Algae Is Not Endive: The Future of Biofuels in the United States

      

Researchers have developed an inexpensive way of producing microbubbles that can float algae particles to the surface of the water, making harvesting easier, and saving biofuel-producing companies time and money. (Credit: Stéphane Bidouze / Shutterstock)

Source: The Globalist (4 April 2012)

Former Cowboy Flying Free Health Care to Those in Need

CNN Heroes - by Allie Torgan - April 6, 2012

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Stan Brock made a name for himself lassoing animals on 'Wild Kingdom'

Today, he runs a nonprofit that provides free health care to people all over the world

He started a nonprofit, Remote Area Medical. Since then, the all-volunteer group has held more than 660 medical clinics worldwide, providing free health care to half a million people.

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  • California Nuclear Plant Shut Indefinitely Amid Hunt to Find Cause of Problems

    submitted by Janine Rees

          

    The power plant has been shut down since this winter, when a small amount of radioactive gas escaped.

    CNN - April 6, 2012
    STORY HIGHLIGHTS
    • Anti-nuclear activists warn of a potential environmental catastrophe
    • The San Onofre nuclear plant has been shut down since radioactive gas escaped
    • Officials have said there's no harm to the public health, but can't identify problem's cause
    • The head of the NRC says the plant won't restart until a cause and plan is put forward

    (CNN) -- A large Southern California nuclear plant is out of commission indefinitely, and will remain so until there is an understanding of what caused problems at two of its generators and an effective plan to address the issues, the nation's top nuclear regulator said Friday.

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    Gulf's Dolphins Pay Heavy Price for Deepwater Oil Spill

    A study of bottlenose dolphins in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, showed that many of the marine mammals were suffering from lung and liver disease. Photograph: Alamy

    by Peter Beaumont - guardian.co.uk - March 31, 2012

    New studies show impact of BP's Deepwater Horizon disaster on dolphins and other marine wildlife may be far worse than feared.

    A new study of dolphins living close to the site of North America's worst ever oil spill – the BP Deepwater Horizon catastrophe two years ago – has established serious health problems afflicting the marine mammals.

    The report, commissioned by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NOAA], found that many of the 32 dolphins studied were underweight, anaemic and suffering from lung and liver disease, while nearly half had low levels of a hormone that helps the mammals deal with stress as well as regulating their metabolism and immune systems.

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    Stocks Follow Oil Lower on Reserve Talks

    A man refuels his car as gas prices are reflected into the windows of the United Oil gas station in Los Angeles, California March 24, 2012.  REUTERS/Bret Hartman

    Reuters - by Rodrigo Campos - March 28, 2012

    (Reuters) - Oil prices fell on Wednesday as the U.S. and some European governments mulled the release of strategic oil reserves, while commodity-related shares weighed on global equities.

    U.S. stocks closed weaker, though far from the day's lows, in the wake of economic data that was slightly below expectations.

    France, the United States and Britain are in talks about the possible release of strategic oil stocks to help push fuel prices lower, French ministers said, only weeks ahead of the country's presidential election. Purchasing power is among voters' top concerns.

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    The Third Industrial Revolution: How the Internet, Green Electricity, and 3-D Printing Are Ushering in a Sustainable Era of Distributed Capitalism

    by Jeremy Rifkin - huffingtonpost.com - March 28, 2012

    The great economic revolutions in history occur when new communication technologies converge with new energy systems. New energy revolutions make possible more expansive and integrated trade. Accompanying communication revolutions manage the new complex commercial activities made possible by the new energy flows.

    Today, Internet technology and renewable energies are beginning to merge to create a new infrastructure for a Third Industrial Revolution (TIR) that will change the way power is distributed in the 21st century.

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    BioSense Program Redesign

            

    The BioSense Program provides local, state, and federal partners a timely regional and national picture of trends in disease syndromes and situation awareness. BioSense is in the midst of a redesign that shifts the program's focus to meet the needs of stakeholders and end users in state and local health departments, CDC programs, hospitals, and other federal programs (i.e. DoD and VA) to improve regional and national coverage.

    https://sites.google.com/site/biosenseredesign/about

    At a recent Forum hosted by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR), state and local health practitioners expressed their desire to more easily access social media data. The Now Trending Challenge was created to help fill this need.

    New Industry Commitments to Give 15 Million Households Tools to Shrink Their Energy Bills

    submitted by Gavin Starks

    EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
    OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY
    COUNCIL ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
    WASHINGTON, D.C.

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  March 22, 2012

    New Industry Commitments to Give 15 Million Households Tools to Shrink Their Energy Bills

    Washington, D.C. -- Responding to President Obama’s call for an “all-of-the-above” strategy to help consumers reduce their energy costs, the Administration announced today that nine major utilities and electricity suppliers will commit to providing more than 15 million households access to data about their own energy use with a simple click of an online “Green Button.”  By providing consumers with secure, easy-to-understand information about how they are using energy in their households, Green Button can help them reduce waste and shrink bills.

    Proceedings for the 2011 Community Health Resiliency Workshop are Now Available

           

     

    Thank you for attending the 2011 Community Health Resiliency Workshop; your participation helped make this event a success!

    Material from the workshop is now available for download in the attachment below, and at: http://www.communityhealthresilience.com/proceedings.html

    Respectfully,

    The Community Health Resilience Workshop Coordination Team

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    How the Legal Assault on Obama’s Health Law Went Mainstream

          

    People walk in front of the Supreme Court as others form a line, Saturday, March 24, 2012. | AP Photo

    by Josh Gerstein - politico.com - March 25, 2012

    When President Barack Obama signed the health care bill two years ago, the legal challenges to the law were widely belittled as long shots — at best.

    But as the cases head to the Supreme Court this week, what looked to many like far-out legal arguments to undo “Obamacare” don’t seem so zany anymore.

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    Exercise 24: Using Social Media for Crisis Response

    submitted by Samuel Bendett

          

    worldfinancialreview.com - By George H. Bressler, Murray E. Jennex & Eric G. Frost

    “Can populations self-organize a crisis response? This is a field report on the first two efforts in a continuing series of exercises termed Exercise 24 or X24. These exercises attempted to demonstrate that self-organizing groups can form and respond to a crisis using low-cost social media and other emerging web technologies.”

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    California Struggling to Prepare Quake Early Warning System

    submitted by Samuel Bendett

          

    Workers fix subway lines that were damaged after an earthquake was felt in Mexico City on Tuesday, March 20. (Associated Press / March 19, 2012)

    By Hector Becerra and Sam Allen, Times Staff Writers - latimes.com - March 22, 2012

    The state spends a fraction of what countries like Mexico and Japan spend on their systems. One reason for the lack of interest, experts say, is that California has not experienced a catastrophic quake in more than a century.

    U.S. Water Shortages Loom

    Waters shortages are evident in this Colorado River reservoir // Source: greenbang.com

    submitted by George Bressler

    Homeland Security News Wire - February 24, 2012

    More than 1 in 3 counties in the United States could face a “high” or “extreme” risk of water shortages due to climate change by the middle of the twenty-first century, according to a new study in the American Chemical Society’s (ACS) journal  Environmental Science & Technology.

    The new report concluded that 7 in 10 of the more than 3,100 U.S. counties could face “some” risk of shortages of fresh water for drinking, farming, and other uses. The study includes maps that identify the counties at risk of shortages.

    You’re Invited! “Match Making” in the Biofuels Value Chain at USDA

    submitted by Albert Gomez

    usda.gov - March 19, 2012

    On March 30th, the Department of Agriculture, is hosting a “match making day” at USDA, to promote connections between agricultural producers of energy feedstocks (and their related businesses) with biorefiners seeking to produce biofuels for commercial sale and consumption. Officials from the U.S. Department of Navy, U.S. Department of Energy, and the Federal Aviation Administration will attend, make presentations and answer questions.

    As we move forward as a nation, identifying and implementing an “all-of-the-above” energy strategy, there are key relationships that will determine our success in the effort to develop and deploy aviation biofuels.  The objectives of this match making session will be to improve awareness and increase understanding of the biofuels supply-chain links between those involved in feedstock production and the processors of that feedstock into biofuels.  This includes logistical challenges, potential roles of service providers, and potential pitfalls.

    Keystone XL Pipeline Could Cost More Jobs Than It Creates

    by Gina-Marie Cheeseman - triplepundit.com - March 19, 2012

    The proposed route of the Keystone XL pipeline would carry oil extracted from Alberta, Canada’s tar sands through six states: Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. Although many proponents of the pipeline make a big deal about the jobs it would create, the six states would only gain about 20 permanent pipeline operation jobs, according to a report by Cornell University’s Global Labor Institute. Meanwhile, the agricultural and tourism sectors that are already major employers in those states would be affected greatly by a major spill.

    (THE CORNELL UNIVERSITY STUDY TO BE POSTED IN COMMENTS)

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