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Food waste firm wins green award

Auckland food waste firm Eco Stock Supplies yesterday was named Supreme Winner of the annual Green Ribbon Awards.

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Nappies-to-compost business spreads

Thousands of tonnes of used disposable nappies in Wellington are to be composted rather than going to the rubbish dump.

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Greens praise plans for Christchurch

Light rail and more green spaces will find favour with Christchurch residents, says Green Party earthquake recovery spokesperson Dr Kennedy Graham.

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Carbon gear will map our land use

Technology developed to measure New Zealand's greenhouse gas emissions will be used to map the country.

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'Pure NZ' impossible mountain, says scientist

The 100% Pure brand is stopping New Zealand reaching its potential, says the current holder of the Prime Minister's Science Communicator Prize.

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PNG student wins Daysh scholarship

A PhD student's plans to use traditional ecological knowledge to develop a sustainability education programme for Papua New Guinea have won her a scholarship.

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Retailer joins TV recycling camp

Electronics retailer Noel Leeming has joined the Ministry for the Environment's TV TakeBack Programme.

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Battery pioneer excites hybrid car makers

Forty years ago, Dr John Abrahamson made a discovery that is exciting modern hybrid car makers.

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Food stores switch to 'natural' refrigeration

Foodstuffs is looking to drastically cut emissions and energy costs by switching to natural refrigeration.

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Carbon storage report will shape new laws

A report launched in Wellington yesterday lays the foundations for new laws around the storage of carbon dioxide as a way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

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TV takeback ticks over 200,000 mark

More than 200,000 television sets have been collected for recycling under the TV TakeBack programme.

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Blocking the sunlight has a dark side

By TIM RADFORD. Finding a technology that would let us counteract the effects of climate change is a cherished dream. But if there is a cure, it could be worse than the disease, scientists say.

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By hook or by crook, science is finding new routes to energy

By TIM RADFORD.- While politicians posture, and climate scientists sigh sadly, researchers in laboratories continue to devise ingenious new ways to save energy, increase efficiency, and make the most...

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American students claim to clean the air with roof tiles

California science students say they have created a roof tile coating that when applied to an average-sized residential roof breaks down the same amount of smog-causing nitrogen oxides per year as a...

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Wastewater system earns environment award

Watercare's Kawakawa Bay wastewater system has received one of three Environment and Sustainability Awards for large projects presented by IPENZ, Auckland Branch at the prestigious Arthur Mead Awards...

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Why playing around with the climate could make things a whole lot worse

By TIM RADFORD.- Geoengineering - which sometimes seems to be the despairing climate scientist's Plan B - simply won't work.

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New brainstorming centre will tackle the 'weird stuff'

A new centre of research excellence in Auckland will help New Zealand business to develop the "weird stuff" that could transform the economy, its director says.

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Lots of hot air about heat, but why is no one talking about sustainable...

By TOBY PETERS.- Without cooling, the supply of food, medicine and data would simply break down.

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Skincare firm calls for ban on microbeads

A multimillion dollar Kiwi supplement and skincare company is calling on the New Zealand Government to prohibit the use of plastic microbeads in all personal care and consumer products.

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The skyscrapers of the future will be made of wood

By PETER WILSON.- Vancouver architect Michael Green was unequivocal at a conference at which I heard him speak a while ago: "We grow trees in British Columbia that are 35 storeys tall, so why do our...

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