Archive for the ‘Energy’ Category

GM’s Announcement & Obama’s Response

Tuesday, July 15th, 2008

General Motors (GM) had a news conference this morning to announce restructuring moves that include cutting salaried employment costs by 20% as it seeks to counteract falling sales.

GM, as well as other US car makers, are under pressure these days due to the high fuel prices and the dip in demand for larger cars such as sports utility vehicles (SUVs), as consumers are rapidly switching to smaller, more fuel-efficient cars.

Presidential candidate, Barack Obama, responded to GM’s announcement with this statement:

“We need real change in Washington. That means no longer turning a blind eye to 3.5 million lost manufacturing jobs or waiting 6 years to sit down with the auto companies. It means recognizing the continued importance of the manufacturing sector in our economy, and having a plan to help revive it. It means taking seriously the crippling impact of high health care costs on our manufacturers and putting in place an energy policy that wasn’t written by the oil companies. It means standing up to our trading partners when they manipulate their currencies and fail to abide by the same trade rules that American workers and companies live by. And it means having a President who understands that we have the best workers and best companies in the world, but as we ask them to join us in the great mission of energy independence, we must invest in giving them the tools to succeed.

“When a mainstay of the American economy is forced to make a restructuring decision like the one General Motors is announcing today, it is a sober reminder of the difficult economic times we’re facing and of why we need change and a new direction in Washington. My heart goes out to all the workers and families in Michigan and across the country who will be affected as well as those who have been impacted over the last few months and years of turbulence in the auto industry. America’s auto workers are not just the backbone of our economy, they are on the front lines of our effort to produce the next generation of clean vehicles, strengthen America’s competitiveness and create up to 5 million clean energy jobs here in the United States.

“In recent weeks, I have met with the CEOs of both GM and Ford to talk with them about their economic challenges and about the need for everyone - from auto executives to the federal government - to work toward the energy and economic future the American people deserve. These companies are facing a perfect storm of record gas prices, rising steel prices, a credit market contraction that has made it more difficult for consumers to purchase autos, and a weakening economy that has shed jobs for six straight months. The impact of their hardship goes far beyond their own companies - to the countless suppliers, small businesses and communities throughout our nation who depend on a strong auto industry.

“I have also met with the workers in these plants, men and women who face a different set of economic challenges. Their perfect storm includes paychecks that are being stretched to meet family budgets, intensifying competition from abroad, jobs that are increasingly insecure and little support from a government that has consistently turned its back on the middle-class.

“In this difficult moment, it is clear that just as the American economy cannot succeed without our auto companies, these companies cannot succeed without a strong and growing American economy. And while all of us must take responsibility for building a future of shared prosperity, we will not turn our economy around with more of the same failed economic policies of the last 8 years.

“I have complete confidence that GM and our other auto companies will adapt and thrive in the 21st century economy if we bring real change to Washington and forge a true partnership together. That is what I intend to do as President.”

Greener Gadgets 2008 Conference - One Laptop Per Child

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Mary Lou Jepsen gives an awesome presentation on at the Greener Gadgets 2008 conference in New York on One Laptop Per Child.

“By trying to do the right thing and by designing for the poorest people in the world, we’ve made the greenest laptop in the world. And that’s not just the color!” - Mary Lou Jepsen

In the video below, Mary Lou illustrates how the OLPC laptop, also known as XO or the $100 laptop, is a new model for energy-efficient electronics, consuming just 2 Watts of energy.

The Presidential Candidates On Nuclear Energy

Monday, February 4th, 2008

What do the presidential democratic candidates have to say about Nuclear Energy? Find out in the below clips from the 2008 democratic debate.

John Edwards:

Hillary Clinton:

Barack Obama:

Vice President Al Gore’s Tennessee Home Renovations

Monday, January 21st, 2008

Vice President Al Gore has recently completed renovations to his Nashville, Tennessee home in response to the criticism of his high electric bills. All improvements were focused on making his home more energy efficient.

Since the renovation, Gore’s natural gas usage is down 93 percent and his electricity is down 11 percent during a period in which average usage increased 20-30% due to a Nashville heat wave.

Gore has also said he invests in renewable energy such as solar and wind power to balance 100 percent of his electricity usage.

Kim Shinn of the U.S. Green Building Council gave the house its second-highest rating for sustainable design.

Presidential Candidate Rudy Giuliani on Global Warming Strategies

Monday, January 7th, 2008

Presidential Candidate Rudy Giuliani answers a question from Bruce Clendenning on July 10, 2007, in Manchester, New Hampshire about how fuel efficiency standards, renewable energy, and emissions caps will be used to fight global warming.

Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007

Friday, December 21st, 2007

President Bush signs the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, at the Energy Department in Washington on December 19, 2007.

What’s in the new energy law?

  • Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) – Raises average fleet fuel-economy standards for cars and light trucks to 35 miles per gallon by 2020.
  • Renewable fuels – Expands the renewable fuels standard to 9 billion gallons in 2008 and increases it to 36 billion gallons by 2022.
  • Biofuels - Requires the US to produce 21 billion gallons of advanced biofuels, such as cellulosic ethanol.
  • Light bulbs – Increases national efficiency standards of light bulbs by 30 percent and phases out most types of incandescent bulbs by 2012-14.
  • Green buildings – Mandates that federal buildings renovated or newly constructed in 2010 reduce their fossil-fuel-generated consumption by 55 percent in 2010 and 100 percent by 2030.

Google Can’t Wait for Renewable Energy

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

Google LogoGoogle can’t wait for advances in potential technologies that will save our planet, so they are taking things into their own hands. In the past year or so, they has spent millions on funding green initiatives. Their latest is Renewable Energy Cheaper Than Coal, which will focus on advanced solar thermal power, wind power, geothermal systems that will help save our planet.

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