Archive for July, 2007

Jul 31 2007

Life Through Rose Colored Solar Cells

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FrankGlass.jpg What would you do if you could choose the color of your solar cell? Want it to be tinted pink? How about a rainbow of colors? What if you could have a Frank Lloyd Wright inspired stained photo-voltaic (PV) window? Researchers at Ohio State University have demonstrated yet another example of just how fashionable Dye Sensitized Solar Cells (DSSC) can be. For those just joining the conversation, Dyesol is the proclaimed leader in this area of “third generation” solar cells (follow the link for a review of the technology). A few of the advantages of DSSC is their inexpensive nature, their use of common materials,…

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Jul 31 2007

Number of the Day: 52.2

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numbers-cost-car-bus1.jpg 52.2 — the average cost in the US, in cents per mile, of driving a car alone, according to AAA. Compare that to… 20.7 — the average cost in the US, in cents per mile, of riding public transportation, according to the American Public Transportation Association. Of course, these numbers take into account myriad assumptions and factors that don”t apply to everyone (more explanation is available from the l…

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Jul 31 2007

Why China Loves Transformers (And Why We Should All Be A Little Worried)

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tfcover.gif Transformers are huge in China, and I don”t mean just the devices used to transfer energy between circuits. The alien robot car disaster movie may not have earned more money in China than the US (you can watch the movie free on Chinese web…

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Jul 31 2007

Furochic: And That’s a Wrap

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Furochic As no doubt our razor-sharp readers will be quick to point out, the most sustainable packaging is no packaging at all. But if your delicate sense of aesthetics will not permit your goods to go commando, a traditional Japanese art of embellishment that employs a reusable square piece of fabric (or Furoshiki) could be your answer. Furochic revives that technique with its 100 percent cotton fabric wraps, each measuring 27×27 inches. While we wish the company supplied more-sustainable textile options, you”re by no means limited to Furochic”s offerings—hemmed squares of hemp, linen, and organic cotton fabrics, or even a brightly…

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Jul 31 2007

Ornamental Inheritance: Old Ceramics Given New Life

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ornamental_inheritance.jpg Deftly combining contemporary symbols (like airplanes, modern architecture, a McDonalds sign and what looks to be a windmill or two) with aging materials, Netherlands-based studio Jo Meesters and vormgevingsbureau take used ceramics and sandblast them to create a new landscape. Meesters aims to combine technology and craftsmanship, with a balance between aesthetics and innovation within his designs, and the results of this hybridization are quite striking. Hit the jump for more pics of “Ornamental Inheritance” (the ceramic project), and for the details on more of Meesters” work on something called “My Secret Garden.” ::studio …

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Jul 31 2007

Help Save the Seahorse

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The seahorses and the Pulai River Estuary need your help.

Save the seahorse

Click http://www.thepetitionsite.com/2/help-save-the-seahorse to sign up the online petition.

Your petitions can change the fate of the seahorse and the Pulai River Estuary.

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Jul 31 2007

The Return of Burning Rivers?

Published by admin under Green Cars

>The Bush team has granted Big Oil (BP) the right to increase its river polluting output. One cannot help but display a wrinkled forehead at the doings of the Bush team. America, via the Bush team, has had to relearn via experience, way too much of history. And based upon how it “managed” the Iraqi war and all the other major tasks it attempted - America is probably in BIG trouble again. And nobody will attempt to stop the Bush team juggernaut. The Democrats are too busy trying to fix the problems of the Bush team to look at the source of the problems.

A Burning river? You bet. Where? Ohio. Did the river have a name? Yes - Cuyahoga. Now listen to how others described it:

>Fires plagued the Cuyahoga River beginning in 1936 when a spark from a blow torch ignited floating debris and oils. The largest river fire in 1952 caused over $1 million in damage to boats and a riverfront office building. By the 1960s the lower Cuyahoga River in Cleveland was used for waste disposal, and was choked with debris, oils, sludge, industrial wastes and sewage. These pollutants were considered a major source of impact to Lake Erie, which was considered “dead” at the time. On June 22, 1969 a river fire captured national attention. Time magazine described the Cuyahoga as the river that “oozes rather than flows” and in which a person “does not drown but decays.” This event helped spur an avalanche of pollution control activities resulting in the Clean Water Act>, >Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement>

>and the creation of the federal and state Environmental Protection Agencies.

You would have to believe that most of the world would likely have nothing but admiration and respect for the giant effort put forth by the people of the United States of America to fix the problems of a burning river and two headed fish.

While the Bush team had no trouble believing in yellow-cake, the same may not be true of environmental issues supported by scientist.  

The Bush team may be different. Read the whole story at the below link:

http://www.epa.gov/glnpo/aoc/cuyahoga.html.

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Jul 31 2007

Bellevue Beautification Project

Published by admin under Green Cars

Most of the photos on this blog (well all but one) have been taken in the Bellevue area. I was shocked to see this story in our morning newspaper about a Bellevue beautification project

It shows how irresponsible our local paper is by showing three city council candidates standing by a wall to make Bellevue beautiful. There are Don Johnson,

Bellevue is a beautiful place to live, but it is overrun with garbage.

Although the Bellevue signs are attractive, they are like putting

I’m also considering canceling my subscription to the

Bellevue is naturally beautiful if we keep it clean. We have bigger

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Jul 31 2007

Oil at 78.71 a barrel (highest price ever so far)

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Oil has now reached a price of 78.71 per barrel according to the BBC article on their website. It has surpassed the highest price that was set in July of 2006. Have we learned anything from the oil shocks of the 1970s and beyond? How much longer are we going to continue down this nonrenewable path?

Apparently not.

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Jul 31 2007

The Season of Rachel Carson

Published by admin under Green Cars

“Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves of strength that will endure as long as life lasts.” -Rachel Carson

Miss Carson has been talking to me in subtle ways, lately. So I thought maybe it was important to write about her. I keep running into her words on the internet, a reference here or there. A little investigation reveals that this year would have been her 100th birthday, so maybe that’s why she’s been talking to me.

Who is Rachel Carson? I think probably Robin knows, and Ben will know, too. Rachel Carson was a trained marine biologist, who studied at Woods Hole laboratory and received her MA in zoology at John Hopkins University. She was a researcher and a naturalist, who became editor-in-chief of publications for the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Perhaps most importantly, she was an author. Her fierce love of the natural world surfaced in several volumes, one of which, ‘Silent Spring’, spurred an environmental movement that lead to an eventual ban on the use of DDT.

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I was first introduced to Carson, not through her famous work, Silent Spring or her early books about the ocean, but through a book my father gave me in my teens called ‘The Sense of Wonder’. The Nature Company created a special edition of this last book of Carson’s prose paired with incredibly detailed photography of nature by William Neil.

The Sense of Wonder was published posthumously. Rachel Carson succumbed to breast cancer after a long fight at the age of 56. The book is based on an article written for ‘Women’s Home Companion’ about how to introduce your child to the wonders of nature. The article was a token of love to her grandnephew Roger, whom Carson adopted at the age of five when his mother passed away. Here is one of my favorite passages.

“One summer night, out on a flat headland all but surrounded by the waters of the bay, the horizons were remote and distant rims on the edge of space. Millions of stars blazed in darkness, and on the far shore a few lights burned in cottages; otherwise, there was no reminder of human life.

My companion and I were alone with the stars; the misty river of the Milky Way flowing across the sky, the patterns of the constellations standing out bright and clear, a blazing planet low on the horizon.

It occurred to me that if this were a sight that could be seen only once in a century, this little headland would be thronged with spectators. But it can be seen many scores of nights in any year, and so the inhabitants probably gave not a thought to the beauty overhead.

And because they could see it almost any night, perhaps they never will.”

rachel-carson-3-sized-11.jpg

The details that surround Carson’s seminal work, Silent Spring, are a story in themselves. Carson’s first love was marine biology, and all her books previously had centered around the sea. Silent Spring was a call of conscience for Carson. The ill effects of pesticides made from chlorinated hydrocarbons, such as DDT had come before her attention on several occasions; so after receiving a letter from one Olga Huckins in 1958, Carson began to collect and catalogue scientific evidence on the biological effects of DDT. There was some difficulty in having the findings published because editors feared corporate backlash. It was the New Yorker that presented Carson’s book in a condensed, three part series.

The reaction was immense and immediate. Rachel Carson was both supported and attacked by those on either side of the issue. The chemical industry attacked her character, and her mental stability. They called her a communist, an hysterical woman, and a nature nut. According to wikipedia, American Cyanamid biochemist Robert White-Stevens and former Cyanamid chemist Thomas Jukes were among the most aggressive critics. According to White-Stevens, “If man were to follow the teachings of Miss Carson, we would return to the Dark Ages, and the insects and diseases and vermin would once again inherit the earth.”

This line of argument sounds all too familiar, doesn’t it?

Rachel Carson suffered through a long bout of poor health during the writing and publishing work of Silent Spring, and though it would have been easier and possibly advisable to go into refuge from public attention, Carson chose instead to speak. She appeared at congressional hearings, televised segments of CBS reports, in front of schools and special organizations.

She spoke with conviction and dignity, and she eventually conferred with President Kennedy and his Science Advisory Committee. The committee’s report on pesticide use and control confirmed the findings in Silent Spring. A two year investigation into pesticide use and control commenced, and DDT became banned from use in the United States, and eventually throughout the world.

Silent Spring is often credited with having started the momentum of the environmental movement. It was a watershed work. But let’s turn back to the author for a moment more.

Rachel Carson lived long enough to see her actions begin to weild the changes they would eventually create. Many tokens of the world’s appreciation did not come until after she had passed away. In 1980 she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

I feel that Rachel Carson did what she did out of a fierce love of nature and life. There is a theme that weaves her beginning, to her life’s work, to her end. Rachel Carson was born in the spring: May 27, 1907. She was born in Springdale, Pennsylvania. She worked and wrote about the sea but she is remembered best for writing ‘Silent Spring’. In the spring of 1964, on April 14th, Rachel Carson passed away. She passed away in the town of Silver Spring, Maryland.

Spring is the season of new life;

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