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  • There goes the neighborhood

    Buried in Robert Novak's latest column is this gem:

    George W. Bush moved a step closer to Democratic Sen. Joseph Lieberman's re-election bid in Connecticut as an independent candidate when Tom Kuhn, the president's college roommate and close friend, co-sponsored a Lieberman fund-raising luncheon Thursday in downtown Washington.

    Kuhn, president of the Edison Electric Institute, raised more than $100,000 for Bush in the 2000 and 2004 presidential campaigns. Also among the Lieberman event's sponsors was Rick Shelby, a longtime Republican operative who currently is executive vice president of the American Gas Association.

    The luncheon's sponsors pressed fellow Republican lobbyists to pay a minimum of $1,000 a ticket. Lieberman has announced he will stay in the Democratic caucus if re-elected. But Republicans backing him against antiwar candidate Ned Lamont, the Democratic nominee, hope for a change of heart by Lieberman.

    Have a look at this information about the Edison Electric Institute's lobbying.

    Lieberman's making his bed. Do Connecticut voters think he won't sleep in it after the election?

  • Big renewable energy purchase

    The headline says it all: "Wells Fargo commits to largest-ever corporate purchase of renewable energy in US."

    From the press release:

    Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE: WFC) said today it will buy renewable energy certificates (RECs) to support generating 550 million kilowatt-hours of clean, renewable wind energy a year for three years.  With this action, Wells Fargo becomes the largest corporate purchaser of renewable energy in the United States according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

    ...

    The purchase will offset 40 percent of Wells Fargo’s electricity consumption with 100 percent Green-e® certified wind energy.  It will help develop renewable energy and prevent the emission of  380,000 tons of carbon dioxide each year, the equivalent of reducing the CO2 emissions of 75,000 cars annually or by reducing the equivalent CO2 emissions associated with  40,000,000 gallons of gasoline each year.

  • Better Off Fed

    Federal employees can donate to Grist through Combined Federal Campaign Hark, employees of the U.S. federal government! We’ve got a special offer for you and you only: the opportunity to donate to your favorite nonprofit eco-publication (that’s us) through the Combined Federal Campaign. Grist is recipient No. 2338, and we promise to use your tax-deductible […]

  • Does Silicone Count?

    California will measure chemical levels in people’s bodies under new law The first state to measure how residents absorb chemicals from everyday products will be, of course, Arkansas. Ha ha — you wish, Arkansans. No, it’ll be California. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) signed a “biomonitoring” bill Friday that calls on state health officers to collect […]

  • A Stroke of Bad Luck

    Lead still bad for you, and at lower levels than previously thought Lead exposure levels long considered safe for adults have been linked to higher death rates from stroke and heart attack, says cheery research in the medical journal Circulation. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration suggests that safe blood lead levels for adults are […]

  • It’s the Environment, Stupid

    China’s first-of-its-kind “Green GDP” report finds pollution hampering economy The Chinese government is exploring an innovative way to assess economic growth with a new “green GDP” report, released last month. The report found that air and water pollution cost the nation $64 billion in 2004, equivalent to 3 percent of gross domestic product; it suggests […]

  • Forgive and Let Live

    Debt-for-nature swap will protect rainforests in Guatemala About 20 percent of Guatemala’s debt to the United States will be forgiven in exchange for forest conservation efforts in the Central American nation, officials announced yesterday. It’s the largest debt-for-nature swap carried out under the Tropical Forest Conservation Act of 1998, which allows debt owed to the […]

  • A dispatch from a forward-looking climate conference in Germany

    Michael Levitin is a freelance writer based in Germany. Last week, he attended KyotoPlus: Escaping the Climate Trap, an international conference held in Berlin. Monday, 2 Oct 2006 Berlin, Germany Imagine a trans-European “super grid” of renewable energy connecting solar parks in northern Africa to wind farms in Scandinavia. Consider the millions in savings — […]

  • Myths shot down

    If you hang around much with conservatives, you've no doubt heard the charge that environmentalists, inspired by Rachel Carson, led the charge to ban DDT and thereby "mass murdered" millions of Africans the pesticide could have saved.

    It's bullshit.

    Jeff Dorchen explains why.

    (via Tim Lambert, who owns the DDT issue)