Alternative Energy

Yesterday, it was the Counter Culture. Today, it’s…
Thursday, November 25, 2010 and it’s all about us.

Est. 1964 Re-Incarnated by Public Demand

This is the original, 60’s, counter culture, LA Free Press. Today’s Best Alternative View & Our Old Hippie Headlines, Too! A Head Trip for Smart Minds.

The Counter Culture is all about us! It’s a statement with a two-fold meaning that explains why what was once imagined may now become our better reality.

Published by One p.m. (PST)

Series 17 – Day 3 of 3

Ecology. Who Cares?

(In addition to our postings here, please check out Peter Bergman’s blog ===>)

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Editor - November 25, 2010 at 11:50 am

Categories: Alternative Energy, Changing Society, Community, Environment, Health & Wellness, Social Change, Society and Culture, Youth Issues   Tags:

Jane, you magnificently ignorant slut

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Editor - July 15, 2010 at 10:46 am

Categories: Alternative Energy, Changing Society, Government & Politics, Political Humor, Society and Culture   Tags: , , ,

Message from Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne and Graham Nash

http://i6.cmail1.com/ti/739389EF/bg-nukefree.jpg

Dear Nuke Free friends,

This is nuclear power’s summer of desperation. It has just a few short weeks to grab billions in taxpayer funding for new nuclear plants.

Last time we wrote, a $9 billion package was being slipped into an “emergency” war appropriations bill. Amidst a wave of your letters, the vote did not happen.
The issue is now in the Senate, and has been greatly complicated by our efforts.

Now the industry is demanding $25 billion for unspecified projects. Again, your voice can make a difference.

Please join us (Bonnie, Jackson, Graham and the NukeFree team) in writing and calling the members of the House, and especially in calling members of the House Appropriations Committee, per the below alert from NIRS, and ask them to oppose this latest industry boondoggle. A key vote may come up as soon as Thursday afternoon.

Your voice HAS made a difference. But we need to keep shouting. Please contact Congress ASAP.

Thank you!!!

~ Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne and Graham Nash

HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS SUBCOMMITTEE TO MEET THURSDAY, JULY 15. WILL CONSIDER SPENDING BILL THAT INCLUDES $25 BILLION OF TAXPAYER MONEY FOR NEW REACTOR CONSTRUCTION LOANS. ACT NOW! TELL YOUR REPRESENTATIVE ONE MORE TIME: NO TAXPAYER SUBSIDIES FOR NUCLEAR POWER!

Dear Friends,

We have to act again, and we have to act now.

A House Appropriations Subcommittee plans to hold another meeting to try to pass an energy budget for Fiscal Year 2011 on Thursday (July 15) afternoon.

As you may remember, the subcommittee had scheduled a meeting in June but cancelled it when some pro-nuclear Democrats (especially Chet Edwards (Tex.) and Chaka Fattah (Penn.) complained that the bill did not include the Obama Administration’s request for $36 Billion to loan to wealthy nuclear utilities to build new nuclear reactors.

Since then, the House has passed $9 billion in new nuclear loans through the emergency supplemental funding bill (the Senate has not yet taken up that bill). Not satisfied with that, the pro-nuclear faction has succeeded in getting the rest–$25 Billion–on the energy appropriations bill that will be considered on Thursday.

Now we have to get this money removed from the bill. And your actions can make the difference.

Please send a message to your Representative now here. And please help us spread the word to your networks, friends and relatives: there isn’t much time. Here is the link to the action page: http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5502/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=3179

And if your Representative is on the list below, he/she is on the Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy. Please call his/her office today with the simple message: Vote against all loans for new nuclear reactors. You can reach every member of Congress at 202-224-3121 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              202-224-3121      end_of_the_skype_highlighting.

We don’t need more radioactive waste, more radiation leaks, and higher electric bills–all the things more nuclear power would bring.

We had hoped to begin moving our attention to the Senate this week, which soon will be taking up energy/climate bills–with potentially disastrous nuclear provisions.

But first we have to stop $25 billion in new nuclear loans. So we all need to act, and act fast. Please send your letter here; if your Representative is listed below, please call him/her today.

And, last and probably least, if you can support this ongoing (and seemingly never-ending) campaign, please make a tax-deductible contribution here. Your support enables us to do this essential work.

Thanks for all you do,

Michael Mariotte
Executive Director
Nuclear Information and Resource Service
nirsnet@nirs.org
www.nirs.org

House Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water

Democrats

  • Chair: Peter J. Visclosky (IN)
  • Chet Edwards (TX)
  • Ed Pastor (AZ)
  • Marion Berry (AR)
  • Chaka Fattah (PA)
  • Steve Israel (NY)
  • John W. Olver (MA)
  • Lincoln Davis (TN)
  • John T. Salazar (CO)
  • Patrick Murphy (PA)
  • David R. Obey (WI), Ex Officio

Republicans

  • Ranking Member: Rodney P. Frelinghuysen (NJ)
  • Zach Wamp (TN)
  • Michael K. Simpson (ID)
  • Dennis R. Rehberg (MT)
  • Ken Calvert (CA)
  • Rodney Alexander (LA)
  • Jerry Lewis (CA), Ex Officio

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Editor - at 10:45 am

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10 Ways to Kick the Offshore-Oil Habit

http://www.grist.org/i/screen/new/grist_logo.gif

by Jonathan Hiskes

Number 10One of the most depressing aspects of the Gulf of Mexico oil leak is the idea that we’ve got no choice but to rely on offshore drilling and the stomach-turning dangers it carries. We know all the problems with importing oil from petro-dictatorships. Electric cars aren’t ready to replace fuel-combustion engines. The only option, political leaders tell us, is for Americans to choke down the occasional drilling catastrophe and deal with the ugly consequences.

“Accidents happen,” said Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.). “You learn from them and you try not to make sure they don’t happen again.”

“I doubt this is the first accident that has happened and I doubt it will be the last,” said White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs.

“The reality of it is that we will be depending on oil and gas as we transition to a new energy future,” Ken Salazar, President Obama’s Interior secretary, told a Senate panel last week. “You are not going to turn off the lights of this country or the economy by shutting it all down.”

Is it true that we’ve got no alternative?

The last time lawmakers truly freaked out about the problem of our oil dependence–when gas prices topped $4 a gallon in the summer of 2008–the Senate Energy Committee called in Skip Laitner, director of economic analysis at the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).

The committee asked Laitner what efficiency–the famously unglamorous energy strategy–could do to relieve gas prices. He gave them an astonishing figure: It could save 46 billion barrels of oil. If the U.S. made an all-out investment in energy efficiency-cutting energy waste out of vehicles, buildings, the electrical grid, and elsewhere in the economy–Laitner believes it could save the energy equivalent of 46 billion barrels by 2030.

Domestic offshore drilling produced 537 million barrels a year over the last nine years, according to the Minerals Management Service. A full-bore efficiency plan would save the equivalent of 85 years of offshore drilling.

Looking at the transportation sector alone, Laitner recommended 10 short-term policies that would cut the need for oil. Congress eventually passed one of them-the “cash for clunkers” program. Even that could be improved upon: the lax fuel-economy standards for new cars meant the trade-in program didn’t save nearly as much fuel as it could have

If you’re tired of dead sea turtles, oil-coated marshlands, destroyed fisheries, disputes over leak rates, political cop-outs, terms like tar balls and junk shots (OK, those are funny), these are for you:

10 solutions to our oil addiction

1. A better “cash for clunkers.” Last summer’s popular program took hundreds of thousands of low-performing autos off the road, but its low standards for the fuel economy of eligible new cars made it more of an auto-industry bailout than an environmental boon. A two-year version that gave credit for only truly efficient new vehicles (35 mpg or better) would save more oil. Congress could pay for it by extending the 1978 gas guzzler tax to light trucks and SUVs–it currently applies only to passenger cars.

2. Emergency funding for endangered mass transit. A chilling 59 percent of public transit networks have cut service or raised fares (or both) since January 2009, pushing more commuters into cars. Congress could save both oil and jobs by preserving existing bus and rail lines with emergency funding.

3. A national telecommuting and videoconferencing initiative. Encouraging employees to work from home and cut back on business travel would cut fuel usage, save them money and commuting time, and probably make a lot of them happier. Congress could direct federal workers to telecommute and videoconference as much as possible. For everyone else, a campaign would help make these things more normative and socially acceptable.

4. Smarter freight movement. Congress could commission a study to explore a grab-bag of methods to lighten the impact of trucking and rail and jet shipping. “Heavy trucks might save 32 percent of energy use through a combination of improved fuel efficiencies, and better coordination to reduce empty backhauls and unnecessary travel,” Laitner writes in a journal article [PDF] Train design that reduces aerodynamic drag and collects energy from braking (as a Prius does) could produce more savings.

5. Smarter land use. Congress could direct (and help fund) local government efforts to update zoning and land-use regulations in ways that encourage compact development compatible with transit service and friendly to walkers and bikers. (Obama’s Partnership for Sustainable Communities is already taking steps in this direction.)

http://www.grist.org/article/2010-05-24-10-ways-to-kick-the-offshore-oil-habit/

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Editor - June 1, 2010 at 10:01 am

Categories: Alternative Energy, Environment, Government & Politics   Tags: , , , , ,

The Oil Spill and the Republicans

The frustration and anxiety of Americans about the horrific oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico grows by the day. Those whose livelihood is tied to the Gulf — or who live in the wetlands of Louisiana, and communities along the coast — are justifiable demanding the deployment of war-time levels of personnel and equipment to stop the dark, deadly oil that is invading from the sea.

In times of national crisis, Americans look to the President to lead — and to deliver. That’s why President Obama was absolutely correct to make it crystal clear that he is personally responsible to deal with the oil spill crisis — and has told his Administration to spare no effort to stop the leak, oversee the cleanup, and assure that BP completely compensates the massive number of victims.

Increasingly sharp criticism has been leveled at the President because BP has so far been unable to stop the leak. The problem, of course, is that most of the critics have few suggestions about what the Administration might do that it isn’t doing.

And it is down right remarkable that the critics, include Republicans like Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, who less that two years ago were joining Republican oil industry “expert” Sarah Palin in the juvenile Republican convention chant “Drill Baby Drill!”

“Drill Baby Drill!” was not just intended to promote more offshore oil drilling. It was intended to mock Democratic concerns for the environmental impact of offshore drilling. It was intended to dismiss their opposition to drilling as stupid, “tree-hugging,” anti-growth, “elite” concerns. It was intended to mock those who feared that offshore drilling would despoil our natural resources. It was intended to label them — in the words of the late Republican Vice-President Spiro Agnew — as “effete, nattering nabobs of negativism” — part of the “chablis and brie” set that is completely disconnected from the lives of ordinary Americans who drink beer, work hard and get their hands dirty producing the products and the food we need in our everyday lives.

Of course things haven’t turned out that way. The victims of the BP oil disaster are the shrimpers and the oystermen — the people who own the mom and pop restaurants and coffee shops — the folks who drive their pickup trucks to a job in the tourist industry along the Mississippi coast. The real victims are the fathers who want to take their sons hunting in the Louisiana wetlands the way their father took them.

And the real beneficiaries of the Bush-Cheney-Republican energy policy have not been ordinary Americans — they are the giant oil companies that have become economic behemoths by encouraging the world’s addiction to oil and preventing the development of energy alternatives that would end our dependence.

The fact is that while Big Oil has been polluting the Gulf with what now appears to be 12,000 to 19,000 barrels of oil — or more — each day since April, it has been polluting our politics with millions of dollars in campaign contributions for decades.

In the last three and a half years, the oil industry has given over $35 million dollars to the Republicans. Big Oil paid for “drill baby drill” just as surely as United Airlines paid for the naming rights of the United Center in Chicago.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-creamer/the-oil-spill-and-the-rep_b_595481.html

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Editor - at 9:59 am

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Florida Minute with Sheff Wright

Lobbyist Sheff Wright talks about alternative energy solutions.

Duration : 0:1:0

Read more…

Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by Editor - April 9, 2010 at 9:24 am

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