The Green Files > Green TV: Next Best Thing To TreeHugger TV
[Treehugger] While we are fiercely proud of our achievements on TreeHugger TV it would be just downright churlish of us not to celebrate other environmental video podcasts as well. Green TV ”is the first website to bring together films from a whole range of environmental organisations and independent filmmakers and make them available to anyone anywhere. They work in partnership with the United Nations Environment Programme and are showing films from, amongst others, DEFRA, European Environment Agency, Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Water Aid, the Sierra Club, RUCN, Stop Climate Chaos.
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Treehugger: Green Back Herons, alligators, dragonflies, butterflies and all manner of natural wonders are the stars of this weeks THTV episode, beautifully shot by m ss ng p eces in the Florida Everglades. John Adornato, the Everglades Restoration Program Manager for the National Parks Conservation Association, gives us a personal tour of the glades while highlighting new conservation strategies that seek to regenerate historic water flow. (via Cosmos)
Bloganic.net - The Organic Blog: Treehugger TV - The well known environmentally friendly blog now makes its own mini-documentaries. Recently they produced a three part series on organic farming called Farm to Table. (via Cosmos)
Treehugger: The best way to get your regular THTV fix is to subscribe to our weekly podcast from itunes, so that you receive a new episode every week without any effort at all! You can also use the TreeHugger link to subscribe. (via Cosmos)
Ben Rowes Blog: I've just stumbled across Treehugger.TV today for the first time. The team at Treehugger have began producing weekly profiles on small businesses that are "dedicated to everything that has a modern aesthetic yet is environmentally responsible". (via Cosmos)
GreenerMiami: A nice Friday feature, I've saved up all of the TreehuggerTV Farm to Table series so that you can view them one after another. Again, as always, these are bite sized videos (around 3 minutes each), incredibly produced by my friends over at m_ss_ng p_eces. (via Cosmos)
BlogHer [beta] | Where the women bloggers are: Mairi Beautyman of Berlin, Germany wrote a post today for the fabulous environmental blog, Treehugger.com about the launch of a new database of "green" women. (via Cosmos)
Apartment Therapy - New York: effects on our cultural soul of living in places not worth caring about, and, finally and scarily, the fundamental shifts that will be required as oil production passes its peak and we can no longer afford our3,000 mile Caesar salads. "Yet living beings drowned in the midst of all this, delight and amuse themselves, unaware, unknowing, without alarm or fear. They feel no sense of loathing and make no attempt to escape. In this burning house which is the threefold world, they (via Cosmos)
Treehugger: You can also check out our other coverage of "food miles" and local food by following the links below. ::10 Reasons to Eat Local Food, ::Living On The 100 Miles Diet, ::Living On The 100 Miles Diet, Part 2,::DEFRA Study About Impact of 'Food Miles', ::Today's Eco-Event: "Eat Local Challenge" (via Cosmos)
We Like It Raw: Try Hemp Pesto. And when your done take a photo and send it to us. More Goodness from Treehugger: Larabar Reviewed (more rawness)DEFRA Study About Impact of 'Food Miles' Locally Grown Food in School Lunch Program (via Cosmos)
Treehugger: Take the 100-mile diet experiment: If you think the series of articles is a call for everyone to turn to a similarly strict diet and renounce most of their favorite foods because they are not produced locally, then yes, it's pretty pointless to wish for much change to happen that way. But if you look at the articles as an experiment that aims at raising awareness about how much energy goes into what is on people's plates and encourage them to make some changes to their eating habits, then the series of articles will probably be successful. (via Cosmos)
Digest- Food and Health blog: In 2002, food transport produced 19 million tonnes of carbon dioxide, of which 10 Million tonnes were emitted in the UK and 9 million tonnes were generated by food imports. This represents 1.8 percent of the total annual emissions of carbon dioxide. (via Cosmos)
[Gristmill.grist.org] TV for treehuggers | Gristmill: The environmental news blog ...: Which is why I'm very interested in projects like Current TV, where you can help make television by creating your own news and/or helping to decide what gets aired.
[Weblog.greenpeace.org] The Greenpeace weblog: They said that from Madrid to Barcelona and beyond all their mates are on the phone asking whether they 'saw the Greenpeace stuff on TV?', and saying how great they think it is. They said that Guinea is a poor country, their fish is being stolen and that they were really happy to see us here.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Greenpeace, The Green Files