News Brief
Climate researchers have reported a weakening of the mechanism that keeps Great Britain temperate, the
Times of London reported on May 8, 2005. “They have found that one of the ‘engines’ driving the Gulf Stream—the sinking of supercooled water in the Greenland Sea—has weakened to less than a quarter of its former strength,” the article... Read more
News Brief
Planting Green Roofs and Living Wallsby Nigel Dunnett and Noël Kingsbury. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2004. Hardcover, 264 pages, $34.95.
Together,... Read moreOp-Ed
Kudos to
EBN for a superb article on the greening of healthcare [Vol. 14, No. 6]. You did an excellent job of describing how these projects are bringing health concerns into green building in ways that will have important implications for the rest of the building industry.
Members of project design teams who are interested in... Read more
News Brief
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom signed the “Precautionary Purchasing Ordinance” into law in June 2005, requiring city departments to consider public health and environmental responsibility when making purchases, which amount to about $600 million each year. “By exercising our economic power, San Francisco can encourage market development of... Read more
News Brief
Twenty Middlebury College students have teamed up with the nonprofit Green House Network to create the
Flat Earth Award, designed to publicly expose well-known climate-change naysayers “for their denial of the facts on global warming.” This year’s nominees were Michael Crichton, whose 2004 novel,
State of Fear, portrays climate... Read more
News Brief
Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm issued an executive directive in April 2005 requiring that all new buildings for state agencies, universities, and community colleges be certified according to the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® Rating System. The directive also requires that all buildings owned or operated by the state reduce their... Read more
News Brief
The Enterprise Foundation has released a report that summarizes how different states are using federal low-income housing tax credits to support green building. “The report finds that many states encourage developers to meet some standard of energy and/or water efficiency; utilize sustainable, durable materials; and ensure proximity to services... Read more
News Analysis
The U.S. distributor of the Uridan® nonflushing urinal, USA-GDK International, has abandoned the product, citing the relatively high price point (exacerbated by the recent drop of the dollar against the euro) and the unavailability of a vitreous china model as reasons for the slow sales. Uridan is seeking a new U.S. distributor. For more on... Read more
News Brief
EBN
Vol. 13, No. 7). “The design utilizes the natural asset of earth to create terraces that emulate the gentle flow of the area’s... Read more
News Brief
News Brief
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi is urging businessmen to doff their suits this summer to save air-conditioning energy. “I, too, will go without jackets and ties,” said Koizumi, who called for setting thermostats no cooler than 82° F (28° C). Japan imports more than 80% of its energy, and has committed, through the Kyoto Protocol, to... Read more
News Analysis
Product Review
News Brief
News Brief
EBN
Vol. 14, No. 1).
News Brief
Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer has signed into law a renewable portfolio standard (RPS) requiring public utilities to purchase at least 5% of their electricity from renewable energy sources by 2008. Eligible technologies include wind, solar, geothermal, small hydropower, most biomass, and fuel cells using one of these fuel sources. The RPS... Read more
News Brief
News Brief
Ecotone Publishing has announced plans to publish
Who’s Green?, envisioned as “the preeminent resource book for locating firms, organizations, and institutions that are actively participating in the growth of the sustainable design and construction field,” according to Ecotone. It will include architecture, engineering, interior design... Read more
News Brief
The Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has revised its estimate of the size of the global market for FSC-certified products. Previously believed to fall somewhere between $3 billion and $5 billion (see
EBN
Vol. 13, No. 10), the market is now believed to be “in excess of $5 billion.” The revision is based on the results of a global... Read more
News Brief
The organizers of the Rethinking Sustainable Construction 2006 (RSC06) conference, set for Sarasota, Florida, in September, are calling for “creative content” proposals, ranging from research papers to problem-solving workshops. The international conference is intended to “produce an agenda for the future of green buildings,” as described in... Read more




