Some new developments we may have missed this week
Electrics: where do you plug in? Our energy future and update on East Anglia hacking.
Electrics: where do you plug in? Our energy future and update on East Anglia hacking.
Updates on the spread of hybrid auto tech.
ZEROlab to measure carbon footprints for businesses and public agencies.
NOAA has reported that July, 2009, produced the hottest ocean surface temp on record. Of course, those records don't reach back millenia to previous climate changes.
Bright Automotive wants to green the delivery truck and corporate vehicle fleets of America. If only they can get some money.
It's time to follow the money, and there may be a lot of it to follow as it flows from China, Saudi Arabia and Japan to Washington and then is recycled into states and cities across America.Last week Departrment of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) started doling out more than $10 billion.
A new assessment from NOAA indicates that while human activity and greenhouse gases may be altering the earth climate, to be able to predict future regional climate we will need to understand the oceans better.Said a NOAA scientist: "Improving predictions of regional sea-surface temperatures will be crucial to predicting climate variability across the U.
Courtesy: Toyota.Time to follow the money. Toyota has pulled back from its plan to assemble the hybrid Prius in the U.
A new study by researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science shows exactly how important a single atom can be in a complex molecule. Reporting in the Nov.
It's getting colder in North America. And the bleak economic news may make it seem like spring has been cancelled.