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renewable resources

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Clean Desert Energy to Fix China’s Rampant Pollution & Energy Deficit?

August 29, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

China is choking under a thick covering of contaminants produced from burning carbon-based fuels for industrial production, power-generation, and transport. Environmental degradation is so rampant that much of the northwest of the country is being lost to rapidly expanding deserts. And desertification threatens the already shaky balance between China’s available arable land and its skyrocketing demand for cheap food. Policy makers and market theorists in China and abroad should be thinking about whether that desert can produce something to help China escape the mounting environmental and public health cataclysm.

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Geothermal: West Digs Deep for the Next Big Thing in Power

August 13, 2008 :: l.johr :: No Comment Yet

Geothermal energy is increasingly being touted by scientists and researchers as one of the most efficient and environmentally friendly sources of power available. Currently, geothermal sources supply enough energy, 2,800 megawatts, to run 2.8 million American homes.

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Urban Growth May Choke Chinese Future, if Revolutionary Infrastructure Changes not Implemented

August 10, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The World Bank estimates that 750,000 people are killed each year by China’s impenetrable pollution problem; and 400 million people are expected to migrate to China’s already super-saturated metropoli by the year 2025. China is now burning one-third of the world’s coal for electric-power generation, and has opted to move its national transport infrastructure toward the automobile, a potentially catastrophic choice that could have a decidedly negative impact on health and economic wellbeing across the world.

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Why Nuclear Power & New Offshore Drilling Are Counterproductive

July 30, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

With gasoline prices at record highs, and the strain on a weak American economy already at an extreme, Pres. Bush is pushing Congress to hold an “up-or-down vote” on renewed exploration of the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) before its August recess. Opponents protest that none of any oil found there would be available for production for 10 to 15 years, and the OCS plan is an attempt to deliver oil firms an otherwise unjustifiable gift, taking advantage of the pressurized situation of exorbitant prices.

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All Energy from Carbon-Free Sources: Gore’s Green Overhaul is Boom Opportunity

July 18, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 4 Comments

The former vice president of the United States, Al Gore, yesterday announced an ambitious goal, which he says the nation can meet, of transitioning its entire domestic energy production to clean resources by 2018. The speech marks a major moment in the process of transition to the green technology boom, which will be the next step in the ongoing economic development of the United States and the world. Gore, however, warned that failing to meet the challenge to date means “the United States of America as we know it is at risk”.

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Al Gore Pushes National Effort to Produce All U.S. Energy from Renewables in 10 Years

July 17, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Former US vice-president Al Gore is calling on the nation to marshal its resources and divorce itself from the combustible fuels economy. Gore says the US can produce all its energy requirements from renewable resources within 10 years, if action is taken. The bold initiative is designed to drive debate on the topic and move discussions about how to deal with high fuel prices toward the new opportunity they provide for funding renewable infrastructure development.

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U.S. Pres. Bush Lifts Executive Ban on Offshore Drilling; Congress May Renew its Ban

July 15, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

US pres. George W. Bush has lifted the executive ban on offshore oil drilling on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), and has challenged the US Congress to act to open the OCS to new oil exploration, saying the US needs to increase domestic production to reduce its dependence on imported oil. The ban was put in place by his father, George H.W. Bush, the 41st US president, for environmental concerns and in part because the oil companies have leases for huge expanses of underwater terrain they have not explored or exploited.

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Transparent Dyes Allow Windows to Act as Super-powerful Solar Panels

July 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Special transparent dyes coating glass or plastic panes concentrate the Sun’s rays, guiding them to solar-voltaic cells lining the edges, allowing a window to act as a solar panel with 10 times the electricity generation capacity of solar cells, by current standards. The ‘organic solar concentrator’ (OSC) system also reduces cost, by reducing the surface area that needs to be coated by solar-voltaic cells and by eliminating the need for large concentrating mirrors and sun-tracking mechanisms.

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Oilman T. Boone Pickens Wants to Create National Wind-energy Network in the US

July 10, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

T. Boone Pickens has started what USA Today reports will be “the biggest public policy ad campaign ever” to promote a national economic shift from oil to renewable fuels, primarily wind. The campaign is centered on the PickensPlan website, which shows the oil tycoon explaining how and why the US can and must break its dependence on foreign oil —for which American consumers pay $700 billion per year— by transitioning to an energy economy founded on exploiting the massive wind resources of the Great Plains.

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Oil Shock: the Coming Economic Unraveling & How We Can Adjust

July 9, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Petroleum is the most pervasive base resource other than water in the global economy of the 21st century, and as demand is exploding, production is nearing its geological peak, and untenable price increases are hitting a strained economy hard. Oil prices could be in a stagflation lock, unable to readjust to consumers’ means, unable to compete as emerging energy sources repeatedly slash development and commercial prices. Whatever factors are at play, crude oil prices have jumped over 900% since 1998, and it looks like production cannot meet global demand.

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Gasoline Record Price $4.11/gallon in U.S.: Are Pricing Mechanisms Legitimate?

July 7, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

As the United States emerges from its national independence celebration, traditionally a holiday when citizens across the nation take to the roads to visit family, friends or vacation sites, regular unleaded gasoline has hit a record high price of $4.11 per gallon. With some economists having forecast an unusually slow driving holiday, and anecdotal reports […]

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McCain Wants Government to Fund Push for New Energy Technologies

June 23, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

In a speech today in California, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) pledged to create a fund to grant $300 million to anyone who can invent a significantly more powerful car battery, which would make hybrid and electric automobiles more viable as a replacement for petroleum-fueled cars, and promised to give $5,000 tax credit automakers for every zero-emissions vehicle sold. He also demanded that automakers help make every new car “flex-fuel” vehicles, and speed the move away from petroleum powered automobiles.

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World Facing Huge New Challenge on Food Front: Business-as-Usual Not a Viable Option

June 23, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

A fast-unfolding food shortage is engulfing the entire world, driving food prices to record highs. Over the past half-century grain prices have spiked from time to time because of weather-related events, such as the 1972 Soviet crop failure that led to a doubling of world wheat, rice, and corn prices. The situation today is entirely different, however. The current doubling of grain prices is trend-driven, the cumulative effect of some trends that are accelerating growth in demand and other trends that are slowing the growth in supply.

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US Begins Difficult Task of ‘Breaking Addiction’ to Foreign Oil

May 26, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

According to the Financial Times, the United States is, however gingerly, beginning to break its dangerous reliance on foreign-sourced petroleum-based fuels. Foreign oil has been a major driving force in US economic and political trends for the better part of a century, and many in the US, both in politics and in private life, are increasing their calls for the country to move away from the resource that’s sown so much instability and propped up undemocratic regimes.

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Global Wind Power Capacity Reaches 100,000 Megawatts

March 4, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

At its current growth rate, global installed wind power capacity will top 100,000 megawatts in March 2008. In 2007, wind power capacity increased by a record-breaking 20,000 megawatts, bringing the world total to 94,100 megawatts—enough to satisfy the residential electricity needs of 150 million people. Driven by concerns regarding climate change and energy security, one in every three countries now generates a portion of its electricity from wind, with 13 countries each exceeding 1,000 megawatts of installed wind electricity-generating capacity.

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Green Investment Boom Gets Traction: Fund Promises $10 Billion for Clean Energy

February 16, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The coming green, renewable resource economyThe private investment fund Ceres, a group of institutional investors, has promised to devote $10 billion to investment in clean energy sources. The news comes as 3 of the world’s major oil companies call for coordinated policy on how to face climate change, constrain emissions, and a couple of months after 150 global corporations asked for a major boost in subsidized research into transitioning to clean energy technologies.

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Dawn of the Anthropocene Epoch

February 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

At a meeting of European scientists, in Stockholm, Sweden, the man who coined the term ‘anthropocene’ to describe the new geological epoch in which human influence dominates natural processes, announced that the term has gained acceptance in a growing number of fields. The real import of the term, and of its increasing relevance to what science is showing about the effects of human civilization on the environment, globally, is that ecological information is increasingly vital to implementing human ambitions in a responsible and sustainable way.

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Nobel Peace Prize Awarded for Work to Raise Awareness About Global Climate Change

October 14, 2007 :: admin :: One Comment

Climate change is no longer controversial; it has been accepted as scientific fact by a global consensus of researchers and policy makers, including the Bush White House, which resisted acknowledging human activities were a vital contributing factor, until recently. Now the Nobel committee selecting the Peace Prize laureate has raised the issue of warming posing a major international security crisis.

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Clinton Global Initiative Brings Together 1,300, Including 52 Current or Former Heads of State

September 26, 2007 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

Former US pres. Bill Clinton’s Global Initiative (CGI) holds a major international stakeholders’ and donors’ conference each year in conjunction with the UN’s General Assembly, in New York City. This year’s convention brings together 1,300 delegates from 72 countries. 52 active or former heads of state are participating, in only the 3rd year […]

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Geothermal Energy Creates Hope for Global Energy Solution

September 23, 2007 :: l.johr :: No Comment Yet

The race to tap large quantities of underground, geothermal energy is heating up. In a recent bid to solve their country’s demand for clean energy, the Swiss are digging deep, and the Earth is responding. A scientist at MIT, in the US, says 40% of US geothermal sources could power the entire country’s energy needs in excess of 56,000 times.

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