EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"USPS Could Deliver America the Electric Car"
SolveClimate, 09/08/2009"Government researchers have confirmed the ideal testing ground for electric cars: the U.S. Postal Service. Now all they have to do is find the money to pay for it."
Enviros File Suit To Block Tar Sands Pipeline
NYTimes, 09/04/2009"Less than two weeks after the State Department gave the go-ahead for a major new pipeline to carry Alberta oil sands crude into the United States, a network of environmental and Native American groups filed a lawsuit to stop it."
"One Company Gets Lion's Share of $500M in Clean Energy Awards"
ENS, 09/04/2009"One company has received more than half of $500 million in the first round of grants from a Recovery Act program that provides cash assistance to renewable energy production companies in place of earned tax credits."
Speculators Now Dominate Oil Futures Market: Study
SPX, 09/03/2009A new study using CFTC data shows that speculators have come to dominate the oil futures market since Congress eased commodity regulations in 2000.
"BP Finds Giant Oil Field Deep in Gulf of Mexico"
NYTimes, 09/03/2009"BP announced on Wednesday the discovery of what it characterized as a giant oil field several miles under the Gulf of Mexico, but it may take years to assess how much crude can actually be recovered."
"Google-Backed Geothermal Company Suspends Test Project"
Reuters, 09/03/2009"Geothermal startup AltaRock Energy Inc on Wednesday said it has suspended its demonstration project in California due to geologic anomalies."
"As Hybrid Cars Gobble Rare Metals, Shortage Looms"
Reuters, 09/02/2009"The Prius hybrid automobile is popular for its fuel efficiency, but its electric motor and battery guzzle rare earth metals, a little-known class of elements .... That makes Toyota's market-leading gasoline-electric hybrid car and other similar vehicles vulnerable to a supply crunch predicted by experts as China, the world's dominant rare earths producer, limits exports while global demand swells."
"Europe’s Ban on Old-Style Bulbs Begins"
NYTimes, 09/01/2009"Restrictions on the sale of incandescent bulbs begin going into effect across most of Europe on Tuesday in the continent’s latest effort to get people to save energy and combat global warming."
"Recession Speeds Coal's Long-Term Decline"
Reuters, 08/28/2009"Declining industrial electricity demand and an abundance of cheap natural gas will threaten coal's status as the dominant U.S. fuel to generate electric power, even after the economic recession ends" say electric industry executives and analysts.
"Europe's Saharan Power Plan: Miracle Or Mirage?"
Reuters, 08/28/2009"A $774 billion plan to power Europe with Sahara sunlight is gaining momentum, even as critics see high risks in a large corporate project using young technology in north African countries with weak rule of law."
Direct Carbon Fuel Cells Could Offer Hope for Coal
ClimateWire, 08/27/2009Laboratory researchers are pursuing technologies for skipping the burning of coal altogether, and producing electricity directly from carbon via fuel cells.
"Scalding A Quarter-Mile In An Electric Ford Pinto"
NPR, 08/26/2009Think electric cars are small and wussy? Go out on the drag strip and smell the burning rubber. "Mike Willmon's 1978 Ford Pinto can go from zero to 60 in about 3.5 seconds — just like the $1 million Ferrari Enzo." He built it himself.
"China Racing Ahead of U.S. in the Drive to Go Solar"
NYTimes, 08/26/2009Chinese companies like Suntech are using government subsidies to leap ahead of the U.S. in the solar panel market.
"SC Utility Votes To Drop Coal-Fired Power Plant"
AP, 08/25/2009"COLUMBIA, S.C. -- State-owned utility Santee Cooper decided Monday to drop plans for a controversial coal-fired power plant in South Carolina, a move lauded by environmental groups that had criticized the facility."

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