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Thursday, July 31
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 31 Jul 2008 09:48 AM CDT
Mass production vehicle conversion to plugin hybrids and eventually to pure plugins, that don't need fuel at all, that recharge in a few minutes and don't need backup power; could procede in stages.
Without needing a new car. Avoiding the cost and energy use needed to manufacture a new car.
The steps: more »
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 31 Jul 2008 09:07 AM CDT
Our valiant (Gristmill) advocate for kinder gentler GMO supposes this hypothetical, we need to sway people like this to our organic ag point of view.
"Suppose you are growing, say potatoes, organically and occasionally have to apply a natural fungicide or pesticide derived from another plant grown somewhere else."
You grow the natural plants that repel or suppress parasites along with the potatoes. Even using crop rotation and mixing mulch made from the repellant plants into the soil for the next potato crop.
Mulch that stops fungus and pests. And suppresses weeds. Why not? Copy nature's own strategy. Walnut trees prevent competing plants from invading their area with natural herbicide built into their genes. Cedar trees discourage competing fungus and bacteria with genetically coded cedar oil, evolved for that purpose. more »
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 31 Jul 2008 08:55 AM CDT
Why? Because organic fertilizer does not release nitrous oxide, chemical fertilizer does. It is a 296x worse GHG than CO2. Chemical fertilizer releases this GHG in an amount that is equivalent to 2/3 of the CO2 uptake of the crop fertilized.
Organic farming build the soil ecosystem to act as a living carbon sink, the praies were 20 to 30 feet thick with organic carbon rich soil when they were first plowed. The fertility was gone in 10 years, then chemical fertilizer burned the remaining organic matter out. more »
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 31 Jul 2008 08:46 AM CDT
What is at the root of the problem of fuel farming, ethanol, biodiesel, or biomass for combustion? It is the false claim that consuming biomass in flames as either solid or liquid fuel is carbon neutral. That it only emits CO2 that has been absorbed by plants and that makes it "green", instead it makes this false claim "greenwashing".
Consider this. Think about the natural carbon cycle, before industrialized humanity appeared on the scene..
Prairie soil was 20 to 30 feet thick, soil stored a huge millenial amount of carbon. Wetland peat bogs were even thicker, storing more carbon. Coral reefs stored carbon as calcium carbonate made by the coral. more »
Monday, July 28
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 28 Jul 2008 10:27 AM CDT
Someone else noticed this. Thanks. Keep up the good work Ken.
"Cap & trade was a deal by which certain corporations -- primarily Enron -- could gain an enormous new profit center, while others were provided political cover to support climate action under the guise of a "free market" solution. By splitting the monolithic bloc of private sector opposition, EDF and others hoped to cobble together a power base strong enough to overcome the oil/auto axis." more »
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 28 Jul 2008 12:19 AM CDT
How to replace all those big GHG spewing power plants with solar panels on buildings, wind farms, and distributed biogas power generation plants? And control the flow so that the grid still operates consistently as with the old central power plant design.
You do that with this. A smart grid, this Xcel energy project is very encouraging. more »
Monday, July 21
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 21 Jul 2008 12:48 AM CDT
Brokaw's questions were quite a powerful sleep aid, try watching it if you are troubled by insomnia. Zzzz. Here's the transcript, more informative, but still Brokawed up. Check out the Gristmill discussion on it.
Did Brokaw ask about the best part of Gore's plan? The idea to tax carbon and reduce payroll taxes by that same total taken in by the carbon tax? Well, of course he didn't.
It prices carbon without raising taxes or cap and trade hedge fund bubble gumming up the works. more »
Saturday, July 19
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 19 Jul 2008 02:45 AM CDT
"Is Al Gore nuts?" A feeble attempt at a rhetorical question from one, Neal Dikeman, self professed renewable energy expert and venture capitalist.
From his site cleantech.org:
"We welcome new technologies across the cleantech sector: solar, photovoltaics, ethanol, biofuels, fuel cells, batteries, combustion, carbon, materials, IT, alternative energy, wind, geothermal, renewable power, water, environment, energy efficiency, or any other green technology."
Not only does this make no sense linguistically, but it touts ethanol (which doubles GHG over oil based fuel), fuel cells (hydrogen fuel cells? a ridiculous boondoggle) , and biofuels (which ones, biodiesel? another GHG increasing, gas guzzling, land destroying scheme). more »
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 19 Jul 2008 02:26 AM CDT
Good news, the battle to save our climate, planet, and life as we know it is still hopeless! Evidently the blogosphere is just as ignorant of renewable/conservation energy and agricultural technology as the mass delusional main stream media and our lobbyist disinformed politicians.
I was worried that the momentum from Gore's speech would galvanize an internet based information revolution, winning this battle in a heartbeat. If this fight stops being hopeless, I'll have to be moving along. Luckily the blog world has more than it's share of dimbulb limboobs. That makes this effort vital! The only battle worth fighting is a hopeless one. more »
Friday, July 18
by
amazngdrx
on Fri 18 Jul 2008 01:29 AM CDT
"I have long supported a sharp reduction in payroll taxes with the difference made up in CO2 taxes. We should tax what we burn, not what we earn. This is the single most important policy change we can make."
Great Al! I haven't heard of this before. It's revenue neutral, budget balancing. And the only way to raise taxes that is politically acceptable, by offsetting the raise with a payroll tax cut. Brilliant politics! A tax break for struggling families. (text)
My suggestions following the video of his speech. Go Al! Just mind these changes. Feel free to call me for more pointers, hehehey. more »
Wednesday, July 16
by
amazngdrx
on Wed 16 Jul 2008 05:08 PM CDT
Great article from Dave Roberts in Grist about biodigestion and biomass energy in Austria. He always gets to the heart of the matter at energy conferences he attends for the magazine. This is how the process described in the article works.
One part manure to 30 parts wood chips, straw, or other waste cellulose, that is the carbon. At that nitrogen/carbon ratio, biogas is produced.
The manure would combine with carbon in the environment if it were allowed to run off or put directly on fields, producing methane (biogas) that is released into the atmosphere. By trapping and burning the gas in this energy system that methane emission is halted. Thus offsetting 20 times the CO2 that is released by burning the gas. more »
Tuesday, July 15
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 15 Jul 2008 10:35 AM CDT
100% dispatchable terrorist fighting solar powered lighting. For Iraq!
But of course solar is not practical here. Hilarious. We knew about his solar panels and ground source heat pump heating/cooling system though. On the Bush family ranch in Crawford. more »
by
amazngdrx
on Tue 15 Jul 2008 10:19 AM CDT
Gar Lipow in Gristmill puts the lie to "free" marketeerian plans that claim to use the power of the markets to cure GHG climate disaster. The underlying false dilemna fallacy, only corporations can acomplish change, but unless they have a bottomline reason to go green, they'll never do it.
The conslusion? If they own the air and water, they will protect it. GHG emission permits are really property rights to the atmosphere itself. more »
Monday, July 14
by
amazngdrx
on Mon 14 Jul 2008 10:18 AM CDT
Symbiosis is a better concept around which to design a new energy and agriculture economy and a new cultural paradigm, than the vague overused ad jingle word, sustainability.
Interdependence is one of the main aspects of symbiosis. And that interdependence is what humans made in God's image (god made in human's image?) tend to ignore.
Without algae, humans couldn't breath. That is the sort of vital interdependent symbiosis that we could describe to get the point across.. more »
Saturday, July 12
by
amazngdrx
on Sat 12 Jul 2008 06:42 AM CDT
A good discussion on the effect of plugin hybrids on the energy economy in Gristmill, lead by Joe Romm. Will plugin hybrids, with their lower cost fuel, renewable electricity, increase miles driven and sprawl, and reduce the push for mass transit and biking? Probably. But slowly, as their adoption rate will be slow at first.
A tax on electricity used as motor fuel, similar to the tax on liquid fuel will need to be instituted to support road maintenance. It ought to include funding for mass transit and bike lanes and trails too, to offset the lower cost fuel sprawl effect. more »
Friday, July 11
Thursday, July 10
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 10 Jul 2008 09:15 AM CDT
Imagine individuals faced with this kind of opposition, when installing a (grid connected) renewable energy system in their home or business. more »
by
amazngdrx
on Thu 10 Jul 2008 08:26 AM CDT
So the big challenge is to redesign the grid we have, into a 100% renewable net zero GHG grid. That will do everything it does now and power plugin hybrid vehicles.
Even though the status quo design is set on GHG intensive base load power from coal. According to this paradigm, no other baseload power other than nuclear, with prohibitive cost and safety issues, is available.
And coal is killing our human friendly climate.
This would seem to be an unsolvable dilemna. How to think outside this box? more »
Tuesday, July 8
Saturday, July 5
Friday, July 4
by
amazngdrx
on Fri 04 Jul 2008 09:43 AM CDT
Let women decide and the overpopulation will subside.
Take the government, religion, and eternal growth craving bottomline corporate think that rules them out of the equation. Every religion and corporate culture trying to outpopulate the others.
A steep rise in the quality of life employing renewable energy and agriculture and conservation of resources would allow that human rights transition to proceed. With clean, safe water and at least minimal nutrition and medical guarantees, the situation of desperate survival reproduction would dwindle. more »
Wednesday, July 2
by
amazngdrx
on Wed 02 Jul 2008 12:40 PM CDT
This video of Sen Reid dissing fossil fuel reminds me of the revolting performance of Jack Welch (former head of GE), earlier today. He is the poster child for McCain's energy policy.
"Neutron" (the people dissapear, but the building is still there) Jack was on MSNBC this morning, looking the (hi-tech overmedicated)zombie that McCain will be a couple years after taking the bush throne; croaking this, "Drill, drill, drill, build 45 new nuclear power plants!" more »
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