Daily Sprout

Climate, Energy Likely to Escape Axe in Budget Freeze: Climate change and green energy programs are expected to receive ample funding in the president’s fiscal 2011 budget request despite a plan announced yesterday to freeze non-military discretionary spending for the next three years. — Greenwire via NYT

East Coast “Hydrogen Highway”: Connecticut-based sunHydro wants to put the East Coast on the hydrogen fueling map with a quest to build 11 self-contained, solar-powered hydrogen fueling stations between Portland, Maine and southern Floriday. — Wired’s Autopia

Revenue on the Rise for CoaLogix: Acorn Energy subsidiary CoaLogix, which specializes in filters that remove certain pollutants from coal plant emissions saw an 80 percent increase in revenue between 2008 and 2009 — “indicating growing interest in clean coal initiatives other than carbon capture or sequestration.” — VentureBeat’s GreenBeat

Why Antivirius Vendors Belong in Green Computing: Antivirus specialists like Symantec and McAfee “seem born to manage energy consumption.” They already enjoy a trusted brand name with much of the computer-owning public. They also “contact consumers on a regular basis, and you need what they are pushing down the pipe.” — Greentech Media

Moment of Truth for High-Speed Rail Stimulus: “So it looks like tomorrow, after the State of the Union, President Obama is planning to announce how the $8 billion in stimulus money for high-speed rail projects will get spent.” Will the funds be spread too thinly, across 13 projects in 31 states? — TNR’s The Vine

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