Posts Tagged ‘automobile’

Cars Giving Back to the Environment

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

July 21, 2010
Cars Giving Back to the Environment
written by Steven Barrymore

Justin Robertson of Enervate in New Zealand has developed a way for a vehicle to give back to the environment. The company’s PowerTread system is a series of fluid filled tubes fitted to a roadway. When a vehicle passes over the tubes the motion / weight of the vehicle forces the fluid into a turbine generating electricity.

An early prototype of the PowerTread system on a busy Malaysia-Singapore highway border successfully powered the lights and electricity of the border patrol booth for two days.

The company is experimenting at Singapore shopping mall with further road-testing of PowerTread’s ability to capture energy from passing vehicles. On an industrial scale PowerTread could generate 15KW an hour, enough to power 12 good-sized homes.

Bravo to the developer, and 5 stars ***** for concept and simple genius


Via: New Zealand Herald

How Would You Spend BP’s Oil Spill Penalty? 4 Ways BP’s Payout Could Get Us Off Oil

Monday, June 28th, 2010

How Would You Spend BP’s Oil Spill Penalty?  4 Ways BP’s Payout Could Get Us Off Oil
BP could be liable for as much as $13 billion (maybe more) for the Gulf oil spill.
June 27, 2010 by Jim DiPeso

BP has agreed to fork over $20 billion to pay claims stemming from the Deepwater Horror. Except for fake conservatives like Rush Limbaugh, who bloviated in defense of Joe Barton’s funhouse mirror characterization of the compensation fund as a “shakedown,” any person with even a passing acquaintance with morality would agree that BP should pony up for the damage it has caused.

The $20 billion, however, likely will not be the closing bill for BP, even if the special kitty covers all claims for restitution. There is the matter of civil fines for the oil spill, which haven’t received nearly as much attention.

The fines could be big. Very big. And therein lies an opportunity for attacking the core of the problem, of which the worst oil spill in U.S. history is a symptom.

First, however, how much could BP be fined under the Clean Water Act for an illegal oil discharge? Depends on how much oil has been spilled and the degree of negligence involved. Spill estimates have been a moving target, and more will spill in the weeks to come, but the latest estimated range is 1.6 million to 3 million barrels.

Under the law, fines could range from $1,100 to $4,300 per barrel spilled. A fine of $1,100 per barrel, charged against 1.6 million barrels spilled, would yield a civil fine of $1.76 billion. That’s the approximate low end. At the approximate high end, a fine of $4,300 could be levied if there is a finding of gross negligence. Times the high estimate of 3 million barrels, and now we’re talking a fine approaching $13 billion.

A tidy sum. What would be a good use for the money? Oil dependence is the monkey on the nation’s back that has resulted in BP and other oil companies going to the ends of the earth and under the deep blue sea, at substantial environmental risk, to find expensive, hard-to-reach oil to feed our addiction. How about using the fine proceeds to create a special fund which, as part of a broader energy plan, could be used to start throttling back oil dependence?

There are any number of possible uses. Such as:

  • A revolving loan fund to finance beefing up and smartening up the power grid, so it can better handle electric cars.
  • R&D for electric car batteries offering the range that drivers demand.
  • R&D for alternative fuels made from inedible feedstocks, such as algae.
  • Building capacity for carrying out large-scale demonstrations of capital-intensive, high-risk energy technologies, such as carbon capture and sequestration.

Establishing a special Get the Oil Monkey Off Our Backs Fund, financed by a gigantic fine levied on BP, is not a complete answer to reducing oil dependence and the many geopolitical, economic, and environmental liabilities associated with such. It would not make up for the damage that Gulf Coast communities will be dealing with for years to come. It would be a start, however, to addressing the root cause of the spill and putting the U.S. onto a more sustainable, less risky energy path.

Article reprinted with permission. Copyright Jim DiPeso.  Jim DiPeso is the policy director for Republicans for Environmental Protection. Contact Jim DiPeso at: jdipeso@rep.org

Will the Economy Fail Again

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

June 26, 2010
Will the Economy Fail Again
written by Steven Barrymore

An estimated 60,000 barrels a day (1) are being lost in the Gulf Oil (spill) Blowout. This must have some impact on how the other oil companies are going to price oil, and what will this new pricing scheme do to the economy. We already experienced $5 per gallon gas prices during the start of this recession. Will gas reach or surpass those levels again? Before this gulf oil blowout gas prices were going down, now they are creeping up, where will the ceiling be? Are the gas companies artificially increasing the price of oil due to the Gulf disaster? If gas does reach the $5 mark or above, what will you give up to pay those prices?

In addition to the gas prices and other product mark ups that use oil products. This event is obviously affecting those in the region. Payouts for losses are stated to be coming from BP, but when and how long are the payouts good for. The recovery for the region could take longer than the payout will be of benefit. Is this $20bn payout fund set up by BP going to be enough?

I am amazed at the low-tech approach to this oil mess. Crews hand picking tar balls on the beach. You would think that after all these years of offshore oil drilling, these oil companies would have put some bucks into the research and development of higher tech and effective methods for oil spill cleanup. Where were all the preventative measures — or are these oil companies operating under a “fix it when it happens” matrix?

Reported in the news recently is the effort of OTS and actor Kevin Costner to find a solution to the oil disaster. Story here: Oil Spill Cleanup

Should fossil fuels remain buried? And we as a nation move forward, in a massive way, on alternative energy resources, ie; environmentally friendly wind generation, hydrogen, more efficient solar cell technology for homes and Solar Power Plants, and geo-thermal?

This is our opportunity as a nation to speak up, and not only with our voice, but also with our actions. We deserve better, and it better start now.

(1) Calculation based on 42 gallons on crude oil per barrel with an estimated 2.5 million gallons per day gulf oil well loss.

the Power Remains

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010
Fuel from extinct preserved organic remains – fossils?  Sounds like compost to me.  Perhaps the guy on this distinct print can explain, of course, after he has finished his fueling.


END POLLUTION

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010
Find the Solution – End Pollution. This bumper sticker makes a statement — in a techno geek way.