Del.'s chemical site eyed for renewable energy KPLC Lake Charles Sat, 19 Nov 2011 07:48 AM PST One of Delaware's biggest environmental headaches is being considered by state and federal officials for its potential to produce clean energy. | Artworks Feature: Pedder Dreaming Australian Broadcasting Corporation Sat, 19 Nov 2011 07:46 AM PST In the Artworks Feature, back to the 70s and a Lithuanian-born photographer and his passion for a pink quartz beach. For some, the flooding of Lake Pedder in Tasmania's south west was the loss of one of the world's most precious natural sites. For others it promised clean, green energy to power industry in a state that needed jobs. The photographer Olegas Truchanas and his images became the ... | AD: hard pressed low income earners will not benefit from new tax rates Malta Star Sat, 19 Nov 2011 07:42 AM PST Alternattiva Demokratika â" The Green Party said that Government's proposed budget for 2012 was mixed, with a number of positive proposals, yet which postpones Malta's energy problems as regard dependence on fossil fuels and unsustainable water usage. | Club supports more than athletics The Adobe Press Sat, 19 Nov 2011 07:29 AM PST Nipomo High School Boosters Club plans to add new members and forge closer ties with local businesses this year. âThereâs a new energy on the board,â said NHS Principal Michelle Johnson. | Tata Capital, IFC set up clean energy venture Market Watch Sat, 19 Nov 2011 07:24 AM PST Tata Capital Ltd. has formed a clean energy venture along with the International Finance Corp., the company said Saturday. The new venture, Tata Cleantech Capital Ltd., in which the IFC will hold up to a 19.5% stake, will provide financing and advisory services to companies engaged in climate change initiatives, Tata Capital said in a press release. | Clean energy isnât a clean process - Sat, 19 Nov 2011 PST The Spokesman-Review Sat, 19 Nov 2011 07:24 AM PST Princely U.S. government subsidies have made developing wind, solar and other clean energy nearly risk-free to investors â" and thatâs bad. But the price of this domestically produced power has tumbled, thanks in part to such aid. That helps clean energy compete with the fossil kind, which is definitely good. So this is not quite the wasteful Washington outrage that foes of such subsidies make it ... | | |
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