Climate Technology
All Stories
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Teller All Your Crazy Dreams
Bank of America announces $20 billion green initiative In perhaps the largest initiative of its kind evah, Bank of America has announced a $20 billion investment in being all green […]
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Bank of America makes a $20 billion green pledge
Not long ago, I became a Bank of America customer, with mixed emotions. You know, the faceless corporation, the rumors of unethical practices, the exhaustion of trying to figure out […]
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Group Hug
Leading tech competitors bury the hatchet to improve energy efficiency Hold onto your geek hat: 11 leading tech companies have partnered to reduce the energy used by servers and data […]
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An interview with IKEA sustainability director Thomas Bergmark
Green by design. Photo: IKEA Last week, IKEA U.S. announced a “bag the plastic bag” initiative: the retailer will charge a nickel for plastic bags to discourage their use, donating […]
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Did your pick win?
With over 20,000 people participating, the votes have been cast for the 2007 Global Warming Globie Awards. And the winners are:
Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels (Best Performance by a State or Local Official)
US-CAP (Best Performance in the Corporate World)
An Inconvenient Truth (Best Film, Documentary, or Website Focusing on Global Warming)
ExxonMobil (Worst Performance by a Corporation or Corporate Official)
Senator James Inhofe (Most Egregious Contribution to Public Ignorance and Denial)
Check out the site for more details and honorable mentions.
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Plights of the Roundtable
International business group joins chorus begging for emissions regulations Yet another group of businesses has come out in support of international greenhouse-gas regulation. The Global Roundtable on Climate Change, which […]
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Premature Surrenderation
Fighting the new defeatism on climate change In Beltway media circles, among pundits who nod at one another with furrowed brows on cable TV, a new consensus is congealing: global […]
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Environmentalism’s confusing accounting
The L.A. Times published an interesting if somewhat odd piece in last week's magazine about efforts to coax the business community into loving the environment by assigning a dollar value to our natural resources, or "ecosystem services."
So, for example, we learn that dung beetles provide $380 million of waste management services to the U.S. cattle industry. One mile of coastal wetland provides $2.4 million of storm protection. A nice fern is worth $4, or you can get 3 for $9.99.
I made up the last one.
The odd part of the article is that it wraps together these efforts to place a concrete value on natural resources with a very different phenomenon: the use of pollution markets to curtail environmentally damaging activities.
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Romance blossoms between big biz and enviros over a candlelit dinner
Love is in the air. Photo: iStockphoto The on-again-off-again flirtation between big business and the mainstream environmental movement seems to be progressing into a full-on steamy love affair — and […]
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With big biz jumping on the green bandwagon, should activists cheer or jeer?
“The test of a first-rate intelligence,” F. Scott Fitzgerald once wrote, “is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the […]