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7.06.2010

St Louis Renewable Energy-Company Info

Scotts Contracting St Louis Renewable Energy
Green and Sustainable Design and Contracting Services for Eco Friendly Building Options for the St Louis Missouri Area.

Sponsor of the St Louis Renewable Energy 'Green Team'

St Louis Renewable Energy 'Green Team'-will bring you the Greenest Products, Information, Industry News and Green Build Experience available. For us being Green and Eco Friendly is not just a FAD. It has become a lifestyle that we have incorporated into the way we choose to do business and live.

When you contact Scotts Contracting for a Green Site Evaluation Scotty will bring you Cost Effective Solutions for your Green and Eco Friendly Building Projects.

Here are just a few of the Ways we will save you $money$ on your Green Projects:
  1. Our Knowledge and Experience in Standard Building Techniques and Building Structures allows us to foresee any unseen building components that are causing: Energy Losses, Inefficient Designs, Building Flaws, and other Issues.
  2. We Recycle During the DE-Construction or Demolition stages-provide outlets for all the Recycle-able Materials. Outlets will pay Cash for Recyclable Goods-(You Can "Lower the Cost of your Project") Others such as a Habitat For Humanity gladly accept donations of used Building Materials. (Tax Breaks and Incentives are available)
  3. Because of the Extensive knowledge of your Buildings Structure- the Design and Estimating Department will not add extra materials into the Estimate Proposal for UN-needed materials. This translates into Savings for You! We Do Not Waste Time or Money (yours or ours)-
    1. While we are working on your Job Site. We work as Efficiently as Possible. While being acutely aware of the -
    • Customers Needs
    • Budgeting Concerns
    • Project Time Frame
    • Safety


    Scotts Contracting Offers the Following Services - With Free Green Design and Estimating-St Louis Area Residents
    • Door and Window Installation/Repair , Lock Changes / Board Up
    • Carpentry: Framing, (metal or wood)
    • Finishing- Custom Wood Work
    • Drywall (Installation and Finishing)
    • Decorative Concrete
    • Custom Cabinetry and Appliance Installation
    • Flooring: Carpet, Tile, Wood "Eco /Green Flooring Styles Available"
    • Roofing: Torch Down, Shingles or Metal Eco and Green Choices and Styles "Lifetime Guarantee Available"
    • Exterior and Interior Finishes-Painting, Staining, Custom Finishes, Stucco
    • Basic: Plumbing, HVAC, Electric
    • Masonry / Tuck Pointing
    • Weatherization Home or Business
    • Renewable Energy Resources and Installation
    • And More
    • **Green Builder currently Enrolled in Home Energy Auditing Training**completed 2010.  Seeking additional Training that will allow me to bring the latest Sustainable Designs and Techniques to your Property.
    Scotts Contracting Will Save You $ money $ To Schedule your Green Site Evaluation click here to email Scotts Contracting for an Affordable Green Solution in the Construction of Your Next Project- Large or Small.

    2015 Renewable Energy Forecast

    Renewable Energy Forecast

    Year 2015

    • Low 63 Million MWh

    • High 157 Million MWh

      That is allmost 2½ times More Electricity

    Subscribe to

    Green_Team:

    E-News Letter and Eco Friendly People

    Green Article and Advertisement Information

    Do you have Something to Barter Or Exchange?

    We are open to Trades and Bartering of Services:

    send inquiries to sales@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

    Brought to you by Scotty, Green Builder Scotts Contracting St Louis Renewable Energy

    supplied by: Green Power Network

    BuildDirect - Composite Decking - Go Green For Less

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    I utilize a Green Web Host for the Web Site

    St Louis Renewable Energy with Fat Cow Web Hosting

    July Free Efficiency Webinars

    Free Energy Efficiency Webinars

    Free July Webinars Show How to Spread the Energy-Efficiency Story

    Involving Others Multiplies The Energy Savings

    Teaching Commercial Building Energy Efficiency with

    ENERGY STAR®

    Thursday, July 8, 2010 - 1 P.M. EDT

    This new ENERGY STAR course was developed and tested as a community college course. However, the materials and curriculum are flexible and adaptable enough to be used in total or in part in a business or organization training setting.

    The course gives students practical, hands-on experience with understanding and improving energy efficiency. This course has everything you need to bring energy efficiency to the classroom. Students will learn the benefits and barriers of energy efficiency through an in-depth look into the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPAs) ENERGY STAR® program.


    Presenters include:

    Katy Hatcher, ENERGY STAR Public Sector National Manager, U.S. EPA

    Daniel Lawse, Coordinator of Sustainable Practices, Metropolitan Community College

    Craig Moody, Adjunct Faculty, Metropolitan Community College and Principal, Verdis Group

    Judy Sunde, Project Manager - Market Strategies, Omaha Public Power District


    Thursday, July 8
    1:00 P.M. EDT

    To register for this presentation, please:

    • Visit https://energystar.webex.com/energystar and click on the session titled "Teaching Commercial Building Energy Efficiency with ENERGY STAR" under "Training Center."

    • Click on the link for "Registration."

    • Complete the contact information on the next page.

    • Save the confirmation e-mail (sent by messenger@webex.com) with the information needed to participate in the presentation, which will be sent to the e-mail address you have specified.  Please check your spam e-mail filter if the message does not appear in your inbox.

    Click on the link provided in this e-mail and join us at least 15-minutes prior to the start of the presentation. 



    How to Launch an Energy Competition

    Wednesday, July 21, 2010 - 1:00 P.M. EDT
    Motivating people to save energy is critical to achieving results. One effective way of getting employees, business units, members and even whole communities excited about energy efficiency is to tap into people's competitive spirit through challenges and competitions.


    Energy competitions provide an easy to understand and fun context for achieving a desired result.  Furthermore, no matter who wins the competition, everyone benefits by improving their energy performance, saving money, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.  



    • John Scott from Cushman & Wakefield who will discuss his company's Environmental Challenge and how it is driving energy savings across the properties his company manages; and,

     

    • Christy Dooley from the City of Louisvill whose Kilowatt Crackdown has engaged over 100 facilities and forged an alliance focused on energy efficiency among business groups in the community.


    Wednesday, July 21
    1:00 P.M. EDT

    Registration

    Pre-registration for this web conference is recommended. To register, go to:

    OR

    Registration for this web conference is limited to 150 participants, so prompt registration is recommended. A 56K modem (minimum) with a separate phone line is also necessary.

    If this will be your first ENERGY STAR web conference, please test your browser and computer system's compatibility with Webex before joining the web conference.





    Energy Efficiency

    Saving energy, saving money and saving the environment are all part of the energy-efficiency story. Most of us enjoy the advantages already implemented- large and small, for energy saving programs in our homes, businesses and organizations. Scotts Contracting is available to assist in Helping you become more Energy Efficient with Ways you can "Reduce and Eliminate Your Cooling and Heating Costs."



    If you need assistance in adding additional money saving energy efficiency programs or Renewable Energy Producing Systems to your Home or Business. We can provide you with various options that will enable Cost Savings for your Property. We are Currently Offering: Free Green Site Evaluations for cost effective ways to reduce your Bills.



    New Green Blog Site

    http://scottscontracting.wordpress.com/

    Renewable Energy Site

    http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com/

    Submitt Green Articles for Publication Here



    7.04.2010

    BP Seeking Investors- Not With My Money

    Such sad news to report: BP needs Money

    When reading the artile I found via Yahoo. It seems to me the BP Company is having some $money$ troubles. I just had to share this with you. Feel Free to leave your comments at the bottom of the Article. This is somewhat of a follow up on the Article: BP's Financial Woes- http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com/2010/06/bp-bankruptcy-ahead-rivals-their-chops.html

    Report: BP launches search for new investors-

    2 hrs 53 mins ago

    LONDON/DUBAI (Reuters) – Oil major BP Plc is seeking a strategic investor to secure its independence in the face of any takeover attempts as it struggles with a devastating oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico, newspapers said on Sunday.

    Britain's Sunday Times said the company's advisers were trying to drum up interest among rival oil groups and sovereign wealth funds to take a stake of between 5 and 10 percent in the company at a cost of up to 6 billion pounds ($9.1 billion).

    Abu Dhabi newspaper The National said BP could get a reprieve from Middle East financial institutions looking to make a strategic investment, citing informed sources.

    Proposals from the region have already been submitted to BP advisers in London, the newspaper reported, and could involve Middle Eastern investors purchasing key assets from BP, which has lost more than half its market value since an explosion at the Deepwater Horizon rig on April 20 started the still-gushing leak.

    The paper said regional financial institutions might also give financial backing to any capital-raising BP might be considering to reinforce its balance sheet following the environmental disaster, which could cost as much as $60 billion to clean up.

    The report did not indicate which Middle Eastern financial firms issued the proposals or what the size of investments could be.

    Regional sovereign wealth funds, such as the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) and Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA), have supported Western companies in times of financial crisis by purchasing stakes in western banks and effectively halting declines in their share prices.

    Separately, British newspaper the Guardian said BP was holding talks with the Kuwait Investment Office about raising its 1.75 percent stake in the oil company to potentially as much as 10 percent.

    Rival oil majors ExxonMobil, Total and Royal Dutch Shell have been mooted as possible bidders.

    BP declined to comment on the speculation.

    The New York Times reported on Sunday that BP is asking its partners in the ruptured well, Anadarko Petroleum Corp and Mitsui Oil Exploration Co, to contribute nearly $400 million to the clean-up effort.

    BP sent out demands for $272 million from Anadarko and $111 million from Japanese company Mitsui on June 2. That represents roughly 40 percent of the $1 billion BP spent in May, according to the newspaper.

    BP owns 65 percent of the well, Anadarko owns 25 percent and Mitsui 10 percent.

    "We have said that other parties besides BP may be responsible for costs and liabilities arising from this oil spill and we expect those parties to live up to their expectations," BP spokesman Toby Odone said in Houston.

    Anadarko and Mitsui did not immediately respond to calls for comment.

    Meanwhile, the Sunday Telegraph reported BP was facing fresh criticism over its approach to safety as it emerged it did not use an industry standard process, known as a safety case, to assess risk at the Deepwater Horizon rig.

    A BP spokeswoman confirmed to Reuters that it did not use the procedure, developed in Britain after the Piper Alpha oil rig explosion in 1988, at any of its U.S. wells as there was no legal requirement in the U.S. to use it.

    BP shares closed down at 322 pence in London on Friday, valuing the business at 60.5 billion pounds.

    (Reporting by Matt Scuffham and Shaheen Pasha; Additional reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Will Waterman and Todd Eastham)

    Solar power may get chance to shine in Illinois

    Solar power may get chance to shine in Illinois Advocates see West Pullman power plant as sign of hope June 30, 2010|By Gerry Smith, Tribune reporter At a former industrial site on Chicago's South Side, more than 32,000 solar panels slowly tilt every few minutes, following the sun as it moves across the sky. Operated by Exelon Corp., the 40 acres of panels in West Pullman is the nation's largest urban solar plant, generating 10 megawatts of clean power and hope for an Illinois industry that has long waited for its moment in the sun. "We have been frustrated over the years that solar has not become more mainstream," said Kevin Lynch, who trains electricians to install solar panels for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. "We understand it's still a relatively expensive technology, but the cost is much less than it was a few years ago." Indeed, the biggest obstacle to the growth of solar energy — its cost — has started to decline. The price of photovoltaic solar panels dropped more than 40 percent last year due to a glut in global supply, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. The drop in price is driving renewed interest in solar energy, said Howard Learner, executive director of the Environmental Law and Policy Center. Last month, Illinois lawmakers passed legislation that will double the state's solar power supply each year and create an estimated 5,000 "green" jobs by 2014. Meanwhile, at least three solar developers have plans to build solar projects of 10 to 20 megawatts in Illinois, Learner said. To be sure, Illinois is not quite the solar-powered mecca of California or Florida. But the potential is there: The sun in Illinois is more intense than in Japan or Germany, the world's two largest solar markets. "Illinois has the opportunity to be a very significant solar energy leader between the two coasts," Learner said. Nationwide, there are more than 22,000 megawatts of large-scale solar projects under development, or enough to power 4.4 million homes. And government incentives are helping drive the industry. A 30 percent manufacturing tax credit has resulted in the construction of 58 new facilities to produce solar energy equipment, according to Jared Blanton, a spokesman for the Solar Energy Industries Association. In Illinois, unions are preparing for the anticipated demand. At an apprentice school in Alsip, Lynch trains about 200 electricians a year to work in the solar industry. His students are hoping to follow in the footsteps of Jim Amedeo, the site supervisor at Exelon's West Pullman plant. Ads by Google

    Wallpaper Removal the Easy and Frugal Way


    by Scotts Contracting

    Question: I was recently asked- How did I remove that wallpaper so easily?

    Answer: I Bagged It.

    Here's how I did it and the equipment I used.

    Needed tools

    1. Hudson Sprayer filled with warm water and 1- 2 Table Spoons Dish-washing Detergent

    2. 4 mill Rolls of Plastic or Large 30 Gallon or Larger Trash-bags- (You will need enough plastic to Completely cover the area you are working on.)

    3. Scraping tool of your Choice- I've used 5 ways, Small Sheet Rock Spatulas, etc

    4. Step Ladder

    Here's the Simple Steps

    1. Working in 8ftx8ft areas. Using the Hudson Sprayer, set on medium Mist and a Premixed Warm Water Solution of 1-2 Tablespoons of Dish Washing Liquid ( Original Dawn is my Preferred Choice). I mist the walls down until the water solution starts to run down the wall.

    2. Starting at the Top of the Wall of the area I just wet the area down. I place the Plastic against the wall and smooth out any wrinkles.

    • Through trial and error I found that the smoother the plastic is against the wallpaper the faster the water solution will work into the adhesive of the Wallpaper. (Plastic is the Vapor Barrier)

    1. I then re-peat the process until I have the entire walls area covered with the Water Solution and Plastic.

    2. Let sit for ½-1 hour

    3. Remove Plastic and Repeat Steps 1 thru 3

    • I will do this at least 2 times

    When the wallpaper's is thoroughly moist with water solution. It is now time to start the removal of the wallpaper.

    1. Once Again starting at the Top of the Wall. I peel the wallpaper off the wall using a combination of scraper and pulling the wallpaper towards the floor with my hands. If you choose to utilize trash-bags the bags for the vapor barrier- they can now be recycled and will now hold the scraps of wallpaper removed from the wall.

    2. After all the wallpaper has been removed I then utilize: a warm soapy solution and Medium Coarse Scrub Pad to remove any left over wallpaper adhesive.

    Question- Why does this system work for me?

    Answer- Here's the Secret.

    The Plastic -'Vapor Barrier' -Keeps the water Solution from Evaporating into the Air and is Absorbed by the Wallpaper's Adhesive instead. When this happens the Adhesive Loses its adhesive properties and is easily removed from the wall surface.

    Time Saving Tips

    • Cover the Floor in the area you are working on with a Drop Cloth.

    • Recycle the Plastic Bags to Hold the Wallpaper you Removed.

    • Warm Water Speeds up the Process

    If you need assistance with your Projects, Large or Small, Scotts Contracting is available to assist. Use this Link to Email Scotty to schedule a free Estimate on your next project.

    Additional Info and Prior Job Site Photos by Scotts Contracting can be viewed at: http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com/job-site-pictures.html

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

    Green 'Wild Catting' Venture-Recycling Old Wells

    Great News in the Recycling Biz-Oil Wells

    Anytime we can Recycle 'we save'

    As this article points out recycling the old wells for the now lucrative Hot Liquid Brine within the wells.  Is the New power source in old wells

    Miles below Texas are zones of hot, pressurized brine that for decades posed a liability to drillers and rendered oil and gas wells worthless.

    Now, new wildcatters are going after those same pools in the name of green energy. They want to use the pressure and heat to make electricity.

    If successful, they will introduce a new source of clean power to the grid that has the potential to exceed all other sources.

    According to a report by the Southern Methodist University Geothermal Laboratory, the hot water and pressure between 8,000 and 25,000 feet below Texas could supply more than 100 times the state's 2008 total electric consumption for well over a century.

    The concept and technology of using the hot water from old oil and gas wells have been around in various forms since the 1960s. Since then, more than half a million oil and gas wells have been drilled in Texas.

    The challenge always has been to make electricity production economical from those wells.

    This summer, a Houston company will give it a try at a well in Liberty County. Also, a San Antonio company is working on financing a project to produce more than 100 megawatts in 12 months.

    They and a handful of other companies have the support of the federal and state governments. A new state law provides tax incentives to companies producing electricity from oil and gas wells.

    The Texas Public Utility Commission is working on rules to kick-start the geothermal market by requiring utilities to buy more clean energy. The commission did the same thing for wind power development, which is one reason Texas now is a national leader in wind energy production.

    The federal government is issuing grants, including several in Texas, to accelerate the development of the geothermal market.

    "There are millions of wells across the country and hundreds of thousands in Texas," said Tim Reinhardt, who specializes in low-temperature geothermal development at the U.S. Energy Department. "We feel that this is a great thing."

    Southern Methodist University received $5 million to create a national geothermal database cataloging the millions of wells drilled across the country that could be used to generate electricity.

    The U.S. Energy Department is investing another $5 million in El Paso County for the research and development of a geothermal system using new wells to produce electricity for Fort Bliss. The work is part of the post's effort to become self-sufficient.

    "It's like gambling," said Jon Lear, who works for a contractor on the Fort Bliss project. "You put a lot of chips out on a lot of different squares."

    This summer, George Alcorn, a third-generation oil and gas man, is setting out to prove he is worth betting on as he starts a demonstration project on a well outside Houston.

    In 2008, with oil prices at record lows, Alcorn told his father he was doing the unthinkable and going green by opening up abandoned gas wells, not for the gas but for the 250-degree water that would gush to the surface. The hot liquid then would be used to create steam and turn a turbine before being injected back into the earth.

    "I think a lot of guys his age and generation just can't fathom such an event," Alcorn said of his 77-year-old father. "He's old school."

    Alcorn plans to start reconfiguring an abandoned 13,000-foot-deep gas well in Liberty County. He calls the well a "typical well," in that it doesn't have exceptionally high temperatures or pressure. The idea is that if geothermal power can work on this well, this same technology could be applied to thousands of others.

    He has the backing of a $1.5 million matching federal grant and expects to be producing about half a megawatt by December - enough to power about 75 homes.

    It's not much in comparison to the hundreds of megawatts produced by geothermal plants on the West Coast. But those operations are built on top of or next to natural hot springs.

    Texas does not have those kinds of formations. What it does have are more 500,000 oil and gas wells drilled since 1960.

    "Some of our (oil) fields produce 10 times more water than oil," said Jacques Beaudry-Losique, deputy assistant secretary for renewable energy at the Energy Department. "Some of it comes back pretty hot."

    Outside Victoria is a 41/2-mile-deep well with water at a recorded temperature of 510 degrees Fahrenheit, more than twice the boiling point. If exposed to the surface, the water would explode.

    Along the Texas Coast are similar wells at slightly cooler temperatures but at thousands of pounds of pressure and capable of spewing continuous jets of brine hundreds of feet into the air.

    It is that energy that Alcorn wants to tap. He envisions thousands of wells across Texas producing thousands of megawatts of clean power 24 hours a day.

    Unlike wind and solar energy that's dependent on the weather, geothermal can produce power round the clock without fluctuation. The power generation also can be close to places where demand is high, making it more efficient than wind turbines that have to transmit power hundreds of miles.

    Sologen Systems, a renewable energy development company in San Antonio, is betting on the abandoned wells of South and East Texas. It estimates they could produce 100 megawatts in 12 months - as soon as it secures funding.

    But investors are cautious about the new technology, Sologen President Frank Smith said. They want assurance it will work and be profitable.

    "You want to be on the cutting edge," Smith said. "Not the bleeding edge."

    From late 1989 until early 1990, the Energy Department ran a demonstration plant at an old well on the Pleasant Bayou East near Houston that pumped out a steady megawatt of power. While clean and reliable, the energy was too expensive at the time to be marketable and the plant was shut down.

    With the improvements in generators and the rising cost of energy, Alcorn believes the power now is marketable and has found investors to back his demonstration project.

    "I feel like I'm wildcatting again," Alcorn said. "I feel like I am out there taking the risks that no one else is taking."

    The person who figures out how to get that reliable clean energy to market cheaply will stand to make millions.

    "My dad told me, 'When you flip the switch, I want to be there,'" Alcorn said.

    energy

    Copyright 2010 San Antonio Express-NewsAll Rights Reserved
    San Antonio Express-News

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

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