AP-- To understand why Barack Obama and John McCain are emphasizing solutions to the country's energy woes and have scrambled to change their positions, look no further than the voters' distress over $4-a-gallon gasoline and its wide ripple effect. [Read more]
The Hill-- A growing majority of Americans believe that Congress should stay in session until an up-or-down vote is held on drilling, according to a poll released Wednesday by a Republican pollster. [Read more]
Wall Street Journal-- Ford Motor Co. and other auto makers are lobbying the Bush administration to scale back a proposal to boost automobile fuel-economy standards. The aim is for milder fuel-economy standards for vehicles with extra towing capacity. The thing is, Detroit isn’t alone—a number of lawmakers from truck-friendly states are helping the companies’ lobbying [Read more]
Small Times-- Reps. Dan Lipinski and Todd Akin have introduced H.R. 6661, the Nanotechnology Innovation and Prize Competition Act, which establishes an X-Prize competition for nanotechnology. [Read more]
AP-- A loophole in a sweeping tobacco regulation bill would give the industry a 21-month window to introduce certain new products without first getting federal approval. [Read more]
Boston Globe (Opinion)-- Two years ago, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention broke with past policy and called for routine HIV testing among teens and adults up to age 65. The goal was to go beyond high-risk groups in order to identify more of the estimated 250,000 people who are unaware they are [Read more]
TMCNET-- Barack Obama is calling for the creation of a new cabinet-level position to deal with the ever changing world of technology. The "Chief Technology Officer" would be responsible for oversight of the federal government use of the technology available from the private sector. In addition the CTO would undoubtedly work with the new administration [Read more]
USA Today-- As energy costs rise, more states and cities are adopting policies that encourage or require new construction to be energy-efficient. [Read more]
ITworld-- Employment statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor for the month of July, as well as its employment statistics comparing July 2007 versus July 2008, indicate a significant decline in information technology employment. [Read more]
ABC News-- There is a new option for people annoyed at having to take their laptops out of their bags at airport security. The TSA will now allow travelers to leave their computers inside "checkpoint friendly" cases. [Read more]
The Guardian-- The UK should take active steps to prepare for dangerous climate change of perhaps 4C according to one of the government's chief scientific advisers. [Read more]
Nature News-- More than 40 negotiators from Asia, Europe and the United States converged on Washington DC last week for what was billed as the first major war game involving global warming. [Read more]
AP-- Computers are far from being truly clean machines, but Dell Inc. and other PC makers are trying to make their own business operations greener. [Read more]
Washington Post--Barack Obama and John McCain used an ongoing debate over energy policy to tack back to core themes of their campaigns Tuesday. [Read more]
CNET-- While many headlines from Sen. Barack Obama's speech on energy policy on Monday focused on tapping the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, a look at the details shows a significant pledge to clean technologies. [Read more]
Scientific American--Colorado Rep. Diana DeGette doesn't like the Bush administration's stance on stem cells, and she's not taking it sitting down. [Read more]
N.Y. Times--The state has sued Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne, seeking to reverse his decision to give polar bears protection under the Endangered Species Act. [Read more]
N.Y. Times--The Justice Department is preparing to declare the 2001 anthrax case solved and to make its case publicly on Wednesday against a military scientist who killed himself after investigators linked him to the attacks, federal law enforcement officials said Tuesday. [Read more]
CQ.com--The White House’s request for a nearly $1 billion increase in medical-countermeasure and pandemic-flu funding has the support of pharmaceutical industry experts but will probably face an uphill slog in Congress. [Read more]
Washington Post--Doctors should stop testing elderly men, and it remains unclear whether the screening is worthwhile for younger men, a federal task force concluded yesterday. [Read more]
Business Week--Even if no new reactors are built, getting rid of the country's nuclear waste will cost $96.2 billion and require a major expansion of the planned Nevada waste dump beyond limits imposed by Congress, the Energy Department said Tuesday. [Read more]