by Liz Borkowski

  • When 'picking energy winners,' don't ignore past investment

    Marketplace commentary gives a misleading picture of government’s role in energy use 12

    Posted 1 year, 3 months ago In a commentary on Thursday's Marketplace, the Cato Institute's Will Wilkinson critiqued T. Boone Pickens' new energy plan. In doing so, he painted a misleading picture of the government's role in our energy usage.

    Pickens wants wind energy to replace natural gas in electricity generation, and use the freed-up natural gas to fuel vehicles so we can use less foreign oil. There are problems with this energy plan, but Wilkerson is most concerned that the government might be "picking a winner" if it helps Pickens realize his scheme. (Wilkerson doesn't specify exactly what Pickens wants the government to do,… Read More

  • The Department of Defense (of itself)

    DOD slows condemning research into its polluting behavior 1

    Posted 1 year, 5 months ago Back in April, a Government Accountability Office report explained how the White House Office of Management and Budget was holding up the EPA's Integrated Risk Information System assessments. According to GAO, the OMB started requiring an "interagency review" process allowing agencies that might be affected by the IRIS assessments to provide comments on the documents. As a result, some of these outside agencies can effectively block completion of IRIS assessments, which inform federal environmental standards and many environmental protection programs at local, state, and even international levels.

    The GAO explained that this interagency review process came about because the… Read More

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  • Leading to problems

    Implications of the study linking childhood lead exposure and adult criminality 0

    Posted 1 year, 5 months ago A study just published in the journal PLoS Medicine (and written up in the L.A. Times) suggests a link between childhood lead exposure and adult arrests for violent crimes. Studying 250 adults for whom they had prenatal and childhood blood lead level measurements, University of Cincinnati researchers found that each 5-microgram-per-deciliter increase in blood lead levels at age 6 was associated with a nearly 50 percent increased risk of arrest as a young adult (the risk ratio was 1.48).

    The good news is that overall, U.S. children's blood lead levels have dropped dramatically since manufacturers started phasing… Read More

  • Nanotubes: the next asbestos?

    Lessons from the asbestos crisis should guide the response to nanotechnology, but will they? 6

    Posted 1 year, 6 months ago The story of asbestos in this country ought to serve as a cautionary tale: A seemingly miraculous fiber was widely introduced into common consumer products; only after it was already in millions of homes did the general public realize that it causes a particularly terrible form of cancer. Now, treating victims and cleaning up contaminated communities is costing billions of dollars, and thousands of people endure the toll of a debilitating and deadly disease.

    Nanotechnology is another innovation that promises to bring consumer products to a whole new level -- and, once again, it looks like nano products will become… Read More

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  • Name: Liz Borkowski

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