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Archive for April, 2008

“How we handle global, environmental, questions is not just going to save humanity but it is also going to define humanity.” -T.A. Barron (The Day the Stones Walked

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“It is so important to reach out to them (children) and teach and talk about nature and global warming… it is the most interesting audiance there is.” = Jean Craighead George. -an award-winning author and illustrator. (My Side of the Mountain

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“I don’t think of myself as a visionary… I think of myself as a dedecated environmentalist who has a job to do, understands that job, loves the work, loves nature, loves the values that are incorporated in here (NRDC) and who has been very lucky” -John H. Adam">/0.jpg" alt="YouTube Preview Image" />

“The environment is not something you drive to, or a once every year visit to a national park. The environment is the air you breathe and the water you drink. Environmentalism is the protection of those basic things. That is the accurate definition… and that makes us all environmentalists that now face THE most urgent challenge of our lifetimes… Global Warming.” -Laurie David

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“The solution is you” -Laurie David

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America is facing critical choices about its energy future; how do we fulfill our energy needs AND combat global warming? The coal industry wants to turn coal into a liquid transportation fuel. But liquid coal would have devastating impacts on our economy, our communities and our environment.

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IT’S YOUR NATURE…

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www.itsyournature.org

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Tech firm SUNRGI says its “concentrated photovoltaic” system could revolutionize the solar power industry.

By Paul Davidson, USA TODAY
A Silicon Valley start-up says it has developed technology that can deliver solar power in about a year at prices competitive with coal-fired electricity, a milestone that would leapfrog other more established players and turbocharge the fast-growing industry.

SUNRGI’s “concentrated photovoltaic” system relies on lenses to magnify sunlight 2,000 times, letting it produce as much electricity as standard panels with a far smaller system. Craig Goodman, head of the National Energy Marketers Association, is expected to announce the breakthrough Tuesday.

Also pushing down costs are a highly efficient semiconductor that converts 37% of the sunlight to electricity, more than double the industry average. The unit’s compact size allows it to be made at electronics or PC factories, avoiding the need to build new plants.
“Moving from the lab to the market in two years is typically not what happens,” says Stow Walker of Cambridge Energy Research Associates. Yet, he adds, the semiconductor market “moves much more quickly than power technologies.”

Here’s the full article

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1832-1839
Scottish inventor Robert Anderson invents the first crude electric carriage powered by non-rechargeable primary cells.

1835
American Thomas Davenport is credited with building the first practical electric vehicle — a small locomotive.

1859
French physicist Gaston Planté invents the rechargeable lead-acid storage battery. In 1881, his countryman Camille Faure will improve the storage battery’s ability to supply current and invent the basic lead-acid battery used in automobiles.

1891
William Morrison of Des Moines, Iowa builds the first successful electric automobile in the United States.

1897
The first electric taxis hit the streets of New York City early in the year. The Pope Manufacturing Company of Connecticut becomes the first large-scale American electric automobile manufacturer.

1899
Believing that electricity will run autos in the future, Thomas Alva Edison begins his mission to create a long-lasting, powerful battery for commercial automobiles. Though his research yields some improvements to the alkaline battery, he ultimately abandons his quest a decade later.

1900
The electric automobile is in its heyday. Of the 4,192 cars produced in the United States 28 percent are powered by electricity, and electric autos represent about one-third of all cars found on the roads of New York City, Boston, and Chicago.

A Ford Model T

1908
Henry Ford introduces the mass-produced and gasoline-powered Model T, which will have a profound effect on the U.S. automobile market.

1912
Charles Kettering invents the first practical electric automobile starter. Kettering’s invention makes gasoline-powered autos more alluring to consumers by eliminating the unwieldy hand crank starter and ultimately helps pave the way for the electric car’s demise.

1920

During the 1920s the electric car ceases to be a viable commercial product. The electric car’s downfall is attributable to a number of factors, including the desire for longer distance vehicles, their lack of horsepower, and the ready availability of gasoline.

1966
Congress introduces the earliest bills recommending use of electric vehicles as a means of reducing air pollution. A Gallup poll indicates that 33 million Americans are interested in electric vehicles.

1970s
Concerns about the soaring price of oil — peaking with the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973 — and a growing environmental movement result in renewed interests in electric cars from both consumers and producers.

1972
Victor Wouk, the “Godfather of the Hybrid,” builds the first full-powered, full-size hybrid vehicle out of a 1972 Buick Skylark provided by General Motors (G.M.) for the 1970 Federal Clean Car Incentive Program. The Environmental Protection Association later kills the program in 1976.

Vanguard-Sebring’s CitiCar
1974
Vanguard-Sebring’s CitiCar makes its debut at the Electric Vehicle Symposium in Washington, D.C. The CitiCar has a top speed of over 30 mph and a reliable warm-weather range of 40 miles. By 1975 the company is the sixth largest automaker in the U.S. but is dissolved only a few years later.

1975
The U.S. Postal Service purchases 350 electric delivery jeeps from AM General, a division of AMC, to be used in a test program.

1976
Congress passes the Electric and Hybrid Vehicle Research, Development, and Demonstration Act. The law is intended to spur the development of new technologies including improved batteries, motors, and other hybrid-electric components.

1988
Roger Smith, CEO of G.M. , agrees to fund research efforts to build a practical consumer electric car. G.M. teams up with California’s AeroVironment to design what would become the EV1, which one employee called “the world’s most efficient production vehicle.” Some electric vehicle enthusiasts have speculated that the EV1 was never undertaken as a serious commercial venture by the large automaker.

1990
California passes its Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) Mandate, which requires two percent of the state’s vehicles to have no emissions by 1998 and 10 percent by 2003. The law is repeatedly weakened over the next decade to reduce the number of pure ZEVs it requires.

1997
Toyota unveils the Prius — the world’s first commercially mass-produced and marketed hybrid car — in Japan. Nearly 18,000 units are sold during the first production year.

1997 - 2000
A few thousand all-electric cars (such as Honda’s EV Plus, G.M.’s EV1, Ford’s Ranger pickup EV, Nissan’s Altra EV, Chevy’s S-10 EV, and Toyota’s RAV4 EV) are produced by big car manufacturers, but most of them are available for lease only. All of the major automakers’ advanced all-electric production programs will be discontinued by the early 2000s.


2002
G.M. and DaimlerChrysler sue the California Air Resources Board (CARB) to repeal the ZEV mandate first passed in 1990. The Bush Administration joins that suit.

Crushed EV1 electric cars
2003
G.M. announces that it will not renew leases on its EV1 cars saying it can no longer supply parts to repair the vehicles and that it plans to reclaim the cars by the end of 2004.

2005
On February 16, electric vehicle enthusiasts begin a “Don’t Crush” vigil to stop G.M. from demolishing 78 impounded EV1s in Burbank, California. The vigil ends twenty-eight days later when G.M. removes the cars from the facility. In the film “Who Killed the Electric Car” G.M. spokesman Dave Barthmuss states that the EV1s are to be recycled, not just crushed.

2006
A few pure electric cars and plug-in hybrids are in limited production and new ones are on the horizon. Experts differ on how soon rising oil prices, peak oil forecasts, changing fortunes at car companies, and public demand for cars that run without gasoline will resurrect the mass market for electric car in the twenty-first century. The success of the gasoline hybrid Toyota Prius is a promising sign.

Sources: Hybridcars.com: History, Electric Auto Association: Electric Vehicle History, IEEE Power Engineering Society: “Electric Vehicles In The Early Years Of The Automobile” by Carl Sulzberger, About.com: The History of Electric Vehicles, Econogics: EV History, Smithsonian Institution: Edison After Forty, Who Killed the Electric Car?

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To avoid any confusion about the use, or partial use of “powur” we are changing the website name from Empowured.net to SolarEnurgy.net.

Please change any settings you may have.

Thank you very much for registering!

Peace,

Bruce Marshall-Jones

SolarEnurgy.net

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Even though our government has chosen to subsidize the Ethanol from Corn technology there are some major questions as to why this was passed. Turns out the net energy to create the Corn based ethanol is no more than what you yield from it…. no net energy.

There are a couple of attractive alternatives that are not getting the support they should.

The first alternative bio-fuel is Switchgrass Ethanol…

Here is a report by Scientific American on a 5 year study…
“switchgrass ethanol delivers 540 percent of the energy used to produce it, compared with just roughly 25 percent more energy returned by corn-based ethanol according to the most optimistic studies.”-USDA plant scientist Ken Vogel
“”Cellulosic ethanol contains more net energy and emits significantly fewer greenhouse gases than ethanol made from corn.”-DOE Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman.

But even a native prairie grass needs a helping hand from scientists and farmers to deliver the yields necessary to help ethanol become a viable alternative to petroleum-derived gasoline, Vogel argues. “To really maximize their yield potential, you need to provide nitrogen fertilization,” he says, as well as improved breeding techniques and genetic strains. “Low input systems are just not going to be able to get the energy per acre needed to provide feed, fuel and fiber.”

University of Rhode Island scientist aims to genetically modify switchgrass and produce 100% ethanol for less than $1 per gallon.

“That’s a key concern with using corn for ethanol because some of the genes being engineered into corn to make it a better source of ethanol aren’t genes we want in the food chain. And without confinement, such as plant sterility, those genes could find their way into the corn that we eat.”
“It won’t entirely solve the problem, but it sure will help,” said Kausch. “And the reduced CO2 that comes from your tailpipe is then absorbed by the plants that are then turned into ethanol again, so it becomes a natural cycle.”

– Albert Kausch, University of Rhode Island, plant geneticist

Second alternative bio-fuel is Ethanol from Hemp…

Hemp: the New Soy The THC in this food is so minuscule it is like comparing poppy seeds with heroin.

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Willie on Hemp and the Family Farm…

The Declaration of Independence was printed on Hemp!

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Jack Cashin on hemp -Libertarian candidate for Georgia Agriculture Commissioner advocates Hemp as the billion dollar cash crop that will save Georgia’s farmers.

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Hemp Building materials -Hemp can make a cement-like substance that is stronger & lighter than traditional cement , in fact 1/6th the weight.

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1941 Ford Hemp Car- lighter than steel, yet could withstand 10 times the impact without denting

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Could this all be about the control of the oil industries… or the fear of ???

Why are we kept in the dark about this particular plant? Who has the most to loose if we start to utilize this fiber the way our ancestors did? Good questions to answer.

The old stigmatism about Hemp needs to change, or at least soften. The “medicinal” pot is a distant relative of the other varieties of Hemp. You could eat a life time of the new “healthy” hemp seeds and never get high… instead you would just suffer from better health…. darn.

Is ‘Hemp’ The Right Thing to Do?
Are there better options for fiber? super foods? better sources of ethanol? Maybe. There are better ways to harvest energy. How about Solar Energy? One onethousandth of one percent of the solar energy reaching the earths surface can satisfy all of the earths energy needs. In fact, in just one hour the Sun provides enough energy to supply all our needs for an entire year… There is a better way… like the solar rental REnU from Citizenre! We could even use this energy to make methanol out of carbon dioxide and not only do we have a superior fuel but we stop and possibly reverse global warming.

Be well,
Bruce

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Gregg Braden, trained as a scientist, talks about how science is beginning to prove how our thoughts dictate our world. There is a living field between the particle of atoms that gives matter its form, this is the matrix of all matter. Ancient civilizations already know this, and the Western world is only beginning to wake up to this. This is all about energy… and all about vibration.

In-joy,

Bruce

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Happy Earth Day from the Environmental Defense Fund…

Choose HOPE…. Choose ACTION…

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And from our Native Brothers and Sisters…

Native American 10 Commandments

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Originally founded in 1970, Earth Day has become an internationally recognized event throughout the world. Its founder, the late Sen. Gaylord Nelson is credited with bringing environmental issues and concerns into the international spotlight. Earth Day and Beyond, a 28 minute intimate portrait edited from its original 58 minute version provides a clear and compelling story of the founding of Earth Day as well as some of the more prominent issues affecting the sad state of our environment today.

An Intimate Portrait of Gaylord Nelson, Founder of Earth Day.

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A Perfect Balance

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Neighbors

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Acknowledgment says: You matter to me and I believe in you. It is a powerful and profoundly easy way to heal our society. It begins with our children, our families and then extends out to the people living and working with us in our community. Acknowledgment is easy to do, and to make a difference we must embrace opportunities life offers us to do so.YouTube Preview Image

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Two very important environmental issues…

Laws of Nature: Ocean Fishing
- NRDC

“It is under the water that this silent collapse is occouring.
Unless we take steps to protect the oceans now we are going to out of fish my mid century.”
-Sarah Chasis
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Crude Substitute: The Folly of Liquid Coal
America is facing critical choices about its energy future; how do we fulfill our energy needs AND combat global warming? The coal industry wants to turn coal into a liquid transportation fuel. But liquid coal would have devastating impacts on our economy, our communities and our environment.

“The Coal Industry is after the taxpayers wallet to subsidize the coal industry because Wall Street is smart enough to realize what a bad investment it is. They can’t get the money from the private sector on Wall Street, so they’re going to congress. And they are baisicly trying to have congress lay the bill and all the economic risk on to the American consumer.”
-David Hawkins

“To replace just 10% of the oil we use in this country with liquid coal, we would have to increase coal mining by 40%. We would exacerbate all the effects from coal mining… like mountain top removal.”
-Elizabeth Martin Perera

Solutions?
The best thing we can do is start with the cleanest energy resources first:
-Conservation & Energy Efficiency
-Renewable Energy, Solar, Wind, Biomass
-Clean energy from coal by capturing the CO2 emmissions and pollution
-Smart growth policies

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