It may not sound like a classic Saturday night blow-out, but at 8 p.m. on March 29, millions of people around the world will turn off their lights to celebrate Earth Hour. This event, sponsored by the WWF, a global conservation organization, is intended to increase awareness of global warming and spur action to combat the issue. The movement began last year when the WWF asked residents of
Saturday at 8 p.m., residents of Denver will join environmentally-conscious people around the world in switching off lights and non-essential appliances, to give the Earth's energy resources a break.
For the first time, physicists have been able to identify individual returning photons after firing and reflecting them off of a space satellite in orbit almost 1,500 kilometers above the earth. The experiment has proven the possibility of constructing a quantum channel between Space and Earth.
A candlelight service and an energy workshop are some of the ways local residents will mark Earth Hour on Saturday. But while the idea of reducing street lighting in Brockville was suggested, that's something city officials say cannot be done. "Regrettably, we cannot do anything with the streetlights," []
In a dimly lit gymnasium at Sunny View Junior and Senior Public School, Earth Hour came two days early as hundreds of students marked the hour by dancing, singing and throwing around an oversized "earth ball."
North America could be the darkest continent on earth if citizens honour their pledge to Earth Hour, a global campaign that calls on the world to raise awareness about climate change by switching off lights between 8 and 9 p.m. on Saturday.
From the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge to the Golden Gate Bridge, more than 60 businesses and organizations in San Francisco have vowed to turn off the lights Saturday at 8 p.m. for the city's first "Earth Hour" event.
Millions are expected to turn out their lights Saturday evening to raise awareness about pollution and global warming in an initiative known as Earth Hour.
The Stiles Corp. will be turning out the lights at its two Orlando properties on Saturday as a part of the World Wildlife Fund's global 2008 Earth Hour.
Energy conservation and its impact on climate change will be a key focus in this year’s recognition of Earth Hour, especially for Elk Island Public Schools (EIPS).