Posts Tagged ‘energy efficient’

Europe Shows the Way to Energy-Efficient Design

January 12th, 2010

From the Matter Network:

After the EU signed Kyoto, requiring it to reduce carbon emissions 8% below 1990 levels by 2012, many products and design changed there, diverging from US standards. Cars, for example, became smaller, lighter; and more fuel efficient. Even US automakers not known for efficiency make 62 MPG cars for Europe. Germany and Spain introduced Feed-in Tariffs that paid homeowners to make solar power on their roofs.But most interestingly, for Americans now considering energy efficient retrofits with a new “Cash for Caulkers” program being considered, a whole new industry was created by the need to supply new energy efficient building innovations. Energy efficient glass.

Read more

A Greener California Is Driving Jobs

July 3rd, 2009

green-jobs-1It turns out that Green Policies are good not only for the environment, but for the California economy as well, according to a study that will be released Monday by UC-Berkeley professor David Roland-Holst.

The study shows that since 1977, energy-efficient policies have created nearly 1.5 million jobs while eliminating fewer than 25,000, improving employee compensation over all by $44.6 billion. “Consumers were able to reduce energy spending,” said Prof. Roland-Holst, adding that “these savings were diverted to other demand.”

“When consumers shift one dollar of demand from electricity to groceries,” he added, they create jobs among retailers, wholesalers, food processors and other businesses.

Read more from the New York Times

Major League Baseball Goes Green

June 29th, 2009

MEN-JJ09-gazette-mlb-recycleGoing green is the new big trend and Major League Baseball (MLB) is aiming to hit a home run with a recent partnership between MLB and the environmental group Natural Resources Defense Council.

The Washington Nationals new baseball stadium, built by the District of Columbia, is the first big-league ballpark to meet standards set by the U.S. Green Building Council. It will have energy-efficient lighting, ultra low-flow lavatory faucets, low-flush toilets, recycling bins, a green roof, bike racks and preferential parking for high-mileage cars.

The Cleveland Indians installed solar panels last summer at their ballpark and the Boston Red Sox quickly followed suit at Fenway Park. The Oakland A’s now sell beer in cups made entirely of biodegradable corn starch, while the Seattle Mariners recycle food waste as well as paper and plastic containers. Even the Pittsburgh Pirates’ scouts drive flex-fuel cars.

“By getting America’s pastime to embrace environmentalism, we can move beyond the debates about left, right and politics,” says Allen Hershkowitz, a senior scientist at Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), a longtime Mets fan and manager of his son’s little league team. Hershkowitz is especially hopeful that baseball’s green drive will influence fans too. “There’s nothing comparable to the brand loyalty that professional sports teams generate.”

Read more at money.cnn.com.