Thursday, February 23, 2012
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
What is Biodegradation
Thanks to my friends over at The Green Scene they have produced this video explaining 'What is Biodegradation'
Melvin Wylie
Melvin Wylie
US House of Representatives Vote to Open ANWR for Oil Exploration
The fight is on to stop Oil Exploration in ANWR Alaska! The US House of Representative had voted to open up the coastal plain of ANWR to oil and gas development. Included in the bill is the opening of the US Outer Continental Shelf areas to oil and gas exploration, encouraging oil shale development nationwide and mandating the approval of the Keystone Pipeline Project. Now the bill moves to the Senate where strong opposition lies for it's future. The President has threatened to veto any legislation including the Keystone Pipeline stating "I strongly reject drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge because it would irreversibly damage a proctected national wildlife refuge without creating sufficient oil supplies to meaningfully affect the global market price or have a discernible impact on US energy security." Native Alaska Inter-Tribal Council which represents 229 Alaskan Tribes officially opposes any development in ANWR. Many tribes live off the land and caribou is one of the primary animals that they depend on for sustenance. Approximately 250,000 migrating herds of caribou use ANWR as their calving grounds. If this bill is passed it's possible that the calving grounds will be destroyed from oil and gas exploration.
Melvin Wylie
Melvin Wylie
Monday, February 13, 2012
30th Episode of GreenNews4U
What's Under Your Athletic Field? In this edition I will be talking about PowerBase which is what goes under the synthetic turf. Well find out how it's made and the pros of using synthetic turf with PowerBase. To do this I have Dan Sawyer who is the Founder & Chief Executive Officer of Brock International. For those that don't know, Brock International is the leader in performance base systems for synthetic turf. The company produces a premier product called Brock PowerBase which is a shock pad and drainage layer used beneath synthetic turf on athletic fields that enhances player safety, performance and prevents concussions. Nothing like it existed before Dan's team envisioned the technology. Today over 20 million square feet of Brock products is in play underneath athletic fields worldwide. The Boulder, Colorado native is passionate about environmental stewardship. In October 2011, Brock became the first company in the industry to have a Cradle to Cradle Certification CM for its combined drainage and shock pad product. Offering the only product in the market that can be closed loop recycled, the company's technologies reduce the overall energy cost of constructing a field by 50%. Dan has become a vocal advocate for preventing concussions on sports fields. With the perspective of handling hundreds of successful installations for clients ranging from NFL teams and major universities to community parks, he feels many head injuries can be prevented through education as well as better technique, equipment and treatment. Brock's products have been scientifically proven to reduce the likelihood of traumatic brain injury by up to 50%, provide the same G-Max and playability as a pristine natural grass field and mitigate field hardening over time.
Melvin Wylie
Melvin Wylie
Monday, February 6, 2012
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Waterless Urinals Fail in a School - $500,000 to Fix
In Boca Raton, Florida Students had to step over rivers of urin and endure a horid stench of rancid waste after a plan to bring 'green' waterless urinals into bathrooms backfired according to the report. School officals at Spanish River High School wanted an environmentally friendly, cost-savings solution so they turned to Falcon Waterfree urinals. With no water moving through the copper pipes to flush the urine into the sewer system, the waste product eventualy ate through the metal leaving leaky pipes that dripped into the walls and flowed onto the floors. According to Frank Barbieri who told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel 'The girls had to step over a river of urine. I could smell it as soon as I walked into the hallway.'
Melvin Wylie
Melvin Wylie
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