Tips for Building a Greener Portfolio
Shortly before speaking at the recent San Francisco Green Festival, I found myself standing under a large model of Planet Earth and the words “Too big too fail.” I was asked to write on a dry erase board what I believed was too big to fail.More

Why wait in line at the butcher counter when you can have a locally raised heritage-breed ham delivered to your door just in time for your Spring holiday celebration?
Alternative energy is a vital component in renewing Michigan through economic diversity and growth — and that’s the focus of Henry Ford Community College’s 5th annual Alternative Energy Summit.
The USGBC Students at the University of Michigan and the School of Natural Resources & Environment would like to present the inaugural speaker series entitled “Moving Beyond Green Building: Exploring the Socioeconomic Impacts of Green Building & Interdisciplinary Collaboration.”
The Great Lakes High Performance Building Conference at Michigan State University includes presentations by design professionals and academics on the most advanced High Performance Building practices in Energy Efficiency, Lifecycle, Occupant Productivity, and Operations to Great Lakes building industry professionals including architects, engineers, construction managers, contractors, and facilities managers.
The early arrival of spring has got people all over Michigan moving out of doors and into their re connection with nature. Schools are gearing up for their final push to gain recognition and designation of a “Michigan Green School.”
Keystrata, a specialized provider of Business Intelligence solutions and MicroStrategy systems integrator has partnered with Tre Monti Ristorante, located at 1695 E. Big Beaver Road, Troy, MI 48083, to launch an exciting after work social networking event for Information Technology, Data Warehousing, and Business Intelligence professionals and leaders.
The four-year project involves 16 organizations in a range of EU countries, including several universities and Westinghouse. Scientists running the project say the process they plan to develop would produce safe fuels that could be 80% recycled compared to the current 1 %.