2,500 people have invested in the first windmill co-op in Britain, now providing cheap, green energy — and profit — for its owners.
2,500 people have invested in the first windmill co-op in Britain, now providing cheap, green energy — and profit — for its owners.
Canadian electric car maker Zenn Motor Co may find itself in the right place at the right time. Troubled American auto makers have pledged to accelerate development of cleaner, more fuel-efficient vehicles. The Chief Executive of Zenn (Zero Emission No Noise) said that green push may spark big demand for his tiny company. (Reuters News has the story)
In what may be the best sports story of 2008, Shawn Crawford, a US track runner gave the silver medal he won at the Summer Olympics in the 200 meter race to a runner he felt deserved it more than him.
“And the most amazing thing is, he didn’t tell anyone. He didn’t need the public to congratulate him for doing it. For him, it was just the right thing to do.” (Sport’s Illustrated)
A new United Nations loan of over $30 million seeks to boost the social and economic power of rural women in India’s largest pocket of poverty.
Women from an estimated 108,000 poor rural households will benefit from the UN International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) loan, which aims to give women in the Mid-Gangetic Plains of northern India easier access to microfinance and business development services.
Researchers in Nevada are reporting that waste coffee grounds can provide a cheap, abundant, and environmentally friendly source of biodiesel fuel for powering cars and trucks. Their study has been published online in the American Chemical Society’s (ACS) Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a bi-weekly publication.
Spent coffee grounds contain between 11 and 20 percent oil by weight. That’s about as much as traditional biodiesel feedstocks such as rapeseed, palm, and soybean oil. The scientists estimated that spent coffee grounds can potentially add 340 million gallons of biodiesel to the world’s fuel supply.
California officials yesterday approved a climate plan that aims to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas emissions by at least 30% by 2020. Central to the plan is a cap-and-trade program and a requirement for utilities to produce a third of their energy from renewable sources such as wind, solar and geothermal. (MSNBC.com has the full story)
More than one thousand trees will take root in
(Photo by Sun Star)
In the last few years, psychologists and researchers have been digging up hard data on a question previously left to philosophers: What makes us happy? The emerging field of positive psychology is bursting with new findings about how things like money, attitude, culture, memory, health, altruism, and our day-to-day habits affect our well-being.
Here are 10 scientifically proven strategies for getting happy. (YES magazine features an interactive graphic, or read the text under that, to explain the 10 strategies)
Photo by Tim Middleton, www.timages. biz
More than a third of the world’s population can’t afford propane or other petroleum-based cooking fuels, relying instead on wood or charcoal that burns inefficiently in stoves that emit smoke and toxic fumes. One man succeeded in inventing the impossible: a safer, cleaner, and less-expensive way to cook using the waste from rice – turning it into a clean bright blue flame.
Last month, watchmaker Rolex named Belonio as one of its 10 exemplary innovators. Belonio says he plans to use the $50,000 prize to build a stove demonstration and research center in Iloilo, Philippines.
For some 240 laid-off workers at a manufacturing plant in Chicago, federal law required a 60-day notice that the facility was closing. Their employer gave three days. Following a six-day sit-in protest staged in the factory, the workers won a severance deal that complied with the law. (Christian Science Monitor)
The chance to see your family and friends is truly one of the best parts of the holidays.
But hosting family members and friends in your own home can also be one of the most stressful parts of the holidays. Trying to make everything perfect for guests can only add to your stress. However, with some simple planning, you can have a stress-free time while hosting the ones you love. (Detroit News and GetButtonedUp has the article)
In 2003, a group of New Mexico students began lobbying the state legislature to address collisions between vehicles and wildlife. As a result, state agencies have installed fences to guide mule deer, black bears, cougars, and other wildlife through safe passages beneath a major highway. So far, the project – completed last year for the relatively modest sum of $750,000 – seems to be working. It has reduced animal fatalities by ninety percent. (Christian Science Monitor)
Afghanistan defeated Russia 5-4 in the final of the 2008 Homeless World Cup in Melbourne on Sunday.
The Homeless World Cup is a world-class international football tournament that has triggered grass roots football programs in more than 60 nations engaging 30,000 players who are homeless all year round.
(Photo: Sayed Qasem in action during the 2008 Homeless World Cup final against Russia in Melbourne Australia. 7th December 2008. Photo: Sydney Low / Photoworx)
During their 6th world cup last week, 56 nations united for a tournament that included the first women’s cup, won by Zambia.
Keep America Beautiful announced a record 48,000-plus gardens, green spaces and xeriscapes created in 2008 in its annual Great American Cleanup campaign that cleans-up and greens-up thousands of communities in all 50 states.
“The impact of more than 48,000 gardens nationwide is wonderful to imagine,” said Matthew M. McKenna, President and CEO of Keep America Beautiful, Inc. “Every one of these public spaces could be providing a quiet place to reflect on nature, food for the community, a gateway for the neighborhood, an activity space for kids, or even an offset to a community’s carbon footprint. We are incredibly thankful to all the volunteers and partners who made this possible.”
Six weeks before leaving office, the Bush administration is giving up on an effort to ease restrictions on pollution from coal-burning power plants, a key plank of its original energy agenda and one that put the President at odds with environmentalists his entire eight years in the White House. (AP story at SFgate.com)
(Photo courtesy of Sun Star)
I was raised to be intolerant (this was an unconscious act of my ignorant but loveable parents). I was taught that everything was either good or bad and to look at everything in a moral way.
After just months away from home I could see the ineffectiveness of this baseline education on my human interactions. The orientation around moral judgments doesn’t allow for others to have spiritual beliefs or ethics different from my own.
(Photo by Tim Middleton – www.Timages.biz)
Through several years of formal education, informal study and work in both corporate and small business settings, I redesigned that pattern, which was affecting both my personal and work life, to produce more meaning in my life.
Now I am morphing into a more tolerant, blending person. I suspect I’ll get there by the time I’m dead.
Changing this moral orientation has had a huge effect on how I choose to think about which things to do and how to do them.
A Murfreesboro, Tenn. woman who recently found $100K in the bathroom of a local restaurant located the owner of the money and returned it. She even refused a $1,000 reward after hearing the woman’s story.
Read the USA Today report HERE
About four in 10 U.S. adults and one in nine children are turning to unconventional medical approaches for chronic pain and other health problems, health officials said on Wednesday. (Reuters News has the report)
Three Year old Kensley Penney has been a Good Girl this year. So good in fact that Santa, with some help from the Pentagon granted her wish to bring Daddy home for Christmas.
This is the video. Very Very heartwarming. There is nothing more sincere and real than a young child’s heartfelt emotion.
(Photo courtesy of Sun Star)
At Tufts University, Massachusetts scientists are pioneering a method of manipulating spider silk to genetically engineer new bone tissue, thus allowing them — in theory — to re-grow damaged bones and teeth… At Rush University, Indiana, meanwhile, a team of cardiologists are trialing a device made of Gore-Tex — the waterproof fabric used in much outdoor clothing — to help repair holes in the human heart. (Full Science-Health Report at CNN)