U.S. power plant carbon dioxide emissions dropped slightly in 2008
From Green Right Now Reports A softening economy and a milder-than-usual winter contributed to a decline in carbon dioxide emissions from U.S. power plants in 2008, according to a new report from the...
View ArticleBonnie Plants says it was a victim of tomato blight, not the culprit
From Green Right Now Reports: Bonnie Plants, which recently removed more than $1 million in tomato plants from retail nurseries in the Northeast, reported in a statement this week that the move was...
View ArticleHands Across the Sands plans a public demo against oil drilling
From Green Right Now Reports The message of Hands Across the Sands, its founder likes to say, is simple: Say ‘No’ to oil drilling and ‘Yes’ to clean energy. Hands Across the Sands in Florida in Feb....
View ArticleGovernment gives BP a new directive on oil spill waste management
From Green Right Now Reports The U.S. Coast Guard has issued a new directive to BP on how the company should manage recovered oil, contaminated materials and liquid and solid wastes recovered in...
View ArticleAugust was the second hottest in three decades
From Green Right Now Reports If last month found you with singed bare feet, and frying eggs on the backyard decking, you will find affirmation in today’s report that August 2010 was the second-hottest...
View ArticleNew web tool shows how climate change will worsen extreme heat, drought
From Green Right Now Reports Climate change is expected to lead to worsening drought conditions and greater heat extremes, along with myriad health problems. And a new web tool created by the Natural...
View ArticleClimate change leads three southern states to battle for water
A dispute over water that has been brewing for more than two decades has reached a boiling point. Georgia, Alabama and Florida all have a stake in a river system that flows inside all three states....
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