AltWeeklies Wire

U.S. Military Measures Climate Changenew

The intelligence establishment is calling it a major security problem.
Santa Barbara Independent  |  Sam Kornell  |  05-12-2008  |  Environment

Amy Todisco Helps Housekeepers Clean Greennew

The founder of the online store Green Living Now helps people navigate the extensive and often confusing world of "natural" products.
Seven Days  |  Alison Novak  |  05-12-2008  |  Environment

The Surging Commodities Market Could Bring Prosperity to the Iron Rangenew

But it might also threaten one of Minnesota's greatest natural resources.
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Jonathan Kaminsky  |  05-08-2008  |  Environment

Environmental Racism in the South Bronxnew

One in four children in the Hunts Point neighborhood has asthma. While urban planners and public health specialists are still struggling to find the cause for the community's disturbingly high asthma rates, for parents like Tanya Fields there is no question that it's the air they breathe that makes their children wheeze.
New York Press  |  Gabriele Steinhauser  |  05-08-2008  |  Science

Harnesssing the Power of Green Jobsnew

With the help of billions in private investment and local and state government incentives, the alternative energy industry, and solar in particular, has exploded in California, resulting in thousands of new jobs in panel installation and solar cell production.
East Bay Express  |  Matthew Green  |  05-08-2008  |  Business & Labor

Retailers to Orlando: Ban Plastic Bags! Orlando: No Thanksnew

According to city spokeswoman Heather Allebaugh, Mayor Buddy Dyer has little interest in the issue: "In this case, the city feels banning the use of plastic bags is something the company itself should consider."
Orlando Weekly  |  Deanna Morey  |  05-06-2008  |  Environment

Is Nuclear Energy Really Cheap or Clean?new

Behind the seeming swell of interest in nuclear energy is a well-funded lobbying effort that has funneled millions into Congress and the Bush administration, earning billions in subsidies for itself -- as well as a preferential treatment during Vice President Dick Cheney's secret energy talks.
Boulder Weekly  |  Pamela White  |  05-05-2008  |  Environment

Retired Rangers Target Land Abuse by ATV Usersnew

Federal rangers consider unlawful ATV use to be a top law-enforcement issue on public lands, and a prime contributor to habitat destruction.
Tucson Weekly  |  Tim Vanderpool  |  05-01-2008  |  Environment

Clean Air at the Port Could Cost Small Truckersnew

As the Oakland port wades into a battle over clean air, some truckers are worried that they'll bear the brunt of the costs.
East Bay Express  |  Emma Brown  |  05-01-2008  |  Business & Labor

If Green is the New Black, Eco-Populism is the New Environmentalismnew

There's good reason to be excited about capitalists pouring money into saving the planet. But is it really the panacea that true believers say it is?
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Vanessa Carr  |  04-30-2008  |  Environment

Four Govs Gather at Yale Climate Conference to Promise They Won't Let the World Endnew

Governors Jon Corzine, Kathleen Sebelius, Jodi Rell and, of course, Arnold Schwarzenegger, met to sign a declaration to renew statewide efforts to reduce our collective carbon footprint. The event marked the 100th anniversary of the original 1908 "governors conference" sponsored by then-President Theodore Roosevelt, which called the public "to consider the weightiest problem now before the nation."
New Haven Advocate  |  Alexis Fitts  |  04-29-2008  |  Environment

Why Environmental Consciousness Needs to Go Beyond Recyclingnew

For years, environmentalists have told us to first reduce consumption, then to reuse what we buy, and only then to recycle. But somehow, the option of last resort became the default setting. Leading environmental thinkers say it's time to take a different approach to our economy -- which means cultivating an even more radical relationship to the resources we use.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Bill O'Driscoll  |  04-28-2008  |  Environment

A Pasadena Family Turns its Backyard into an Urban Homesteadnew

Melting ice caps, unchecked global oil consumption, mind-boggling volumes of trash accumulating in landfills -- the problems facing our planet are so big, it's tempting to tune them out. But when you talk to the Dervaes family, the founders of a home-based sustainable living resource center in Pasadena called Path to Freedom, it's the smallness of things you walk away thinking about.
Pasadena Weekly  |  April Caires  |  04-28-2008  |  Environment

Breaking the Oil Habit, One Car at a Timenew

Inside electric cars, grease cars, hybrids, and "eco-driving."
Shepherd Express  |  Ken Reibel  |  04-25-2008  |  Transportation

A 'Green Vision' for Indiananew

It is imprudent (some might say criminal) to continue to ignore or deny the pollution that places Indiana among the most toxic states in the nation.
NUVO  |  Thomas P. Healy  |  04-24-2008  |  Environment

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