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Ford Unveils Electric Version of Transit Connect Utility Van

by Michael Graham Richard, Ottawa, Canada on 02. 9.10
Cars & Transportation

ford transit connect electric photo
Photo: Ford

Not Sexy, But the Business World Needs Electric Vehicles Too
Ford has just unveiled the electric version of its award-winning Transit Connect utility van in Chicago, and it's not just a "maybe far in the future" announcement. Transit Connect Electric vans should be in the hands of customers "later this year", says Ford, though full volume production is only scheduled for 2011.

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Sen. DeMint: DC Snow Is Revenge on Gore

by Daniel Kessler, San Francisco, California on 02. 9.10
Business & Politics

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Sen. Jim "Health Care will be Obama's Waterloo'' DeMint of South Carolina is once again making his state proud by posting on his Twitter account the following: "It's going to keep snowing in DC until Al Gore cries 'uncle'". Classy, Senator, real classy. It's to be expected that climate change skeptics and deniers would use any strange weather to back up their case that climate change is a hoax, but this is beyond the pale. It does snow in February in DC, Senator. You've been in DC long enough to have realized this.

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From the Forums: What Would Gandhi Do?

by Alex Davies, New York City on 02. 9.10
Interact

ghandi-statue photo
Image Credit: madmack66 via Flickr

Pilon has a hypothetical question:

What if Gandhi were alive today and he declared a fast unto death to encourage progressive climate change legislation? Would he be dismissed as an extremist? Would he be ignored by the mainstream media? Would he die and be quickly forgotten? Or would he change the world? What do you think?

What do you think? Join the conversation.

Plus, check out Jonathon F. P. Rose's op-ed, Gandhi, King and Climate Change.

TreeHugger breaks it down for you in a series of in depth how-to articles that will help you green your life. No time like the present!

Why Are So Many Paul Rudolph Buildings Being Torn Down?

by Lloyd Alter, Toronto on 02. 9.10
Design & Architecture

rudolph walker guest house photo
Bonnie Alter

While out running in Sanibel Island, Florida, passing monster house after monster house, I came upon a small, lovely gem of modern architecture by the side of the road. It took about three seconds (google "small, modern, sanibel) to determine that it was the Walker Guest House by Paul Rudolph, a regular on TreeHugger. One of his first commissions, the 24' square house has lift-up panels connected to 77 pound round counterweights, giving it the nickname the "cannonball house." More to follow after I tour it on Friday, but it clearly shows all those things I love about Paul Rudolph and his Florida buildings- he understood the importance of natural ventilation, shading, working with the climate instead of throwing things at it.

Yet more than any other famous architect of the era, his buildings are either under threat or they are gone already. Why is this happening?

Article continues: Why Are So Many Paul Rudolph Buildings Being Torn Down?

TreeHugger's Best of Green 2010: Now Calling for Nominations

by Team Treehugger, Worldwide on 02. 9.10
TH Exclusives

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Do you know of a green person, product, company, event, or concept that deserves to be lauded for the positive environmental change it has enacted? Let us know! In TreeHugger's second annual Best of Green Awards, we're looking to bestow top honors on the people, places, and things that are helping move sustainability into the mainstream.

Last year, we awarded more than 170 prizes across eight general themes. This year, we're asking for your help making some of the selections. Let us know who you think should be nominated for a Best of Green Award. Then we'll ask for your help picking the cream of the crop in dozens of specific categories in our new-this-year Readers' Choice Awards. Click the link below for nomination instructions.

Make a nomination!

10 Disgusting, Diseased Trees We Don't Want to Hug (Slideshow)

by Jeff Kart, Bay City, Michigan on 02. 9.10
Travel & Nature

emerald ash borer larvae photo
Credit: Michigan State University.

Trees. They provide shade. They turn carbon dioxide into oxygen. They're the perfect shape for hugging. Unless they're riddled with disease. There are dozens of diseases that sicken or kill trees in the United States. There also are bugs that make trees more prone to disease, like the Emerald Ash Borer, first found in Detroit in 2002.

The bug, native to Asia, likely arrived here in shipping containers. It starts out as larvae that feed on the inner bark of ash trees, and has killed tens of millions of ash in Michigan, other states, and Canada since first being discovered, according to emeraldashborer.info, a clearinghouse site.

The borer is just one of a number of insects and afflictions that make trees less huggable. Climate change is likely to bring news diseases to new areas, according to U.S. Forest Service officials. Get ready to meet some of your new neighbors.

10 Disgusting Diseased Trees We Dont Want to Hug