ThinkSouth -- a weblog of the Center for a Better South

8.14.2009

8/14: New biofuel in LA from fish, algae

Louisiana: Reuters: New biofuel created out of algae, fish

LiveFuels Inc. is a developer of renewable algae-based biofuels and is starting operations that will use fish to filter and process algae into oil, instead of using complex mechanical and chemical processes.

A new Texas facility is focused on researching how to increase the rates of conversion of biomass into fuel. The results will then be used for an expansion to full-scale commercial operations along the coast of Louisiana, the company said. The commercial facilities will be designed to harness flows of agricultural pollution from the Mississippi River that can be used as nutrients for generating algal blooms. By removing these nutrients from river flows, LiveFuels' systems also mitigate the impacts of agricultural pollution in the open ocean.

No news on how the fuel smells.

Also in the South:

ALABAMA: Gov. Riley reverses stance on Southern Co.'s involvement in water wars

ARKANSAS: State recycles old building for five agencies

FLORIDA: Population down in state for first time in 60 years

GEORGIA: Mexican group denounces state's appeal on DOJ's rejection of voter ID check

KENTUCKY: State to hold minority economic summit on August 27

MISSISSIPPI: Health care debate puts state doctors in a dilemma

NORTH CAROLINA: State lawmakers benefitted from health lobby dollars

SOUTH CAROLINA: Budget board delays action on cutting state services, programs

TENNESSEE: State leads in per-capital Chapter 13 filings

VIRGINIA: Schools in Virginia falling short of federal standards


If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org

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1.27.2008

Grisham's take on jackpot justice

John Grisham, attorney, novelist and native Mississippian, appeared on Bill Moyers Journal program on public TV this weekend.
Grisham covered a variety of topics in a fascinating interview with Moyers, expressing a progressive outlook on fixing the problems of the country in general and the South in particular. His new book is called The Appeal. In it he describes the way some states fill the judicial benches on their courts. Here's a portion from the transcript:
JOHN GRISHAM: It's called THE APPEAL. You'll love it. It's got more politics than anything I've written. It's tons of politics, tons of legal intrigue. It's about — all my books are based, in some degree on something that really happened. There's an element in truth in all these books. This is about the election of a Supreme Court justice in the state of Mississippi.
Thirty some odd states elect their judges, which is a bad system. Because-- if they allow private money. Just like a campaign. Just like the campaign we're watching now for president. You got corporate people throwing money in. You got big individuals. You got, you know, cash coming in to elect a judge who may hear your case. Think about that. You've got a case pending before the court and you want to reshape the structure of the court, well, just to get your guy elected. And that's happened in several states. Big money comes in, take out a bad judge, or an unsympathetic judge. Replace him with someone who may be more friendly to you. And he gets to rule in your case without a conflict.
BILL MOYERS: Is this the story of the corporation that dumps the toxic poisons into the stream. Ruins the community's drinking water?
JOHN GRISHAM: It starts off with a verdict. Chapter one is a verdict where this big chemical company has polluted this small town to the point where you can't even drink the water. It's become a cancer cluster. A lot of people have died. And so there's a big lawsuit. And that's the opening of the book. And then it's all the intrigue about what that company does. Because the guy who owns that company doesn't like the composition of the Supreme Court. And he realizes he can change it. And so--
BILL MOYERS: By buying an election. He can buy the judge.

You betcha. Alabama, Mississippi's neighbor to the east, know all about it. In 2006, two candidates for chief justice of the state Supreme Court went through all most $6 million. That's enough hard-fought campaigning to merit its own novel.

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