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Thursday, April 28, 2011
Friday, April 22, 2011
Happy Earth Day 2011
The Earth Day Story
Posted 20 Apr 2011The first Earth Day, observed across the country on April 22, 1970, crystallized a growing public concern about ecological crises. Earth Day was the product of local grassroots action to increase environmental awareness but it also focused the nation's political agenda on urgent environmental issues.
It was Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson who in September 1969 proposed a national teach-in on the environment to send a message to Washington that public opinion was solidly behind a bold political agenda on environmental problems.
Inspired by the campus activism of the late 1960s, he employed a team of experienced students to help him respond to the immediate and overwhelming public excitement for a national day on the environment. However, Nelson insisted the first Earth Day's activities be created not by organizers in Washington, but by individuals and groups in their own communities. As a result of this empowering vision, 1 in 10 Americans participated in the first Earth Day, drawing extensive attention from the media and jump-starting an era of bold environmental legislation.
Nelson's decade-long struggle
Gaylord Nelson earned a national reputation as "the Conservation Governor" by starting popular reforms in Wisconsin to clean up waterways, protect natural resources, create green jobs, and bolster the state's recreation infrastructure. But once elected to the U.S. Senate in 1962, he spent 7 years trying unsuccessfully to draw the attention of lawmakers to his environmental agenda.
However, beyond Capitol Hill, Americans increasingly shared Nelson's concerns. The percentage of citizens who cited cleaning up air and water as one of their top three political priorities rose from 17% in 1965 to 53% in 1970. Added to rising fears about smog, pesticides, and water pollution were the dual headline-grabbers of 1969: the massive Santa Barbara oil spill and a river so polluted it actually burned, Cleveland's Cuyahoga River.
Eureka! The Earth Day idea
Nelson had just toured the oil spill devastation on the coast of Santa Barbara and was flying to San Francisco when he read an article about recent popular teach-ins held on college campuses. The format struck him as a promising way to communicate this growing public concern to elected officials in Washington D.C. and state government. He imagined that:
"If we could tap into the environmental concerns of the general public and infuse the student anti-war energy into the environmental cause, we could generate a demonstration that would force the issue onto the national political agenda."
Separate teach-ins were already planned at San Jose State, Dickinson College (Pennsylvania), and the University of Michigan—all organized campus-wide events drawing attention to ecological crises. Nelson aimed to unite these efforts and then extend them beyond the college campus. He announced his intentions at a speech in Seattle on September 20, 1969 and several major media outlets immediately broadcast the idea to national audiences.
Choosing "not to be in charge"
As the idea caught fire, Nelson's Senate mailbox was inundated, so he set up an independent organization, Environmental Teach-In, Inc., to handle the flood of queries from excited citizens. Inclusivity was, for Nelson, the key to a national day on the environment. He insisted that the national office would not try to shape a uniform national protest—this was to be a day for people to act locally. "This is the time," Nelson insisted, "for old-fashion political action."
Nelson and the Teach-In office worked tirelessly to drum up publicity for the day, provide what support they could to organizers, and advertise the multitude of grassroots action. He and his staff encouraged citizens young and old to investigate ecological problems in their communities and develop their own responses. Nelson established a steering committee of scientists, academics, environmentalists, and students, and tapped California Republican Congressman Paul McCloskey as co-chair.
A Burlington, Wisconsin girl showcases her proposal for energy conservation during Earth Week 1973. Grassroots participation and organization was extremely important to Gaylord Nelson.
A day for 20 million
Nelson's decision to leave Earth Day to the grassroots proved genius. Exceeding their wildest expectations, Nelson and his staff estimated 20 million Americans—from 10,000 elementary and high schools, 2,000 colleges, and over 1,000 communities—took action on April 22, 1970. Though students lent the day a unique spirit, it did not draw out only the young. Labor union members, housewives, farmers, scientists, and politicians of all stripes—from Barry Goldwater to Edward Kennedy—made up the mosaic of faces in Earth Day crowds.
Throughout his life Nelson remained modest about his own contribution but was extremely proud of the nation's response:
"Earth Day worked because of the spontaneous response at the grassroots level. We had neither the time not the resources to organize the 20 million demonstrators who participated from thousands of schools and local communities. That was the remarkable thing about Earth Day. It organized itself."
A new coalition?
After a decade marked by partisan rancor and social division, Nelson hoped Earth Day could form "a new national coalition whose objective is to put quality for human life on a par with Gross National Product." In Washington, at least, environmental politics did for a time become the obsession of both parties. The midterm election of 1970 spelled defeat for politicians linked to dirty industries, while President Nixon and many in Congress rushed to lend their support to the National Environmental Protection Act, the Endangered Species Act, and stringent amendments to the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts.
Despite the achievements, many remained suspicious that the new environmental politics in national discourse served to distract from the struggles against militarism, racism, and poverty. In the Senate, Nelson worked to break through these perceived divisions between the era's major crises. He repeatedly called for elimination of the federal funds dedicated to the Vietnam War, defense technology, and the space program—money that Nelson wanted more effectively spent on toxic cleanup and green jobs. "Make no mistake," he insisted in the week before the first Earth Day, "any national policy on the environment that is worth its name must mean attacking the problem of our cities and the poor as much as it means providing national parks and scenic rivers."
The living tradition of Earth Day
Nelson's aim with the first Earth Day was to light a fire for the environment in Washington, and Nelson felt satisfied it had done so. He saw no need to replicate Earth Day. But Earth Day, born in rural towns and big cities across the country in 1970, has remained an important annual way to raise awareness of local environmental issues each year.
Nelson did work with allies to organize Earth Week activities in the 3 years that followed, with the explicit goal of installing an annual event in schools to promote environmental education. National observation of Earth Day peaked in 1990 for its 20th anniversary, with an focus in forging international alliances, a goal carried into the 25th and 30th anniversaries. An estimated 184 countries held formal Earth Day celebrations in 2000.
*For more information go to www.epa.gov
Friday, April 8, 2011
Courtesy of GlobalSpec
Worldwide Power Demand to Reach 30,300 TWh by 2035
Sunday, April 3, 2011
You Can Benefit From an Energy Audit
From AllBusiness / Kevin Morris
Most times when you think about reducing costs in running your business, it means that you will have to cut something, whether it’s employees or funding for projects. But there is one thing you can do that will actually help your company grow while reducing costs.
An energy audit is a relatively painless checkup on your company’s energy efficiency. The cost of energy inefficiency for a small business can run in the thousands of dollars every year. And many business owners don’t realize there are a lot of ways they could reduce those inefficiencies with little or no investment.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Does NIMBY (not in my backyard) really mean NAGME
NAGME...Not a good marketing effort. Maybe that's why so many large scale energy infrastructure projects are stalled. People are smart. And people expect value. Just because the government or a utility says we should build it, well should we? The disciplined marketeer listens to her customer, seeks to innovate, and always presents the benefits and value of their product. NAGME. What is the benefit of clean burning coal...is there really such a thing as clean coal? NAGME. Do wind turbines really generate electricity that costs $0.14/kWh (you pay about $0.075 today). And will they kill the birds and cause me to have insomnia? NAGME. Nuclear energy is clean energy. Really? How clean are the two reactors that have just suffered a melt down in Northern Japan? NAGME some more.
http://www.mfrtech.com/articles/11342.html
http://www.mfrtech.com/articles/11342.html
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Author Guy Kawasaki says "Energy efficiency is the fastest and cheapest path away from coal and gas, and toward a low-carbon future." Bottomline ENERGY SOLUTIONS agrees. The most cost-effective and green energy is the kilowatt or BTU that is never consumed in the first place. Conserve. Save. Sustain.
http://energypriorities.com/entries/2011/03/enchantment_kawasaki.php
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle...Learn How You Can Make a Difference
Ever heard of Keep America Beautiful? Well I bet you have seen their commercials. Check out their site to see how you can get more involved in your local community.
http://www.kab.org/site/PageServer?pagename=index
http://www.kab.org/site/PageServer?pagename=index
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Tripping the Circuit: Electrical Safety Tips
Key Points
- Misuse or neglect of electrical equipment can result in severe injury or even death.
- With planning, testing, and training, you can reduce the risk of workplace electrical accidents.
- OSHA regulations and NFPA standards address electrical safety in the workplace.
Basic Electrical Safety Principles
It is important for employers to be aware of the risks associated with electrical equipment. When planning or performing work on (or near) electrical equipment or machinery, the following safety tips will reduce the risk of an accident:- Plan ahead—consider possible problems that may occur and how to prevent them.
- Use the right tools for the job—procedures, drawings, and other documents.
- Identify electrical shock and arc flash hazards, as well as other potential hazards that might be in the area.
- Test every circuit, every conductor, every time—before you touch it.
- Properly train workers and make sure they have the skills and experience required to safely perform work around electrical equipment.
- De-energize all electrical equipment and conductors before beginning work.
- Treat electrical equipment and conductors as energized until lockout/tagout, test, and ground procedures have been implemented.
- Wear protective clothing, including hard hats and insulated clothing and gloves.
- Use only insulated tools.
- Determine approach boundaries and comply with suggested minimum clearances for power lines or exposed conductors.
Electrical Safety Regulations and Standards
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has a number of regulations relating to workplace electrical safety. Some important regulations include 29 CFR 1910: Subpart Electrical:- 1910.137 Electrical Protective Devices
- 1910.302-308 Design Safety Standards for Electrical Systems
- 1910.331-335 Electrical Safety Related Work Practices
- NFPA 70 National Electrical Code—addresses electrical systems and equipment installed and used within the workplace.
- NFPA 70E Standard for Electrical Safety Requirements for Employee Workplaces—discusses protection from electrical hazards such as shock, arc blasts, and explosions initiated by electricity.
- NFPA 79 Electrical Standard for Industry Machinery—covers fire safety and electrical specifications for industry machinery and manufacturing systems.
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