Greetings from the Green City of Las Vegas

By Tom Foremski - March 9, 2007

I've been in Las Vegas since Wednesday for the New Communications Forum speaking on two panels and a workshop. This is one of my favorite conferences, founded by Jennifer McClure and Elizabeth Albrycht.

I'm also a founding fellow of the Palo Alto thinktank the Society of New Communications Research, which is closely connected with the conference and provides most of the speakers for the event.

I'm backed up terribly on my emails but I'm meeting lots of excellent people and having lots of excellent conversations about the future of media and public relations, as we try to figure out some of the the new rules. I'll have more to write when I get back to San Francisco.

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Thinktank formed to study the new communications channels and their impact on society
Think tank studies new communications channels and their impact

. . .

It has been about two years since my last visit to Las Vegas, and it has changed and grown a lot. I was thinking that Las Vegas might qualify as one of the greenest cities in the US because of the Hoover Dam nearby, which provides all of its power and water.

However, the green part of the equation must be balanced against the huge number of visitors arriving by burning massive amounts of carbon from airplanes and cars. Plus if Las Vegas were more conservative in its use of electric power and water, there would be more for other communities, and less carbon powered electricity would be needed overall.

 

 


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Posted to New Rules Communications

March 9, 2007 | Permalink | Comment | Subscribe to SVW

Comments (2)

So true, green in more ways than one. There's a fantastic site that provides info on the LV Springs Preserve, a $250 million development that will cement Vegas as a top green city. Also worth a note, Michael Kanellos posted a piece today that states Vegas pays its residents for replacing their lawn with rock at $2 a square foot.


I was thinking the same thing, Tom! I noticed that not one light bulb in the Venetian was a compact florescent or LED, and there were tens of thousands of light bulbs just inside that one hotel - not to mention outside on the Strip. Imagine the impact if hey all converted just their light bulbs?!


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