A New Way to Save Energy

I would like to try this.

Amanda's avatarmy type of marketing

Conservation – a term that is heavily used nowadays in relation to encouraging people to reduce their water usage, energy usage, etc. Conservation is important because the population is currently growing faster than our resources can handle. For example, the City of Vancouver is placing a heavier emphasis on enforcing the lawn water restrictions in the summer. Approaches such as these are in place to change people’s habits to contribute to a greener, more sustainable economy.

Enter Neurio. Neurio is a technology product created and developed by Vancouver-based company Energy Aware, which was founded by Sauder’s own Janice Cheam. In short, the basis of Neurio is to monitor your home’s energy usage, alert you about energy changes, and provide an analysis 0n your energy usage. All this is done with the three components of Neurio: Neurio Sensor, Neurio Cloud, and Wattson. The Neurio sensor is a device that…

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World Wetlands Day

Celebrate World Wetlands Day, today

Project 90 by 2030's avatarProject 90 by 2030

Sunday the 2nd February is World Wetlands Day which commemorates the signing of a world-wide convention to protect wetlands. The Ramsar Convention was signed in 1971, in Iran, on the shores of the Caspian Sea. This day aims to raise awareness on the importance of wetlands.

Wetlands are one of the most biological diverse ecosystems but are also one of the most threatened ecosystems in the world.

There are a number of wetlands in and around Cape Town, however urban development has changed many of them. Many small wetlands have been drained or filled in, while others have become permanent lakes because they receive large volumes of water from storm-water drains, e.g. Zeekoevlei and Princessvlei. Wetlands are threatened by nearby developments, pollution, fertilisers, sewerage, stormwater run off and livestock manure. Read more.

Why are wetlands important?
• Wetlands improve the quality of water – they act like a natural…

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Educators and industry focus on a sustainable future at annual forum

South Florida needs much sweat and effort from its citizens to start adapting to the change in the environment.

Joyce Edelstein's avatar

Palm Beach State College’s Institute for Energy and Environmental Sustainability (IEES) hosted the third annual Florida Colleges Energy Education Forum on Jan. 31 at the Palm Beach Gardens campus.

K-12 and college-level teachers met with representatives from renewable energy companies, the Energy and Materials Center at The Scripps Research Institute, South Florida Water Management District, the Southeast National Marine Renewable Energy Center and the Florida Department of Education. The daylong event featured presentations and workshops on biofuel, wind, ocean and solar energy—all with the real potential to make Florida a leading force in renewable energy production, requiring a skilled workforce.

In the photo, Amy Patterson, Florida Power & Light electric vehicle coordinator, shows one of 55 Ford F-150 trucks converted to a plug-in hybrid, part of FPL’s “green fleet” that will include 200 hybrid bucket trucks by the end of the year. Looking under the hood as…

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Transparent, flexible, organic, abundant materials, and cheap solar cells to become widespread

How great would it be if we can generate energy from just about every surface around?

digger666's avatardigger666

via Transparent, flexible, organic, abundant materials, and cheap solar cells to become widespread – FUTURISTECH INFO.

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The dwindling resources for conventional energy sources make renewable energy an exciting and increasingly important avenue of research. However, even seemingly new and green forms of energy production, like silicon-based solar cells, are not as cost effective as they could be.  An OIST research team led by Yabing Qi is investigating solar cells based on organic materials that have electrodes both flexible and transparent, enabling the fabrication of these solar cells at a low cost. In a recent paper published in the journal Organic Electronics, Qi and his research group characterized the electrodes made with new materials, including plastic, conductive material and zinc oxide. They also successfully identified methods by which to clean the electrodes to restore their conductivity and work…

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Thanks to Miss Lou

Thanks for the follow. I am very passionate about helping people to become sustainable. Behaviors like growing our own food and getting our own energy from the sun and wind are going to become survival tactics in the next 20 – 25 years. Not because you wouldn’t be able to buy them but because they will be priced so high most people will not be able to afford them or we will be in servitude to the ones who will supply it to us. We do not need to be tied to buying, buying, buying everything that is put on the market. We can make it ourselves to a very large degree. Just think about all the ‘stuff’ you buy and then throw away because someone tells you that you need to buy the same thing but ‘new’!!!!

Also think about what it was like to be in a community instead of in front of a TV all day long!

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ISLES OF EDEN – by Harvey Lloyd & Barry Benjamin – YouTube

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New World Story Emerging

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U.S. Climate Change Plan Would Let All Countries Set Their Own Goals, Gains Grudging Support At UN Talks

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Every day I’m shufflin’ @automattic

The states are leading the charge to getting off of non-renewables!

Matt's avatarMatt on Not-WordPress, mostly photos

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Ohio Utilities Rank in the Top 10 for Solar Power

If the Federal gov’t will not develop infrastructure then the states need to step in. Kudos for Ohio!

BrownFlynn's avatar

The Solar Electric Power Association’s (SEPA) sixth annual Utility Solar Rankings report analyzes the amount of new solar power interconnected by U.S. electric utilities in 2012. Notably, Ohio tied with Hawaii for the state that contributed the most utilities to the Watt-per-Customer Top 10 list, each contributing three. The municipal utility for the City of St. Marys (OH) ranked first nationally with nearly 563 watts per customer. The city owns 2.3 MW of a 3.6 MW solar project that is located in the City of Napoleon, OH. Ohio is a newcomer to the rankings, driven by solar initiatives from American Municipal Power, the municipal generation and transmission provider based in Columbus.

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