June 2010

(This is a guest post by Michael Noble, the executive director of Fresh Energy, an organization promoting clean energy solutions for the environment and the economy. Read his full bio below. This was originally posted on the Fresh Energy blog. Last winter, he made a trip to New Zealand, came home, and wrote about some of what he experienced.)

Last week, I blogged about New Zealand’s birds. I had visited an island sanctuary where several near-extinct birds had been introduced. Today, I went to a museum in Auckland, and saw stuffed birds in glass cases–one I saw in the wild yesterday that seems to have made it and escaped extinction, one that hovers at the precipice, and one that is gone.

Tonight we met with our touring students in our classroom setting in a crowded Auckland hotel room. “Why does it matter,”asked Professor Hoffman, “if a Saddleback bird goes extinct? Is your life richer now knowing of its recovery, since its reintroduction to island refuges off the coast of Auckland? Three days ago you had never heard of a Saddleback.”

Yesterday, a nurse who guided our hike through the bush said that when she was the students’ age, no one she knew had ever seen a Saddleback, they were so rare. Now they were above our heads, flitting and hopping across the low tree canopy, almost within reach, as common as sparrows in St. Paul, it seemed.

huia, heterolocha acutivostrisToday, I saw a stuffed Saddleback in the museum. Presumably it was once so rare that it was a museum piece. Along side it in the glass case was a Huia bird, pictured to the right. It was one of the few birds where male and females have dramatically different beaks. But Huia were prized not for beaks, but for feathers. The last was seen in the wild in 1907.

takaheThe odd flightless Takahe, pictured to the right, is poised between the world of survival and extinction. About 220 exist. Efforts are constant to mix the gene pool, and move members from south to north to try to hatch a new chick. Crummy at parenting, when a Takahe does hatch an egg, it keeps the conservationists on edge for weeks working for the chick’s survival. Large, heavy, colorful and flightless, and a very slow breeder to boot, who knows if the Takahe will survive.

After pressing the students on this question–Professor Steve Hoffman and I listened to their careful logic– we need to prevent extinctions because we can; it’s important to the web and fabric of life, because species fill niches we don’t even understand; because these birds are iconic and represent the culture of New Zealand. Steve offered another choice as well–a simple and daring reason that not everyone would embrace. We must protect species from extinction because they have a right to exist and we have no right to take existence away from them. The students mulled that.

Of all the pending impact of a rapidly warming world, many are tragic and potentially economically calamitous: sea level rise; drying of soils and loss of arable lands; severe storms and killer heat spells; shortage of water and food. Surely the human impacts are our top concern, but the risks of cascading extinctions stands apart.

In January 2004, Nature Magazine reported that 19 ecologists had conducted modeling of 6 ecosystems that represent 20 percent of the Earth’s land area. If greenhouse gases are not dramatically reduced soon, they found that between 15 and 37 percent of all life would be extinct by 2050, or on its way to extinction.

saddlebackAn interesting lens to view the new prospering of a Saddleback bird, pictured to the right, on a small island off New Zealand.

(Michael Noble is the executive director of Fresh Energy, an organization promoting clean energy solutions for the environment and the economy. Fresh Energy works to create fair laws that level the playing field for clean energy and remove barriers to renewable energy sources. Its goal is a clean energy economy that protects the health and the wallets of consumers now and in the future.

Michael has over thirty years of professional expertise in energy, and has been a key strategist for major public policy innovations in energy, such as energy efficiency, renewable energy development, global warming solutions, and strategies to reduce reliance on foreign oil in Minnesota and the Midwestern region. Michael has served as the CEO of three different not-for-profit energy organizations since 1979 and one for-profit energy services company. Currently, he is the Chair of the Clean Energy Working Group and serves on the Steering Committee of RE-AMP. In addition, Michael serves on the board of directors of Conservation Minnesota Voter Center, Wind on the Wires, and the Will Steger Foundation.)

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It’s time for a short break for me! Company has come to town – seven women I have not seen since high school graduation in 1972! The last thing I want to worry about these next few days while we have an amazing reunion (and recovery days afterward!) is posting to this blog, Twitter and Facebook. I’ll be back next week with a couple guest posts and hopefully some writing of my own.

I have gone back to school to be a Residential Planner. It will expand my real estate business, but it’s very time-consuming. And I miss getting up and writing in the morning! I have a few weeks off from school, so I hope to get caught up with desert verde, too, and bring you some original writing.

Meanwhile, go through the drop-downs in the navigation menu at the top of the page, and read Eco-living Tips, the Solar Building Series, and facts and news about Eco Building. Check out the Nature Quotes and Book selections, and visit the ads on the right side of the page to help keep this blog alive! There is lots to see while I’m gone a few days!

See you soon!

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Backpacking in Tasmania

by nan on 2010/06/24 · 1 comment

in Environment

(This is a guest post by Frank Wall, who writes about bushwalking, hiking, backpacking and the environment in Australia on Our Hiking Blog. If you are heading his way, he suggests you take a week or more to visit and explore its natural wonders and pristine wilderness.)

Tasmania is that tiny island State, right at the bottom of Australia. It is one of the greenest places on earth. There are wild rivers, soaring mountains and wilderness. Lots of wilderness.

Wilderness we love to explore.

Fast Tassie Facts:
> Area- 62,409 sq km (24,096 sq mi)
> Length – 364 km (226 mi) long and 306 km (190 mi) wide from west to east.
> Population – 500,000 (1998)
> Climate – cool & temperate with four distinct seasons
> Wilderness (the important bit) – 37% of the State is reserves, National Parks and World Heritage Sites.

For more information, head across to Wikipedia.

So, what is so great about Tasmania (aka “Tassie” by most Australians)?

The Wilderness

Tasmania is a wild place. Just a short journey from the main population centres can have you exploring some fantastic wilderness areas. Throw on a pair of hiking boots, grab a day pack, and you can be exploring beautiful rivers, wonderful forests and hidden treasures. Just be careful though, Tasmania can have four seasons in one day, and always head off with rain jacket, water, map and some snacks.

There are many multi-day backpacking trips with grades suitable for a beginner to expert. These bushwalks (as we call hiking and backpacking in Oz) range from a gentle 30 km (18.6 mile) overnighter on the beautiful Freycinet Peninsula Circuit to a 150 km (93 mile) traipse on the Port Davey and South Coast Track. Many people travel from mainland Australia and overseas to enjoy these areas. Other than a couple of tracks in high season, they are usually uncrowded and isolated. For example, we have been on 7 day adventures and met 2-3 people along the trail; it’s our definition of heaven!

The Mountains

Dolerite columnMuch of the island is composed of dolerite rock that has formed spectacular mountains and cliffs. Probably the iconic Tasmanian delorite peak is Cradle Mountain. This gnarly peak of 1,545 m (5,069 ft) can be scaled as part of a day hike and will reward you with extensive views of this wild and rugged area. Day hiking in the area is spectacular with Dove Lake in the foreground of the mountain and special spots like Wombats Pool and Twisted Lakes are terrific to explore.

The Overland Track

Cradle Mountain and Boat ShedThis is probably the iconic Tasmanian bushwalk. It is a 65km (40ml) trek from Cradle Mountain to Lake St Clair in the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage area. It is wild country with limited infrastructure. There are huts dotted along the way but no roads, power, telephone service or much else. In summer, permits and a fee are required as the Overland Track is popular with hikers from across the world.

I have walked it about eight times with my wife Sue. We enjoy every trip because of the different seasons or people we meet along the way. A couple of years ago we wrote a guide on how to plan, organise and walk the Overland Track which we sell as an eBook via Our Hiking Blog. It is really helpful for people coming to Australia who want to experience this unique environment.

The People
Waldheim Forrest“Tassie” as many Australians call Tasmania, has an interesting background. The island was home to the Tasmanian Aboriginals for an estimated 35,000 years before European settlement commenced in the late 1700′s. It became a British penal colony and from 1803 to 1853 around 75,000 convicts were transported there. You can still see much of this history in buildings and historic relics. A visit to Port Arthur, one of the most brutal prisons, is a “must see”. Unfortunately as European settlement increased, the indigenous population was treated atrociously and the last of the full blood Tasmanian Aboriginals died in 1876.

Whether you are traveling around sampling some fantastic local produce, checking out beautiful hand crafted objects or wandering along the many walking trails, Tasmanians are always welcoming and interesting people to have a chat with. They are proud of their State and fiercely independent and many are strong environmental advocates. This year the Tasmanian State election saw a swing to “The Greens” political party and they now hold the balance of power in the Government.

River Tasmania

(All of the images in this article have been shared by
Dennis Harding, a Tasmanian Photographer.)

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(This is a guest post from Roy Gayhart, originally posted on his blog at Whole Solar, a Women Owned Small Business, which is part of an affiliated group of wholesale distributors and manufacturer’s representatives who share a passion for solar energy.)

I just got through listening to President Obama’s speech about the BP Oil Spill. When I wrote the blog What the BP Gulf Oil Spill Means to BP Solar in May, who could have imagined we’d be where we are now? Around that time government officials were estimating that oil was leaking at a rate of 5,000 barrels a day (a five-fold increase from initial estimates). A few days after that blog was written, NPR began reporting that the spill rate could be closer to 70,000 barrels per day. That set off a controversy, with BP’s COO disputing the NPR oilspill estimates. A month later, a US scientific team has fixed the estimates of the oil spill rate at between 35,000 to 60,000 barrels a day.

We are in day 57, with no end in sight. We’ve gone from “the largest oil spill in American history” to the “worst environmental disaster in American history.” We continue to hear about the chaotic manner in which BP has handled the crisis. We’ve gone from what was described in that earlier blog to the realization that the BP spill was turning the gulf into a dead zone.

In the earlier post that I’m updating here, I explored the branding repercussions affecting BP Solar. Since then, I as able to access a talk given by a BP Group Vice President of Marketing on April 26, 2001 at The CNN Fortune Time Global Marketing Forum in Rome, Italy. Her talk was titled “Branding in the 21st Century; A BP Perspective.” She points out BP at that time was “a company made up of 100,000 people thrown together as a result of a series of mergers and acquisitions. Almost overnight the new BP became:

> One of the biggest companies in the world with over 100,000 employees worldwide
> The largest oil and natural gas producer in the US and UK
> The largest non-OPEC oil producer in the world
> The world’s largest solar company
> And a company with more than 28,000 service stations world-wide.”

In somewhat of a sad foretelling manner she stated: “I believe at the end of the day, the strongest brands still result from powerful emotional connections that companies are able to make with the general population.” She went on to identify three themes that identify “what people expect, and demand, from great brands:

> Great brands deliver not what a company makes, but what customers need.
> Great brands make a positive impact in people’s lives.
> Great brands demonstrate alignment between external words and internal actions.”

Fast-forward from 2001 to 2010 – I’m reading articles titled You Don’t Trust BP? It’s Too Late, BP and Big Oil: Shut Down America’s Greenwashing Machine and Americans Don’t Care if BP Goes Bankrupt Paying for Oil Spill, Poll Shows. Somehow I doubt this was the branding goal BP had in mind.

So, again I ask, where does this put BP Solar? There hasn’t been a lot of press on BP Solar since the the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Distaster. Renewable Energy World tells us:

BP Solar With over 35 years of experience and installations in over 160 countries, BP Solar is one of the world’s largest solar companies and has manufacturing facilities in the U.S., Spain, India, and China.

As I wrote in the earlier blog, Home Depot has exclusively carried the BP Solar brand. Since I wrote that last blog, Home Depot in California has thrown out all of its long-time loyal solar installers and replaced them with Solar City. Perhaps this is a play to replace a tarnished brand with the Solar City brand. In any event, anyone buying solar panels at a California Home Depot will get BP Solar AND Solar City. This might apply in Home Depot Warehouses outside of California as well. Will it work for Home Depot, Solar City and BP Solar? I guess we continue to wait and see.

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(This is a guest post from Roy Gayhart, originally posted on his blog at Whole Solar, a Women Owned Small Business, which is part of an affiliated group of wholesale distributors and manufacturer’s representatives who share a passion for solar energy.)

At the Solar Power International Show, Rhone Resch, President and CEO of SEIA, presented The Solar Bill of Rights, which I’d like to share. In a message of industry unity that was later complemented by calls for exerting political by New Mexico Governor Richardson, Rhone laid out eight amendments of the Solar Bill of Rights and then stated, “We declare these rights not on behalf of our companies, but on behalf of our customers and our country. We seek no more than the freedom to compete on equal terms and no more than the liberty for consumers to choose the energy source they think best. These rights, like those on which country was founded, are a simple matter of common-sense. In fact, you might even call them ’self-evident.’ But that doesn’t mean they’re self-evident in the halls of power, especially when our opponents are pumping as much haze into the energy debate as they are into the environment.”

So here it is, in Rhone’s own words:

Solar Bill of Rights.

First Amendment: Americans have the right to put solar on their homes or businesses. Today’s systems beautify and add value to communities and homes, and yet antiquated rules prevent many homes and businesses from going solar. From restrictive covenants to onerous connection, permitting and inspection fees these rules create fundamental barriers to solar. Utilities should not be allowed to restrict green power with red tape.

Second Amendment: Americans have the right to connect their solar system to the grid with uniform national standards. This is as simple as creating a standard jack for telephones. Can you imagine buying a phone in Nevada and bringing it home to California and finding out it doesn’t fit into the wall jack? Other industries don’t stand for this and neither should we.

Third Amendment: Consumers have the right to Net Meter and be compensated at the very least with full retail electricity rates. Call this solar’s eminent domain—utilities use the power we make, and we expect to be compensated at its actual value. This is not just the cost, but the true value of solar including our security benefits, peak power benefits and environmental benefits – as well as the true price for carbon.

Fourth Amendment: The Solar Power Industry has the right to a fair competitive environment. It’s the most basic right there is—equality under the law. Today, solar has anything but. And that’s not just an opinion, that’s a fact. From 2002 to 2008, federal subsidies for fossil fuels were $72 billion while solar received less than $1 billion. This is completely disconnected with the desires of the American people. Recent independent polling shows that 92% of the public supports greater use of solar. And yet taxpayers are forced to subsidize companies like ExxonMobil, companies that are the richest in the history of the world. It’s that simple—and that wrong. Subsidies aren’t the only issue of fairness, which leads me to number 5.

Fifth Amendment: We also have the right to equal access to public lands. Oil and natural gas companies are operating on 45 million acres of public lands. Today, solar companies have access to ZERO. America has the best solar resources in the world and we can’t harness the full potential of the sun without accessing our sun-baked lands of the West. Of course, there’s little point in collecting energy unless there’s a means of distributing it.

Sixth Amendment: We have the right to interconnect and build new transmission lines. Here, too, we seek no more than what other industries already have. The next great build out of our transmission lines must connect the vast solar resources in the southwest to the population centers across the United States.

Seventh Amendment: Americans must have the right to buy solar electricity from our utilities. Consumers have no choice but to buy power from utilities. Although recently some utilities have started to listen to the 92 percent of Americans who want them to prioritize a kilowatt of power drawn from the sun over any other energy source. We have a long way to go. Therefore, for any renewable portfolio standard to be effective, at either the federal or state level, it must contain a large carve out for all solar energy technologies.

Eighth Amendment: Consumers have the right, and should expect, the highest ethical treatment from the solar industry. From minimizing our impact on the environment to providing systems that work better than advertised to ensuring that we accurately communicate how incentives work for consumers, our industry must operate at a higher ethical standard than any other. We will not stand for those who cheat, lie and take advantage of the good name of solar energy.

We declare these rights not on behalf of our companies, but on behalf of our customers and our country. We seek no more than the freedom to compete on equal terms and no more than the liberty for consumers to choose the energy source they think best. These rights, like those on which country was founded, are a simple matter of common-sense. In fact, you might even call them “self-evident.”

But that doesn’t mean they’re self-evident in the halls of power, especially when our opponents are pumping as much haze into the energy debate as they are into the environment.

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(This is a guest post by Mark Turzcynski, developer of the POWERSHED.)

Solar energy is abundant, renewable and becoming increasingly accessible across the country. Yet there are some serious concerns about rooftop solar installations when it comes to fire safety. In addition to the actual heat generated by the panels, the ability for fire fighters and other emergency responders to disconnect the electrical current to the panels and/or to gain access to attic fires remains a very real problem for homeowners.

What’s more, in cases like a home fire that happened earlier this spring in San Diego, CA, homeowners can’t find an electrician soon enough who is willing or able to sever the current (Source: North County Times). Granted, electricity is a pretty powerful force, and should be treated with respect. However, trying to locate a professional who can help save your house from burning to the ground can be very frustrating, to say the least.

Building codes across the country in states like California, New Mexico, Florida, Nevada and Florida haven’t kept pace with the advances in clean-tech and alternative energy. The wheels of bureaucracy churn slowly, and in the meantime, lots of people may be hurt or suffer property loss until it catches up.

powershed1

One solution is portable solar options. Ordinary arrays or plug and play may work for some, but POWERSHED is a self-contained solar product geared toward homeowners. The photovoltaic solar panels are connected to a sturdy shed designed to withstand 90 mph winds. The shed is usable for storage and can also be situated anywhere on the property to maximize solar harvest.

powershed3

The array is completely separate from the house, and the installation is specifically designed to be stress free: pour the concrete pad upon which the shed sits; anchor the shed; unfold the panels and lock them in place; plug the unit into the household current. A regular contractor can be used to coordinate assembly and connections, but a licensed solar installer is not necessary.

powershed2

If desired, the POWERSHED can go with you when you move, or in some cases, may stay with the property as a value-add to the sale of your home.

POWERSHED was invented by the author, Mark Turczynski, an engineer in the Midwest who saw a need to transition folks to renewables and off fossil fuels as much as possible. For more information about how POWERSHED works or its technical specifications, please visit www.powershed.com.

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The Carson National Forest just announced in The Taos News that fire danger is high. Temperatures are in the 90s, and humidity is low. Even after all that snow in March and April, there is a high risk of fire. It doesn’t take long for things to dry out in the desert!

Fire season officially starts on May 15. Fires can be started by lightning and fireworks, but, more frequently, humans. People burning trash, out-of-town campers, and people throwing cigarettes out of their car windows are all responsible. Once in a while, it is arson. Please be careful!

Whether you live in the beautiful Pinon and Ponderosa forests in New Mexico, or in the mountains of southern California, you can protect your home with firescaping – landscaping for fire resistance.

Create defensible space.

Defensible space is your home and all outbuildings and 30′ of adjacent yard around each. It should be as clear of flammables as possible. If you are on a slope, your defensible space is 100′.

> Use fire-resistant roofing materials – tile and metal instead of wood shakes and shingles.

> Plants with the highest water needs should be closest to the house – groundcovers, lawn, flowers and other herbaceous plants. Do not plant volatile vegetation, such as evergreens, in this area.

plantings> Plant fire-resistant plants.

> Plant in loose clusters, instead of densely.

> Mulch to retain moisture, but do not use pine bark.

> Keep plantings of shrubs and trees to a minimum. Prune them, and keep them in good health. Dead and dry vegetation is wildfire fuel.

> Trees should be pruned at least 10′ off the ground, and branches should not hang over the house.

> Do not plant vines to climb up trees. Ground fires will quickly climb them to the canopy.

> Lawns should be well-watered and cut low.

hardscaping> Hardscaping – walkways, patios, stone walls, driveways and parking areas- is an effective firebreak.

> Your driveway should be wide enough for fire equipment to come in and turn around.

> Remove flammable vegetation at least 10′ on either side of the driveway.

> Keep leaves and debris out of your gutters.

> Keep your defensible space free of flammable materials, such as wood piles and scrap lumber.

> Keep hoses and tools handy in the event of a fire.

Consult your local county extension office or US Forest Service for information specific to your area.

Photos courtesy Firewise. Learn about Firewise Communities.

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Big is not beautiful anymore. American home square footage has been ballooning for years, but that’s got to end.

In our patriotic efforts to live up to our international reputation of being over-consumptive, we are living in way more space than we need. We have media rooms, master suites, walk-in closets that can be mistaken for bedrooms, and extra living and dining areas. I grew up in a house, some of which was reserved for company – formal living and dining rooms. I never understood that excess. It eventually dawned on my parents that they actually lived in about 1000 square feet, and they built their final house accordingly.

Jenkins Lane 4 My first house, as a single 30-something, was a 16′x24′ passive solar post and beam saltbox in New Hampshire. It had more space than I needed – full basement, two stories and a cozy reading loft on the ‘third floor.’ Utility bills were low. Being passive solar, it did not need supplemental heat on sunny winter days. Being small, it did not take much wood to keep it comfortable at night.

I now have children, and my house is about 2000 square feet. The space has served us well for the last eleven years. We have lived in every inch of it, and I even remodeled to reduce my energy bills and improve the traffic pattern and heating/cooling air flow. As the kids are growing up and moving out on their own, though, I am drowning in the extra room. I am ready to downsize.

A friend of mine owns a pumice passive solar duplex, one side of which is 665 square feet. It is one bedroom and a full bath with a petite kitchen, a living room and a storage room with a washer and dryer. I had this listed for sale a couple years ago, and every time I was in it, I said to myself, ‘I could live here with no kids.’ It was just enough room. If it was still for sale, I’d probably buy it.

Extravagance vs Simplicity

Why do we think bigger is better? Ask yourself that as you consider these parts of home ownership:

> cost
> maintenance
> cleaning
> utilities
> waste

Do you really need more of all those in your life? Right. I didn’t think so.

Downsize Without Sacrifice

> Make sure you have storage space. Not too much, otherwise you’ll continue to fill it up with ‘stuff,’ and stuff is what we are trying to get rid of!

> The furniture must be to scale. Small room, small furniture. That is why the pumice duplex seemed so spacious – the kitchen was small but complete, and the living room furniture fit in the space it was given.

> Built-ins take up interior wall space, not living space. Use them. Double-duty built-ins, like a bench that is storage below, are very effective and space-saving.

> Get rid of your stuff! Have yard sales, and donate to churches and battered women shelters. Visit second-hand stores, freebox and recycling center regularly. Dump your stuff! The less stuff you have, the less room you will need. My rule is if I have not used something in six months, I get rid of it. If that makes you nervous, use one year as a timeline.

> Raised ceilings, which I don’t recommend for heating purposes, give the illusion of more space. Raise them if you must. Just don’t tell me about it.

The Benefits

> Save money on utilities and maintenance.

> Save money on your mortgage or your rent.

> If you are building, you will cut costs with less material.

> If you are building, you will create less waste (good for the landfill).

> If you are building, you will have a smaller footprint, eating up less of the planet’s precious vegetation.

> Reduce your carbon footprint and save our natural resources.

Next time you move or build, think big by going small.

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