Friday, July 27, 2007

SunPower Dedicates 330 Megawatt Solar Cell Fabrication Plant

SunPower Dedicates 330 Megawatt Solar Cell Fab:
"SunPower Corporation (Nasdaq: SPWR), a Silicon
Valley-based manufacturer of high-efficiency
solar cells, solar panels and solar systems,
today announced the inauguration of its second
solar cell fabrication facility, known as cell
Fab 2, in the Philippines. The dedication of cell
Fab 2 will take place on July 30, 2007 at the new
plant, located in Batangas, south of Manila.
President Macapagal Arroyo of the Philippines
and The Honorable Raphael P. M. Lotilla, secretary
of energy, will be on hand to help inaugurate
the facility which has been recognized by the
International Energy Agency for its superior
energy-efficient design."

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Paint or print your Solar Panel

Researchers at New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) have developed an inexpensive solar cell that can be painted or printed on flexible plastic sheets. “The process is simple,” said lead researcher and author Somenath Mitra, PhD, professor and acting chair of NJIT’s Department of Chemistry and Environmental Sciences. “Someday homeowners will even be able to print sheets of these solar cells with inexpensive home-based inkjet printers. Consumers can then slap the finished product on a wall, roof or billboard to create their own power stations.”

NJIT Researchers Develop Inexpensive, Easy Process To Produce Solar Panels

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

New Solar cell record, 42.8 efficiency

Using a novel technology that adds multiple innovations to a very high-performance crystalline silicon solar cell platform, a consortium led by the University of Delaware has achieved a record-breaking combined solar cell efficiency of 42.8 percent from sunlight at standard terrestrial conditions.
42.8 is a significant advance from the current record of 40.7 percent announced in December and demonstrates an important milestone on the path to the 50 percent efficiency goal set by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). In November 2005, the UD-led consortium received approximately $13 million in funding for the initial phases of the DARPA Very High Efficiency Solar Cell (VHESC) program to develop affordable portable solar cell battery chargers.
UD-led team sets solar cell record, joins DuPont on $100 million project

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Murdoch: I'm proud to be green and I am (RavenII) suprised!

Well I do have my surprises, but how did this escape me? Does R.Murdoch sounds a Green name to you! And nor did I like his political affiliation's either. I never thought I will have something nice to say about Rupert Merdoch but now I have!, with a little help form;
The Conservation Report: ENERGY: Murdoch: I'm proud to be green

"In one of the most unexpected conversions since Saul of Tarsus hit the road to Damascus, Rupert Murdoch is turning into a green campaigner. He is making the whole of his worldwide operations carbon neutral and setting out to "educate and engage" his readers and viewers about global warming.

He believes his companies' "global reach" presents "an unprecedented opportunity to raise awareness and to stimulate action around the world". A former skeptic who confesses to having been "somewhat wary of the warming debate", he laid on his first global webcast for all his employees on Wednesday to tell them that he was "changing the DNA of our business". He added that he had started with himself, buying a hybrid car.

Mr Murdoch's conversion, which may surprise employees like Jeremy Clarkson, was heavily influenced by his son James - who took BSkyB carbon neutral a year ago this week - as well as by Tony Blair and former US vice-president Al Gore. All three attended his annual meeting for senior executives in Pebble Beach, California, last year where he was convinced to take the lead on the issue.

Mr Murdoch has bought a Toyota-made Lexus GS450H "green" car, and other practical measures include solar-powered golf carts to carry people round the Fox film lot in Hollywood, building environmentally friendly studios, replacing company fleets with hybrids, using renewable energy, and offsetting remaining emissions by financing windpower in India."

Thanks everyone!

The Interior Department would review and may overturn eight decisions on wildlife and land-use issues

Although endangered species is not a subject that I spend time on, I would like to direct you to a news release by US Fish and Wildlife Service . It shows how much the politics play on every decisions made on or about planet earth. As if you did not know! But it surprise me every time.

The Interior Department said Friday that it would review and probably overturn eight decisions on wildlife and land-use issues made by a senior political appointee, Julie A. MacDonald, who has been found to have improperly favored industry and landowners over agency scientists.


The conflict between science and political ideology has been a recurrent theme in Washington in recent years, with complaints arising from inside and outside the administration about decisions on oil exploration, timber rights, global warming and public health. Just last week, the former surgeon general Richard H. Carmona said top Bush administration officials had repeatedly tried to water down or suppress important public health reports for political considerations.

The species that could receive additional protection are the white-tailed prairie dog, Preble’s meadow jumping mouse, 12 species of Hawaiian picture-wing flies, the arroyo toad, the Southwestern willow flycatcher, the California red-legged frog and the Canada lynx. The extent of Rocky Mountain habitat protection for the jumping mouse is also under review.

Environmental advocates said numerous cases of potential political interference by Ms. MacDonald or others in the department were left off the list of decisions to be reviewed. They cited as examples decisions affecting the status of the marbled murrelet, a small sea bird found in the Pacific Northwest; a plan to help speed the spotted owl’s recovery; and the habitat of the bull trout.

NY Times article. (Archived articles may require you to register)

Thursday, July 19, 2007

BP Solar to Welcome Governor O'Malley at Groundbreaking Ceremony

BP Solar and Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley break ground today on what is now a $97 million expansion project that will further bolster the facility's output of solar energy products. Already the largest fully integrated solar plant in North America, the plan is to nearly double the current casting and sizing capacity to approximately 150 MW and will create approximately 70 new jobs.

Exactly nine months ago, the company announced it would invest $70 million in the project. That figure has now been increased to $97 million, which will allow for space to further enlarge its manufacturing capacity to 400+ MW in its casting, sizing, and wafering processes. Construction is slated for completion by the end of 2009.
This project is part of a larger growth plan for BP Solar globally. Earlier this year, the company announced it began construction on two mega cell plants -- one at its European headquarters in Tres Cantos, Spain, and the second at its joint venture facility, Tata BP Solar, in Bangalore, India.
"Expanding our Frederick plant ensures that BP Solar stays at the forefront of the global solar industry by meeting demand, providing
innovative products to our current customer base, and allowing us to enter new markets," said Lee Edwards, BP Solar CEO. "We recognize that in order to do business in the long term we must respect the broader needs of communities where we operate and be good corporate citizens. So, to complement our expansion plans, we will integrate sustainable building techniques such as a roof garden, bio- retention, extensive water recycling and the implementation of LEED(TM) (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) design components such as energy efficient lighting, cooling and heating."
Furthermore, to help educate Maryland students about the importance of solar energy, BP announces it will contribute $100,000 to the Maryland Solar Schools program. Administered by the Solar Schools Foundation, the program assists schools in the installation of solar electric systems,provides curriculum guidance, technical assistance, and can provide limited
grants to help defray the high upfront cost of solar.
"I am proud to be here today to celebrate the expansion of BP Solar in the State of maryland," said Governor Martin O'Malley. "By capitalizing on Maryland's existing renewable industry and recently enacted legislation to
promote solar and wind energy, I hope to make Maryland the engine of the renewable energy economy. Today, BP is helping to lead the way by using sustainable building techniques and investing $100,000 in Maryland's Solar
Schools Program."

In April, Gov. O'Malley signed into law Senate Bill 595, which establishes a market for solar power and encourages homeowners, businesses and others to invest in roof-top systems to lower their electricity bills.
"Solar energy is an important option to address rising electricity rates," said Edwards. "With its recently-passed legislation, Maryland is
now among a number of states across the country with programs to promote the installation of clean and reliable solar power. At a time when
electricity rates are increasing, this legislation allows homeowners to reduce their power bills through their own solar system on their home."
BP Solar is a key business within BP Alternative Energy and a global company with over 2,200 employees focused on harnessing the sun's energy to produce solar electricity. This includes the design, manufacture and marketing of quality solar electric systems for a wide range of applications in the residential, commercial and industrial sectors. With
over 30 years of experience and installations in over 160 countries, BP Solar is one of the world's largest solar companies and has manufacturing facilities in the U.S., Spain, India and Australia. BP Solar is part of BP,one of the world's leading energy companies. To learn more, visit http://www.bpsolar.us.
Information on the Maryland Solar Schools Program can be found here
http://www.e3energy.com/SSF/index.html
Information on the LEED program can be found here
http://www.usgbc.org/DisplayPage.aspx?CategoryID=19

BP
Solar to Welcome Governor O'Malley at Groundbreaking Ceremony to
Celebrate Multi-Million Dollar Expansion Project and Contribution to
Maryland Solar Schools Program
:

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

The future of biofuels is not in corn!

WASHINGTON, July 18 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The future
of biofuels is not in corn, says a new report released
today by Food & Water Watch,the Network for New Energy
Choices, and the Vermont Law School Institute for Energy
and the Environment. The corn ethanol refinery industry,
the beneficiary of new renewable fuel targets in the
proposed energy legislation and proposed loan guarantee
subsidies in the 2007 Farm Bill, will not significantly
offset U.S. fossil fuel consumption without unacceptable
environmental and economic consequences.
"Rural communities won't benefit from the Farm Bill
becoming a fuel bill. In the long run, family farmers
and the environment will be losers,while agribusiness,
whose political contributions are fueling the ethanol
frenzy, will become the winners," said
Food & Water Watch Executive Director Wenonah Hauter.
Full Report:
http://www.newenergychoices.org/uploads/RushToEthanol-bro.pdf

Saturday, July 14, 2007

"Tandem" organic solar cell with increased efficiency created

(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Using plastics to harvest the energy of the sun just got a significant boost in efficiency thanks to a discovery made at the Center for Polymers and Organic Solids at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Nobel laureate Alan Heeger, professor of physics at UC Santa Barbara, worked with Kwanghee Lee of Korea and a team of other scientists to create a new "tandem" organic solar cell with increased efficiency. The discovery, explained in the July 13 issue of the journal Science, marks a step forward in materials science.

Tandem cells are comprised of two multilayered parts that work together to gather a wider range of the spectrum of solar radiation –– at both shorter and longer wavelengths. "The result is six and a half percent efficiency," said Heeger. "This is the highest level achieved for solar cells made from organic materials. I am confident that we can make additional improvements that will yield efficiencies sufficiently high for commercial products." He expects this technology to be on the market in about three years.

Heeger and Lee have collaborated for many years on developing solar cells. The new tandem architecture that they discovered both improves light harvesting and promises to be less expensive to produce. In their paper, the authors explain that the cells "… can be fabricated to extend over large areas by means of low-cost printing and coating technologies that can simultaneously pattern the active materials on lightweight flexible substrates."

The multilayered device is the equivalent of two cells in series, said Heeger. The deposition of each layer of the multilayer structure by processing the materials from solution is what promises to make the solar cells less expensive to produce.

"Tandem solar cells, in which two solar cells with different absorption characteristics are linked to use a wider range of the solar spectrum, were fabricated with each layer processed from solution with the use of bulk heterojunction materials comprising semiconducting polymers and fullerene derivatives," wrote the authors.

The cells are separated and connected by the material TiOx, a transparent titanium oxide. This is the key to the multilayer system that allows for the higher-level efficiencies. TiOx transports electrons and is a collecting layer for the first cell. In addition, it acts as a stable foundation that allows the fabrication of the second cell, thus completing the tandem cell architecture.

Heeger shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in the year 2000, with Alan MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa, for the "discovery and development of conducting polymers." The tandem solar cells reported in the Science article utilize semiconducting polymers from the class of materials that were recognized by the award of the Nobel Prize.

With Howard Berke, Heeger in 2000 co-founded Konarka Technologies, based in Lowell, Mass., to develop and market solar cells based on this technology.

Heeger recently was presented with the Italian Prize for Energy and the Environment (Eni Italgas Prize) for his discoveries and research accomplishments in the field of "plastic" solar cells. The Italian agency cited Heeger "for research that will begin to contribute to the energy needs of our planet in the near future."

An exciting aspect of the latest discovery is that it is expected to contribute to third world usage of technologies such as laptop computers in areas that are "off the electricity grid."

The work described in the Science article was performed at UC Santa Barbara's Center for Polymers and Organic Solids. Heeger's longtime collaborator Lee, a professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, in Gwangju, Korea, made fundamentally important contributions, along with first author Jin Young Kim, a postdoctoral fellow who is also from Korea. Other collaborators from UCSB's Center for Polymers and Organic Solids include Nelson E. Coates, Daniel Moses, Thuc-Quyen Nguyen, and Mark Dante.

About Alan Heeger

Professor Heeger shared the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2000 for his role in the revolutionary discovery that plastics can have the properties of metals and semiconductors, a finding that created an important new field of research. A member of the UCSB faculty since 1982, Professor Heeger was director of the Institute for Polymers and Organic Solids for 17 years, until 1999. The recipient of many international honors and awards, he is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a member of both the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. In 2003 he was named to a University of California Presidential Chair, an honor reserved for the institution's most distinguished scholars. Konarka, a company he co-founded, was recently named one of the "Ten to Watch," in a new book, "The Clean Tech Revolution."

Straight from University of Santa Barbara news release.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

That Bottle of Water you carry, carries a message!

In San Francisco, the municipal water comes from inside Yosemite National Park. It's so good the EPA doesn't require San Francisco to filter it. If you bought and drank a bottle of Evian, you could refill that bottle once a day for 10 years, 5 months, and 21 days with San Francisco tap water before that water would cost $1.35. Put another way, if the water we use at home cost what even cheap bottled water costs, our monthly water bills would run $9,000.

This is a tiny part of a extremely well researched and well written article by Charles Fishman at Fast Company.
The article goes to lengths to explain the current status of the bottled water market and sheer vastness of it that get water shipped from Fiji islands to quench thirst in USA..
This article with certainly make you thirsty, please follow the link below;

Message in a Bottle at Fast Company

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Environmentalist Lady-Bird Jonson, farewell First Lady!


It is not easy to write about a First lady and Environmental issues in one single article. It is even harder, if this relates to events that happened long before environment was a buzz word!
I was moved to read an article about former First Lady, Lady-Bird Jonson that started with;
"When you see a pretty vista along an interstate highway, unmarred by a junkyard or a billboard telling you to Eat at Joe's, you can thank Lady Bird Johnson."
The AP article by By KELLEY SHANNON is telling us something that every one should know, lest these heroes and heroines be forgotten amidst these global visionaries who are pushing forward to save the planet earth. Here is the article;

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - When you see a pretty vista along an interstate highway, unmarred by a junkyard or a billboard telling you to Eat at Joe's, you can thank Lady Bird Johnson.

Johnson loved nature and Texas wildflowers, and her devotion to the beauty and usefulness of native plants may well be the former first lady's biggest legacy.

Breaking ground as an activist first lady, she pressed for cleanup efforts in the nation's capital and had a key role in lobbying for the passage of the Highway Beautification Bill in 1965. The $320 million bill became known as ``The Lady Bird Bill.''

According to the Federal Highway Administration's account, the first lady was particularly incensed by what she saw while traveling to campaign stops during the 1964 election. On a stop in Portland, Ore., in September 1964, the president said the auto junkyards they had seen during the campaign ``are driving my wife mad.''

Even earlier, economist John Kenneth Galbraith had lamented, in his 1958 book, ``The Affluent Society,'' that motorists move through ``a countryside that has been rendered largely invisible by commercial art.''

The bill, signed Oct. 22, 1965, provided incentives to reduce the number of billboards and remove or shield other ugly sights along federal highways. Planting wildflowers and other native plants along highways - already a well-established program in Texas - was expanded.

Johnson showed her love of flowers in other ways, both in the White House and afterward. She commissioned a china service for the White House that featured dozens of different wildflowers, including the official flowers of the 50 states.

On her 70th birthday, in 1982, she and actress Helen Hayes founded the National Wildflower Research Center in Austin. It was later renamed the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center.

Its purpose is to encourage people to understand, love and preserve the natural beauty of the nation's landscape. Plants unique to central Texas ecosystems are featured at the center and are displayed in gardens and natural areas.

The center, which operates on private donations, along with grants and admission fees, also has on its grounds a rainwater collection and storage system, recycled building materials, American folk art and educational facilities.

``This is her great joy and passion in life,'' former executive director Robert Breunig once said.

Harry Middleton, the retired director of the LBJ Library and Museum in Austin, said her efforts helped foster interest in the environment.

``So she figures mightily, I think, in the history of the country if for no other reason than that alone,'' Middleton said. Environmentalism boomed after the establishment of the first Earth Day in 1970, the year after the Johnson administration ended.

Lady Bird Johnson said she founded the wildflower center to educate people about the environmental necessity, economic value and natural beauty of native plants.

``Our center works for more than the lovely blossoms in our open spaces,'' Johnson wrote in a message on the center's Web site. ``We are concerned for all of North America's native plants, from the smallest sprout to the tallest tree.''

She pointed out that more than 4,000 native plant species are in danger of extinction nationwide.

``Will these plants be lost to all but memory, with succeeding generations losing even that fragile connection? Are there sources of food, fiber, or medicine that might perish with them? How do we save these species in the face of an ever-expanding human population and its impact on the land?''

May God bless you! and thank you for being Lady-Bird Jonson!

On the Net:

Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center:

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

EnergyStar 4.0, New Specifications for Many Office Products in 2007

2007 brings new ENERGY STAR specifications for office and imaging equipment. This means it will be more difficult for computers, copiers, fax machines, mailing machines, multifunction devices (MFDs), printers, and scanners to earn the ENERGY STAR

Energy Star 3.0 was all over the place, but those standards have been in place for a decade. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will introduce new ENERGY STAR 4.0 requirements on July 20th, 2007. What’s going to change? What is in it? What do manufacturers have to do to get compliant? What does business' need to do to be compliant? well it seems that it is easier than one tend to assume. Even small business' can still save money on power and cooling by implementing ENERGY STAR 4.0 compliant desktops and other office appliances.

There are two fundamental changes from the current ENERGY STAR 3.0 program to the ENERGY STAR 4.0 that will have a decided impact on your organization should you choose to implement the new standards:
  1. Idle power usage will now be measured and used as a metric to earn the ENERGY STAR 4.0 rating as opposed to Standby power.
  2. An 80% efficient power supplies are a requirement.
In Standby, the number of storage devices, processor cores, graphics power, memory, etc. makes very little difference to the power used. These devices are either turned off or are in a very low power state. However, in idle, all these devices are drawing power. The amount of memory or the number of hard drives has a big impact on power used. This is why the ENERGY STAR 3.0 configuration you’re buying today might not be a configuration that will meet ENERGY STAR 4.0 in the future.

The 80% efficient power supply is a principal requirement of Energy Star 4.0 and a major new innovation. What is an 80% efficient power supply? When a power supply converts AC power from the wall to the various DC voltages that the computer needs, there is always a loss of power. The power loss varies with how busy the computer is. An 80% efficient power supply is guaranteed to lose less than 20% of the AC power at 20%, 50% and 100% loads. Currently, power supplies for desktop computers range from approximately 65% to 75% efficiency.

Revisions to existing specifications by energy Star!

Monday, July 09, 2007

Platinum LEED Rating from U.S. Green Building Council is awarded to Ranch House at Del Sur

SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Ranch House at Del Sur, the information center for the newly opened master-planned community by Black Mountain Ranch LLC in north San Diego, last week was awarded a Platinum LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification, a program of the U.S. Green Building Council and the most widely recognized standard worldwide for sustainable, high-performance, low-energy-use buildings.

With a point score of 59 out of a total 69 points possible, the 3,000-square-foot Ranch House is the first private-enterprise, new construction building to achieve Platinum rating in California, and San Diegos first Platinum-rated structure.

The Ranch House is to be commended for its LEED Platinum Certification, said Rick Fedrizzi, President, CEO & Founding Chair, U.S. Green Building Council. As a visitor information and resource center, the Ranch House will serve as an example to the community as well as raise awareness among consumers and new home builders. The Ranch House will be a model for master-planned community development.

Of the approximately 680 LEED-NC (new construction) certified buildings in the world, only 28 have achieved Platinum certification. Many Ranch House features are available as standard or options to the 2,500 homes under construction at Del Sur. In addition, the Ranch House is actively promoted as a showcase and resource to all San Diegans to encourage learning about and committing to environmental stewardship.

Were honored that the Ranch House has been recognized by the Green Building Council with its highest rating, said Fred Maas, president and CEO of Black Mountain Ranch LLC, developer of the 1,800-acre Del Sur. The Ranch House is the focal point of the Del Sur vision: celebrating heritage, craftsmanship and sustainability. Everything from the land planning to the recycling of construction waste to the use of Earth-friendly materials and techniques is part of the Del Sur green building strategy.

Fullerton Architects P.C., of Kalispell, MT provided architectural design services, in consultation with LEED consultant Hernando Miranda of Soltierra, Inc. in San Diego. Landscape architecture was provided by Vita Planning & Landscape Architecture and Wimmer Yamada and Caughey, and interior design was provided by San Diego-based Design Line Interiors. Standard Pacific Homes constructed the Ranch House at Del Sur, and Benchmark Landscape provided landscape installation services.

Resource Conservation, Recycling and Reuse

Through the incorporation of efficient appliances, weather-based irrigation and low-water plant palettes, combined annual estimated water savings are 70 percent, or more than one million gallons saved per year. A photovoltaic (solar) energy system provides about half the buildings power, while natural lighting, EnergyStar appliances, and efficient ductwork save approximately 57 percent of energy annually. Wind credits offset the remainder of the energy use, making the Ranch House a net-zero consumption facility.

Approximately 89% of construction waste at the Ranch House was recycled, and materials were re-used on-site where possible. Cork in the flooring, sunflower husks in countertops, wheat waste in cabinets and ceilings, and salvaged timbers used in flooring and ceiling trusses are among the reclaimed or rapidly-renewable resources on display at the Ranch House.

The porous concrete driveway leading to the Ranch House aids with groundwater filtration and mitigates storm-water runoff. Electric vehicles, dedicated carpool parking spaces and bike racks offer and demonstrate a variety of resources for alternative transportation.

About the U.S. Green Building Council and LEED Certification

The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) is a non-profit composed of leaders from across the building industry working to advance buildings that are environmentally responsible, profitable and healthy places to live and work. Driving its mission to transform the built environment is the Councils LEED® (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Green Building Rating System, which is accessible on-line and supported by a robust LEED Workshop program and the LEED Professional Accreditation program. For more information, visit www.usgbc.org.

Live Earth is a successful event in rising awareness of global warming all over the world!

Organizers of this weekend's Live Earth concerts are calling it the biggest musical event ever staged.

The 29-hour music marathon featured 100 of the biggest names in music and spanned seven continents with an estimated worldwide television audience of 2 billion.

The concert was also available on the Internet. More than 10 million people tuned in to the video broadcast on LiveEarth.MSN.com, (Which made it difficult for many users to see the concert!) making it the most watched online event ever.

I Started with Australia, Japan and ended up with Police in New Jersey!, it even had a band performing in Antarctica! Brazil, which was the only free concert, touted to have had the largest audience, anywhere from 200000 to 100000!.

The event ended Saturday night at Giants Stadium in New Jersey with a plea to concert-goers from organizer and former U.S. vice president Al Gore.

Gore called on fans to adhere to a seven-point pledge to tackle global warming. I have done most of the pledges already! Except for the driving bit!.

"Put all of this energy in your heart and help us solve the climate crisis," said the former vice president, appearing on stage at the end of the New Jersey concert with his wife Tipper.

Friday, July 06, 2007

Ten things to do at home to keep our Earth Alive,


While watching Live Earth,Do your part to ensure a healthy planet by incorporating these ten simple actions into your everyday life.

1) Replace your incandescent light bulbs with compact florescent lights (CFLs). Look closely at labels when buying light bulbs. Those marked as CFLs last 10 times longer and use 66 percent less energy than incandescent bulbs while delivering the same light levels. As a result, CFLs accrue net savings between $30 and $45 over their lifetimes, depending on your cost of electricity, the wattage size of the CFL, and the lamp's lifespan (manufacturers make CFLs that last 6,000, 8,000, or 10,000 hours). The return on investment is 15 times higher than leaving your money in a bank account or the average return on Dow Jones stock investments. CFLs also reduce the release of greenhouse gas emissions and are safer because they burn at a lower temperature (160° F or less) than incandescent and halogen lights, which can burn at temperatures up to 500° F.
2) Inflate your car tires. When walking or biking isn't feasible, you can do something to better protect the Earth while driving. Take a step in the right direction by inflating your car tires. Pumping them up can improve your gas mileage by about 3.3 percent – a savings of about 7 cents per gallon. It‘s the right thing to do for your wallet and the right thing to do for the Earth.
3) Weigh your ecological impact. It’s far easier than stepping on a scale. Take CI's short eco-footprint quiz to find out if you need to tread more lightly on Earth’s biodiversity. Measure how last year’s habits stack up, and you’ll be well on your way to becoming a full-fledged eco-warrior in the year ahead.
4) Turn down the hot water heater. Set your water heater to 130° F. While you’re at it, turn down your house thermostat during the winter to 55° F when you go to bed or leave home. These simple actions can have enormous positive consequences, preventing the emission of more than 1,100 pounds of carbon dioxide over the course of the year, while cutting your energy bill by more than 10 percent. And that’s just from you! Get your friends on board, and the benefits will multiply.
5) Choose your seafood wisely. We can’t afford to wait until 2008. The world’s seafood will be entirely depleted by 2048, according to an early November report in the journal Science. That means the moment to shape up is now. By buying and eating certain types of seafood, you can discourage harmful fishing practices and avoid the more depleted or threatened species. Take a look at Seafood Choices Alliance or Seafood Watch to make smart choices.
6) Replace your showerheads and faucets with high-efficiency models. Retrofitting just one showerhead and two faucets will reduce water usage by 50 percent to 70 percent, while maintaining the same user experience. The cost savings you’ll see on your water and electricity bills will pay for the retrofit in only three to 12 months.
7) Offset your carbon footprint. Carbon footprints are soooo last year. Luckily, CI's new carbon calculator guarantees you’ll be on the cutting edge. It empowers you to offset your personal impact on Earth’s rising climate. Donate $10 to offset your cross-country road trip, $20 for the upcoming family reunion, or $7 for a domestic roundtrip flight. Your money will help protect the roughly 832,000-acre Makira Forest in northeast Madagascar and prevent millions of tons of CO2 from entering the atmosphere.
8) Buy locally produced meats and produce. Sounds like a good idea, but you don’t know where to start? Just type in your zip code on Local Harvest's website to see a list of farms and farmers’ markets close to home, as well as nearby restaurants committed to supporting their neighbors. Buying locally produced food cuts out the middlemen and the vast amounts of energy required to get your products onto store shelves. Most produce in U.S. supermarkets travels an average 1,500 miles before it is sold!
9) Drink more water from reusable glassware. It’s great for your bank account, your health, and your planet. The average American consumed more than 400 beverage bottles and cans in 2006, leaving behind wasted glass, plastic, steel, and aluminum. That adds up to excessive amounts of fossil fuels and hydropower for mining, processing, refining, shaping, shipping, storing, refrigerating, and disposing of those materials. Of course, changing your drinking habits both at home and at work is applicable to just about every other habit, as well. You’ve heard it before and you’ll hear it again: Reduce, reuse, and recycle.
10) Turn down the thermostat just three degrees in the winter and up three degrees in the summer. You can prevent the emission of nearly 1,100 pounds of carbon dioxide annually.


Straight from Conservation International

Live Earth 070707 Live!

Live Earth 070707 is about o begin in Austrailia!
I am watching world feed now! Please Join!

Thursday, July 05, 2007

Steorn Orbo! Free Energy, may be after that free lunch!

I think one of the first physics lessons that you learn at school is about Principle of Conservation of Energy. The Simple fact that the principle of the conservation of energy states that energy can neither be created or destroyed, it can only change form.

The first law of thermodynamics is an expression of the universal law of conservation of energy, and identifies heat transfer as a form of energy transfer. The most common enunciation of first law of thermodynamics is:

"The increase in the internal energy of a thermodynamic system is equal to the amount of heat energy added to the system minus the work done by the system on the surroundings."

If you would like to learm more follow this link for historical time line.

But now Steorn, an Irish company, claims;

"Orbo produces free, clean and constant energy - that is our claim. By free we mean that the energy produced is done so without recourse to external source. By clean we mean that during operation the technology produces no emissions. By constant we mean that with the exception of mechanical failure the technology will continue to operate indefinitely.

The sum of these claims for our Orbo technology is a violation of the principle of conservation of energy, perhaps the most fundamental of scientific principles."
There were to be a demo today but it came against some problems that might get resolved so all of us can see a demonstration of this phenomenal form energy! and save the world!

"Important update on the Kinetica demo:

We are experiencing some technical difficulties with the demo unit in London. Our initial assessment indicates that this is probably due to the intense heat from the camera lighting. We have commenced a technical assessment and will provide an update later today. As a consequence, Kinetica will not be open to the public today (5th July). We apologize for this delay and appreciate your patience."

If this proves to be true as the creators claim, it will be a boom for green energy!


thmsdown

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Happy 4th of July 2007 America!


Be safe, Be free and Be thinking of Our world. Let's leave something behind so that they can land on!

Monday, July 02, 2007

WeSeePeople: Vote for New 7 Wonders of the world


Please go and vote for new seven wonders of the world, as this will work toward the awareness of the world and our heritage.
WeSeePeople: Vote for New 7 Wonders of the world

Go green through flowers and more

Sustainably grown, organic from "seed-to-store" flowers of every variety and color are now much more widely available. The best ones are from your own garden, farmer's market or local floral designer who specializes in organics. But when time and miles require a long distance solution, the Internet is suddenly filled with resources that will guarantee delivery of no-spray, sustainably grown beauty.

Look for the USDA Certified Organics seal, or the VerifloraTM emblem. VerifloraTM is America's first Green Label certification standard for the floral industry. The standard establishes procedures for verifying sustainable agricultural practices employed by flower and ornamental operations, from soil preparation and seed planting through production, harvest, and post-harvest handling. If a VerifloraTM farm is not already organic, it must have plans to make that transition.

Checkout Organicbouquet.com, which carries roses in just about every shade imaginable, as well as lilies and tulips, or Californiaorganicflower.com, which bills itself as the country's first online retailer of organic flowers.