FOGS update:
the rocky mountain sustainability summit (RMSS) occured here at CU
last thursday and friday. one of the more interesting events was the
"green products expo" that hosted a variety of really interesting
technologies and services geared towards energy efficiency and
sustainability. there were a few companies in particular worth
mentioning.
first was eco-products (www.ecoproducts.com). this boulder-based
company specializes in manufacturing cleaning, office, and food
service supplies, outdoor furniture, and more. i thought their new
compostable utensils made from corn starch were really neat: these
things biodegrade in 45 days! and if you were really hungry, you
could eat the fork! they also make another line of biodegradable
utensils made from corn oil and limestone. other cool products of
theirs are food containers made from sugar cane and biodegradable
yard waste bags. buy up! if you know someone with a business, tell
them to check these guys out.
another great innovation is moving through the solar power world. as
many of you know, solar has been getting cheaper and there are many
government incentives to purchase solar energy systems for your
home. another boulder company, namaste solar electric
(www.namastesolar.com), now sells a new, higher efficiency solar
array, yielding more power per square foot than conventional solar
systems. this is accomplished through a new method of growing
photovoltaic (PV) crystals. many of you may have noticed that solar
panels have the appearance of what in geology we'd call a breccia
(angular interlocking crystals). That is due to the manner in which
silicon crystals (taken from sand) are grown and then thinly sliced
into sheets and mounted to a panel. namaste has developed a way to
grow very large PV crystals, thus eliminating the speckled appearance
of traditional solar panels and yielding more power/area than any
other PV system out there. now solar consumers have even greater
choice: go for more bang for your buck with the cheaper traditional
systems, or maximize your power output for a given area with the new
technology. www.sunpowercorp.com/solarcells/ for more info on the
new PV cells offering 50% more power/sq. ft.
and then i found out something i wish i had heard months ago before i
spent $ on the "terrapass"- terrapass is a for-profit venture, which
is fine, but driveneutral.org is non-profit. what does this mean?
ulitmately it means that you can spend half as much money on
offsetting your car's emissions and put more dollars toward actual
carbon neutralization. driveneutral.org is a san fransisco-based
organization that, for a price of around $50 (yeah, even for an suv)
will offset your CO2 emissions for 12 months via investments in
renewables and carbon sequestration. check em out...
oh, speaking of terrapass, they made an appearance at the oscars last
night. instead of the typical $100k goody bags given to the
hollywood a-list, they received terrapasses. sounds like the IRS
caught wind of the kind of money going under the radar at the event
and wanted to tax the vacations, jewelry, and cars being offered to
the hollywood stars. the terrapasses given out are valued at
offsetting 100,000 lbs of CO2. now my question is: is that even
enough to offset the lavish lifestyles of these people? maybe for a
few months. i generate close to 20,000 lbs/yr just driving my truck
and i get 21 mpg. hollywood stars tend to drive less fuel efficient
cars, fly in way more airplanes, and consume a heck of a lot more
energy to keep their multi-million-dollar homes (and hot tubs and
pools) at just the right temperature. 100,000 lbs is a great
gesture, but does it cover it all? i doubt it. though, i'm so much
happier to hear that oscar guests are getting gifts that offset their
consumption, not gifts to fuel it. terrapass even put a little
handbook for reducing your footprint in with the gift. it's attached
to this email. oh yeah, and congrats to al gore, huh?
finally, more innovations for the home: geothermal heating and
cooling. a company called econar (www.econar.com) has a great
website explaining how geothermal can help your home. by pumping air
into your heater/ac unit that comes from underground , far less
energy is required to maintain comfortable living temperatures(this
is a very simplistic explanation). the subterranean temperature of
any given area (up to a certain depth) is equal to the year-round
average temperature of the surface. out here in colorado that is
around 52 degrees F, or 11 C. it should come as no surprise that
heating air from 52 to 70 is a lot easier than going from 10 to 70.
equally, it is easier to cool your home with incoming air from
underground, rather than straining your a/c unit by cooling 90 degree
outside air.
oooh, and one more thing: does anyone remember hearing the story
that came out in "the guardian" (in the UK) a few weeks ago about how
conservative thinktanks (i'm not sure which) are offering $10k
rewards for any scientist willing to submit journal articles refuting
the latest IPCC report? reminds me of an article i read called
"balance as bias: global warming and the US prestige press," which
explained the bias in global warming coverage by the media. in a
nutshell, the scientific community is done debating climate change -
it's happening and we're contributing - but the media sources want to
paint an even picture of both sides of the argument anyway. the
authors (boykoff & boykoff 2003) argue that balanced coverage does
not imply accurate coverage, and furthermore, this current situation
is one of informational bias. they also identify the fact that our
US government spends 3 times more money on climate science than any
other nation on earth (as much as japan and the EU combined), yet
consistently ignores the outcomes of this research. "it's for
economic reasons" some say. while i haven't read the stern review
report on the economics of climate change, from what i understand
some great british minds including sir nicholas stern, former chief
economist to the world bank and current head of britain's government
economic service, have concluded that the economic costs of inaction
will far outweigh the upfront costs of meeting the climate crisis
head on.
man, this was the first big newsletter in a while...
hope you enjoyed it
-jimmy
8 comments:
speaking of Oscars, does anyone know what Leo DiCaprio
and Al Gore meant specificlly when they mentioned that
the Oscars were completely green? is it what jimmy
was referring to?
when US says it's for economic reasons, i believe it
is alluding to the Kyoto Protocal and agreements like
it. the Kyoto Protocal in particular will cost the
American people more $$ per person than any other
nation. Americans would have to bear the finacial
burden. the counter arguement is that we generate
most of the problem and we're rich so we should bear
the boot. Instead our government has invested money
into things like the electric car, hydrogen fuel, fuel
cells, solar, wind farms, etc. in terms of tax breaks
and research. Basically, they are reliing on future
technology to ease the pain. thats my take.
(Mike Pomponi, 2/26/07)
Jimmy,
You'll be glad to know that the City of Santa Monica (along with several
other beach cities in California) have banned the sale of polystyrene from
the food service industries and grocery stores. All restaurants, cafes, food
marts, and grocery stores are supposed to use up their stock and switch to
alternatives such as the products you mentioned from www.ecoproducts.com.
The chemical and polystyrene industry is pretty nervous about this trend and
I don't blame them. The best arguments they could come up with at the City
Council meeting, for not passing the ban, were:
1) There is no viable alternative for polystyrene that keeps your food hot.
2) It will bankrupt businesses
Thankfully our side had several small restaurant owners there to represent
the functionality of the eco friendly alternatives. In addition, it was
shown that the costs were not significantly different (especially given the
money spent on the food item and the costs to our environment and wild
animals).
It was a slam dunk for the City Council members to unanimously pass the
proposal. Hopefully the rest of LA follows suite as well as your town. The
template has been set and individual cities just need to replicate it.
Story about the ban:
http://www.worldchanging.com/local/losangeles/archives//005821.html
Ferris
(Ferris Kawar, 2/27/06)
I think it meant they all drove to the Oscars in hybrids. And there was something about the lighting being used that was more energy efficient. "Completely green", where did that phrase come from and what does it mean? Hybrids sound more like they should come under a heading of "partially green", if green means...what...
Maybe they should have just said we tried to be energy efficient where we could. But hairdryers use a ton of electricity. I've heard anyone who has a daughter who used a hair dryer a lot, and then left home, noticed a big difference in the electric bill.
(from Cathie Vonesh)
I haven't seen hybrid limos yet, but you know what screws everything up in California and hybrid cars? The fact that people with hybrid cars get this special pass to drive in the HOV lane by themselves... which in concept sounds like a good idea, BUT everyone in the Bay Area has decided to buy those cars so the HOV lanes are just as packed as all the other lanes with people driving by themselves. I think that kinda defeats the purpose. I can't go one day without seeing a Prius in the HOV lane here.
what do you think about that?
(Angelo Santiago)
i'd say that's a quality problem.
gimme traffic jams filled with hybrids, park your hummer on the white house lawn
(Kevin Raich)
One other thought, buying a new vehicle, in order to be 'green' is a bit
questionable, because of environmental production costs... hybrids also have
the inherent problem that there is more 'engine' - forgive the technical
jargon!
So, ditching your fridge to buy a 'greener' version, for example, is not
environmentally friendly. Better to wait for it to reach the end of it's
life.
Jane (in sunny Cambridge)
There are a few hybrid and CNG limo companies in California now:
Eco Limo www.eco-limo.com
PlanetTran www.planettran.com
Evo Limo www.evolimo.com
There are even cab companies that are running on biodiesel in Santa Monica and Yellow Cab in San Francisco has added 15 hybrid and CNG cabs to their fleet.
It’s a start
Ferris
In my opinion to be "green" the celebs should wear biodegradable
clothing walk on biodegradable carpet, ride mountain bikes made of clay
to the Oscars recycle the Champaign bottles into solar panels and on and
on. Being green is financially stylish and that is what they are in need
of. Look at the resources that one good action movie consumes!
It's annoying to be told that a hybrid limo is green. It requires
vastly more resources to have a gas and an electric power plant on board
and batteries are not earth friendly as they are built or disposed of.
There is no easy answer but saying the words "I am green!" is very easy
to do. What did the a-list folks do for hor'dourves after the show,
hand ground corn chips imported on donkeys. That would be pretty
"green".
It takes lots of energy to drag the sea floor for shrimp, scallops,
oysters and clams. It takes twin 800 horsepower diesels at a minimum to
"drag doors" which are huge steel plates on chains rumbling up all the
sea life on the ocean floor in front of a giant net.
I have an impossible time listening to al gore "go on and on" when just
one of his several houses is 10,000 square feet and his monthly electric
bill is $1,200.
He may think the energy fueling his house is green but even wind
generators are not made out of corn and clay. Huge armatures, bearings,
grease and power cleansing microprocessors make up only the guts of a
wind generator.
Check out the migratory bird kill near a wind farm.
Many new technologies are resource rich. Check out how many elements
must be mined from the earth to build a simple personal computer, ipod
or cell phone. I'm sure Leo likes his FedEx delivery options as much as
anyone and none are delivered by stage coach.
There are two meanings to "green" . politically green allows you to buy
carbon credits and become greener by sending money to third world
countries. Green in terms of earth science would relate to organic
chemistry.
john
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