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  • Mr. Plug-in Hybrid goes to Washington

    On Thursday, May 18, the Big Three automakers have scheduled a trip to the White House to discuss their "needs" with President Bush.

    CalCars wants to bring a 100-MPG plug-in hybrid to Washington to meet them.

    I think that's a really good idea.

    If you do too, join me in helping out.

  • A Hard Sell

    Bush admin land sell-off plan may be DOA The future looks dim for the Bush administration’s unpopular proposal to sell off 300,000 acres of public land to fund rural schools. A House subcommittee has excluded the proposal from a spending bill; it will be considered by other committees, but has no enthusiastic backers in Congress. […]

  • Wal-mart’s organic bomb

    Melanie Warner at the NYT reports today that Wal-Mart is about to dramatically increase its organic food offerings.

    In very understated fashion, she says, "Wal-Mart's interest is expected to change organic food production in substantial ways."

    Um, yeah, it sure will.

    Wal-Mart's plan is to sell organics ~10% over the price of non-organics -- a much closer premium than you can get elsewhere. It's also getting brands like Pepsi, Rice Krispies, and Kraft Mac 'n' Cheese in the game.

    There's good back and forth in the article about the pros and cons of further industrializing organics -- availability and expansion of the market in the pros, weakening standards and increased overseas production in the cons.

  • Trailer: Who Killed the Electric Car?

    Somebody's probably posted about this already, but if not: The trailer for Who Killed the Electric Car? is available here.

    We've written previously about the movie here, here, here and here.

  • Push to raise fuel-economy standards gaining new support

    Cringe as we might over record-high gasoline prices, they could be the best thing to happen to automobile fuel economy since the Arab oil embargo. Nowhere to go but up. The soaring cost of oil in recent weeks has sent Washington lawmakers into an election-year frenzy. Some of their proposals — like one from Senate […]

  • RealClimate on An Inconvenient Truth

    Over at RealClimate, where actual scientists hang out, Eric Steig offers a brief review of An Inconvenient Truth, focusing mainly on the science. The verdict: Aside from a few small and largely inconsequential errors, the science is right on.

    The folks in the lively comment section seem woefully, nay, tragically unaware of my interview with Gore, in which he answers many of their questions.

  • Hummer tax

    The editors of The New Republic endorse what they call a “Hummer tax.” Wonks, in their pithiest mode, refer to the Hummer Tax as a “feebate” system. Under such a system, the government would either slap a tax or offer a rebate on newly purchased vehicles based on the vehicle’s fuel-efficiency rating. For instance, a […]

  • More interview with Mike Davis

    Part two of Tom Engelhardt's interview with Mike Davis is up. Davis is the author of City of Quartz and, most recently, Planet of Slums.

    More great stuff. I particularly like this:

  • Activists are fighting a new agreement between the U.S. and Peru

    A logger drives his freshly cut mahogany logs upriver toward Ivochote, a scratchy, low-slung jungle town in Peru’s eastern Amazon. Hoping to convert his illegal revenues into some weekend lovin’, he takes maca, a traditional Peruvian libido enhancer. He heads to a nearby brothel, but its employees are too busy protesting pollution caused by a […]

  • Survivaballs!

    Halliburton Solves Global Warming
    SurvivaBalls save managers from abrupt climate change

    An advanced new technology will keep corporate managers safe even when climate change makes life as we know it impossible. [Speech, photos]

    "The SurvivaBall is designed to protect the corporate manager no matter what Mother Nature throws his or her way," said Fred Wolf, a Halliburton representative who spoke today at the Catastrophic Loss conference held at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Amelia Island, Florida. "This technology is the only rational response to abrupt climate change," he said to an attentive and appreciative audience.

    Read the rest.