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  • “Window replacement has a 200 to 300 year payback period”
    That quote is from Michael Blasnik, who has been mentioned on this blog several times. The full article can be seen here. I have the discussion with people all the time – people who insist that they’re going to save … Continue reading
  • Cheap is as cheap does
    A quick post with a pic from travels this weekend. Cheap bulbs aren’t worth what you pay for them. These bulbs may not cost much but you’re goingkeep need to keep replacing them as they burn out. Until they do, … Continue reading
  • Three types of people, three types of compost
    THREE TYPES OF PEOPLE – THREE TYPES OF COMPOST NOTE: Each year Arlington holds an EcoFest where people gather to learn about various environmentally related issues. This year I was asked to discuss compost with people. Below is a version … Continue reading
  • EcoFest in Arlington Saturday March 31
    This Saturday, March 31, Sustainable Arlington will host its annual EcoFest. This year the focus is on local food. Local in the sense of buying from a local farmer, and in the sense of growing it in your yard. I’ve … Continue reading
  • Q-Lon Training for Team Leaders
    This Sunday, March 18 at 9 am we’ll hold another Q-Lon training for Team Leaders/potential Team Leaders in East Arlington. There will be people from HEET groups around the area learning how to install our favorite door air-sealing kit. If … Continue reading
  • Got CO?
    It’s time to ‘spring forward’ which also means its time to replace the batteries in your smoke detectors AND CO monitors. You do have carbon monoxide monitors, right? State law says that you must have carbon monoxide monitors on all … Continue reading
  • How to choose CFL bulbs, again
    I’ve spoken a lot about choosing bulbs, including here, here and here and in person with a lot of people recently. Here’s someone else talking for a change. A short (two minute) video by MassSave explaining how to choose bulbs and … Continue reading
  • The sound of a leaky house
    I’ve highlighted a number of cheap or free ways to find leaks in your home in earlier posts (and of course a free energy audit from Mass Save is always a top-choice.) Here’s one more: If your hearing is good, … Continue reading
  • On the roof! It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s a thermal break!
    A short post on this, the first snowfall of the year, even if it is only a dusting. If your roof has stripes like this, you’ve got a problem. Either your insulation is failing/missing or you’ve got an air-sealing problem … Continue reading
  • Two MLK Weekend Events in Waltham
    There are two weatherization barnraisings in Waltham on MLK weekend. Sat. Jan. 14th A low-income home 1 Spruce Street 10 am – 2 pm If you recall the post a few weeks ago about a family spending $280/year to keep … Continue reading
Commonwealth Conversations: Energy Smarts
  • Rooftop Solar Challenge: Making solar more affordable, accessible
    Mark Sylvia Commissioner, Department of Energy Resources (DOER) View Mark's Bio Using the sun to power our homes, businesses, and government buildings has come a long way in Massachusetts. Solar capacity has increased 30-fold since 2007, when Governor Patrick set his goal of installing 250 megawatts by 2017. We’re now...
  • Energy By the Numbers: 62,000
    Dan Burgess Clean Energy Fellow, Department of Energy Resources View Dan's Complete Bio Less than thirty minutes from Boston, the Blue Hills Reservation is a haven for those who enjoy exploring the outdoors. Now the area is also the site of a 48 kW solar photovoltaic (PV) array which produces...
  • Patriots of the clean energy revolution cutting greenhouse gasses
    Secretary Richard K. Sullivan Jr. Secretary, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs View Secretary Sullivan's Bio With new science emerging on the health impacts of fossil fuel consumption and increases in extreme weather and storm events relating to climate change, it’s clear...
  • Video of the Week
    Maia Fitzstevens Multimedia intern, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) View Maia's Bio We continue today with our brand new Video of the week series, which each week highlights a video or two about clean energy in the Commonwealth. Today we bring you “Investing in Solar for your...
  • Saving money at state-owned rinks
    Mark Sylvia Commissioner, Department of Energy Resources (DOER) View Mark's Bio The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is continuing to have a positive impact for communities across the Commonwealth. Recently, I joined Lieutenant Governor Tim Murray, Secretary Rick Sullivan and many others to celebrate the installation of new, stimulus-funded energy...
  • Video of the Week
    Madeleine Barr Multimedia intern, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) View Madeleine's Bio Today we are starting a new Video of the Week series in which we highlight a clean energy video from the Commonwealth. With so many great clean energy stories happening across the state, it will...
  • Energy by the numbers: 2.7 Million
    Since the Green Communities Act was passed in 2008, 86 communities in the Commonwealth have been officially designated as a Green Community – that means more than 2.7 million Massachusetts residents are living in a municipality that have met five clean energy benchmarks.
  • Worcester environmental director named White House Champion of Change
    Phil Guerin was named a “White House Champion of Change” in a West Wing ceremony on February 15. Three levels of government – federal, state and local – brought an energy project to life. Guerin, the City of Worcester’s Director of Environmental Systems for the Department of Public Works and Parks, was the key “person-on-the-ground” who brought project to a successful conclusion in the form of a 135 kw solar array that provides electricity to an energy intensive water filtration plant.
  • Infographic: Clean Energy in Massachusetts
    Dan Burgess Clean Energy Fellow, Department of Energy Resources View Dan's Complete Bio You can download the text of this infographic here.
  • Energy efficiency services available to businesses
    Maia Fitzstevens Multimedia intern, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) View Maia's Bio Interested in investing in energy efficiency to cut costs and reduce energy use at your business? If so, you should know that energy efficiency services, incentives and technical assistance are available for all Massachusetts industries...
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SUSTAINABLY
  • fMRI brain scans can predict weight gain

    It is passe, if not cliche-ish, to say that MRI images of the brain show similar activity for some people shown food images compared with cocaine addicts shown coke images.

    But a study at Dartmouth College — published April 18 in The Journal of Neuroscience — goes a step further, using images from the brain’s rewards center to predict who is likely to gain weight six months hence.

    Not only that, but researchers used the same technique to predict sexual desire.

    read more

  • Tax would help, but could it ever pass?

    I’m reminded of the “lock box,” which was a largely unsuccessful political gambit promoted by Al Gore during his 2000 presidential run as a way to make Social Security tax increases more palatable. The idea was that we would ensure that taxes collected for this purpose would not be redirected, making it just one more tax increase.

    read more

  • Oh no! The food industry could go under!

    A proposed standard for nutrition claims in New Zealand and Australia is being opposed by an industry group.

    Yes, I know, that's hardly news. After seeing the US food industry insist on no more than voluntary guidelines and then using tens of millions and all its other muscle to defeat those, it's clear that the industry will truck no curb, no matter how innocuous.

    read more

  • Who needs our protection?

    A question that keeps recurring: Why are the free-speech rights of corporations more important than our shared imperative to protect children?

    No rights are absolute, as exemplified by falsely shouting "fire" in a crowded theater, as expressed by Oliver Wendell Holmes in a 1919 Supreme Court case. In the larger sense, there are very few absolutes in a world colored in shades of gray, anyway.

    read more

  • How can you not be outraged?

    I'm late to this topic, and perhaps have failed to add to, or take advantage of the momentum generated when this special Reuters report on food marketing to children was released April 27. But it's too important not to bring it to your attention, and by more than just a tweet.

    read more

Jennifer Shon - EzineArticles Expert Author
Writer. I love when they all ride off into the sunset but also most people make me question why humans keep procreating. Beer, coffee and Boston Bruins enthusiast. I like more than that but I probably hate equally as much. My blog, Random Lunacy, will tell you all about it. The blog contains the musings of a tragically misunderstood smoker who will one day marry a rock star. Or a movie star. Or, more likely, become a NY Times best selling author who writes a book about a girl who marries a rock star but is in love with a ...
Jennifer Shon - EzineArticles Expert Author
  • Why I Love My iPod
    Historically speaking humans have always had a special interest in music and long to be surrounded by it as much as possible. Discoveries of primitive instruments, as well as paintings of instruments being played, journals detailing specific rituals or even songbooks, have opened the eyes of modern man to the many thousands of years of musical prominence in almost every imaginable society and culture. In addition to these finds we see amazing advances in musical portability over the past forty years indicating desire to evolve even further toward complete immersion in melody and song.
  • Plastic Soup - What is Garbage Island and How Did it Form?
    In the northern Pacific Ocean swirls a circular current known as the North Pacific Gyre and within it resides the largest accumulation of toxin emitting plastic debris on the planet. With over 80% of this plastic having come from land, it is high time we educate ourselves and reduced our dependence on non-biodegradable, disposable plastic products.
  • You Have a Little Something Green on Your Collar - Green Collar Jobs Make a Big Surge
    Just as the Industrial Revolution and Information Age spawned a surge of jobs on a global level, the boon toward protecting our Earth has opened new doors into the creation of viable employment opportunities. The global market is redefining what it means to make a living with the introduction of the Green Collar market.
  • Green Home Innovations Are Springing Up in Unconventional Solutions
    In the current housing market there is a growing trend to leave the ideals of the past behind and move toward a new way of thinking -- green design. Environmentally sustainable products are growing in popularity with the building trades and many people are taking advantage of their availability, from large corporations to the every day homeowner, sometimes utilizing them for the construction of an entire home. Now that is thinking outside the box.
  • Daylight Savings Time Helps Save Energy As a Benefit to the Planet
    When the concept of time, time zones and Daylight Savings were invented it is unlikely our forefathers considered how many electronic devices would be in use in each home across the United States. As we increase our technology based devices the use of energy creates a serious impact on our planet. Using Daylight Savings Time to its best advantage will ensure an environmentally positive impact on energy usage during the entire year.

Hot, Flat, and Crowded is essential reading

Thomas L. Friedman has hit many nails on the head in his analysis of what this country needs to do to deal with global warming, population growth, and the expansion of the world's middle class.  This book is the current selection of the Arlington Democratic Town Committee Book Group.  All are welcome to attend the discussion of Hot, Flat, and Crowded on Sun., Jan. 4, from 3 to 5 at Ken Larsen's house at 4 Frost Street.  Please contact Ken at 648-5332 if you have any questions.

Here's my favorite review of what I feel is an essential-to-read book.

-- David Landskov

from Washington Post | September 7,2008

A Climate for Change

Tom Friedman says Americans can prosper by "outgreening" everyone else.

Reviewed by Joseph S. Nye Jr

Sunday, September 7, 2008; Page BW03

HOT, FLAT, AND CROWDED

Why We Need a Green Revolution -- And How It Can Renew America

By Thomas L. Friedman

Farrar Straus Giroux. 438 pp. $27.95

Like it or not, we need Tom Friedman.

The peripatetic columnist has made himself a major interpreter of the confusing world we inhabit. He travels to the farthest reaches, interviews everyone from peasants to chief executives and expresses big ideas in clear and memorable prose. While pettifogging academics (a select few of whom he favors) complain that his catchy phrases and anecdotes sometimes obscure deeper analysis, by and large Friedman gets the big issues right.

Almost a decade ago, in The Lexus and the Olive Tree, he celebrated the arrival of "globalization." Three years ago, in The World is Flat, he warned that borders, oceans and distance no longer protect us from the information revolution that is leveling the global economic playing field and relocating our jobs. Now he updates and expands this diagnosis by showing how population growth, climate change and the expansion of the world's middle class are producing a planet that is "hot, flat, and crowded." Unchecked, these trends will produce dangerous instability; but Friedman remains guardedly optimistic that we can stave off this nightmare, particularly if the United States changes its wasteful energy habits. In this important book, Friedman says we can survive, even prosper, by going green.

Of course, rousing a full-bellied nation, groggy from decades of energy overconsumption, is no small task. As the current election debate reminds us, the United States has proven inept at developing a serious energy strategy. Our approach, says one expert quoted by Friedman, is "the sum of all lobbies"; we have energy politics rather than energy policy. In the aftermath of 9/11, George W. Bush ignored calls by Friedman and others for a "USA Patriot Tax" of $1 per gallon on gasoline. Instead, the president offered tax cuts and urged us to shop. Rather than stimulating the economy to move toward fuel-efficient vehicles and renewable energy, we became more dependent on China to finance our deficit and Saudi Arabia to fill our gas tanks. Americans wound up paying even more for gas in 2008, but we enabled OPEC to be the tax collector instead of using the revenues ourselves. Friedman calls this a "No Mullah Left Behind" policy and quotes former CIA director Jim Woolsey: "We are funding the rope for the hanging of ourselves."

Friedman believes we need to become "green hawks," turning conservation and cleaner energy into a winning strategy in many different arenas, including the military. ("Nothing," he writes, "will make you a believer in distributed solar power faster than having responsibility for trucking fuel across Iraq.") We should stop defining our current era as "post-Cold War," he says, and see it as an "Energy-Climate Era" marked by five major problems: growing demand for scarcer supplies, massive transfer of wealth to petrodictators, disruptive climate change, poor have-nots falling behind, and an accelerating loss of bio-diversity. A green strategy is not simply about generating electric power, it is a new way of generating national power.

Incremental change will not be enough. The three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning writer for the New York Times scoffs at the kind of magazine articles that list "205 Easy Ways to Save the Earth." In the 1990s, global carbon dioxide emissions rose 1.1 percent annually, and many nations (not including the United States) signed the Kyoto Protocol to try to curb those emissions. But from 2000 to 2006, growth in CO2emissions tripled to 3 percent per year.

Friedman cites an estimate by Royal Dutch Shell that it typically takes 25 years for a new form of energy to capture 1 percent of the world market. Shell predicts that if we do things right, renewable energy will provide 30 percent of global needs by 2050, but fossil fuels will still provide 55 percent. Friedman says we need to do better than that. "Carbon neutral" is not ambitious enough; companies and institutions should seek a "carbon advantage" over rivals. This will require innovations in clean energy; greater energy efficiency (including the use of information technology to create smart grids and smart buildings); and a new ethic of conservation. Friedman argues that rather than costing too much, such initiatives can create investment opportunities, new jobs and global leadership for the U.S. economy. Here one wishes he had provided more evidence from some of the pettifogging academic economists.

Friedman is skeptical of treaties, and he argues that "a truly green America would be more valuable than fifty Kyoto Protocols. Emulation is always more effective than compulsion." He makes a good case that "outgreening" other countries would contribute to America's soft power as well as our hard power. "We are still the city on the hill for many Chinese," he notes, "even though they hate what we've done at times at the top of the hill." But the problem of China could overshadow what we do at home. In 2007, China surpassed the United States as the world's leading emitter of carbon dioxide. Chinese argue that on a per capita basis each of their citizens is responsible for only one-fifth the emissions of an American, and that developing countries should not have to cut back until they reach rich countries' CO2levels. This is a formula for global disaster. As Friedman says, "Mother Nature isn't into fair. All she knows is hard science and raw math."

China uses coal, a particularly CO2-intensive fuel, for 70 percent of its commercial energy supply, while coal accounts for a third of America's total energy. China builds more than one new coal-fired power plant each week. Coal is cheap and widely available in China, which is important as the country scrambles for energy resources to keep its many energy-intensive industries running. But Friedman does not deal with the issue of cleaner coal in China, and no amount of renewable energy in America will solve the problem. At the rate China is growing, a Chinese switch to renewables will come too late.

What can the United States do about this security threat? The bombs, bullets and embargos of traditional security policy are irrelevant. A 2007 report from the International Energy Agency urged a cooperative approach to helping China and India become more energy efficient. In other words, to promote our own security, the United States and other rich countries may have to forge a partnership with China, India and others to develop a full range of creative ideas, technologies and policies to prevent dangerous climate change. This requires a reframing of what we think of as national security and a more inclusive strategy than we have had in the past. If we finally move in that direction, Friedman will deserve some of the credit. ·

Joseph S. Nye Jr. is University Distinguished Service Professor at Harvard and author, most recently, of "The Powers to Lead."