There are many natural window cleaners available at coops and natural food stores; however, these products can be expensive, and in my experience, their performance leaves much to be desired. It is…
Magazine Review: Rolling Stone’s Green Issue
Image Credit: Rolling StoneRolling Stone joins about every other magazine on the planet (score!) by publishing an environmental issue, specifically, a "special report on climate crisis". …
Green Style Spotlight: Maggie’s Functional Organics
Two weeks ago, I lost one of my favorite socks while moving to a new apartment. I'd feel pretty silly about having just a pair of sock being shipped across the country so I kept putting it off….
Beverly Hills Shows Its True Colors with Green Days
Usually, when I think of Beverly Hills, I don’t think “green”. Rodeo Drive? Yes. Mansions with manicured lawns? Yes. Brenda, Brandon, and the rest of the 90210 gang? Unfortunately, yes. But none of…
Greenpeace – Making Waves: San Francisco goes for smart energy
From the Sacramento Bee:
The city plans eventually to have at least 51 percent of its electricity supplied by renewable sources of energy — compared to about 13 percent for PG&E today. Those new sources could include a wind farm in Solano County, geothermal power from the desert, solar panels in the city’s sunny southeast section and even wave power supplied by the Pacific Ocean.
A much more aggressive energy efficiency program would also play a role.
City officials and analysts believe that San Francisco can dramatically boost its use of renewable energy and still get its power for less than residents are paying now. One big reason: municipal bonds. The city can borrow money with low, tax-free interest rates not available to the private utilities.
That cheap money might be able to jumpstart renewable energy projects that otherwise would never get off the ground. Most such projects have high upfront costs and then fairly minimal costs to operate.
This is a plan Greenpeace, the Sierra Club and other groups have been pushing for a while. It’s called “Community Choice Aggregation”.
In Climate Change Debate, U.S. Eyes Turn to California
It celebrates tree-sitters like Julia Butterfly Hill, who spent two years on top of a giant redwood to prevent it from being chopped down. And its laws protect geckos, yellow-billed cuckoos and the Mohave ground squirrel.
China Overtakes U.S. as Top CO2 Emitter
China has overtaken the United States as the top emitter of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, because of surging energy use in its economic boom, a Dutch government-funded agency said on Wednesday.
Greenpeace – Making Waves: Air travel and climate change
This one kind of slipped by me, but Greenpeace UK did a cool thing a couple days ago. The set up booths at airports and gave away free train tickets.
Over the past hour or so, impromptu ticket exchange booths have been appearing in airports across the UK.
Greenpeace volunteers (fetchingly dressed as stewards and stewardesses – pics here) have been offering BA passengers checking into domestic flights climate-friendly train tickets.
It’s not just because we’re generous souls – it’s also because flying causes 10 times more damage to the climate than taking the train. And it’s responsible for 13 per cent of the UK’s impact on the climate (that’s the government’s own figures).
Finance Alliance for Sustainable Trade

(Posted by Sarah Rich in Socially Responsible Investment at 3:49 PM)
Appropriate Housing for Urban Bats

(Posted by Sarah Rich in Biodiversity and Ecosystems at 11:07 AM)
