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10.19.2010

2010 Snake Oil Awards- Vote Here



On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 10:10 AM, Dave Boundy, Repower America <info@repoweramerica.org> wrote:
 

Dear Scotts Contracting,

Who was the dirtiest opponent of clean energy this year? I don't think it would be too hard to name at least a handful of big oil companies and professional polluters that lied and cheated to protect their billions in profits.

That's why Repower America is asking you to vote this fall for the worst offender of 2010.

The depths to which the fossil fuel companies and their cronies have sunk this past year are unprecedented. Corporate polluters have hijacked our democracy, devastated our environment, denied the science of climate change and made record profits doing it.

Who was the dirtiest opponent of clean energy this year? Nominate a fossil fuel company for the 2010 Snake Oil Award and make sure it gets the recognition that is truly deserved.

Submit your nominee

The nomination period begins today and remains open until midnight on Friday, October 22. Our slate of nominees will be announced November 1, and after supporters like you cast your vote, the "winner" will receive our first annual Snake Oil Award.

It's up to you to decide who's the worst of the worst:
  • Is it Massey Energy and CEO Dan Blankenship for the way they handled the Upper Big Branch mine disaster in West Virginia last April?
  • Or how about Koch Industries, led by brothers Charles and David Koch, for polluting our planet and bankrolling countless climate deniers using shadowy front groups?
  • And let's not forget this year's critical darling BP for devastating the Gulf Coast with the worst offshore oil spill in history, hampering the investigation and sending their CEO Tony Hayward off in a golden parachute.
Submit your nominee for the 2010 Snake Oil Awards.

When climate activists come together and speak out, snake oil salesmen have nowhere to hide. Get involved today and help shine a spotlight on the biggest disgrace of 2010.

Thanks for getting involved,

Dave Boundy
Campaign Manager
Repower America
DONATE

 

 
This email was sent to scottscontracting@gmail.com.
Paid for by the Alliance for Climate Protection



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Politico Morning Energy Report- Kit Bond Included



POLITICO's Morning Energy, presented by America's Natural Gas Alliance: EDF'S new ad blasts Bond – Alaska Republican's private security 'arrests' reporter – California regulators look to make drivers pay for pollution

Monday, October 18, 2010 4:46 AM
 

POLITICO's Morning Energy
By Josh Voorhees

ME FIRST LOOK - The Environmental Defense Fund will begin running a new TV spot today blasting Sen. Kit Bond for his efforts to block U.S. EPA from writing new air pollution rules. The ads will run throughout the week in major media markets in the retiring senator's home state of Missouri.

The 30-second video makes no mention of global warming or greenhouse gases, but instead focuses on the potential health impacts of air pollution, complete with video of a young girl in a hospital bed. Watch the not-so-subtle ad here: http://bit.ly/bUUlVH

BACKGROUND - Bond is on the greens' naughty list as a result of his unsuccessful bid last month to attach an amendment to the defense bill that would have undercut EPA's ability to regulate carbon emissions and his opposition to tighter standards on mercury pollution from boilers. "While Senator Bond's efforts did not succeed, it is clear that this is the beginning of a sustained assault on the air pollution rules that protect the health of all Americans," EDF's Tony Kreindler e-mails Morning Energy.

A WARNING SHOT - "While Senator Bond is retiring, we intend this ad to be [a] message to any Member of Congress - Democrat or Republican - who might consider following his lead in the weeks and months ahead," Kreindler said.

GREENS' GREEN - LCV spent a combined $555,000 yesterday on House races in Ohio, Michigan and Nevada, according to records filed with the Federal Election Commission. The cash went to Reps. John Boccieri ($250K for a pair of TV ad buys), Mark Schauer ($100K for a field program; $5K for a TV ad) and Dina Titus ($200K for a TV ad buy). (Hat tip: POLITICO's Ben Smith) http://bit.ly/aP25O9.

View some of the ads here: http://bit.ly/c1uumF

The expenditures come on the heels of last week's announcement by the group that it was adding Prop 23 to its "Dirty Dozen" list. LCV and its sister organization have spent a total of $1.2 million so far to defeat the California ballot initiative.

** A message from America's Natural Gas Alliance: When used for power generation, natural gas is twice as clean as coal when it comes to carbon emissions. It has 80% fewer NOx emissions and virtually no sulfur dioxide, particulate matter or mercury. http://bit.ly/d652Uo **

CHENEY'S 'FOG OF DISINFORMATION' - The NYT's editorial board today blasts GOP Senate candidates for disappearing "in a fog of disinformation" when it comes to addressing climate change. "The candidates are not simply rejecting solutions. ... They are re-running the strategy of denial perfected by Mr. Cheney a decade ago, repudiating years of peer-reviewed findings about global warming and creating an alternative reality in which climate change is a hoax or conspiracy." http://nyti.ms/arrTxL

POLLUTER PAYS? - Air quality regulators in California's San Joaquin Valley are proposing to charge the owners of the region's 2.7 million cars and trucks an annual fee of $10 to $24 as a way to cover federal fines that could top $30 million for exceeding federal ozone limits, the NYT reports today.

"Although the surcharge is not expected to change how much people drive or what cars or trucks they buy, air pollution experts say it is a harbinger of the future. After decades of forcing industry to clean its smokestacks, retool car and truck engines and fine-tune gasoline, regulators are exploring what they can do to force consumers to face up to the pollution they cause." http://nyti.ms/9ehwr1

LATE BREAKING - The editor of an online Alaska news site was arrested (and handcuffed) last night by Joe Miller's private security guards as the editor attempted to interview the Senate hopeful at the tail end of a public event in Anchorage, according to multiple media reports.

The Anchorage Daily News:"[Tony] Hopfinger, who was holding a small video camera, said he was attempting to draw out a statement from Miller on why he was disciplined by the Fairbanks North Star Borough when Miller worked there as a part-time attorney. After Miller walked away, Hopfinger said, he was surrounded by Miller supporters and security guards and felt threatened, so he pushed one of them away." http://bit.ly/adjcUk

The Dispatch's take, complete with slideshow: http://bit.ly/dzJzBD

SPEAKING OF ALASKA - With ENR ranking member Lisa Murkowski closing the gap on Miller in recent weeks, officials and candidates in The Last Frontier are preparing for the legal fight that is all but certain to break out over which misspellings of her name should be counted in her favor, WSJ reports today. http://bit.ly/aSthbp

HAPPENING TODAY - The Natural Resources Defense Council will release its latest polling data at noon on how a yes vote on Waxman-Markey is affecting the reelection efforts of 23 House lawmakers.

The list: Jerry McNerney (Calif.-11); Betsy Markey (Colo.-4); Alan Boyd (Fla.-2); Suzanne Kosmas (Fla.-24); Alan Grayson (Fla.-8); Leonard Boswell (Iowa-3); Debbie Halvorsen (Ill.-11); Phil Hare (Ill.-17); Frank Kratovil (Md.-1); Mark Schauer (Mich.-7); Carol Shea-Porter (N.H.-1); Harry Teague (N.M.-2); Dina Titus (N.V.-3); John Hall (N.Y.-19); Steve Driehaus (Ohio-1); Mary Jo Kilroy (Ohio-15); John Boccieri (Ohio-16); Zack Space (Ohio-18); Paul Kanjorski (Pa.-11); Patrick Murphy (Pa.-8); John Spratt (S.C.-5); Tom Perriello (Va.-5) and Steve Kagan (Wisc.-8).

ALSO TODAY - GridWeek 2010 kicks off this morning at D.C.'s Walter E. Washington Convention Center with a keynote from Commerce Secretary Gary Locke at 8:30 a.m. From there, participants can choose one of three tracks for the opening day, including discussions on global grid activity and industry collaboration. But those novices who don't know a CBL from a CPP have no need to worry: There is also a three-part primer for beginners (Ballroom B).

AND TOMORROW - Ford Motor Co. and Microsoft are hosting a discussion Tuesday entitled, "Charged Up: Is America Ready for Electric Vehicles?" (ME SPOILER: Ford plans to have a trio of its plug-in models on hand for test drives, so we're pretty sure what the panel's answer is going to be.) The two-hour discussion will feature: David Sandalow, DOE assistant secretary for policy; Sue Cischke, Ford's environmental group vice president; and Mark Duvall, electric transportation director at the Electric Power Research Institute. 10 a.m. in The Newseum's Knight Studio.

EPA HOMECOMING - The Environmental Law Institute holds a forum tomorrow to discuss EPA's "future role using 20th century law." The panel includes a number of EPA alumni, including: former general counsels Jonathan Cannon and Ann Klee, and former deputy administrator Hank Habicht. Current deputy administrator Bob Perciasepe is also expected to be on hand. 3:30 p.m. at the Omni Hotel. 2500 Calvert St. NW.

LIGHTNING ROUND:
--The Project on Government Oversight is using the release of an e-mail between Steven Henke, then of BLM, and the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association to question the decision by government ethics officials to allow Henke to leave his job as an oil and gas regulator to become head of the trade group. http://bit.ly/ajIX3R

--EPA chief Lisa Jackson spent her weekend touring low-income neighborhoods in the San Francisco Bay area as part of her "environmental justice" tour. LAT: http://lat.ms/95bVrn

--Starting next season, NASCAR will use a new E15 racing fuel. http://bit.ly/bRWDUk

--NYT separates "myth from fact" about the soon-to-be-released Chevy Volt. http://nyti.ms/aRB4FW

THE WEEK AHEAD:

Tuesday: The Clean Diesel conference kicks off at the Washington Convention Center. The two-day event officially begins with a welcome luncheon at 11:30 a.m., where a TBD U.S. EPA official is slated to give the keynote.

Wednesday: The National Capital Planning Commission will hold a discussion on how federal agencies are meeting new greenhouse gas emissions requirements. Participants include: White House Council on Environmental Quality's Michelle Moore. 401 Ninth St. NW. 6 p.m.

Thursday: The Environmental and Energy Study Institute holds a briefing on the low-carbon lessons that can be learned from Nordic countries. 9 a.m. in the Capitol.

Thursday: Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack will give a speech on his agency's progress toward reaching the Renewable Fuels Standard (36 billion gallons). National Press Club. 9: 30 a.m.

CHECKING THE TRAPS:

Bloomberg - BP has agreed to sell assets in Venezuela and Vietnam to its Russian joint venture TNK-BP for $1.8 billion. http://bit.ly/b36A6e

WSJ - In Israel, Texas-based Noble Energy Inc. and other oil companies are set to start drilling what executives are hailing as one of the world's most promising natural-gas prospects in years. http://bit.ly/bhWN26

LAT - A number of lawmakers are looking to remove wolves from the nation's endangered species list. http://lat.ms/9J12TD

WaPo - The American chestnut tree is ready for a comeback. http://wapo.st/9p7fWK

AND FINALLY - We leave you with a dispatch from POLITICO's Darren Samuelsohn, who apparently is always on the clock. Darren was on his way home Saturday evening from a reporting trip to California when he spotted a pair of "energy heavyweights" on board his final leg from O'Hare to D.C.

"David Sandalow, DOE's assistant secretary of energy for policy & international affairs, said he was on the final leg of his return trip from Shanghai, where he had been attending energy bilaterals with President Barack Obama's top science adviser, John Holdren. By sheer coincidence, Howard Gruenspecht, deputy director of the Energy Information Administration, was a few rows back. He said he was connecting from Calgary."

** A message from America's Natural Gas Alliance: One solution for more abundant domestic energy is staring us in the face. Natural gas is the natural choice-now and in the future. We know we need to use cleaner, American energy. And, we have it. Today, the U.S. has more natural gas than Saudi Arabia has oil, giving us generations of this clean, domestic energy source. Natural gas supports 2.8 million American jobs, most states are now home to more than 10,000 natural gas jobs. As Congress and the Administration look for ways toward a cleaner tomorrow, the answer is right here: natural gas. Learn more at www.anga.us . And, follow us on Twitter @angaus. **


Go to Morning Energy Now >> http://www.politico.com/morningenergy

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

Solar Power Reliability and Balance-of-System Designs

 

By Mike Fife, P.E., PhD, PV Powered Inc.   |   October 14, 2010   |  
Balance-of-system component providers can significantly reduce the levelized cost of energy by boosting device reliability.

Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA -- In order to compete more effectively with other energy sources, the solar industry is focused on decreasing the levelized cost of energy (LCOE), a term that refers to the price at which solar energy is valued taking into account all the lifetime costs of the solar power system. This includes the cost of the initial investment, the cost of capital, the cost of system operations and maintenance and repair costs. While there is much visibility on bringing down the purchase cost of solar cell technologies, the cost of maintenance and repairs represents the major variable cost over the lifetime of a photovoltaic (PV) system. In fact, although PV balance-of-system (BOS) components (inverters, trackers, junction boxes, combiners and transformers) represent only about 10 percent of system costs, they have historically been responsible for up to 70 percent of system failures.1,2,3,4 Fixed cost and downtime associated with these failures can have a significant negative impact on solar power economics.

Solar Financing News-Public-Private-Funding-options

Public-Private Partnerships Can Help Finance Renewable Energy Projects

By Lee J. Peterson, Reznick Group   |   October 18, 2010   |   Entities that don't pay taxes can still take advantage of tax credits for renewable energy installations. Here's how.
 

Even in tough economic times, great opportunities exist, especially for governments and tax-exempt organizations interested in using of renewable energy. In fact, it is precisely these tough times that are making renewable energy the smart choice right now. This is especially true for cities and schools, where declining tax revenues and high operating costs are forcing cutbacks to balance budgets.



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Scott's Contracting
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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

10.18.2010

2010 Tied for Warmest on Record So Far

LiveScience.com

This year has been a steamy one so far, with the first nine months tied for the warmest on record with the same period in 1998, according to a new report looking at combined land and ocean surface temperatures.

The global average land surface temperature for January-September was the second warmest on record, behind 2007; and the global ocean surface temperature for that stint was also the second warmest on record, behind 1998.

The report was put out by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) National Climate Data Center and includes records going back to 1880.

Here are some of the highlights:

  • For the year-to-date, the global combined land and ocean surface temperature of 58.67 degrees Fahrenheit (14.75 degrees Celsius) tied with 1998 as the warmest January-September period on record. That record is 1.17 degrees F (0.65 degrees C) above the 20th century average.
  • The combined global land and ocean average surface temperature for September 2010 tied with 1998 as the eighth warmest month on record at 59.9 degrees F (15.5 degrees C).
  • The September 2010 global land surface temperature was the ninth warmest September on record.

Warmer-than-average conditions dominated the world's land areas this year. The most prominent warmth was in western Alaska, most of the contiguous United States, eastern Canada, Greenland, the Middle East, eastern and central Europe, western and far eastern Russia and northeastern Asia.

Cooler-than-average regions included much of Australia, western Canada, parts of the northern United States, parts of western and central Europe, and central Russia.

Arctic sea ice reached its annual minimum on Sept. 19, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The 2010 average extent of 1.89 million square miles (4.90 million square kilometers) was the third lowest September sea ice extent on record (30.4 percent below average).

Antarctic sea ice reached its annual maximum in September, and marked the third largest sea ice extent on record (2.3 percent above average), behind 2006 (largest) and 2007 (second largest).

LiveScience.com chronicles the daily advances and innovations made in science and technology. We take on the misconceptions that often pop up around scientific discoveries and deliver short, provocative explanations with a certain wit and style. Check out our science videos, Trivia & Quizzes and Top 10s. Join our community to debate hot-button issues like stem cells, climate change and evolution. You can also sign up for free newsletters, register for RSS feeds and get cool gadgets at the

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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Do CPR the right way: 5 things everyone needs to know

The American Heart Association announced today new recommendations for the way CPR is performed. The small change could make a big difference in the lives of people suffering from cardiac arrest, the organization says.

For nearly 40 years, CPR guidelines have trained people to follow these simple A-B-C instructions—tilt the victim's head back to open the airway, then pinch their nose and do a succession of breaths into their mouth, and finally perform chest compressions.

But now, the AHA says starting with the C of chest compressions will help oxygen-rich blood circulate throughout the body sooner, which is critical for people who have had a heart attack. With this shift, rescuers and responding emergency personnel should now follow a C-A-B process—begin with chest compression, then move on to address the airway and breaths. This change applies to adults, children, and babies, but does not apply to newborns.

The revision is a part of the 2010 emergency cardiovascular care report published by the AHA., an organization that reviews its guidelines every five years, taking into account new science and literature. Although the changed procedure will take some time to reach what Monica Kleinman, the vice chair of the AHA's Emergency Cardiovascular Care Committee, calls "front-line people", there is a plan in place to implement the recommendations as soon as possible to their training network, medical staffs, and first-responders.

"The sooner chest compressions are started, the more likely there will be a better outcome," Kleinman announced. "Studies performed in labs as well as large-population studies have shown that people do better if they get chest compressions within four minutes."

That four minutes is the amount of time it could take for emergency crews to rapidly respond, Chicago firefighter and CPR instructor Kelly Burns notes.  Until then, he stresses that any CPR bystanders perform can make a difference.

"Early activation is critical," Burns says, especially in cities where traffic and walk-up buildings can slow even the fastest respondents during a trauma where every minute counts.

When someone needs CPR, the very best reaction is a quick one, he says.

"In a perfect world, someone else calls 911 while you start chest compressions on the person in need," he advises. According to Kleinman, however, only about one-third of victims of cardiac arrest get assistance from bystanders.

Despite changing guidelines, outdated training, or any confusion in the moment, Burns says that no one who tries CPR is faltering.

"People are reluctant to jump in and help, especially if the person is not a family member or friend," Burns observes on a weekly basis. "The only mistake a civilian can make in these situations is waiting and not doing anything at all."

To that end, the new AHA guidelines are meant to help anyone who encounters this kind of emergency—the idea being, if they know better, they will do better.

5 potentially life-saving notes to remember about the new C-A-B method of CPR:

1. There are no mistakes when you perform CPR.
"One thing most people don't know, " Kleinman says, "is that there is almost nothing you can do [during CPR] to harm a person in cardiac arrest except delay responding."

Starting with chest compressions is now viewed by the AHA as the most effective procedure, and all immediate assistance will increase the chances the victim will survive with a good quality of life.

If one person calls 911 while another administers CPR, as Burns recommends, emergency operators will give informed instructions over the phone as well as dispatch aid to the scene.

2. All victims in cardiac arrest need chest compressions.
The AHA asserts that people having a heart attack still have oxygen remaining in their lungs and bloodstream in the first few minutes of cardiac arrest. Starting chest compressions first thing pumps blood to the victim's brain and heart sooner, delivering needed oxygen. This new method saves the 30 seconds that people performing CPR used to take to open the airway and begin breathing under the old guidelines.

3. It's a myth that only older, overweight men are at risk for a heart attack.
"Equal numbers of women and men have heart attacks," Kleinman reports. Sufferers are primarily adults.

Although infants and children are far more likely to require CPR due to accidents than cardiac arrest, it is important to know how administer care to them. (You can learn how to perform CPR on infants and children with this kit produced by the AHA  or by signing up for one of their training sessions.)

4.  Nearly all cardiac emergencies occur at home.
"Ninety percent of events take place at home. If you perform CPR in your lifetime, it's probably going to be for someone you love," Kleinman reveals.

5. Training is simpler and more accessible than you think.

Learning CPR has never been hard, Kleinman says, but guideline changes in the last ten years have reduced the number of steps and simplified the process even more.

Traditional CPR classes (listed here on the AHA website) are accessible for many people at local schools and hospitals.

Kits are also available to complete in the privacy of your own home or workplace. Kits available through the AHA include inflatable, disposable mannequins and a training DVD.

"Anybody can learn to do CPR. It's clearly important for saving lives, and now it is easier than ever," Kleinman asserts.


Have you ever administered or received CPR? Would you jump in to the C-A-B method if you saw a person in need?



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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

The Fed's Plan -Masquerading as a Jobs Program

Robert Reich

Robert Reich

Posted: October 16, 2010 02:52 PM

The latest jobs bill coming out of Washington isn't really a bill at all. It's the Fed's attempt to keep long-term interest rates low by pumping even more money into the economy ("quantitative easing" in Fed-speak).

The idea is to buy up lots of Treasury bills and other long-term debt to reduce long-term interest rates. It's assumed that low long-term rates will push more businesses to expand capacity and hire workers; push the dollar downward and make American exports more competitive and therefore generate more jobs; and allow more Americans to refinance their homes at low rates, thereby giving them more cash to spend and thereby stimulate more jobs.

Problem is, it won't work. Businesses won't expand capacity and jobs because there aren't enough consumers to buy additional goods and services.

The dollar's drop won't spur more exports. It will fuel more competitive devaluations by other nations determined not to lose export shares to the US and thereby drive up their own unemployment.

And middle-class and working-class Americans won't be able to refinance their homes at low rates because banks are now under strict lending standards. They won't lend to families whose overall incomes have dropped, whose debts have risen, or who owe more on their homes than the homes are worth -- that is, most families.

So where will the easy money go? Into another stock-market bubble.

It's already started. Stocks are up even though the rest of the economy is still down because of money is already so cheap. Bondholders (who can't get much of any return from their loans) are shifting their portfolios into stocks. Companies are buying back more shares of their own stock. And Wall Street is making more bets in the stock market with money it can borrow at almost zero percent interest.

When our elected representatives can't and won't come up with a real jobs program, the Fed feels pressed to come up with a fake one that blows another financial bubble. And we know what happens when financial bubbles get too big.

Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America's Future, now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org.

Click here to find out more!


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