Making The Connection Between Humans, Animals And The Environment

Friday, September 30, 2011
Bronx Zoo pathologist Tracey McNamara started to see lifeless crows dotting her zoo's grounds in mid-August 1999. After Labor Day weekend that year, she recalls, "All hell broke loose."
Oil And Water Don't Mix For Nebraska Pipeline Opponents
Growing Solar Power Industry Signals Need For Federal And State Support
Entire Ice Shelf Nearly Gone In Canada's Arctic
Perry Attacks Romney's Environmental Record
'A Hops Revolution'
BLOG POSTS
Joanna Zelman: Introducing 'The Infection Loop'
I'm excited to announce the launch of HuffPost reporter Lynne Peeples' series, The Infection Loop, which, along the lines of the growing movement "One Health," will examine the link between humans, animals, and the environment.
Heather Taylor-Miesle: How Obama Can Keep Latino Voters: Focus on Health and the Environment
Most Latino voters view strong environmental safeguards and cleaner, more sustainable solutions as ways to protect their families. They will vote for leaders who fight for policies that bring safer air and cleaner water.
Robert Wilhite: The Consumer Driven Smart Grid
Today's electric and gas providers operate in a market that is controlled through regulatory authorities. Providers of the future will seek to operate under a market and customer-driven model, rather than our regulatory construct of today.
Mason Inman: The Climate Post: Cutting Oil Use Should Be Focus of U.S. Energy Research, New Roadmap Says
WikiLeaks has once again stirred up controversy, this time by releasing a diplomatic cable sent by the U.S. embassy in India, revealing discussions about questionable projects.
Ben Jervey: Pipeline Jobs Are a Pipe Dream: Cornell Report Busts Myth of Keystone XL Job Creation
Based on TransCanada's own figures provided to the Canadian government, operating costs for the U.S. section of their pipeline are minimal, and new permanent American jobs created would likely be as few as 50.
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