Tag Archives: politics

Corporations Favor EPA Regulation of Greenhouse Gases

(From nlpc.org) Earlier this month corporate climateers including Nike and 3M were given awards — supposedly “the equivalent of an Oscar for the climate change mitigation world” — for their efforts to reduce their carbon emissions. The honors were bestowed by the Carbon War Room, which “harnesses the power of entrepreneurs to implement market-driven solutions to climate change.” The Virgin Group’s Richard Branson is one of the nonprofit’s co-founders.

The War Room gave Nike the Gigaton Award for the “consumer discretionary” category. The prize was named for a Clinton Global Initiative project called Gigaton Throwdown, which “encourages companies, entrepreneurs, policy makers, and investors to build big solutions to create climate stability and energy security.” Award winners are chosen by the Gigaton Academy, which consists of alarmist luminaries such as Branson, Ted Turner, UN IPCC chairman Rajendra PachauriNicholas Stern, and a host of rent-seeking alternative energy industry leaders.

As reported earlier this month by NLPC, Nike also co-signed a letter to President Obama that called for U.S. leadership in an initiative to create and finance the Global Climate Fund, which was established at the UN climate talks in Cancun in early December. Similarly as part of theBusiness for Innovative Climate and Energy Policy — created by environmental pressure group Ceres — Nike endorsed a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and his colleagues to urge Congress to allow the EPA to regulate greenhouse gas emissions:

We are writing as major US businesses to urge you to oppose all riders to the FY11 Interior Appropriations bill that would block or delay enforcement of the Clean Air Act and /or specifically curtail EPA’s ability to take action on the regulation of carbon.

For nearly two years, our coalition, Business for Innovative Climate and Energy Policy [BICEP] has worked with members of Congress toward passage of comprehensive climate and energy legislation because we believe it is critical to the health of our businesses and essential for job creation and innovation in the United States.

It is important to underscore that we have always believed strongly that Congress should lead on setting climate and energy policy for the United States. However, in lieu of Congress’s ability to pass a comprehensive bill we feel that EPA’s legitimate authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions should not be constrained at this time.

For more – Click HERE

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Bali School Makes Sustainability a Way of Life (NY Times)

Half a world away from Cancún, Mexico, and the international climate change talks that took place there last month, a school here in Indonesia is staging its own attempt to save the planet.

It is small-scale and literally grassroots — and possibly in some respects more effective than the tortuous efforts of politicians to agree on how to stop global warming.

In the midst of the lush, steaming jungle of Bali, along a pitted road, past scattered chickens and singing cicadas, Green School has two dozen buildings made of giant bamboo poles. There are no walls, and there is no air-conditioning. Just gracefully arched roofs, concrete floors and bamboo furniture. There is a big, grassy playground, complete with goalposts made — yes — of bamboo; a bamboo bridge across a rock-strewn river; vegetable patches; and a mud-wrestling pit.

But there is also a computer lab, a well-stocked library and an array of courses drawn from an internationally recognized curriculum and taught in English.

More than 200 children from 40 countries, including Indonesia, are learning math here, as well as grammar, science, business studies, drama and Bahasa Indonesia, the official language spoken in this country of 240 million.

The students, whose levels range from kindergarten to 10th grade and who represent 40 nationalities, are also learning to grow and thresh rice and how to make ceramics and paper from materials found on the school site.

They get dirt under their fingernails and mud between their toes. Visitors are advised to wear comfortable shoes. High heels are not recommended.

If all this sounds a little bit hippie and idealistic, that is because it is. A little.

But then, Green School, the brainchild of John Hardy and his wife, Cynthia, is also realistic and practical, designed to give children not just a sense of how to live sustainably, but also to leave them ultimately with the skills to enter academic institutions anywhere in the world.

“We want to create future green leaders — we need green leaders,” said a sarong-clad Mr. Hardy, picking his way along a dirt path last month. “We want to teach kids that the world is not indestructible.”

Mr. Hardy himself — sarong notwithstanding — is no mere dropout, tree-hugging beach bum.

True, he says, he “ran away” from his home in Canada in 1975, to go to Bali. But he is also an entrepreneur, and the upmarket jewelry business he and his wife built over the years was worth enough, by the time they sold it in 2007, to allow the Hardys to set up the Green School.

For more – Click HERE

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11 Green-Tech Stories I Want to Write in 2011 (ZDNet)

By Heather Clancy – ZDNet.  I tend to be a Pollyanna-esque sort of journalist, looking for optimism and positive news wherever I can find it. So, my list of green technology “predictions” (if you can really call them that) is strictly focused on the things that I hope will happen in the year-to-come. Yes, of course, these are things that are also at least somewhat likely to happen, based on my read of current events. There is no particular order to this list.

#1: Makers of renewable energy technology and energy storage technology team up on more commercial-scale projects.
One of the biggest complaints about renewable energy continues to be the intermittent nature of sources such as the sun and the wind. One of the biggest concerns associated with electric vehicles surrounds “range” anxiety and how far one of these cars can travel on one charge. With that in mind, I’d like to hear more about practical applications of energy storage technologies in 2011, ala the joint project by International Energy and Princeton Power Systems that I wrote about in this blog from September 2010.

#2: Energy-efficient lighting technology booms as businesses invest.
The trends in cleantech venture capital pointed to an accelerating interest in energy efficiency projects throughout 2010. Many businesses are moving first to address the efficiency of their lighting, which you might consider the low-hanging fruit in terms of corporate sustainability projects. A survey I reported about last spring is a leading indicator: More than half of facilities managers believe that green lighting technology will show a quicker return on investment than pretty much any of their green technology options.

#3: Solar adoption continues to outpace expectations.
A new update from the Solar Energy Industries Association reports that the U.S. solar photovoltaic industry has grown an average of 69 percent annually for the past decade. 2010 was a record year for installations — before the third quarter had even ended. At the last count, 530 megawatts of capacity had been added in the United States by that time, compared with 435 megawatts for all of 2009. I think that the emergence of new cost-effective residential options that are more “plug and play” to install (like what Clarian Power is developing) along with another extension of the Department of Treasury Section 1603 program  will help fuel another breakout year in 2010.

#4: Electric cars finally find a following with “average” Americans.
OK, let’s be real. So far most of the electric car or electric hybrid options — ala the Tesla — have been available in the United States have been far from accessible to most of us. But all bets are off now that the Nissan Leaf and the Chevrolet Volt have hit the market. One big factor, according to a new report on electric vehicles from Pike Research, will be the programs the many of the big rental car companies — including Avis, Hertz and Enterprise — to incorporate electric vehicles into their rental fleets.

#5: More businesses embrace formal policies for handling electronic waste.
Earlier this week, I interviewed the president of systems integrator Valcom, Chuck Birmingham, about this very topic. Valcom is allied with CloudBlue, which is a company that handles recycling, refurbishment and reuse of older technology. Birmingham reports that more and more midsize and enterprise companies are adopting more detailed electronic waste (e-waste) policies. Valcom now receives an average of two proposal requests per week. “They want to be able to get rid of the old at the same time they are deploying the new,” he says. One thing that will definitely be a continuing story. The emergence of certifications (ala e-Stewards) that companies can rely on to know that their technology is being disposed of securely (from a data destruction standpoint) and responsibly (as in, items aren’t being sent to landfills or exported to countries where they might do environmental damage).

#6: Mega-Enterprise XYZ cites energy efficiency as key factor in cloud sourcing decision.
Power and cooling considerations have become a key consideration in data center design decisions, so much so thatGartner is predicting a major overhauls in the design of new data centers over the next five years. Gartner outlines five ways that businesses can reduce power consumption, which in turn will improve data center efficiency. My belief is that these considerations will play a big role in whether or not companies build a new data center — or turn to the cloud to add desired new computing capacity. Increasingly, power management and energy-efficiency best practices are things that it might be worth sourcing from an expert, rather than developing them in-house.

For more – Click HERE

You may be interested in the following books on Green IT:

Green IT: Reduce Your Information System’s Environmental Impact While Adding to the Bottom Line

This groundbreaking work offers a complete roadmap for integrating environmentally sound techniques and technologies into your Information Systems architecture. Green IT explains how to adopt a business-driven green initiative and provides a detailed implementation plan. You will find strategies for reducing power needs, procuring energy from alternative sources, utilizing virtualization technologies, and managing sustainable development. Case studies highlighting successful green IT projects at major organizations are included. Keep your IT department and your organization in the green–both environmentally and financially–with help from this comprehensive guide.

  • Work within current global initiatives and standards for e-waste
  • Minimize power usage and use alternative cooling methods in your datacenter
  • Transition your office into a paperless environment
  • Equip your organization with green hardware, including EPEAT-, RoHS-, and ENERGY STAR-certified machines
  • Implement efficient datacenter design in terms of energy consumption, cooling, server configuration, consolidation, cabling, redundancy, and more
  • Virtualize servers and storage using the latest technologies from VMware, Microsoft, Compellent, Incipient, and others
  • Measure existing datacenter efficiency using current metrics, and track progress with Business Intelligence tools
  • Establish a green supply chain
  • Explore the Software as a Service (SaaS) model
  • Manage ongoing compliance and sustainable growth

The Greening of IT: How Companies Can Make a Difference for the Environment

The Greening of IT offers clear, business-focused coverage of both the benefits and roadblocks of moving to green IT. Lamb discusses internal organizational obstacles, as well as regulations, energy cost shifts, and utility rate incentives that can help companies move towards green IT. You’ll find specific how-to guidance on everything from measuring energy usage and optimizing data center cooling equipment through leveraging virtualization. Lamb also presents detailed, up-to-the minute green IT case studies – including utilities, universities, and companies of all sizes, worldwide. He concludes by previewing emerging trends in green IT and identifying “on the horizon” opportunities businesses should be monitoring and preparing for.

Foundation of Green IT: Consolidation, Virtualization, Efficiency, and ROI in the Data Center

In Foundations of Green IT, a team of leading Green IT consultants presents the detailed technical information data center professionals need to systematically identify the right improvements, implement them, maximize savings, and accurately calculate business value. Marty Poniatowski and his team present comprehensive case studies reflecting their unsurpassed Green IT experience, complete with detailed implementation diagrams and performance information. You’ll find independent, detailed coverage of solutions from HP, VMware, EMC, Cisco, and other leading vendors, with optimized sample designs and realistic ROI projections. Whether you’re a CIO or IT director, architect or administrator, if you want to improve IT efficiency, this is your definitive resource.

Three comprehensive, start-to-finish case studies - Analyze current environments, set goals, define implementation plans, and calculate ROI for:

  • Server and desktop consolidation and virtualization
  • Data center backup/recovery/archiving, including replication
  • Networking, including VoIP background

Plus practical coverage of these Green IT topics:

  • Designing data centers for greater efficiency and lower power usage
  • Leveraging cloud computing
  • Consolidating Microsoft SQL Server instances
  • Reducing PC-related power usage and waste

Green IT For Dummies

Green technology is not only good for the environment; it’s also good for your bottom line. If your organization is exploring ways to save energy and reduce environmental waste, Green IT For Dummies can help you get there.

This guide is packed with cost-saving ways to make your company a leader in green technology. The book is also packed with case studies from organizations that have gone green, so you can benefit from their experience. You’ll discover how to:

  • Perform an energy audit to determine your present consumption and identify where to start greening
  • Develop and roll out a green technology project
  • Build support from management and employees
  • Use collaboration tools to limit the need for corporate travel
  • Improve electronic document management
  • Extend hardware life, reduce data center floor space, and improve efficiency
  • Formalize best practices for green IT, understand your company’s requirements, and design an infrastructure to meet them
  • Make older desktops and lighting fixtures more efficient with a few small upgrades
  • Lower costs with virtual meetings, teleconferences, and telecommuting options
  • Reduce your organization’s energy consumption

You’ll also learn what to beware of when developing your green plan, and get familiar with all the terms relating to green IT. Green IT For Dummies starts you on the road to saving money while you help save the planet.

Posted in Alternative Energy, Biofuels, Carbon Capture and Storage, Climate Change, Energy Efficiency, Energy Storage, Environment, Fuel Cells, Geothermal, Health, Politics, Pollution, Recycling, Smart Grid, Solar, Sustainability News, Waste to Energy, Water Power, Wind | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Massachusetts Releases Plan to Cut Greenhouse Gases

The state’s energy chief on Wednesday released a plan to sharply cut Massachusetts’ greenhouse gas emissions that calls for better efficiency, more hydroelectric power and an experimental insurance program aimed at curbing driving.

The “Massachusetts Clean Energy and Climate Plan for 2020″ tries to reduce emissions to 25 percent below their 1990 levels within the decade, as required by the state’s two-year-old anti-global warming law.

The plan by Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs Ian Bowles outlines more than two dozen steps to get there that mix existing policies with expanded or new programs.

Bowles called the document “a roadmap of multiple routes” that will require diligence to ensure Massachusetts reaches the law’s goals and helps mitigate climate change. He said the plan won’t require new regulation or cost businesses and residents more than they’ll get back in savings.

“I think what it really underscores is that the first 20 or 30 percent (cut) of greenhouse gas emissions can be done on a cost-effective basis, including nationwide,” said Bowles, who is leaving his post at year’s end.

The state’s 2008 Global Warming Solutions Act requires a one-quarter reduction from 1990′s total greenhouse gas emissions (about 92 million to 94 million metric tons) and an 80 percent reduction by 2050. Carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide and ozone are among the targeted gases.

The law also required Bowles to submit a plan by year’s end on how to reach the first benchmark. The plan was devised over two years and at eight public hearings. Officials say its policies and programs could create up to 48,000 jobs.

Better efficiency in transportation and among power suppliers are key to the plan, but improved building efficiency is the biggest contributor, with the state saying cleaner-running buildings will account for a nearly 10 percent of the hoped-for emissions reduction.

The state already has committed $2 billion to help buildings owners decrease energy use, such as with efficient lighting, improved insulation or furnace and boiler upgrades.

Bowles also wants to expand to commercial oil heat customers a program that improves residential oil heat efficiency. It’s unclear how that expansion would be funded. Any attempt by electric utilities, which run the existing program, to pass on the costs to ratepayers would have to be approved by state regulators. But the state’s two largest utilities, National Grid and NStar, both say they back it.

The plan sees tightening Environmental Protection Agency regulations on power suppliers shutting down some major emitters, such as the state’s older power plants. It also projects up to 15 percent of the state’s electricity demand will be supplied by decade’s end by renewable hydroelectric power after the completion a massive project by Hydro-Quebec to run transmission lines to New England.

For more – click HERE

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U.S. beefs up fuel cell research and development with $74 million (EcoSeed)

The Department of Energy launched a $74 million funding program to support the research and development of fuel cell technologies for stationary and transportation applications, which could help the United States emerge as a leader in the fledgling global fuel cell market.

The program set aside $65 million over three years for continued research and development on fuel cell components, such as catalysts and membrane electrode assemblies, to help minimize costs, improve durability and increase fuel cell efficiency.

It also allocated $9 million for independent cost analyses that will determine the economic viability and technological advancement of fuel cell and hydrogen technologies for applications such as light-duty vehicles, forklifts, buses, stationary power plants and hydrogen storage systems.

Life cycle cost studies will be conducted for various manufacturing volumes to identify the near-term, low-volume market feasibility for these technologies and long-term potential.

“The investments we’re making today will help advance fuel cell technology in the United States,” said Steven Chu, energy secretary. “This is part of a broad effort to create American jobs, reduce carbon pollution and help ensure the U.S. stays competitive in the growing clean energy economy,” he added.

For More – Click HERE

 

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Corporate Propaganda begins as EPA starts to regulate Greenhouse Gasses in the US

The Obama administration is moving through regulatory channels to clamp down on greenhouse gas emissions after Congress failed to act on new legislation. The Environmental Protection Agency has announced a new plan for establishing greenhouse gas pollution standards under provisions of the Clean Air Act.

In an announcement posted late Thursday on EPA’s website, administrator Lisa Jackson said officials “are following through on our commitment to proceed in a measured and careful way” to reduce pollution that contributes to climate change. The new regulations will focus specifically on coal plants and oil refineries, two of the largest sources of greenhouse gases. It will propose standards for power plants by next July and for refineries a year from now.

As the EPA begins the regulation process, the battle-lines are beginning to take shape.   The article below from the Wall Street Journal paints a scenario where business activity in the US will grind to a halt and the US economy will lose millions of jobs if the EPA is allowed to begin regulating GHG’s. This is the typical corporate ‘fear’ approach which we are beginning to see more and more often.  However, there is relatively little discussion of the negative economic impact and loss of US competitiveness if the US is allowed to become an environmental back-water as the rest of the world moves forward in addressing this problem. In short, blind short-sighted corporate greed is making its voice heard in this conversation.  As has happened many times in history, government is going to have to demand that corporations conduct themselves as good citizens – a role corporations, if left to do on their own, are unwilling to do.

From the Opinion Page of the Wall Street Journal

On Jan. 2, the Environmental Protection Agency will officially begin regulating the emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. This move represents an unconstitutional power grab that will kill millions of jobs—unless Congress steps in.

This mess began in April 2007, with the Supreme Court’s decision in Massachusetts v. EPA. The court instructed the agency to determine whether greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide pose (or potentially pose) a danger to human health and safety under the Clean Air Act. In December 2009 the agency determined they were a danger—and gave itself the green light to issue rules cutting CO2 emissions on a wide range of enterprises from coal plants to paper mills to foundries.

In response, states including Texas and Virginia, as well as dozens of companies and business associations, are challenging the EPA’s endangerment finding and proposed rules in court. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit is currently considering a partial stay of the EPA’s rules and is expected to begin issuing decisions sometime in 2012.

The EPA, of course, is in a hurry to move ahead. It wants to begin regulating the largest emitters first. But it has the authority under its endangerment finding to regulate emissions by hospitals, small businesses, schools, churches and perhaps even single-family homes. As companies wait for definitive court rulings, the country could face a de facto construction moratorium on industrial facilities that could provide badly needed jobs. Moreover, the EPA has never completed an analysis of how many jobs might be lost in the process—although Section 321 of the Clean Air Act demands that it do so.

The best solution is for Congress to overturn the EPA’s proposed greenhouse gas regulations outright. If Democrats refuse to join Republicans in doing so, then they should at least join a sensible bipartisan compromise to mandate that the EPA delay its regulations until the courts complete their examination of the agency’s endangerment finding and proposed rules.

Like the plaintiffs, we have significant doubt that EPA regulations can survive judicial scrutiny. And the worst of all possible outcomes would be the EPA initiating a regulatory regime that is then struck down by the courts.

For the last year or so, some in Congress have considered mandating that the EPA delay its greenhouse-gas regulations by two years. But that delay is arbitrary—it was selected because a handful of Democrats needed political cover. There is no way to know whether two years will be sufficient time for the courts to complete their work.

Moreover, the principal argument for a two-year delay is that it will allow Congress time to create its own plan for regulating carbon. This presumes that carbon is a problem in need of regulation. We are not convinced.

Have your say – Is it in the best interest of the country (or the world for that matter) to let congress, a body which is going to be influenced to an even greater extent by corporate interests in the coming two years, to attempt to craft legislation to address this growing problem?

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From greenhouse gases to green agenda: 5 energy issues to watch

(From The Hill) It’s been a dynamic past 12 months on the energy front. The massive Gulf oil spill dominated much of the news cycle. And while Democratic efforts to pass comprehensive climate change legislation in the Senate failed, the Obama administration is moving ahead with plans to use its existing powers to regulate greenhouse gas emissions. With the end of the year drawing close – the 111th Congress is over and President Obama is in Hawaii with his family for the holidays – it seems only fitting to turn our attention to next year.

Without further ado, here are five things to watch out for next year:

Attempts to block the Environmental Protection Agency’s climate regulations:

Just hours before most people in Washington, D.C., left town for the holidays, EPA made two major announcements Thursday in its efforts to reduce the country’s greenhouse gas emissions. The agency laid out a timetable for phasing in emissions standards for power plants and refineries, and it announced that it would issue greenhouse gas permits in Texas, where the governor had refused to align itself with federal rules. On top of that, beginning in January EPA will, on a case-by-case basis, begin phasing in rules that require large new industrial plants and sites that perform major upgrades to curb emissions.

The move is certain to fuel the fire of opposition against the Obama EPA’s efforts. Republicans, emboldened by their majority in the House next year and their swollen numbers in the Senate, have promised to fight the EPA. While Sen. John Rockefeller’s (D-W.Va.) effort to delay EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions by two years failed, he’s promised to try again next year. Other Republicans have promised to get in on the action too.

All eyes are on the new Republican House and energy/environment committee chairman: Rep. Fred Upton (Mich.) will chair the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Rep. Doc Hastings (Wash.) will chair the House Natural Resources Committee and Rep. Ralph Hall (Texas) will chair the House Science and Technology Committee. All three lawmakers are planning to turn a critical eye toward the Obama administration’s climate change policies.

The continuing fallout from the Gulf oil spill:

For the many months that oil gushed into the Gulf of Mexico, the oil spill stayed on the front pages of the country’s newspapers and in front of lawmakers’ minds. But almost as soon as the well was capped, lawmakers’ priorities shifted and talk of passing an oil spill response bill in the Senate died down.

However, the oil spill is still very much a part of daily life in the Gulf. Spill victims continue to work to receive adequate compensation for the losses they suffered. Next year, Kenneth Feinberg, the administrator of BP’s $20 billion oil spill compensation fund, will continue to determine how best to dole out money to victims.

At the same time, the Department of Justice will advance both its criminal and civil investigations into those companies responsible for the spill. DoJ announced earlier this month that it is suing BP and eight other companies involved in the spill. The department also reserved the right to expand the lawsuit and add new defendants. And DoJ’s criminal investigation is still continuing.

For more – Click HERE

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China moves to defuse trade row with US over green technology

China tried to defuse a trade row with the United States over wind technology today, as bilateral rivalries threatened to dash global hopes for green energy co-operation. Officials in Beijing said they were willing to discuss incentives for turbine manufacturers, which the Obama administration described as “illegal subsidies” in a request for talks on the subject at the World Trade Organisation. The US claims China has given an unfair advantage to domestic firms by channelling hundreds of millions of dollars to them through a special fund established in 2008.

The United Steelworkers union (USW) is frustrated that this weakens the competitiveness of US firms such as General Electric in a Chinese market that has doubled in size almost every year since 2005 and is now the biggest in the world in terms of generating capacity. Barack Obama is also expected to raise the issue at a summit in Washington next month with his Chinese counterpart, Hu Jintao.

Beijing insists its wind policies are good for the global environment and within global trade rules, but its initial response today was conciliatory. “China will conscientiously study the US request for consultations, and will deal with this in accordance with WTO dispute settlement rules, while retaining our corresponding rights,” the Chinese commerce ministry said in a statement on its website.

But government advisers were scathing. Professor Pan Jiahua, the executive director of the sustainable development research centre at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said the symbolic impact would be significant. ”At a global level, the US action is terrible. It’s very silly,” Pan said. “This gives a very bad signal for the world. It says renewable energytechnologies should not be encouraged. This is a huge blow to the fast deployment of wind energy.”

For more – click HERE

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