May 9, 2008

Green Groups Urge Upholding U.S. Tar Sands Fuel Ban (Globe and Mail)

Twenty-six US and Canadian green groups have urged the US Senate to keep in place a rule banning the feds from buying fuel from Alberta's dirty tar sands, as momentum to rescind the ban builds in Congress.

U.S. Consumers the Least 'Green,' Survey Says (Green Tech Blog, CNET)

U.S. consumers have the least "green" habits in the world in terms of energy use, transportation, travel and goods, while consumers in Brazil, India and China are the most green, according to a new survey by National Geographic and GlobeScan.

Another Sunny Year for Solar Power (Worldwatch Institute)

Global production of photovoltaic solar cells increased 51 percent in 2007 to 3,733 megawatts. Germany passed Japan as the world's top PV manufacturer, and remains the #1 installer, accounting for almost half of the global market.

Energy Secretary on Killing FutureGen: 'I Did it in Order to Save it from Itself' (AP)

Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman said that he scrapped plans for FutureGen -- the ill-fated "clean coal" plant that was planned for Illinois -- because it wasn't economically or politically sustainable, during testimony before Congress.

Voluntary Carbon Trade Grows 240% (Carbon Positive)

The value of trade in the voluntary carbon market grew by 240 per cent in 2007 to $331 million, with 65 million tons of emissions traded, according to a new report by Carbon Finance and Ecosystem Marketplace.

China: Beijing Olympics "Basically" Carbon Neutral (Reuters)

The Beijing Olympics are expected to generate 1.18 million tons of carbon. Still, the games will be "basically" carbon neutral after accounting for energy saving measures and an afforestation program, a Chinese official has claimed.