Articles About Green
- Author:
- Richard M. Gatto
- Posted:
- 12.14.2017
How Electronic Vehicles (EV) Are Presenting New Opportunities for CRE
Electric vehicles, or EV, are quickly becoming more and more popular across the United States with 2016 seeing a whopping 25% increase in EV sales from the previous year. Today, more than 360,000 EVs are on the road.
- Author:
- Tom Silva
- Posted:
- 12.05.2012
Hostess Liquidation Sets Off Online Twinkie Run
As Hostess Brands, Inc. – the 80-plus-year-old baker of such iconic brands as Twinkies, HoHos, Hostess CupCakes, DingDongs and Wonder Bread – enters into liquidation and probable acquisition, the online price of the sugar-filled delicacies is soaring. As soon as Hostess announced the end of production, Twinkie lovers started scrambling to buy every Twinkie they […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 07.11.2012
Ancient Harappan Civilization a Victim of Climate Change
Climate change isn’t new. A recent study found that it destroyed an ancient civilization approximately 4,000 years ago. The gradual eastward movement of monsoons across Asia at first supported the formation of the Harappan civilization in the Indus Valley by allowing large-scale agricultural production, then wiped out the civilization as water supplies disappeared. This the initial […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 07.02.2012
Public Transport Booms in the Recession
Soaring gas prices lured Americans out of their cars and onto public transportation, adding up to a five percent increase in ridership in the first three months of 2012, the most significant 1st quarter increase since 1999. According to the American Public Transportation Association (APTA), Americans took almost 125 million more rides on public transit […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 06.26.2012
Germany Runs Half the Country on Solar Power
During a spell of extremely sunny weather, – on Saturday, May 26 — the solar-energy record by sourcing nearly 50 percent of its daytime electricity needs from sunshine. According to Germany’s Institute of the Renewable Energy Industry (IWR), solar power plants produced an unprecedented 22 gigawatts of electricity, approximately the same amount generated by 20 nuclear […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 06.18.2012
2012 CoreLogic Storm Surge Report Contains Some Surprises
Which American city is at the greatest financial risk from a hurricane? If you think it’s New Orleans or Miami, you’re wrong. According to CoreLogic, a data analysis firm, it’s New York City that is at the greatest risk, both from the number of properties impacted and the dollar value of the damage. The area […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 06.04.2012
Bonn Climate Change Summit Has Its Own Storm Clouds
Disagreement emerged early during the latest round of international climate change talks in Bonn, with the European Union (EU) and developing countries clashing over the future of the Kyoto protocol. Under the terms of last year’s Durban Platform, the EU had agreed to sign an extension of the Kyoto protocol before it lapses at the […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 05.16.2012
Antarctic Ice Melting Faster Than Thought
In a sign that global warming is a reality, a new study reveals that ice shelves in western Antarctica are melting at a faster pace than previously known. Data collected by a NASA ice-watching satellite show that the ice shelves are being eaten away from below by ocean currents, which have been growing warmer even […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 04.16.2012
EPA Putting the Lid on Coal-Fired Power Plants
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced new greenhouse-gas standards for power plants, following through with the authority conferred by a 2007 Supreme Court ruling declaring carbon dioxide a pollutant under the Clean Air Act. The new regulation effectively bans new coal-fired power plants unless they capture and sequester carbon dioxide. Advanced natural-gas plants would meet […]
- Author:
- Mark McDowell
- Posted:
- 04.09.2012
Office Buildings Have to Get on the Smart Grid
Back in the day, hot weather that overtaxed the power grid meant that office buildings had to turn down the air conditioning to save electricity. Meanwhile, the employees would notice that their surroundings were getting appreciably warmer. Today – because more buildings are connected to a smarter grid – fewer adjustments need to be made, […]