Monday, February 27, 2012

20th Environmental Film Festival, March 13-25, 2012 Washington, D.C.

20th Environmental Film Festival, March 13-25, 2012
Washington, D.C.

The critical role that the environment plays in human health has inspired the theme of the 2012 Festival. Read more.
Take Amtrak to Washington, D.C. for the Environmental Film Festival!

Special Pre-Festival Screening on March 1st
Date: February 2, 2012

Cafeteria Man (2011, USA, 60 min.) chronicles an ambitious effort to ‘green’ the Baltimore public school diet serving 83,000 students. Leading the charge to replace pre-plated, processed foods with locally-grown, freshly-prepared meals is visionary Chef Tony Geraci, food-service director for the city’s public schools. His bold vision includes school vegetable gardens, student-designed meals, meatless Mondays, and nutrition education in the classroom. Over the course of two years, the film traces efforts to make healthy, nutritious meals available to all the city’s students. Watch as inner city youth plant and harvest vegetables at the school system’s 33-acre teaching farm and witness what it takes to get local produce on school plates.

Introduced by Peter O’Brien, Executive Director, Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital. Discussion with filmmakers, Richard Chisolm and Sheila Kinkade, and Chef Tony Geraci follows screening.

Date/Time:
Thursday, March 1st
10:00 AM - 12:00 Noon

Location:
Warner Theatre
513 13th St., NW (13th & E Sts., NW)
Metro: Metro Center (12th & F Sts., exit)
Metrobuses: D1, D3, D6, P17, P19, W13, 32, 36

Ticket/Reservation Info:
FREE. To register student groups please contact Maribel Guevara at 202-342-2564 or maribel@envirofilmfest.org. This film is recommended for grades 6-12

No reservations required for general public.

This program is available through Arts for Every Student, the tickets and transportation program of the DC Arts & Humanities Education Collaborative. For information on how to benefit from this program, please call 202-204-7753.
EFF Participates in Give to the Max Day 11/9
Date: October 27, 2011

To help generate donations, and possibly win thousands of additional dollars in awards, on November 9th the Environmental Film Festival will be competing in Give to the Max Day: Greater Washington, a massive one-day regional online fundraiser to support local nonprofits. More than a thousand nonprofits that serve the greater Washington region will ask donors to display their generosity in a region-wide competition to raise as much money as possible, and gain as many supporters as possible, in order to win hundreds of thousands of dollars in awards.

For 24 hours, starting at 12:00 AM on November 9th, nonprofits will drive their supporters online to donate, creating a huge display of support for one of the region’s largest sectors. There will be more than $100,000 in cash awards available for local nonprofits who generate the most in donations, and those that attract the most individual donors. EFF is excited to be a part of this campaign and we hope you can show your support on November 9th. Help us reach our goal of 50 unique donors between 3 PM - 4 PM.

To help EFF and the great work we do every day,

1) Save this link and mark your calendar for November 9th, 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
2) Help spread the word by sharing with friends and family
3) Learn more about Give to the Max Day

The Washington area nonprofit sector is one of the region’s most important economic drivers. To help local nonprofits, Give to the Max Day: Greater Washington was created by online fundraiser Razoo, and organized and supported by The Community Foundation for the National Capital Region and United Way of the National Capital Area.
The Arctic Trilogy screening 10/27
Date: October 24, 2011

The Arctic Trilogy (2011)

Paddling a kayak past glacier walls and polar bears, cruising on a hundred-year-old schooner through iceberg-packed seas, exploring tunnels in an ice cave, descending deep beneath the Arctic terrain to mine coal: these are just some of the extreme scenarios Janet Biggs captured when she ventured to Svalbard, the islands between mainland Norway and the North Pole. Awe-inspiring nature has its role to play, but Biggs’s trilogy focuses on the human dimensions of her subjects’ quests, exploring what draws people into working relationships with such a harsh, forbidding environment. Each twenty-minute video gathers force as the artist alternates stunning imagery with vocals by avant-garde performance artists John Kelly and Bill Coleman.

Date/Time:
Thursday, October 27, 2011
8 PM

Location:
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Ring Auditorium
Independence Ave. & Seventh St., SW
(Metro: L’Enfant Plaza, 7th St. & Maryland Ave. exit. Blue, Orange, Yellow and Green lines)
(Metrobuses: 13A, 13B, 13F, 13G, 52, V7, V9, 34, 36, 54, 70, 71, P17, P19, W13, Circulator)

Ticket/Reservation Info:
FREE. No reservations required.

To visit the Hirshhorn's website please click HERE.
Watch: Short videos about 2011 Festival
Date: October 11, 2011

Re-visit the 2011 Festival! EFF has uploaded two new short films featuring events from March 15-27, 2011. Click the links below to watch. Filmed and edited by Eduard Tabaku.

2011 Festival Highlight
2011 Pre-Festival event For Students
10/6 Premiere screening & discussion of PIPE DREAMS
Date: September 27, 2011

On Thursday, October 6th, 2011, at 5:30 PM & 8:00 PM please join the Environmental Film Festival in the Nation's Capital, the National Wildlife Federation, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Sierra Club for a premiere of the new documentary on the proposed Keystone XL tar sands oil pipeline, PIPE DREAMS.

PIPE DREAMS (USA, 2011, 40 min.) explores the controversy surrounding the proposed Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada’s tar sands through America’s heartland -- Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas -- to the Gulf Coast. Featuring interviews with farmers and ranchers along the pipeline’s route and Susan Casey-Lefkowitz, International Program Director of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the film showcases the David and Goliath struggle to protect some of America’s most fertile farmland and the Ogallala Aquifer, one of the largest aquifers on the planet and the lifeblood of the region. Narrated by Daryl Hannah. Directed by Leslie Iwerks.

Introduced by Academy-Award nominated director, Leslie Iwerks. A panel discussion follows screening. Panelists: Leslie Iwerks, Director; Randy Thompson, Nebraska rancher; Susan Connolly, Michigan community member impacted by the Enbridge tar sands oil spill; George Poitras, Mikisew Cree Canadian indigenous first nation; Lorne Stockman, Oil Change International, Author, "Exporting Energy Security: Keystone XL."

Date/Time:
Thursday, October 6th, 2011
5:30 PM
8:00 PM

Ticket/Reservation Information:
FREE. Reservations required.

To RSVP for this event please email MackeyK@nwf.org

Location:
Goethe-Institut, 812 Seventh St., NW 

(Metro: Gallery Place/ Chinatown, 7th & H Sts. exit. Yellow, Orange and Green lines) 

(Metrobuses: 80, P6, X2, 42, G8, Circulator, 70)

For more information, please contact Jenny Kordick; KordickJ@nwf.org; 202-797-6607.

© 2012 Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital
INTERACTIVE MAP

Use the Map to find the locations of film screenings and EFF partnering organizations


Travel to the Environmental Film Festival in an environmentally friendly way!

Plan your trips to Festival screenings by train, bus, bike or foot by visiting GoDCGo and using their interactive map.

For Metrorail and Metrobus information, consult the Metropolitan Area Transit Authority or call 202-637-7000 to reach customer information.

Visit Capital Bikeshare to learn how to use their bikes at stations across D.C. and Arlington County.

Google GO TO MAP

© 2012 Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital | Sitemap | FAQ


Reas more at:
http://www.dcenvironmentalfilmfest.org/

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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Honda Loses Top Spot on Annual 'Green' Car List

Honda Loses Top Spot on Annual 'Green' Car List
Civic that runs on compressed natural gas drops to second after 8 years at No. 1.

By Douglas Newcomb Wed 4:24 PM
Exhaust Notes

With a significant drop in U.S. sales, a tepid reception for its new 2012 Civic and a one-two punch from dual natural disasters, Honda probably wants to put 2011 behind it. Now comes news that the automaker's compressed-natural-g​as Civic has been bumped from its perennial top ranking on a respected "green"-car guide.



The Washington, D.C.-based environmental lobbying group American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy has published its annual Greenest Vehicles list at Greenercars.org for the past 14 years -- and the Honda Civic CNG has occupied the top spot for the past eight. This year, the No. 1 ranking was awarded to the Mitsubishi i-MiEV, the first electric car to earn top honors in the past 12 years.


The last all-electric car to hit ACEEE’s top spot was GM’s ill-fated EV-1. Shruti Vaidyanathan, head vehicle analyst for ACEEE, said that an electric car topping the list again after so long shows that "electric cars are becoming more prominent," although she acknowledged that huge hurdles for EVs still exist, such as range and refueling infrastructure.


Honda's being pulled down a notch comes on the heels of the Civic CNG garnering Green Car Journal's coveted Green Car of the Year Award at the 2011 Los Angeles Auto Show, where it beat out the Mitsubishi i for the honor. But it follows a lukewarm press reception and lackluster U.S. sales for the all-new 2012 Civic. The stalwart Japanese automaker took the unprecedented move of announcing a rushed refresh for the popular Civic, reworking the model only few months after it went on sale last April.


The ACEEE’s online guide ranks more than 1,000 vehicles and derives their green score based on a wide range of factors, including fuel efficiency, tailpipe emissions, emissions from the vehicle manufacturing processes and the health impact of those emissions. The Mitsubishi i had a green score of 58, while the Civic CNG and the fellow second-pace finisher the Nissan Leaf scored 55 points each.


Overall, Honda sales were down 7.1 percent in 2011 compared with 2010. Some of this is due to the devastating tsunami that hit Japan in March and floods that struck the company’s factories in Thailand in July. But it’s also due to what some see as stagnant design and innovation at Honda, particularly at a time when domestic rivals have roared back and South Korea’s Kia and Hyundai have increasingly won over U.S. buyers.



The Mitsubishi i was launched in the U.S. last month, and the automaker has sold only a handful of the 4-seat subcompact cars, mostly to fleet buyers. The i followed the Nissan Leaf as the second EV to reach U.S. showrooms, and more all-electric cars competitors -- the Toyota RAV4 and Ford Focus EV, for example -- are scheduled to debut later this year.


The Toyota Prius and Honda Insight occupy the fourth and fifth spots, respectively, on ACEEE’s top 12 list; other conventional hybrids take up half of all the spots, and compact gasoline-powered cars account for three of the top 12 slots. No vehicles from domestic brands made ACEEE's list, although American vehicles such as the Chevrolet Sonic and Ford Escape Hybrid topped their respective classes.


Domestics did dominate ACEEE’s "meanest" list, accounting for nine of the dozen most environmentally unfriendly vehicles of this year, which previously featured several prominent European exotics. For 2012, the Bugatti Veyron took a third in the "meanest" ranking. The top spot was shared by GM’s full-size cargo/passenger vans, the Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana, with Ford's E-350 wagon "winning" third place.


Read more at:
http://editorial.autos.msn.com/blogs/autosblogpost-hyb.aspx?post=026d0848-e31d-435e-9eaa-25924f94dfe5?icid=autos_2338

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