Competitive pressures and unpredictable energy costs continuously motivate us to examine our processes for opportunities to increase quality and productivity, and to decrease costs. Energy-intensive processes such as those associated with the manufacture of a wide variety of products utilizing water or VOC-based solvents offer opportunities to reduce operating costs through heat management or control.
- By Tim Golden
- September 01, 2007
This article originally appeared in the 09/01/2007 issue of Environmental Protection.
I am a child of the ‘70s, and just like the folks who came of age in the ‘60s, who were warned of global disaster from "too many people," I was told that the next ice age was just around the corner. This climate disaster would bring worldwide famine and, with it, the collapse of social order, or at least deconstruction of the status quo.
- By Anthony J. Sadar
- July 01, 2007
This article originally appeared in the 07/01/2007 issue of Environmental Protection.
Economic prosperity is in the best interest of every United States citizen. Climate change due to human-caused greenhouse gases in the atmosphere may threaten the economic survival of this nation.
- By H. Troy Stuckey, Hannah R. Kolni
- June 01, 2007
This article originally appeared in the 06/01/2007 issue of Environmental Protection.
This article originally appeared in the 04/01/2007 issue of Environmental Protection.
With the demand for oil growing and our resources dwindling, new technologies will certainly help fuel our future. A variety of energy sources are competing to ease the demand and to move us forward to greener, cleaner automobiles.
- By Katie McCarthy
- November 01, 2006
This article originally appeared in the 11/01/2006 issue of Environmental Protection.
Insurance companies are helping turn contaminated sites turn into solar energy producers
- By Jeffrey Hanneman
- July 01, 2006
This article originally appeared in the 07/01/2006 issue of Environmental Protection.
It is well understood that the world's fossil fuel supplies have a finite lifetime --particularly oil. Forward-thinking scientists, political leaders, and other individuals have given thought for years to the transition in energy production that will inevitably be forced upon us as fossil fuel supplies dwindle.
This article originally appeared in the 07/01/2006 issue of Environmental Protection.
There is a rising flood of coverage in America of global climate change and greenhouse gases (GHGs), including a motion picture (The Day After Tomorrow), an HBO feature (Too Hot Not to Handle), a New York Times piece (Yelling 'Fire' on a Hot Planet), a TIME magazine cover story (Be Worried. Be Very Worried), a film starring Al Gore (An Inconvenient Truth), photos of receding glaciers, and reports of drowning polar bears.
- By Steve Barnett
- June 01, 2006
This article originally appeared in the 06/01/2006 issue of Environmental Protection.
It took years and years of designing, planning, and problem-solving before a vehicle that wasn't powered by a gasoline engine actually made it onto the market in quantities sufficient to satisfy more than the most adventurous or environmentally conscious of consumers.
- By Jason Goodman
- November 01, 2005
This article originally appeared in the 11/01/2005 issue of Environmental Protection.