Tag Archives: energy

Cate Blanchett Shines on Australia’s Second Largest Rooftop Solar Installation

Photo: Sydney Theatre Company Better known for lighting up the stage and screen, Oscar winner Cate Blanchett, (with husband and Co-Artistic Director of the Sydney Theatre Company) has teamed up with Australian federal government, the University of New South Wales and the NSW Government Architect’s Office to shine the light in a project known as, Greening the Wharf. The light in this instance will be sunlight. Or more precisely the capture of it. The Sydney Theatre Company’s blog on the matter notes that EnergyAustralia have calculates the 1,900-plus solar panels (and energy efficiency savings) will generate about 614,000 kWh a ye… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Cate Blanchett Shines on Australia’s Second Largest Rooftop Solar Installation

Commentary (Jonathan Powers): Why the United States Needs to Free Itself from Oil

Why America needs to free itself from oil By Jonathan Powers, Special to CNN July 4, 2010 9:37 a.m. EDT Photo: An oil refinery in Los Angeles, seen before dawn. Editor's note: Jonathan Powers, a veteran of the war in Iraq, is the chief operating officer for the Truman National Security Project, which describes itself as an organization that “recruits, trains, and positions a new generation of progressives across America to lead on national security.” . (CNN) — For two years in a row, I celebrated Independence Day in the oppressive heat of Iraq along with fellow soldiers. A few nonalcoholic beers and some locally grown watermelon were our replacement for hot dogs and potato salad. This year, as Americans across the nation celebrate July Fourth with barbecues and fireworks, those most responsible for defending our independence, the military, will continue to fight two wars. And it is a shame that we will let yet another July Fourth pass us by without making substantial progress toward ending our unnecessary dependence on oil, a dependence that is funding the bullets that our enemies fire at our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is for that reason, and many more, that the fight for energy independence is being fought here at home, a struggle I hope more Americans will join in support of those who are fighting abroad. Oil poses a clear threat to America's economic and national security. This spring we have watched as untold millions of gallons of oil flowed into the Gulf. But for years, we have watched as billions of dollars flowed to hostile nations to pay for oil. Every day, we send well over a billion dollars out of this country to pay for oil — money that could and should be used to grow our economy and create jobs. The simple fact is that our dependence on oil from nations in the Middle East and other regions constrains our choices, hamstringing America's flexibility and choices on the world stage. Too often, we are forced to consider the impact our foreign policy will have on our oil supply instead of whether a choice is in line with our values. Every day, we make a clear choice between living up to those values (and strengthening our security) and prolonging our weakness as a dirty-energy nation. Today, thousands of Americans are calling for a new freedom from oil — a dangerous, dirty and vulnerable source of energy. This week, 10,000 American flags were planted on the National Mall, each representing Americans who have pledged to free our nation from a long and damaging cycle of dependence. As Americans look to rebuild our economy, we must consider the massive, alarming and unprecedented transfer of wealth to those who do not share our values. America's ability to underwrite our national security always had, at its heart, the pumping arteries of a vibrant economy. Unless we act soon, we will be held hostage to the rest of the world, not just for oil, but for the clean-energy technology that will power the next century of growth and prosperity. Already dependent on oil, our country needs to act now lest we become dependent on China for solar panels. A more insidious impact of our dependence is clear in America's foreign and military policy. Today we are forced to both pay and protect the nations that supply our oil, the very nations that fuel extremism around the world and turn a blind eye to terrorist funding within their own borders. That money, winding its way through shady front groups and so-called charities, ends up funding not just insurgents in Iraq, but also in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The tragedy in the Gulf of Mexico demonstrates, in clear and often painful terms, just how unreliable our energy sources have become. We are forced to drill to the deepest depths of the ocean, to despoil the richness of our God-given natural treasures, and to rely on dangerously uncontrollable technologies. It is time for us to stand on our own — to take control of our energy — with sources that will not threaten our security, fund our enemies or force us to ignore our values. The long struggle to live up to the challenge of our values has always been difficult, but today we stand at a clear crossroads between moving beyond oil or prolonging our dependence on it. Clean, American power is possible, but only if we commit ourselves to achieving that goal. In the spirit of the holiday and in light of the tragedy in the Gulf, let us dedicate the next two decades to winning a new battle for American independence — from oil. . The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Jonathan Powers. added by: EthicalVegan

AP Report Understates the Financial Impact of LIHEAP’s Heap of Liars and Thieves

At the Associated Press, Kelli Kennedy’s Thursday report on fraud and abuse in the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program ( LIHEAP ), which is well done in several aspects, nonetheless significantly understates the losses that are occurring in the program. The AP report deals with a now-released Government Accountability Office report on the results of investigations in nine states. Here are the first four paragraphs of Kennedy’s report (HT David Freddoso at the Washington Examiner), including reference to a woman who is LIHEAP’s version of a welfare queen: A federal program designed to help impoverished families heat and cool their homes wasted more than $100 million paying the electric bills of thousands of applicants who were dead, in prison or living in million-dollar mansions, according to a government investigation. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services spent $5 billion through the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program in 2009, doling out money to states with little oversight of the program. Some states don’t verify applicants’ identifies or income. For example, the program helped pay the electric bill of a woman who lives in a $2 million home in a wealthy Chicago suburb and drives a Mercedes, according to the yet-to-be released report obtained by The Associated Press. The Government Accountability Office studied the program after a 2007 investigation by Pennsylvania’s state auditor found 429 applicants received more than $162,000 using the Social Security numbers of dead people. The GAO investigated Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and Virginia, which represented about one-third of the program’s funding in 2009. The agency found improper payments in about 9 percent of households receiving benefits in those states, totaling $116 million. Unless someone can demonstrate that other states’ LIHEAP programs are airtight (good luck with that), the true losses in the program are far higher than the figure Kennedy cited. We already know from her report that Pennsylvania, which was outside the scope of GAO’s investigation, has had serious program problems. Since the states involved “represented about one-third of the program’s funding,” total losses to fraud and abuse are more than likely in the neighborhood of $350 million or three times higher than the reported $116 million. Kennedy should have included a sentence along these lines: “If the experience of these six states is representative of what is occurring in the program nationwide, annual LIHEAP losses to fraud and abuse are about $350 million.” LIHEAP’s long list of “not for profit” and corporate defenders at the Campaign for Home Energy Assistance are already defending the program in response to Kennedy’s report. The following is from a statement currently on the group’s home page : We are disappointed that LIHEAP funds may have gone to ineligible parties. In this economy, more and more households cannot afford to heat and cool their homes because of financial woes. The poor, vulnerable populations that this program serves should not be denied the assistance they needs because of some bad actors or some administrative mismanagement. They also believe that the program’s scope should be quintupled: At $5.1 billion in LIHEAP funding, only 1 in 5 eligible Americans are served, which means there are many people who need assistance and are not getting it. A question separate from AP’s report: What would happen to a business where 9% of payments to employees or vendors were improper? Answer: They’d be out of business. But in government, the easy answer is not to clamp down on fraud and abuse (later paragraphs in the AP article demonstrate a decided reluctance to do that on the part of those who should be doing it). Instead, its “answers” are to either raise taxes or borrow more money while constantly advocating even more spending. Meanwhile, the fraud and abuse go on and on. “Responsible government” and “Government oversight,” once again, are shown to be oxymorons. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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AP Report Understates the Financial Impact of LIHEAP’s Heap of Liars and Thieves

Jesse James: Ex-Wife a Threat to Sunny

Jesse James says his ex-wife – the second one, not Sandra Bullock, who he officially divorced this week – is a threat to his daughter. He’s not a fan of Janine Lindemulder. He filed explosive documents in his custody war with Janine, including emails in which she allegedly admits to drug use, prostitution, and extreme jealousy of Bullock. The documents show emails Janine sent to Jesse’s sister, Julie James England, from 2008-2009, which Jesse claims prove Janine is a threat to daughter Sunny. Among the shocking items: Janine Lindemulder revealed how she agreed to spend one night with a man named Pete, who would in turn pay her $25,000. Jesse’s sister warns, “this [sic] is a form of prostitution.” Jesse James’ relationship with his second ex-wife is a bit contentious. Janine goes on to complain about her daughter’s relationship with Sandra Bullock, stating “all [sic] Sunny talks about is Sandy, Sandy! WTF?!” Indeed . After begging for Vicodin from Julie – and being denied – she wrote, “I am so depressed, Sun is suffering, I can’t even find the energy to play with her.” “It’s 9:30 and I don’t even know what she ate today,” the porn star, who’s out on parole, added. “Not being awake makes everything better.” Maybe it’s not the worst thing in the world Jesse’s moving to Texas so that Sunny and his two older kids (from his first ex) can stay close to Sandra .

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Jesse James: Ex-Wife a Threat to Sunny

Doubling Natural Gas Usage in US Will Come At High Environmental Cost

Hot on the heels of recent MIT survey showing that natural gas use in the US is set to double in the coming decades, an important counterpoint over at Yale e360 highlights some of the problems that transition will bring. At the center of it are the environmental consequences of Fracking (that’s

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Doubling Natural Gas Usage in US Will Come At High Environmental Cost

Why The Choice of Insulation Matters

Dow Corning Alex Wilson raises an important issue in Buildinggreen : It is not only important to insulate really well, but to also think about what insulation you are using. He makes the point that many insulations use potent greenhouse gases as blowing agents. He writes: We rarely pay attention to the fact that insulation materials themselves contribute to greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. This happens in two ways: through the embodied energy of the insulation (the energy use and greenhouse gas emissions that … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Why The Choice of Insulation Matters

Revolutionary Elevator Uses Zero Energy

Image from Footprint It’s big and clunky and it’s revolutionary. An elevator that uses no energy at all. Designed as part of the London Festival of Architecture , the challenge was to make some historic steps accessible by wheelchair and highlight the need for accessibility across London. The designer, an architect, worked with the Royal Engineers to create the solar elevator. It had to be free-standing since it was to be in the middle of the Duke of York Steps, and it had to be temporary. A… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Revolutionary Elevator Uses Zero Energy

Geological Storage of CO2 Emissions Only Viable if Leakage Kept to Less Than 1% in 1000 Years

photo: Alex Proimos via flickr Even with all the serious doubts about its scalability or financial viability, carbon capture and storage repeatedly continues to get talked up as a key part of a future low-carbon energy economy. Adding to the practical issues swirling around CCS is this bit, from research just published in Nature Geoscience

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Geological Storage of CO2 Emissions Only Viable if Leakage Kept to Less Than 1% in 1000 Years

Gulf Coast Oil Disaster: Tropical Storm Could Mean Two-Week Halt to Oil Recovery | Video

Tropical storm, oil slick equal more fear, uncertainty By the CNN Wire Staff June 26, 2010 2:34 p.m. EDT New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) — As much as 2.5 million gallons of oil could flow into the Gulf of Mexico for two weeks if Tropical Storm Alex forces a work stoppage at the ruptured BP well. Adm. Thad Allen, the government's disaster response manager, said Saturday that gale-force winds near the well head would prompt an evacuation of the thousands of workers and vessels involved in the oil recovery and cleanup effort. It would take 14 days to put everything back in place, Allen said. That means the containment cap would be off for that period, allowing oil to flow freely. Researchers have estimated that between 35,000 barrels — about 1.5 million gallons — and 60,000 barrels — about 2.5 million gallons — of oil are gushing into the ocean every day. Anxiety levels rose Saturday as Alex churned toward Mexico with a potential for hurricane force winds in the coming days. The storm is not on track to directly pass over oil-affected areas but forecasters have not ruled out an easterly shift in Alex's path. “We all know the weather is unpredictable, and we could have a sudden last-minute change,” Allen said. Alex — the first named storm of what is expected to be a fierce Atlantic hurricane season — formed in the Caribbean on Saturday and had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph. It was heading toward Belize and Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. Allen said it would take five days to evacuate more than 38,000 people and 6,000 vessels that are involved in the oil response as well as the two rigs that are collecting about 24,500 barrels of oil a day from the well, Allen said. He told CNN there is “no playbook” when it comes to responding to a massive oil spill as a storm brews. “But I will tell you there's been an extraordinary amount of planning being done,” he said. BP plans to place a third rig called the Helix Producer at the well site next week, which will increase the amount of oil being captured to 53,000 barrels a day, Allen said. That, too, could be disrupted if Alex affects the area. Gulf Coast residents feared that high winds and storm surges could spread the slick and push more oil ashore into bays, estuaries and pristine beaches, exacerbating the oil disaster triggered by BP's ruptured well. “The greatest nightmare with this storm approaching is that it takes this oil on the surface of the Gulf and blows it over the barrier islands into the bays and the estuaries,” Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Florida, told CNN. “And that is where you really get the enormous destruction, because it's just very difficult to clean up those pristine bays.” Americans took to beaches Saturday to protest offshore oil drilling. They held hands and formed lines in the sand. “I believe Americans need to stand together and take our energy future back from the grip of the oil industry,” said Dave Rauschkolb, a restaurant owner from Seaside, Florida, who founded Hands Across the Sand. Deepwater drilling could resume by the end of July after U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Thursday denied a request to keep a six-month moratorium imposed by President Barack Obama on May 27 in place, pending a government appeal. The government has 30 days to show it is beginning to comply with Feldman's order and start issuing permits. The appeals process can continue, but until the appeal, the government must act as if Feldman's order will be upheld. While protesters lined the sand, Alex moved toward Mexico, no one knowing whether it would make a sudden turn north into the open Gulf. Meteorologist Karen Maginnis said the “preferred scenario” actually would be for Alex to head to northern Florida. That's because the oil spill has been gradually rotating counterclockwise. If the storm heads to the east of it, it would send the oil farther out to sea. If the storm heads more directly towards the central Gulf and Louisiana, it might push the oil toward Florida. “We've never been in this situation before,” Maginnis said. “We've never seen an oil spill that encompassed the Gulf like this, end up so close to shore.” A powerful storm would also complicate efforts to clean up miles of coastline. “It's going to mean we're going to have to find a way to maneuver all our resources, change things,” said Grover Robinson, chairman of the Escambia County Commission in Pensacola, Florida. “We won't be able to fight the oil for a couple of days. And we have no idea about winds and current and what it will do to the oil in the gulf. So obviously, it's a very big concern for us.” Allen said he and some top Obama administration officials, including Vice President Joe Biden, will be headed back to the Gulf region next week to assess the oil relief efforts. But in a new blow to fishermen, Mississippi officials announced that waters east of the Gulfport shipping channel would be closed to shrimping, because of oil sighted in the area. In one Vietnamese fishing community in Biloxi, the oil spill has been devastating. Jennifer Le said her father has known nothing but shrimping since coming to America. He doesn't know how he would succeed in any other career and his checks from BP have not been enough. “I mean, everything was based on the waters and now it's just, it's just gone,” Le said. Aside from state closures, the federal government has banned fishing in 78,597 square miles of the Gulf, which is about 32.5 percent of of federal waters. Like Le, many oil-affected residents face an ominous future. But this week, there was some promising news for potentially tens of thousands of people seeking claims against BP. Kenneth Feinberg, who is administering the $20 billion compensation fund set up by BP under White House prodding, says that people who work in support of oil rigs will be able to file claims — and not just fishermen and businesses along the coast. Employees of businesses that brings tools to oil rigs, for example, also would be able to file a claim. The company previously agreed to set aside the $20 billion in an escrow account for spill-related costs, a sum that does not cover fees and penalties that could be imposed by the federal government. BP had resisted approving claims by people who said they were affected by the moratorium on oil drilling, saying it was imposed by the Obama administration. But Feinberg said BP and the administration now have agreed those claims will be covered. “I now have discovered — I didn't realize this until yesterday, but the moratorium claims will fall under my jurisdiction,” he told CNN. To date, almost 74,000 claims have been filed and more than 39,000 payments have been made, totaling almost $126 million, according to the company. CNN's Brandon Miller, T.J. Holmes and Moni Basu contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

AARP Dumbs Down Maryland’s Important Smart Grid Initiative

Old Buick drivers lobby ’till the wheels are off. Image credit: Jennifer Zimmerman, Pbase The codger lobby is frantically arguing that smart metering will bring added expense to the low income retiree. It’s paranoid, unsubstantiated thinking and it’s working. The Maryland Public Service Commission has sunk a flagship smart grid initiative of the Obama Administration, As reported in the NYT Energy & Environment section : “A utility proposal to install smart mete… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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AARP Dumbs Down Maryland’s Important Smart Grid Initiative