Skyonic Corp
Electronics Dell goes worldwide with free recycling Dell Inc. has completed the rollout of its free worldwide consumer electronics take-back and recycling program, the company said Dec. 12. Most recently, the Round Rock, Texas-based electronics manufacturer expanded its free program to Brazil, China, India, South Korea, Mexico and Taiwan to meet its timetable, which it set in June.1
Shareholders have filed more than 40 resolutions on climate change during the 2007 proxy season, said the Boston-based group. It chose the 10 for their size and their reluctance to address the issue, or respond to shareholder inquiries, said Ceres spokesman Peyton Fleming.2
The point isn’t to meet America’s baking soda shortage — there is none — but to dispose of the huge amount of carbon dioxide that coal plants produce. Big Brown alone creates about 10 million tons a year of the global warming gas, and coal plants worldwide create about 40 percent of the world’s manmade carbon dioxide.3
Feel free to distribute or cite this material, but please credit the Center for Responsive Politics. For permission to reprint for commercial uses, such as textbooks, contact the Center.4
Police were called to meet flight 958 at Love Field when it landed, King said. Jones was ticketed on a disorderly conduct charge, a class C misdemeanor that carries up to a $500 fine, a Dallas police spokeswoman said.5
Marc Andr? Ledoux, Consortium SudEco Industrie: Ledoux combined two technologies to transform harmful aquatic plants into new cooking fuel. A floating grappling is used for fast and easy removal of the plants, which are then compressed, dried and turned into pellets for cooking fuel.6