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RFK Jr. explains why nuclear power isn’t green and coal isn’t cheap

February 25th, 2010 · No Comments

By Harriet Blake
Green Right Now

As passionate as his father was about civil rights, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is equally so about the environment.

In a lecture in Fort Worth on Wednesday, the 56-year-old son of the late Senator, advocated for moving the nation to green energy, which he doesn’t see as encompassing nuclear power.

Coal is not the only power-producing industry that needs scrubbing, said the longtime environmentalist, nuclear energy is simply not safe. “Nuclear energy is the most catastrophic form of energy. No bank will finance it…[and] no insurance company will insure it,” he said.

“It’s not just a bunch of hippies saying it’s unsafe. There are spills all the time into the Hudson,” says Kennedy, who serves as chief prosecuting attorney for the Hudson Riverkeeper, whose mission is the restoration of that waterway. Three Mile Island was not the last accident despite what nuclear advocates say.

He made it clear that lobbyists for fossil fuel and polluting energy industries are powerful and dangerous. The nuclear industry, for example, managed to find a way to get a Congressional exemption that leaves them free from damage. “All homeowners’ policies in the U.S. exclude radiation from the nuclear industry,” he said.

Kennedy believes greed has taken over the utility companies as well. “Utility companies make money by selling more energy – even if the energy is green. We need to change the rules,” he says. “Don’t reward bad behavior.”

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EDF releases the Texas Green Jobs Guidebook

February 11th, 2010 · No Comments

By Ashley Phillips
Green Right Now

The Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) and the Environmental Defense Fund, with the support of The Meadows Foundation have developed the Texas Green Jobs Guidebook.

The project highlights that in an emerging green energy economy, green means dollars. There are more than 200 green jobs listed in guidebook, as well as specific training and education opportunities across Texas, and the list is expected to grow. Green is not a short term trend, but a fundamental shift in political, corporate, and personal decision making, according to those advocating for green jobs.

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Wisconsin wind blade facility to create 600 jobs

February 10th, 2010 · No Comments

From Green Right Now Reports

While Washington leaders debate whether the stimulus money has done enough for the economy, Wisconsin has latched onto money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to kick start a wind turbine blade manufacturing plant in Wisconsin Rapids, a small city in the center of the state. The new factory is expected to be the most advanced in North America and employ more than 600 people.

The Energy Composites Corp. (ECC) facility will be built with the help of $238 million in municipal tax-free bonds from a pool of money (the state’s Recovery Zone Facility pool) created with federal stimulus dollars.

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Clean Energy Week brings activists, businessmen to Washington

February 2nd, 2010 · No Comments

By Bill Sullivan
Green Right Now

[caption id="attachment_8653" align="aligncenter" width="350" caption="Image: cleanenergyweek.org"]Image: cleanenergyweek.org[/caption]

Legislators wrestling with health care reform, job concerns and a spiraling federal deficit have another group vying for their attention in Washington this week. Thanks to a hastily thrown-together coalition, it’s Clean Energy Week, with environmental activists and business leaders descending on Capitol Hill to press for money for more and better green initiatives.

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Top 5 wind-energy states for 2009

February 2nd, 2010 · No Comments

From Green Right Now Reports

[caption id="attachment_8660" align="alignright" width="252" caption="Turbines spin on the Texas Panhandle (Photo: Sandia National Laboratories)"]Turbines spin on the Texas Panhandle (Photo: Sandia National Laboratories)[/caption]

The 9,922 new megawatts (MW) installed in the U.S. last year expanded the nation’s wind plant fleet by 39 percent and brought the total wind power generating capacity in the U.S to over 35,000 MW, according to the American Wind Energy Association. U.S. wind projects now generate enough to power the equivalent of 9.7 million homes.

America’s wind power industry will avoid an estimated 62 million tons of carbon dioxide annually, equivalent to taking 10.5 million cars off the road, and will conserve approximately 20 billion gallons of water annually, which would otherwise be consumed for steam or cooling in conventional power plants.

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Kohl’s increases its green power ranking

January 26th, 2010 · No Comments

From Green Right Now Reports

Kohl’s Department Stores has moved into second place among Fortune 500 companies for green power purchasing as recognized by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the company announced today.

[caption id="attachment_8472" align="alignright" width="211" caption="A Kohl's store in Laguna Niguel, Calif., features solar panels and has received the Energy Star certification "]A Kohl's store in Laguna Niguel, Calif., features solar panels and has received the Energy Star certification [/caption]

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American wind turbine maker GE supplies China

January 13th, 2010 · No Comments

From Green Right Now Reports

Who says America can’t take the lead in wind power? Not General Electric. The global corporation based in Schenectady, N.Y., announced today that it has signed contracts to supply 88 wind turbines to HECIC New Energy Co., Ltd., a leading wind energy developer in China.

The turbines are destined for three new projects in the Hebei and Shanxi Provinces in China, which is the world’s 4th largest producer of wind power (after Germany, the U.S. and Spain).

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The Next Decade: Renewable Energy

January 5th, 2010 · 2 Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
Green Right Now

The clock has just struck midnight on New Year’s Eve, 2020, and your rooftop cocktail party is in full swing. An urban garden, with potted evergreens and fruit trees, carpets the top of your downtown apartment building. The structure itself is vintage – a 1960’s brownstone that’s been retrofitted, by city-wide mandate. It operates on the new multi-source national electrical grid, which is supplied by wind, solar, geothermal power, as well as fossil fuels whose emissions are trapped underground.

[caption id="attachment_7825" align="alignright" width="224" caption="Rooftop Garden (Photo: Adpower99/Dreamstime.)"]Rooftop Garden (Photo: Adpower99/Dreamstime.)[/caption]

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New York City residents can switch to green power easier

December 1st, 2009 · No Comments

Green Right Now Reports

Depending on where you live, it can be a relatively painless process to switch to a greener power company, or virtually impossible.

logo-gpnycNew York City residents can switch, if they choose, and now a new environmental collaboration is making the process easier than ever.

Consumers can follow the guidance of a new website, launched Monday and created by the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Alliance for Clean Energy in New York.

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Blue Hawaii getting greener every day

October 28th, 2009 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
Green Right Now

(HONOLULU) – Hawaii has found a new place in the sun. With a local in the White House and clean-energy tech booming, this sunny, windy island state is blossoming into an exotic garden of alternative power innovation with nearly $1 billion in clean energy projects underway. The aggressive new initiatives are driven by history and necessity.

Necessity, because Hawaii gets 90 percent of its energy from imported oil, while its isolation makes it vulnerable to frequent power outages (no neighbors to send in reserves – until wave power is tapped). Not-so-distant history, because native Hawaiian culture is rooted in respect for nature, a vibe that resonates “take no more than is needed and squander nothing that is taken”.

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Wind industry ahead of projections

October 22nd, 2009 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
Green Right Now

[caption id="attachment_5989" align="alignright" width="270" caption="The Roscoe, Texas, project became the world's largest win farm."]The Roscoe, Texas, project became the world's largest win farm.[/caption]

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.

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

October 20th, 2009 · No Comments

[caption id="attachment_5941" align="alignright" width="263" caption="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)[/caption]

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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