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Farmers Encouraged To Spread Toxic Coal Ash On Fields
13 hours ago ago from Wake-up Call
Beth Buczynski Care2 Despite what coal industry executives and opponents of renewable energy research would have you believe, America is running out of this filthy, costly, fossil fuel- and not a moment too soon. Businessweek Magazine recently reported that the federal government is encouraging farmers to spread a chalky waste from coal-fired power plants on their fields to loosen and fertilize soil even as it considers regulating ...
Related contentDeveloping Nuclear Power As Alternative Energy
19 hours ago ago from Make-Energy.net|Get Free of the Energy Grid
October 1st, 2009 admin Posted in Uncategorized | Many researchers believe that harnessing the power of the atom in fission reactions is the most significant alternative energy resource that we have, for the fact of the immense power that it can generate. Nuclear power plants are very clean-burning and their efficiency is rather staggering. Nuclear power is generated at 80% efficiency, meaning that the energy produced by the fission ...
Related contentSave money with solar power
14 hours ago ago from Talk on Subject: Energy
Save money with solar power Benefits For Municipal Waste Management with Plasma Gasification Plasma Gasification Plant (PGP) projects are being developed by at least five gas plasma technology companies, and there are real benefits to be obtained from this technology for the destruction of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW). There is some debate still whether the process has been demonstrated to be a vaible technology which can be ...
Related contentBig lumps of coal for Christmas dinner
5 hours ago ago from Coal Country
A year after an immense spill of coal ash in Kingston, Tennessee, workers are not even half done cleaning up the mess. The ash that spilled into the Emory River is being sent to a landfill in Alabama. But the owner of the coal plant, the Tennessee Valley Authority, has yet to find anyone willing to take the ash that spilled over land. The problems that caused the spill — too much coal ash and too little regulation — are far from ...
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