Off-Road Electric Vehicles
| Rare hydrogen producing microorganism may help unlock tomorrow’s hydrogen economy An ancient organism from the pit of a collapsed volcano may hold the key to tomorrow’s hydrogen economy. Scientists from across the world have formed a team to unlock the process refined by a billions-year old archaea. The U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute will expedite the research by sequencing the hydrogen-producing organism for comparative genomics. |
| Press Release: Conservation Program Changes Would Help Wyoming Ranchers Improve Wildlife Habitat, Keep Species Off Endangered List
EDF’s recommendations include:
“Range management on Wyoming’s grasslands is mostly oriented toward improving livestock production,” said Toombs. “Our analysis shows how we can continue to help ranchers with livestock production, but at the same time better address overall rangeland health and wildlife habitat. By implementing a few relatively straightforward changes, we could help keep grassland birds off the endangered species list.”
Visit the Web site (http://edf.org/wygrasslandbirds) for more information or to see the entire report.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Sharyn Stein, Environmental Defense Fund, 202-572-3396 or sstein@edf.org
(Boulder, CO – June 30, 2008) – A dozen species of native Wyoming birds might be kept off the endangered species list with some improvements to federal conservation programs that also would continue to help the state’s ranching economy. That’s the conclusion of a new study by a leading national conservation organization.
The report by Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) analyzes federal conservation programs in the Equality State and is titled “Are Wyoming Range Practices Working at Cross-purposes with Wildlife Habitat Goals?” The study examines a wide range of programs under the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) from 2003 to 2007. It concludes that federal government conservation programs in Wyoming get good grades overall, but basic improvements could make them more successful for ranchers and wildlife alike.
“These changes would be a win-win situation for Wyoming,” said Ted Toombs, an ecologist in the Boulder, CO office of EDF. “If we make sure that the twin rangeland and wildlife goals of NRCS work well together, we can double the benefits of limited funding resources. We can also help ensure that Wyoming maintains healthy wildlife populations, and we can prevent the need to add species to the endangered list.”
Eastern Wyoming has 8.6 million acres of native grasslands, most of which are privately owned. NRCS programs are designed to help ranchers manage livestock production on their grasslands in environmentally responsible ways, but right now the programs are not reaching their full potential. EDF’s report shows what aspects of the programs are working well, and lists changes that could help reverse the declining populations of a dozen native birds while also maintaining cattle production.
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| Off-Road Electric Vehicles Frontiers for electric vehicles have changed: 10 years ago or even more recently it was almost impossible to consider an electric solution for all-terrain purposes, now on the market we see new products with highly improved performances. Pioneer in this field is the Italian company Alkè (www.alke.com) who invested research and time to develop [.] |
| Press Release: Despite Weak Economy, New Poll Data Shows California Voters Strongly Support Policies to Implement Global Warming Solutions Act FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact:
Derek Walker, (916) 492-7169, dbwalker@edf.org
Sean Crowley, (202) 572-3331, scrowley@edf.org
(Sacramento, CA – June 23, 2008) Three days before the California Air Resources Board (CARB) releases its draft scoping plan for the Global Warming Solutions Act (AB 32), a new poll shows nearly three out of four voters (73 percent) support state energy policies to reduce global warming pollution. Despite the weak economy, nearly six out of 10 voters (58 percent) support these energy policies even if they result in higher prices, according to the poll commissioned by the non-partisan nonprofit research organization Next 10 (http://www.next10.org/about/press.html) and conducted by Fairbanks, Maslin, Maullin & Associates.
“The message from voters in this poll is crystal clear: don’t delay implementation of the Global Warming Solutions Act,” said Derek Walker, Director of the California Climate Initiative at Environmental Defense Fund, which cosponsored the groundbreaking law. “Californians understand that immediate action is needed to transform California’s economy and protect our state from global warming. Any lawmaker who supports delaying AB 32 will hear strong opposition from their constituents and is risking a backlash at the polls in November.”
Support for the proposed state policy package ran strong across party and ethnic lines:
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| Time to invest more in protecting environment. Pollution used to be a typical internal issue of individual countries as it affects only people within a certain area, but China’s pollution has become a major factor with its growing impact on the country’s international image. |
| Harnessing the Power of Highways KinergyPower is a new form of alternative energy which is also an example of distributed generation. KinergyPower was invented by two brothers Stefanos and Dimitri Horianopolous in Greece in 2002. Their system uses a series of hydraulic pistons to absorb the kinetic energy from the motion of traffic and transform it into hydraulic pressure. [.] |
| Bush Administration Approves Expanded Wyoming Drilling PINEDALE, WYO. — As reported by the L.A. Times, Federal land managers are recommending companies be allowed to drill almost 4,400 new natural gas wells in western Wyoming, where energy development already is blamed for a spike in air and water pollution. Shell, Ultra Resources and Questar want to relax drilling restrictions meant to protect [.] |
| Chief scientist: China’s North Pole trip focuses only on climate studies. China’s scientific expedition to the North Pole is purely aimed at studies on climate change in the area rather than exploration of natural resources, the expedition’s chief scientist said Friday. |