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Masdar’s Green City Built by Clean Technology Experts in High Demand

John GartnerPublished on Date September 22nd, 2009 by John Gartner
Posted in Category Building, Middle East, Recycling, Renewables, Waste-to-Energy
Comments1 Comment »
 Rating: 4.0/5

masdar-instituteAbu Dhabi is going far beyond its borders to build a zero carbon footprint city in Masdar. Clean technology leaders from across the global are helping to build Masdar City, which is being designed to use only renewable power and convert its waste to energy.

The innovative city of 40,000 will have no cars and recycle all of its waste, and is scheduled for completion in 2016.

An Australian firm, LAVA architects, recently won the bid to design the city center of Masdar with a European-style plaza.

America’s General Electric has a prominent role in Masdar, partnering with the Mubadala Development Company on financing programs and clean energy research. GE is also establishing an “ecoimagination” research center in Masdar.

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Obama Urges Leaders to Find Compromise to Avert Climate Catastrophe

Ceylan ThomsonPublished on Date September 22nd, 2009 by Ceylan Thomson
Posted in Category Climate Change & Carbon Emissions, North America, Videos
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 Rating: 0.0/5

Obama-climate-catastrophe-United-Nations.jpgWarning that the global climate threat could produce “an irreversible catastrophe,” President Obama told world leaders gathered at the United Nations that developed nations should take the lead in finding solutions, but that emerging countries must also be ready to act.

And while conceding that the economic recession has added to the challenge, he vowed that the U.S. “will meet our responsibility to future generations.”

Obama urged leaders to find a compromise as the world approaches global climate talks in Copenhagen in December.
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Fuel Economy: How Traditional Car Models Compete With Hybrid Vehicles

John GartnerPublished on Date September 21st, 2009 by John Gartner
Posted in Category Electric Vehicles, Featured
Comments9 Comments »
 Rating: 4.5/5

fuel-economy-electric-vehicles.jpgIn recent years a greater emphasis on MPG during car shopping has emerged. Between fluctuating gasoline prices, a broader selection of hybrid vehicles, and the promise of plug-ins and battery electric vehicles, and mandated increases in CAFE standards, fuel economy is becoming an important vehicle characteristic for many consumers.

Makers of ICEs are looking to accentuate the efficiency of many of their “traditional” models to meet federal requirements and better compete with hybrid vehicles. This includes the addition of a turbocharger, which enables manufacturers to use smaller engines while increasing fuel economy by up to 20 percent. Turbochargers reduce emissions as they burn exhaust gas as fuel, and also provide additional power for acceleration.

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Fuel Prices At $20 Per Gallon — Sustainable? Impossible? Profitable?

Joe WalshPublished on Date September 21st, 2009 by Joe Walsh
Posted in Category Electric Vehicles, Energy
Comments3 Comments »
 Rating: 5.0/5

Current Gas Prices in Europe - Future Reality in the US? (picture photoshop-modified)NPR’s On Point never disappoints, and their show with Christopher Steiner, author of $20 Per Gallon: How the Inevitable Rise in the Price of Gasoline Will Change Our Lives for the Better was no exception. Steiner’s thesis is that as liquid hydrocarbons become all the more difficult to naturally extract and regulation makes them all the more costly to refine and use, prices will inevitably rise. At $20 a gallon, we might not recognize our lives…all for the better, says Steiner.

People will live and buy their locally-grown produce in mixed-use developments clustered around high-speed rail lines. In Steiner’s view, $6 a gallon is an inflection point that begins to redefine the way we live our lives. But, will innovation (or the US government) ever allow prices to remain at that level? Not according to Mark Mills, co-author of The Bottomless Well: The Twilight of Fuel, the Virtue of Waste, and Why We Will Never Run Out of Energy.

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Wastewater: Dow Chemical Licenses BioPetroClean’s Tech To Gobble Up Oil

Karin KloostermanPublished on Date September 20th, 2009 by Karin Kloosterman
Posted in Category Water Resources
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 Rating: 4.5/5

biopetroclean-DOW-oil-refineryEven the CEO was initially skeptical about BioPetroClean’s simple and effective solution for cleaning up industrial wastewater, but it works; and now Dow Chemicals is onboard.

The idea that microscopic bacteria could cheaply and efficiently cleanse oceans of industrial wastewater may seem far-fetched. But it is just this premise that launched BioPetroClean, a Texas-based cleantech company with research-and-development facilities in Tel Aviv.

In fact, the technology is so effective that $57.5 billion industry giant Dow Chemical just announced a global commercial agreement whereby it will market and distribute the Dow-BPC Water Treatment System internationally. The agreement includes exclusivity across significant oil drilling and refining markets.

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US High Speed Rail: The Empire Corridor — Uplift For NYC Mass Transit

Alex LennartzPublished on Date September 18th, 2009 by Alex Lennartz
Posted in Category Featured, North America, Rail
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 Rating: 5.0/5

US-high-speed-rail-empire-corridor-nyc-metro.jpgThis is the 12th of a 13-part series on high speed rail in the USA. For previous articles, see below.

City or upstate? That is the usual question that follows any New Yorker after they tell people where they are from. The proposed Empire Corridor would link these two entities that make up New York and bind them together with a transportation link would end in Buffalo nearly at the Canadian border.

Albany, Utica, Syracuse, Rochester and Buffalo are the major cities that would be linked to NYC on this line that would also be connected to the nationwide HSR network via the Keystone Corridor and the already in service Northeast Corridor. New York City as the vital intersect point for rail plans for this part of the country, and needs a complete makeover in both regional and interstate passenger travel.

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Ever Installed Solar Panels? Bent Conduit? Mounted Inverters? It’s Fun!

Jared FriedmanPublished on Date September 16th, 2009 by Jared Friedman
Posted in Category Events, Featured, North America, Solar
Comments3 Comments »
 Rating: 5.0/5

solarthon-grid-alternatives-solar-panel-roof-installation.jpgDuring the past weekend a team of CleanTechies made up of our staff members, friends and blog readers like yourself put our “Think Globally, Act Locally” philosophy into practice during Solarthon 2009. Our team of 15 people spent a partially rain-soaked Saturday to install a solar electric system on a low-income home in a Habitat for Humanity neighborhood located in Oakland, California. The team was organized by CleanTechies over the last month and its members were given the goal of raising almost $5,000 for the privilege of taking part in the event. All this effort was to support the ongoing efforts of a company we’ve raved about many times; GRID Alternatives.

GRID Alternatives is a non-profit organization making solar electric systems a reality for low-income homeowners who otherwise could not afford the systems. GRID does this through an innovative business model where they train volunteers to do everything from designing a system on a sheet of paper to mounting the final panel on a roof. With drastically reduced labor costs, a team of 10-15 volunteers can work slowly and steadily under the guidance of a GRID employee to deliver a complete system at almost half the cost of a typical solar system.

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Top Resume Writing Tip: Non-quantifiable Accomplishments

Ceylan ThomsonPublished on Date September 16th, 2009 by Ceylan Thomson
Posted in Category Career & Job
Comments3 Comments »
 Rating: 0.0/5

Professional Resume Writing ServicesIn previous posts, we’ve demonstrated the effect a professionally written accomplishment can have on your resume. Clearly highlighted and dynamically written accomplishments facilitate resume skimming and ensure that your achievements get readers’ attention. But what if your achievements aren’t quantifiable? What if you haven’t been managing million-dollar projects, generating triple-digit sales growth, or increasing the size of a critical team? This doesn’t mean your accomplishments are any less impressive or important. Here are 3 before-and-after examples to show you how to make your own unique achievements stand out.

Example #1

BEFORE:
Did a variety of tasks on several software development projects, which helped provide experience in this new area.

AFTER:
Gained thorough knowledge of complete SDLC by serving as team member on 5 key development initiatives.

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Copenhagen Climate Talks: US Energy Secretary Chu Urges Realistic Goals

Ceylan ThomsonPublished on Date September 15th, 2009 by Ceylan Thomson
Posted in Category Climate Change & Carbon Emissions, Legislation
Comments1 Comment »
 Rating: 0.0/5

US Secretary Steven ChuThe climate talks in Copenhagen will not be the final chance for the world to confront climate change, U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu said. And while the historic negotiations should produce meaningful results on greenhouse gas reductions, he said, negotiators should avoid unrealistic goals.

“You have to bring more people along,” he told reporters during a briefing in Vienna, “So don’t tee it up as now or never.”

World leaders will gather in December in hopes of crafting the successor to the Kyoto Protocol. While some developing nations want richer countries to cut CO2 emissions by 25 to 40 percent from 1990 levels by 2020, Chu said targets that are too aggressive would not likely be approved by U.S. lawmakers.

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Bioethanol From Dates: Iraq Approves Plan to Boost Agriculture Economy

Ceylan ThomsonPublished on Date September 15th, 2009 by Ceylan Thomson
Posted in Category Biomass, Middle East
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 Rating: 0.0/5

bioethanol-dates-iraq-biofuel.jpgIraqi officials have endorsed a plan to convert dates into biofuel, an innovative project they hope will boost a once-thriving agriculture economy burdened by years of drought, government sanctions and war.

A United Arab Emirates-based company will produce bioethanol from the dates that farmers can no longer use because they are rotting, said Faroun Ahmed Hussein, head of Iraq’s date palm board.

The nation produces about 350,000 tons of dates annually, but consumes only about 150,000 tons.

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