Showing posts with label natural capitalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label natural capitalism. Show all posts

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Clean Technology



Pelamis Wave Energy Converter. This image is Copyleft.

Clean Technology (The titles in italics are book titles).

I have been posting some of my green political ideas on various forums. I have always been fascinated by green technology. I follow it pretty closely. I am a big fan of the Apollo Alliance http://www.apolloalliance.org/ . I reviewed a book on this organization called Apollo's Fire Igniting America's Clean Energy Economy.

The idea that we can completely eliminate oil is not a new one. I also posted Winning The Oil Endgame by Amory Lovins. http://www.oilendgame.com/ReadTheBook.html The Rocky Mountain Institute has http://www.rmi.org/ pointed the way on building a clean economy focused on what would be called Natural Capitalism-- http://www.natcap.org/ . It is possible to build a clean energy economy. It is more of a matter of political will than anything else.

There is more than one roadmap to a clean technology future with a revived industrial base for the United States. Listening to the endless drivel which we are being fed every day won't get us to where we want to be. Not only do we need to talk to our politicians, we need to invest in the future technologies which will make a clean future. Silicon Valley is more than willing to create a surge of investment in clean technology. http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_9308526

Another book which I reviewed earlier was The clean tech revolution : the next big growth and investment opportunity. This book covers environmentally sound technologies which can offer changes in industry because they are cleaner, more energy efficient, and use less waste. It covers things like green buildings, efficient appliances, renewable energy, and other clean tech.

Contrary to what many more conservative people say, clean technology will not drive the country into a recession, quite the opposite will happen. At a minimum it will create whole new industries and massive economic growth. There is a potential of at least 3 million new jobs created. These jobs are industrial jobs and manufacturing jobs, not service jobs.
In Freedom From Oil by David Sandalow which I reviewed earlier, he pointed out that there is no magical formula for energy independence. It is not hard to figure out what we need to do. We need to plug our cars into a wall socket. The majority of our non-transportation energy comes from energy that is not dependent on oil. This means we should be building more hybrid cars and more electric cars. We should also as an interim step increase the amount of ethanol blended with gasoline as well as biodiesel blended with diesel.

The coal industry, the nuclear industry, and the oil and gas industry are mature industries. This means there is very little room for growth. The newer clean technologies have room to grow and develop. They also offer significant environmental benefits.

Investing in clean technologies could provide the boost to create what would be renewable energy cheaper than coal. We are not as far from this as you might think. Wind power with economies of scale could also approach this. This is what the coal industry is afraid of. It is not about destroying our economy, it is about the process of capitalism, creative destruction.
http://cleantechnica.com/2008/05/10/solar-power-goes-to-extremes-for-5cents-per-watt/

I think there is real potential for green economics to be much more potent. There is increasing interest. I read http://www.renewableenergyaccess.com/ occassionally.

I also follow a variety of publicly traded companies, verenium (vrnm), mgp ingredients (mgpi), capstone turbine (cpst), finavera (fvr.v), and others. I think there is a real interest in investing in green technology.

People spend a lot of time writing about companies like http://www.phoenixmotorcars.com/ and http://www.teslamotors.com/ which represent near term change. Without people being aware of these kind of companies and buying their products, they will never get off the ground.

There is a real interest in seeing the idea of the electric car revived. I look forward to seeing when General Motors rolls out the Chevrolet Volt http://www.chevrolet.com/electriccar/ . There is not too much hope for GM unless there is real change.

Americans are facing a real crisis in our manufacturing industries and blue collar jobs. Greening them will end up saving a lot of jobs and bringing a lot of change. Change that will be uncomfortable, but in the long run necessary.

The best thing that can happen now is to level the playing field and make the energy industry much more competitive.

What got me so interested in the concepts of a sustainable future was a book called Bioshelters, Ocean Arks, City Farming: Ecology As The Basis of Design by John and Nancy Todd. It was written in 1984. The writers described how to design cities that were extremely green, introduced concepts like aquaculture, vertical farms, and many radical scientific ideas on treating wastewater and solids using ecological designs. At the time the time they were writing no one was even close to thinking about things like this.

John Todd currently runs http://www.toddecological.com/ . I tried to place their more recent work, A Safe and Sustainable World, The Promise of Ecological Design by Nancy Todd and John Todd on hold through interlibrary loan but could not get it. I am debating on whether to just purchase it.

Earlier, I had a vague idea of civilization being able to run on renewables. R. Buckminster Fuller had predicted that in the future society would run on renewable energy, the sun and the wind. Also, I had come across the idea of a "Technic" civilization or a society that ran on wind and water technology proposed by Lewis Mumford. Lewis Mumford's book Technics and Civilization is a brilliant, if somewhat bizarre history of the development of technology.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Clean Technology (Green Technology) and Natural Capitalism Books,




I am very interested in industrial ecology and clean technology. It is very hard to get good reading material on this subject. I tried to get A Safe and Sustainable World by Nancy Jack Todd: The Promise of Ecological Design. John Todd is the inventor of Living Machines and Artificial Wetlands. His site Ocean Arks International is very interesting http://www.oceanarks.org/

Currently, The Clean Tech Revolution: The Next Big Growth and Investment Opportunity by Ron Pernick and Clint Wilder is on reserve at the library for me. I also have Freedom From Oil: How The Next President Can End The United States Oil Addiction by David Sandalow on reserve.

Two books which talk about natural capitalism, or green business practices which I can recommend are Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution by Amory R. Lovins and Paul Hawken, and Green to Gold: How Smart Companies Use Environmental Strategy to Innovate, Create Value, and Build Competitive Advantage. The article which the book Natural Capitalism came from is here,
http://www.engineering.ucsb.edu/~ewb-ucsb/documents/articles/natcap.pdf



There is not a whole lot written on this material. I am taking home Green Gold Japan, Germany, and the United States Race For Environmental Technologies by Curtis Moore and Alan Miller. I read this but it was not that good. The information was very dated. It was written in 1994 and much of what was being talked about has changed considerably. I would suggest reading something more recent.

Getting back on topic. Recently, I had mentioned a failure by Finavera to commercialize their wave energy buoy. They wrote the technology down to zero value. Something unusual has happened. After they wrote the value of their wave energy buoy technology down to zero, they are opening a wave energy project with PG&E http://www.energy-businessreview.com/article_news.asp?guid=135144DB-4CD2-4116-9987-1425D809CAF7

It is an utterly odd experience going from thinking a company is worthless and will never do any wave energy projects to the first commercializer in the United States of wave energy.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Books About Green Capitalism and Worldchanging


Quite a few of the books which I have read during the last year are about green capitalism or as the call it "natural capitalism." A lot of the ideas for natural capitalism stem from the Rocky Mountain Institute http://www.rmi.org/ . One of the most substantive works is Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution by Amory Lovins and Paul Hawkens. It talks about ways to integrate environmental technologies like lean manufacturing, recycling, energy efficiency, and refurbishing items with capitalism to make more profitable cleaner companies. Amory Lovins also talks about how to switch away from an oil based economy. There is an excellent ebook on this subject at http://www.oilendgame.com/ by Lovins. I highly recommend his work.
Another book which came out of a website is Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century, Alex Steffens, Editor. This is a collection of various technologies and ideas on how to make the world a better place. Once again this book is focused on clean technology, and new ideas for a greener form of capitalism. The book comes from the website http://www.worldchanging.com/ . This web site is very much future oriented. It talks quite a bit about energy issues, population issues, housing, and clean technology. It is well worth looking at.
Big And Green by David Gissen, Ed., is a guide to green buildings which are energy efficient, often use recycled material, are designed to be aesthetically pleasing, include recycling technologies, and often build renewable energy into them. There are quite a few architectural diagrams and pictures throughout the books. Green buildings are a very interesting issue. Take some time if you can to look at http://www.usgbc.org/.
I see a positive future where we won't need oil coming up. I don't see a negative future without oil. Life will be cleaner, healthier, and more long lived in the future. People need to take some time to figure out a better vision of what is coming next. Read about it and think about how you can make the world a better place to live.
On that note, I posted links to blog at the newsgroups Sci Fi & Fantasy Writing, Online Books and Ebooks, rec.arts.books.marketplace, alt.books.reviews, rec.arts.sf.written, rec.arts.books, and alt. books.
If you can think of any place where I can post a link to my site please let me know with comments. I would really appreciate it. This can be a message board, web site, blog, or group.
I just started adding keywords to each of my blog posts. They are pretty generic for the most part. You can see them at the bottom of the posts. Hopefully, this will generate some more interest in the site. Someone searched for "un lun dun" to find this site which is pretty surprising.