18
Items
2
Pages
1
2
In Toronto, Richard Blackwell meets Ron Dembo, whose Zerofootprint has shot to prominence as the offset broker for Air Canada. He is passionate about planting trees – even if others consider it a waste of time.
The Globe and Mail: Richard Blackwell
Collaboration with Zerofootprint offers companies four ways to offset emissions
Montreal, July 30, 2008 – Air Canada, in conjunction with Zerofootprint, is extending its popular carbon offset program to corporate clients to make it easier than ever for businesses to meet their green ...
Lee Rickwood: PCWorld.ca
The Canadian Environment Awards tonight hosted a gala evening at Toronto’s Liberty Grand to recognize the 2008 winners of its annual celebration of environmental achievement.
Toronto, May 21, 2008 — The Canadian Environment Awards today announced the short list of finalists who will be honoured during its annual celebration of environmental achievement. Inspired by the community-action objectives of Canadian Environment Week, which takes place this year from June 1 to 7, the Canadian Environment Awards program is a national bilingual celebration that recognizes four ...
Financial Post: Jim Sutherland
You get what you pay for. And when you shop in retail stores, you’re often paying for an enormous environmental footprint. Zerofootprint is helping change that for Grassroots stores and Roots.com.
NEW YORK, May 15, 2007 – At the C40 Large Cities Climate Summit here this week, Toronto’s mayor, David Miller, announced that his city would take advantage of a new tool to measure and reduce Toronto’s greenhouse gas emissions.
Miller will team up with Zerofootprint, a nonprofit working to help companies, governments and individuals reduce their carbon footprint, to create Zerofootprint Toronto, the first-ever city-scale project to bring a city’s residents to the table to fight climate change.
While personal carbon calculators are turning into a dime-a-dozen offering across the web, the unveiling of Zerofootprint’s carbon counter at the C40 Climate Summit last week ushers in a new era of a large scale web-based data warehousing that can aggregate carbon emission information from city government, companies, universities, neighborhoods, groups or families.
TechCrunch: Michael Arrington