Affordable Portable Solar
Going solar has usually meant a significant financial outlay and a time-consuming, complicated installation. No longer.
Now there’s the Solar Stik, a portable solar generator weighing around 100 pounds that installs in around 10 minutes.
It’s already been used by the military, classified as a Tactical Quiet Generator (TQG), given the name “TESS” (Tactical Electric Solar System) by the U.S. Army’s Rapid Equipping Force and the Testing & Evaluation Command (USATEC).
Use it to link other units together or add a wind turbine to expand your energy output.
The Solar Stik www.solarstik.com can be used for emergency power, for boats or campgrounds, even for humanitarian use, like bringing power to Galveston after Hurricane Ike.
Folding up into small [...]
Consumer Electronics Report Card part 2
Some of the statistics on consumer electronics companies reviewed as part of the recently released Environmental Sustainability and Innovation in the Consumer Electronics Industry Report are pretty impressive.
Epson’s packaging now comes from trees specifically grown for them. They also plant 20 percent more trees than they harvest.
The amount of electrical energy Nokia’s cell phone chargers consume when left unattended has been reduced by 90 percent over the past nine years and Nokia phones now signal users as reminders.
Panosonic’s plasma TV’s currently use 90 percent less energy than eight years ago.
Kodak has embraced recycling cameras big time. They’ve recycled 1.2 billion single-use camera since 1990, recycling 120 million last year alone.
Intel’s [...]
Wave Energy – A Wave of the Future (Part 2)
Off the northern coast of Portugal, the Pelamis Wave Power’s converters are tethered by cables to the ocean’s floor and placed perpendicular to the coastline. Each device has several sections. As waves roll past, each section moves up and down, while internal hydraulic rams resist this motion. This opposition forces high pressure fluid through hydraulic motors, driving the electric generators. The electricity produced then travels underwater via cables to the mainland.The electricity generated varies according to the power of the waves, reminiscent of renewable energy technologies like wind and solar and their dependence on weather conditions.
The exciting development of this new energy source could prove a significant factor in driving down [...]
A Greener Report Card for the Electronics Industry
In these days of rampant greenwashing, consumers have been dealt a winning hand by the Consumer Electronics Association.
The CEA’s recent “Environmental Sustainability and Innovation in the Consumer Electronics Industry Report” http://www.ce.org/PDF/Sustainability_Final.pdf
analyzed 20 corporations, including many of the largest consumer electronics sellers in the world.
The report paints a positive picture, including lower manufacturer energy consumption and improved cradle-to-cradle design.
Some of the results are truly impressive. One company reduced their electricity use by 58% per employee, while increasing their employee base by 60%! Still another company reduced electricity usage by 46% per million dollars (revenue), as they increased their overall revenue by 43%.
Clearly, wise energy management can engender greatly improved company health, contrary [...]
Wave Energy – The Future is Here (part 1)
Waves over the Pelamis Wave Converters generate electricity
Portugal has launched the world’s first wave farm, technology so new it’s been viewed as speculative for the past few years.
The Pelamis Wave Power project, went live the end of September off Portugal’s northern coast, in Agucaduora. The three coral-colored, whale-like, partially submerged wave-energy converters use naturally-occurring waves to generate electricity.
Phase 1 of this commercial renewable energy project anticipates generating 2.25 megawatts of electricity.
The second phase, with 25 additional converters, will extend capacity to 21 MW – enough energy to power 15,000 homes!
To understand this technological breakthrough, consider that the ocean’s waves are estimated to generate 2 Terawatts of power. The entire United [...]
Forward Thinking in Colorado
Have been on the email list for CASBA – Colorado Alliance of Sustainable Business Associations for some time. Sort of fell into my lap.
I continue to be amazed at the effort and broad-stroked commitment that that CASBA demonstrates is occurring and that’s bringing the conversation of climate change and related issues forward in that state.
The latest e-zine and diverse calendar of events, available at
http://www.sustainablecolorado.org
contains a plethora of meetings, conferences and brown bag events being held in various Colorado cities on wide-ranging topics including Western Water Resources and Climate Change, renewable energy, permaculture, sustainability and LEED.
Definitely an impressive group and one to keep an eye on. If you do business in [...]
More States Steward Mercury Disposal
Mercury disposal is a big health concern. Approximately 50 million mercury-containing thermostats – each containing an average of 4 grams of mercury – are still in homes in the U.S..Though 15 states in the U.S. ban or restrict their sale and manufacturers no longer produce them, mercury thermostats are legally sold in 35 states.
Some states have passed legislation covering proper mercury thermostat and recycling. The latest states to join this bandwagon are California and Pennsylvania. They join 4 other states – Maine, New Hampshire, Iowa and Vermont – to regulate this proven environmental hazard.Kudos to the Product Stewardship Institute
www.productstewardship.us, a national non-profit organization, for creating the model that thermostat [...]
Solar Highways Begin to Light the Way
The state of Oregon began installing the U.S.’s first solar highway in August. Located at the intersection of Highways 5 and 205, its 104-kilowatt array will produce 28 percent of the power necessary to light the exchange.
Portland (OR) General Electric and U.S. Bankcorp Community Development Corporation partnered to create the funding for this $1.4 million alternative energy project.
The CDC will own the project’s federal and state tax benefits for 5 years (they’ll expire then). Ownership will then revert to Portland GE.
This venture sounds promising. Makes you wonder what something like this could do in a sunnier states like California, Nevada or in the Southwest, with those wide-open spaces? There’s the [...]
A "Natural" Legacy
A plethora of states would love to jump on the National Trail System’s bandwagon – from Washington, D.C. to Ohio, from Maryland to Indiana.
The pending National Trails bill that awaits action by the U.S. Senate, authorizes the National Park Service to study extending numerous trails and sites throughout the Eastern half of the country.
The Secretary of the Interior would be required to update the feasibility and suitability of extending four historic trails – the Oregon, California, Pony Express and Mormon Pioneer National Historic trails, sites rich in our country’s history.
A number of U.S. Senators have proposed various portions of this massive and, well, historic legislation.
The current administration has done extremely little to [...]
Trails Bill Rests in the Senate
Some remarkable trails have been proposed for annexation into the National Trails System. Amazingly, the U.S. House has approved many of them. Typically, the Senate hasn’t.
The Senate could vote on this bill – containing 150 public lands, natural resources, and water projects -on November 17th, in a lame duck session. If so, the House would have to re-approve the measure, or risk delaying it until 2009.
Among trails proposed are:
the Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route National Historic Trail, running from Rhode Island to Virginia, commemorating American and French troop movement in the Revolutionary War.
the New England National Scenic Trail.
a bill establishing the Pacific Northwest National Scenic Trail.
the Ice Age Floods National Geologic Trail, [...]