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  • Environmental Myth No. 2- PCBs cause human cancers

    By Kennedy Maize In 1979, researcher Renate Kimbrough of the Centers for Disease Control, part of the Department of Health Education and Welfare (now Health and Human Services), shocked the electrical world with an epidemiological study. She found that GE employees from the transformer works at Schenectady, N.Y., exposed to high levels of polychlorinated biphenyls […]

  • Court Reinstates Emissions-Related Public Nuisance Suit Against Utilities

    In a decision that experts say could have profound implications on the future of climate change litigation, a two-judge panel of a federal appeals court on Monday reversed a 2005 district court decision and ruled that eight states and New York City can sue coal-burning utilities for creating a “public nuisance” through their emissions of climate-warming greenhouse gases.

  • EPA Finalizes Greenhouse Gas Reporting Rule

    The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on Tuesday issued a final rule that will require—for the first time—most large emitters of greenhouse gases to begin recording data under a new reporting system starting in 2010.

  • Climate Change Developments in Washington, Texas, and at the UN

    The week brought several developments concerning climate change legislation. A Republican senator is considering introducing an amendment to a fiscal appropriations bill that would prevent the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) from regulating greenhouse gas emissions from stationary sources. Meanwhile, as reports emerged that Senate hearings on climate change legislation could begin next month, Texas Governor Rick Perry railed against the Waxman-Markey bill, and China pledged to slow growth of its carbon emissions.

  • Working Mother Names AEP One of the Best Places to Work

    Working Mother magazine has selected American Electric Power (AEP) as one of the 100 best companies for working mothers. AEP is the only electric utility and the only Ohio-based company on the 2009 list.

  • China to Host First Commercial Site for U.S.-Developed IGCC Technology

    Southern Co. plans to implement an advanced integrated gasification combined-cycle (IGCC) technology developed in conjunction with the Energy Department, KBR Inc., and other partners at an Alabama federal research facility at an existing fuel oil–fired power plant in China, the company said on Thursday.

  • DOE to Conduct $75.5 Million in CCS Research at 11 U.S. Sites

    The Department of Energy last week announced the award of 11 projects worth $75.5 million to conduct site characterization of promising geologic formations for carbon dioxide storage.

  • Babcock to Buy UK Govt.’s Commercial Decommissioning Arm for £50 Million

    Babcock International last week agreed to buy the full commercial arm of the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA)—a UK government body that provides nuclear decommissioning, waste management, and new nuclear build support services—for £50 million.

  • Environmental myths part 1 — EMF

    By Kennedy Maize A few environmental myths about electric power just won’t die. I’ll begin to discuss some of them in this blog. The first is that exposure to electrical and magnetic fields from high-voltage power lines causes cancer. This long-shot-down claim resurfaces repeatedly. It is simply wrong, and multiple scientific studies – including a […]

  • On the Death of Mary Travers

    By Kennedy Maize This blog has nothing to do with energy or power.  It’s about music. But I suspect that there are enough readers out there who will connect with it to make the blog worthwhile. I’m writing about the death on Sept. 16 of Mary Travers, 72, the dominant force of the folk group […]