Archive for Wind power
How Stopping Your Bottled Water Addiction Can Save Cash & Save The Earth
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- Image by Getty Images via Daylife
Do you love bottled water? If so then you’re just like most other Americans since we consume over 25 BILION LITERS per year!
While sales of bottled water have exploded in recent years, you may be surprised to learn that water from bottles is not necessarily cleaner or safer than water from your tap.
The United States has one of the safest water supplies in the world, and public water suppliers must provide an annual report to customers on drinking water quality. Those reports are available from the water supplier or by visiting the Environmental Protection Agency’s website at www.epa.gov. Read More→
Outdoor Solar Lighting
Posted by: | CommentsIf you have lights outdoors, why not let the sun power them?
Outdoor Solar Lighting, like all Solar Power, is clean, natural and sustainable. A solar energy home can help you reduce your energy usage which helps reduce pollution. How? By using Solar Energy, we put less of a strain on the power plants that cause pollution.
How Outdoor Solar Lighting Works
Sunlight is collected and stored in a battery so when you need the light, it’s ready to go. Some can even collect sunlight on cloudy days. And they work with no wires.
A Solar Light has two parts:
1. the light itself and
2. the solar panel.
The solar panel collects the energy so it must be in the sun to charge the battery.
Some units have the light and the panel together in one piece and some units separate the light and panel. This allows you to put the light where you want it, even in a spot that does not receive much sunlight, as long as the panel is in the sun. Read More→
Will Wind Power All Of England?
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- Image by Wayfinder_73 via Flickr
On Tuesday, May 12, the green light was given to build the world’s largest offshore wind farm in the Thames Estuary of Great Britain. The Thames Estuary is the area in which the River Thames meets the waters of the North Sea. The first phase of the 90 square mile London Array will see 175 turbines producing 630 megawatts (MW) of electricity 12 miles off the coast of Kent.
Planning work for the $2.984 billion, (€2.2bn ; £2bn), program will start this year with offshore construction under way in 2011 and the first electricity produced in 2012. The second stage is dependent on future environmental evaluations, but the ultimate aim is for 341 turbines producing 1 gigawatt (GW) of power, enough for a quarter of all the homes in Greater London.
Onshore work is due to start this summer, with offshore work due to start in early 2011. When fully operational, it will make a substantial contribution to the UK Government’s target of providing 15.4% of all electricity to be supplied from renewable sources by 2020. Based on the current schedule, it is expected=2 0that this project will represent nearly 7% of this target. It would also avoid the emission of millions of tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) over its life. Read More→
DOD To Spend $346 Million More For Green Energy
Posted by: | CommentsWithin the Department of Defense’s announcement detailing further plans for facility improvements, under money allocated to it through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), there are some little green gems that may have gone unnoticed.
In its March Expenditure Plan, the Defense Department had said it planned to spend $300 million on “near-term energy technology research.”
Now it plans to spend an additional $346 million on “energy-related projects, enabling the DOD to lead the way in the national effort to achieve greater energy independence,” according to the Department of Defense April 28, 2009, Expenditure Plan (PDF). Read More→
Show You The Money? Funding Ops For Rurual Renewable Energy
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- Image via Wikipedia
To help make your search a bit easier, we’ve been scouring the internet and talking to local, state, and federal agencies and private companies to learn what funding opportunities they offer: Read More→
Power Company Pays YOU Rent?
Posted by: | CommentsDuke Energy has a solar plan for its customers in North Carolina that’s so simple that it might just catch on nationwide.
The utility company wants to RENT sunny spots – patches of roof or land – to install small grid-connected solar systems. Duke will own and maintain the systems for their expected life spans of 25 years. The utility company will own the solar generated power too.
The rent payment to property owners will be based on the size of the system installed. Together, connected by the grid, the mini solar systems will create a distributed solar power system. Property owners hosting the systems need to do little more than than sign some paperwork, receive a payment each month, and decide how to spend the newfound cash. Read More→
Tax Cows? Six Eco Myths Busted!
Posted by: | CommentsFactcheck.org has won a well-deserved 2009 Webby “People’s Voice” award. Designed to check the facts spouted by politicians and those seeking to influence politics and policy debates, the nonprofit Factcheck.org is an indispensable nonpartisan resource.
In recognition of the site’s Webby, here’s a look at six of its greatest recent hits:
1. There’s enough wind power in the Atlantic to offset all the electricity we now get from coal. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar made waves when he said the U.S. East Coast was so rich in wind that offshore wind farms could produce as much electricity as every U.S. coal-fired power plant. It sounds great. Coal, which produces roughly half our electricity, is a major source of pollution that causes smog, acid rain, mercury contamination and global warming; wind power causes none of these. Unfortunately, it’s just not true, according to Factcheck.org. “We calculate that converting wind to enough electricity to replace all U.S. coal-fired plants would require building 3,540 offshore wind farms as big as the world’s largest, which is off the coast of Denmark,” Factcheck.org reported. “So far the U.S. has built exactly zero offshore wind farms.”
2. Congress is outlawing your backyard organic garden. A vast campaign, spread via email, Facebook and elsewhere, has tried to convince people that a food safety bill being considered in Congress will wipe out organic farming as we know it, and even possibly make it illegal to have a garden in your backyard. According to Factcheck.org, though, there’s hardly anything to worry about. “We suppose in the grand realm of all that’s possible, or more likely a futuristic B movie, federal bureaucrats could decide that public safety calls for inspections of every backyard garden in the nation, leading everyday citizens to surreptitiously cultivate tomato plants in a closet with a sunlamp, lest they get busted by the cops,” Factcheck.org concluded. “But we kinda doubt it.” Read More→
Where is Wind Power Used the Most?
Posted by: | CommentsBut Texas has always been active in wind energy generation. In 1999 here was the top four states were: Read More→







































