Climate Cities
All Stories
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South Central Community Farm update
If you haven't been keeping up: The situation at the South Central Community Farm has gotten even more grim. The farmers have received an eviction order. A variety of celebs and quasi-celebs and hippie ex-celebs have taken up direct action, camping out on the farm. Julia Butterfly Hill is even sitting up in a tree. It's not looking good.
(Meanwhile, the same city that can't cough up $10 million for this community farm is contemplating spending $800 million renovating a sports stadium to attract an NFL team. Awesome.)
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Fuel Me Once, Shame on You
GM promotion will cap gas at $1.99 a gallon for SUV buyers In a promotion that begins today, General Motors promised to cap gasoline prices at $1.99 a gallon for […]
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Move Thyself: Deer avoids car, hits man on bicycle
D'oh, a deer ...
In other bicycle news, it seems the Chinese masses are increasingly trading in their classic cruiser-style Flying Pigeon bikes for cushy mountain bikes and higher tech road bikes (oh, and cars).
Not a huge surprise, as an increase in affluence often leads to a transportation upgrade. But nonetheless, the state-owned bike company has noted the changing demographics of its riders as well as a dip in sales.
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It’s a Mall World, After All
Green mega-mall gets green light to build in Syracuse, N.Y. Destiny USA — the purportedly uber-green mega-mall planned for Syracuse, N.Y. — is finally ready to move into the construction […]
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The Wrong Side of the BedZed
Problems in one green community won’t keep U.K. from building more Four years ago, a housing complex called BedZed opened in south London with the ambitious goal of running entirely […]
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Cars pollute the dictionary too
I don’t want to rock your world too severely, but it’s come to my attention that cars cause problems. If you’re not the U.S. government, you may have heard about […]
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Move Thyself: A tribute to fallen cyclists, and cycling away the gas-price blues
Tonight in some 200 U.S. cities (and six other countries), cyclists will be joining in the Ride of Silence to pay tribute to bicyclists who've been killed or injured on public roadways.
And there are a lot.
From the Seattle Times article:
In 2004, in Seattle there were 258 bicycle collisions with cars -- resulting in 224 injuries and one death, according to the city's Department of Transportation.
Um, make that 260, and 225 injuries. My two collisions that year went unreported. (Stupid minivans!)
And from the Oregonian:
The most recent Oregon Department of Transportation statistics show 14 bicyclists died in Portland-area collisions with motor vehicles from 2000 through 2005. Meanwhile, the number of reported bicycle crashes has held steady for years at about 160 annually.
Join a ride near you and reclaim the streets.
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Countries May Have Shifted During Flight
China builds new airports; still not as pollutey as U.S. China plans to build 48 new airports in the next five years, spending $17.5 billion on construction and continuing expansion […]
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Who’s on the Right Side of the Road Now?
Brits change habits to save gasoline; Americans don’t Starting in 2008, new drivers in Britain will be tested not only on the anxiety-producing three-point turn, but also on their ability […]
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Have You Hugged Your Tree Today?
On Arbor Day, appreciate the trees Urban forest cover in many U.S. cities has declined about 30 percent over the past 10 to 15 years, according to the green group […]