RENEWABLE ENERGY RE-EVOLUTION TO SAVE US FROM GLOBAL CLIMATE DISASTER, PERPETUAL OIL WAR, AND NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION.
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    View Article  Indict Bush/Cheney. Every town ought to consider it.

    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Bush-Warrant.html?ex=1202446800&en=3e73b5f3909ade0e&ei=5070&emc=eta1

    This could spread nation wide.  Start a petition in your town today, spring elections upcoming.  get it on your ballot.

    All politics is local.  Crawford Texans?  Get this ballot measure going!!

    Bust the kidnapping, torturing, murdering pair.  A 15 year old Canadian is being held incumminicado at gitmo right now by these scofflaws.

    Check out the announcement on the Brattleboro town website:

    Indictment Petition

     

    On January 25 the Town Clerk’s office received a petition from Brattleboro resident Kurt Daims.  Per Town Charter, a petition containing signatures from 5% of Brattleboro voters can be placed on the ballot for a Town-wide vote.  Mr. Daims’ petition did contain the required number of signatures.  At a meeting on January 25, the Brattleboro Selectboard voted 3-2 to place the petition on the ballot.  Reasons given by Board members voting in the affirmative centered on the belief that if a petition contained the required signatures, the voters should have the opportunity to vote on the matter. Reasons given by Board members voting on the dissent centered on the belief that articles outside the scope and authority of the Town should not go before the voters of the Town.  The Brattleboro Town Attorney has stated that the petition has no legal standing, as the Town Attorney has no authority to write an indictment and the Town Police Department has no authority to attempt an arrest of the President of the United States. 

     

    The Town will vote on the article on March 4.

     

    http://www.brattleboro.org/

    View Article  Clean Energy. Green Jobs. One Living Planet.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/25/135055/623#70

    Just one more word
    Greenmom.

    Clean Energy.  Green Jobs.  One Living Planet.

    That's the bumpersticker.  That's a winner.

    View Article  GREEN LIFE? or... RADIOACTIVE COAL BLACK CHEMICAL DOOM?

    An infamous GOP pronouncement on politics in the media age, "We have a bumpersticker, they have an essay."  We need a bumpersticker phrase.  Here's a blog contest(s) to do that.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/25/135055/623#13

    My entry:

    In this fashion..bumpersticker style...

                    GREEN LIFE?
        RADIOACTIVE COAL BLACK CHEMICAL DOOM?

    That'll get the advertising message across.  Then add a Hillary/Barack '08 sticker.  And a plugin hybrid sticker, and an organic farming sticker, and a NO MORE ENDLESS OIL WAR sticker...  and so forth.

    View Article  Bees, what is happening to them? The verdict is in, it wasn't your cellphone.

    The verdict is in, it wasn't your cellphone that is killing the insects that lay the golden ag, for farmers all over the globe.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/25/162237/654#6

    Bee teevee
    The RFD cable tv channel has an excellent series on beekeeping.  It shows how selective bee breeding works.

    Bees have the genetic resources to overcome disease, but mites and diseases are being unintentionally selectively bred by the chemical ag industry through the application of 'cides.  

    As with human disease organisms, like antibiotic resistant bacteria, where the misuse of antibiotics accelerates the evolution of the bacteria beyond the capacity of the immune system to adjust.  The shorter life cycle of mites and disease organisms gives them an advantage over the host organism, the bees.  

    Could bee breeders help bees overcome this aspect of the problem?  They are fighting the basic laws of natural selection.  As are the the developers of new human antibiotics.

    Eliminate chemical agriculture, that is the way to fight this trend in the whole food system.  Animals fed antibiotics are transferring resistant disease organisms to humans.  Our food system has become the perfect breeding ground for accelerated evolution of disease organisms hosted by insects, animals, and humans.

    Bees are the high profile canaries in the coal mine, because of the huge effect of pollination rates on agricultural productivity.  Restore wilderness conservation land to the natural state, like a Prarie National Park would, and farmland to organic agriculture, and the system will be healthier.  

    And humans will be healthier and happier and spend far less financial energy on antibiotic after anitibiotic and treatment after treatment, always behind the eight ball in the vital sphere of natural selection.  Humans think they can beat mother nature, but she has the last word, we are all mortal.

    And that's the very last word.

    View Article  Water, energy, farm, economic, foreign policies, all interacting.

    Try new fractals, that distract from the steady state of decline.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/24/92132/7414/#comment5

    You got it
    Only wind, solar, and other renewables don't have problems with drought.  They help reverse GHG climate change causing catastrophic drought.

    Nuclear, coal, and fuel farming all are dependent on massive quantities of water.  Polluting and contaminating it all the way.  4.5 gallons of water are wasted per gallon of ethanol gas guzzling.

    Wind pumped hydro power storage could capture flood waters in wetlands to serve as extra hydro dam power and a backup for river flow levels.  Low levels threaten endangered species, mainly fish, in these river ecosystems.

    Extra wetland/resevoirs restore groundwater aquifers, depleted by irrigation and backsup rivers depleted by metroplolitan water use.

    Solar power can be used to recycle city water and other water conservation techniques, like drip irrigation and manure/biomass/biogas production save and recycle huge amounts of water while actually increasing agricultural production and quality.

    These new, improved nuclear reactors that use no water?  Well, give the nuclear industry time to build a few of these, that also reprocess nuclear waste.  In 10 years rexamine the issue of nuclear power, after the data from these fully functrional experimental reactors is available.

    A completey transparent process that the public can trust would be needed.  These must be sabotage and theft (of nuclear materials) proof too.  It's a big design challenge.  I think it is more likely that renewable smart grids, conservation devices, organic farming, and plugin hybrid transportation will beat nuclear in terms of time to deploy, cost, and safety.

    And economic revival.  Instead of trillions of dollars to nuclear contractors.  The money would go to local businesses.  The gallon of gas you buy now, from oil company mega multinational taps, replaced by 75 cents worth of electricity bought from a farm down the road, over the smart grid.  Or free from the solar panels on your home.

    Anyway, the money would now stay in the local community, instead of in Dubai.  That is anti-globalization.  Relocalization.  It magnifies throughout the local economy, from business to employee to business..  and so forth.

    Nuclear and coal power dissappears the cash into shady multinational corporations that bribe local governments to pollute and contaminate at will.  Agribizz mega lobbyistys get the cash from fuel farming.  Destroying conservation carbon sink land to guzzle more gas.  But it's a green gas?  Duuuh..

    View Article  Sedentarians/Aerobians

    How does obesity relate to eco destruction?

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/21/194839/064/#comment27

    I would suggest this as a very sane new division of humanity.  Easily verified membership, totally voluntary, completely different value systems and motivations.

    Finally a rational way to be prejudiced!  "I just don't get along with Aerobians."  

    Or, "Those Sedentarians drive me nuts!"

    A better bigotry for a better, more correct..political correctness!  Excellent.

     

    View Article  Sustainable empire? An oxymoron.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/20/203028/450#8

    This is an interesting challenge.

    Imagine how a sustainable empire might work.

    How does a commercial empire work?  It creates a technological revolution that increases productivity.  With that surplus, brought about by greater productivity, it takes over markets.

    The british empire used coal/steam/iron technology to grab markets from agrarian cultures.

    If a new commercial empire that switched to renewable energy/electricity/silicon, lithium, composite based technology and distributed manufacturing, could be started, would it capture markets?  Or would it be coopted by military dictatorship?

    Probably both.  The key would be to develop easily replicable manufacturing techniques, as it was with the coal/steam/iron age.  Certain pivotal inventions/discoveries pushed this commercial empire.  

    What are the key inventions/discoveries for the next commercial empire?  

    Plug and play renewable distributed power switches?  That use internet communication to regulate power flow.  From one home with a solar panel or biogas generator..all the way up to a whole continental grid, made up of millions of these computer switches.  All working together like a colony of ants.

    Plugin hybrid vehicles and renewable electric mass transpotation.  All the way from electric assisted bikes and plugin hybrid cars..to plugin hybrid buses and high speed electric commuter rail.

    Organic fertlizer/biogas energy systems and mechanized organic farming.  

    These are breakthroughs that magnify human productivity in terms of quality of life.  Rather than using more and more resources to raise human standard of living, these developments raise the quality of human life, in symbiosis with the living planet.  That way technological innovation and economic growth can be sustainable.  

    Human progress compatible with life.

    Would this lend itself to commercial empire if a Walmart, for instance, were to mass produce this model in nation after nation with local production?  Look at their CFL efforts.  How would a commercial empire ever be motivated to go after local production, rather than the lowest cost manufacturing model that Walmart uses?

    It's a big problem.  Empire, by it's very nature, concentrates capital and power in fewer and fewer hands.  Sustainable human progress needs protection from empire, that is what representative government was supposed to do.

    Taxation without representation?  Ring any bells?  The US was founded as a reponse to the Walmart of revolutionary war times.  The British East India Tea Company backed by the british army and navy.

    Would the spread of representative government along with earth friendly technology constitute an empire?  A new kind of empire?  I'm not sure if it would still fit the definition.  

    View Article  The anti-war-anti-GHG-war to end all oil wars.

    Some thoughts on how to get climate change legislation during a recssion.  It's the economy...again.  For bush it is an excuse for no action on climate and more tax cuts for his corporate crony contractors.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/17/141151/026#15

    Economic decline
    Good point ce, if the economy declines, it already is in freefall, politicos will dodge the GHG issue.  Bush is wanting a stimulation now.  For all his favorite contractors and energy companies?  Yep.

      "Free" market free falling economy.  As gas prices keep snuffing out any revival before it starts.  And the housing industry keeps dropping off the cliff because of the (hedge fund created) mortgage crisis.  As tax breaks keep on being doled for corporations to outsource jobs.

    So how to get around this?  Couple the energy revolution with lower gas prices, kwhs are around 75 cents for eqivalent miles per gallon of gas.  make jobs in Detroit building millions of plugin hybrids for government service, federal, state, and local.

    Have big energy projects like FDR did, instead of building a power dam, build a huge wind farm out on the prairie.  And big conservation projects, carbon sink wetlands and prairie restoration and dangerous flamable dead wood buildup clearing (and recycling) in forests.

    Link economic recovery to renewable energy and conservation.  I ski past the old CCC (Civilian conservation corps) camp buiding foundations everyday.  Jobs created by FDR's programs.  

    Hillary talks about diverting subsidies for big energy to renewables and conservation.  She will do it like FDR did.  With money in people's pockets, paychecks for a job well done.  That is the best stimulus package.  And climate disaster energy policy.

    Giving more leverage over life on planet earth to hedge funds through "free" market trading of carbon or oil or the atmosphere or the oceans... is not going to be helpfull.  

    Think Costanza.."The Human Fund...  Money for people", rather than multinational gamblers and bush kleptocrats.

    Yes
    Like that Pan, more of that.  Geo heat exchange has the potential GHG savings of a very large portion of 36% of total GHG emmisions.  Power the circulation and heat pumps with a renwable smart grid and storage of clean solar, wind, and other clean kwh in the form of heating and cooling is added.  And even more than 36% might be saved?  

    How so?  Well the solar and wind and other renewable sources and grid installed will replace a larger and larger portion of other GHG sources as well.  Plugin hybrids strategically charged to store more power, and all other grid power uses supplied by the entire, completed grid eventually.

    Make sure all contractors for these projects only hire legal workers at fair wages.  Those are good jobs.  make all the devices here in the uSA, revive our economy just like WW 2 war production did.  The anti-GHG-war to end all oil wars.  That's the bumpersticker slogan.

    View Article  Vinod, a tough sell.

    Really very difficult to dissuade Vinod Khosla off ethanol.  He has many experts telling him he is on the right track.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/14/1224/31738#1

    Blindfolded
    You are throwing darts with a blindfold on.  A function of committee based decision making.

    Ethanol, from cellulose or corn or sugar cane, does not have lower GHG emissions than gasoline.  The illusion of cleanliness is created by a misperception of the nature of soil and the carbon/CO2 cycle.

    You are claiming that since the plant mass used to make the fuel, removed CO2 from the atmosphere, you can simply subtract that amount of CO2 from the amount given off when the ethanol is burned to find the total GHG effect of fuel farming.  Adding a bit of CO2 for oil based tractor fuel and chemical fertilizer.

    Here is the flaw, the plant mass already growing on the land used for ethanol production, actually did remove CO2 from the atmosphere and sequester it in the soil, before it was used for chemical agriculture and eventually fuel farming.

    Furthermore, millenia of carbon was stored in that soil before it was exploited with chemical agriculture.

    Electric power from renewable sources actually does prevent GHG production.  Ethanol production prevents CO2 from being sequestered year after year.  To the tune of 1.8 tons of CO2 per acre per year in the case of prairie land.  That is the same as releasing more cO2, from the point of view of the carbon balance.

    The Audi plugin has the potential to be much cheaper to manufacture than hybrids like the Prius, with complicated series/parallel transmissions.

    It's true that a series hybrid with a much more efficient generator could have much higher average mileage than the Audi.  Something like the Boeing solid oxide fuel cell/turbine that they are developing for backup power on their airliners.  It is 60 or 70% efficient.

    As far as adoption speed, regular cars do not do well on ethanol.  Flex fuel cars would be a big capital mistake if better, cheaper batteries like the Firefly design go into mass production soon.

    Firefly has its graphite foam lead acid battery coming out to the semi market right about now.  This design doesn't suffer from material shortages.  

    You cited silicon as an example of shortage that increased the price of the end product.  Only refined silicon is in short supply, with silicon being one of the most abundant elements on earth.  Depite refined silicon shortage, the cost of silicon based computing devices per computing power has dropped precipitously over the decades of the computer age.

    Plugin hybrids don't need expensive quick charge batteries, hours long recharge is fine.  Pure electric plugins will need quick charge nano tech batteries.

    I don't know much about the efforts to increase ICE efficiency, but I see it involves adding computers upon computers and excessive complication to achieve small incremental advances.  Plugin hybrids are a huge advance all at once, in the case of the Audi design, with a lot less complication.

    A 50% increase in efficiency in an ICE could take a 40 mpg car to 60 mpg.  A plugin hybrid could average well over 100 mpg.  Probably over 200 mpg.

    As far as speed of rollout of plugin hybrids and a renewable smart grid, that will take time.  But these technologies both coexist well with the present system and chip away at it.  

    Solar panels can be added onto the present grid, and smart grid devices added to store that power as cooling or heating or as battery power in plugin hybrids.

    All the technologies you are invested in have a rollout time as well.  Cellulosic ethanol is lagging behind its promised rollout year after year.  I think plugins powered by renewable electricity will beat the rest, mainly because a gallon equivalent of electric "gas" costs 66 cents.  With solar panels on your roof, that payback in a few years, that cost quickly drops to near zero cents per gallon equivalent.

    As a gallon of liquid fuel, gasoline or ethanol, rises inexorably through 4, 5, 6, 7...  dollars per gallon.  You can't claim ethanol will reduce liquid fuel prices, since we only have enough spare biomass for maybe 10% of liquid fuel to come from ethanol.

    Put your money on the smart grid, internet enabled power grid that carries all the information now traveling through phone lines, cable tv lines, and cell phone towers, and uses distributed computing to smooth out the supply and demand on a 100% renewable power grid.

    View Article  Is anybody out there? Testing...

    Can bloggers get through to green billionaire investors?  Gates doesn't listen, neither does branson.  How about Vinod Khosla?  At least he participates, now will it change his mind in favor of electric transportation? 

    Over fuel farming, which all of the above named are boosting. 

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/14/02133/2988/#comment28

    Inflation
    Food price inflation is the main economic pain of fuel farming.  That is caused by food versus fuel.  Mass starvation is going on right now from soaring corn prices.

    Yep falcon, the more fuel that comes from chemical farming, the more biomass is burned.  Biomass should be recycled back into the soil to provide maximum carbon sink activity.  That happens with conservation land, wetlands, and forests and even with farms, organic farms that is.

    Fuel farming results in more GHG in the atmosphere, mainly because it takes carbon stored in the soil and releases it.  And it releases GHG that would normally be removed from the atmosphere.

    When corn is grown organically, compost that stores carbon is added to the soil.  Everything but the corn kernels are put back, the styalks, roots, leaves, maybe even most of the carbon locked up in the corn kernels are returned if the manure from the animals it is fed to is composted too.

    The balance depends upon returning the same amount of carbon to the soil as was extracted.  Productive living soil, like that under natural prairie grass, extracts 1.8 tons of CO2 per acre per year from the atmosphere and stores it underground.  The prairie soil was 20 feet thick when farmers first plowed it, now it is an inert chemical layer that blows in the wind, wherever chemical farming has ruled.

    All that millenia of soil storing cO2 was burned off by chemical farming, chemical burning.  And now each year the amount it used to store stays in the atmosphere.  The dynamic balance is the thing here.

    The self and mass deluding idea that because corn stores CO2 then it is released as ethanol fuel burned in cars, but is reabsorbed again and again, over and over.  Similar to the cycle of rain and evaporation in the water cycle.  The idea that constitutes zero emmision fuel is erroneous.

    The land used, not to mention the fossil fuel for tractors and chemicals, results in more and more cO2 in the atmosphere every year.  At least 1.8 tons per acre per year from prairie land converted to chemical fuel farming.

    Now compare this process of fuel farming and gas guzzling..  to..

    Charging up plugin hybrids with solar power harvested from already used land, rooftops of buildings all over the country.

    It leaves the land that is removing cO2 from the atmosphere alone.  It is only mounted on roofs.  And it supplies enough kwh to replace 90% of present liquid fuel use, through the plugin hybrid's 40 mile battery range.

    Renewable electricity charging plugin hybrids is technology ready to mass produce now.  Diverting any capital away from that solution dilutes it and slows the eventual cut in fuel consumption and GHG release.

    Plugin hybrids have the same utility as gas guzzlers and can be fueled at regular gas stations.  The additional investment by auto companies to add plugin power to existing vehicle lines is minimal.  An electric rear axle added to a regular front wheel drive car, plus batteries is it.

    Better to apply capital to this, than ethanol, Vinod.

     

    View Article  Vinod lured back to blog

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/14/02133/2988#7

    Now we can convince him where his billions in investment capital would be better spent on the energy re-evolution...  instead of ethanol farming.  Stay tuned, he has a three part series planned.

    View Article  Farm house!

    http://weather.uwyo.edu/upperair/sounding.html

    Found a log of weather balloon soundings.  Illuminating the effect of much taller, larger wind machines.   It seems when going from around 500 foot level to the 1000 foot level wind speed at least doubles.

    Since available power varies with the cube of the windspeed, that means the 1000 foot machine would average around 8 times the power with the same size rotor.  The 3.6 MW GE machine at 1000 feet?

    Maybe 30 mw, instead of 3.6.  Rumors in Europe are of a new 20 mw machine.  By expanding the rotor diameter by 40% and elevation to 1000 feet it maybe possible to reach 60 mw.  And average the same kwh production over time as  20 mw of coal or natural gas power production.

    50 of these larger machines would equal a 1000 mw coal or nuclear plant.  With no fuel or waste ever.  The great plains has plenty of room for these, plenty more could be floated  offshore on all three US coasts.  Waves could add additional power, as well as ocean and tidal currents.

    Gulf stream current could power the southeast with these floating wind/wave platforms by extending an underwater rotor beneath into the flow.  Only 5 mph of water flow has 180 times the power potential of the same speed wind through a wind machine rotor.  And the gulf Stream will not vary, unless arctic ice melt due to GHG stops it.

    When that happens it's too late to act. 

     Floating wind/wave/current platforms can be built in shipyard drydocks and towed into place.  No crane work out on the rough seas and underwater construction anchoring towers to the seabed, as with Cape Wind for instance.  And far less eco damage.  These can be far enough offshore to dissappear on the horizon.  Qwelling NIBMYism.

    Norsk Hydro is about to test the full size version of its floating wind machine.  These are analogous to the liberty ships that helped win WW 2.  New energy devices and policy to stop oil wars.  Stopping wars (before they start) is even better than winning them.

    View Article  Plugin hybrid guessing? Romm on CBS news Mon.

    We guess what the car he is talking about will turn out to be.  How will it make a plugin hybrid practical and affordable (price competitive with a Prius, with much higher mileage , 100+ mpg).

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/10/16651/4008

    Without a breakthrough
    Yep, sounds right buddy.

    The thing about a plugin hybrid is that it can take hours to charge.  Needing no very expensive quick charge nano lithium ion batteries.  A pure electric plugin needs a recharge time of minutes to compete with gas pump fueled vehicles.

    A plugin with a backup generator like the Volt, has it's own gas powered recharge onboard.

    By covering the average daily trip, with a 40 mile plugin range, average mileage remains stupendlously high.  But gas pump refueling gives the range and convenience drivers need.

    Great to see this explained on CBS news!  Good work Joe!

    Firefly
    Here's my favorite low cost battery for plugin hybrids Joseph.

    http://thefraserdomain.typepad.com/energy/2007/10/firefly ...

    Graphite and foam lead acid.  It looks really good from energy density, but is slower charge than the nano batteries.

    Better let Al know about this one.  When Hillary makes him energy secretary he can use the information, hehey.

    View Article  Joseph Romm: Most famous, influential envro-energy blogger?

    You be the judge.  Here is his tantalizing description of a "secret" energy strategy meeting with Al Gore.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/1/11/102248/330

    And my take on what "secrets" might have been discussed:  First what Joesph Romm might have said on hydrogen powered cars and energy storage.

    It was ...
    I bet it was what he said on hydrogen on the History channel bio-d.

    An execellent analysis.  Hydrogen as an energy carrier not a source.  An inefficient carrier made worse by burning it in internal combustion engines.

    Hillary announced that she just heard about plugin hybrids, at a campaign stop in Commerce California.  It was wonderful, she said we ought to be making them here in the USA.

    Let's try to guess what the secret seminars were about?  A good game.  Joseph can say warmer or colder, hehey.

    1.  Plugin hybrids.
    2.  Distribuited internet enabled smart grids.  And how they can store energy and match supply and demand.
    3.  Offshore wind and great plains wind.
    4.  The latest solar PV.
    5.  Biogas, organic fertilizer production, and water reclamation.
    View Article  Plugin hybrid conversation with Vinod Khosla

    Noted venture capitalist, founding partner of Sun microsystems, Vinod Khosla visits grist to defend his remarks on plugin hybrids versus ethanol (blogging with the bigshots, hehey).

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/12/27/153441/49/#comment7

    15,000 more V?  Does the Audi plugin hybrid cost that much more than a regular hybrid or a comparable economy car?

    With mass production would plugin hybrids cost anymore than a conventional economy car?  It's a fact, until mass production efficiencies kick in products are more expensive.  Plugin hybrids take a fifth of the batteries of a pure electric car, and those batteries need not be the very expensive quick charge type.

    Plugin hybrids do not need quick charge.  They have backup liquid fuel.  A few hours charge time is no problem.

    The complaint that electric cars pollute just as much if the electricity is from GHG intensive sources like coal is deceptive.  The goal of renewable energy revolution is to go renewable with the grid as well.  Your dream of cellulosic ethanol would not happen overnight, neither will a distributed renewable smart grid to charge plugin hybrids.

    Thanks for your reply though.  I personally think you would be better off targeting investment dollars to a distributed renewable generation and storage internet enabled smart grid.  Plugin hybrid vehicles and high speed light rail.  And conservation in the form of geo heat exchange heating and cooling.

    Climb on board and come on in for the big win with us (to paraphrase "Full Metal Jacket").  

    One more thing.  20 years is the timetable we are looking at to make this complete new energy direction work.

    17 million new cars are sold each year in the US.  300 million need replacement over 20 years, no problem then.  

    The best part of the new Audi plugin hybrid design is this.  They simply added a rear axle plugin battery electric drive to a regular front wheel drive car.  That not only allows easy conversion of used cars, but it means automakers don't need to change their capital intensive production facilities.

    They keep turning out the standard front wheel drive cars and simply add the rear wheel electric drive.  making them all wheel drive as well.  Another atractive feature for extra traction in difficult weather conditions, with ever more extreme weather this is a feature car buyers already pay more for.

    Witness the great success of Subaru.  It's the silent sports/nature lovers status vehicle of choice right now.  Eco friendly folk don't want SUVs anymore.

    It's not personal, it's just business, hehey. Well maybe it is personal for green car buyers, we want to keep up with the latest eco status symbol.

    Gas guzzling flex fuel vehicles just don't make the grade.  Wether they guzzle oil or corn or cellulose.

    View Article  Google rules! New effort to make renewable energy cheaper than coal.

    http://thefraserdomain.typepad.com/energy/2007/11/googles-goal-re.html#comment-94252066

    The first part of my favorite entry in this effort would be concentrating solar cogeneration.  10 sun trough concentration reduces the amount of PV cells by 90%, reducing the cost by 60% (1/10nth the PV cells are used, but the concentrating troughs add some cost), and tripling the usual efficiency of most PV cells in use now.

    Like the typical ones used in this roof mounted system in solar insolation average NJ.  It's no shining desert, but no rain forest either.

    http://msmith.typepad.com/smithelectricco/ 

     This system has a 8.5 year payback with subsidies, but coal has numerous subsidies too, in the form of tax breaks.  Tripling the efficiency for this system and cutting the cost by 60%, by hypothetically replacing it with the concentrating trough system would produce triple the kwh per year.  Thus cutting the payback to one third, and the original 8.5 years is cut to 5.1 years by the lower cost already.  For a 1.7  year payback.  After that the kwh are free.

    That surely beats coal!  With it's ever increasing fuel costs.  Free after 1.7 years beats nearly everything.  Add to this the cogenerated heat to heat hot water and the payback drops even further.

    A smart grid with this kind of solar power mounted on every suitable rooftop, and distributed wind, wave, water, and biogas from waste power generation.  And smart grid switching of loads to store and conserve energy.  And plugin hybrid vehicles employing smart grid vehicle to grid storage and charging.  And a switch to geo heat exchange heating/cooling. 

    That kind of energy system design, which google has related expertise at (the internet switchable smart grid part), would not only be cheaper than coal.  It would impell an economic, foreign policy, and climate renaissance. 

    View Article  A new paradigm in utility grid engineering. Renewable distributed smart grid technology.

    http://thefraserdomain.typepad.com/energy/2007/12/wind-power-as-a.html?cid=93753972#comment-93753972

    This article claims 95% of baseload can come from wind with a small, affordable amount of storage.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2006/12/17/212637/60

    How so? That claim is based on a study of the output of 8 wind farms.

    The more wind farms, the higher the baseload power percentage and the lower the amount of storage or backup needed.

    And as amory Lovins pointed out, our vehicles have 7 times the power generation potential of our entire power grid. If only 10% of vehicles were plugin hybrid, vehicle to grid storage would more than take care of storage.

    An internet enabled smart grid that used heating/cooling load timing (storing heat or cold in buildings and freezers for instance) letting them coast on stored heat/cold, would also be enough to fill in gaps in wind.

    Another great backup power source is solid oxide fuel cell/turbines running on natural gas or biogas. These can be distributed around the grid in smaller units that the typical coal or nuclear power plants. The cogenerated heat used for heating, adding efficiency to the already 70% efficiency of the fuel cell/turbine.

    Natural gas for this application can be diverted from heating buildings by switching to smart grid controlled geo heat exchange heating/cooling. Another big load of gas can come from biogas production from the waste stream, keeping high nitrogen run off from human waste, manure, and landfills from releasing methane (a 23 times worse GHG than CO2) from natural carbon sinks, like wetlands.

    Finally as the ultimate natural gas/fuel cell/ cogeneration backup, coal, tar sands, and sour oil can be converted to natural gas underground with bacteria. Making coal obsolete.

    With solid oxide fuel cell/turbines in the 20kw range as liquid fueled backup generators for plugin hybrids, vehicle to grid with the vehicle fuel cell plugged into natural gas when parked would supplement distributed fuel cell cogeneration backup. These fuel cell units are under development by Boeing, as backup generators for their aircraft and the power source for unmanned aerial vehicles. Mass produced for vehicles the cost would come down to compete with internal combustion engine powertrains.

    An internet enabled smart grid, incorporating these devices, would be different from the old centralized power grid model. The old grid is designed to meet any load at anytime, necessitating huge capacity for peaks that sits idle or worse is kept in "spinning reserve' mode, consuming fuel but yielding no kwh. No matter how much capacity or power line buildout, it seems that this grid always falls short during peak air conditioning load, or ice storms, or lightning events.

    A smart grid would adjust load during emergency peaks by shutting down non-essential load. Letting heating/cooling coast for instance. It would adjust to variability, becoming much more predictable, even as the grid itself becomes more variable.

    A new paradigm for utility engineering is emerging. A renewable distributed generation, storage, and conservation grid, operating with smart grid technology, that will make GHG and fossil fuel use a minor part of our power system. A system that makes local, regional, and national grids autonom,ous in emergencies, but allows for distribution of power over the grid for added efficiency.

    This system can pay it's own way in fuel and GHG saved, storm outage averted, trillions saved on centralized power grid and power plant upgrades, and economic revitalization with lower energy costs and a whole new manufacturing sector.

    View Article  Great news!! Britain goes with offshore wind power.

    The UK is shifting to offshore wind as its base load power.  That means mass production will get a big boost.

    http://thefraserdomain.typepad.com/energy/2007/12/noted-in-pass-2.html?cid=93472172#comment-93472172

    Now put all that offshore wind onto floating platforms.

    Look at Cape Wind. It is a huge cost and an eco problem to anchor towers on the sea bed.

    That is why mass produced floating wind, wave, and current generators all on one platform are the better option for offshore wind. Mass assembley in shipyards will allow larger machines at a cheaper price.

    Assembling large wind machines onsite, offshore or on land, is problematic. Shipyards have all the equipment right there to assemble the machines and float them.

    This is reminiscient of WW 2 Liberty ships. Mass produced freighters that kept the UK going until the uS could really join the war.

    With a floating design like the Norsk Hydro unit, with wave generator installed around the water line, and an underwater rotor to catch tidal current power, the cost per kwh would go way down.

    If problems occur later it is easy to tow these units to another location or back to the dock for rebuilding. Anchored machines are there to stay without major underwater construction work. it is dangerous near the shallow water that offshore wind towers are usually anchored in.

    I believe that the new 20 mw machines rumored to be under design in Europe would be perfect for this deployment. The larger units are much easier assembled in the dock and towed into position. The larger the parts, the more difficult remote assembley and transportation of the pasrts will be, on land or sea.

    The other great wind US resource area, the great plains, is an easier place to house sub assembley plants and transport the huge parts. It is nearly deserted in many northern remote areas that have really high steady winds.

    It is heartening that the UK is planning to go with wind. Add wave and tidal current power and float it all Britainia. You are the great sea faring empire, it's your heritage.

    View Article  High energy costs, A huge "tax" on economic growth.

    Transfering technology to China.  It is already happening at a breakneck pace. 

    http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/007686.html

     China is already catching up on wind, manufacturing at lower cost of course. I think China "transfers" technology all the time, helped out by companies operating factories there.

    Forget clean coal, that is nothing but a fantasy hyped by the coal industry. The real way to clean up coal is to turn it into natural gas underground using anaroebic bacteria. Forget coal mining and leave the toxic coal mess underground where it is now.

    Extract the natural gas and use it in solid oxide fuel cell/turbine distributed power plants. These operate at twice the efficiency of conventional coal power, cutting GHG in half. These smaller units also allow for the cogenerated waste heat to be used for heating hot water or buildings.

    And they also operate on biogas from the waste stream, by tapping the waste stream manure and landfill run off is prevented from releasing methane (23 times worse GHG than cO2) into the atmosphere from biomass acting as a carbon sink in wetlands.

    The huge consumer market here in the US fed by corps like Walmart is funding rapid dirty coal power plant expansion in China. A market for renewable energy devices and smart grid equipment here, as well as plugin vehicles and geo heat exchange heating/cooling systems will impell chinese companies to manufacture all of them.

    And since they yield lower energy costs, along with GHG remediation, mass production cost efficiency and competition will dictate their use in the chinese energy economy. They will rush to beat the world in low cost production, as they have with most other consumer products in demand around the globe.

    How much will this energy revolution cost the US and world economy? It won't.  It  will make economic opportunity expand.

    On the contrary, it will take high energy costs, actually acting as a huge tax payed to multinational energy corporations, off the world economy. And as all good economists know, taxes kill growth. Cutting taxes impells growth.

    Multinational energy corporations now direct the power that goes along with these huge "taxes" towards oil wars over their favorite commodity and buying out governments like the US government to further their own monopoly interests. Then their military industrial cohorts drain 60% of the national budget for "defense".

    Defense of foreign oil fields from the people of nations like Iran and Iraq that actually rightfully own these resources and ought to benefit from their exploitation. Their "royal" corporate partners like the saudi ruling class then keep the knife of tyranny at the throat of their own population to continue to steal the oil.

    Encouraging terrorism along the way. All the 9/11 terrorists and most of the foreign fighters in Iraq are from Saudi Arabia.

    GHG climate disaster is already collecting a huge new "tax" as well. Take the widespread ice storms across the US lately, the resulting power outage curtails business and puts a huge dent in growth. Now multiply that effect by all the effects of climate change related hurricane, drought, fire, flood, and on and on.

    This well worn talking point by the corporate right, that green energy revolution will be a huge cost to the economy is nonsense. it will be a huge power shift away from the war mongering, politically corrupting, climate destroying status quo. that will hurt the interests of big energy monopoly, but it will help create good jobs and growth that will benefit we the people of spaceship Earth.

     

    View Article  The soul of kleptocracy

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/12/5/184641/855#64

    Quality versus quantity
    Do the developed nations with full health coverage (an illuminating distinction), value quality of life over quantity of possesions and consumption?  The rich and super rich pay more taxes there, but the not so rich are healthy.

    The US klepto-class, typified by that weaselly christian crusader chieftain of Blackwater, are taking it all.  

    These other nations direct their resources in more positive directions.  Here it is dissipated into multi-national corporate war for the enrichment of the klepto-class.

    They think thievery, torture, and murder are their sacred duties as crusaders.

    It might be difficult to wrest the direction on all these issues from their hands.  They are quality of life issues, real standard of living of real people, energy is at the heart of it all.

    Go to war over energy, then the extra political and financial capital needed to fix everything goes missing (like that 11 billion in $100 bills that dissappeared into Iraq on C-130s).  That's why energy policy is important.

    Without a healthy, motivated, educated workforce where will the war mongers manufacture their latest war machinery, who will they get to operate it?  I guess Blackwater will have to hire help from the countries that don't go along with invasion, occupation, and nation building as just another step in the oil bidness.

    Walmart will have to open up a military procurement department.  Missles and land mines, aisle 23.

    View Article  A new BUG? The future of plugin.

    http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2007/11/12/3348547.html

    This Audi design reminds me of the best selling economy car ever.  The VW BUG.  Add the plugin battery electric rear axle to the current front wheel drive VW BUG.  And they might rival the old bug.

    VW/Audi are one company, why not?  Every baby boomer would want one, and a bus with the same drive system.  Well maybe half the baby boomers.

    Winnebago sales are a major sign of economic "health" (gas guzzling helathy?) , how about plugin hybrid VW vans.  That's green camping.  The better way to retire.

    41 hp electric rear axle will perform like the old BUG, that's fine!  It is equivalent power to the original VW engine.

    View Article  Fossil fuel, GHG free, organic agriculture

    Can't afford..  not to do it.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/12/5/184641/855/#comment13

    One of my favorite topics.  How to get rid of chemical oil powered agriculture and replace it with organic farming.

    Think hypercar technology.  The Amory Lovins concept.  He claims only .06% of the energy in the gasoline actually is used to transport the weight of the passengers.  Because conventional cars are so heavy.

    How about tractors?  Massive, because they pull plows and cultivators, huge tanks of chemicals, their weight makes huge tires a necessity too.  Adding to the whole bulk.

    Imagine a hypercarred tractor.  It never plows, instead it drills small holes and injects seeds or seedlings with organic fertilizer that is worked into the hole by the drill.  It is unmanned, operated by remote computer by the farmer/technician.  It is small, light, solar rechargeable.  It can inject water and organic fertilizer in just the right amount for each plant.  Going up and down in the field all day.

    The farmer would program it, one person operating a few of these machines.  They would mulch, plant insect repelling plants here and there.  Turn any weeds into mulch on the spot.  All the things done by hand labor on the typical organic farm.

    This increased productivity would keep food costs down.  With this kind of on the spot attention, pesticides, herbicides, and mono GMO crops would be obsolete.  The lower costs for energy, no chemicals, no fertilizer, coupled with a new emphasis on quality, only possible with organic farming and very close attention makes this the winner.  In the consumer's world.  Clean, chem free food, with real taste that's cheaper.

    And the farmer/technician makes a better living.  As do the people building and servicing the robotic ag equipment.

    College ag departments and extension services should start to work with local organic farms to get this up and running.  They have been pushing agribizz chem for decades.  I bet they could switch to this mode of organic, hi-tech, robotic farming.

    This would save enormous amounts of water too, with pinpoint water injection.  The GHG prevented would be enourmous, and so too would be the carbon stored in the organic soil as it got deeper and deeper with every year's addition of mulch and soil mass and roots.  That's tons of cO2 stored per acre per year.  

    All farmland turned to a carbon sink would reverse GHG buildup once a renewable power grid and plugin cars take hold.  The fertilizer run off saved alone would curtail a huge amount of methane release.

    And you know how farmers could afford to do this?  With government subsidies diverted from agribizz and fuel farming.  But also by turning farms into power stations on the distributed renewable grid.  Help farmers invest in wind, solar, and biogas power.  The kwh generated can pay for upgrades to organic farming.  The biogas digestors providing plenty of organic fertilizer.

    Now this would be a farm policy.  If a farm bill could be created to promote it.   

    View Article  Green Antarctic living? How about a design contest?

    http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/007634.html

    I have proposed a design contest for a zero emission, totally renewable energy powered building suitable for housing scientists in Antarctica.

    If it could be done there, it can be done anywhere. Quite a challenge. On the topic of wind in Antarctica, the famous Minnesota built, Jacob's Wind Electric machine that survived and thrived there is a legend in wind power circles. A 30 year history of operation, metal edges were needed on the wood blades to protect from ice particle erosion.

    On storing wind energy and matching output to demand; the big load in Antarctica is heating of course. Heat storage phase change salts could provide the needed bridge.

    Does anyone know if the new Antarctic station uses cogeneration heat from it's generators?

    Anyway World Changing, think about sponsoring a contest like this to design a zero GHG building/home for Antarctica. Maybe you could enlist other blogs, like Grist for instance, and eco friendly industries, like wind and solar companies. I bet some celebrities would join the effort too.

    View Article  Wake up call for Stanford

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/11/23/151723/75#5

    Just some?
    "...there are some dramatic changes at the end-use level that could make even coal less damaging environmentally."

    Yes, plugin hybrids are a good one.  

    But geo heat exchange heating/cooling would save more GHG.  And a renewable energy distributed generation and storage smart grid is another that would save even more GHG.  

    In fact, if those who tout "clean" coal as the only practical alternative (like you Jeremy), or fuel farming lobbyists, or the marvelous hydrogen energy economy fans, or those who tout nuclear power, lose the energy policy battle, then the time, capital, and political will wasted on clean coal (and these other awful corporate boondoggle diversions), could be devoted to plugin hybrids, geo heat exchange, and a renewable smart grid.

    The dity coal (and oil)would only be needed for a decade or so, eventually totally replaced by renewable and conservation.  While this is ongoing, coal to natural gas underground conversion could take the grid from coal as the steady backup source to natural gas.  

    Furthermore going to geo heat exchange could eliminate a huge amount of natural gas heating.  Freeing up existing natural gas supplies for grid power backup.  then a transition to solid oxide fuel cell/turbine distributed backup generation could save natural gas with double the efficiency of standard natural gas power generation.  This also allows the waste heat from natural gas generation to be used via this distributed cogeneration.

    You ought to do a better job on these issues Jeremy, you are in a catbird seat as far as energy issues.  You owe it to yourself and all of US who support Stanford through our tax dollars.

    Your POV tends to play into the hand of  the coal industry.  allowing them to use clean coal research as an excuse to delay real solutions to coal GHG.

    Thanks for taking the time to visit, sorry if my critique was too harsh on a personal level.  But a serious wake up call is needed for the status quo academic establishment, along with  government and industry.

    One other thing:

    How difficult is it to replace coal fired boilers (many aging and in need of replacement anyway) with natural gas boilers to feed the same turbine generator systems now powering the grid?

    Conversion to natural gas is a viable interim alternative to clean coal.  If natural gas use in heating is replaced by geo heat exchange, gas can replace coal.  Start adding in biogas from the waste stream too. And lowering electric power demand by cooling buildings with geo heat exchange.

    These are solutions that fit together in an organic design.  It is a lot different than the mechanistic so-called "free" market approach.  

    Coal reaps huge profits in the short term, build coal.  That is not a fractal that serves the long term success of the human species (global infestation?, hehey).

    View Article  Idle consciousness: Peak schmeak II.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/11/21/103546/27#23

    Peak mass delusion
    The appointment of the chimp.  Twice.  So maybe reality starts to eclipse incompetence now?

    Peak moments of delusion set the scene for a change, a revolution.  Duuhbya, an agent of change.

    Think about it.  He has brought US to the very brink, the herd needs to turn or go over the cliff to extinction.  

    Maybe dolphins will be the next species to try for global domination.

    The nature of reality, the relationship between the microcosim, the single particle.  And the macrocosm, the infinity of space/time.  The quality of existence, not the quantity.  

    Consciousness, Idle consciousness.  Forever speculating on a street corner named desire.

     

    View Article  Audi plugin hybrid. Rear wheels electric.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/11/9/145814/981#5

    Audi
    http://jalopnik.com/cars/tokyo-auto-show/tokyo-auto-show- ...

    This Audi plugin hybrid mentioned in the article has a gas engine for the front wheel drive and an electric motor for rear wheel drive.  Just the conversion idea that we discussed here awhile back in one of bio-d's articles I think.

    Any front wheel drive car could have an electric motor/battery system adapted to the rear wheels.  It's a simpler system for conversion of an internal combustion vehicle.  

    The tEsla could have it's battery made smaller and add a backup generator so it could compete in the plugin hybrid market.  Just as the EV-1 could have been saved by a similar conversion to hybrid.  It extends the range and allows a visit to a gas station, instead of a lengthy recharge, to get going again on longer trips.

    Actually the Audi design would allow any maker of a front wheel drive vehicle to simply add on an optional rear battery/electric drive.  It would work even better for all wheel drives.

    Mass production of standard motor/battery units would then be adapted to various models and makes.  One or two large manufacturers could supply all the auto makers with the battery electric units.

    It would also give every converted front wheel drive all wheel drive.  Combining the SUV like traction feature with the plugin feature.  Saving gas in the worst gas guzzlers.  And wouldn't all those minivan moms want all wheel drive for safety too?  Yep.

    This is a happy marketing coincidence.  Could Toyota's complex parallel/series hybrid system yield to a simple parallel drive system like the Audi has?  I think it might.

    Then as batteries become faster charging and have more capacity with less weight, the gas engine could be made smaller and electric motor made more powerful in future models.  For less and less gasoline used and more and more, hopefully renewable kwh.

    Eventually the gas engine could yield to a solid oxide fuel cell/turbine that is 60% efficient and runs on various fuels.


     

    View Article  Peak oil, schmeak oil

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/11/5/6856/01740#36

    "There's no reason to worry about whether peak oil or global warming are more important"

    Yes there is.  If the focus remains on peak oil instead of GHG disaster, fuel farming, offshore drilling, tar sand processing, and coal to liquid fuel will absorb the capital needed to foment this renewable energy/conservation  re-evolution.

    Furthermore, the huge profits from peak oil panic reaped by oil futures traders, like hedge funds, self perpetuate gas guzzling.  with that huge market leverage oil traders can keep infernal combustion gas guzzling, fuel farming, "clean' coal, and nukes going forever.

    The peak oil fantasy is really a well crafted diversion created by oil traders through their mouthpieces, oil and energy analysts and pundits.

    When people start talking peak oil, start countering with peak GHG disaster.  Multinational oil and energy corps will not kill the goose that lays the platinum egg.  They will raise energy prices slowly enough to keep the world economy going, then use the financial/political power they amass to steer the energy economy and foreign policy to the asdvantage of their bottom lines.

    That means endless war and copiuos GHG, eventually replaced by endless war over nuclear power and nuclear proliferation and terror.   By the time the fossil fuel is burned up, will humans  have to live in giant nuclear powered bunkers to hide from the 300+ mph storms?

    View Article  US invasion of Pakistan?

    http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&q=pakistan+invasion

    It's a distinct possibility.  The likely next invasion, occupation, and nation building neoconman adventure.  It would take the political focus back to war, fear, and terror fighting.

    Great GOP issues, especially for "9/!! ( "9/!!" is an amazingdrx trademarked phrase) hero" Rudy. 

    Would any self respecting traitorous corporate feudalist pass up this opportunity for  another endless war?  Kristol?  What say you oh treasonous one?

    You heard it here first. 

     Iran?  A simple diversion.  The real hoped for target is pakistan.  India will have a million troops to mop up after the shock and awe.

    Blackwater has an airforce now you know.  And an Abu Ghraib for illegal immigrants on the southern US border.

    View Article  Grand Island Trail Marathon DVD trailer

    http://pozolefilms.com/Home_Page.html

    Just click on "Grand Island Trail Marathon Trailer".  My first marathon.  Fantastic adventure.

    Still can't believe I went 26 miles.   Just registered for next year. 

    View Article  Clinton on renewable energy boom

    Renewable distributed power generation and storage, conservation, and plugin hybrids a drain on the economy?  Highly doubtfull.

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/11/4/111522/920/#comment7

    Lovins
    I saw Lovins making this point recently also.  The boom in renewable energy will not cost economic growth, stability, and oppurtunity..it will expand it.

    The monopoly control of energy is like a huge tax built into the world economy.  And yet sufficient energy is freely available everywhere on spaceship earth.  Why pay that energy tax to multinational corporations.  Why fight wars for them?

    Go get 'em Bill!  

     

    View Article  Organic automatically better?

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/10/10/92220/476/#40

    Persistence of vision
    "this strange but persistent belief, held all over the world, that something "natural" or organic is automatically better than something man-made"

    The simple mechanistic view of life is giving way to the organic.  The bottom line POV says 20 store bought tomatoes are better than one home grown tomato.

    We all know the store tomatos are nearly inedible.

    The simple mechanistic approach throws anti-biotics around into the food stream and that has caused good old organic evolution to produce anti-biotic resistant bacteria.  You can't beat the nuance and complexity of real reality with mechanistic corporatism.

    You can wreck the human friendliness of the climate and the ecosystyem..from microbial to glacial...  with corpora-think.  You can destroy the quality of life.  But you can't control the natural world with it.  Mother nature still holds sway.

    What you can do with simple minded technology is mass produce wind machines, solar panels, geo heat exchange heated and cooled buildings, electric mass transit, and plugin hybrid vehicles.  

    Working with nature.  Instead of genetically modifying soy beans to resist herbicides to fill up millions of square miles of the earth's surface to produce fuel for 14% efficient infernal combustion gas guzzling.

    A solar panel over the garage and parking area charging up a plugin hybrid.  That's the simple minded nature friendly/human friendly approach.

    View Article  Circular (mis)reasoning

    Why don't "opinion leaders" get it...  on GHG, oil war, and renewable energy policy?

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/10/15/121945/04

    You don't either
    If you really believe this..

    ".. Barack Obama's extraordinary climate plan..."

    ...then you don't get it either.

    Obama's plan is ridiculous pandering to oil, coal, auto, and nuclear interests.

    The unifying principle of so-called "opinion leaders" happens to be conventional wisdom (the ultimate oxymoron).  They become opinion leaders by subscribing to that conventional wisdom.  By anticipating and forming it.

    Facts need to enter the world view of the opinion leaders.  But that would put them at odds with the conventional wisdom spread by mass delusional media.  Quite a conundrum!  

    The main fact?  Distributed renewable energy generation and storage and conservation are ready to solve GHG/energy problems, oil war problems, and economic disaster right now.  

    View Article  Is renewable power really not ready for prime time?

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/10/3/102831/613#11

    Mass delusional media
    It spreads the conventional wisdom.

    Here's the argument:

    Renewable power is not in widespread use.  

    If it were technologically/economically feasible it would be in widespread use, since it would cure so many of our problems.  And yeild huge profits for the companies that build out and use it.

    Therefore:  

    Renewable power must not be technologically/economically feasible.  It must need more research.

    The facts:

    Renewable energy and conservation are cheaper and quicker to build out than any other alternative.  They are ready now.

    Monopoly corporate/government power working in concert with mass delusional media are blocking implementation and the resulting economic boom and end to war over oil and nuclear proliferation that would result.

    It's exactly that simple.  Vested interests support the status quo for their own benefit over the obvious benefits of change to the rest of uS and the living planet.

    Hillary's plan
    Divert subsidies from the status quo corporate sectors (big oil, coal, nuclear) and devote that capital to building out renewable power and conservation.

    The problem will be getting the bribe swilling congress to turn on their corporate hog-trough fillers.  As with health care reform in '93, when democrats were in control of congress, enough bribed democrats will be found to join with the bribed pubs to block any real change in the direction of subsidies.

    These hogs must be told at the local level, if you return to try and get re-elected and keep voting the corporatist line, you will be given the boot.  Enough green troops exist to do that at the local grassroots political level.  To take over local parties.  But environmentalists will not lower themselves to the task.

    They would rather stay home and simply donate to orgs with glossy magazines they can put on their coffee tables to garner status with their crowd.  Orgs like NRDC, that oppose wind power, back fuel farming, clean coal, and nuclear.  Orgs that sell out to corporate power at every turn.

    A congressman who is deluged at a local fundraiser with calls to back renewables by diverting subsidies from the corporatist cabal, can go to his corporate lobbyist loving staff and say, "Look I can't go against the voters or I won't be here next year."  No amount of campaign "contributions" (bribes) from the corporatsis will change that.

    View Article  Two more trail runs

    Well mostly, had to walk the last few miles of the Grand Island Marathon.  The sand is what blew out my legs early.  There were a couple of sections on the beach.  Now I run on sand whenever I can.  

    The Taqua Run went up beside the river past waterfalls.  Over 15 miles.  My fist season of trail running is complete.  After training less than a year I completed the 26 mile course on Grand Island.  and the two other 25k courses that people tell me are both harder than a 26 mile road course.

    Now for an easy one to boost my confidence.  The whistlestop Marathon in Ashland, on an old railroad bed.  It has the speed of a road race but the soft surface of a trail.  Perfect.  Good for the knees and hips.

    Hoping for a snowshoe trail run from the good people at Great lakes Endurance.   Eco spritual mixed with exciting challenge.  No one does it better.

    Go register for next year's trail running.  Train from now until spring/summer.  You will be thrilled.  It will change you.

    View Article  Toyota as incompetent as GM?

    It appears that is the case with this vehicle.


    http://thefraserdomain.typepad.com/energy/2007/07/japan-c ...

    With a pathetic 8 mile battery only range and Nimh batteries.  Is Toyota serious about this?  

    With the Hymotion Prius plugin conversion using A123 nano tech lithium ion batteries ..40 mile range.  This conversion voids the Toyota warranty, toyota's method of killing a real plugin Prius.

    No Toyota is not serious about plugins.  Is GM?  Probably not.  

    It's an oily world of automotive board room diversion from real GHG solutions.

    Board rooms need the conversion.  To sentient beings.  Enough with the dolts dead from the neck up now running the auto world.

    View Article  The GM Volt, another fake to kill CAFE standards?

    http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/7/27/163133/596#4

    Proffessor Prius
    Said it's a fake.  I talked to him at the Midwest Renewable Energy Fair.  he is a Toyota spokesman for the Prius technology, explaining it to the public.

    I jokingly taunted him that Toyota would lose first place if they did not dump the Prius parallel technology and go with the GM Volt serial plugin design.  He got into the spirit and we bet lunch next year over my argument.

    We'll see.  

    GM's habit of showing off various Volt concept shells with hydrogen fuel cell instead of the serial plugin hybrid once again raises "Who-killed-the-electric -car" suspiscions.

    In that scenario, as you no doubt remember, one arm of GM was promoting the EV-1, while the main part of GM was trying to kill it.  corporate schizophrenia?  Or was there a method to their madness?

    There was a method.  To kill the green car legislative standards in California.  Maybe the Volt is only that?

    Not really, as with the eV-1, the engineers that designed the originmal serial plugin volt, really know they have a world beating, climate restoring concept.

    40 miles on battery alone.  More than covering most average daily tripping for most drivers.  Think conversion of used cars though.

    Not new cars from GM or toyota.  They all seem dead set against the 200+ average mpg serial plugin hybrid under any name.  300+ mpg with half the horsepower of the sportscar like Volt.

    Small businesses all over the uSA will be converting cars to this design if this energy revolution takes hold.  But will it?  or will humans migrate and die off in the millions to mitigate GHG climate disaster?  Probably a little of both.

    Along with renewable energy and conservation.  The real political question is how much of the GHG saving activity will be used to save lives and forced migratory induced world wide mass pychosis.  War, famine, and disease.