Archive for March 25th, 2010

Report: Upscale Infiniti EV Coming in 2014, Will be Based on Nissan LEAF

This item was filled under [ Energy, Environment, News ]

According to a report on the Top Gear website, the much-anticipated Infiniti performance electric car won’t arrive until 2014. This comes even after previous suggestions from Nissan that we might see it as early as 2012. Top Gear is also reporting that the Infiniti EV will be based on the Nissan LEAF platform but have completely different styling and upgraded performance.

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Electric Peugeot Pod Concept Can Spin On Its Axis

This item was filled under [ Energy, Environment, News ]

Yesterday GM unveiled a trio of people pods in Shanghai. Designed to combat urban congestion, these tiny two-wheeled electric vehicles replace some of what conventional car provides with no emissions. It is cool, though a bit awkward, but any idea that rethinks the car is all right by me.

But even though I generally prefer American cars, and I’m no fan of French cars especially… I really like these little Peugeot electric pod vehicles. Called the 1001, this little pod doesn’t have wheels, but spheres, driven by eight different electric motors. It can even spin in place 360 degrees, easily navigating the congested alleys and roadways of future cities.

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Policymakers take aim at new recycling frontier: Solid waste, retailers and packaging

This item was filled under [ News, science ]

NEW YORK–It’s human nature to conserve and hoard, so a lot of Americans today take a certain pleasure in their trash habits when it comes to recycling paper, plastics, glass and cans. But in order to make sure we don’t run out of resources as Earth’s population peaks, the next garbage frontier is an "upstream" focus on solid waste management and getting industries to take more responsibility for collecting the trash that results from consumption of their products, a panel of speakers said here on March 23. [More]



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(newsletter) Wooly Willy Table, Self-Balancing Skateboard, Platypus Inaction Figure

This item was filled under [ News ]


By: fungus amungus

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In Brazil, a Plan to Turn Waste Fish Guts Into Biodiesel

This item was filled under [ Energy, Environment, News ]

Already the largest market in the world for sustainable, cost-competitive ethanol production, Brazil may be setting its sights on another interesting biofuel: biodiesel made from the leftover entrails of the Tilapia farming industry.

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Government ‘a Counting: Does the U.S. Census Need a 21st-Century Makeover?

This item was filled under [ News, science ]

The Internet Age is upon us. But rather than circulating online, the 23rd Decennial Census stuck with the tried-and-true, and flooded the U.S. Postal Service March 16 through 18 with surveys en route to more than 120 million households nationwide. The 10-question form, which probes for demographic information such as age, sex and race, will help determine how more than $400 billion will be allocated to communities across the country. Citizens and noncitizens alike are required by law to complete the form and mail it back to the U.S. Census Bureau in the accompanying prepaid envelope. That’s a lot of mail, but that’s not all of it.

In case the mail at your household gets picked up and thrown into the "we’ll get to it later" pile, the Census Bureau took the extra step this year of sending out a "heads-up" letter in advance–a "state-of-the-art practice in survey research," according to Census Director Robert Grove’s blog–to encourage participation. And in case that’s not enough paper for you, an extra nudge was mailed out the week of March 22. This might sound excessive, but the mail-out/mail-back response rate for the 2000 census was only 65 percent, and the missing data has to be collected in person by enumerators at a cost of about $57 per household. So the nudge "more than pays for itself," Groves says.

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Spiralling Vet Bills – Oldies Club Needs Your Help

This item was filled under [ Abandoned Pets, News ]

Oldies Club currently has 14 sponsor dogs in care, the most we’ve ever had at any one time. As a result our vets bills are hitting the roof and we are unable to help other dogs that are waiting to come into our care. Please can you help us raise much needed funds so that we can continue to take in and rehome older dogs?

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Shark fin soup: CITES fails to protect 5 species of sharks from overfishing and finning

This item was filled under [ News, science ]

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) this week decided not to create any new international trade restrictions to protect five endangered shark species, all of which are highly prized for their use in the Chinese delicacy known as shark fin soup, or, as I call it, "extinction in a bowl."

Shark fin soup is particularly unappetizing dish to conservationists, as shark "finning" remains one of the most controversial hunting or fishing activities in the world. Sharks are caught, their fins are chopped off, and the bodies (which are not prized) are dumped back into the ocean–often alive, where they suffer a horrible death.

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FORD MOTOR COMPANY RECOGNIZED AS ONE OF THE WORLD’S MOST ETHICAL COMPANIES BY ETHISPHERE

This item was filled under [ News ]

DEARBORN, Mich., March 22, 2010 – Ford Motor Company has been recognized as one of the world’s most ethical companies by the Ethisphere Institute, a leading business ethics think tank.

Ford is among 100 global companies chosen for the designation from a field of thousands of companies in more than 100 countries and 36 industries. Ford is the only automaker to receive the honor in 2010. The results are based on an extensive review of companies’ social responsibility efforts, corporate governance and business practices.

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