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Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Top 5 ways Google is helping tomorrow, today
(or taking over the universe, either way).

A hydrogen fuel cell bus in Sullivan Station in Boston, Massachusetts. (King TransitMA/Wikimedia Commons)
Northwestern University
Friday, February 11, 2022
As Jorja Siemons reports experts discuss clean hydrogen fuel's usefulness in Senate Committee on Energy & Natural Resources hearing Thursday.
Tags: Joe Manchin, Hydrogen, hydrogen fuel cells, Build Back Better, Policy
The George Washington University
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Scott Sklar is your average neighbor… with a few quirks. The house with over a dozen solar panels, three solar-powered pink flamingos, and a hydrogen fuel cell? It’s totally off the grid.
Tags: batteries, home solar, solar power, hydrogen fuel, professor, storyfest2017
Planet Forward
Monday, March 14, 2011
Cross-posted from Advanced Biofuels USA by Joanne Ivancic
Friday, February 14, 2014
How do you fit 12 acres of productivity into 12,000 square feet? Just ask Mary Ellen Taylor, The Lettuce Lady.
Tags: lettuce, lettuce lady, microgreens, Hydroponics, small farms, Efficient Food Production, efficient farming, green farming
Planet Forward, George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs
Monday, September 29, 2014
Bill Hohenstein
University of Connecticut
Tuesday, November 30, 2021
Although ecoanxiety impacts all ages, its influences are disproportionately felt among young people. These feelings, compounded in many by COP26’s resolution, make prioritizing mental well-being as a climate activist paramount.
Tags: ecoanxiety, climate grief, mental health, youth climate movement, storyfest2022
George Washington University
Friday, June 10, 2022
Patterns of U.S. land protection prioritize the great landscapes of the West over species richness or biodiversity, which are largely concentrated in the Southeast.
Tags: conservation, climate change, Biodiversity, endemic species, endangered species
Planet Forward, George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
GW's Dave Karpf explores the Sierra Club's recent acts of civil disobedience in protest of the Keystone XL pipeline.
Tags: sierra club, Keystone XL, civil disobedience

Michael Branch — a desert-dwelling and award-winning environmental essayist who "writes like a drunken professorial hillbilly" — shows us that humor can, and should, have a place in communicating conservation's weightier issues. (Photo courtesy of Michael Branch)
Planet Forward Senior Correspondent | University of Wisconsin-Madison
Thursday, March 08, 2018
Michael Branch — an award-winning environmental essayist who "writes like a drunken professorial hillbilly" — shows us that humor can, and should, have a place in communicating conservation's weightier issues.