Archive for July 2, 2012


Environmental Defense Fund’s mission is to preserve the natural systems on which all life depends.


Guided by science and economics, we find practical and lasting solutions to the most serious environmental problems.

2012 Aspen Environment Forum: THE PATH FORWARD FOR NATURAL GAS
Topics: aef2012, Aspen Environment Forum
Publication Date: 06/23/2012

The environmental impacts of natural gas development are real. Public trust for the industry is eroding and its license to operate is at risk. Strong voices —from leading companies responding to the crisis of confidence, as well as from investors, suppliers, customers, NGOs, and other stakeholders —are joining in a powerful call for real action to get the rules right. Fred Krupp, President of the Environmental Defense Fund, served on the Secretary of Energy’s Advisory Board on shale gas and is among those leading the way forward on this highly charged issue. He’ll share his views on the challenges and opportunities of shale gas.

Fred Krupp, President of the Environmental Defense Fund in conversation with Alex Chadwick, Host and Senior Correspondent, BURN

Selected milestones
1967: A small group of scientists incorporates our organization as Environmental Defense Fund after winning a ban on the pesticide DDT.

1970: EDF helps bring all hunted whales onto the U.S. endangered species list and opens an office in Washington, D.C.

1975: EDF hires Zach Willey, the first Ph.D. economist to work full-time at an environmental organization.

1977: Our campaign curbs the use of the hazardous flame retardant TRIS in children’s sleepwear.

1985: We help convince federal regulators to end the use of leaded gasoline.

1990: The Clean Air Act uses EDF’s innovative market-based approach to cut air pollution, leading to a 52% drop in acid rain between 1990–2008.

1991: McDonald’s accepts the recommendation of our joint task force, eventually eliminating more than 150,000 tons of packaging waste.

1995: We launch our Safe Harbor program to give landowners new incentives to protect endangered wildlife. Today more than 4 million acres of habitat are being protected.

1996: EDF helps the Panará Indians of Brazil win protection for their homeland, saving 1.2 million acres of Amazon rainforest.

2002: EDF helps win passage of California’s first-in-the-nation law to reduce global warming emissions from cars and trucks.

2004: Our partnership with Fed Ex puts hybrid electric trucks on the road. The new trucks cut smog-causing emissions by 65%, reduce soot by 96% and get 50% better mileage.

2006: Regulators approve EDF’s proposed management method, catch shares, to end commercial overfishing of red snapper in the Gulf of Mexico. Catch-share programs have made fisheries more sustainable while increasing per-boat revenues by 80%.

2006: We help win permanent protection for a chain of pristine islands in Hawaii, forming the world’s largest marine reserve.

2007: Our hard-hitting campaign against the Texas utility TXU leads to a landmark buyout deal that blocks a new wave of dirty coal plants.

2009: We help win major reforms in California water law to provide water for California’s farms and growing population while leaving enough in rivers for wildlife. The New York Times called it the “most comprehensive” water package since the 1960s.

Image Source: http://www.edf.org

“The God Particle”
CERN may have found exotic Higgs ‘impostor’ particle

CERN announced the discovery of a new particle last week, it was very, very careful to not explicitly call that particle the Higgs boson, instead citing “strong evidence”.

The God Particle is only a marketing term may have contributed to increased media interest, many scientists dislike it, since it overstates the particle’s importance, not least since its discovery would still leave unanswered questions about the unification of Quantum chromodynamics, the electroweak interaction and gravity, as well as the ultimate origin of the universe.

 

Image Source: thehindu.com




The HIGGS BOSON is a massive scalar elementary particle predicted to exist by the Standard Model in particle physics. At present there are no other known fundamental scalar particles in nature.

The Higgs boson is the only Standard Model particle that has not been observed. Experimental detection of the Higgs boson would help explain the origin of mass in the universe.

The Higgs boson would explain the difference between the massless photon, which mediates electromagnetism, and the massive W and Z bosons, which mediate the weak force. If the Higgs boson exists, it is an integral and pervasive component of the material world.

STANDARD MODEL OF PARTICLE PHYSICS:

http://www.youtube.com/user/Best0fScience#g/c/4A8C50311C9F7369

The Standard Model of particle physics is a theory of three of the four known fundamental interactions and the elementary particles that take part in these interactions. These particles make up all visible matter in the universe.

Every high energy physics experiment carried out since the mid-20th century has eventually yielded findings consistent with the Standard Model.

Still, the Standard Model falls short of being a complete theory of fundamental interactions because it does not include gravitation, dark matter, or dark energy. It is not quite a complete description of leptons either, because it does not describe nonzero neutrino masses, although simple natural extensions do.

• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Model

Image Source: news.softpedia.com

 

The HIGGS BOSON is a massive scalar elementary particle predicted to exist by the Standard Model in particle physics. At present there are no other known fundamental scalar particles in nature.
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Watch “A Day Made of Glass” and take a look at Corning’s vision for the future with specialty glass at the heart of it.

Materials manufacturer Corning put together a futurist video last month called “A Day Made Of Glass,” which has spiraled into stratospheric popularity on YouTube. The premise of the video is that we’re about to live in an era of ubiquitous touchscreens (made with glass) and smart windows (made of glass) as well as appliances like stoves which are also made with glass.
What’s striking about the video is mostly how we see the touch screens working, and the way the mobile devices seamlessly network with household appliances, TVs, and bendable flat screen computers. There’s also a very paranoia-inducing, panopticon feeling to what we’re seeing. As one person walks along, we see giant pictures of her (or her avatar?) leaping up the walls of buildings. And when she walks into a store, she’s shown pictures of herself in the clothes she might want to try on. A world made of glass may promise easy information access, but it also seems to be a world where everybody is always looking at themselves and each other to an alarming degree.

Still, I wouldn’t say no to some of this tech. Especially the user interface where you plop your phone down onto a surface and it instantly networks with it and allows you to get a large screen version of the data on your mobile.

This is obviously a concept video so enjoy…

Source: citb.iprock.com