Serfaty Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 1:46 PM
Digital Sustainability's curator insight,
Today, 10:34 AM
A um baixo custo, esta inovação reduz a poluição e gera economias significativas no consumo de água em processos industriais.A tecnologia dá viabilidade nichos industriais econômicas até agora presos.A inovação foi patenteada por Green programa Fast Track dos Estados Unidos, que permite um processamento rápido de grandes inovações de impacto ecológico.De todos os pedidos de patente dos EUA 1500 apenas 1 foi adotado por este programa.
Cristal Lagoas Corp obteve uma nova patente em os EUA para um dos seus sistemas industriais, o que aumenta a patente obtida em fevereiro passado em processo de resfriamento industrial. Desta forma, eles são duas inovações chilenos da empresa, um pioneiro, patente receber tratamento preferencial, nos Estados Unidos, por sua grande impacto ecológico. Delete the scoop?
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Chain restaurants, cattle industry, U.S. congressmen have had enough of corn-based fuels that are pushing up prices throughout the food chain. Delete the scoop?
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JUNE 26 @ 11AM PSTPut Down the Fork. Pick Up the Shovel.
Please join us as we kick off the new Community Resilience Chat series with Philip Ackerman-Leist, author of Rebuilding the Foodshed: How to Create Local, Sustainable, and Secure Food Systems. If you’re interested in the nuts and bolts of how to transform our toxic food system into one that's healthy, sustainable, equitable, and resilient, you’ll want to participate in this interactive online chat hosted by Post Carbon Institute's Executive Director Asher Miller. Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 1:34 PM
Breeders in the heartland are bringing a change to the beef industry, with grass-fed cattle that takes longer to mature but lacks added chemicals and hormones. Delete the scoop?
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Company says an industry fund could be the best way to ensure pipeline operators have enough money to cover “a highly unlikely but higher-cost spill” Delete the scoop?
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As demonstrated by Hurricane Sandy in New York, sea level rise is increasing the risk of storm surge flooding at several U.S. airports. Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 2:15 PM
Live theater is inherently temporary. A Parisian firm designed an innovative theater to reflect that. Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 2:13 PM
As the Obama administration’s decision regarding whether to approve the controversial Keystone XL pipeline draws nearer, the latest disaster is raising serious concerns about the safety of Canada’s rapidly expanding pipeline network. Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 2:10 PM
As stronger storms brew and sea levels rise, city leaders figure they’d better prepare for the worst. Delete the scoop?
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WASHINGTON -- Polls have shown most Americans like the idea of requiring businesses to provide paid sick leave to workers who fall ill. Delete the scoop?
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Income for the country's top 1 percent has soared by 275 percent over the past 30 years, while growth for the rest of us has stagnated. Delete the scoop?
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From
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Today, 1:47 PM
Climate change, deforestation, sustainable sourcing. Voices of concern over these issues – and more – aren't only those of activists or the environmental community. Increasingly, disparate stakeholders and investors are chiming in. What was once a murmur is now a chorus, often built into business plans and integrated into corporate agendas.
In a recent preview of the 2013 proxy season, Ernst & Young reported that 45% of shareholder proposals focus on environmental and social topics. Interestingly, nearly one third of climate change and other sustainability proposals were withdrawn, indicating dialogue between corporations and shareholders on these issues that has satisfied both parties.
Shareholder expectations have historically pushed the corporate agenda, but why the growing interest in greener topics? Environmental and social issues – in other words sustainability issues – interest shareholders because they are strategic risk-management issues. Leading companies are taking their cue accordingly, renewing their focus on the need for resource efficiency and scenario planning. This response spans large industrial sectors including oil and gas, agriculture, food and beverage, manufacturing and utilities. Via Olive Ventures Delete the scoop?
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I’ve recently reported on a handful of ways that researchers are trying to lower the cost of capturing carbon dioxide, with the view to storing it underground or using it for something useful (see “Cheaper Ways to Capture Carbon Dioxide,” “Grasping for Ways to Capture Carbon Dioxide on the Cheap,” and “Fuel Cells Could Offer Cheap Carbon Dioxide Storage”).
All of these improvements shouldn’t obscure the fact that the potential of carbon capture is limited. Carbon capture and storage will never be able to accommodate all of the carbon dioxide we emit now. And quite frankly, carbon capture would have trouble just keeping up with the increase in coal consumption (see “The Enduring Technology of Coal”).
Capturing and storing carbon dioxide will always make electricity more expensive. In theory, low carbon sources like solar, wind, and nuclear might one day compete with fossil fuel power (and they do now in some places, for some purposes). It will always be cheaper just to let the carbon dioxide escape into the atmosphere.
Even if costs are made far lower than they are today, the impact of carbon capture will be limited by the sheer scale of infrastructure needed to store carbon dioxide. During combustion, each carbon atom from coal combines with two atoms of oxygen from the air, and this creates a huge amount of stuff. Even once the gas has been compressed into a liquid that can be piped to storage sites, the volume is immense.
Vaclav Smil, a professor at University of Manitoba and master of sobering energy-related numbers, calculates that if we were to bury just one-fifth of the global carbon dioxide emissions, we would need to build an industry capable of handling twice the volume of stuff as the entire oil industry, an industry that took 100 years to develop, driven by a large and mostly expanding market.
In some cases, at a limited scale, the cost of capturing carbon dioxide will be low enough (as it is now for capturing it from some industrial sources) that it can be sold for a profit for some applications. Future reductions in costs could expand these applications. But the market for carbon dioxide will be limited.
Click headline to read more-- Via Chuck Sherwood, Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc Delete the scoop?
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Proyecto de arquitectura futurista con el diseño de una eco granja urbana para producir alimentos sin contaminar. Vincent Callebaut, es un famoso arquitecto nacido en 1977 en Bélgica, tiene una conocida oficina de arquitectura vanguardista y sin igual, al menos...por ahora. (...) Via Ursula Sola de Hinestrosa Delete the scoop?
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World Aeros wants to make airships that can transport 250-ton loads. They’re cheaper and more energy efficient than cargo planes, but potential Delete the scoop?
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A project of the Competitive Enterprise Institute accounts for more than 99 percent of the comments urging the Environmental Protection Agency to back off of regulating a proposed mine in Alaska. Delete the scoop?
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Since 2010, at least three ruptured pipelines have spilled oil into U.S. neighborhoods, forcing officials to decide quickly whether local residents would be harmed if they breathed the foul air. Delete the scoop?
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From
www.sfgate.com
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Today, 1:29 PM
The charred oak leaves drifting into Samantha Weber's Mariposa County yard on Monday underscored two things, the conservation biologist said. Delete the scoop?
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Automakers are coming under increasing pressure to sell zero-emission vehicles to U.S. consumers who haven't shown much interest in them, with more states following California's lead in setting sales targets. Delete the scoop?
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