Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Electric car owners use creativity to plug in

SEATTLE - Owning an electric vehicle requires more than global-cooling ambitions. It takes guile, planning, sharp vision, a silver tongue — and a 50-foot extension cord.

Read full article MSNBC

Posted by Phoenix Motorcycle Accident Lawyer,

Monday, October 20, 2008

A Lesson In Changing Light Bulbs

In recent days the news poured in from all corners of the earth; many, many countries are going to force their citizens to change their light bulbs. No joke - 27 countries in Europe, Australia, Canada, Cuba and the Philippines are all eliminating incandescent light bulbs as early as 2010 and replacing them by fluorescent bulbs. And the US 2008 energy bill phases out filament light bulbs for traditional use starting 2012 with an official ban effective in 2014.

Read full article ENN

Posted by Phoenix Auto Accident Lawyers

Environment will wither whoever wins US election

Eager anticipation of the next American president offering a dramatically different policy on climate change is being tempered by the chill winds of the financial crisis.

Read full article ENN

Posted by Phoenix Arizona Personal Injury Attorneys and Lawyers

Friday, October 17, 2008

Argentina makes environmental insurance a must

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentine officials said on Thursday theirs is the first government worldwide to require that companies engaged in potentially hazardous activities buy insurance to cover environmental damage.

Read full article ENN

Posted by Phoenix Wrongful Death Lawyer

Monday, October 13, 2008

Global warming getting political cold shoulder in U.S. amid economic woes

WASHINGTON - The global economic crisis has thrown a political chill over one of the main initiatives under consideration in the United States to combat global warming: the so-called cap-and-trade plan.

Read full article ENN

Posted by Phoenix Arizona Personal Injury Attorneys and Lawyers

Friday, October 10, 2008

Global Warming Triggers an International Race for the Arctic

A new epoch is beginning at the top of the Earth, where the historic melting of the vast Arctic ice cap is opening a forbidding, beautiful, and neglected swath of the planet. Already, there is talk that potentially huge oil and natural gas deposits lie under the Arctic waters, rendered more accessible by the shrinking of ice cover. Valuable minerals, too. Sea lanes over the top of the world will dramatically cut shipping times and costs. Fisheries and tourism will shift northward. In short, the frozen, fragile north will never be the same.

Read full article Enn.com

Posted by Phoenix Arizona Personal Injury Attorneys and Lawyers

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Starbucks Wastes Millions of Litres of Water a Day

Environmental campaigners have attacked Starbucks after the discovery that millions of litres of water are wasted in its coffee shops every day, contradicting its much-boasted green credentials.

Read full article ENN

Posted by Phoenix Arizona Personal Injury Attorneys and Lawyers

Monday, October 6, 2008

Expert: 99 percent of Alaska glaciers in decline

Most of Alaska's glaciers are retreating or thinning or both, a new book by the U.S. Geological Survey reports.

About 5 percent of Alaska's area is covered by more than 100,000 glaciers — that's about 29,000 square miles (75,000 square kilometers), or more than the entire state of West Virginia.

Read full article MSNBC

Posted by Phoenix Arizona DUI Attorneys

A cleaner way to get drinking water from seas?

David Kreamer's vision is to return old ships to the seas where they belong. But he'd like to see them fulfill a new purpose: turning seawater into drinking water through desalination facilities installed aboard.

According to Kreamer, a geoscientist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, hundreds of mothballed military and private ships could be well adapted as mobile desalination plants.

Read full srticle MSNBC

Posted by Phoenix Arizona Personal Injury Attorneys and Lawyers

Friday, October 3, 2008

Ike leaves debris on miles of Texas beaches

PADRE ISLAND NATIONAL SEASHORE, Texas - The world's longest undeveloped barrier island now looks as if people have been living — and dumping — on it for decades.

Tons of debris swept up by Hurricane Ike last month were carried by Gulf of Mexico currents hundreds of miles from the upper Texas coast to this ordinarily pristine landscape just north of the Mexican border.

Read full article MSNBC

Posted by Phoenix Arizona Personal Injury Attorneys and Lawyers

Houston joins L.A. in severe-smog club

HOUSTON - Houston has joined Los Angeles to become the second place in the U.S. classified as having a severe smog problem, the Environmental Protection Agency said Thursday.

Read full article MSNBC

Posted by Phoenix Auto Accident Lawyers

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Weather History Offers Insight Into Global Warming

NEW PALTZ, N.Y. — It is probably a good thing that the Mohonk Mountain House, the 19th-century resort, was built on Shawangunk conglomerate, a concrete-hard quartz rock. Otherwise, the path to the National Weather Service’s cooperative station here surely would have turned to dust by now.

Read full article NYTimes

Posted by Phoenix Arizona DUI Attorneys