Capturing energy riches from our waste stream & reducing greenhouse gases

by grmeyers

Gary Mazzotta's Park Spark Project in Cambridge, MA uses dog waste to feed this anaerobic digester that produces methane to burn the gas lamp. Photo: Park Spark Project

Times change, thankfully. Instead of thinking first about how to get rid of waste, more people are now asking how they might put parts of the waste stream to use.

Some landfills now capture methane to power massive generators that feed electricity to the grid; a California company makes biodegradable plastic from organic waste without using petroleum. The list of companies and people involved in promising and innovative work continues to grow.

Dog poop is now on the list of viable new materials from that can be harvested and used from the waste stream. Last year in Cambridge, MA, conceptual artist Matthew Mazzotta launched the Park Spark Project, using dog feces to power lampposts in a park.

Mazzotta’s Park Spark Project was funded through MIT and created in partnership with the City of Cambridge. Methane, a common greenhouse gas, is created in a methane digester that converts freshly scooped poop into burnable fuel.

Dog owners collect dog droppings in biodegradable bags, then toss the mess into the digester –- a closed cylindrical container, where the dog feces are broken down by anaerobic bacteria. This process creates methane that is then released through a valve and burned to power an old-fashioned gas-burning lamppost in a park.

Mazzotta has said he hopes to install permanent underground digesters in parks, not only in Cambridge, but also throughout the country.

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Converting the commercial building from energy hog to a better self

by grmeyers

If you didn’t already know, most commercial buildings are unbridled energy hogs. The traditional glitzy, nighttime pan of a Manhattan skyline, or that of any other large city, comes with a large price tag.

It is estimated that commercial buildings consume almost 70 percent of the electricity consumed in the United States.

Buildings like the headquarters for US Airways feature and EPA Energy Star rating. Photo courtesy of Hines

Measuring and managing energy performance in existing building – a process known as benchmarking – is seen as a way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and potentially save building owners money on their energy expenditures.

For those unsure of what energy benchmarking is, it means measuring and auditing the energy use of a building and comparing it to other similar buildings to obtain an energy rating. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency offers a free online benchmarking tool called Energy Star Portfolio Manager (ESPM) that many owners currently use. ESPM scores range from 1 to 100, with a score of 50 being the average. A score of 75 or higher is needed to apply for an EPA Energy Star label.

Benchmarking and auditing represent key first steps for building owners to make in saving both energy and money, says Cliff Majersik, executive director of the Institute for Market Transformation (IMT) – a policy think tank on building energy rating and disclosure. The net result also makes these buildings more competitive in the marketplace.

“Energy is one of the biggest expenses of building ownership and will be an even greater financial burden for owners in the future as energy prices escalate. Owners can’t take control of energy costs if they don’t know where to begin. Benchmarking – or measuring and rating – a building’s energy performance is that critical first step owners can take to start controlling energy costs and saving money.”

A number of different studies linked through IMT  show that buildings with good energy ratings will command higher rents, sell for higher prices and have lower vacancy rates than other buildings.

On its website, IMT states that most U.S. building owners, including governments, have not measured the energy efficiency of their buildings. The result of such inaction has historically limited an owner’s ability to “manage and reduce energy consumption.”

Managing energy consumption also has a direct impact on the overall profitability of a building. According to a March 2008 national study by the CoStar Group, rental rates in Energy Star-labeled buildings command a $2.40 per square foot premium over similar non-labeled buildings and have 3.6 percent higher occupancy rates.

Another study by the University of California at Berkeley reported that buildings with the Energy Star label sold for 16 percent more than identical buildings without such labels.

These are the kind of green footprints that the best parts of many worlds.

Generating green juice by pedaling

by grmeyers

In an era when an abundance of items requires electrical or battery power to operate, what happens when you aren’t near the grid or – heaven forbid! – the power goes out?

Place your bike into a Pedal-A-Watt and generate electricity for yourself. Photo: Convergence Tech

There are some interesting portable power generating options are available to generate electricity from the sun or wind or by simply pedaling a stationary bicycle.

We begin with the do-it-yourself version of power generation: the bicycle. Convergence Tech manufactures the Pedal-A-Watt, a bicycle stand that not only generates electricity, it seconds as a fitness device. The power that’s generated can be used to power lights and/or other small appliances, such as laptops, cell phones, fluorescent or LED lights.

As Convergence Tech writes on its website,  “Any bicycle that is in good shape will work with the Pedal-A-Watt Stand as the stand adjusts to fit any wheel size including children’s bikes.”

The company states that the average rider can produce between 125 and 300 watts using the Pedal-A-Watt.  While this amount of power isn’t huge, many pieces of equipment draw very little power and can be powered for long spans of time with small amounts of power.  As an example, a laptop draws 70 watts, thus one 20 minute workout could run the laptop for over an hour.

The Assembled Pedal-A-Watt (including a blocking diode) allows the owner to drop a bicycle into the stand, pedal and generate watts. According to Convergence, “The Assembled Pedal-A-Watt includes the bicycle stand, generator, 20 amp blocking diode, adjustment knob and instructions. The Pedal-A-Watt is built with off the shelf components to reduce waste and carbon footprint. The stand weighs 23 lbs.”

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LED Economics = Sensible Solutions

by grmeyers

LED lighting system from Eco-story provides ambiance and cost-savings at Timberland stores. Photo: Timberland

Less than a year ago, Eco-story LED Lighting Solutions was selected by The Timberland Company (NYSE: TBL) to “help its stores make an eco-friendly shift in lighting.” The results are impressive – both economically and environmentally.

Timberland, an outdoor footwear and apparel company, opted to use Portland, ME-based Eco-story to create special LED track lights that would improve overall ambiance, while saving money.

According to a recent press release, 10 months after the LED system installation, the company has saved approximately $100,000 in electricity costs for 50 U.S. Timberland stores that were retrofitted.

Generally this meant that Eco-story replaced up to 150 50 to 90-Watt halogen spotlights in each store with 10-Watt Par 30 color-matched LED bulbs.

“Eco-consciousness led the way in our endeavor to make lighting changes, but with the Federal tax incentive and our lowered electric bill, the financial savings has been a significant advantage,” said Al Buell, Timberland store planning and construction project manager.

According to the release, Eco-story LED bulbs are predicted to last 6 to 10 years.  As for failure rate, less than one percent of over 5,000 lamps failed and replacement was not difficult.

The Eco-story ECO-PAR-30-WW LED lamp features lighting-class Cree XLamp LEDs.  For more information about Eco-story and its products, visit its website.

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Join us in General Electric’s Ecomagination Challenge

by grmeyers

There is nothing quite as inspiring as a great idea. With this in mind, we were happy to submit our idea to GE’s Ecomagination Challenge where they will examine thousands of innovative ways for powering the grid.

We encourage all readers to go take a look at some remarkably fresh approaches to powering and managing the grid. And applause to General Electric and the sponsors supporting this contest, as this is how we will advance toward the development of a saner and more sustainable world.

The joint submission from John Tuttle, president of Windpipe Corporation, and myself is as follows:

Title:

Highway & Traffic Wind Energy Recycling System Using a Bladeless Wind-to-Electricity Generation System

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Mr. Electricity ranks refrigerators & electrical wasters

by grmeyers

Michael Bluejay on his bike. Photo: Bluejay

For those wondering if they or their friends have attained the 21st century status of being electricity hogs, they might wish to get familiar with Michael Bluejay, known to many as Mr. Electricity on his website. He publishes useful information about how much electrical energy various home appliances use, and often waste. He starts off with the second biggest user, the refrigerator (The top rank goes to the air conditioner). In most homes the refrigerator is the second-largest user of electricity (13.7%), right after the air conditioner (16%). (Dept. of Energy).

Bluejay refers to his lifestyle as that of a minimalist, saying saving electricity is about more than saving money. “Saving electricity doesn’t just save money, it also saves the environment.”

He goes on to state this is news to a lot of people. “After all, when you plug something into the wall, it seems clean enough — you don’t see or smell any pollution, like you do with your car. But the pollution is there — it just happens at the power plant.”

What this means to today’s electricity gobbling homeowners involves either using less electricity in certain cases or sometimes just better, or newer appliances. Consumers can start lowering appliance electricity use by choosing more efficient appliances. With most appliances you save energy by using them less, but you can’t very well do that with your fridge. The main way to save money with your fridge is to use an efficient model.

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Welcome words to the world’s first molten salt concentrating power plant

by grmeyers

Enel Archimede plant in Italy. Photo: Enel

This July the Italian utility Enel unveiled “Archimede”, one of the most important developments in the emerging field of concentrating solar power (CSP). The launch showcases this power plant as the first CSP  plant in the world to use molten salts for heat transfer and storage.

Archimede, a 5 MW plant located in Priolo Gargallo (Sicily). The breakthrough project was co-developed by the utility, Enel, and ENEA, the Italian National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Sustainable Economic Development. The name, “Archimede,” refers to the rows of huge parabolic mirrors used to capture the sun’s rays, recalling the “burning mirrors” that Archimedes is said to have used to set fire to the Roman ships besieging Syracuse during the Punic War of 212 BC.

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Add these energy technologies to your list

by grmeyers

This story came in about and the third annual Energy Technology Summit presented by the Southwest Virginia Technology Council. Some of the technologies may seem far-fetched or little better than brainstorms.

The information is interesting to hear about, especially the pursuit of aneutronic fusion. Where possible, even if the site provides scant detail, links have been added for further information.

Source: TriCities.com

reported by: Deborah McCown

WISE, Va. – Amid discussion of the shortfalls of U.S. energy policy and the nation’s future, the Southwest Virginia Technology Council highlighted five promising technologies Monday during its third annual Energy Technology Summit.

These technologies included thorium, Hydrocoal, fly ash, aneutronic fusion and sunshine advances.

Thorium – is it the fuel of the future?

Like uranium, thorium is an element that can be used to produce energy, said Charles Stevens, who said he recently revived a technology he worked on as a U.S. government subcontractor back in the 1980s.

Unlike uranium, he said, thorium doesn’t generate radioactive waste or encourage proliferation of nuclear weapons.

“It’s sustainable energy, and it represents energy independence for the United States,” he said.

Stevens, CEO of Laser Power Systems, based in Massachusetts, added that the technology uses high-energy lasers to turn water into steam, which then drives a turbine and generator. It works, he said, without the chain reaction of a nuclear reactor.

At the price of $1.85, he said one gram of thorium can produce as much energy as 7,500 gallons of gasoline or 2.2 tons of coal. A thorium-powered car could travel 300,000 miles before refueling.

A 2,000-megawatt thorium power plant could fit in a 50,000-square-foot building, he said – less than a third the size of a typical big box retail store – and he believes the technology will be ready to go commercial in 12 to 18 months.

Among his first customers are Third-World countries, which are seeking the technology as a means of generating electricity and clean water without the kind of expensive power infrastructure that’s used in the United States, Stevens said.

For a house, he explained, a thorium power system could cost about the same as a furnace/hot water system – less than $15,000. It would come fueled, potentially cutting heating bills by 80 percent for a typical American homeowner.

Cars, he said, would be priced around $25,000, and could run a million miles.

Another technology discussed was HydroCoal.

“Our business is about taking dirty, inexpensive coal, which is found abundantly all over the world, into clean renewable fuels for billions of people,” said Randy Taylor, co-founder and president of Hydrocoal, which is based in Athens, Ga., but is discussing a possible location in Wise.

“We expect to make that commercial beginning in 2011,” he said.

Thus far, the common method of grinding coal to sand was problematic, he said; his company has solved the problems with gasification by finding a way to grind the coal smaller, to particles 10 microns in diameter.

“It’s a coal tornado,” he said. “Coal swirls around inside and grinds itself.”

He said the smaller particles react faster and at a lower temperature – and, mixed with steam, they burn like natural gas.

Once coal is gasified, he said, it’s easy to clean with existing commercial technologies.

Fly ash – Studying the elements in lunar soil to learn about its use in space, scientists discovered an interesting parallel, said Larry Austin, a merchant banker and former Wall Street lawyer who said billions of dollars worth of precious metals are buried in the fly ash discarded by coal-fired power plants.

Environmentalists have hammered the ash with criticism, particularly after a large quantity of ash, which includes heavy metals, spilled into Tennessee’s Emory River in 2008. Austin said the same metals have made fly ash an unstable building material.

But it costs just $200 a ton to process the ash, and the products of that ton can be sold for $517. The figures are based on outdated prices, before the appearance of China on the world stage sent resource prices skyward, he said.

Austin said the world is throwing away $35 billion a year in precious metals. The Appalachian coalfields could become “the new mecca” for these resources – and manufacturing facilities that use the raw materials – if the ash is processed here. He estimated that as many as 20,000 jobs could be created.

Once the metals are removed, he said, the remaining material is similar to that used in making drywall and other construction materials.

The first step, he said, is a $250,000 study to update the numbers and create a modern business case. A pilot plant, which would process 10 tons a day, would cost $10 million, he said, and a commercial scale plant would be $100 million.

Another take on solving the fusion puzzle could be aneutronic fusion.

George Miley says the nation’s energy future lies in nuclear fusion – a topic that, he acknowledges, nobody mentions when they’re listing the nation’s many energy options.

“Why not? I think people become frustrated; it’s just too far off,” he said. “I don’t think that’s true.”

Scientists have studied the concept since the 1960s, but have not reached an effective way to generate fusion power. Miley believes he may have the solution – but the only way to find out is to test it.

He says the answer could lie in fusing the atoms of hydrogen and boron at a high temperature, high enough to place them in a state beyond a gas called plasma, on a small scale.

“I think it’s obvious that if what I’m saying is done, this is going to revolutionize the power industry,” he said. “If you start something, you’ll become the Silicon Valley of that field. So you have to have the vision to start it, and then you will have it.”

Sunshine advances – Robert Loftur-Thun, a principal at a firm called Sustainability Nexus, said solar power could be generated on the flat, deforested surface-mined mountaintops of Appalachia.

“Taking a mountaintop and converting it so that there could be an economic higher use, I think that would make a lot of economic sense and also provide business opportunities for the coal mining companies in the area,” Loftur-Thun said. “The time has really come. Solar technology is maturing.”

He noted the existence of several technologies, from visually appealing solar panel roof shingles to concentrated solar power plants, which focus sunlight to heat water into steam for generating electricity.

On Monday, he announced the founding of Wise Solar Development LLC, a startup focused on solar energy in rural and small communities. He said harnessing the sun’s potential has a role to play in U.S. energy security and in providing electricity in rural areas.

He said an area the size of a football field, if covered with a solar array, can generate 400 kilowatts of electricity.

US wind power firms face market challenges in China

by grmeyers

Reported today on DallasNews through Climate Progress:

“U.S. companies are getting squeezed out of the big Chinese wind-power market even as Dallas investors are bringing Chinese firms here via a big wind farm in Texas, according to a new industry report.

““They’ve used every measure you could possibly think of to enhance production of renewable energy equipment in China,” said report author Alan Wolff of the trade law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP.

“U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk won a pledge from the Chinese last fall to drop rules giving preference to Chinese makers of wind-power equipment. But Kirk’s office hasn’t seen any evidence that the pledge has been carried out, said spokeswoman Carol Guthrie.

“Meanwhile, Chinese manufacturers are entering the U.S. wind market under a joint venture led by Dallas investor Cappy McGarr.

“McGarr’s U.S. Renewable Energy Group, with Cielo Wind Power LP of Austin and China’s Shenyang Power Group, is planning a $1.5 billion, 600-megawatt wind farm on 36,000 acres in West Texas.

“Dewey & LeBoeuf’s report on China’s renewable energy equipment market was done for a U.S. industry group, the National Foreign Trade Council, where concern about China’s market restrictions and treatment of foreign firms is growing.”


Advisory committee meeting set for CO Carbon Fund

by grmeyers

From the Governor’s Energy Office:

Colorado Carbon Fund Advisory Committee Meeting

The Colorado Carbon Fund’s Advisory Committee meets Monday, March 1 from 2-4 pm at the GEO office.

The Agenda includes:

  • An update on Colorado Carbon Fund marketing and plans for 2010.
  • An introduction to Ben Vitale, the new president of The Climate Trust, our partners in managing the Fund and finding high quality projects.
  • An Executive Session review of proposals received during the RFP for solar hot water systems. This portion of the meeting will be closed to the public.

If you’d like to listen in by webinar, please register online.

To attend in person, please contact
Susan Innis