GreenJibe

Energy, Transportation, Biofuels, Home, and Living… All Sustainably Working Together ??

Solar SunFlowers Provide Green Energy With a Fresh Look August 22, 2009

Filed under: Art, Energy Generators, Solar — bferrari @ 7:34 am

Fifteen flower-shaped solar panels have been installed in an open space between a highway and a retail lot in Austin, Texas.

They not only provide a green source of energy, but also bring a fresh look to solar panel design.

Designed by Massachusetts art duo Harries/Heder, the SunFlowers are an art exhibit at heart, and stand over 30 feet tall.

They collect power from the sun by day, and use that energy to power their blue LEDs at night.

Up to 15 kilowatts of surplus power is sent back to the grid as payment for any maintenance fees the SunFlowers incur.

Click here for more on this story from PopSci.com.

Click here to read more on this story from GOOD Magazine.

 

UK’s CO2 plan ‘certain to fail’ February 11, 2009

Chinas economic growth also means growing emissions

China's economic growth also means growing emissions

BBC

The UK’s plans to cut emissions by 80% by 2050 are fundamentally flawed and almost certain to fail, according to a US academic.

Roger Pielke Jr, a science policy expert, said the UK government had underestimated the magnitude of the task to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

He added that it would be more effective to “decarbonise” economic growth rather than focus on targets.

Professor Pielke made his comments during a speech at Aston University.

Professor Pielke said that a country’s greenhouse gas trajectory was determined by three factors: economic growth; population growth; and changes in technology.

This meant, the academic from the University of Colorado suggested, that if people migrate to the UK and the economy boomed, it would be harder for politicians to achieve emissions cuts based on historic levels.

He calculated that the combined effects of possible population growth and economic growth could oblige the UK to increase energy efficiency and reduce carbon intensity of energy at an unprecedented annual rate of 5.4%.

Conversely, if migrants left the UK and the economy slumped, there would be a downturn in emissions, for which politicians would claim unearned credit.

Burning questions

Professor Pielke suggested that a more effective measure would be to track the emissions produced for every unit of wealth generated by individuals. In other words: CO2 per capita GNP.

How to curb climate change will be the subject of heated debates in 2009

How to curb climate change will be the subject of heated debates in 2009

This would focus efforts on delivering the technological change needed to reduce emissions, he believed.

However, Professor Pielke’s approach also raises a number of questions.

First, there is no guarantee that a change in measurement will provoke the scale of change the author believes is required.

Moreover, his alternative system would reward governments that shifted to service-based economies and moved their emissions “offshore”, creating an illusionary cut in emissions.

This difficulty could be overcome with a more complex measure based on CO2 per capita GNP and would include imported “embedded” emissions.

But that has problems too: in modern supply chains: a computer may contain parts from 20 different countries and manufacturers regularly change suppliers, so it will often be impossible to keep an accurate tally of embedded carbon.

It could also be too complex for many people to grasp easily.

Professor Pielke’s position is strongly supported by Gwyn Prins, director of the Mackinder Centre at the London School of Economics.

Professor Prins told BBC News: “Professor Pielke is far from being a so-called ’sceptic’ on reducing CO2, so this makes his analysis all the more telling.

“To begin to meet the legal targets of the Climate Change Act, the UK will have to achieve and maintain decarbonisation at (unprecedented) rates,” he added.

“The Climate Change Act will have to be revisited by Parliament or simply ignored by policymakers. What are the costs in terms of public cynicism about legislators and the legislative process, of passing aspirational rather than codifying laws?”

Colin Challen MP, chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Climate Change Group, said: “This raises questions which I do not think have been factored into the thinking behind the Climate Change Act.

“The task (of cutting emissions by 80% from 1990 levels by 2050) is already staggeringly huge and, as we have seen, well beyond our current political capacity to deliver.

“Heathrow is a prime example of ducking the responsibility,” the Labour MP for Morley and Rothwell told BBC News.

“It is hard to see any tough choices being made in the current climate. A greater population implies more embedded CO2 emissions in imported goods, but the climate change committee is only empowered to consider domestic emissions.”

‘Hardly news’

Professor Pielke’s intervention was rejected by economist Terry Barker, a lead author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

“Pielke’s analysis does not tell us how fast an economy can de-carbonise, just how much it has done so in the past when there has been a weak carbon price,” he said.

“[His] proposals are diversionary; they fail to emphasise the scale of the no-regrets options available to reduce emissions at net benefit and they do not include potential changes in regulations on vehicles and power stations that could lead to rapid de-carbonisation.”

Professor Tom Burke from Imperial College London added: “These conclusions are a very marginal addition to our knowledge.

“The argument in his paper amounts to saying that getting 80% will be difficult. This is hardly news.

“There is nothing that supports the contention that the Climate Change Act will fail or that there are flaws in its basic conception or that there is an alternative approach which is better.

No-one has said this would be easy.

Debates like this will run throughout the year whilst the world staggers towards a climate change agreement to replace the Kyoto Protocol.

The existing EU policy model of capping emissions and allowing firms to trade in carbon permits is criticised for enriching businesses while failing to deliver emissions cuts or setting a long-term carbon price.

Arguments will continue over whether this model can be improved or if any alternative policy structure will be more certain to deliver the emissions cuts the scientific establishment so urgently demands.

Source

 

UK Gets Biofuels Research Centre January 27, 2009

Greenhouse gas emissions from road transport continue to grow

Greenhouse gas emissions from road transport continue to grow

A centre that will act as the hub for biofuels research has been launched by Science Minister Lord Drayson.

The £27m institute has been tasked with developing economically competitive and environmentally sound alternatives to fossil fuels.

Last year, the government delayed its plans to increase the amount of biofuel blended into petrol and diesel.

According to government figures, the transport sector accounts for about 25% of the UK’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The Sustainable Bioenergy Centre, which will have hubs at six universities – including Cambridge, Dundee, York and Nottingham – has been established by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC).

‘Practical solutions’

“The UK has a world-leading research base in plant and microbial science,” said BBSRC chief executive Professor Douglas Kell.

“The centre draws together some of these world-beating scientists in order to help develop technology and understanding to support the sustainable bioenergy sector,” he added.

“By working closely with industrial partners, the centre’s scientists will be able to quickly translate their progress into practical solutions to all our benefit and ultimately, by supporting the sustainable bioenergy sector, help to create thousands of new ‘green collar’ jobs in the UK.”

While other sectors have curtailed or reduced overall emissions, CO2 from transport has continued to rise.

In an attempt to address the problem, the UK government introduced the “Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation” in April 2008, which required 2.5% of all the fuel sold at petrol stations to be biofuels.

Ministers originally had intended to increase this to 5% by 2010, but accepted a recommendation by the Gallagher Review to delay this until at least 2013.

Non-food crops, such as jatropha, do not distort food prices

Non-food crops, such as jatropha, do not distort food prices

Mounting pressure from environmentalists has also led to the European Union revising its targets.

It had stipulated that 10% of transport fuel had to be biofuels by 2020, but this was modified in December 2008.

Now, the 10% target can be met by any renewable source, including fuel cells, hydrogen or solar power.

Once widely viewed as an acceptable alternative to fossil fuels, biofuels have fallen foul of environmental concerns in recent years.

The global surge in biofuel production led to questions being asked about how the impacts of the supposedly green fuel.

Some production methods, especially in South-East Asia, led to huge areas of old-growth rainforests being felled and burned, only to be replaced by vast oil palm plantations.

Not only did it undermine efforts to curb carbon dioxide emissions, conservationists said it threatened the long-term survival of many endangered species, such as orangutans.

Robbing Peter

Another impact was the effect biofuels were having on global food prices. As the demand for the biodiesel and bio-ethanol grew, many farmers were selling their crops to fuel producers rather than food producers.

This, combined with a series of poor harvests around the world, led to prices reaching unprecedented levels.

However, scientists at the BBSRC centre plan to focus their efforts on “second generation” biofuels.

These fuels can be generated from a wider range of feedstocks, meaning any plant-derived materials, or biomass, not just food crops.

This means that second generation biofuels are generally more efficient, are not in conflict with food supplies, and have a smaller environmental impact.

However, as this process is much more complex, it is also more expensive and struggles to be commercially competitive.

The new centre hopes to make “sustainable bioenergy a practical solution” by improving the yield and quality of non-food biomass, and also improving the processes used to convert this into biofuels.

 

UFO claim over wind farm damage January 8, 2009

Filed under: Wierd, Wind — bferrari @ 10:13 am

UFO enthusiasts are claiming damage to a Lincolnshire wind farm turbine was caused by a mystery aircraft.


The turbine at Conisholme lost one 66ft (20m) blade and another was badly damaged in the early hours of Sunday.

County councillor for the area Robert Palmer said he had seen a “round, white light that seemed to be hovering”.

Ecotricity, which owns the site, said while investigations continued they were not ruling anything out – but the extent of damage was “unique”.

The turbine is one of 20 at the Conisholme site, which has been only been fully operational since April 2008. The broken blade has been recovered and is being examined.

Local ufologists said they had received many reports of activity in the area and had teams searching for clues.

Mr Palmer said: “I actually saw a white light – a round, white light that seemed to be hovering.

“That is the only way I can explain it – it wasn’t a flare-like light – it was just round, white light with a slight red edge to it that seemed to be over the wind turbines.”

Dale Vince, founder of Ecotricity, said the company was keeping an open mind about the incident.

“We don’t have an explanation at the moment as to what the cause was,” he said.

“We have been crawling all over it and have sent bits off for analysis to see if we can work out what caused it.

“Until we have some idea, some plausible explanation that it was not a UFO, I don’t think we should rule it out”.

He added: “To make one of these blades fall off, or to bend it, takes a lot.”

Numerous reports

Russ Kellett, from the Flying Saucer Bureau, said witnesses had told him of activity in the area.

“One saw what they at first thought was a low-flying aircraft on the Saturday evening and another heard a loud banging in the early hours of Sunday,” he said.

“This is the second most reports of activity we have ever had – I have had over 30 phone calls and emails.

“To hit two of the blades, any object must have been about 170ft long.”

But some technical experts have suggested a more mundane explanation.

Dr Peter Schubel, from the University of Nottingham, is an expert in the design and manufacture of wind turbine blades.

‘Military activity’

He said that if the turbine blade was still, it would take the equivalent of a 10-tonne load to do that kind of damage, but if it was rotating, or hit by a moving object, the force could be a lot less.

He said of the possible cause: “It’s definitely not a bird. It could be ice thrown from a neighbouring turbine that struck it.

“Most turbines have an anti-icing system on the blades and maybe it failed to prevent the ice build-up.”

The Ministry of Defence said it was not looking into the incident.

A spokesman said: “The MoD examines reports solely to establish whether UK airspace may have been compromised by hostile or unauthorised military activity.

“Unless there’s evidence of a potential threat, there’s no attempt to identify the nature of each sighting reported.”

Ecotricity said it hoped to have the turbine back in action within a week.

Source

 

A Prius can power your home in a snowstorm January 3, 2009

Filed under: Energy Generators, Hybrids, Wierd — bferrari @ 6:36 pm
Power your home with a Prius ??

Power your home with a Prius ??

The recent snow and ice storms in the northeast left hundreds of thousands of residents without power. In Harvard, Massachusetts, however, one Prius owner found a way to keep the lights and electricity going by using his hybrid as a backup generator.

John Sweeney ran his fridge, freezer, wood stove fan and even his television and lights using his Prius for three days while the power was out in his town. By using an inverter to convert the car’s DC power supply into household AC, Sweeney was able to generate 120 volts

The New York Times wrote about this a year ago. The battery in the Prius is able to provide an uninterrupted power supply as long as the engine turns on and off periodically to recharge it. Any car battery can be used this way, but only hybrids start automatically when they need to recharge their battery. As long as the Prius has enough fuel, it can produce three kilowatts of continuous power. That’s enough to maintain the basic household electrical needs.

After three days, Mr. Sweeney’s Prius used up a mere five gallons of gas to power the electricity in the Sweeney household – a bargain and a real smart grid solution.

Via The New York Times and WBZTV

 

Climate Advisors Take Electric Road December 2, 2008

Filed under: Global Warming, Solar, Wind — bferrari @ 1:58 pm
ANALYSIS
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website

The committee sees a major UK role for wind, but not for solar (Getty Images)

The committee sees a major UK role for wind, but not for solar (Getty Images)


“Welcome to the electric future.”

That was the key message from the Committee on Climate Change, the government’s new advisory body, as it delivered its recommendations on how the UK should meet its target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050.

There is a wealth of detail tucked away in its 500-plus page report.

It proposes five-yearly “carbon budgets” that the government should adopt, and suggests a range of policy options for achieving them – among which weaning the nation’s power providers off fossil fuels is clearly the priority.

The committee sees a rapid rise in the UKs use of low-carbon electricity. (CCC)

The committee sees a rapid rise in the UK's use of low-carbon electricity. (CCC)

“One particularly important development is the de-carbonising of electricity,” the committee’s chairman Lord Turner told reporters.

“Once we de-carbonise generation, we can apply electricity to new areas such as road transport and the heating of buildings.”

By 2020, renewables – principally wind – could generate about 30% of the UK total. Efficiency improvements, nuclear – a “cost-competitive” technology – and carbon capture and storage (CCS) could all play a role.

Or could they?

The targets are incredibly ambitious,” said Jayesh Parmar, a partner in the energy and utilities practice of Oliver Wyman, the global management consultancy firm.

Story continues here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7758752.stm

 

Vatican Unveils Ambitious Solar Energy Plans November 26, 2008

Filed under: Solar — bferrari @ 3:44 pm

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – And then there was light — and it was powered by the sun. The Vatican on Wednesday activated a new solar energy system and announced an ambitious plan that could one day make it an alternative energy exporter.

Vatican

Vatican

The massive roof of the “Nervi Hall” where popes hold general audiences and concerts are performed, has been covered with 2,400 photovoltaic panels to provide energy for lighting, heat and air conditioning.

After weeks of tests, the system went on line at full throttle hours before Pope Benedict held what officials called the “first ecological general audience in the Vatican.”

The new system on the 5,000 square meter roof will produce 300 megawatt hours (MWh) of clean energy a year for the audience hall and surrounding buildings.

The 1.2 million euro ($1.6 million) system, devised and donated by German companies SolarWorld and SMA Solar Technology, will allow the 108-acre city-state to cut its carbon dioxide emissions by about 225 tons and save the equivalent of 80 tons of oil each year.

“This is a very courageous initiative,” said Carlo Rubbia, the Italian who won the 1984 Nobel Prize in physics and attended the unveiling ceremony in the Vatican.

“The sun has 100,000 times the energy produced by traditional sources of energy on earth. This why we need so much science, so much investment in research for the future,” Rubbia said at the unveiling.

More of the story, after the jump: http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSTRE4AP50M20081126?feedType=RSS&feedName=environmentNews&rpc=22&sp=true

 

The “Green” Wonderland of Dubai, United Arab Emirates November 15, 2008

Filed under: Biofuels, Energy Generators, Solar, Wind — bferrari @ 10:56 pm

By Bob Ferrari

Dubai in the United Arab Emirates is fast becoming “the place to visit and drop a lot of money”. The US is not the only country to figure out that the vast oil reserves of the Middle East are NOT endless. It is estimated that there is possibly 20-30 years left of oil production in the Middle East.

Brilliantly, the UAE leaders acknowledge this and have taken steps to protect their wealth from the pending oil outage. They have taken their vast oil wealth and are using it to develop Dubai at record breaking speeds. Every year there seems to be some development that seeks to out-do the previous record holder, not just in sheer height, but in some other extravagant design concept.

Here is one of the latest. 125 stories, with a turbine (propeller) – and a restaurant in the middle of the turbine, of course – is designed for the Dubai architectural wonderland by the British firm Atkins. As in all the developments in this future-looking city, this one also seeks to be completely self-sustained. A foward-looking-green and self-sustaining future plan that comes from the minds of those that are dripping in wealth from oil. The US needs to think along the same lines, certainly the country that has all the oil is doing so now.

Self-sustaining Anara Tower Dubai

Self-sustaining Anara Tower Dubai

There is a “hanging” garden every 27 floors…. and a huge swimming pool. The building is self-sustaining, as most of new projects for Dubai.

Sustainability from a city birthed from oil

Sustainability from a city birthed from oil

Visit Anara Tower: http://www.anaratower.com/

More info on Dubai: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dubai

 

Should World Powers Drill for Long Frozen and Possibly Dangerous Methane from Hydrates November 14, 2008

Filed under: Energy Exploration, Natural Gas — bferrari @ 10:48 am

U.S. Study Finds Large Alaska Frozen Natural Gas Deposits Could Be Extracted With Current Tools

By H. JOSEF HEBERT Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON November 12, 2008 (AP)

Government scientists believe Alaska’s North slope has huge deposits of frozen natural gas that current technology could extract, according to an Interior Department report.

Read the full first article here:   http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=6237613

Doomsday?

Doomsday? Or simply unfounded panic

Commentary by Bob Ferrari:

This report will cite that “methane is 27 times more potent than carbon dioxide in contributions to global warming”.  I would like you, the reader, to remember this little fact, and also know that Alaska is not the only place in the world that has such massive frozen methane deposits.  Japan is also onto this track, but Japan is already doing something about, NOW. The “scary” part of all this, is within this first sentence in the second article:

Caught in the Vice Between Tectonic Plates

http://cordis.europa.eu/fetch?CALLER=EN_NEWS&ACTION=D&SESSION=&RCN=28875

Japan is looking to drill here:

 

Don’t Let Low Fuel Prices, Fuel Alternate Fuel Complacency November 13, 2008

Filed under: Biofuels, Energy Generators — bferrari @ 5:38 pm
The Times Tribune

The Times Tribune

Don’t Let Low Fuel Prices, Fuel Alternate Fuel Complacency

Published: Thursday, November 13, 2008
Updated: Thursday, November 13, 2008 4:20 AM EST

Back in July, when the gasoline per-gallon price was flirting with $4 and a gallon of diesel fuel was well on its way to $5, a wide array of analysts predicted that the high prices would be permanent. Gasoline, many of them said in the spring, would cost $5 a gallon by Labor Day.


Now, with oil prices south of $60 a barrel after peaking at about $145 in mid summer, many analysts predict that gasoline will cost about $2 a gallon by year’s end.

It would be a tragic mistake if consumers and the government, as they have in the past, regard the new prices as permanent. This year has demonstrated that price volatility is truly the permanent feature of the oil market.

More Info after the Jump:

http://tinyurl.com/5ay3ze