February 2012

One Block Off the Grid

Check out One Block Off the Grid and see how much it costs on average, to “go solar” in your neighborhood. The site also has information about how much you could save every month, and what you could save over time.

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Credit: Hemera Collection/Thinkstock

EarthTalk® E – The Environmental Magazine

Dear EarthTalk: I read that car makers had agreed to up fuel economy standards to an average of about 55 miles per gallon by the year 2025, and that specifics were due to be hammered out by the end of 2011. Did this happen and where do things stand now?  

          – Scott Ellis, Norwalk, CA

After years of wrangling on the issue, auto companies, regulators and policymakers have finally come to terms on increased Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards for vehicles plying American roads. According to the plan as formulated by the Obama administration, automakers will double the average, unadjusted fuel-economy rating of their car and light truck vehicle fleets to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025 from today’s standard of 27 miles per gallon. Automakers which don’t meet the standards will be penalized $5.50 per 0.1 miles per gallon they fall below, multiplied by their total production for the U.S. market. Congress is likely to sign the new rules, which will start taking effect for the 2017 model year, into law this summer.

According to the White House, the higher standards will likely lead to price increases of some $2,000 per vehicle to cover the costs of more expensive technology, but drivers should save an average of $6,600 in gas over the life of a vehicle. Environmental advocacy groups allied as the Go60mpg Coalition report that the new rules will create almost half a million new jobs while cutting domestic oil consumption by 1.5 million barrels or more a day by 2030.

“The standards are going to lead to large investments and a rebirth of the U.S. auto industry [as] global leaders in innovation,” says Roland Hwang, director of the Transportation program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, one of the six environmental groups (along with Environment America, the National Wildlife Federation, the Safe Climate Campaign, the Sierra Club and the Union of Concerned Scientists) behind Go60mpg. Hwang figures the new rules will generate $300 billion in extra revenue to the U.S. auto industry, not to mention lining consumers’ pocketbooks with an estimated $200 billion in fuel savings. “This is a big deal [and] something that will keep the U.S. auto industry on the forefront of manufacturing innovation.”

In addition to the new CAFE standards for cars and light trucks, the White House is calling for a
20 percent cut in greenhouse gas emissions from large trucks and buses by 2018. The fuel economy bump inherent in these new truck rules will translate to some $73,000 in fuel savings for truckers over the lifetime of a new 18-wheeler and some 530 million barrels of oil saved for all large trucks and buses made between 2014 and 2018.

Critics point out that no one can be sure how much new technology will add to the cost of vehicles, let alone how fluctuations in gas prices, consumer tastes and the overall economy could impact what types of cars people want to drive. While the new rules represent a gamble in regard to these variables, enough Americans see the benefits of more fuel efficient vehicles outweighing the trade-offs. Of course, environmentally conscious consumers can already buy more fuel efficient vehicles—Priuses, Volts and Leafs are already all over American roads. And if Congress goes along with its intent to pass the new rules, greener cars will be standard and the U.S will be on the forefront of automotive innovation once again.

CONTACTS: Go60mpg Coalition, www.go60mpg.org.

EarthTalk® is written and edited by Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss and is a registered trademark of E – The Environmental Magazine ( www.emagazine.com). Send questions to: earthtalk@emagazine.com. Subscribe: www.emagazine.com/subscribe. Free Trial Issue: www.emagazine.com/trial.

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American-Made Furnishings

by Daphne Dixon on February 17, 2012

in GreenTowns Categories, Lifestyle, Uncategorized

European Style Farm Table

Educating homeowners about domestically sourced goods is a founding value of Greenspiration Home, an online magazine dedicated to educating homeowners about green building, renovating, and decorating in an easy-to-understand, homeowner-to-homeowner format.  We invest time and money in this initiative, which introduces consumers to American made décor items for their homes – like this handsome European style farm table from Inventia Design.

Each week we scour the internet and other resources for American made (preferably environmentally responsible) furnishing that stand out. We interview the companies and write a news release about our pick and distribute it through our own paid newswire service and social media.

It is a true labor of love and lot of free publicity for an industry that touches so many parts of American manufacturing from textiles to forestry.

Greenspiration Home, is using its own resources to highlight a different American décor manufacturer each week . The initiative is called our American Made Décor Pick-of-the-Week campaign.

 

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EarthTalk®
E – The Environmental Magazine

Dear EarthTalk: What are the environmental implications of the road ahead as laid out by President Obama in his recent State of the Union?                                    – Marilyn Pike, Bethesda, MD

Pete Souza/White House photo

Even so, natural gas is cleaner burning than oil or coal, and reducing our reliance on foreign oil is a good thing overall. “Right now American oil production is the highest that it’s been in eight years,” Mr. Obama said, adding that “…last year we relied less on foreign oil than in any of the past 16 years.”

Michelle Wilson Berger of the National Audubon Society points out that when George W. Bush told us in his 2006 State of the Union that the U.S. was addicted to foreign oil, some 60 percent was coming from foreign sources. “Now it’s just less than half,” Berger says, adding: “The trend is going to continue in that positive direction and within a couple decades, it’s going to be even less, say something like 36 percent.”

Nonetheless, environmental advocates were hoping for less bullish talk from Obama on expanding fossil fuel development of any kind, given the dire climate predictions we are facing. But Obama isn’t giving up his commitment to renewables, despite the recent bankruptcy of solar panel maker Solyndra after it had received upwards of $500 million in loan guarantees. “Some technologies don’t pan out; some companies fail,” stated Obama in the speech. “But I will not walk away from the promise of clean energy.”

Obama also called on Congress to pass a new standard aimed at boosting wind, solar, geothermal and other renewables, and to extend related tax credits to help diversify and green the country’s energy mix, adding that he wants to end tax subsidies for oil companies. In underscoring that Americans don’t have to choose between the economy and the environment, he cited the case of the revival of the American auto industry thanks in part to automakers’ willingness to innovate to meet aggressive fuel economy standards.

Fred Krupp of the Environmental Defense Fund considers Obama’s State of the Union “a strong defense of the importance of clean energy to America’s long-term economic prosperity.”

Speeches aside, 2011 wasn’t a bad year for Obama on the environment. He proposed raising the average fuel efficiency standard for new cars to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025—this alone, says Natural Resources Defense Council’s Frances Beinecke, “will save drivers more than $80 billion a year at the pump and cut our annual oil use by more than the amount we imported from Saudi Arabia and Iraq in 2010.” Obama’s recent rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline project—which would have transported dirty Alberta tar sands oil across U.S. soil—was another triumph, as were establishing the first national standards to limit mercury and other air toxins from power plants, proposing a visionary national oceans policy, protecting the Grand Canyon from uranium mining, and supporting clean energy investments at record levels.

CONTACTS: White House State of the Union 2012, www.whitehouse.gov/state-of-the-union-2012.

EarthTalk® is written and edited by Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss and is a registered trademark of E – The Environmental Magazine ( www.emagazine.com). Send questions to: earthtalk@emagazine.com. Subscribe: www.emagazine.com/subscribe. Free Trial Issue: www.emagazine.com/trial.

 

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A New Cosmology

by Daphne Dixon on February 14, 2012

in Advisors, Connections, GreenTowns Categories

Danny Martin, GreenTowns Advisor

Danny Martin
GreenTowns Connections Advisor
 

Cosmology is how we understand our place in the world: it comes from observation, something that some of us – scientists – do professionally. An emerging new cosmology tells us that we are not separate from other things, that what we call nature includes us. The implications are enormous, for if we actually are this universe then how should we live with everything else. But promoting a new cosmology is not easy because people resist it for obvious reasons. Galileo experienced such resistance from the leaders of his time even when he presented them with a telescope to see the evidence for themselves. Perhaps the most creative thing we can do now in order to make our world a more sustainable place is to encourage each other to look around us and also let in the new knowledge we have – take a peek through the telescope – and get the new cosmology.

Read more about the new cosmology.

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GreenTowns Lifestyle Advisor, Wendy Martinenas

Wendy Martinenas
GreenTowns Lifestyle Advisor
 

When someone says “not really” to the question: Do you try to live a green lifestyle? People often end with “but I did just buy some green cleaning products.” Many times, people are not sure exactly why they made this eco-friendly choice over the conventional product, which is living proof that the buzz about green has entered into the unconscious mind of the general population. Green cleaning may be trendy but it is definitely not a fad. Green cleaning is here to stay, simply because it is healthier for people and for our earth.

Which would you rather have come in contact with your body, and enter the air that you breathe in your home?  A plant derivative or a potentially cancer causing synthetic chemical? Which would you rather have drain into the ground and enter your water system? A substance that naturally becomes a part of the earth, or one that retains its toxic properties? With choices like these, paying a little bit more for an eco-friendly cleaning product becomes easier, wouldn’t you say?  Handy on Snappy Green’s Resources page, is this link that identifies the dangers lurking in your common household cleaners. Get educated! Your family is worth it.

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Jeremy Cohen, Founder

We believe that people should be rewarded for doing the right thing. At ExchangeMyPhone.com we have created a place for people to easily sell or recycle their used or broken cell phones. By salvaging old phones we give folks the opportunity to make money or to donate to charity. By giving your phones a second life with us we are keeping them in circulation rather than sending them to landfills as toxic e-waste. Even if a phone has no monetary value we pay for the shipping and recycle it for free because we believe e-waste stewardship should be just that simple. We are a small, Brooklyn-based start up with big plans to make cell phone recycling as easy as returning a Netflix DVD.

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Photo credit: Heidi Geldhauser

What if we could grow healthy, natural foods locally, independent of season and without the need for synthetic pesticides? What if we could reduce the cost, energy consumption and carbon footprint of our food’s production and distribution system? What if we could add jobs and stimulate our local economy by growing and selling pesticide-free produce in urban centers? And what if we could do all this year-round while using less energy and space?

We can. The future of urban farming is here: PodPonics is changing the way we farm, one head of lettuce at a time. Combining the use of recycled shipping containers that can be stacked for urban use with proprietary technology that reduces overall energy usage while increasing crop yield per square foot, CEO and founder Matt Liotta is bridging the gap between sustainability and profitability, and the impact both have on local foods.

Liotta combines his technological experience – which includes numerous successful technology startups – with his appreciation of and desire to source locally grown, chemical-free produce, bringing high-tech farming to underutilized urban spaces. Through controlled environment agriculture, PodPonics utilizes recycled shipping containers – pods – that can be stacked for use in areas where traditional farming, both indoors and out – would be prohibited because of land limitations. This enables PodPonics to produce crops – six varieties of lettuce with plans to begin growing additional vegetables soon – all year long from a local source, with no pesticides, chemicals or carbon footprint.

Each 320-square-foot pod can produce one acre’s worth of produce; and, since the pods can be stacked, they are ideal for use in vacant city spaces that could otherwise not be utilized without expensive renovation to the area and soil.

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EarthTalk® What’s the Story with Echinacea?

February 7, 2012 GreenTowns Categories

EarthTalk® E – The Environmental Magazine   Dear EarthTalk: What’s the story with Echinacea? Many herb teas contain it, and many people swear by it as a cold remedy. But I’ve also seen headlines saying that the herb has no medicinal value whatsoever. Can you set the record straight?                        – Arlene Hixson, Portland, ME [...]

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The Colorado River: Running Dry

February 5, 2012 Energy

Photographer Peter McBride traveled along the Colorado River from its source high in the Rocky Mountains to its historic mouth at the Sea of Cortez. In this Yale Environment 360 video, he follows the natural course of the Colorado by raft, on foot, and overhead in a small plane, telling the story of a river whose water [...]

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