New Wind Turbine Design Good for Rural, Urban Environment
Wind power is one of the fastest growing forms of alternative energy in the world. More and more, wind power mills are seen in the countryside, in large wind farms and for the most part, away from city life. But a new form of wind power is now designed to work in an urban environment. VOA producer Zulima Palacio has the story. Mill Arcega narrates.
Categories: Carbon Footprint, Consumers, Energy, Green Lifestyle, Wind Tags: Design, Environment, Rural, Turbine, Urban, Wind
Home Wind Power: How You Can SAVE Money Using It
Home Wind Power: No More Energy Bills to Pay! Read on to Learn More
Over the past years, most people never considered wind power as a serious source of generating energy and electricity, that too, for domestic purposes. In fact, wind was perceived as just another natural phenomenon with very limited usage in life. People generally reveled when the weather was pleasant, and tried to protect themselves when storms or blizzards attacked an area.
However, the situation grew more serious over time, as the oil crisis hit the world. The prices of oil rose rapidly, and the need for an alternative, less expensive source of energy was felt acutely. Such an energy source would indeed be required pretty soon. Now, wind power fitted the bill perfectly. In addition, the supply of wind power was plentiful as well. Thus, many experts tried to combine automobile alternators to radiator cooling fans. This was expected to produce 12 volts of DC current, and was quickly stored away on automotive storage 12 volt batteries. However stretching whatever little power that was produced to 120 volts of AC current, proved to be an unpractical task for most people. And thus, these trials on wind energy harnessing came to an end. Read more…
Categories: Consumers, Energy, Green Lifestyle, Wind Tags: Clean Energy, Energy Consumption, Green Lifestyle, Power, Wind, Wind Power
The Ultimate Consumers Guide To Wind Power.
This Ebook Offers A Non-technical Easy To Understand Approach To Wind Power. You Get An In-depth Tour Covering Every Topic From Selecting The Best Location To Choosing The Right Wind Turbine. Includes Candid Reviews Of Turbines Currently Sold In The U.s.
The Ultimate Consumers Guide To Wind Power.
Categories: Consumers, Energy, Green Lifestyle, Sustainability, Wind Tags: Consumers, Guide, Power, Wind
Home Wind Power Kits: How to Make Them WORK For You
Did You Know? Home Wind Power Kits Can Help You Save Money and Preserve Your Natural Environment
Defining wind power and wind power kits
How is wind, a variety of solar energy, generated? The answer may be attributed to several ecology-related reasons. Different parts of the earth have differences in air temperatures. This is because, the uneven nature of earth’s surface result in the sun heating up the earth by unequal amounts. This hot air, being lighter follows a convectional movement upwards. This creates a hollow in the lower parts of the atmosphere, which gets occupied by the cold air drifting in from nearby areas. Such movement of air is termed ‘wind’. These movements generate a type of motional, or kinetic, energy. Wind energy is obtained from this kinetic energy, which is converted by modern, sophisticated machines. The various equipments for tapping wind power and generating electricity are collectively termed ‘home wind power kits’.
What are the advantages of home wind power kits? Read more…
Categories: Energy, Green Lifestyle, Wind Tags: Clean Energy, Power, Wind, Wind Power
Top 15 Green Blogs
Reposted from: GBB.org
There are over 6,000 blogs related to the environment on Technorati, and countless more news feeds, and webzines.. There are hundreds of high-quality, well-written green blogs, so it’s very difficult to limit the list to just 15. This list seeks to balance depth with breadth and rankings popularity with diversity. These blogs represent many different topics, from general interest to news to lifestyle to tech.
1. Treehugger - Launched in 2004 by serial entrepreneur and designer Graham Hill, Treehugger defined a new online green space and quickly ascended to the ranks of the web’s top blogs. With radio, forums, video, television, its own social bookmarking network, and more than 30,000 posts, Treehugger is a comprehensive resource for sustainable modern living. Treehugger publishes posts by over 30 writers around the world updating 24/7. Discovery recently bought Treehugger and the site is now partnered to Planet Green. It’s not hard to see why: with over 2 million unique visitors per month and a Technorati rank of 19, Treehugger is by far the biggest green blog online today. The content is focused on green news, products, and events. Read more…
Categories: Carbon Footprint, Consumers, Ecomomy, Energy, Event, Green Building, Green Business, Green Finance, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Green Office, News, Solar, Sustainability, Wind Tags: Carbon Footprint, Clean Energy, Consumers, Energy Consumption, Green Blogs, Green Building, Green Business, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Green Office, Green Teams, News, Sustainability, Wind, Wind Power
The Age of Sustainability: Why ‘Less’ Should Be More of Your Business Strategy
By Mahesh Pethe
Business has officially entered “The Age of Sustainability.”
Most people relate sustainability to climate change and our efforts to sustain Earth’s limited resources.
In the corporate world, it means businesses are being asked — or even expected — to take Earth’s climate into consideration in normal business operations. In this new age, business strategy has been required to adapt to profound changes in how consumers and partners buy, use, interact with and view their products and services. This is particularly true over the last 10 years and will likely continue for at least the next 20 to 30 years.
We have all heard of the phrase “reduce, reuse, recycle,” as the call to think about environmental sustainability when making decisions about products and services. But have you considered that this directive may be in conflict with the common business goal of selling more to achieve higher revenues and profits? Read more…
Categories: Carbon Footprint, Consumers, Energy, Green Building, Green Business, Green Lifestyle, Solar, Sustainability, Wind Tags: Carbon Footprint, Clean Energy, Consumers, Energy Consumption, Genentech, Green Building, Green Business, Green Lifestyle, Recycling, Sustainability
GreenCitizens launches “Green Business“, an online directory for firms operating in Green sector
By Pranay Jain
GreenCitizens.net, a first of its kind Green Networking Platform has officially launched “Green Business”, a free of cost online directory for firms operating in the world of Green – Energy, Environment, Carbon, Sustainability or Climate Change.
PR Log (Press Release) More than just an online directory, “Green Business” on GreenCitizens.net, provides a networking and marketing platform to organizations engaged in any aspect of green business. It has been created in a way to provide an interactive platform to all organizations.
Every company gets its own dedicated page on GreenCitizens.net, where it can talk about its vision, experience, its initiatives, projects and achievements, share photos and videos, update its followers of its developments and share news with the entire GreenCitizens community. It will act as a marketplace where you will be able to connect with other organizations, both suppliers and potential clients, pave way for strategic partnerships and create visibility for your organization. Read more…
Categories: Carbon Footprint, Consumers, Energy, Green Business, Green Lifestyle, News, Solar, Sustainability, Wind Tags: Carbon Footprint, Clean Energy, Consumers, Energy Consumption, Green Business, Green Jobs, Solar Power, Sustainability, Wind Power
Where Are the Green Jobs?
If, like me and millions of other Americans, you’ve recently lost your job due to Economageddon, you may be wondering where these Green Jobs are that everyone keeps talking about. News reports say green is the fastest sector of the jobs market; the White House says it’s creating more and more green jobs. Well, where are these jobs, and how do you get one?
I could give a quick, snide answer and tell you to use something called a search engine. Or I could be a little more helpful and point you in the direction of a couple of good job boards, like Greenjobs, or the Green Jobs board at TreeHugger.com.
But what if you’re not a scientist, architect, or engineer?
What if you don’t have the skill set to start developing biofuels or teaching environmental science? As a recently laid-off print editor, for example, I’d love to jump into a growing (as opposed to a terminally ill) job sector, but how do I leverage the skills and experiences I already have and get a green job?
The good news is that most green companies—solar, wind, and biofuel outfits, for example—have plenty of non-technical positions that need to be filled, just like any other company. A green collar economy calls for an army of green accountants, green marketers, green PR flaks, green human resources reps, and so forth.
The even better news is that, just like your high school basketball coach told you, it’s the fundamentals that count. Networking (including meeting, greeting, and going to conferences on green subjects that matter to you) is much more likely to get you your next green job than sending out blind emails. Research and creative thinking won’t hurt either.
And of course there’s always that possibility of going back to school to get more green schools, although some would argue that you don’t necessarily need it.
Here’s my last piece of advice (and take it with a big, fat grain of salt, since I’m still looking for my next full-time gig myself): If none of these answers satisfies you, be an entrepreneur. Start your own green business, based on your own skills or inclinations. After all, as Gandhi said, if you want change in the world, you’ve got to be that change.
Photo Credit: Hillary Birch Vanaria
Categories: Ecomomy, Energy, Green Building, Green Business, Green Finance, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Green Office, Solar, Sustainability, Wind Tags: Clean Energy, Genentech, Green Business, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Sustainability, Sustainability Officer
The 20 Most Popular Stories of 2009
Oakland, CA — What to make of the 20 most-read stories among the 2,350 (or so) articles and blog posts we ran during 2009 on GreenBiz.com,ClimateBiz.com, GreenerBuildings.com,GreenerComputing.com andGreenerDesign.com
It’s hard to make head or tails of them, in terms of the themes, interests, or. Yes, packaging and Walmart seem to be two recurring themes. Rankings and ratings stories always rank high. Beyond that, 2009 seems a muddle — as, perhaps, in real life, it was. After all, what links termites and windvertising?
Themes or not, here are the stories of ours that you, dear reader, clicked on, Googled, Digged, Scribd, StumbledUpon, tweeted (and retweeted) and linked to the most. Do you see any noteworthy patterns or trends herein? Let us know if you do. Read more…
Categories: Carbon Footprint, Consumers, Energy, Green Building, Green Business, Green Finance, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Green Office, News, Solar, Sustainability, Wind Tags: Apple, Bottled Water, Carbon Footprint, Cisco, Clean Energy, Coca-Cola, Consumers, E-Waste, Energy Consumption, Google, Green Building, Green Business, Green Finance, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Green Office, Green Teams, Intel, News, Starbucks, Sustainability, Sustainability Officer, Walmart, Wind
Obama: US spending necessary to create ‘green’ industry jobs
By Tom Raum
WASHINGTON — President Obama is promoting new U.S. spending to create tens of thousands of clean-technology jobs.
He outlined the initiative Friday after a weak government jobs report raised new questions about the sustainability of the recovery.
“Building a robust clean energy sector is how we will create the jobs of the future, jobs that pay well and can’t be outsourced,” Obama said.
Obama announced $2.3 billion in tax credits — to be paid for from last year’s $787 stimulus package — that he said would create some 17,000 “green” jobs. The money will go to projects including solar, wind and energy management.
He said more than 180 projects in over 40 states — including six projects in Arizona — would receive the tax credits.
He also called for an additional $5 billion in spending for clean energy manufacturing, an idea being promoted by Vice President Joe Biden.
Such initiatives are “an important step toward meeting the goal I’ve set of doubling the amount of renewable power we use in the next three years with wind turbines and solar panels built right here in the U.S. of A.,” Obama said.
Obama spoke after the Labor Department said the U.S. jobless rate was unchanged at 10 percent in December, following a decline the previous month. But the government’s broader measure of unemployment — which includes people who have stopped looking for work or can’t find full-time jobs — ticked up 0.1 percentage point to 17.3 percent.
That, plus the larger-than-expected loss of 85,000 jobs in December, put new pressure on the administration to step up job creation.
“The road to recovery is never straight,” Obama said, although he added that the trend is pointing toward an improving jobs picture.
House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio ridiculed Obama’s effort.
“Instead of wildly pivoting from one issue to the next, the Obama administration needs to listen to American families asking ‘where are the jobs?’ and employers calling on Washington to scrap … policies that are already costing jobs,” Boehner said.
After generating 23 million new jobs during the 1990s, the economy is coming off a lost decade, with no net increase in jobs. Even so, losses have been moderating substantially since mid-2009 as the U.S. economy slowly recovers from its worst recession in decades.
Categories: Ecomomy, Energy, Green Building, Green Business, Green Finance, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Green Office, News, Solar, Sustainability, Wind Tags: Clean Energy, Economy, Energy Consumption, Green Building, Green Business, Green Finance, Green Jobs, Green Lifestyle, Green Office, News, President Obama, Solar, Sustainability, Vice President Joe Biden, Wind






