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Environmental Headlines
Latest
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  • Trend watching at the Greenbuild Expo in Phoenix
  • Continental Airlines reports 800% jump in recyclables collected in 2009
  • America Recycles Day
  • Coulomb sets up EV stations in Elk Horn, Iowa
  • Energy Star TVs will have to meet higher test
  • Report says green construction creates jobs
  • Mercedes-Benz will debut hybrid SUV
  • Top green cooks transform Thanksgiving dishes
  • Check rebellious toilets with the Leak Alertor
  • World oil reserves may be less than officials say
  • Rwanda, investors sign $250 million bio-fuel deal

    November 24th, 2009 · No Comments

    From Green Right Now Reports

    San Francisco Bay Area-based Eco-Fuel Global this week signed an agreement with the Government of Rwanda to produce bio-fuels from Jatropha Curcas. The deal, estimated to be worth in excess of $250 million, would replace up to 20 percent of the Rwandan fossil fuel requirement with low emission bio-fuels.

    Jatropha Curcas is a poisonous shrub whose seeds contain oil that is used to produce biodiesel fuel that is usable in a standard diesel engine.

    “This marks the beginning of one of the largest sustainable biofuel projects in the world,” Mark O’Brien, CEO of Eco-Fuel Global, said in a statement. “Rwanda is leading the world in a new generation of environmentally friendly and economically responsible energy production.”

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    City of Houston launching electric vehicle pilot project

    November 18th, 2009 · No Comments

    From Green Right Now Reports

    The City of Houston and Reliant Energy are launching a program to bring plug-in hybrid electric vehicles to the streets of Houston, to demonstrate the important role that electric cars can play in the city’s clean energy future.

    Under the program, called the “Power of the Plug-In,” 10 city-owned Toyota Prius cars will be converted to plug-in hybrid electric vehicles and 10 vehicle-charging stations will be installed to power them. The Power of the Plug-In is designed to raise consumer awareness and education about plug-in electric cars and to promote Houston and Texas as an electric vehicle center. Seven of the 10 stations will be available to the public, representing the largest public charging infrastructure in Texas, the city said.

    “We’re committed to making Houston the nation’s green energy capital,” Houston Mayor Bill White said in a statement. “That commitment begins at City Hall and these clean-running electric cars and the charging stations that will be available to all Houstonians will get us farther down that road.”

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    Zerofootprint introduces the TalkingPlug

    November 17th, 2009 · No Comments

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Most commodities come with a clear price attached to a distinct amount. A bag of potatoes, a can of beans, a jar of peanut butter….the cost of these is stamped on a sign at the grocery and an individual label breaks down the nutritional details.

    Zerofootprint's Talking Plug

    Zerofootprint's Talking Plug

    Electricity is sold with a price tag also, a price per kilowatt. Every month, customers pay a provider based on how many kilowatts their household has used. But there’s no label breakdown.

    We don’t know how much electricity was expended to power the HVAC or dishwasher or fridge or computer. It’s a mystery what caused that spike in our bill. Our worst power phantoms are hiding.

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    World oil reserves may be less than officials say

    November 11th, 2009 · No Comments

    Green Right Now Reports

    The world is running out of oil faster than the “official” report from the International Energy Agency suggests, according to an exclusive news report in the UK’s Guardian.

    Whistleblowers, one inside the agency and one who has left the agency, say that the IEA has been downplaying the coming shortage of oil for fear of triggering a panic.

    Further, the whistleblower still employed by the IEA (described as a “senior official” who wished to remain anonymous), says that the agency’s reluctance to come clean about oil supplies has been the result of pressure from the United States.

    These allegations raise questions about the IEA’s prediction that oil production could be raised from its current level of 83 million barrels a day to 105 million barrels a day to meet increasing demand expected as the world comes out of the recession.

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    Utah wind farm to help light up LA

    November 11th, 2009 · 1 Comment

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Officials gathered in a tiny corner of Utah yesterday to celebrate a new age of energy production that will carry the power of the wind to where it is needed most, in this case, to population centers in California.

    Wind tubines outside Milford, Utah (Photo: First Wind)

    Wind tubines outside Milford, Utah (Photo: First Wind)

    The occasion was the opening of the “Milford Wind Corridor Project,” which is expected to generate enough electricity to power about 45,000 Southern California homes.

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    Washington in a lather as Kerry-Boxer climate bill passes out of committee

    November 5th, 2009 · No Comments

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Today, environmentalists, climate change activists and Americans who want legislation to control carbon pollution were cheered to see climate action take another step forward.

    The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee passed the Clean Energy Jobs for American Power Act, meaning the full Senate will now get to debate the bill which aims to put America on a clean energy path.

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    Wind industry ahead of projections

    October 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    The Roscoe, Texas, project became the world's largest win farm.

    The Roscoe, Texas, project became the world's largest win farm.

    The US wind industry will finish 2009 ahead of projections for wind installations, though the numbers will still fall behind the industry’s record-breaking year in 2008.

    “It’s not a bad year given the financial crisis,” said Liz Salerno, director of industry data and analysis at the American Wind Energy Association, in a news conference this week.

    [Read more →]

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    Clean-tech jobs on the increase, and they’re not just for geeks and experts

    October 20th, 2009 · No Comments

    Roof-mounted solar panels on Hall's Warehouse in South Plainfield New Jersey. (Photo: Business Wire)

    Roof-mounted solar panels on Hall's Warehouse in South Plainfield New Jersey. (Photo: Business Wire)

    By Melissa Segrest
    Green Right Now

    The latest generation of workers in clean technology jobs aren’t all engineers, tech experts and scientists. They aren’t all in Silicon Valley – some are from Detroit or Gary, Ind.

    They may come from community colleges or be fresh out of high school.

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    DOE funding solar projects in 16 cities

    October 16th, 2009 · No Comments

    From Green Right Now Reports

    The Department of Energy announced $10 million has been awarded to 16 cities for 40 new Solar America Cities Special Projects. The funds, made through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, will enable the cities to increase solar energy use in their communities through innovative programs and policies that the government believes can be replicated across the nation.

    The cities chosen for these awards came from the group of 25 large U.S. cities that are part of the DOE’s Solar America Cities program, which recognizes the participating cities as partners highly committed to solar technology adoption at the local level. Those cities already have been given millions of dollars in funds and technical assistance to accelerate solar adoption.

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    Solar Decathlon shows that homes can run on the sun

    October 15th, 2009 · No Comments

    By Ashley Phillips
    Green Right Now

    Tomorrow’s leaders are already working towards a cleaner future. The Solar Decathlon, an international competition hosted by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), is showcasing solar-powered home designs created by students from around the world.

    Students selected to participate were given two years to design and build solar homes, which must be carbon neutral and completely powered by the sun. The projects, many costing hundreds of thousands of dollars, are on display at the National Mall in Washington through Sunday (Oct. 18).

    Two thousand students came together to form 20 teams, which are competing to win prizes in several categories, such as best architecture or engineering or “comfort zone.”

    The Solar Decathlon Proposal Review Committee, which is made up of engineers, scientist, and other experts from the DOE and its National Renewable Energy Laboratory, selected the teams that they thought had the ability to meet the strict structural and safety requirements. Once selected, each team was given $100,000 to get started. Projects often require more, so individual teams then raise any additional funds.

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    Sacramento company adding solar power to produce recycled plastic

    October 14th, 2009 · No Comments

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Plastic Package Inc., which manufactures 100-percent post consumer recycled plastic containers, said it will installing the largest cylindrical thin film solar system west of New Jersey to power its operations.

    The project will use solar technology from Solyndra.

    The project will use solar technology from Solyndra.

    The Sacramento, Calif., company said it will use solar technology from Solyndra for the project. That Bay Area company recently was funded by a $535 million loan guarantee from the Department of Energy. Plastic Package officials said the installation will be done by Premier Power Renewable Energy of El Dorado Hills.

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    From poop to power, here’s a truly alternative energy source

    October 9th, 2009 · No Comments

    By Ashley Phillips
    Green Right Now

    Farm Power, a Washington-based renewable energy company, and Washington utility company Puget Sound Energy (PSE) are giving new meaning to making cowssomething new out of something old. Farm Power says it has developed a “manure digester” — a system that turns cow manure into electricity — in Skagit County, Wash.

    The manure digester captures the methane biogas from the waste, and holds it in an air tight tank, which then heats the manure to 100 degrees Fahrenheit. The harvested methane becomes an alternative fuel and is sold to PSE. The leftover processed manure is then taken to other farms and used as an organic fertilizer.

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