Sustainability

A Carbon Negative Fuel

Cross-posted from WorldChanging.com <http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/007427.html>

By Jeremy Faludi, 16 Oct. 07
“Impossible!” you say. “Even wind and solar have carbon emissions from their manufacturing, and biofuels are carbon neutral at best. How can a fuel be carbon negative?” But listen to people working on gasification and terra preta, and you’ll have something new to think about.

We’ve mentioned terra preta before: it’s a human-made soil or fertilizer. “Three times richer in nitrogen and phosphorous, and twenty times the carbon of normal soils, terra preta is the legacy of ancient Amazonians who predate Western civilization.” Although we don’t know how it was made back then, we do know how to make it now: burn biomass (preferably agricultural waste) in a special way that pyrolisizes it, breaking down long hydrocarbon chains like cellulose into shorter, simpler molecules. These simpler molecules are more easily broken down by microbes and plants as food, and bond more easily with key nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus. This is what makes terra preta such good fertilizer. Because terra preta locks so much carbon in the soil, it’s also a form of carbon sequestration that doesn’t involve bizarre heroics like pumping CO2 down old mine shafts. What’s more, it may reduce other greenhouse gases as well as water pollution: according to Biopact, a network that promotes biofuels and biomass energy, (continue reading…)


UK Music Festivals Go Green in 2010

Cross-posted from Green Weblog<http://www.greenweblog.net/2010/06/09/uk-music-festivals-go-green-in-2010>

By: Dan Greenslade 9 Jun. 10

When you think of a music festival, many people will think of nature-loving hippies at places like Glastonbury and Woodstock. But in fact, due to the enourmous amount of energy it takes to light and sound up to ten different stages at once, music festivals can contribute tonnes and tonnes of CO2 to the atmosphere.

This year though, some of the UK’s biggest festivals are striking back, with massive events such as The Big Chill, Latitude, Bestival, Reading & Leeds and Lovebox joining a campaign to cut carbon emissions.

Starting with Bestival on the Isle of Wight last weekend, 10 festivals have joined the Guardian-supported 10:10 mission to cut their greenhouse gas emissions by 10% during 2010.

The venues – hosting a wide variety of bands and artists including Jay-Z, Lady Gaga, Elbow, Lily Allen, The Prodigy, Hot Chip, Florence & The Machine, The Flaming Lips, Spandau Ballet and Seasick Steve – have joined up as 10:10 begins a wave of international launches from France to the west coast of the United States.

(continue reading…)


EarthSmart: FedEx Trades Purple and Orange for Green

Cross-posted from the Earth Garage blog <http://blog.earthgarage.com/2010/07/earthsmart-fedex-trades-purple-and.html>

By: Glenn Shorey 18 Mar. 2009

Ever seen a FedEx truck with this logo on it and wondered what it meant?

Earthsmart is a FedEx program developed with Etsy Enviromental Partners, a sustainability management consultancy founded by Yale professor Dan Esty, author of Green to Gold. The program has three main branches, business solutions, workplace culture, and community outreach. The most interesting changes are in the business branch, which includes trucks, planes, and facilities.

Some of the ways the Earthsmart program reduces environmental impact is the use of solar power, a new type of fuel cell called a Bloom Energy Server, and eco-friendly vehicles. The Express Hybrid Delivery Vehicle was introduced in 2008. In 2009 FedEx retrofitted 92 old trucks with hybrid technology and particulate filters. Hopefully FedEx will continue to reduce its environmental impact and in the process encourage other corporations to do the same.

If you feel like following suit, check out these green oil and exhaust filters on our website earthgarage.com.


Hot Tips for Raising Money from the Green Entrepreneur Summit


By: Kosta Stavreas 28 Jul. 2010

NEW YORK CITY – Yesterday, Chris and I attended the Green Entrepreneur Summit in New York.  It was a completely sold out event, and rightfully so.  The panelists and audience were high-quality business leaders who are the lifeblood of the cleantech scene in New York.

I went back through my notes and there was some great insight shared by the Funding Strategies Panel on how to raise capital for a cleantech or sustainability venture. The panelists were heavy-hitters with long track records of successfully raising substantial amounts of capital (in the 10’s and 100’s of millions) and commercializing technologies in the ‘green’ space.

David Kistner — CEO, Green Apple Cleaners
Ron Bergamini — CEO, Action Carting Environmental Services
Franklin Madison — Technology Program Director, ITAC
Martin Saposnick – Mentor, Hudson Valley Innovation Center

Here are some of my favorite quotes:


Curitiba – Sustainable City (Brazil’s Green City)

Cross-posted from Green Planet Monitor <http://www.greenplanetmonitor.net/news/2009/03/curitiba-sustainable-city>

By: Anil Mundra 18 Mar. 2009

The city of Curitiba, in southern Brazil, is famous among urban planners for its innovation and rational development, with a reputation for being highly livable and very sustainable.  It was one of the first cities to market itself as “green” in a 1980s advertising campaign.

And it is. Curitiba is blessed with some 400 square kilometers of public park or forest space. That’s more than 50 square meters per inhabitant.  According to some measures, it emits 25 percent less carbon per capita than most Brazilian cities, even though more people own cars here. The discrepancy arises from Curitiba’s famous public transportation system, which carried some 70 percent of commuter traffic in the last decade.

Curitiba has also spearheaded programs that encourage residents to keep their streets clean and recycle, by offering them food in exchange for their waste. Still, the city landfill is expected to overflow this year and it is no longer the Brazilian city with the most green space. So, despite the success of aggressive urban planning measures undertaken forty years ago, Curitiba must continue to update its initiatives and adapt to the times.

(continue reading…)


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