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9.26.2010

Wind Capital Wind Farm- NW MO Site-Carnahan vs Blunt

Carnahans respond to GOP blowback over brother's stimulus money

buy this photo Russ and Robin Carnahan

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ST. LOUIS -- The campaigning Carnahan siblings have struck back against GOP complaints that they played a role in helping their younger brother land stimulus cash.

Tom Carnahan's St. Louis-based firm, Wind Capital Group, was awarded $107 million in stimulus funds to aid a wind farm in far northwest Missouri.

Predictably, Missouri Republicans have accused Carnahan of treading on his name to get the money, a claim the Carnahans deny.

"This is just more of the same as Congressman Blunt and his friends try to distract from his 14-year record of waste, corruption, and sticking it to the middle class that has given billions of taxpayer dollars to Big Oil companies who ship our jobs overseas," said Linden Zakula, a spokesman for Democrat Robin Carnahan's Senate campaign. "They are attacking a Missouri company's use of a tax credit that Congressman Blunt has voted to extend four separate times."

Zakula refers to the production tax credit, which is available to renewable energy firms like Tom Carnahan's. But it was the stimulus bill -- that Blunt opposed -- that gave eligible companies the option of taking the money in the form of a cash grant, instead of tax credits.

The campaign of Robin Carnahan's other brother, U.S. Rep. Russ Carnahan, offers a similar argument against Republican criticism.

"This latest, baseless attack is a complete lie and it is exactly what voters are tired of - the politics of division and misinformation," said Angela Guyadeen, communications director for Russ Carnahan's campaign. "Russ Carnahan played absolutely no role in Wind Capital's application for tax credits available to any qualified producer. Anyone who wants this credit must apply and quality for it through an independent process."

Again, it's not a credit -- it is a payment in "lieu of tax credits" for up to 30 percent of the cost of an renewable energy property. But Guyadeen is correct that the benefit is widely available -- more than 1,100 companies have qualified for funding in the same program, which has, according to the Treasury Department, has distributed $5.2 billion since last year.



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US Senators aim to keep renewable power bill "clean"

Fri Sep 24, 2010 3:45pm EDT

* Requires utilities to generate 15 pct renewable by 2021

* Bill gains two co-sponsors this week, now 4 Republicans

* Senators want to pair bill with ethanol incentives

By Timothy Gardner

WASHINGTON, Sept 24 (Reuters) - U.S. Senators backing a bi-partisan
bill that would make big utilities begin embracing renewable
electricity believe they can get enough votes to pass it without
having to add oil or nuclear incentives to the measure, a
Congressional aide said on Friday.

Democrat Jeff Bingaman, the chair of the Senate's energy committee,
and Senator Sam Brownback, a Republican, introduced the bill this week
that includes a Renewable Electricity Standard, or RES.

The RES is backed by environmentalists and other groups as a
consolation prize after the failure by the Senate to pass a more
comprehensive climate bill, one of the key priorities of the Obama
Administration. The law would help reduce greenhouse gases by cutting
back on fossil fuel consumption.

The bill, which is similar to an RES that passed easily in Bingaman's
committee last year, would require big utilities to generate 15
percent renewable power such as solar, wind, geothermal, and some
hydroelectric, by 2021.

Since the senators introduced the new bill, two more senators have
climbed on board as co-sponsors, bringing the total to 25. It has four
Republican co-sponsors, including Charles Grassley.

The bill would need 60 votes to pass in the 100-member Senate, but the
aide cautioned against counting co-sponsors.

"Many other senators are ready to vote for the bill but they are not
ready to co-sponsor it," the aide told Reuters, adding that some
senators do not want to add their names to it before the Nov. 2
congressional elections.

Bingaman told the Reuters Washington Summit this week he believes the
bill will be taken up in a so-called lame duck session after the
elections. [ID:nN22275479]

He also told the Summit he does not see a big climate bill reaching
the Senate floor in the remainder of President Barack Obama's first
term, undermining the administration's hopes of taking a lead role at
the global climate talks.

Because the RES bill may be the only chance of getting energy
legislation through the Senate this year, many senators who are not
co-sponsors are attempting to add items to it that would get them
support at home.

Some senators see a chance to boost coal power and want electricity
from plants where companies bury carbon emissions in the ground to be
counted as a renewable power. Others want nuclear power to count.

KEEPING IT CLEAN

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Calif. wants third of its power renewable by 2020

State air regulators require Calif. utilities to get a third of
electricity from renewables

Jason Dearen, Associated Press Writer, On Friday September 24, 2010,
9:29 am EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The state with some of the nation's most
ambitious clean energy standards went even further Thursday:
Regulators approved new regulations requiring utilities to draw a
third of their power from alternative energy sources such as wind,
solar and geothermal in 10 years.

California already is pushing utilities to reach a
20-percent-renewable standard by next year, which has been a struggle
to accomplish. Toughening the rules could prompt regulators across the
country to do the same, but some consumers fret that they will end up
paying for the changes in the form of higher utility bills.

"To the extent that prices do become unreasonably elevated, there must
be a safety valve to protect retail customers," said Matthew Freedman,
a staff attorney at The Utility Reform Network, a consumer advocacy
group.

At a time when nearly one-eighth of the state's work force is jobless,
some want California to dial back, not bolster, its leading-edge air
pollution rules. A November ballot measure bankrolled by Texas oil
companies would delay the state's landmark 2006 global warming law
until the unemployment rate falls dramatically.

Advocates of the proposed utility standards plan say it will usher in
"green" jobs and save rate payers money in the long run by decreasing
dependence on fossil fuels.

"This standard is going to further diversify and secure our energy
supply while also growing California's leading green technology
market, which will lead to cost savings for consumers," Mary D.
Nichols, chairman of the board considering the new rules, said in a
statement after the vote.

Some clean-air advocates gave tepid support for the regulation but
said it is filled with loopholes that would allow utilities to
circumvent clean-energy upgrades.

Regulators say California now gets nearly 14 percent of its
electricity from renewable sources, excluding large hydroelectric
plants and nuclear power, which do not count toward either the
proposed or the existing standards.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has said he favors raising the state's
renewable mandate to 33 percent to help the state comply with the 2006
global warming law, which seeks to reduce California's greenhouse gas
emissions to 1990 levels by 2020.

The California Legislature failed to vote by the end of its session on
a bill that would have adopted the 33 percent standard. The California
Air Resources board took up the issue Thursday. Rules set by the board
are more easily undone than laws approved by the Legislature, and its
requirements would need to be adopted within a year by a state legal
office that reviews new regulations.

Laura Wisland, a clean energy analyst at the Union of Concerned
Scientists, said her group wants a 33 percent standard, but not this
one.

She said the air board's plan would actually slow clean technology
investment because it allows utilities to meet the entire 33 percent
by purchasing "renewable energy credits" rather than actually using
renewable energy to supply their customers. The credits would
represent renewable power that was generated at facilities outside
California and never ends up in the state.

"California doesn't get any power for that (energy credit) purchase,
so we get no greenhouse gas reduction benefits, no air quality
improvements and no clean jobs," Wisland said. "But the utilities
still have to provide electricity for customers, and that could still
come from fossil fuels."

Under current law, utilities are not authorized to use any renewable
energy credits to satisfy the 20-percent targets. All the energy must
be produced in California or in another state connected to its power
grid.

The air board said it will consider placing a cap on renewable energy
credits as the regulation's language is finalized in coming weeks.

One of the state's three large, investor-owned utilities, Pacific Gas
& Electric Co., said it is committed "to working to achieve the 20
percent and 33 percent targets."

The company, which has more than 6 million customers in central and
northern California, has struggled to meet the 20 percent goals in the
set time frame, but says it has made substantial progress. PG&E has
contracts for renewable energy deliveries representing more than 20
percent of its future needs, but many of those projects are not yet
producing energy, said Cynthia Pollard, a company spokeswoman.

Utilities face fines for failing to meet the goals but can seek extensions.

Cindy Montanez of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power
applauded the regulation and said the utility is moving quickly to
increase its renewable energy. "We want to see real emission
reductions and real jobs created. We think this is a smart way
forward," she said.

Consumer advocates warned that the proposal did too little to protect
utility customers from fluctuating energy costs. Young said there are
no cost caps in the current plan, but added that officials will be
able to add them later if they are needed.

In a state with a 12.4-percent unemployment rate and heated contests
for governor and senator, the debate over whether a renewable
electricity standard will create or kill jobs has been fierce.

California voters will have a big say in the future of the state's
efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions when they vote Nov. 2 on
Proposition 23. The measure would delay the global warming law until
California's unemployment falls to 5.5 percent and stays there for a
year. The proposition would not affect the renewable energy standards,
legal experts said.

Congress considered imposing a national renewable electricity mandate
in the latest energy bill, but the idea was nixed amid heavy
opposition from utilities. Senate Democrats hope to pass a bill after
the midterm elections that would mandate utilities get 15 percent of
their energy from such sources by 2021.

Renewable energy projects are under way across the West, though many
are years from being able to deliver power to energy-hungry cities. On
Thursday, the California Energy Commission approved plans to build a
massive solar energy plant in the Mojave Desert that could generate
enough power for about 140,000 California homes.

Hawaii has a 40 percent renewable energy requirement, but has given
its utilities until 2030 to meet the standard.

--
Scott's Contracting
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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

9.25.2010

22- Used Wind Turbines 4 Sale

18 Used Mitsubishi MWT 450 – 500kW Wind Turbines For Sale
Sep 24, 2010 05:36 pm (Ralph)
Amazing Offer: 18 Mitsubishi MWT-450 – 500kW (50hz) wind turbines for
sale. Complete package price for all 18 units – Only €2,225,000 EUR –
($3,001,458) Immediately Available. Can ship anywhere in the world!
This is a massive 9mW of wind turbines for only €247,222 EUR per 1mW –
($333,472 per 1mW) On behalf of one of our ...


4 Used Lagerwey LW 18/80 Wind Turbines 80kW For Sale
Sep 24, 2010 01:04 pm (Ralph)
FOUR USED LAGERWAY WIND TURBINES LW18-80 (80kW) IMMEDIATLEY AVAILABLE
Price 21,000 EUR ($28,000) per unit 'where is – as is' ExWorks owner's
site. Turbines are already dismantled The youngest machine is built in
1999, the oldest in 1992 and the two others are 1992 to 1995. Three
part galvanised steel tower – hub height 31m Previously in operation
in Holland ...



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9.23.2010

This is going to be huge.







--- On Thu, 9/23/10, May Boeve - 350.org <organizers@350.org> wrote:

From: May Boeve - 350.org <organizers@350.org>
Subject: This is going to be huge.
Date: Thursday, September 23, 2010, 1:51 PM


With just over two weeks left before 10/10/10, there are over 3500 events in 165 countries--and hundreds of new events being registered for 10/10/10 every single day.
This is clearly going to be huge. Don't miss it: get involved today.

Take Actionwww.350.org/101010
Dear friends,

There are just 18 days left until the 10/10/10 Global Work Party, and it's shaping up to be the largest single day of carbon-cutting action in the planet's history. 

It's hard to keep up with all the incredible news pouring in from around the world, and even harder to know what news to share first, so let's just dive right in:

First up: the explosive growth of this movement. In the last two weeks alone, over a thousand 10/10/10 events have been registered. In the last five days, ten of the "missing countries" without events got on the map, bringing our country count up to a whopping 165!

If you haven't gotten involved yet, you can find an event to join near you by clicking here. If there isn't one near you, you can register a new event by clicking here. And make sure to keep track of our event and country counters on the gorgeous new homepage at http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=7blH6AiT7oSCpwFRWQOFuDxjzaDArIMf

If you're already linked up with a local 10/10/10 event, you can click here to check out the 25 missing countries that are still not on the map for 10/10/10. Maybe you know someone that knows someone that knows someone in, say...Jamaica? Or Bhutan? If so, you can give the climate movement a real boost and spread the word.

Next: the huge scale of 10/10/10 events. When we announced 10/10/10, we expected that some people would plant a few trees--but we were blown away when we found out that a team in the Philippines is organizing 2,000 people to come out and plant mangroves. We expected that some people would promote sustainable transportation, but we weren't expecting organizers in New Zealand to fix up every old bike in their capital city. People are thinking BIG for 10/10/10.

If you haven't signed up your local work party yet, don't let these big events intimidate you--instead, let them inspire you. Even if you can't pull off anything at quite this scale, you can still dream big and know that no matter the size of your own event, you'll be part of something massive.

Third: the buzz is building all around the world. Every day, we get more calls in the 350 office from reporters and politicians. They know something huge is in the works, and they want to get in on the action. Let's make sure we've got something to show them on 10/10/10: now is the time to spread the word to make sure LOTS of people come to local events, and start working on your banners to make sure we get lots of iconic "350: Get to Work!" pictures to show the media.

Fourth: we're all working together. One major reason that the buzz is building so much is that our hundreds of partner organizations are stepping up to spread the word. From Greenpeace to the World Council of Churches, organizations all over the planet are getting their members fired up for 10/10/10. And of course, our featured partners over at 1010Global.org are pulling out all the stops to make this day truly epic.

Finally: this movement is made of real people and real stories. Some of their pictures are below. We want to share yours too. So email us: send your latest updates to http://www.blogger.com/mc/compose?to=organizers@350.org&subject=Updates%20about%20Our%20350%20Work and your pictures as attachments to http://www.blogger.com/mc/compose?to=photos@350.org&subject=City%2C%20Country (make the subject line the "City, Country" that the photo was shot in).

Together, we are building something truly amazing. It's an honor to do it with all of you.

Onwards,

May Boeve, (@MayBoeve on Twitter), 350.org

P.S. Here are 10 of the latest photos that have come into our inbox of people gearing up and getting a jump start on 10/10/10. May they inspire you in these last few weeks:

Vietnam Tree Planting

Solar Installations in Iraq
Beach Cleanup in the Dominican Republic
Bikes and Love in Thailand
Sunrise on the Beach in Canada
Getting Local Politicians Involved in Vermont
Getting Fired Up For 10:10 in the Netherlands (©Robert vanWaarden)



You should join 350.org on Facebook by becoming a fan of our page at facebook.com/350org and follow us on twitter by visiting twitter.com/350

To join our list (maybe a friend forwarded you this e-mail) visit http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?v=2&c=CJ%2BSBENtIcgYt3sgXEZU%2FoTuVCw8Bwi2

350.org needs your help! To support our work, donate securely online at 350.org/donate


350.org is an international grassroots campaign that aims to mobilize a global climate movement united by a common call to action. By spreading an understanding of the science and a shared vision for a fair policy, we will ensure that the world creates bold and equitable solutions to the climate crisis. 350.org is an independent and not-for-profit project.

What is 350?
350 is the number that leading scientists say is the safe upper limit for carbon dioxide in our atmosphere. Scientists measure carbon dioxide in "parts per million" (ppm), so 350ppm is the number humanity needs to get below as soon as possible to avoid runaway climate change. To get there, we need a different kind of PPM-a "people powered movement" that is made of people like you in every corner of the planet.

GOP 'Pledge' makes closing argument to voters

GOP 'Pledge' makes closing argument to voters

John Boehner, Craig Fritsche, Tabetha A. Baume-Chandler AP – House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio, center, accompanied by Craig Fritsche, president of Tart …

STERLING, Va. – Pushing toward big gains on Nov. 2, House Republicans promised to end a slew of Democratic policies and restore Americans' trust in government as they rolled out a campaign manifesto designed to show they're listening to an angry public and are focused on creating jobs.

"The land of opportunity has become the land of shrinking prosperity ... Our government has failed us," Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California declared. "We will take back our country. We will restore for a better future. This is our pledge to you."

At a hardware store in suburban Washington, senior House Republicans in shirt sleeves showed off the 21-page document they say would guide them should they gain a majority of seats in the midterm balloting five weeks away.

The "Pledge to America" was filled with familiar proposals to slash taxes and spending and cut down on government regulation, as well as repeal President Barack Obama's health care law and end his stimulus program. In a show of unity, Senate Republicans and Haley Barbour, chairman of the Republican Governors Association, issued strong statements of support.

The unveiling capped a private debate among Republicans that had pitted those who favored making an agenda public against others who argued it would merely open the party's candidates to criticism in a campaign that has been tilting their way.

Republicans have sought to turn the midterm elections into a referendum on the policies of President Barack Obama and the Democratic-controlled Congress. Democrats, in turn, want it to become a choice between two alternatives â€" what they describe as their own efforts to fix the economy, as opposed to what they criticize as Bush-era policies that led to a severe recession.

For their part, Democrats dismissed the GOP plan as recycled ideas that would further exacerbate the nation's problems.

"Republicans want to return to the same failed economic policies that hurt millions of Americans and threatened our economy," said Nadeam Elshami, a spokesman for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

With polls showing voters disenchanted with Obama, worried about the economy and mad at elected officials, the agenda also vows to change the way Congress works — requiring every bill to cite its constitutional authority, for example, and to be made public for three days before a vote.

"Putting spending, putting the policy of economic growth in place and cleaning up the way Congress works is not only a stark contrast to this president and this Congress," said Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. "It's a contrast to the way we conducted ourselves a decade ago. We spent too much money. We lost our way."

The plan steers clear of specifics on important issues, such as how it will "put government on a path to a balanced budget." It omits altogether the question of how to address looming shortfalls in Social Security and Medicare, which account for a huge portion of the nation's soaring deficit, instead including a vague promise: "We will make the decisions that are necessary to protect our entitlement programs."


Will the new GOP agenda resonate with a disillusioned public?


Republicans are favored to add substantially to their ranks on Nov. 2, perhaps enough to seize control of the House.

Their new agenda is rife with the kind of grass-roots rhetoric that could appeal both to tea party activists and to independent voters the GOP is courting in its quest for control.

"Regarding the policies of the current government, the governed do not consent," the pledge says. "An arrogant and out-of-touch government of self-appointed elites makes decisions, issues mandates and enacts laws without accepting or requesting the input of the many."

Polls show large majorities are fed up with Congress and both parties and show Republicans have a chance to earn the public's trust on key issues.

The latest Associated Press-GfK poll found nearly three-quarters disapprove of the way Congress is handling its job, with 68 percent disapproving of Republicans compared with 60 percent disapproving of Democrats.

Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas, the head of Republicans' House campaign committee, said the agenda was drafted to answer the public's skepticism about government and give them a "deliverable."

"A number of people are very cynical about the reliability and the sincerity of either party," Sessions said. "We've put things on a sheet of paper."

______________

AP Deputy Polling Director Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.



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Kevin Costner pitches emergency oil spill plan to Congress

Kevin Costner, Craig Taffaro AP – Actor Kevin Costner, left, and St. Bernard Parish, La., President Craig Taffaro Jr., talk on Capitol …

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Kevin Costner told US lawmakers Wednesday that clean-up operations during the BP oil disaster were a "tangled mess," as the Hollywood star urged Congress to adopt his 895-million-dollar emergency response plan.

Costner -- the on-screen hero of "Waterworld" who has a real life passion for developing oil clean-up technology -- said that 32 of his company's centrifugal oil-water separators leased by BP sat idle while the British energy giant figured out what to do with them.

"Our machines sat on a barge waiting to separate oil and water for days before some boats could even come," Costner told reporters after testifying before the House of Representatives committee on homeland security.

"It was a lack of coordination, it was a tangled mess."

The Oscar-winner had returned to Capitol Hill in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon spill to pitch his plan, which incorporates oil-separating machines developed by his firm, Ocean Therapy Solutions, along with a fleet of specialized boats for oil collection and eliminating use of dispersant chemicals.

During recovery operations, BP touted its "vessels of opportunity," thousands of small boats -- often private fishermen -- sent out to fight the spill, many of them with no expertise in oil containment.

"Our choices are clear," Costner told lawmakers. "We can choose to enlist a fleet of 6,000 vessels that are hampered by their lack of training and preparedness, or we can create a dedicated fleet of 190 state-of-the-art vessels."

The specialized ships and barges, Costner explained, could react quickly to a spill, skimming large amounts of oily water separating the gunk from the water while offshore, rather than inefficiently bringing the haul to land for processing.

[World's largest wind farm opens off UK coast]

Costner, 55, urged that the same energy and financial resources expended by the oil industry in pursuit of oil be harnessed to protect US waters and coastlines.

"Americans demand that this nightmare that continues to chase us into the 21st Century be solved with real solutions -- solutions that don't depend on dispersants, burning and public relations."

And the plan should be paid for by the oil industry, not taxpayers, he said.

"It should be their responsibility. It's their industry, their accident."

Costner noted that the Gulf of Mexico, where Deepwater Horizon was drilling when it exploded and sank in April, triggering the spill, is home to more than 5,000 production platforms and 27,000 wells.

He said his plan does not envision the BP spill as a worst-case scenario.

"Given the dangerous world that we live in, we have anticipated a situation where five Deepwater Horizons could occur simultaneously."

After spilling a record 4.9 million barrels (206 million gallons) of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, BP's Macondo well was declared permanently dead last Sunday.



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