Nov 30
This entry is part 78 of 78 in the series all things eco

Welcome to the November 30th, 2009 edition of All Things Eco.

all things eco

Be sure to Stumble the posts you like, or submit them to other social bookmarking services. Let's promote each other, as well as this blog carnival.

I hope ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 30

Congrats to our winner, randomly selected, comment #56, Adriane! Adriane will be contacted as soon as this post goes up and will have 48 hours to respond with contact info. If after 48 hours I haven't heard back, a new winner will have to be randomly selected. ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 29
Do Ladybugs Bite?
icon1 Barbara Rae | icon2 Member Posts | icon4 11 29th, 2009| icon3Comments »
Image via Wikipedia To set the record straight, the simplest answer is NO they do NOT bite. That is the case for our domestic ladybugs and lady beetles, most commonly found in North America. However, the multi-colored Asian lady beetles DO bite. Their native habitat is northeast Asia.  However, the U.S Department of Agriculture, introduced the Asian [...]
Nov 27
The Trouble with Cap and Trade
icon1 The Green Skeptic | icon2 Member Posts | icon4 11 27th, 2009| icon3Comments »

The Department ...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

On Tuesday, the State of California announced its plans for its own cap-and-trade program as part of Assembly Bill 32, which aims to cut Greenhouse Gas Emissions 15 percent by 2020.

The California Environmental Protection Agency's Air Resources Board released its scoping plan, which was praised by governor Schwarzenegger, environmentalists, and utilities.

But is all the praise deserved?

The California plan follows the same outline of other such plans: a cap limits the amount of GHG emitted by power plants, refineries, cement factories and the like, and requires a permit for every ton of CO2 released into the atmosphere.

The trouble with a California program -- or a Western States Program or a Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative like we have in the Northeast -- is that it's a patchwork approach.

If you're a company with a national footprint, you have to react to all sorts of different regulations, that's why some companies want a national program.

Yet even a national cap-and-trade program is a flawed scheme for dealing with CO2 emissions. Despite the prevailing sentiment that cap-and-trade is market-based, most of the proposed programs will hand out a significant portion of the permits for free, which could have the unintended consequence of keeping the price of permits lower than desirable.

The EPA estimates that the average price per ton will be around $15 for possibly the next two decades. That's until 2030 folks.

Some analysts say that utilities need a carbon price of $50/ton before they'll commit the billions needed for new technologies, such as carbon capture and storage and alternative energy resources. When will we get to a $50 price for carbon? When it's too late.

At that rate, the price of carbon won't be enough to create incentives for investments in low-carbon energy infrastructure, energy efficiency, and transportation.

The potential for gaming the system is equally troubling. There is little agreement about monitoring and accounting of the permits and projects that qualify, which could provide an avenue for unscrupulous speculators to take advantage of the situation.

A cap-and-trade program potentially creates windfall profits for utilities, but it is unclear whether it will generate significant reductions in emissions or investments in clean technology.

And some analysts think it is doubtful that cap-and-trade will even put a dent in fossil fuel's price advantage. Others fear that much of the transactional value of the assets created by any cap-and-trade program will be in the hands of some of the same folks who gave us the subprime mortgage and credit default debacles.

Finally, if we are going to have a cap, and that seems to be the way it's going, I'd rather see a cap-and-invest structure where you auction of the permits to the highest bidder and use profits to create an R & D investment fund rather than giving the permits away for free.

It seems to me these flaws need to be addressed in any scheme that gets adopted before we head down the road of future regrets.


Related articles by Zemanta


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Nov 26
Happy Thanksgiving
icon1 Stefanie | icon2 Member Posts | icon4 11 26th, 2009| icon3Comments »

thanksgiving.gif

Hope everyone has a good day and gets to spend time with loved ones. If the weather is cooperating where you live, get outside and have some fun. ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 26
Today I appeared on Fox Business speaking with Stuart Varney about ClimateGate, Copenhagen, and a horrible television commercial that shows polar bears falling out of the sky.

Here it is:

Watch the latest business video at FOXBusiness.com


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Nov 26

 

Greentip12vampireenergy_2

Earthling, there is a frightening phenomenon happening right now all across your planet. It is called VAMPIRE ENERGY.

Save yourself from wasting electricity, wasting your Earth's fossil fuels and needlessly running up your electric bill.

All you have to do is UNPLUG all things electrical when not in use. You waste electricity when your audio/video/VCR/DVD/DVR/gaming system sits plugged into the outlet, even when they are OFF.

It is so easy to do. Simply plug all of your stuff into one power strip and unplug the power strip when you are finished playing video games or watching your movie. Do not simply flip the switch on the Joinzorkv1200x200_6power strip to OFF... this is where vampire energy lurks. Actually unplug the power cord from the outlet to stop vampire energy waste. In standby mode, your TV and video equipment sit silently sucking energy as you sleep.

You might say this is a small hassle, however you will be saving energy, doing your part to save the planet, and enjoying lower electricity bills. Wouldn't you rather do something fun with that money?

Meet the Vampires. These are the "evil machines" wasting precious energy in your home at this very moment.

This is what they cost per year in vampire energy.*

1.Plasma TV $159.76
2. Desktop Computer $34.21

3. Game Console $25.73
4. Laptop $15.90
5. Laser Printer $12.43
6. VCR $10.12
7. DVD Player $8.67
8. Convection Microwave $3.85
9. Cordless Phone Base Station $3.18
10. LCD Monitor $2.51
11. Radio $1.44
12. Rechargeable Toothbrush $1.35

Green12unplugpowerv4

These vampires suck $279.13 worth of electricity a year from each and every average American home. Start unplugging today.

Wait! Unplug these too: 
Cell Phone Charger

Electric Razor
iPod
And
look in your kitchen: Toasters, Blenders, Bread Machines, Mixers, anything in your home, garage or office with a "ready" or "standby" light.

Do not be a Didiot! Take a few minutes and search your home.  Do not let those evil vampires contribute to your carbon output any longer. Be green like me!Alienemail2_2

Another Secret Revealed:  "Blackle" does not save electricity if you are on a modern LCD monitor.

*2005 Intrusive Residential Standby Service Report: Department of Energy.

Nov 25
Relax and enjoy the natural beauty of the Season, and all we have to be Thankful for! See where the cutest ladybugs live! Share and Enjoy:
Nov 25

holidayguide09.jpg

Readers who have been with us for awhile may remember last year's holiday guide and how huge it was. This year is guide is even better! So many of the tips and gift ideas last year were good that I've migrated them over to this year's guide, as well as added a ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 24
Earth Days Movie
icon1 A. Caleb Hartley | icon2 Member Posts | icon4 11 24th, 2009| icon3Comments »

This past weekend (November 2o, 2009, to be exact), filmmaker Robert Stone introduced a showing of his newest film, Earth Days.

In Robert’s own words, he wanted to make a movie “not about the present, not about the future, not doom and gloom, but about how we got here.” In doing so, he hoped to show how today, politics tends to be the issue when it comes to environmentalism, and he also hopes that movie will “point a way forward.”

I’m not a professional movie reviewer, in fact, I go to movies less often than your typical hermit, but I’ll do my best here to give this film it’s due.

Stone immediately lays politics out as part of his statement, as the opening scene shows statements about the environment being made by presidents starting with John F. Kennedy, all the way through George W. Bush (who’s statements on the environment for his entire eight-year tenure in office were limited to, apparently, “We are addicted to oil.” Duh.).

Stone then introduces nine “pioneer” environmentalists, each with a different background and modus operandi:

  • “The Radical” – Stephanie Mills
  • “The Conservationist” – Stewart Udall
  • “The Astronaut” – Rusty Schweickart
  • “The Biologist” – Paul Ehrlich
  • “The Motivator” – L. Hunter Lovins
  • “The Futurist” – Stewart Brand
  • “The Organizer” – Denis Hayes
  • “The Politician” – Paul (Pete) McCloskey
  • “The Forecaster” – Dennis Meadows

The film speaks of some of the typical “demons” of the environmental movement, including the interstate highway system and automobiles, and theorizes that one of the core problems of the environmental movement is that it asks human beings to move outside of their instinctual “reaction” mode. Early humans faced many risks, and those who survived were the ones who, when faced with immediate threats or opportunities, made a choice rooted in the moment – without having to consider the long-term consequences of their actions. In other words, “cavemen,” when faced with a woolly mammoth, ran. They didn’t have to consider where to run, nor what they would do once they escaped the creature. Conventional business works – even today – in much the same way. Short-term considerations are most important, if the long-term is even thought about at all.

So the film indeed shows a history of the environmental movement, from Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” to the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970, and beyond. It chronicles the “utopia/Back to the Land” movement, where people left the “civilized” world and attempted to live completely off the grid and separate from society at large. And it also chronicles the failure, in general, of that offshoot of the movement.

The breakthrough moment of the evening, of the film, and of the environmental movement itself was stated by Hunter Lovins, who does not mince words: “The world around us is pretty much the world we’re gonna have, and we have to work with that or we’re gonna lose.” This recognition was the impetus for so many groups working together toward the same goal and the launch of the first Earth Day – as well as all the Earth Days that have followed.

To finish up the film, Rusy Schweickart talks about his concept of humanity needing to move away from the idea of the Earth taking care of us to an idea of us having to take care of the Earth. I think that this is a fitting close, and actually is a very exciting and hopeful statement. I think that the concept is a great metaphor to life in general.

The idea of “Mother Earth” keeps us mired in childhood – humanity as infant and child. But as infants and children get older, they “need” their mother less and less – or at least they think they need their mother less and less. Teenagers begin to rebel and feel out their limitations, sometimes destructively. This is the stage I feel humanity is in today – and was in when the environmental movement truly appeared on the scene.

But tomorrow – tomorrow humanity moves into adulthood. When we realize that our mother gave of herself everything she could to get us where we are today, asking for nothing in return. And because of that, we have a duty – even a need – to ensure that she is taken care of. Even if we still think that we don’t need our mother, we make sure she is well taken care of for the rest of her life. Humanity’s next step is this one, and it’s a great way to think about our human condition – the same as the span of lifetime, except over millions or billions of lifetimes.

In the talkback after the screening, Director Robert Stone stated that it seems like the movement has moved from one of grassroots activism putting pressure on government, to being led by scientists, politicians, and career activists, but losing the grassroots.

In summary – Earth Days discusses the successes as well as the failures of the environmental movement, since before it was even considered a movement. But it certainly does point us in a direction for the future:

  1. individuals are the ones who make the biggest impact and show that as humans we are far more cohesive in our support of the Earth than the media and politicians and pundits make it seem.
  2. we need to work together on the big picture instead of in seeming opposition on smaller and smaller “niche” issues.
  3. we need to change what people use to live instead of trying to change how they live. Human nature is incredibly difficult, if not impossible, to change. Products and services, however, change on a daily basis. It will be much easier to make it unquestionably superior to use products and consume services that are environmentally-friendly than to keep using polluting, unsustainable, conventional products and services.

Namaste,
A. Caleb Hartley


If you are interested in seeing Earth Days, we were told that it will be shown on television on April 19th, 2010, thought I cannot find any information on what channel or time it will show. Keep an eye on http://www.earthdaysmovie.com to find out.

Nov 24
Today marks the 5th Anniversary of "the green skeptic." The blog, if not the person.

People often ask me why I'm skeptical and what I'm skeptical about.

Well, the answer is, I believe that skepticism is a hallmark of human nature. Without it, we are sheep.

I think we need to constantly challenge our assumptions about the way the world works or how others tell us it works. We must question even what our leaders tell us, regardless of what side of the aisle their derriere rests upon or what side of the issue they claim to represent.

As the recent controversy around emails sent by and among climate scientists reveals: we are none of us -- left, right or center -- averse to cajoling, tricking or brow-beating to get our point across and win the minds of others.

So, I'll remain a skeptic and try to stop the bleating where I can.




Nov 24
Pluck of the Draw
icon1 simplejess | icon2 Member Posts | icon4 11 24th, 2009| icon3Comments »

turkey

With Thanksgiving approaching, many Americans are prepping for feasting, family time and football.  I would like to take a moment to shed some light on these traditions and put a new spin on them for those of you who are out growing them.  Feasting, fine.  Family time, great.  Football, whatever floats your boat.  But why do we fill ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 23
This entry is part 77 of 77 in the series all things eco

Welcome to the November 23rd, 2009 edition of All Things Eco.

all things eco

Be sure to Stumble the posts you like, or submit them to other social bookmarking services. Let's promote each other, as well as this blog carnival.

I missed ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 22
I’m Doubly Honored!
icon1 Barbara Rae | icon2 Member Posts | icon4 11 22nd, 2009| icon3Comments »
I am especially honored and humbled, to receive the Best Blog Award, twice within 10 days.   Special thanks goes to Nathan, at Wild Facts for presenting me with this wonderful award.  Please stop by and see his wonderful blog. I am posting this award, because of the great honor it is to receive it twice.  While, [...]
Nov 22
There is a great giveaway going on at Happy Green Babies. These products look awesome....but I am also a sucker for anything natural that smells good.  And come on.....they have bear safety playing cards. Every Canadian needs these!
Nov 21

bpafeedingset.jpg

As mentioned in our thinksport BPA free sports bottle giveaway, thinkbaby is well known for there non-toxic baby feeding products, and they also carry a full toddler feeding ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 21
Gapminder, is now able to visually show us how much the world has changed in both life expectancy, and income per person, over the last 200 years.  Hans Rosling, shows us how all the countries of the world, have developed since 1809 to the present day. I found this to be both fascinating and informative, as [...]
Nov 21


With six dogs in our family now, along with the two cats, piggy, and lots of ducks and chickens, it may be time for us to start making our own Christmas stockings. Thankfully Johann at Raise a Green Dog! shared some ideas with us:

Raise a Green Dog!: Make your own dog holiday stocking!!!

Just watching those stockings getting hung on our fireplace gets me all excited with anticipation of digging into my stocking on Christmas morn’. Mum always has some homemade yummy’s in there!

It’s much more fun to make your own, and personalize your dog’s stocking, so here are some great ideas from our ‘make your own’ series:’ Make a cool doggie holiday stocking from reused items, holiday decorations, clothing and more, you’ve got around the house!

Make sure you share you check out Raise a Green Dog! to get some ideas for making your holiday stockings.

Reposted from The Gang.

Similar Posts:

Nov 20
Fear of Discovery
icon1 simplejess | icon2 Member Posts | icon4 11 20th, 2009| icon3Comments »

2682928904_b0d0c31bea

Do you ever find yourself thinking of a really great idea and then it passes like the wind since you never wrote it down or acted upon it?  Do you feel stuck?  Perhaps you procrastinate and then beat yourself up over it.  Maybe you do not forget the good idea you had but you never act and instead just ... [visit site to read more]


© Focus Organic for 2009. | Permalink | No comment | subscribe Subscribe via Email

Ideal Bite

Nov 20
WXPN's World Cafe Live regularly features rock bands, but on one day in November, Philly Startup Leaders' Founder Factory gives entrepreneurs, from earnest beginners to successful experts, the chance to be the rock stars.

The small stage and close proximity of the audience makes for an intimate setting, differentiating it from the large, cold and poorly lit venues that usually host company showcases.

For the experts who have made it -- as entrepreneurs, investors or both -- Founder Factory provides a chance to regenerate the entrepreneurial ecosystem. The experts share stories, impart wisdom, and lend an objective ear in "Fishbowl" problem-solving sessions with young startups.

For the startups, it's a chance to meet other like-minded entrepreneurs, receive advice that would cost thousands if they had to pay for it, and maybe even find an investor or adviser.

And for the audience, many of whom are entrepreneurs working on their own ideas, they benefit from hearing the types of questions facing young companies and those asked by investors and others who may be in a position to lend a hand to them some day.

This year's speakers included Doug Alexander of Internet Capital Group. Doug has seen it all over almost 30 years as an investor and entrepreneur. He offered an investor's perspective on what it takes to build a successful company.

Success may be determined by how a startup answers a few essential questions, Alexander noted: 1.) Are you solving a problem that is keeping someone up at night? 2.) How are you going to make money? and 3.) What is your go-to-market strategy?

Dr. Jeremy Siegel, the Russell E. Palmer Professor of Finance at the Wharton School, arrived with some good news on the economic front. He analyzed everything from the relative value of the dollar to what level of inflation our economy can handle (3-4 percent, in his view), and even criticized former Fed Chairman Alan Greenpsan for not foreseeing the collapse of the credit markets due to highly leveraged credit default swaps.

"Greenspan saw the balance sheets," Professor Siegel said. "He could have told us to watch out." Siegel's bullish optimism on the resilience of our economy was well received.

The sold-out crowd of 200-250 people also heard from Alan Kraus of Ben Franklin Technology Partners Geoff Cook of myyearbook.com and David Brussin of Monetate.

The Fishbowl companies this year were Revzilla, an ecommerce site for motorsports enthusiasts, mobile language learning system PlaySay, and Kidzillions, an allowance and chore rewards platform that lets kids spend and save their money online.

Kendra Gaeta, founder and CEO of Kidzillions stole the show when she demonstrated the art of winging it during her presentation. Her team did not make it due to car trouble on the Turnpike and then her PowerPoint couldn't load. With a sigh of resolve, Gaeta plowed ahead, impressing both the Fishbowl panel and the audience.

The sophomore outing of Founder Factory was not without kinks: some of the presenters need to sharpen their presentation skills and focus on the story rather than every technical issue they wrestled with in establishing their business.

I'd also like to see some cleantech representation in the program next year, either as presenters or Fishbowl companies. There were several interesting cleantech companies in the audience this year, so perhaps one will hit the PSL radar.

And the program would benefit from having a "where are they now?" session recapping what happened with last year's Fishbowl companies and what they learned after Founder Factory.

In the end, Founder Factory is a good reminder that celebrating the entrepreneur can lead to inspiration and value creation. More than one entrepreneur in the audience with whom I spoke shared that Founder Factory helped them renew the spark that got them excited about starting a business in the first place.

And perhaps one of those startups will one day be invited back as an expert imparting his or her wisdom to the next generation of entrepreneurs.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

« Previous Entries

` `