I mean the title quite literally. A new leader for Greenpeace was recently interviewed and I found the article in the New York Times. (…)
I love the resources that are available to me with the click of a button. This article is one of such items because it discusses a seldom considered topic: rockets and their environmental impacts. Since I have an obsessive personality, it is something that has passed through my mind once or twice. Now someone has done the research! (…)
I typed the title without realizing the pun initially, so sorry for those who groaned when they read that. I have seen repeatedly that many companies are using bamboo in an effort to be more eco-friendly. This recent article that I read talked about a company called Incase that has created an iPhone case made out of bamboo pulp. (…)
This article was part of a two article series on Malaysia and the country's efforts to go green. I would assume the author has a decent understanding of not only the green movement but also businesses from what the article put forth. (…)
I was taken aback by this article because it presented an idea I have never heard proposed before: harvesting the kinetic energy of cars. For those who do not know, kinetic energy is the energy of movement. When cars are moving along, they create kinetic energy that has not been harvested before. A company called New Energy Technologies is working to change this. (…)
Countries around the world are moving toward greening their technology. This article discusses briefly some of the things that South Korea is doing to become the world leader in green IT. (…)
Thomas Fuller brings about many concerns about green energy in his article. Many people like the idea of moving away from fossil fuels as the main source of energy but there are some hindrances that Fuller brings up. (…)
In South Carolina, there is a neighborhood with homes over 100 years old. The homes are taken care of and have strict rules to keep the original structure's integrity intact. That is, until Betsy Kaemmerlen moved into the neighborhood. (…)

Just another WordPress weblog
I mean the title quite literally. A new leader for Greenpeace was recently interviewed and I found the article in the New York Times. (…)
I love the resources that are available to me with the click of a button. This article is one of such items because it discusses a seldom considered topic: rockets and their environmental impacts. Since I have an obsessive personality, it is something that has passed through my mind once or twice. Now someone has done the research! (…)
I typed the title without realizing the pun initially, so sorry for those who groaned when they read that. I have seen repeatedly that many companies are using bamboo in an effort to be more eco-friendly. This recent article that I read talked about a company called Incase that has created an iPhone case made out of bamboo pulp. (…)
This article was part of a two article series on Malaysia and the country's efforts to go green. I would assume the author has a decent understanding of not only the green movement but also businesses from what the article put forth. (…)
I was taken aback by this article because it presented an idea I have never heard proposed before: harvesting the kinetic energy of cars. For those who do not know, kinetic energy is the energy of movement. When cars are moving along, they create kinetic energy that has not been harvested before. A company called New Energy Technologies is working to change this. (…)
Countries around the world are moving toward greening their technology. This article discusses briefly some of the things that South Korea is doing to become the world leader in green IT. (…)
Thomas Fuller brings about many concerns about green energy in his article. Many people like the idea of moving away from fossil fuels as the main source of energy but there are some hindrances that Fuller brings up. (…)
In South Carolina, there is a neighborhood with homes over 100 years old. The homes are taken care of and have strict rules to keep the original structure's integrity intact. That is, until Betsy Kaemmerlen moved into the neighborhood. (…)