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Popular links
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More and more, consumers are asking not just about a product's price, quality and availability, but where and how it was made. Their concerns are with the underlying cost—the social, environmental and health implications of its manufacture, distribution, use and disposal.
http://www.thegreenguide.com/reports/
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In the United States, the building environment accounts for approximately one-third of all energy, water and materials consumption and generates similar proportions of pollution.
Changing the type of materials we use to construct these buildings is everyone’s responsibility. Governmental regulations, environmental design concerns and skyrocketing energy costs are just some of the factors that have contributed to this wave of change.
Our mission at Green Products is to bring biobased product innovations from the fields of the farm, to the lab and ultimately to your building.
http://www.greenproducts.net/
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Find out about easy, everyday actions you can take to protect your health, your home and the planet. Share tips and talk with others who care about their world -- and take more action if you want.
http://www.simplesteps.org/
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As the environmental impact of buildings becomes more apparent, a new field called green building is gaining momentum. Green or sustainable building is the practice of creating healthier and more resource-efficient models of construction, renovation, operation, maintenance, and demolition.
http://www.epa.gov/greenbuilding/
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To understand the e-waste recycling process, one must first realize that e-waste recyclers (and in general, all recyclers) are interested in both saving these devices from landfills as well as getting the most value out of these materials. Electronics such as computers and televisions are made with some valuable metals, including copper and gold, which can be sold and then reused in alternative capacities.
http://earth911.org/
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Browse many other links with environmental information.
http://www.linkmarket.net/link_directory/Science/Environment/
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The biggest cause of global warming is the carbon dioxide released when fossil fuels like oil and coal are burned for energy. So when you save energy, you fight global warming (and save money, of course). Here are some easy steps you can take:
http://www.nrdc.org/globalWarming/gsteps.asp
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With over 800,000 members, Action Network is a gateway to online activism centers for over 170 leading environment, health and population advocacy organizations. Action Network ensures that the power to change our world is only as far away as your computer.
http://actionnetwork.org/
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EPA promotes and expands the use of environmentally beneficial alternative fuels and vehicles by providing the states with tools, such as benefits models, State Implementation Plan Credits, and the Clean Fuels Fleet program. EPA also coordinates with the Department of Energy and Department of Transportation so that their Energy Policy Act and Transportation Equity Act of the 21st Century programs promote alternative fuels and vehicles having the greatest environmental gains.
http://www.epa.gov/otaq/consumer/fuels/altfuels/altfuels.htm
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Keep it real
Get rid of pesticides, weed killers and chemical fertilisers, and layer on all-natural compost instead. Call in beneficial insect reinforcements to attack pesky garden pests.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=218&objectid=10461258
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