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  • Mad about saffron

    This weekend, after decades of planning, Christo opens a massive installation in Central Park. The Bulgarian-born "environmental artist," best known for wrapping Berlin's Reichstag in 1995, has draped 7,500 16-foot-tall structures in saffron-colored fabric to create The Gates. New York officials originally rejected the artist's plans in 1980 due in part to environmental concerns. So he modified the structures to sit on the pavement instead of in the soil, pledged to avoid paths with low-hanging branches, and shifted the two-week event from fall to comparatively quiet winter. Its materials -- including 5,290 tons of steel and more than 1 million square feet of fabric -- will be recycled, and proceeds from related merchandise will be donated to Nurture New York's Nature. Hundreds of thousands of tourists are expected, and everyone seems to be on the bandwagon now, with nearby hotels offering binoculars in every room and serving saffron soup.

    But do I have to like it?

  • More Verdopolis

    More Verdopolis coverage over at Treehugger. We'll have some of our own up later today.

    Update [2005-2-10 16:45:41 by Dave Roberts]: Still more, from Will Duggan, who was excited that businesses are finding good reasons to go green, but ends with this:

    Inspiring two hours, yes, but corrosively depressing that there was no American business leader to match the vision, passion, and humanity on display.

  • DNA Check, Aisle Seven

    Scientists begin project to catalog life with DNA barcodes Of an estimated 10 million plant and animal species on Earth, less than a fifth have been identified and named. That might change, however, with a new bar-coding initiative launched today, which aims to use snippets of genetic material to characterize all living organisms in a […]

  • Gene Hackmen

    Open-source biotechnology boasts first big success Though some enviros are opposed to genetic engineering of any kind, other critics have a more specific complaint about biotechnology: that restrictive patents held by companies like Monsanto and Syngenta impede research and development into biotech applications that could help developing countries or smaller, more specialized crops in the […]

  • Why Do Fish & Wildlife Scientists Hate America?

    Fish & Wildlife Service scientists report political pressure, distortion When two public-interest groups sent a survey on scientific integrity to 1,400 scientists at the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, agency administrators warned the scientists not to respond — not even in their personal time. Now that 414 of them have defied the warnings, it is […]

  • Wave power

    There has been a flurry of stories about wave power recently, and I keep meaning to blog about some of them. Luckily, Jamais Cascio has provided a nice entrée, via discussion of a new report from the Electric Power Research Institute. Conclusion: wave power may yet sneak past wind and solar as the most promising renewable energy source.

  • Sustainable building in China?

    Check out this article in Metropolis about sustainable building in China. The country's Ministry of Construction has announced breathtakingly ambitious plans to reduce all buildings' energy use by 50% by 2010 and to use PV and other renewable energy technologies to power 80 million square meters of building space.

    The article notes that, if implemented, the building program would be the most ambitious in world history.

  • Verdopolis

    Earth Pledge is a very cool organization -- they sponsor the Farm to Table initiative on local, organic food, the Greening Gotham project pushing green roofs, and Verdopolis, a project bringing together cultural, political, and business types to discuss and plan for the "future green city."

    Verdopolis is throwing a massive bash in New York City, which kicked off yesterday -- here's the agenda. We've got someone there who will be sending us some coverage, and I'll point to coverage elsewhere as I see it. Yesterday was mostly composed of a fashion show, which you can read about on Treehugger. It sounds, frankly, disappointing, and the pictures verge on gross. Apparently the big-name fashion designers who contributed still think, even at an event explicitly devoted to demonstrating the opposite, that greens are frumpy hippies.

    Anyway, I'm much more interested in the green building, green healthcare, and green energy portions of the event taking place today and tomorrow. Updates to come.

  • Titi Twister

    Naming rights for monkey species being sold to raise conservation funds A new species of titi monkey found in 2000 in Bolivia’s Madidi National Park will not be named by the monkey’s scientific discoverers, but by the highest bidder in an online auction. “To discover a new species of mammal is just incredibly exciting and […]

  • They’ve Got Huge, Sharp … They Can Leap About … Look at the Bones!

    FBI suspects eco-terrorism in latest case of something bad happening Two months ago, eco-terrorists were suspected of starting fires that destroyed or damaged 26 homes under construction near sensitive wetlands in Maryland. Turns out there were no eco-terrorists involved. But those same non-involved eco-terrorists may have struck again! The latest victims are apartment complexes under […]