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Thursday, February 28, 2013
Good post from The Climate Reality Project
Let us know what you think:
This week's radio show
Is now available 24/7 on our international RN channel on Blog Talk Radio.
Here's some background on the show and guest:
Here's some background on the show and guest:
This Week on Renewable Now .
Peter Arpin and this week's co-host Jim Murphy will be speaking with Alexa Leboeuf,a Brown University graduate student . Currently Alexa is working with other students in collaboration with Rhode Island College and the Taubman Policy center on establishing a curriculum at the student teacher level on sustainability.
Listen live weekly on 1320warlradio.com and here on Blogtalkradio.com on the Renewable Now channel .
Renewable Now ,educating you on the business side of Green.
Here's the link; enjoy the show: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/renewable-now/2013/02/27/curriculum-on-sustainability
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Honda, SolarCity raise $65 mln for dealership, home solar systems
Great concept; take a loyal client base like Honda's, partner with a major PPA player, Solar City, and make it much easier for customers to invest in solar. Specially, if we read the article correctly, in which you will have, potentially, positive cash flow on the system from day 1 (energy savings exceeding lease payments).
With Honda and other car manufacturers trying to get consumers interested in hybrids and electrics, this gives them a taste of alternative energy and getting off of grids and imported oil.
We hope you consider solar for your house:
With Honda and other car manufacturers trying to get consumers interested in hybrids and electrics, this gives them a taste of alternative energy and getting off of grids and imported oil.
We hope you consider solar for your house:
Feb 19 (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co's U.S. division is partnering with solar power company SolarCity Corp on a $65 million fund to help its customers and dealerships finance solar projects.
The companies did not say how much money they each contributed to the fund, which is expected to finance systems for between 2,500 and 3,000 residential homes, as well as 10 to 20 dealerships.
SolarCity, which installs and maintains the panels, has raised similar funds from banks such as U.S. Bancorp and from Google Inc, but this is the first such deal with an automaker.
"This is really the first initiative like this," said Steve Center, vice president of the environmental business development office for American Honda Motor Co. "We've got some of the most sought after customers in the marketplace."
The funds allow homeowners to pay a monthly fee for their solar panels rather than pay for them all at once. The growth of such financing in the solar industry has made going solar an option for households that otherwise could not afford it.
The move is part of Honda's goal to reduce is greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent by 2050, executives said on Monday. As the owners of the panel systems, Honda and SolarCity will also be able to claim a federal tax credit worth 30 percent of the value of the system.
"My hope is that this sends a message to other corporations to follow," SolarCity Chief Executive Lyndon Rive said in an interview.
Honda customers will be able to claim an additional $400 discount beyond what they would receive from SolarCity directly."
Monday, February 25, 2013
Federal/private partnership brings in 4-to-1 taxpayer returns for conservation
This good news came from the United States Dept of Agriculture.
It is interesting how the ROI on is very good, as is the investments made, to date, in mass transportation (averaging around 7-1 on dollars spent) and clean energy projects as well.
We love seeing that sweet spot hit of good financial sense and good ecological sense. Let's see more:
It is interesting how the ROI on is very good, as is the investments made, to date, in mass transportation (averaging around 7-1 on dollars spent) and clean energy projects as well.
We love seeing that sweet spot hit of good financial sense and good ecological sense. Let's see more:
Contact: Sarah Maxwell, (202) 720-0693
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28, 2013 – The USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation partnership created $40.5 million out of an initial $10.3 million taxpayer investment in 2011 for on-the-ground conservation efforts throughout the United States.
Using a competitive grant-matching program that leverages private funds, the Conservation Partners Program will accelerate service to more than 4,200 farmers and ranchers to restore or protect 1.2 million acres in areas that have vulnerable species and habitat or other conservation concerns.
“This is a unique partnership that shows how the federal government can use its resources innovatively and address real conservation concerns throughout the country,” said Jason Weller, NRCS acting chief.
Because of its successful two years, NRCS has renewed the partnership in 2013. NFWF will make nearly $4.6 million available to match through a competitive process starting in March of this year.
The grants give organizations increased ability to provide more technical assistance to private landowners to improve their working lands stewardship.
Examples of the program’s projects include:
- Sotoyome Resource Conservation District in California will match $170,000 with $182,000 to improve drainage from working agricultural lands in the area to help streams and fisheries that are critical to Coho salmon.
- Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks will plant 642,000 longleaf pine trees on more than 1,180 acres of private lands to improve the habitat for 122 endangered or threatened species.
- Oklahoma Association of Conservation Districts will capitalize on existing state and local relationships to improve range conditions that will benefit livestock operations and will also enhance habitat for at-risk species such as lesser prairie chickens.
“These projects have helped restore wildlife habitats, conserve forests, improve water and air quality and ultimately benefit the livelihood of farmers, ranchers and communities,” said Weller.
The partnership, which started in 2011, allowed NFWF to leverage $900,000 of NRCS funds into more than $3 million for locally led conservation projects. These investments not only improved water and air quality but regularly employed biologists, foresters, pipe makers, welders, engineers and others from local communities.
The conservation work being done through the partnership is part of USDA’s emphasis on rural America to improve conservation efforts by pulling in public and private expertise and support.
# # #
Friday, February 22, 2013
Enjoy the show and tour/2013
We are so proud to premier the first show we shot a few weeks ago at the Capitol Office Link office incubator in Providence that brings experts together to show us how the effects of local climate change are impacting our daily lives. . Not in a good way, of course,
This is a three-part special series. We'd love to have you watching, on either ABC 6 or The Live Well Network, or watch in a few weeks as we release these same shows to our global network and, in a few months, our You Tube channel.
Let us know what you think.
This is a three-part special series. We'd love to have you watching, on either ABC 6 or The Live Well Network, or watch in a few weeks as we release these same shows to our global network and, in a few months, our You Tube channel.
Let us know what you think.
This week's radio show
Here's some information on the show:
On Renewable Now this Wednesday at 12 noon.
Peter Arpin and his co host Jack Gregg will be having a very interesting conversation with Ross McCurdy from the Ponaganset High School Fuel Cell Education Initiative .
Tune in for a very educational and inspiring program into the world of Bio energy as well as a discussion on positive changes in education leading kids into green economy jobs and sustainable lifestyles .
You can listen to Renewable Now both on 1320warlradio.com and blogtalk radio.com on the renewable now channel .
Renewable Now is education you on the business side of green .
Here's the link. Enjoy the show: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/renewable-now/2013/02/20/bio-energy-and-education
On Renewable Now this Wednesday at 12 noon.
Peter Arpin and his co host Jack Gregg will be having a very interesting conversation with Ross McCurdy from the Ponaganset High School Fuel Cell Education Initiative .
Tune in for a very educational and inspiring program into the world of Bio energy as well as a discussion on positive changes in education leading kids into green economy jobs and sustainable lifestyles .
You can listen to Renewable Now both on 1320warlradio.com and blogtalk radio.com on the renewable now channel .
Renewable Now is education you on the business side of green .
Here's the link. Enjoy the show: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/renewable-now/2013/02/20/bio-energy-and-education
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Thanks to our co-producer/Ed Catucci
For sending this great update on a story we ran early this week. Clearly, this is becoming a huge issue, now picked up by the media, and the ecological damage we are doing to try and meet the demands of ethanol production is taking a heavy toll. We need to rethink this policy.
Do you agree?
Do you agree?
NEWSER) – The push for biofuels—spurred by ethanol mandates and government subsidies—is taking a serious toll on the American landscape, a study finds. Grasslands are being plowed up faster than at any time since the 1930s, say researchers from South Dakota State University, with 1.3 million acres turned into corn and soybean territory between 2006 and 2011. Iowa and South Dakota, for instance, are seeing 5% of their pastures converted to cropland annually, the Washington Postreports.
The speed of the process is "comparable to deforestation rates in Brazil, Malaysia, and Indonesia," say the study's authors. That's causing multiple problems: For one thing, it's a climate-change threat, because grasslands are thought to retain carbon better than croplands. It's also a threat to farmers themselves, who are being pushed toward land with a high drought risk. And it poses a danger to bird populations that breed in the area.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Did you know that on average, Americans spend $22,000 for gasoline over the lifetime of a vehicle?
That according to a recent, very interesting blog from Gina at Sierra Club. We hope you enjoy are thinking electric for your next car. Everyone here is:
According to a new report "Where Your Money Goes" by Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), the average American spends $22,000 to pay for gasoline over the lifetime of the vehicle. That's about as much as some people spend on the cars themselves!
President Obama doesn't like this equation at all. In this week's State of the Union address, the president proposed a new Energy Security Trust that would use funds generated by oil and gas revenues on public lands to invest in advanced vehicle technology that will "shift our cars and trucks off oil for good."
UCS found that only about 81 cents per $50 fill-up goes to the local service station, and the vast majority of the money goes directly to U.S.-based Big Oil companies and state-owned foreign oil companies.
Plug-in electric vehicles, however, are powered partly or fully by domestic electricity sources. "Freedom from oil" is a reason that many EV drivers cite for switching to plug-in cars. Iraq and Afghanistan war veteran Tim Goodrich in a previous Sierra Club blog post said he bought his Nissan Leaf because
the cost of filling up with gas is just too much. I'm not just writing about the price we're paying at the pump; I am also referring to the cost to our future generations, our national security, and our economy. As a veteran, I have seen the toll these costs take and I am doing what I can to stop contributing to the problem.
In terms of dollars and cents, some are wary of an EV purchase price that is often more expensive than gasoline-powered counterparts. However, our friends at Plug In America contend that EVs are actually cheaper than many gas-powered vehicles when you factor in all the costs, including purchase/lease price, maintenance, and fuel. They did the math and found that over a ten-year period, a Nissan Leaf would cost about $38,430, a Toyota Matrix about $58,613, and a Toyota Prius V about $51,359. And of course for the electric car, no money goes to Big Oil.
Out-going U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu recently announced a new Workplace Charging Challenge, an effort to provide more people with the opportunity to charge their EVs at work. Google, Verizon, and the Big Three U.S. automakers are among the 21 founding partners of the workplace charging program (at no tax-payer expense) that pledge to "assess workforce plug-in electric vehicle charging demands, and then develop and implement a plan to install workplace charging infrastructure for at least one major worksite location."
These workplace EV chargers will help as more people do the math and figure out how to free themselves from oil.
These workplace EV chargers will help as more people do the math and figure out how to free themselves from oil.
(Photo: Jesse Prentice-Dunn at 2013 DC Auto Show.)
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Undoing our "good work"
Many times we think we are implementing positive changes and moving forward, only to learn, years later, that simply compounded some of our problems. Ethanol use mixed into our gasoline seems to be one of those "improvements" that is quickly falling out of favor.
Thanks to the Better World Club for sending us a great article on this. Last week we ran a story on the waste created by manufacturing solar panels. Again, what looks like a star renewable, the golden child of clean energy right now, has its ugly dark side as well.
That is why we need to explore every aspect of our decisions, perhaps over analyze the pros and cons, before jumping on the bandwagon of new is better and accepting that today's conventional wisdom as fact.
Here's the story:
Thanks to the Better World Club for sending us a great article on this. Last week we ran a story on the waste created by manufacturing solar panels. Again, what looks like a star renewable, the golden child of clean energy right now, has its ugly dark side as well.
That is why we need to explore every aspect of our decisions, perhaps over analyze the pros and cons, before jumping on the bandwagon of new is better and accepting that today's conventional wisdom as fact.
Here's the story:
Ethanol: “worse than the Canadian tar sands”
One of the more bizarre coalitions ever to form in Washington is trying to kill a creature of Washington: corn ethanol.
The oil industry, environmentalists, taxpayer groups, livestock growers and foreign aid groups all want Congress to repeal the mandate requiring a 15 percent blend of ethanol in gasoline.
More than 40 percent of the U.S. corn crop goes to ethanol, combining with a continuing Midwest drought to drive up corn prices. In a conference call Monday, refiners said it wrecks everything from car engines to outboard motors to chain saws.
Scott Faber, a lobbyist for Environmental Working Group, said ethanol has destroyed more wetlands and grasslands in the last four years than were wrecked in the last 40 and as far as greenhouse gasses go, it is “worse than the Canadian tar sands.”
By driving up prices, the ethanol mandate induces farmers to plow marginal virgin land, releasing stored carbon into the atmosphere, while the fertilizer and pesticides used to grow the corn washes into rivers.
“The American public should be outraged this thing is still on the books,” said Charlie Drevna of the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers group. The powerhouse American Petroleum Institute is also waging all-out war on the ethanol mandate.
California Democrat Dianne Feinstein teamed with Oklahoma Republican Tom Coburn in a successful Senate vote to kill off ethanol subsidies a year and a half ago. But that still left massive federal assistance in the mandated blending of ethanol into gasoline, which the Obama Environmental Protection Agency increased from 10 percent to 15 percent.
In addition, the EPA mandates that some of the ethanol come from agricultural wastes, so-called cellulosic ethanol. Former President George W. Switchgrass Bush predicted in 2006 that cellulosic ethanol would be competitive by last year. It is still not commercially viable, even though some Silicon Valley investors seem to hold out hope. Apparently the cost of growing huge quantities of waste straw and transporting it to an ethanol plant doesn’t pan out.
Drevna said refiners are forced to pay fines for not using a product that doesn’t exist, and the D.C. Court of Appeals agreed last week, even as the court upheld the 15 percent blend mandate. See the decision here.
Poultry and other livestock farmers say they are getting crushed by higher feed costs. Tom Elam of FarmEcon,representing poultry producers, said feed costs have more than doubled, raising the price of chicken and driving poultry farmers to bankruptcy.
The ethanol industry says this is all bunk, insisting that ethanol is “is the most successful renewable fuel in history.”
Posted By: Carolyn Lochhead ( Email , Twitter ) | Feb 05 at 12:14 pm
Listed Under: Dianne Feinstein, Legislation, Legislation to Watch, Obama, environment, lobbying, mandate | Permalink |Comments & Replies (44) : Post Comment
Monday, February 18, 2013
Thanks to radio co-host, Jack Gregg
And Earth Policy Institute for bringing the continuing decline in food supplies, and the many reasons behind it, to our attention.
Interesting that agriculture has seen terrific growth in New England, and is one of the resurgent industries here. At the same time, there's been a proliferation of small farms, organic growers and even urban farmers. Of course, we are a long way from being self-sufficient with our local food products.
What also ties into this is the ecological destruction caused by mass farming with their over dependence and use of pesticides that end up running into our water supplies. The need for chemical support might grow as climate change brings harsher conditions to farmers.
We expect to cover this story and bring on experts to talk about the decline in our food supplies, including the Earth Policy Institute.
Here's the link to the story: http://www.earth-policy.org/book_bytes/2013/fpepch1
Interesting that agriculture has seen terrific growth in New England, and is one of the resurgent industries here. At the same time, there's been a proliferation of small farms, organic growers and even urban farmers. Of course, we are a long way from being self-sufficient with our local food products.
What also ties into this is the ecological destruction caused by mass farming with their over dependence and use of pesticides that end up running into our water supplies. The need for chemical support might grow as climate change brings harsher conditions to farmers.
We expect to cover this story and bring on experts to talk about the decline in our food supplies, including the Earth Policy Institute.
Here's the link to the story: http://www.earth-policy.org/book_bytes/2013/fpepch1
Friday, February 15, 2013
Listen to this week's radio show now available 24/7
Here is some information on this week's show:
This week on Renewable Now .
Join Peter Arpin and this week's co host, Jeff Flath, from E now .Together, they will be discussing more about sustainable energy and environmental programs for businesses .
They will be visited by Scott Ridley of Ridley and Associates Inc.
Scott is not only the principle of Ridley and Associates, he is the co author of the book "Power Struggle:The Hundred Year War over Electricity" . Scott also has written on energy topics for numerous publications .
We will learn more about Ridley and Associates and how they work with communities and private clients to develop energy strategies .
Listen to The Renewable Now Radio show live Wednesdays at 12noon on both 1320warlradio.com and blogtalk radio .com on The Renewable Now channel .
Renewable Now ,Educating you on the business side of Green .
Here's the link to the show...enjoy: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/renewable-now/2013/02/13/sustainable-energy-strategies
This week on Renewable Now .
Join Peter Arpin and this week's co host, Jeff Flath, from E now .Together, they will be discussing more about sustainable energy and environmental programs for businesses .
They will be visited by Scott Ridley of Ridley and Associates Inc.
Scott is not only the principle of Ridley and Associates, he is the co author of the book "Power Struggle:The Hundred Year War over Electricity" . Scott also has written on energy topics for numerous publications .
We will learn more about Ridley and Associates and how they work with communities and private clients to develop energy strategies .
Listen to The Renewable Now Radio show live Wednesdays at 12noon on both 1320warlradio.com and blogtalk radio .com on The Renewable Now channel .
Renewable Now ,Educating you on the business side of Green .
Here's the link to the show...enjoy: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/renewable-now/2013/02/13/sustainable-energy-strategies
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Happy Valentine's Day
Thanks to Terra Pass for a friendly reminder on spreading love to our Earth as well?
February 14, 2013
Flowers, chocolates, romantic dinners: all things that you may associate with Valentine’s Day. But have you ever thought about the greenhouse gases that come in to play when those flowers are shipped, the chocolate is sourced overseas, or when your steak dinner is raised? We take a look at the biggest sources of carbon emissions on V-day, and share a few simple steps to love the earth along with your loved ones this Valentine's Day.
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Interesting look at solar/Part 2
We will follow up on this story on the radio side as well.:
..."The
Associated Press compiled a list of 41 solar makers in the state, which
included the top companies based on market data, and startups. In response to
an AP records request, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control
provided data that showed 17 of them reported waste, while the remaining did
not.
The
same level of federal data does not exist.
The
state records show the 17 companies, which had 44 manufacturing facilities in California , produced
46.5 million pounds of sludge and contaminated water from 2007 through the
first half of 2011. Roughly 97 percent of it was taken to hazardous waste
facilities throughout the state, but more than 1.4 million pounds were
transported to nine other states: Arkansas , Minnesota , Nebraska , Rhode Island , Nevada , Washington , Utah , New Mexico and Arizona .
Several
solar energy experts said they have not
calculated the industry's total waste and were surprised at what the records
showed.
Solyndra,
the now-defunct solar company that received $535 million in guaranteed federal
loans, reported producing about 12.5 million pounds of hazardous waste, much of
it carcinogenic cadmium-contaminated water, which was sent to waste facilities
from 2007 through mid-2011.
Before
the company went bankrupt, leading to increased scrutiny of the solar industry and political fallout for President
Barack Obama's administration, Solyndra said it created 100 megawatts-worth of
solar panels, enough to power 100,000 homes.
The
records also show several other Silicon Valley
solar facilities created millions of pounds of toxic waste without selling a
single solar panel, while they were developing their technology or fine-tuning
their production.
While
much of the waste produced is considered toxic, there was no evidence it has
harmed human health.
The
vast majority of solar companies that generated hazardous waste in California have not been
cited for waste-related pollution violations, although three had minor
violations on file.
In
many cases, a toxic sludge is created when metals and other toxins are removed
from water used in the manufacturing process. If a company doesn't have its own
treatment equipment, then it will send contaminated water to be stored at an
approved dump.
According
to scientists who conduct so-called "life cycle analysis" for solar,
the transport of waste is not currently being factored into the carbon
footprint score, which measures the amount of greenhouse gases produced when
making a product.
Life
cycle analysts add up all the global warming pollution that goes into making a
certain product — from the mining needed for components to the exhaust from
diesel trucks used to transport waste and materials. Not factoring the
hazardous waste transport into solar's carbon footprint is an obvious
oversight, analysts said.
"The
greenhouse gas emissions associated with transporting this waste is not
insignificant," Mulvaney said.
Mulvaney
noted that shipping, for example, 6.2 million pounds of waste by heavy-duty
tractor-trailer from Fremont , Calif. ,
in the San Francisco
Bay area, to a site 1,800
miles away could add 5 percent to a particular product's carbon footprint.
Such
scores are important because they provide transparency to government and
consumers into just how environmentally sustainable specific products are and
lay out a choice between one company's technology and another's.
The
roughly 20-year life of a solar panel still
makes it some of the cleanest energy technology currently available. Producing
solar is still significantly cleaner than fossil fuels. Energy derived from
natural gas and coal-fired power plants, for example, creates more than 10
times more hazardous waste than the same
energy created by a solar panel, according to Mulvaney.
The
U.S.
solar industry said it is reporting its waste, and sending it to approved
storage facilities — thus keeping it out of the nation's air and water. A
coal-fired power plant, in contrast, sends mercury, cadmium and other toxins
directly into the air, which pollutes water and land around the facility.
"Having
this stuff go to ... hazardous waste sites, that's what you want to have
happen," said Adam Browning, executive director of the Vote Solar
Initiative, a solar advocacy group.
Environmental
advocates say the solar industry needs greater transparency, which is getting
more complicated as manufacturing moves from the U.S.
and Europe to less regulated places such as China
and Malaysia
.
The
Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, a watchdog group created in 1982 in response
to severe environmental problems associated with the valley's electronics
industry, is now trying to keep the solar industry from making similar mistakes
through a voluntary waste reporting "scorecard." So far, only 14 of
114 companies contacted have replied. Those 14 were larger firms that comprised
51-percent of the solar market share.
"We
find the overall industry response rate to our request for environmental
information to be pretty dismal for an industry that is considered
'green,'" the group's executive director, Sheila Davis, said in an email.
While
there are no specific industry standards, Smirnow, head of the solar industry
association, is spearheading a voluntary program of environmental
responsibility. So far, only seven of the group's nearly 81 manufacturers have
signed the pledge.
"We
want (our program) to be more demanding, but this is a young industry and right
now manufacturing companies are focused on survival," he said."
___
Follow
Jason Dearen on Twitter http://www.twitter.com/JHDearen
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
This is a very interesting look at the solar side/Part 1
Our job is to present all sides of the equation in looking at sustainable changes. One aspect of the solar industry we have not evaluated closely is the composition of the material they use in manufacturing and how the waste is disposed of.
This story, very well written by Jason Dearen of the Associated Press, is a huge eye opener and certainly makes you think twice about the overall impact solar is having on our environment. You would like to think that is young industry could do a much better job of recycling, reusing or, at least, disposing locally of their waste.
Let us know your thoughts. We will run this over a couple of days:
This story, very well written by Jason Dearen of the Associated Press, is a huge eye opener and certainly makes you think twice about the overall impact solar is having on our environment. You would like to think that is young industry could do a much better job of recycling, reusing or, at least, disposing locally of their waste.
Let us know your thoughts. We will run this over a couple of days:
SAN
FRANCISCO (AP) — Homeowners on the hunt for sparkling solar
panels are lured by ads filled with images of pristine landscapes and
bright sunshine, and words about the technology's benefits for the environment
— and the wallet.
What
customers may not know is that there's a dirtier side.
While
solar is a far less polluting energy source than coal or natural gas, many
panel makers are nevertheless grappling with a hazardous
waste problem. Fueled partly by billions in government incentives, the
industry is creating millions of solar panels each year and, in the process,
millions of pounds of polluted sludge and contaminated
water.
To
dispose of the material, the companies must transport it by truck or rail far from
their own plants to waste facilities hundreds and, in some cases, thousands of
miles away.
The
fossil fuels used to transport that waste, experts say, is not typically
considered in calculating solar's carbon footprint,
giving scientists and consumers who use the measurement to gauge a product's
impact on global warming the impression that solar is cleaner than it is.
After
installing a solar panel, "it would take one to three months of generating
electricity to pay off the energy invested in driving those hazardous waste
emissions out of state," said Dustin Mulvaney,
a San Jose State University environmental studies professor who conducts carbon
footprint analyses of solar, biofuel and natural gas production.
The
waste from manufacturing has raised concerns within the industry, which fears
that the problem, if left unchecked, could undermine solar's green image at a
time when companies are facing stiff competition from each other and from
low-cost panel manufacturers from China and elsewhere.
"We
want to take the lessons learned from electronics and semiconductor industries
(about pollution) and get ahead of some of these problems," said John
Smirnow, vice president for trade and competitiveness at the nearly 500-member
Solar Energy Industries Association.
The
increase in solar hazardous waste is directly related to the industry's fast
growth over the past five years — even with solar business moving to China rapidly, the U.S. was a net exporter of solar
products by $2 billion in 2010, the last year of data available. The nation was
even a net exporter to China .
New
companies often send hazardous waste out of their plants because they have not
yet invested in on-site treatment equipment, which allows them to recycle some
waste.
Nowhere
is the waste issue more evident than in California ,
where landmark regulations approved in the 1970s require industrial plants like
solar panel makers to report the amount of hazardous materials they produce,
and where they send it. California leads the
consumer solar market in the U.S.
— which doubled overall both in 2010 and 2011..."
Monday, February 11, 2013
Great news for RI and New England
Congratulations to RI and New England for not only having cut emissions from power plants, over the last few years, by 30%, but having the courage to build on that success by setting a multi-state target of further cutting those emissions from power plants by an additional 45% next year.
We admire the great work done by all governors and leaders in the New England states. We are clearly fighting a race to clean our air, and reduce greenhouse gases, before permanent environmental damage takes hold and our climate, including weather, starts to become more unpredictable and severe.
Of course, other states much follow. Much of the emissions that get carried into New England, as an example, originate in the Midwest. Our pollution levels and resulting problems are worldwide. However, attacking the main source of heavy air pollutants, spewing from local power plants, is a very good and rapid policy change that will offer us immediate benefits.
Here's the story as reported in RI's local media:
We admire the great work done by all governors and leaders in the New England states. We are clearly fighting a race to clean our air, and reduce greenhouse gases, before permanent environmental damage takes hold and our climate, including weather, starts to become more unpredictable and severe.
Of course, other states much follow. Much of the emissions that get carried into New England, as an example, originate in the Midwest. Our pollution levels and resulting problems are worldwide. However, attacking the main source of heavy air pollutants, spewing from local power plants, is a very good and rapid policy change that will offer us immediate benefits.
Here's the story as reported in RI's local media:
States announce deal to cut greenhouse gasses
States agreed to reduce carbon dioxide gap by 2.5%
Updated: Thursday, 07 Feb 2013, 2:19 PM EST
Published : Thursday, 07 Feb 2013, 2:19 PM EST
Published : Thursday, 07 Feb 2013, 2:19 PM EST
BOSTON (AP) -- A multi-state agreement calls for a 45 percent reduction next year in allowable greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.
The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative announced Thursday would lower the cap on carbon dioxide emissions from 165 million tons to 91 million tons in 2014.
The states agreed to further reduce the cap by 2.5 percent per year from 2015-2020.
The nine Northeast and mid-Atlantic states that participate in the cap-and-trade agreement are Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont.
The initiative is the nation's first market-based greenhouse gas regulatory program. Backers say it has cut emissions by 30 percent in past several years and reduced average electricity prices by 10 percent.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Thank you to Seth Handy
For sending us this wonderful piece from Grist.
How amazing is the number of 9 billion, in essence, stolen each day from future generations as burn through fossil fuel. That is truly the business side of green, and that kind of data is so compelling as we look at our short and long-term decisions.
We just finished filming a series of five TV shows focused on what a state's energy plan should look like, and can it be a blueprint to prosperity? We'll follow up on the radio side with the same discussion, and make this data part of the analysis.
In the meantime send us your comments and suggestions:
How amazing is the number of 9 billion, in essence, stolen each day from future generations as burn through fossil fuel. That is truly the business side of green, and that kind of data is so compelling as we look at our short and long-term decisions.
We just finished filming a series of five TV shows focused on what a state's energy plan should look like, and can it be a blueprint to prosperity? We'll follow up on the radio side with the same discussion, and make this data part of the analysis.
In the meantime send us your comments and suggestions:
The cost of not using renewable energy
A clever new study [PDF] from the World Future Council attempts to do something I haven’t seen before: quantify the cost of not using renewables.
The idea is pretty simple. When we use finite fossil fuels to generate energy, rather than the inexhaustible, renewable alternatives, we make those fossil fuels unavailable for non-energetic uses (think petrochemicals) in the future. In other words, when we burn fossil fuels for energy, we are needlessly destroying valuable industrial capital stock.
You can read the paper for more on methodology and assumptions. The paper uses current market values for fossil fuels rather than attempting to predict future prices, so the estimates are likely conservative.
Here’s the conclusion:
Protecting the use of increasingly valuable fossil raw materials for the future is possible by substituting these materials with renewables. Every day that this is delayed and fossil raw materials are consumed as one-time energy creates a future usage loss of between 8.8 and 9.3 billion US Dollars. Not just the current cost of various renewable energies, but also the costs of not using them need to be taken into account. [my emphasis]
Got that? Every day we use fossil fuels for energy, we steal $9 billion from future people who will need those fossil fuels for non-substitutable industrial uses.
The exact numbers here are, like numbers in all economic modeling, probably going to turn out to be wrong. My guess is they are on the low end, but there are so many assumptions required that, really, who knows.
The paper does highlight an important conceptual point, though. Discussion about shifting to clean energy (or regenerative agriculture, or sustainable urbanism, etc.) tends to be dominated by the costs of changing. But the choice is not costs or no costs: the status quo carries costs too. Every day we stick with the status quo, we are increasing the costs our descendants will pay for the inevitable, unavoidable transitions to more sustainable systems. (Relatedly: the cost of reducing carbon emissions enough to avoid catastrophic warming rises every year.)
The question is not costs or no costs, but about the balance of costs and benefits, and perhaps more importantly, who pays the costs and who receives the benefits. Right now we are imposing huge and growing costs are our descendants in exchange for temporary, unsustainable benefits today. That is the farthest thing from “fiscal conservatism.”
Thursday, February 7, 2013
This week's radio show
Is now edited and ready for you to listen if you missed us live yesterday on WARL 1320 and Blog Talk Radio. Here's description of the show.
The link is: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/renewable-now/2013/02/06/new-england-clean-energy-council
The link is: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/renewable-now/2013/02/06/new-england-clean-energy-council
Charity Pennock and Janet Besser from New England Clean Energy were our guests today. Charity is the Rhode Island coordinator for New England Clean Energy . Janet Besser over sees New England Clean Energy Council's work .
Renewable Now is the business side of Green!!
Solarize CT Doubles Adoption in Pilot Towns
Nice update from CT. We hope to see more of this progress across New England. Our thanks to the New England Clean Energy Council for these updates:
"As reported in the Hartford Business Journal, the pilot program Solarize Connecticut has doubled the adoption of residential solar installations to 2.3 megawatts in its four participant communities in the first five months of the initiative.
The program aims to increase residential adoption of solar by having entire towns join together to install solar, thus lowering the installation cost. Residents in Durham, Fairfield, Portland, and Westport, the four pilot towns, have signed nearly 300 contracts totaling 2.3 megawatts.
Because of the high number of signups, Connecticut’s Clean Energy Finance & Investment Authority will start the second phase of the pilot program in March with Bridgeport, Canton, Coventry, Mansfield, and Windham."
New Report: Advanced Energy Represents $1.1 Trillion Global Market
Advanced Energy Economy (AEE), the national affiliate of the New England Clean Energy Council, has released a report showing that advanced energy was a $1.1 trillion global market in 2011. This first-ever analysis of the advanced energy sector also demonstrates that the sector represents an important part of the nation’s economy, with $132 billion in revenue in 2011 and nineteen percent growth estimated for 2012.
“This report shows what clean energy companies throughout New England have seen developing over recent years; the clean energy economy has experienced huge growth, creating jobs and contributing to economic development in the New England region and nationally,” said Peter Rothstein, NECEC President. “New England is a national leader in the advancement of clean energy technology and policy.”
New England’s strong leadership has played a very important role in strengthening and growing the national clean energy economy. Massachusetts’ clean energy economy grew by more than eleven percent in the last year, as indicated in a report released by the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center last summer. Additionally, Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, and Rhode Island ranked among the top ten in the U.S. for energy efficiency, according to the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy.
Connecticut has begun first-in-the-nation programs in ‘green bank’ financing and microgrids, which are already being emulated across the country. A small town in Maine was recently the site of the nation’s first commercial tidal energy project, while New Hampshire has become the first state to fully incorporate renewable thermal energy into its renewable portfolio standard. Vermont, too, has made great strides in growing its clean energy economy, boasting the nation’s highest number of high tech green jobs per capita.
As the individual states and the region as a whole continue to lead on clean energy innovation and policy, the national clean energy sector will continue to grow, providing economic and environmental benefits to the region’s and nation’s industries, businesses, and citizens.
This report was commissioned by the Advanced Energy Economy Institute and produced by Pike Research. For a full copy of the report, please visit AdvancedEnergyNOW.net
"As reported in the Hartford Business Journal, the pilot program Solarize Connecticut has doubled the adoption of residential solar installations to 2.3 megawatts in its four participant communities in the first five months of the initiative.
The program aims to increase residential adoption of solar by having entire towns join together to install solar, thus lowering the installation cost. Residents in Durham, Fairfield, Portland, and Westport, the four pilot towns, have signed nearly 300 contracts totaling 2.3 megawatts.
Because of the high number of signups, Connecticut’s Clean Energy Finance & Investment Authority will start the second phase of the pilot program in March with Bridgeport, Canton, Coventry, Mansfield, and Windham."
New Report: Advanced Energy Represents $1.1 Trillion Global Market
Advanced Energy Economy (AEE), the national affiliate of the New England Clean Energy Council, has released a report showing that advanced energy was a $1.1 trillion global market in 2011. This first-ever analysis of the advanced energy sector also demonstrates that the sector represents an important part of the nation’s economy, with $132 billion in revenue in 2011 and nineteen percent growth estimated for 2012.
“This report shows what clean energy companies throughout New England have seen developing over recent years; the clean energy economy has experienced huge growth, creating jobs and contributing to economic development in the New England region and nationally,” said Peter Rothstein, NECEC President. “New England is a national leader in the advancement of clean energy technology and policy.”
New England’s strong leadership has played a very important role in strengthening and growing the national clean energy economy. Massachusetts’ clean energy economy grew by more than eleven percent in the last year, as indicated in a report released by the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center last summer. Additionally, Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, and Rhode Island ranked among the top ten in the U.S. for energy efficiency, according to the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy.
Connecticut has begun first-in-the-nation programs in ‘green bank’ financing and microgrids, which are already being emulated across the country. A small town in Maine was recently the site of the nation’s first commercial tidal energy project, while New Hampshire has become the first state to fully incorporate renewable thermal energy into its renewable portfolio standard. Vermont, too, has made great strides in growing its clean energy economy, boasting the nation’s highest number of high tech green jobs per capita.
As the individual states and the region as a whole continue to lead on clean energy innovation and policy, the national clean energy sector will continue to grow, providing economic and environmental benefits to the region’s and nation’s industries, businesses, and citizens.
This report was commissioned by the Advanced Energy Economy Institute and produced by Pike Research. For a full copy of the report, please visit AdvancedEnergyNOW.net
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