Monthly Archives: December 2011
Edison Predicted Cheap Energy
| December 31, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Sustainability |

132 years ago today, Thomas Edison first demonstrated his incandescent lightbulb and told spectators: “We will make electricity so cheap that only the rich will burn candles.”
Not a bad prediction, when you think about it. Few people grouse about the price of electricity, which is one of the main reasons that the migration to renewables is so difficult; in many ways, we’re trying to fix something that at first blush doesn’t appear to be really broken. It’s only in the very recent past that we began to realize that our system of delivering energy to a world population had huge hidden costs.
As we enter the new year, let’s all pledge to heighten the awareness of those costs, and do everything we can to push the planet in the direction of clean energy sources.
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Small and Affordable Battery Electric Vehicles
| December 30, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Electric Vehicles |
Lots of folks are wondering what the future of transportation looks like. While none of us knows for sure, we can have some level of certainty as to what it does not look like: a 4000 pound hunk of steel, transporting one 150 pound person, and using 20 times more energy than necessary in the process.
Certainly, re-inventing the way we live and move about will be important to our survival as a species. Great ideas include mixed-use development, greater reliance on mass transit, and car-sharing. But to the degree to which we stay within the passenger vehicle paradigm, it’s hard not to be intrigued with concepts for extremely light, small, affordable, battery electric vehicles, like the EMCycle that I’ve been promoting.
Here’s a related concept from San Francisco-based “LIT Motors” that my friend and colleague Bill Moore of EV World came across.
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Some Good News for Us Green Energy People — For a Change
| December 30, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Renewables - Business |

I often consider how most of the content here is essentially bad news: climate change, ocean acidification, empowering terrorists, oil companies’ propaganda, corporatocracy, governmental corruption, and public ignorance and apathy. But here’s some good news: Traffic at 2GreenEnergy in 2011 was up over 51% from 2010. Not too bad! Thanks to all who contributed!
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Comment on “The New Living Large Is Living Small”
| December 29, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Sustainability |

In response to my piece suggesting that “the new living large is living small,” Erik writes:
I agree that many people will eventually see consumerism as utter foolishness. I also have to agree with some commentators here that this will most likely happen when people are with their backs up against the wall. … It’s our internalized beliefs about what makes us happy that must change. Lust for material growth without limits is no less than a surrogate for our deeper human needs for psychological and spiritual growth.
Wow, that’s really well written. I completely agree. It’s a shame more of us can’t see past the thin veil of materialism and begin to see our lives in grander terms. But this is precisely the aim of modern consumer marketing: to convince us that we’re inadequate as people if we don’t get that big car, big house, or latest gadget; in fact, we’re bombarded with these messages at every turn. Thus the utter brilliance of The Story of Stuff.
Yet I’m wondering if I don’t see a recent change in consumer tastes. There are many reasons that I don’t drive a 5800-pound Cadillac Escalade or 6600-pound Hummer, or some equally ridiculous car, but one of them is that I don’t want to be on the receiving end of the contemptuous glares of a growing number of people communicating, “We all need to share this planet. You obviously didn’t get the memo on this, did you?”
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Renewable Energy – Following the Money
| December 29, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Renewables - Business |

For those interested in tracking the progress I’m making in writing my third book, here is the tentative title:
Renewable Energy – Following the Money.
The project is based on the notion that the migration from fossil fuels will happen precisely when it becomes profitable. Therefore, understanding the trajectory by which renewables gradually displace their dirty counterparts means wrapping our wits around each of the main economic components: subsidies and incentives, taxes and disincentives, lobbying and campaign finance reform, improving efficiencies, cost reduction associated with to scale and technological breakthroughs, addressing demand with conservation and efficiency, and the development of ancillary solutions like energy storage, smart-grid, electric transportation, etc.
Below is an outline which I will continue to update to provide the status of each of the chapters.
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Inductive Charging Offers Advantages in Electric Transportation
| December 28, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Electric Vehicles |
I’ve been lucky enough to derive so much pleasure from business travel – and to conduct so much business during personal trips — that I long ago ceased to try to separate the two.
Case in point: this trip back East for Christmas, where I carved out an hour and a half to meet with the CEO of Momentum Dynamics, less than an hour’s drive from my family’s home in the suburbs of Philadelphia.
Momentum Dynamics offers breakthrough technology in inductive (versus conductive) charging. For those scratching their heads here, we find this concept implemented in today’s electric toothbrushes, which are charged miraculously by merely replacing the brush – sans metal contacts — back into its base unit. Unbeknownst to the user, it sits there next to a modulating magnetic field that induces an electric current to flow into a conductive circuit within the toothbrush, recharging the battery. Read More
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From Guest-Blogger Joshua Okomo: Green Energy and Human Rights
| December 28, 2011 | Posted by okomo under Nuclear |

Global nuclear capacity has remained flat in growth in the last decade, the worldwide operational installed capacity increased insignificantly from 370 GWe at the end of 2005 to 375 GWe at the end of 2010. Nuclear capacity in the OECD countries peaked in 2006 at 2,259 TWh and declined to 2,136 TWh in 2009. A severe earth quake and tsunami in March 2011 that ravaged the pacific coast of northern Japan resulted in devastating incident in Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Following this incidence several countries have announced safety reviews of their nuclear power programmes. Read More
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What Does the Future Look Like for Electric Vehicles? Renewable Energy?
| December 27, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Electric Vehicles |

Over a cold beverage during the holidays, my brother Geoff (terrific person) came to ask me about my level of satisfaction with what I’m doing here at 2GreenEnergy. “It’s a mixed bag,” I told him, candidly. “It’s a combination of experiences that, depending on which day you ask me, could be:
• Deeply rewarding, as we’ve helped move countless cleantech deals forward – in fact, many more than I’m directly aware of,
• Fantastically frustrating, in that this project – and the adoption of cleantech generally — is moving far more slowly than I possibly could have imagined given the urgency, or Read More
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Survey: Contemplating Mankind’s Medium-Term Future: 2011 – 2050
| December 27, 2011 | Posted by Craig Shields under Sustainability |

Are you familiar with our surveys here, in which we ask readers to weigh in on the important topics of the day?
Please consider and comment on the following set of ideas, which I’ll send out as soon as I get it finalized, to get your take on where we’re headed as a species. I intend to get folks to provide their level of agreement on a scale of 1 – 5, on the following propositions:
◊ The global economy will probably recover after the resolution of the U.S. recession, the European debt crisis, and other immediate woes — and a period of sustained growth is likely to follow.
◊ Technological innovation will outpace population growth, the depletion of resources, and man’s impact on the natural environment.
◊ Mankind will gain a better understanding of the impact it’s made on the natural environment, which will significantly raise awareness of our need to reduce, re-use, and recycle – as well as drive innovation in clean tech.
◊ We’re likely to enter an indefinite period of negative economic growth, created by our civilization’s having “hit the wall” with respect to scarcities in energy, water, and food, which are likely to have horrific consequences in the forms of wars, social chaos, and class divisiveness.
◊ Yes, such scarcities are likely, but they will force everyone, rich and poor, to do more with less. But that’s really not such a bad thing, as it will force us all closer to nature, hard work, and the roots of true happiness.
◊ We’re very likely to experience one or more cataclysms of Biblical proportions between now and 2015: a huge nuclear accident, clear evidence of a runaway rise in Earth’s temperature and sea levels, a complete meltdown in the international banking system, “World War III,” or something of that scale.
◊ Though things may get bad, human dignity and kindness will prevail, as exemplified by the aftermath of 9/11, where the incidence of mutual support was hundreds of times greater than that of looting. I.e., in situations like these, people are far more likely to help one another than to take advantage of them.

