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Deal of the Day: Save 24% on Elmer's Carpenter's Wood Glue Max
How to Engage and Convince the C-Suite about Corporate Sustainability
Panasonic Using SAP Recycling Software
Deloitte Developing Water Tool; Outlines Integrated Reporting Benefits
Wood Chips as Fuel?
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Yuengling Brewery Cuts Energy Consumption by 14%
Boeing 787 Dreamliner to Cut Fuel 20%
Padfoot from ‘Harry Potter’ Up for Adoption
Andy Roddick Raises More Than $1 Million for Charity
Standards & Compliance Briefing: Cadmium Jewelry Standard, WEEE, IEEE SmartGrid Portal
Legal and General Property Launches Green Leases
Most Chief Sustainability Officers Close to the Top, Report Finds
Janelle Monáe To Headline Green Campus Conscious Tour
an upcycled silver cake server becomes a tribal necklace
The Nexus of Design, Art, and Sustainability – Women in Green
Wangari Maathai, rest in peace
The great tree-planter and feminist, Wangari Maathai, Nobel Prize winner, died yesterday.
We were fortunate enough to see her speak a few years ago, and I was frankly awed by her ability to find simple, enduring truths in complicated, desperate situations.
Even today, speaking about the unhappiness of development in Kenya, her words resonate with me:
"Now the forests have come down, the land has been turned to commercial farming, the tea plantations keep everyone poor, and the economic system does not allow people to appreciate the beauty of where they live."
In these United States we need not fear tea farming, can still see forests, if we choose, and haven't seen our lives ruined by commercial farming. Yet so many of us -- myself included, at times -- have become wage slaves, gripped by fear, unable to see the beauty of this world all around us.
Thank you for insisting on the goodness and power and beauty of trees, Ms. Maathai.
Recycled Greenhouse Pavilion Pops Up in the Dutch Countryside
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Post tags: "sustainable architecture", eco design, elmo vermijs, green architecture, Green Building, green design, greenhouse pavilion, landart 2011, pavilion, Recycled Materials, reused materials, studio elmo vermijs, Sustainable Building, sustainable design, temporary pavilion, temporary structure, the netherlands
Timeless tubs
Lunchskins Reusable Sandwich Bags
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Guacamole And Mango Bagel Recipe
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