Latest Articles

Published by News 24 | By | Tuesday, October 4, 2005

Coal-fired power stations in Greece, Germany and Spain top a new table of Europe's dirtiest electricity plants, the environmental group WWF International said on Tuesday.

Read More
Published by The Financial Times | By Carola Hoyos, Financial Times | Tuesday, October 4, 2005

Jim Bernhard's athletic frame is slightly hunched as he tries to ignore a backache that has cropped up at the worst possible time. "This company was created for this moment. To restore the state I love," he says.

Read More
Published by Special to CorpWatch | By David Phinney | Monday, October 3, 2005

Thousands of low-wage Asian laborers are traveling to Iraq to work for U.S. military contractors like First Kuwaiti and Prime Projects International in the hope of sending money home to their families. Trapped and exploited under inhuman conditions, many of them are now fleeing the country to save their lives.

Read More
Published by The New York Times | By Lorne Manly | Sunday, October 2, 2005

Network, advertising and production executives say that this season, more and more brands will venture outside the confines of 30-second ads. They may have no choice: As technology and clutter blunt the effectiveness and reach of the commercial spots that have underpinned the television business for nearly 50 years, the various players are scrambling to adapt.

Read More
Published by The New York Times | By Felicity Barringer | Sunday, October 2, 2005

The 217,000 acres of windblown water and mottled tundra here on the North Slope of Alaska, separating Teshekpuk Lake from the Beaufort Sea, are home in summer to 50,000 to 90,000 migratory birds. This corner of Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve is also thought to be brimming with oil.

Read More
Published by Knight Ridder | By Aaron C. Davis | Friday, September 30, 2005

Across the hurricane ravaged Gulf Coast, thousands upon thousands of blue tarps are being nailed to wind-damaged roofs, a visible sign of government assistance.
Construction crews working with TJC Defense, out of Alabama, install a blue tarp on a home in Kenner, Louisiana. Ian McVea, Fort Worth Star-Telegram
The blue sheeting - a godsend to residents whose homes are threatened by rain - is rapidly becoming the largest roofing project in the nation's history.

It isn't coming cheap.

Read More
Published by OneWorld.net | By Abid Aslam | Sunday, September 25, 2005

U.S. companies remain less accountable than European and Asian ones despite recent years' damaging revelations of management chicanery involving finances, labor relations, environmental performance, and consumer protection, a global survey said Friday.

Read More
Published by India Resource Center | By | Friday, September 23, 2005

TAKE ACTION NOW! Send the free fax below to the CEO of Coca-Cola and join the growing community resistance in India in demanding that Coca-Cola STOP Destroying Lives, Livelihoods and Communities in India and Internationally.

Related Links

Read More
Published by The New York Times | By Matthew L. Wald | Friday, September 23, 2005

A consortium of eight companies said on Thursday that it would spend about $100 million to prepare applications to build two nuclear reactors, in Mississippi and Alabama, a step that seems to move the industry closer to its first new reactor order since the 1970's.

Read More
Published by The Washington Post | By Jerry Markon and Josh White | Wednesday, September 21, 2005

A military contractor returning from Iraq was charged yesterday with distributing identity badges that control access to Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone to people not allowed to receive them, including an Iraqi woman he was dating.

Read More
* indicates required