Ryan Reynolds has reportedly bagged the role of superhero the Green Lantern.
According to Daily Variety, the actor was in competition with the likes of Justin Timberlake and Bradley Cooper for the role.
The story of the super hero film revolves around a group of characters who can control the physical world with an all-powerful ring, reports [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Green’
Ryan Reynolds to play superhero the Green Lantern?
Gordon Brown: Green Revolution Will Power Britain’s Recovery
wo centuries ago, Britain was at the forefront of a new industrial age that transformed our small island into the workshop of the world and a global economic powerhouse.
Charles H. Green: The Boston Consulting Group Caused the recession
Like all good conspiracy theories, this one may have a few loose links. But work with me here–it’s a good story. The 70s: When Strategy…
Tea Leaf Green Tour
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While veering through some of the Summer’s hottest festivals, Tea Leaf Green has picked some spots to bring their rock ‘n’ roll prowess during their “Around the Bend Tour.” With stops in all corners of the U.S., Tea Leaf Green will be pulling through starting August 20 at San Diego’s Wave House, then to L.A.’s famed Troubadour on August 21, and finish the short California jaunt in San Francisco at Outside Lands Festival.
They’ll then head to the Northeast for stops in Troy, Syracuse, Buffalo, and Pittsburgh. The tour will end in the Southeast corner – with shows in Birmingham, Athens, Charlotte and finally Charleston – where the band wowed packed houses early in the year.
Tickets for Tea Leaf Green’s “Round the Bend Tour” are on sale now!
Fans purchasing two or more tickets through Tea Leaf Green’s Ticketing Page will become eligible to win the first run of a limited edition poster designed by Josh Clark — commemorating the band’s Summer Tour — which will also be signed by the band.
‘Round the Bend Tour
07.12.09 Masontown, WV @ All Good
07.24.09 Detroit Lakes, MN @ 10,000 Lakes Festival
07.25.09 Detroit Lakes, MN @ 10,000 Lakes Festival
08.07.09 Denver, CO @ Dancin’ in the Streets
08.08.09 Denver, CO @ Dancin’ in the Streets (Late Night CounterClarkWise show)
08.14.09 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Festival
08.16.09 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Festival (Saturday Late Night show)
08.20.09 San Diego, CA @ Wave House
08.21.09 Los Angeles, CA @ Troubadour
08.22.09 San Francisco, CA @ Cafe Du Nord (Trevor Garrod solo show w/ Big Light)
08.28.09 San Francisco, CA @ Outside Lands Festival
09.02.09 Troy, NY @ Revolution Hall
09.03.09 Syracuse, NY @ Westcott Theatre
09.04.09 Buffalo, NY @ Erie Canal Harbor (w/ The Wallflowers)
09.05.09 Millvale, PA @ Mr. Smalls Theatre
09.09.09 Birmingham, AL @ WorkPlay Theater
09.10.09 Athens, GA @ 40 Watt
09.11.09 Charlotte, NC @ Neighborhood Theatre
09.12.09 Charleston, SC @ The Pour House w/ Gaslight Street
Purchase tickets and learn more about the contest through Tea Leaf Green ticketing here.
Liverpool lad back where he belongs
Mixed results for green IT goals

A majority of public sector employees do not know about environmentally friendly IT targets set out in government’s Greening ICT Strategy.
The strategy calls for government IT to be carbon neutral by 2012, with office carbon emissions down 11.5% by 2011.
One of the commissioners of the report says there are scattered trends toward compliance with the strategy.
However, a survey of IT managers in the public sector showed 60% did not know there were any targets to aim for.
The report, titled "The Path to Green Government", was produced by environmental charity Global Action Plan and commissioned by networking giant Cisco.
It is estimated that information and communication technology (ICT) accounts for one-fifth of the Government’s carbon emissions. The Greening ICT Strategy was intended to put the government in a leadership role in the sustainable use of ICT.
A large proportion of carbon emissions can be blamed on the manufacture of new equipment, so a principal focus of the initiative is to make the best use of existing equipment.
However, there is more to the plan once procurement is slimmed down, according to Cisco’s head of public sector Neil Crockett.
"There is another, much bigger debate about how ICT can enable other things to happen, like building management, travel reduction, flexible working," he said.
‘Pockets of excellence’
The Global Action Plan study was conducted by direct surveys of ICT managers in the public sector – local and national government, education, healthcare and so on – as well as a questionnaire in the magazine Computer Weekly.
Some 60% of respondents said that they were unaware of the Greening ICT Strategy, and among those who were aware, nearly one-third said that they had made no changes to their own ICT usage and procurement, and had no plans to make any such changes.
The problem, according to Global Action Plan director Trewin Restorick, is poor collaboration and knowledge sharing across the sector.
"government electricity usage is continuing to rise, and it is likely that one of the big reasons for this is the proliferation of computers, laptops, chargers, lobby televisions and the air conditioning of server rooms"
Rebecca Willis, Sustainable Development Commission
"What we saw was pockets of excellence, areas where the public sector is making both cash savings and carbon savings through smarter use of ICT," he told BBC News.
"But what we discovered was that those pockets of activity tended not to be part of a wider strategy within the public sector. They were very much piecemeal initiatives, which suggests they were being driven by keen individuals."
One straightforward route to knowledge sharing is that between IT managers and those who pay for the energy that the equipment consumes; more than two-thirds of respondents said that they were neither responsible for paying for the energy, nor did they see the bill.
Less than half had calculated their department’s "carbon footprint".
"For an ICT manager, if they’re not paying the energy bills – which are both volatile and going up – they have no interest in knowing what the long term impact of the product is," he said. "So you get managers buying stuff without thinking about utilising the assets they’ve got."
While the longer term goal to ameliorate the effects of climate change are a driving force for compliancy, in 2010 the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs’ Carbon Reduction Commitment scheme will come into effect.
Under the scheme, each large private sector business and public sector organisation will tally up its carbon emissions, with a price tag of 12 pounds per tonne of emissions. Organisation will be placed into league tables; depending on where they fit, they will or will not get the money back.
The concern is that public sector money can, if the sector performs badly, be siphoned off into the private sector – a loss both in monetary and in ideological terms.
"’Health service money goes to Tesco’s’ is not a great headline," said Mr Restorick.
Groundswell
Catalina McGregor, government deputy champion of the Cabinet Office’s CIO/CTO Council Green ICT Delivery Group, said a report from her office due for release in late August will comprehensively detail how each department is doing in unprecedented detail, from intelligence departments all the way to museums.
While its results are mixed, she told BBC News that signs of progress were widespread and that Mr Restorick’s assessment may be a bit wide of the mark.

"I’m a little gun-shy to say that folk aren’t working well together, because they are," she said. "It’s very rare that something central is taken up by local [offices] to this extent on a voluntary basis. It’s true that there are no ‘big sticks’, no incentives, no budgets; but there is a groundswell of support for the green ICT programme."
Rebecca Willis, vice chair of the government’s green watchdog the Sustainable Development Commission, pointed out that despite commitments from government, signs of overall change were still lacking.
"The Greening ICT Strategy is an encouraging step towards making government IT more sustainable," she told BBC News.
"However, government electricity usage is continuing to rise, and it is likely that one of the big reasons for this is the proliferation of computers, laptops, chargers, lobby televisions and the air conditioning of server rooms. It’s clear that ambition levels need to be raised."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.





Green Britain Day is a PR distraction
Greening Britain is a serious goal that requires a vision underpinned by real policies with meaningful outcomes
I’d like to declare today to be Greenwash Day. To celebrate that relatively modern phenomenon of companies trying to sell themselves as being rather greener and more ethical than they really are. Today would be an apt day, it is after all – Green Britain Day. Where’s the Greenwash in that? Oh, where to start.
Green Britain day comes to us courtesy of EDF. That’s Electricité de France to give them their full name. EDF is a state-owned French nuclear power company. They are also the world’s biggest corporate producer of nuclear waste, one of the biggest traders and burners of coal, and have a tiny tiny fleet of windmills (0.7% of their generation). And to promote this campaign they’ve “borrowed” (as Fred Pearce gently puts it) someone else’s logo – the green union flag. This flag symbolises two things: care for the environment and British identity. EDF can claim, of course, neither.
This really does take greenwash to a whole new level. It could almost be the plot of a farce. If it wasn’t for the fact that EDF is seriously intent on convincing us in Britain that it – and nuclear energy – are green and good for Britain.
Stealing someone else’s clothes is not a new tactic in the world of dirty big business. And neither is greenwash.
A few years ago the UK witnessed “fairwash”, where years of pioneering work on the concept of Fairtrade were swamped by a tidal wave of big-budget corporate lookalike schemes. Everybody and their brother now has a version of Fairtrade. It might be tempting to say where’s the harm in that, the more people doing it the better. Well yes, if they truly are doing it, I would agree. But that’s not how this usually goes down. When big brands move into the ethical arena it’s for the kudos, to look like a better company, to follow a new trend and gain sales – it isn’t for the cause, it’s for their cause, which is of course to make money and to add “shareholder value”.
Pale corporate imitations of green and ethical brands or products are truly harmful. They distract consumers and divert spending from the real thing and they bring the risk of early onset “issue fatigue”. You know how it goes – yawn, yawn, here’s another company that says it pays its suppliers a decent price because it really cares about them or says it’s really committed to fighting climate change. Or whatever …
Maybe we need a regulator for environmental and ethical claims. We’ve got Ofgem for electricity and Ofwat for water – I propose we should name this one Ethoff.
Let’s come back to Green Britain Day. The campaign itself has laudable aims, fighting climate change and making Britain a greener place. Who could argue with that? But look for any substance and you won’t find it. It’s all recycled and gimmicky.
And it’s a distraction. Green Britain is a serious goal, it requires a vision underpinned by real policies, a suite of joined up actions that we can all get behind – with meaningful outcomes. It’s a mission not a PR opportunity.
• Dale Vince is the founder and owner of Ecotricity