Archive for September 2009

Energy Literacy - Understand, Track, and Reduce Your Energy Consumption

written by Brad Clements, on Sep 29, 2009 11:40:00 PM.

Energy Literacy - Understand, Track, and Reduce Your Energy Consumption

I recently 'participated' in an O'Reilly webcast with the same title as this post.

This one hour webcast by Saul Griffith compared his 'lifestyle' energy consumption against the world average, examined the impact of CO2 levels on global warning, calculated how much various renewable energy sources must grow to minimize CO2 levels and finally how his 'lifestyle' must change to reduce the CO2 that he produces.

The world has known, calculable amounts of energy are available. In this webcast, we'll take a scientific look (physics and chemistry based) at all of the earth's energy resources, both stored (nuclear and fossil fuels) as well as renewable (solar, wind, wave, geothermal, tidal, wave, photosynthetic).

Looking at the sizes of each of these resources and comparing them to humanity's energy consumption is far from depressing. Although humanity uses a lot of energy, there are very large sources of non-carbon producing energy that can be tapped to meet our needs.

On the whole I found the webcast to be an eye-opener, especially in terms of the total amount of non-fossil fuel energy sources that must be developed in the next 20 years to keep CO2 levels at or below 450ppm.

For example, ALL of the following new non-fossil fuel energy sources must be built continuously over the next 25 years to offset fossil fuel use enough to keep or reduce CO2 to 450ppm:

====================  ==================== =============
Source                Amount               How often
====================  ==================== =============
solar cells            100 m2               every second
solar thermal          50 m2                every second
bio algae              1  olympic pool      every second
wind turbines          12 3-megawatt        every hour
geothermal steam       3  100-megawatt      every day
nuclear power plant    1  3-gigawatt        every week
====================  ==================== =============

Its hard to comprehend the scale of manufacturing needed to sustain this level of development. And making all those items will also generate CO2, so in reality even more non-fossil energy sources will be needed sooner to compensate.

The presentation did seem to drag a little for me at the beginning because the presentor spent perhaps too much time going into the details of his personal lifestyle energy consumption. However he does tie those details back into the presentation at the end by explaining how his lifestyle would need to change to reduce his CO2 output enough to reach a global per-capita average of 450ppm.

The webcast is based on youtube and is available in high-quality format. Broadband/dsl connection highly recommended.

October 2009 PEAK Moment TV Schedule

written by Brad Clements, on Sep 29, 2009 8:57:00 PM.

October 2009 PEAK Moment TV Schedule

The Potsdam And Canton Transition group will meet on October 14 in the Community Room of the Potsdam Civic Center at 7 pm.

You can download this listing as a PDF.

Oct 5th & 6th: Santa Barbara Students Lead the Way to Sustainability

Take a personal tour with members of Santa Barbara City College’s Student Sustainability Coalition. They’re propelling action — like bringing fresh, local organic produce daily to the salad bar, and placing recycling bins in the cafeteria. They’re educating the campus all year round and especially during Sustainability Week — on the climate crisis, renewables, and campus transportation alternatives. Now their advisor, professor Adam Green, has formed a Center for Sustainability for the college campuses, curriculum and community sustainability.sbcc.edu.

Oct 11th & 12th: The Waking-Up Syndrome

Ecopsychologist Sarah Edwards, PhD, explains stages people often go through when facing the implications of climate change and resource depletion. She outlines various aspects of Denial, Anxiety, Awakening, Despair, Powerlessness and eventual Acceptance. Differentiating these from the normal grief process, Sarah emphasizes how we can face inevitable feelings of grief and free our energy for positive, practical action in our personal and community lives. eco-anxiety.blogspot.com

Want more? Read “The Waking-Up Syndrome” by Sarah Edwards and Linda Buzzell on Hopedance online. Or see Ecotherapy: Healing with Nature in Mind by Linda Buzzell and Craig Chalquist (Sierra Books.)

Oct 19th & 20th: Baked in Telluride: Making Dough in a Tough Economy

Biting into a fresh-baked cookie from “Baked in Telluride” is a double treat — a yummy goody that also supports a local independent business. Owner Jerry Green has been going “green” for decades before it became fashionable. He shares the challenges of running an independent business in a tourist town while competing with bakeries thousands of miles away. While a town councilor, Jerry helped shape projects like affordable public housing and public transportation.

Oct 26th and 27th: The Placemeant Project: Stories of Why “Where” Matters

Kate Magruder feels that “Opinions make walls. Stories make bridges.” Using narrative, music and images, Placement Project participants create short stories that not only empower the tellers, but also elicit respect, admiration and tenderness from listeners. Kate hopes that telling our stories can build an honest sense of community in her town of Ukiah and beyond. Watch some digital stories at http://www.storymapping.org/placemeant.html.

PEAK TV is sponsored locally by the Center for Excellence in Communication at Clarkson University and the Seymour Family of Potsdam.

September 2009 PEAK Moment TV Schedule

written by Brad Clements, on Sep 16, 2009 10:49:00 PM.

September 2009 PEAK Moment TV Schedule

Sept. 15-16: Peak Oil and Its Effect on Climate Change

The peak oil message is slow to gain acceptance, says energy analyst Randy Udall, because it's at odds with our optimistic It's-Morning-in-America mentality. Politicians "Don't Do Depletion." Randy describes challenges, mitigations, and exciting opportunities to create a prosperous path to a lower-energy future. In an excerpt from his presentation at the Association for the Study of Peak Oil (ASPO-USA) conference in September 2008, the co-founder of ASPO-USA points out cornucopian myths about energy that are being shattered by reality. His concern is that the peak oil crisis, while less known than the climate crisis, will impact us sooner, and is not being factored into climate policy decisions. Peak Oil may in fact help moderate the climate crisis.

Sept. 21-22: The Twilight of an Age

In his book, The Long Descent, John Michael Greer observes that our culture has two primary stories: “Infinite Progress” or “Catastrophe”. On the contrary, he sees history as cyclic: civilizations rise and fall. Like others, ours is exhausting its resource base. Cheap energy is over. Decline is here, but the descent will be a long one. It’s too late to maintain the status quo by swapping energy sources. How to deal with this predicament? He lays out practical ideas, possibilities, and potentials, including reconnecting with natural and human capacities pushed aside by industrial life.

Sept. 28-29: Creating a Home Graywater System

Trathen Heckman takes us on a step-by-step tour of how to make a safe, ecological and legal suburban home graywater system. Follow the water as it drains from the bathroom tub (and sink and laundry) through a unique valve leading into the backyard garden. It flows into an optional wetland and underground pond for filtering. The water is then piped below ground to several destinations in the yard, where it will supply water for plants growing above it. Trathen discusses the process with local government agencies, the system design and construction (with pictures), costs, resource books, and why to undertake a graywater system in the first place. (www.daily-acts.org)