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9.07.2010

Re: OSB Issues-Toxic Levels

Question Posed:
 "I was just wondering how you felt about OSB (oriented strand board). We will soon begin the framing of our house and are planning to use OSB for exterior walls and interior floor, but I'm a little hesitant about OSB's environmental integrity (possibly emits formaldehyde?)...."


Scotty's Reply:
I have Personally Built and Worked with Homes that utilize OSB used in the Roofs, Exterior Siding, and Flooring-

'With No Ill Effects'  Signed Scotty
For my Own House I would Suggest OSB in the Roof and Exterior Walls (Note: EXTRA ATTENTION TO WATERPROOFING) and for the Sub Floor: Standard Plywood Interlocking Sub Floors.  Two Main Reasons: 1) Floors allways seem to get wet in some time during the Lifetime of a Home. 2) Plywood will take a Little more Abuse while still maintaining its Desired Structural Integrity.

  • Substitute oriented strand board (OSB) for your exterior sheathing. Select boards made from formaldehyde-free glues. If the sheathing is not required for the structure, use nonstructural insulated boards for extra insulation.
Quote from: http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com/2010/03/plywood-vs-osb.html

News reports of formaldehyde concentrations in mobile homes provided to victims of Hurricane Katrina has made builders concerned about the softwood, exterior structural panels used to sheathe walls, floors, and roofs. But the moisture-resistant glues used to make exterior sheathing in the U.S. do not contain urea formaldehyde, the adhesive that has created indoor air quality concerns. According to Marilyn LeMoine, spokesperson for the APA, all of the exterior, structural panels manufactured in the U.S. today comply with or are exempt from the California Air Resources Board (CARB) Air Toxic Control Measure for Composite Wood Products, arguably one of the world's most stringent standards regulating toxic off-gassing from building materials.

Most OSB and many plywood panels use the adhesive diphenylmethane diisocyanate (MDI) as a binder, which contains no formaldehyde and no ecological risks, says LeMoine. Some plywood and OSB contain binders made from phenol formaldehyde, which becomes stable during processing and results in such low emission levels in the finished material that these products remain exempt from all formaldehyde emission standards.

The statement "no added formaldehyde" in a wood product may sound like a hedge, but it is only because wood itself contains small measures of formaldehyde. It's all around us, as natural as air and water. You just don't want to breathe too much of it. How much is too much? No one knows, and hence the effort to avoid products that raise the concentrations of formaldehyde indoors beyond the background levels found naturally outside." End Quote Click here to Continue READING
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Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com


Institute for Environment and Health Assessment on Indoor Air Quality in the Home: Nitrogen Dioxide, Formaldehyde, Volatile Organic Compounds, House Dust Mites, Fungi and Bacteria (Assessment ;2)

 

Green Collars--Where are the Jobs?



by Kristen Wright, associate editor

Where are the 5 million green-collar jobs 2008 presidential candidate Barack Obama pledged to create within 10 years? Two years into his presidency, nobody knows what qualifies, including government agencies and environmental groups.

What about a recently laid-off woman who now pushes a reel mower yard to yard to make money? Would lawn lady's be a green job created, a general job lost, or would the two cancel one another for a net job gain of zero?

"No," said Rick Clayton, chief of the division of administration statistics and labor turnover at the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). "I think that cutting a lawn has no environmental impact."

Another federal agency has found otherwise. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) favors reel mowers over gas-powered ones, and the EPA website even calculates a user's potential emissions reductions by replacing gas mowers with reel or electric ones. Nevertheless, Clayton probably will trump the EPA on this one. He and his team of 18 will have the final say on what qualifies as a green-collar job.

So what about a man who drives a fuel-inefficient truck to deliver solar panels? Is his job as green as an engineer's at the same company, or someone's who works half the time manufacturing an Energy Star product and half the time on something else? And how will meter readers' jobs lost to smart meters factor into the tally?

People think they know what a green job is until they get hit with hypotheticals that easily could be realities. Right now, industry insiders just go with what they know. Many borrow Justice Potter Stewart's obscenity description, "I know it when I see it."

Chad Hall, chief operating officer and co-founder of Ioxus, said his Oneonta, N.Y.-based ultracapacitor company is full of green jobs.

"My definition of a green job is to create or expand the use of alternative energy within an industrial, automotive or utility space," Hall said. "We have created, today, 25 green jobs, and we will be bringing some more people on board fairly soon."

Pressed to define "fairly soon," he said, "Within the next month." That would be August. Pressed to define "some more people," Hall was more vague.

"I can only say it's going to be a large percentage of the company that will be added," he said.

Green jobs are forming in other countries, as well, and the United States must keep manufacturing at home to beat the competition, Hall said.

"China is adding a huge number of employees to create renewable applications," he said. "They're actually very aggressive with their hybrid vehicles. They're adding thousands of hybrid buses. They're installing wind and solar at an astronomical rate, and energy storage is a large portion of their plan, as well. I think we're headed in the right place. Basically the government is picking a winner in the space."

Lithium-ion batteries are manufactured mostly in China, Hall said, and competing with Asian prices is difficult.

"Our ultracapacitors are made in the United States, and we are beating Asian prices," he said. "If we don't do this, then we become dependent on foreign batteries just like we are dependent on foreign oil."

Why Count Green Jobs?

The surest way to determine whether U.S. green job stimulus is working is to count the number of green jobs created and weigh them against their $60 billion investment.

President Obama tapped that much of the stimulus package, officially the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), to generate green jobs. And in January, the administration announced $2.3 billion in federal tax credits that Obama said would create 17,000 more green jobs.

Five months later in June, 9.5 percent of Americans were unemployed, according to the most recent BLS report as of press time. Americans aren't asking to see green jobs solely to check federal spending; to them it's more personal. They want paychecks and will follow the work. Newspaper, magazine and TV stories from one coast to the other tell of workers commuting many miles—sometimes across state lines—to find work.

The Nevada Complex

Jobseekers might look to Nevada after reading the Greenopia USA Environmental Rating. Greenopia's green-living experts rank eco-friendly retailers, services and organizations ranging from beers to state governors. The Silver State came in sixth in a list of eco-friendliest green states. Meanwhile, Nevada leads the nation's unemployment rate at 14.2 percent, BLS data shows. It's the highest state unemployment rate since the government began tracking state unemployment in 1976.

Green jobs, at least, are headed to Nevada. U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced May 15 that a new solar manufacturing plant will bring 278 permanent management, technical and production jobs to the Las Vegas Valley. The jobs, according to a Reid statement, will be well-paying positions that require minimal training for someone who has worked in a construction industry. California-based Amonix will use $5.9 million of its $9.5 million ARRA Advanced Energy Manufacturing Tax Credit for its concentrated photovoltaic (CPV) solar system at the River Mountains Water Treatment Facility. The plant will open by the end of 2010, according to Amonix. Its annual production capacity will be 150 MW of CPV solar systems when fully operational.

Nevada will get new wind jobs, as well, with help from private equity firm U.S. Renewable Energy Group and a Chinese renewable energy technology manufacturer, A-Power Generation Systems Ltd. The 320,000-square-foot plant—to be erected from 50,000 tons of U.S.-manufactured steel, officials said—will manufacture and assemble wind turbines and create some 1,000 long-term jobs. The site in southern Nevada has yet to be determined.

In addition, Geothermal Energy Association (GEA) data reflects a boom in Nevada, and the GEA projects the state to produce $22.5 billion in geothermal profits during the next 30 years. The Silver State has 86 planned or developing geothermal plants with the potential to add more than 3,600 MW to its energy portfolio. The 14 geothermal plants currently in late stages of development will create some 1,400 construction jobs upon breaking ground, said Karl Gawell, GEA executive director. And ARRA funding for geothermal development is expected to create some 1,100 jobs in Nevada, according to the GEA.

The state will use $6 million in ARRA grants to train residents for the anticipated green jobs. In all, 34 states were awarded $190 million in State Energy Sector Partnership and Training grants.

The Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation (DETR) will use its grant to teach 7,125 workers energy efficiency and renewable energy job skills through the state's universities, colleges, community colleges, select high schools, training facilities, apprenticeships and energy partners. The grant targets dislocated workers, the homeless, veterans, former foster youth, young pregnant and single mothers, people receiving public assistance, and people with criminal records, disabilities and low incomes.

When asked about the status of the program, a DETR public information officer, Mae Worthey, said she didn't know where it stands. A request for the same information to DETR Deputy Director Ardell Galbreth went unanswered.

Elsewhere

Outside of Nevada, more green jobs might exist in Greenopia's top five eco-friendliest green states: Washington is No. 17 in unemployment at 8.9 percent; Vermont is No. 31 in unemployment at 6 percent; New York is No. 20 in unemployment at 8.2 percent; Oregon is tied for No. 8 in unemployment at 10.5 percent; and California is No. 3 in unemployment at 12.3 percent.

House Bill 2815 in Washington state required Washington's Employment Security Department to conduct a green-collar jobs study. Completed in 2009, the "2008 Washington State Green Economy Jobs" is one of the nation's first state-sponsored studies to survey employers involved with energy efficiency, renewable energy, and pollution prevention, reduction and cleanup about their estimated number of green-collar jobs. More than 9,500 employers responded. The study concluded 47,194 green jobs existed in Washington at that time. The study's definition of green jobs varies from others.

That's the problem with green jobs; there's no way to tell what is, and what isn't. Everyone assumes.

Dizzying Definitions

Green job definitions dizzy everyone trying to count them. Neither politicians nor agencies agree on a definition, and every company with an interest has its own version.

To simplify the scope, the Regional Economic Development Institute at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College packaged 43 definitions in its "Inventory of 'Green Jobs' Definitions: A Review of the Literature."

It states, for example, that the Michigan Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth defines green jobs to "include primary occupations engaged in the production of green-related products or services, and support jobs created by green-related revenue."

The list attributes the Environmental Defense Fund's "Green Jobs Guidebook" with defining green jobs as "jobs that assist in moving the economy towards preventing or adapting to climate change."

Another definition on the list stipulates that a green-collar job first must be a blue-collar job, and then be in a green business. That one comes from the Economic Policy Institute and Center for a Sustainable Economy's "Clean Energy and Jobs: A comprehensive approach to climate change and energy policy."

And remember that study out of Washington state? It defined a green job as one that promotes environmental protection and energy security.

To count green collars, a standard definition must exist.

Green Means …

"There is no definition," said Clayton of the BLS. "We'd love it if someone would have given us one."

Clayton and his team of 18—split across three or four projects—have been trying to define green for a year, he said. They'll have a U.S. standard definition by 2012.

Obama on Dec. 16 signed into law the 2010 Consolidated Appropriations Act, which includes funds for the BLS to define green jobs and determine where green activity exists and what jobs and pay levels are connected.

"We are trying to decide which industries have sufficient green content that needs a sort of conceptual definition," Clayton said. "We have gone through each of the 1,100 industries. We've met with other agencies."

The EPA, Department of Energy and other federal agencies will participate in the $8 million, yearlong study.

Until that definition is released, the March 16 Federal Register provides a section in which the BLS addresses green job definitions.

"The common thread through the studies and discussions is that green jobs are jobs related to preserving or restoring the environment," the Federal Register states.

It broadly defines green jobs as "jobs involved in economic activities that help protect or restore the environment or conserve natural resources." The economic activities generally fall into the following categories:

  • Renewable energy,
  • Energy efficiency,
  • Greenhouse gas reduction,
  • Pollution reduction and cleanup,
  • Recycling and waste reduction,
  • Agricultural and natural resources conservation, and
  • Education, compliance, public awareness and training.

From there, according to the BLS, the economic activities result in the production of green goods and services that fall into four types:

  1.  Direct green goods and services,
  2.  Indirect green goods and services,
  3.  Specialized inputs, and
  4.  Distribution of green goods.

According to that preliminary BLS definition, the fuel-inefficient truck driver delivering solar panels would qualify as a green job.

"If a business establishment produces a single good or service, and if the good or service is included in the BLS definition, all employment at that establishment will be counted towards the green job total, including production, management, and administrative staff," the Federal Register states.

That prompts a final question for Clayton at the BLS. Will he count his job and those of his 18 co-workers as green jobs created by federal stimulus money?

"I haven't thought about that," he said. "Probably not."



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Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Re: America Wants Solar Energy Now




Build Green
Scotty, Scotts Contracting
www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com








care2 petitionsite actionAlert

Hi Buz,

You know -- and I know -- that fossil fuels are on the way out. Not only do they foul our air and warm our planet, but getting oil, coal and gas out of the earth has become more difficult and dangerous than ever before.

But we need to level the playing field so clean, solar energy can take off. Support the Solar Bill of Rights »

Fossil fuel companies have received tens of billions of taxpayer dollars in federal subsidies for decades -- making it extremely hard for renewable energy sources to compete. Moreover, red tape and unnecessary paperwork make it hard for solar companies to succeed and for everyday Americans to go solar.

The U.S. has some of the best solar resources in the world, especially in our Southwestern deserts. But colder, cloudier countries like Germany and Spain are outpacing us just because they're more solar-friendly.

It's time to stop giving dirty fuels an unfair advantage, and let people decide which energy sources they want to use. Sign the Solar Bill of Rights to make sure solar energy gets a fair chance to lead our clean energy future »

Thanks for taking action!

Emily V.
Care2 and ThePetitionSite Team


It's Time for the U.S. to
Go Solar
The solar industry needs a fair, competitive environment.
Take Action!
  
Take action link: http://www.care2.com/go/z/e/AF1uQ/zKgR/blMjq


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Investigate Money in State Politics

Investigate Money in State Politics

Money in state politics plays a pivotal role in shaping public policy in individual states and across the nation. We track political donations in all 50 states. Take a look.

Jump Into the Data!

Who represents me?

My District

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National Overview Industry Influence Contributions Timeline Recovery Watch Top 10,000

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Legislative Committee Analysis Tool (L-CAT) Lobbyist Link Advanced Search PULSE (m)c50

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Sleuth: Online Tutorials
 

What's New at Follow The Money?

  • What's New IconNew Politics of Judicial Elections, 2000-2009

    State judicial elections have been transformed during the past decade. The story of America's 2000–2009 high court contests—tens of millions of dollars raised by candidates from parties who may appear before them, millions more poured in by interest groups, nasty and misleading ads, and pressure on judges to signal courtroom rulings on the campaign trail—has become the new normal. For more than a decade, partisans and special interests of all stripes have been growing more organized in their efforts to use elections to tilt the scales of justice their way. Many Americans have come to fear that justice is for sale.

  • What's New IconElections & Public Financing

    Fundraising to run for elected office continues to capture increasing amounts of a candidate's time, even at the state level. Our research indicates that public financing systems can help to reduce the amount of time legislators must devote to fundraising and, thus, spend more time addressing policy issues. Our data also indicates that as these races become closer in terms of money, they also become closer in terms of competitiveness. We find that public financing has a moderate but significant effect on improving the number of races that are competitive in both the state House and the state Senate. We also find that public financing has a strong effect on decreasing the disparity between incumbents and challengers in campaign contributions.

  • What's New IconGun Rights Advocates Outgun Opposition Contributions

    Second Amendment advocates won several important victories in the past year, crowned with the Supreme Court's decision in late June that the Second Amendment guarantees an individual's right to keep arms in the home. As well, several states recently passed gun-friendly legislation.

  • What's New IconNames in the News: Gov. Joe Manchin

    Hours after signing legislation that set up a special election to fill the remaining two years of the late U.S. Senator Robert Byrd's term, West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, III announced on July 20 that he would run in the race. Manchin, a Democrat, has dominated campaign fundraising in the past and handily won elections in 2000, 2004, and 2008. If these trends from his state races continue into his U.S. Senate campaign, he will certainly be a powerful contender.

  • What's New IconThe Efficacy of Self-Funding a Political Campaign

    Whitman and Fiorina take note: while candidates with big war chests hold a significant advantage over their opponents, the advantage is diffused when most of the money comes from a candidate's own pockets. The traditional advantages of being the top fundraiser in a race, or being an incumbent, don't confer the same level of success to self-financiers. That trend holds true for candidates from all parties. In fact, in the last nine years, only 11 percent of self-financed candidates won their races. Early primary results in 2010 show this trend may be continuing.

  • What's New IconPetroleum Contributions Gush Over the Gulf States

    If political donations and lobbying efforts serve as a gauge of influence and commitment, oil plays a significant role in Gulf state politics. Oil companies advocated strongly for themselves long before the Deepwater tragedy and likely will continue to do so--and to drill.

  • What's New IconARRA Contracts and State Political Contributions

    A diverse "Who's Who" of American organizations and corporations received billions of dollars in contracts from the federal government under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The National Institute on Money in State Politics examined possible relationships between these contracts, and campaign contributions to state-level candidates and committees.

  • What's New Icon2010 Data Rolling In

    Institute staff are busy collecting 2010 campaign finance reports filed by candidates seeking state office this November. Learn more about how this data is collected, when it will be available, and how you can be notified when it is on our website.

  • What's New IconThird-Party Candidates Face Long Odds

    Voters in the 2010 elections can again expect to see few third-party candidates who seek to provide alternatives to politics as usual. Those few candidates face long odds. Of the 6,181 third-party candidates registered in the last nine years, only 2 percent won their races. Moreover, the traditional advantages of money and incumbency don't confer success onto third-party candidates to the same extent as they do mainstream party candidates.

  • What's New IconNames In The News: Goldman Sachs

    The Justice Department has opened a criminal investigation into securities fraud at Goldman Sachs, one of the nation's largest investment banks. Much of the scrutiny over Goldman Sachs has focused on Washington, D.C., where Goldman Sachs' PAC and its employees gave $24.5 million to federal political campaigns in the period 1999-2009. Most of that money went to Democrats, and a quarter of this year's donations went to members of the committees most responsible for banking regulation.

  • What's New IconThe Role of Money & Incumbency in 2007-2008 State Elections

    The dual advantages of incumbency and fundraising dominance produced a success rate of 96 percent in the 2007-2008 state legislative elections. Candidates possessing just the incumbency advantage had a 94 percent success rate, and frequently did not even face a contested general election.

  • What's New IconHealth Insurance Companies Give Healthy Donations to Political Campaigns

    Executives of health insurance titans WellPoint, UnitedHealth Group, Humana, and Aetna were called before Congress in March to explain stiff rate increases and claims denials. Despite the publicized wrangling at the federal level, state governments actually bear primary responsibility for health insurance regulation--and that has not escaped the notice of health insurers. These four companies were major players in state politics, giving a total of $8.7 million to candidates and committees in 42 states from 2005 through 2008.

  • What's New IconAn Overview of State Campaigns, 2007-2008

    More than 15,000 candidates who sought offices ranging from the state legislature to the governor's seat raised nearly $1.5 billion during state elections held in 2007 and 2008. State office-holders who were not up for election raised an additional $172 million.

  • What's New IconCitizens United v. Federal Election Commission

    Revised: March 2, 2010: The "Citizens United v FEC" ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court has no effect on campaign limits in place at the state and federal levels but may effectively overturn laws in 24 states that ban or restrict corporations from funding advocation for or against state candidates. In the 22 states that prohibit corporations from giving to candidates, individuals contributed about half of the money raised by candidates and non-individuals provided less than one-fourth. The reverse is true in the 28 states that allow corporate giving.

  • What's New IconThe Money Behind the 2008 Same-Sex Partnership Ballot Measures

    (UPDATED 2/9/2010) The struggle between gay and lesbian rights interests and conservative and religious interests continues: in 2008, voters in Arizona, Arkansas, California and Florida passed measures opposing same-sex marriage or benefits. Underscoring the intensity of the conflict, these two interest groups were among the top contributors overall in each of the four states.

  • What's New Icon2008 Party Control Map

    In the report, Advantage, Incumbent, that was conducted in 2008, we showed that the key to victory in a legislative election is to already be in office. Our new Party Control Map gives you a state-level district-by-district visualization that shows party representations after the 2006 and 2008 elections. It also allows you to compare the two maps to see how/if party control has changed.



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Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

9.06.2010

local, state, and federal legislation and government news affecting green home building

August Legislative Update

A roundup of local, state, and federal legislation and government news affecting green home building.

Nonprofits Lobbying for Climate Bill 
Environmental activists are ratcheting up the pressure this summer on senators who punted on a sweeping climate and energy bill despite slim chances that broad legislation will pass this year. (The New York Times)

Loan Program for Green Home Upgrades Stalls
Many projects have been left in limbo after regulators and lenders raised alarms over terms of the Property Assessed Clean Energy program. (The Los Angeles Times)

26 Groups Support EPA Right-to-Know Policy for Chemical Hazards
Health, labor, and environmental organizations have voiced support for a change in an EPA policy that denied public access to information the agency receives from the chemical industry. (Environmental Protection)

Pennsylvania Solar Lobbyist Faces Challenges Pushing Legislation
For the last two years, Maureen Mulligan has worked to persuade Pennsylvania lawmakers to embrace her renewable energy message; as sunset nears on another legislative year in Harrisburg, she is still without success. (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

San Anselmo, Calif., Approves Revised Green Building Ordinance
The law would require that all new home construction and all remodels over $300,000 go through the Build It Green system. (San Anselmo-Fairfax Patch)

San Jose City Planners Ask Developer to Increase Project's Density  
 The Ohlone mixed-use project will go from two 11-story towers and one six-story structure to three 11-story towers, with the number of living units increasing from 649 to 700 and from 100 to 104 units per acre. (The San Jose Mercury News)

North Carolina Ordinance Targets Construction Debris
The recently adopted Chatham County law aims to reduce the amount of construction and demolition debris headed to North Carolina landfills. (Chatham Journal Weekly)

Brunswick County, N.C., Plans for Growing Renewable Energy Use
Ordinances to address solar and wind energy are scheduled to go before the county planning board next month.

Is the Green Communities Label Too Costly? 
Officials in Milton, Mass., are pushing new, eco-friendly construction rules that builders around the state say will drive up the price of development. (Boston Globe)

Stricter Guidelines Coming for Louisville Stormwater 
Developers will have to do more to stop dirt from washing off construction sites and Louisville-area residents will be encouraged to pick up dog droppings, limit the use of fertilizers, and take other steps under a state proposal for reducing pollution in local waterways. (Courier-Journal)

Indianapolis Unveils Green Building Incentive Program 
Indianapolis government leaders have announced a program that provides incentives for property owners and developers to renovate or construct new buildings in a sustainable manner. (Indianapolis Star)

West Sacramento Building Code to be Greener than State
The city's planning commission voted unanimously to approve the early adoption of CalGreen and to make some of the legislation's voluntary sections mandatory, including boosting energy efficiency by 15%. (The Sacramento Business Journal)

San Carlos, Calif., Adopts Green Building Law
City Council members approved the town's first green building ordinance, which officials say will reduce the city's greenhouse gas emissions while allowing builders flexibility to meet the new requirements. (San Francisco Examiner)

Living Buildings Get a Test Run in Clark County, Wash.
For the next five years, the jurisdiction will be testing to see if changes should be made to its building and development codes to allow for more advanced green building construction, including net-zero-energy homes. (Daily Journal of Commerce)

Hanover, Penn., Restricts Solar Panels
Supervisors unanimously passed a residential solar ordinance but restricted panels to the side or rear of a property, regardless of whether they would get the benefit of a southern exposure. (The Morning Call)

--
Scott's Contracting
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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Solar Thermal Plant-California-Steam Electricity Production

California Energy Commission licenses first solar thermal plant in 20-years


Source: California Energy Commission

The California Energy Commission has approved the construction of the proposed Beacon Solar Energy Project, the first solar thermal power project permitted in 20 years.

"Today's action begins the journey of increasing clean renewable energy in California," said Energy Commission Chairman Karen Douglas.
Douglas served as the presiding member of the committee that reviewed the plant's application for certification.

In a unanimous vote, the Energy Commission adopted the presiding member's proposed decision (PMPD) that recommended licensing the 250-megawatt facility in eastern Kern County.

The last solar thermal power plants that the Energy Commission approved were Luz Solar Electric Generating Systems (SEGS) IX and Luz SEGS X in February 1990.

The PMPD for the Beacon Solar Energy Project said the facility, as mitigated, will have no significant impacts on the environment and complies with applicable laws, ordinances, regulations, and standards. The PMPD was based solely on the record of facts that were established during the facility's certification proceeding.

Beacon Solar, LLC, a subsidiary of NextEra Energy Resources, LLC, would construct, own, and operate the proposed plant. The project is a concentrated solar electric generating facility on approximately 2,012-acres in eastern Kern County on the western edge of the Mojave Desert, four miles from California City and 15 miles north of the town of Mojave.

The project will use well-established parabolic trough solar thermal technology to produce electrical power using a steam turbine generator fed from a solar steam generator. The solar steam generators receive heated heat transfer fluid from solar thermal equipment comprised of arrays of parabolic mirrors that collect energy from the sun.

The federal government and the State of California have established the need for the nation and state to increase the development and use of renewable energy in order to enhance the nation's energy independence, meet environmental goals, and create new economic growth opportunities.

Alliance seeks to double clean energy production.(Northeast CHP Initiative): An article from: Fairfield County Business Journal

renewable energy projects to create 1,400 jobs

Good Job Pennsylvania! Hopefully our Missouri Leaders will take notice of not only the Jobs Created but the savings and Green Energy Production for the States Energy Needs. Build Green Scotty


Pennsylvania to invest $20.5MM for 40 alternative, renewable energy projects to create 1,400 jobs



Source: Pennsylvania Office of the Governor

Governor Edward G. Rendell announced $20.5 million in state and federal investments that will create 1,400 jobs in the rapidly expanding clean energy industry.

The funding will benefit 40 diverse energy projects that will generate or save the equivalent of more than 10 billion kilowatt hours of electricity over their lifetimes. That's enough energy to power 1 million average homes in Pennsylvania for one year -- and reduce carbon emissions by nearly 9 million tons, which is the equivalent of removing 1.5 million passenger cars from the roads for one year.

"A few years ago, projects like these existed only in theory. Today, they are a reality," said Governor Rendell. "They benefit Pennsylvania's consumers by generating and saving electricity, driving down utility rates, making additional projects more affordable and feasible, while stimulating the economy by creating manufacturing and employment opportunities, attracting private investments and making our environment cleaner."

The Governor noted that the state investment provided through the Pennsylvania Energy Development Authority, or PEDA, will also leverage more than $211 million in private funds, generating a 10-to-1 return on investment. Since 2005, PEDA has invested more than $99 million in 201 projects which have generated more than $883 million in matching funds.

He also stressed the need to increase Pennsylvania's clean energy portfolio standards, saying higher standards will translate into even more jobs and economic development for the state -- just as the first Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards law did.

"The solar industry has grown at a rapid pace despite the uncertain economy," said Governor Rendell. "Investors and developers have proven anxious and eager to invest in clean solar energy projects. Venture capitalists alone poured $1.4 billion into the industry last year. Pennsylvania could attract a larger share of that action if we just increased the solar share of our portfolio standards law."

When it was enacted in 2004, Pennsylvania's Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards act was one of the nation's most ambitious laws, but has since been surpassed by other states.

The current law's solar share requirement requires that one-half-of-one percent of the electricity Pennsylvanians purchase in 2021 come from solar power. However, Delaware has a 3.5 percent requirement by 2025; Maryland will require that 2 percent of their electricity comes from solar by 2022; New Jersey will require 4 percent solar generation by 2021; and Illinois -- the seventh-largest coal producer in the nation -- has set a 1.5 percent goal for 2025.

"Pennsylvania is on pace to become one of the top five states this year for the amount of installed solar generation capacity we have, but that's because of the standards we enacted six years ago," said the Governor, adding that less than two years ago, Pennsylvania's installed solar capacity was minimal. "Today, we have more than 39 megawatts of capacity installed, or enough to power 5,900 homes and that number increases daily.

"Unless we move now to increase our solar share -- even to a modest 1.5 percent target -- the types of projects we're announcing today won't even consider Pennsylvania. They'll look elsewhere and take their jobs with them. And the 600 solar businesses now operating in Pennsylvania may move to another state where the sun shines brighter. Not acting on this issue now will only hurt our economy in the long-run."

The projects announced by the Governor were funded through three sources. Twenty-four projects were funded with $13 million from Growing Greener II, eight projects were funded with $5 million in federal stimulus funds through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and eight projects in the Pittsburgh region were funded with $2.5 million through Duquesne Light Co. settlement funds.



--
Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

PPL electric utilities plans ten new electric substations for 2010-11

September 2, 2010

Source: PPL Electric Utilities

For electric service, substations are the hubs of power delivery, and PPL Electric Utilities is working on 10 new electric distribution substations in the next two years to improve reliability for thousands of customers in eastern and central Pennsylvania.

Building 10 substations in only two years is one example of the company's increasing investment in its energy delivery infrastructure to improve reliability, strengthen aging infrastructure and better meet customer needs, said David G. DeCampli, president of PPL Electric Utilities.

This year, PPL Electric Utilities expects to complete construction of electric substations in the Beltzville area of Towamensing, Carbon County; in Lower Macungie in Lehigh County, known as the new Schoeneck substation; and in the Valley View Business Park in Jessup, near Scranton.

These facilities were planned to meet increasing demand for electricity in those areas, accommodate local growth and improve the utility's operations.

Additionally, PPL has work under way on eight new substation facilities for service in 2011. The largest of the projects is a $9 million project in Chestnuthill Township, Monroe County, which also includes a 5.6-mile transmission feeder to supply power to the facility and two new distribution circuits to serve local customers. The new project will relieve electric load on existing facilities and ensure more reliable service for the area. This project, known as the Effort Mountain substation, is pending review by the state Public Utility Commission.

Additionally in 2011, PPL expects to build new electric substations in

-- Lansford, Carbon County.

-- South Mechanicsburg in Cumberland County.

-- Moore Township, Northampton County (known as the Blue Mountain
substation).

-- Hawley section of Palmyra Township, Wayne County.

-- Jackson Township, Monroe County (known as the Appenzell project).

-- Lower Windsor Township, York County (known as the Red Front
substation).

"We are committed to invest in our electric delivery system to ensure we meet the energy needs of our customers and ensure solid service reliability. These projects represent our investments in these communities to improve service," DeCampli said, noting more than $1.5 billion in new capital investment across the service area over the next five years. "Our engineers, system operators and field personnel work diligently to keep our system working well, but it's time to expand, upgrade and modernize in many parts of our region."

Substations are a source of power supply for a community. The facilities tap into nearby electric transmission lines and convert the power to lower voltage for local distribution. The facilities generally feature large circuit breakers, transformers and controls for power distribution. The facilities allow PPL to provide additional electric supply to a growing area and enhance reliability. The company operates about 400 electric substations currently across its service area.

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