Posts Tagged ‘Energy Independence’

Will The Stimulus Help Cities Turn Their Trash Into Energy?

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009
green energy
Jamie Green asked:


With virtually every city in the country pitching ideas to the President in a bid to get a piece of the $800 billion stimulus package, a number of ideas have been laid on the table.  A number of these ideas revolve around renewable energy and achieving energy independence.  While some ideas are not much more than experiments, the impact may actually be beneficial, and a couple of these projects even aim to reduce landfill off-gassing and accumulation.

The first project to be mentioned comes from Beaumont, Texas.  The government of Beaumont is asking for 5 million dollars of stimulus money to create a landfill hydrogen plant.  This plant aims to utilize solar energy to convert methane emitted at landfills into hydrogen and natural gas, which can be used as a source of energy. 

The project would employ fifty people, but draws significant opposition because the process is unproven and largely untested.  It is up to government officials to weigh the possible benefits of the program, considering both the chance of success and the environmental impact if the process is both achievable and economically viable.  The process has been implemented at a pilot plant in Regina, Saskatchewan in Canada and reports both success and a need for further improvement to decrease costs and increase efficiency.

The second project to be mentioned has actually been proposed by a number of cities.  Stamford, Connecticut is one of the cities proposing the idea, and is requesting $50 million dollars while promising 75 new jobs.  The money is being requested to build a biomass gasification plant to convert waste into energy.  Biomass gasification is actually considered one of the most economically and technically convincing possibilities for creating a carbon neutral economy and a renewable source of energy due to the fact that the process removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and does not emit greenhouse gases. 

Biomass gasification works by heating landfill waste to create renewable energy.  The process also greatly reduces landfill waste, as the resulting ash occupies only a small percentage of the mass of the original trash.  While the technology still has room for improvements in energy costs to run and maintain, it is an excellent and necessary step toward energy independence.

These are but two of the bills on the table for review by the Federal government.  While each holds its fair share of supporters as well as opposition, it is ultimately in the hands of the United States government to decide if either bill will pass.  As the economy continues to decline, there is hope that the new administration will put considerable attention and funding into alternative energy and that the sheer number of bills regarding various energy technologies will show the government that people are ready to move forward. 

The outcome of the stimulus bill will likely be seen shortly as the administration has been in a hurry to distribute the funding in a rush to stimulate spending and create jobs.  What will remain to be seen for some time, however, is the ultimate level of success and advancement the country makes based on the results of some of the energy forward ideas being pushed through by the stimulus bill.



Go With Green Energy, Fire Your Power Company

Sunday, November 16th, 2008
green energy
Donald Whitehead asked:


Earth4Energy is a viable renewable green energy resource. Green energy is defined as a source of energy that is environmentally friendly and non-polluting, such as geothermal, wind, and solar power. These sources of energy may provide a remedy to the systemic effects of global warming and certain forms of pollution. Green energy is commonly thought of in the context of electricity, heating and cogeneration. Fire your power company, create your own electricity. It’s much easier than you think, and cost effective too.

In order to support further development, and to help reduce the environmental impacts of conventional electricity generation as well as increase the nation’s energy independence Consumers, businesses, and organizations may purchase green energy. Consumers and businesses can support green energy through Renewable energy certificates. There are some 35million homes in Europe and 1 million, about 0.01%, homes currently in the U.S. that are purchasing such certificates. There is expected to be a 10% increase in the use of this technology, by the year 2025.

Some homes that produce there own electricity by means of a renewable energy resource (Green Energy) not only eliminate there entire electric bill as a result but they get a kick back from the power companies for their production of excess electricity. Roughly one-quarter of the nation’s utilities offer green power programs to customers, and voluntary retail sales of renewable energy in the United States totaled more than 12 billion kilowatt-hours in 2006, a 40% increase over 2005. By participating in a green energy program a consumer may be having an effect on the energy sources used and ultimately might be helping to promote and expand the use of green energy. In some countries the electricity companies guarantee to buy an equal amount of ‘green power’ as it is being used by their green power customers.

Many states offer incentives to offset the cost of installation of a renewable energy system. Individuals are usually assured that the electricity they are using is actually produced from a green energy source that they control. Once the system is paid for, the owner of a renewable energy (Green Energy) system will be producing their own renewable electricity for essentially no cost and can sell the excess to the local utility at a profit. This concludes this article and in that we hope that it made some think and others act. The time is now for change. The earth is out of time. Look around you. Global warming is nothing to take lightly.

The polar ice caps are a renewable resource or they’re  suppose to be. The ice at these caps is melting so fast that if they deplete the earth will be in caos. Since the beginning, like clock work, the ice caps have replenished themselves and now, sadly, they are falling way short. As everyone knows or should know the ozone layer that we keep hearing about is terribly damaged and allowing the rays from the sun to get through at such a rate that the ice caps are melting way ahead of schedule, so far ahead that they can’t replenish fast enough to keep up which means that they will deplete if nothing is done. Going to green energy helps.