News Brief
The City of Lubbock, Texas is replacing substandard and deteriorating
low-income housing with homes constructed of insulated concrete forms (ICFs). The city’s Energy Savings Reconstruction Program is partially funded through state, federal, and private partnerships, including support from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban... Read more
News Brief
Generally not known for regulatory zeal, New Hampshire has become the
first state to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. On May 9, Gov. Jeanne Shaheen signed into law House Bill 284 (the “Clean Power Act”), establishing limits for carbon dioxide—along with sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and mercury—emitted by existing... Read more
Op-Ed
Thanks for the piece on
Sun, Wind and Light in the “From the Library” section of the April
EBN issue (
Vol. 11, No. 4). There is a companion Web site at
www.sunwindlight.net. It has, among other things, climate data keyed to
SWL tools that expands the book’s usefulness to many more climates, thus removing... Read more
News Analysis
News Brief
, according to the results of a recent survey by
Metropolis magazine. Fifty-four percent of 500 Web site respondents agree that within 5 years, to be considered “good,” any design will have to address sustainability, and a whopping 93% of practicing design professionals... Read more
News Brief
On May first, the American Lung Association (ALA) reported that 142 million Americans—more than 50% of the population—are now
living in areas with unhealthy levels of ozone air pollution (smog). According to the organization’s
State of the Air 2002 report, a failing grade was received by nearly 400 of the 678 counties that... Read more
News Brief
The Los Angeles City Council agreed in April to commit to sustainable building techniques by adopting LEED™ certification standards for all new public works projects of 7,500 ft2 (700 m2) or larger. Council members hope the initiative will not only improve environmental performance of the city’s buildings, but also benefit taxpayers—largely... Read more
Feature
Today's dominant lighting technologies are either woefully inefficient or reliant on the toxic heavy metal mercury, but significant improvements are occurring all the time.
Electric lighting has advanced tremendously in the past few decades, yet the leading technologies in use today still generate 90% of their output as heat (incandescent lighting), or rely on the toxic heavy metal mercury to operate (fluorescent and nearly all HID light sources). Clearly there is still progress to be made.
This article... Read more
News Brief
Atrazine, America’s most common herbicide,
disrupts hormones in frogs, according to findings published in the April 16 issue of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The University of California–Berkeley team found lowered testosterone levels and hermaphroditism (possessing both male and female sex organs) in frogs... Read more
News Analysis
News Brief
On Earth Day, The American Institute of Architects’ (AIA) Committee on the Environment (COTE) announced this year’s Top Ten Green Projects. The winning projects represent a wide range of function and location, and employ an array of environmental strategies. This year’s awards program was juried, for the first time, by invited jurors from... Read more
Op-Ed
Thank you for your comparison article on non-water using urinals (“Falcon Waterfree Urinals Compete with Waterless,”
EBN
Vol. 11, No. 2). It is great to see you bringing this very viable technology to your readers. I would like to respond with some additional facts your readers may be interested in.
First of all, we really... Read moreNews Analysis
tradable renewable energy certificates (TRCs), allowing consumers... Read more
News Brief
Edited by Joseph F. Kennedy, Michael G. Smith, and Catharine Wanek. New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, British Columbia, Canada, 2002. Paperback, 288 pages, $26.95.
“Natural building is nothing new,” beginsThe Art of Natural Building: Design, Construction, Resources. Nor is it obsolete, argue editors Joseph F. Kennedy, Michael G.... Read more
Feature
News Brief
by William McDonough and Michael Braungart. North Point Press, New York, 2002. Plasticback, 194 pages, $24.95.
Brilliant and charismatic, William McDonough has helped define ecological design in the U.S. over the past two decades with an uncompromising vision of an industrial world that supports, rather than degrades, the natural world. And... Read moreProduct Review
News Brief
A new online tool, produced jointly by the Earth Day Network and Redefining Progress, allows individuals in 58 countries to
calculate their impact on the planet. After completing the 15-question survey, participants learn the size of their ecological footprints in global acres (or hectares), each of which corresponds to one acre (or... Read more
Op-Ed
After seven months of making herself invaluable as an intern,
Jessica Boehland (pronounced “BEE-lend”) has agreed to accept a permanent position as
EBN’s
Associate Editor. Originally from Duluth, Minnesota, Boehland graduated in 2001 from Oberlin College, where she was a student in Dr. David Orr’s Environmental Studies... Read more
News Analysis






