SolarDiscountSecrets.com

Visit SiteSolarDiscountSecrets.comIf you are like most families in this troubled economy, you try to buy things when they are on sale or can be purchased at discount prices. Buying a solar panel system for your home should be no different.

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Home Energy Savings Secrets

Visit SiteHome Energy Savings Secrets"Who Else Wants To Know Home Energy Savings Secrets and Start Saving From Your Monthly Electric Bills in 7 Days or Less – Guaranteed?"

If you are interested in learning everything there is to know about saving home energy, then this is going to be the most important information you’ll ever read…
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Clean Powered House

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Intel: Chip giant into ten the largest purchaser of green energy

Article by hi joiney

Learned from the Intel side, it was awarded the U.S. “Forbes” magazine’s Top decades of green procurement Energy The title of largest companies. Award and Intel has been pushing green issues, and exemplary manner closely related to corporate social responsibility. Intel awarded the title of the most green companyRecently, the U.S. “Forbes” website latest published article about the nation’s more than 1,300 green energy procurement business. Intel’s 10 enterprises from the largest stand out in a decade most companies purchase green energy. Forbes wrote in the article, “If your computer using Intel processors, then the Chip Is through wind, solar or earth energy and manufacturing. ” U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, said in the past decade, Intel became the largest buyers of green energy, purchased a total of 14 million kilowatt-hours of renewable energy. Although Intel has never released the energy spent for the procurement of these funds, but according to the average price to estimate the energy industry may spend a total of 100 million U.S. dollars. Intel’s global director of public utilities and infrastructure MartySedler said: “Although renewable energy has emerged, but the current use of this energy is still very uneconomical. By supporting renewable energy industry, we are committed to making renewable energy much more more economical. from the longer-term perspective, is for everyone to use less expensive energy. ” Three environmental strategy Intel Previously, Intel’s global environmental manager ToddBrady In an interview with CNET News Service interview that “Intel is an environmentally responsible company, the pursuit of environmental protection and business operations double harvest. Intel’s environmental strategies over from R & D, procurement, production, manufacturing, management and other aspects. Intel is committed to bringing out their own environmental strategies to share with the industry to achieve the industrial, social and global importance for the environment, participation and contribution. ” It ToddBrady introduction, Intel environmental strategies include three main aspects: First, sustainable operations, Intel’s main business is the chips and Semiconductor, In production before it, use it in various ways to reduce the environmental footprint left behind on Earth. The second is the development of environmentally friendly products, that is, more energy-efficient product launch, whether it is for the PC or server, whether this or the Internet data center, Intel are seeking the highest energy efficiency. In addition, more than 10 years, Intel has taken the lead in the industry such as lead and halogen remove harmful substances out. The third is to actively promote the environment of Intel technologies, such as smart buildings and smart grid, use the Intel technology and programs, to building more efficient, more intelligent grid. “This is not only business opportunities, but also the opportunity to protect the environment.” ToddBrady also pointed out that by 2012, Intel and its global plant carbon emissions reduction to be achieved in 2007 compared to 20%.

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This Energy Called Green

So what is all the hype about this energy that is called green? A simple way to describe “green energy” is energy that is environmentally friendly sources of power and energy known as renewable and also pollution free. This is what people are talking about when they describe in clean, green energy that helps to reduce energy cost and use.

Green energy has been with us for centuries but until recently have you seen such a push, and a greater demand as people become more aware of our planet and the continuing depleting resources.

Even with our automobiles, there is a sudden go ahead demand for cleaner emissions, leaning more towards hydrogen and electric models. Hydrogen powered vehicles have been proven to increase the miles per gallon and reduce emissions. As technology becomes greener leaning towards solar, water, and wind we can realize the day is coming to end energy production as we now know it.

Just imagine a stand alone home, powered by energy from the sun, assisted by wind energy for back up with little or no maintenance.

You get into your car powered by water alone and go to the shopping mall noticing no pollutants from the cars next to you. These homes can now be constructed with all the latest green energy innovations. This is not science fiction, this is the 21rst century.

Hardly a day goes by that you do not hear about energy, either the rising cost or how we can save money going green. It’s in the newscast, newspaper, and even the Internet you can find thousands of articles and websites dedicated to this seemingly new technology. How can we use this fairly new energy to reduce are global warming, the hole in the ozone layer, and so on and so on?

We need to keep in touch with are government representatives to see what incentives are available for installation of green energy for our homes.

Most people do not even realize that there are tax benefits for going green. In my state they offer energy credits for solar, wind, and solar hot water heater installation.

If every one of us could do just a little to support green energy, just think how much we can help reduce are already over loaded power grids. The biggest beneficiary would be helping reduce pollution and saving the planet and the natural resources. Even homes that are older can benefit from green energy, because any reduction in energy consumption will help everyone save money and help our environment.

Jerry Standefer is a successful renewable energy marketer who has helped many people solve renewable energy needs for their homes. He shows people how they can save money by installing their own solar, wind, or solar hot water heater system. Find out how you can save money on your energy cost today. Visit Earth Power Energy Systems today! Sign up to receive are free energy guide.

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Green Energy: The Belle of the Ball in 2010

Article by Chris Nelder

The Day the World Turned from Brown to Green

Every once in a while, the tone of the energy market shifts in a way that seems subtle at the time, but is a major turning point in hindsight. I believe one is happening now.

January 2007 was such a moment, a time of palpable excitement around renewable energy. Solar, wind, and other renewable plays exploded that year, and First Solar (NASDAQ: FSLR) gained 866%.

July 2007 offered another, when the IEA had its “come-to-Jesus moment.” The depletion of mature oil fields was finally out of the bag and in plain view, and it worked a sea-change on the debate about the future of oil. Fairy tales of endless growth gave way to a more earnest discussion about whether unconventional oil could replace conventional oil, which had flatlined since the end of 2004.

I marked Memorial Day 2008 as the moment when peak oil emerged from obscurity in the media, and the debate shifted from denial to serious inquiry. My intensive study of the subject, Profit from the Peak, had just been published and numerous media appearances followed where I explained what peak oil was about.

Now, anyone who is paying attention knows what it means (or at least think they know what it means), and the topic is casually included in financial and news discussions.

But those were mere eddies compared to the wave I can feel building now. It’s as if all the political momentum – indeed the entire public dialogue about energy – has suddenly changed from Brown to Green.

In the wake of the failed Copenhagen talks, and with the potentially imminent death of cap-and-trade legislation, the world seems to have realized what I’ve been saying all along: It’s better to incentivize than penalize. Focus on generating renewable energy first, and then worry about the emissions that remain.

Automobiles

Peak oil awareness has clearly motivated the auto industry to shift aggressively into electric propulsion. Toyota U.S.A. President and COO Jim Lentz said in November, “Our model on future energy is that we will probably see peak oil some time around the end of the next decade, so whether it’s 2017 or 2020, it’s gonna be some time in that neighborhood.”

GM Vice Chairman Bob Lutz was even blunter in his keynote at the LA Auto Show in December: “Going forward, the automobile industry simply can no longer rely on oil to supply 98 percent of the world’s automotive energy requirements.”

Their response has been dramatic. Toyota’s Prius and GM’s Volt are their new flagship products. BMW, to my great relief, has abandoned its hydrogen car program and is going full-throttle into electric cars. Nissan and Mitsubishi are tooled for mass production of their electrics. Better Place, the recharging infrastructure and battery swapping play, has raised 0 million and it’s not even in operation yet.

Rail

Rail is moving back onto the U.S. national agenda, with billion in new grants for high speed rail announced this week as part of its billion share of the federal stimulus package. Florida is expected to capture .5 billion of that for a high speed link from Orlando to Tampa. A 1 million Department of Transportation loan announced this week will green-light the rebuilding of San Francisco’s Transbay Terminal as a high-speed rail depot while the project’s 0 million federal stimulus application is reviewed.

To be sure, billion is a paltry beginning-perhaps 2% of the federal commitment that will be needed to really rail-ify America. The San Francisco-Los Angeles high speed line alone will cost on the order of billion. The full cost of installing high speed rail and intra-city light rail across America will be somewhere in the low trillions, it will probably take us decades, and most of the interstate links will have to be federally funded.

The stimulus money for high speed rail isn’t part of some comprehensive national transportation strategy to counter the peak oil threat, because no such strategy exists. But it could be the best investment in the hastily conceived, shovel-ready jobs stimulus package, because it will give us in a critically important long-term asset.

For perspective on that billion, consider that Beijing is already executing its plan to build a 6 billion high speed rail system linking nearly all its provincial cities in the next five years. The Shanghai-Beijing link alone is expected to create half a million jobs. And unlike the 9 billion in the U.S. stimulus package that will not go to rail projects, Beijing’s investment will result in a permanent and absolutely vital asset.

Were the U.S. doing anything of the kind, I might never worry my weary head again about peak oil.

Wind and Grid

A study released this week by the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) showed that as much as 30% of the eastern seaboard and the Midwest could be powered by wind, and 20% could be done by 2024 – if the transmission lines existed.

NREL estimates the grid will need 20,000 new miles of backbone at a cost of around billion. Building it would create around 280,000 new jobs and give us a critical long-term asset. It’s a perfect example of appropriate federal investment in national infrastructure, yet it faces NIMBY opposition everywhere. A heavier hand may be required to push it through. It’s good to see transmission reform legislation making its way through Congress now, but I pray it doesn’t blow up into a states’ rights hubbub.

Compare that to the billion HVDC “super grid” that nine European countries plan to build around the North Sea that will enable all of them to use renewable power, whether it’s being generated by offshore wind in Denmark, wave power in Scotland, solar power in North Africa, or hydropower in Norway. It will form the heart of a much larger, 0 billion pan-European super grid; a critical link in achieving the EU’s 20% by 2020 target.

Or compare again to China, with its 7 billion investment in electric grid infrastructure from 2006 to 2010 alone.

The good news is that while building the electric infrastructure of the future isn’t cheap, it isn’t expensive either. The NREL study concluded that the avoided future cost of coal-fired power would more than offset the cost of the new grid infrastructure. We must assume that’s before even factoring in any externalized costs, or any peak-oil adjusted estimates of the future costs.

However we’ll have to move faster. NREL’s 20% scenario is based on 225,000 megawatts (MW) of new wind capacity, or 16,000 MW a year through 2024. The U.S. installed only 10,000 MW of new capacity in 2009 according to the AWEA, so we’d have to post a 60% growth rate from current levels to deploy that much.

Meanwhile, ten times that – more than 100,000 MW of offshore wind capacity alone – is currently under development in Europe.

Solar

Solar power is making progress on several different fronts.

The snowball of Chinese solar manufacturers opening plants in the U.S. rolls on, with the announcement that Suntech (NYSE: STP) is building a new plant in Arizona.

Distributed local generation is making great strides. In California, the Southern California Edison utility has launched a competitive bidding process for 225 MW of rooftop solar capacity, with a project size of 1-2 MW. Another 250 MW will be purchased from independent solar developers. Utility PG&E is expected to launch a similar 500 MW offering soon. Even better, a proposed feed-in tariff for 1 to 10 MW-sized renewable projects is in the works. The progress for bellwether California in distributed generation bodes well for the rest of the country, suggesting that transmission grid support for utility-scale solar may become less of a hurdle for the industry as a whole.

Incentive programs elsewhere in the country continue to enjoy enthusiastic receptions where the price is right. A new million incentive offering for residential and small commercial solar in Massachusetts was fully subscribed in the first four hours this week, reflecting a strong build-up of demand. Generous rooftop solar incentives in states like New Jersey and New York are being exhausted and replenished yearly.

Materials research in photovoltaics (PV) continues to show promise as well, in areas like cell backing materials, adhesion methods, new cell formulations and production methods, and longevity testing and hardening. PV looks well on its way to cutting costs on a Moore’s Law curve.

Building efficiency is also enjoying an explosion of subsidies and new plays. Watch this space for developments in that sector.

Brown Going Down

Meanwhile, things aren’t going too well for the fossil fuel sector, which is under attack on every side.

Oil remains precariously balanced on the narrow ledge of prices, as does natural gas to a lesser extent. The supply of both remains sufficient to keep the specter of shortage marginal pricing at bay. Inventories are reasonably high, and prices aren’t high enough to induce new drilling for high-risk or high-cost prospects. Even so, the worsening outlook for the refining sector continues to support the price of gasoline and other finished products.

Costs remain a bit too high for the comfort of marginal producers, as evidenced by an interview with Royal Dutch Shell CEO Peter Voser in London’s Financial Times this week. The company was no longer counting on growth from tar sands production, he said, and its plan to expand operations in Albert by roughly half a million barrels per day remained shelved. Conventional oil and gas drilling is their new strategic direction, simply because the costs are so much lower than for tar sands development. (This, of course, is no surprise.)

The commodities markets in general seem to be showing signs of post-traumatic stress disorder, or at the very least recency bias. The trade is overwrought on fairly inconsequential signals, and there seems to be a roughly equal balance between those expecting higher and lower prices. I’m beginning to suspect that this will be a low signal-to-noise ratio year for the commodity sector, with traders slugging it out in a narrow price range and fewer solid tradeable opportunities than the last several years offered.

Concerns over public water supply contamination from hydraulic fracking shale gas operations aren’t going away, and the EPA has set up a consumer complaint hotline. We simply don’t have enough information yet to know whether the issue is overblown or a serious enough problem to kill the practice. However, public sentiment isn’t likely to yield to science on this issue any time soon and could dampen the enthusiasm for new shale gas development.

The effort to stop mountaintop removal in coal operations isn’t going away either, and emissions control is still very much in play at the EPA.

The news is nearly all bad. The fossil fuel industry wakes up every day to a drumbeat of reports on oil spills, tanker traffic interruptions, environmental lawsuits, and so on, but their main sales pitch to the public is a weak one about jobs. Their message continues to fall hard on the consumer’s ear, which is much more attuned now to the questions on long-term supply, security, and sustainability.

The Browns are looking more the lumbering, hidebound beast every day; meanwhile, a thousand alternatives sprout around them. They trumpet their investments in clean energy, but the fact remains that it still represents a small fraction of their investment in new BTUs overall.

I don’t know what to call it: the Great Eye, the hive mind, the ideasphere… but it has turned and its attention is fixed on renewables. The Browns will find it hard to get any love this year, but the Greens will be the belle of the ball.

Until next time,

Chris

This article was originally found here: Green Energy: Green Energy: The Belle of the Ball in 2010

Chris Nelder is a self-taught energy expert who has intensively studied peak oil for five years, and written hundreds of articles on politics, peak oil and energy in general.










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