Author: GreenRightNow.com

  • Developer Frank McKinney wants donations to rebuild Haitian villages

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Real estate developer and author Frank McKinney has built opulent mansions, including a $24 million oceanfront estate called Acqua Liana in Palm Beach that he promotes as the biggest green certified manse in the world .

    But the Florida real estate entrepreneur also has been building sustainable housing for the poor for many years, including in Haiti. (Which is why we’re skipping the discussion today about whether ginormous homes like that Palm Beach manse are truly green, and will accept that this house, certified by the U.S. Green Building Council and Energy Star, occupies a special rarified category.)

    Caring Village residents in Haiti

    Caring Village residents in Haiti, before the earthquake

    Back to Haiti. McKinney, builder of homes for the super rich and a self-described Robin Hood, has been supporting work in Haiti since 2003. His non-profit Caring House Project Foundation (CHPF)  has built 11 villages on the impoverished island. The villages provide basic, sanitary housing, and are designed to be part of a self-sufficient community, with a village center, a school, a clinic and other infrastructure. The communities typically have a “commerce element”, such as a fishing coop, to help residents make a viable living.  Several of the projects were damaged or destroyed in the recent earthquakes.

    Now the charity is appealing for donations to help rebuild the villages, and add new ones.

    To find out how to support this work, you can visit the CHPF website’s donor page.  The page lists a menu of options, offering donors a chance to fund everything from an entire village of 25 housing units for $62,500 to a single pig for $18, with dozens of options in between. Funding a house costs $2,500; housing for one homeless person is $313; food to sustain three lives for a year is $250.

    Donors also can just give cash to the Caring House, a 501(3)c, and let the organizers put it to best use. Contributors also can call 1-561-722-3950 to donate over the phone, or mail to P.O. Box 388, Boynton Beach, FL 33425.

    McKinney, dubbed the real estate “rock czar” because of his successes, media exposure and penchant for long hair, has been a real estate investor and builder for nearly 25 years. He has appeared on many talk and news shows and written several real estate and inspirational books. His latests books include The Tap (HCI, 2009, which explores life-changing moments when God taps a person, and Burst This! (HCI 2009), which discusses how to  invest in the post-bubble economy. He also co-authored a fantasy book for children Dead Fred, Flying Lunchboxes and the Good Luck Circle (HCI 2009), based on discussions with his daughter.

    After the major earthquake struck in Haiti on Jan. 12, the real estate developer assembled a crew of doctors, nurses and rescue workers. The group flew to Haiti several days after the disaster, joining other early-arriving rescue teams from around the world. They were able to rescue four people stuck in or under collapsed buildings, according to McKinney’s blog, where you can hear his account of the rescue mission.

  • DiCaprio and other celebs launch ‘This is our Moment’ for clean energy

    Environmentalism is getting an injection of fun, but with a serious aim.

    Today, some of the nation’s best-known and critically acclaimed celebrities, Leonardo DiCaprio, Edward Norton, Jason Bateman, Felicity Huffman and Forest Whitaker, along with rising stars Chace Crawford, Emmy Rossum and Justin Long, are leading a campaign to help citizens sound the call for clean energy in Washington.

    (Noted professor Cornell West also makes a cameo appearance in the video, impishly declaring “Tweet this!)

    The program, launched today by these actors and the Natural Resources Defense Council, is called  This is Our Moment. It’s main thrust: To help people contact their senators, even flood their email boxes, make videos and generally get viral in pushing for an American clean energy bill.

    Those who want to register their support for clean energy action can use social networking tools at the website to spread the message. Fans of the movement will be able to embed a video player on their Facebook page or blog, and more. (Tweet this! says West.)

    This is Our Moment supports legislation to shift the nation’s energy production from fossil-fuel based power sources to non-polluting, renewable sources such as wind and solar power.

    The viral campaign was timed to begin after President Obama’s State of the Union address, in which he called for passage of a clean energy bill. The U.S. House passed such a measure in 2009, but the legislation, called the Clean Energy, Jobs and American Power Act, has been stalled in the Senate.

    Advocates say that passage of the bill would create local jobs, free the U.S. from dependence on foreign oil and greatly reduce carbon emissions, which scientists warn are fueling accelerating climate change.

    “This is our moment – our moment to fight for a cleaner and more secure future,” said DiCaprio, a longtime environmentalist and an NRDC Trustee, in a news release. “The time is now for people across the country to stand up and have their voices heard. We all must call on the Senate to act on this historic opportunity.”

    Those opposed to a clean energy and climate action bill in the Senate have raised questions about the accuracy of the science of climate change. They’ve also called for the nation to pursue all energy sources, an approach opposed by environmentalists who want less of the nation’s energy to come from the burning of fossil fuels. Gasoline engines and coal-fired power plants generate the majority of carbon emissions in the U.S. and in countries around the world.

    In his State of the Union address, Obama called on Congress to pass clean energy legislation so that the U.S. can remain a world manufacturing leader.

    China, as well as India and most European nations, are adding wind and solar capacity, creating a large world market for clean energy technology expertise and goods.

    Major U.S. firms, such as General Electric among others, make components for wind turbines. Several Silicon Valley companies are developing cheaper and more efficient solar tools, both for large industrial and home installations.

    Like what you see on YouTube? Here’s the longer version by the “This is Our Moment” celebs:

    Said NRDC President Frances Beinecke: “This is one of the most important pieces of legislation of our time – we cannot let our moment pass us by. Our Senators need to hear all of us loud and clear.”

  • More non-toxic plastic toys on the way from Green Toys Inc.

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Parents concerned about all the bad news pertaining to plastic toys, with their chemical loads of hormone-disrupting and possibly carcinogenic additives, can find refuge in a line of toys made by an environmentally minded U.S. toy company.

    San Francisco-based Green Toys Inc., a company that constructs toys from recycled milk containers, is introducing a new line of toys for babies and toddlers at the  Spielwarenmesse International Toy Fair in Nuremberg, Germany next week.

    Green Toys' new 18-block set for the very-much younger crowd

    Green Toys' new 18-block set for the very-much younger crowd

    The new line, called My First Green Toys™ , will include seven new products, all made in California, with 100 percent post-consumer plastic that contains no BPA (Bisphenol A), phthlates or PVC (polyvinyl chloride).

    Available this spring, the line will include a Green Toys stacker, tugboat, blocks, feeding spoons, spoon and fork set and a plate and bowl set. Previous toys from Green Toys Inc., also have been made from recycled milk jugs, but were aimed at young children.

    “We’ve been deluged with requests for Green Toys brand products designed for infants and toddlers both in the US and abroad,” said Robert von Goeben, president and co-founder of Green Toys Inc., in a news release. “Our customers tell us they love Green Toys products because they know where the toys are made and exactly what they are made from. The My First Green Toys line allows us to offer the benefits of safe, environmentally-friendly products to a younger age group, while providing parents with peace of mind.”

    In 2009, Green Toys™ brand products were featured in the Top 10 Toys of the Year in Disney FamilyFun Magazine, and the company received praise from Goddard Systems Inc.’s Top 10 Eco-Friendly Toys of 2009, and the American Specialty Toy Retailing Association (ASTRA), which honored it with a 2009 Best Toys for Kids Award.

    The packaging for Green Toys, made from recyclable corrugated materials, won a 2009 Greener Packaging Award.

    Green Toys Inc., was founded to create safe, classic toys in an environmentally responsible way that promotes recycling and reduces greenhouse gas emissions.

    The toys are available online at the company website and at many retailers. Find a store near you using Green Toys’ store finder tool.

  • Cosmetic maker Mary Kay adds green to its palette

    By Harriet Blake

    Mary Kay – home of the pink Cadillac and many things pink — is going green.

    Mary Kay headquarters in Addison, near Dallas

    Mary Kay headquarters in Addison, near Dallas

    Turns out the skin care and cosmetics mega sales business that was born in 1963 and elevated and launched the career of the at-home beauty consultant has an environmental bent.

    The company recycles compacts, builds nature classrooms at domestic violence shelters and for the past 20 years has been moving the culture at MK towards a greener future.

    Crayton Webb, director of corporate responsibility, says Mary Kay Inc. was one of the first corporations in the U.S. to have internal recycling, as early as the late ‘80s.

    “Our president at the time was Dick Bartlett, who believed that it made good sense for a business to be good stewards for the environment,” says Webb. “What we do today affects future generations.” Founder Mary Kay Ash also believed in doing well by doing good, Webb says.

    A Mary Kay compact that can be customized.

    A Mary Kay compact that can be customized.

    In 2008, the global company, based in Addison, Texas outside of Dallas, introduced a new compact. But staff fretted about what women would do with their old ones. In keeping with the company’s new sustainability initiative, Mary Kay put together a compact on compacts — making compact recycling a part of its larger recycling program called Pink Doing Green. The makeup consultants brought old compacts to company events to be recycled. The compacts were broken apart and the end products went to a recycling contractor, thus avoiding the landfill.

    “For every one we got back,” says Webb, “we planted a tree.” The company had partnered with the Arbor Day Foundation, the nonprofit conservation group whose mission is to nurture trees. Webb says the goal was for 200,000 compacts to be collected, but they received 300,000 by the end of last year, when the program ended.

    As a result the company planted 200,000 trees in the Bitterroot National Forest in Montana. “It’s more than planting a tree,” says Janelle O’Haugherty, manager for corporate communication. “This area had been destroyed by fire. We are restoring the benefits that trees provide.” The reforestation will help clean the air and water and resore important environmental benefits to the area, said John Rosenow, chief executive and founder of the Arbor Day Foundation.

    Mary Kay, which had worldwide sales of $2.6 billion in 2008 and operates in 35 markets around the globe, also recommends that women refill their compacts. The company suggests that women buy a compact for the long term and then reuse it with refills.

    ShelterOurSistersMKOC

    A Mary Kay "Nature Explore Outdoor Classroom" at Shelter Our Sisters in Hackensack, N.J.

    Mary Kay’s involvement with the Nature Explore Classrooms and domestic violence shelters evolved from the company’s longtime interest in domestic violence. Mary Kay’s workforce and clientele are predominantly women and domestic violence is an issue the company takes  seriously. Statistics show, says Webb, that one in three women are affected by domestic violence at some point in their lives.

    Since 2000, the Mary Kay Foundation has donated $22 million to shelters. (The foundation also contributes to causes fighting cancers affecting women.)

    The concept of a nature classroom evolved much like music therapy which has been shown to improve kids’ outlook. “Nature is therapeutic to abused kids,” Webb says. “The nature classrooms were created as safe, fun places where kids could learn, play and heal from abuse at home.” Nature has been shown to lessen stress on kids who have faced adverse situations.The Arbor Day Foundation also partnered with Mary Kay on this project.

    “These are not just playgrounds,” says O’Haugherty. “There is a curriculum, music, planting, digging and a lot of learning about nature that goes on.”

    The company has built five nature classrooms so far. They are located in Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas and Hackensack, N.J. In October 2009, the classrooms opened in Chicago, Hackensack and Atlanta. The ones in LA and Dallas will open in the first quarter of this year.

    “As an organization, we believe that violence against women is simple unacceptable,” said Anne Crews last October during Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Crews is vice president of government relations for Mary Kay Inc. and a board member for the Mary Kay Foundation. “We know that helping women and children connect with nature during the healing process will empower them.”

    Mary Kay’s hope, Webb adds, “is that these children have the opportunity to heal. If the nature classroom can play some small role in what they do, we’ve done our job,” he says. “It’s more than just writing a check.”

    In addition to the compact recycling and nature classrooms, Mary Kay has introduced green initiatives in its Addison-based headquarters. Just by turning off the lights when leaving the office, Webb says the company has reduced its energy consumption by 13 percent. There are motion sensors in the offices and conference rooms that automatically go out after people leave the room.

    Initially, says Webb, some employees were resistant because they didn’t want their colleagues to think they had gone home early. “So we created door hangers,” says Webb, “that said: ‘I’m in today. My lights are out to be green.’”

    At Mary Kay’s distribution and packaging facilities, bio-peanuts are now used as the packing materials. They are made of corn and potato starch and can either be re-used or dissolve in water. Mary Kay uses product cartons made of recycled paperboard; the packaging of their individual products uses post consumer content, varying from product to product – in some cases up to 35 percent.

    At its global manufacturing facility in Dallas, Webb says, 13 tons of alcohol waste is now being removed, reducing Mary Kay’s annual hazardous waste output by 25 percent.

    Mary Kay, which is sold by 2 million Mary Kay consultants around the world,  has also been the recipient of the Dallas Blue Thumb Award for water conservation for several years, thanks to its reduced water use.

    “We’re not perfect,” Webb says.  “There’s so much more that can be done. We don’t want to brag. It’s part of our responsibility.”

    Copyright © 2010 | Distributed by Noofangle Media

  • Green campuses, future generations and cap and trade

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Green news is just streaming out these days, like a ticker tape parade, but without the paper waste.

    Carleton College, in Northfield, Minn.

    Carleton College, in Northfield, Minn.

    First on my notes, the College Sustainability Report Card people have issued their 2010 list of schools making A’s for green initiatives. Actually, no campus has earned an A yet, but 27 are  getting A-’s for a range of innovative efforts. My native Minnesota has propelled Carleton College, Macalester College and the University of Minnesota into the top ranks. Uffda, that’s exciting.

    Depending on your roots and alma mater, you’ll likely find a campus to cheer on. The sheer diversity of activities being launched — from eco-peer training to building retrofits to food co-ops — makes our mouth water for local food and a pesticide-free place to eat it. Kudos to the Gen Y’ers and administrations behind all this.

    Now a word about that younger generation. No matter what our age, we can all do something for ourselves and our descendants. We can reduce carbon pollution. Every step we take counts, from our backyard garden to our carpool. But in the U.S., we need to take some BIG BITES out of our out-sized contribution to global warming. And we can do that by supporting cap and trade legislation.

    As the President prepares to deliver his State of the Union address, I am waiting for the word: We need action on climate change. Year two. Let’s get on with it.

    I know, it’s not perfect legislation, those bills that have been hanging around Congress, gathering mildew and exemptions for polluters. They have prompted vicious partisan battles. (But then hasn’t everything pending in Congress prompted vicious partisan battles?)

    But we need something on the books. It could bring fundamental change, or kick the ball in that direction.  If Congress moves in the spirit of creating a greener future instead of looking for ways to insert loopholes for special interests, this legislation could help clear the air, trigger other countries to do the same and help slow climate change.

    A politician once promised a chicken in every pot. Not to mix food metaphors, but this law could do much more. It could mean keeping salmon on your plate, weather catastrophes off your doorstep and clean water available for your children.

    On one level, cap and trade is pretty simple: Fossil-fuel burning businesses will start paying for their pollution. They will be penalized. Clean energy and clean tech businesses will not. This will have the effect of tugging the economy in the right direction. And because it will be staged in, it does not create economic shock. Many argue, in fact, that it will do the opposite, creating green jobs, spurring innovation and curtailing wasteful practices.

    Fossil fuel industries are not happy about this. Duh.

    We could spend another 1,000 words on this topic. But I’d like to refer you to someone who can explain it better, an expert at the Environmental Defense Fund.  Watch this video, and if your kids are old enough to read a 6th grade textbook, share it with them. It’s their future.

    The Facts of Cap-and-Trade from Clean Energy Works on Vimeo.

    By the way, if you’re worried that cap-and-trade legislation is not sufficiently bipartisan, know that the EDF works with many major corporations that support cap and trade as a way to reduce carbon pollution. Many on the left believe a simple carbon tax would be more efficient. This video also notes that it was a Reagan-era cap and trade measure that brought acid rain under control, verifying that this market solution can work.

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Kohl’s increases its green power ranking

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Kohl’s Department Stores has moved into second place among Fortune 500 companies for green power purchasing as recognized by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the company announced today.

    A Kohl's store in Laguna Niguel, Calif., features solar panels and has received the Energy Star certification

    A Kohl's store in Laguna Niguel, Calif., features solar panels and has received the Energy Star certification

    The Wisconsin-based retail chain retains its No. 1 ranking among retailers, buying 1,367,376,000 kWh of power annually from biogas, biomass, small hydropower, solar and wind installations.

    The other top retailers, after Kohl’s, on the EPA’s Top 20 Retail Green Power Purchasers are: Whole Foods Markets, Walmart Stores (in Texas and California), Starbucks, Staples, Lowe’s  and Safeway Inc.

    The list of Fortune 500 Green Power Purchasers includes No.1 ranked Intel Corporation, followed by Kohl’s, PepsiCo, Whole Foods Market, Dell Inc. and The Pepsi Bottling Group.

    Kohl’s now gets 100 percent of its power from green sources, as do the other corporations topping these lists, with some businesses listed as using 100+ percent power from renewable sources, meaning their power generation exceeds their needs and can be sold back through the grid.

    The power sources factored into the formula for designating the EPA’s green power partners includes buying Renewable Energy Credits, which are green power equivalency units that can be paid to a utility that is unable to provide all of a companies needs with direct connection to renewable sources.

    Kohl’s can now claim it is 100 percent powered by green energy.

    “We recognize the importance of encouraging environmentally smart energy practices, and we aim to set a positive example in how we operate our buildings and run our business. Starting 2010 at 100 percent green power helps reduce our carbon footprint and brings us another step closer to achieving our goal of reaching net zero greenhouse gas emissions by the end of this year,” said Kohl’s executive vice president of store planning and logistics Ken Bonning.

    Kohl’s Department Stores’ green power purchase of 1,367,376,000 kWh is equivalent to avoiding the carbon dioxide emissions of nearly 188,000 passenger vehicles per year or the amount of electricity needed to power nearly 128,000 average American homes annually, according to the EPA.

    “EPA’s Green Power Partners are raising the bar for clean, renewable energy use,” said EPA Assistant Administrator Gina McCarthy. “By using green power, Kohl’s Department Stores is doing its part to fight climate change and proving every day that sound environmental practices can also be economically sound.”

    Kohl’s power purchases include:

    • Waste Management/Landfill Gas: At Kohl’s stores built according to Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification, up to 35 percent of the store’s power is generated by landfill gas in partnership with Waste Management.
    • Solar: As the largest retail host of solar power in North America, Kohl’s generates solar power on-site at nearly 80 locations in six states. Solar power generates 20 to 50 percent of these store’s energy needs, depending on the location. The company’s largest system at its San Bernardino, Calif. distribution center has 6,208 panels and generates one megawatt of power – enough to power 400 homes on an annual basis. Kohl’s Milwaukee-based photo studio is  partly powered by 800 solar panels on its rooftop.
    • Wind: Kohl’s actively supports wind farm projects in Texas, and North Dakota and South Dakota by purchasing 100 mWh of renewable wind power annually.

    Kohl’s details other green initiatives on its website. The retailer has been a member of EPA’s Green Power Partnership since 2006.

  • New Hampshire’s Mountain View Grand Resort buys only green power

    NH Resort with Wind 2

    The historic Mountain View Grand Resort and Spa in Whitefield, N.H.

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Who would want to ruin this view? Not New Hampshire’s landmark Mountain View Grand Resort & Spa. The resort has moved away from sky-polluting fossil fuels to using all green, renewable energy.

    Not only did Mountain View Grand put up its own 121-foot wind turbine last year, it now buys all renewable energy from Constellation Energy, in the form of Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs). The RECs represent power that’s been produced by green sources, in this case, wind power.

    These changes have won the ski and summer resort set in the White Mountains a place on the U.S. EPA’s list of Green Power Partners that use 100 percent green power. (See Mountain View’s EPA profile.)

    Mountain View Grand’s shift to total green power avoids an estimated 1,626,231 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, which is equivalent to the greenhouse gas emissions from 135 passenger vehicles each year, or the CO² emissions from the electricity use of 102 average American homes for one year, according to the resort.

    “The wind turbine and green power initiative are just two of many steps we have taken to tangibly lower our carbon footprint at Mountain View Grand,” explains Chris Diego, managing director. “We’re committed to becoming a model for environmental responsibility, as we offer a luxury guest experience that encourages an active appreciation for our natural environment.”

    According to Diego, Mountain View Grand, which is recognized by AAA as a Four Diamond lodging and dining destination, has made many green improvements over the past two years. The resort added a recycling program that includes reusing cooking oil to make diesel fuel, installed energy-saving light bulbs and a water capture tower used to irrigate the golf course and grounds. Staff obtain vegetables from the resort’s own gardens and even raise Leicester Longwool sheep, a critically endangered breed.

    Mountain View Grand, which traces its history to 1865, also buys local foods and has partnered with the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests to promote land conservation. The MVG occupies 400 landscaped acres ringed by another 1,300 acres of woods and fields. Visit the website or call 866-484-3843 for information or reservations.

  • Green Test Drive: Hybrid elegance, the Lexus HS 250h

    By Clint Williams
    Green Right Now

    The 2010 Lexus HS 250h doesn’t drive by itself, but properly tricked out it comes pretty close. And the HS 250h does this while getting the sort of fuel economy associated with a much less comfortable, much less elegant, much less golllleee compact car.

    Lexus HS 250h

    Lexus HS 250h

    The HS 250h is a hybrid luxury car designed from the ground up, not a slap-dash modification of an existing Lexus. The Lexus lineup generally offers power and performance. The HS 250h is the first Lexus with a four-cylinder gas engine.

    Its Atkinson-cycle engine is mated to a two-motor hybrid system, creating an 187 horsepower vehicle. The power plant also meets the California SULEV and federal Tier 2 Bin 3 exhaust emission standards, which means that it emits 70 percent fewer emissions than the average new car. No small carbon reduction there.

    The driver will only notice that the car moves quite briskly. Don’t think you can drag race the BMW 335d (still our favorite green car) in the next lane, but acceleration should never be an issue.

    The HS 250h has a drive-mode switch to shift between Normal, Power, Eco and EV mode. Power mode offers a bit more oomph, but not a lot. The EV mode, under certain circumstances allows the car to be driven short distances at low speed using only the electric motors. It’s useful for winding your way through a parking garage or hauling the kids through the neighborhood to the community pool.

    The EPA fuel economy estimate is 35 miles per gallon city and 34 mpg on the highway. We got 34.6 mpg in a week of driving, according to the car’s trip computer.

    The interior is what you would expect in a Lexus: comfortable and well crafted. The navigation system, climate control and sound system are controlled with Lexus’ exclusive Remote Touch controller, which is part computer mouse, part joystick. It’s fun to play with at stoplights.

    The $3,900 Tech Package includes lane assist and dynamic radar cruise control that do everything but steer the car for you.

    The HS 250h has 10 airbags, including knee airbags for driver and front passenger, side curtain airbags, and both front and rear seat-mounted side airbags.

    Another footprint reducing feature: A bioplastic using plant sources as raw material is used in a number of injection-molded, foam and board components throughout the car, including trunk compartment trim, cowl side trim, door scuff plates, seat cushions and the package tray. About 30 percent of the combined interior and trunk are covered in bioplastic.

    This is Lexus’ first dedicated hybrid, and while it is aimed at a luxury market, the company kept pricing in the mid-30s. It is available in standard and premium models, with suggest retail price tags of $34,200 and $36,970, respectively.

    Options such as the $3,900 Tech Package, which includes dynamic radar cruise control, can quickly add to the tab, however. The loaded test car had a sticker price of $48,876.

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Drilling chemicals used in new gas wells remain underground

    (From ProPublica, which originally posted this piece, which was co-published with Politico, on Dec. 27, 2009.)

    ProPublica

    For more than a decade the energy industry has steadfastly argued before courts, Congress and the public that the federal law protecting drinking water should not be applied to hydraulic fracturing [2], the industrial process that is essential to extracting the nation’s vast natural gas reserves. In 2005 Congress, persuaded, passed a law prohibiting such regulation.

    Now an important part of that argument — that most of the millions of gallons of toxic chemicals that drillers inject underground are removed for safe disposal, and are not permanently discarded inside the earth — does not apply to drilling in many of the nation’s booming new gas fields.

    Three company spokesmen and a regulatory official said in separate interviews with ProPublica that as much as 85 percent of the fluids used during hydraulic fracturing is being left underground after wells are drilled in the Marcellus Shale, the massive gas deposit that stretches from New York to Tennessee.

    A hydraulic fracturing operation in Bradford County, Pa. It's possible that for each modern gas well drilled in the Marcellus and places like it, more than three million gallons of chemically tainted wastewater could be left in the ground forever.(Photo courtesy of the New York State Environmental Impact Statement)
    A hydraulic fracturing operation in Bradford County, Pa. (Photo: the New York State Environmental Impact Statement)

    That means that for each modern gas well drilled in the Marcellus and places like it, more than 3 million gallons of chemically tainted wastewater could be left in the ground forever. Drilling companies say that chemicals make up less than 1 percent of that fluid. But by volume, those chemicals alone still amount to 34,000 gallons in a typical well.

    These disclosures raise new questions about why the Safe Drinking Water Act, the federal law that regulates fluids injected underground so they don’t contaminate drinking water aquifers, should not apply to hydraulic fracturing, and whether the thinking behind Congress’ 2005 vote to shield drilling from regulation is still valid.

    When lawmakers approved that exemption, it was generally accepted that only about 30 percent of the fluids stayed in the ground. At the time, fracturing was also used in far fewer wells than it is today and required far less fluid. Ninety percent of the nation’s wells now rely on the process, which is widely credited for making it financially feasible to tap into the Marcellus Shale and other new gas deposits.

    Congress is considering a bill that would repeal the exemption, and has directed the Environmental Protection Agency to undertake a fresh study of how hydraulic fracturing may affect drinking water supplies. But the government faces stiff pressure from the energy industry [3] to maintain the status quo — in which gas drilling is regulated state by state — as companies race to exploit the nation’s vast shale deposits and meet the growing demand for cleaner fuel. Just this month, Exxon announced it would spend some $31 billion to buy XTO Energy, a company that controls substantial gas reserves in the Marcellus — but only on the condition that Congress doesn’t enact laws on fracturing that make drilling “commercially impracticable.”

    The realization that most of the chemicals and fluids injected underground remain there could stoke the debate further, especially since it contradicts the industry’s long-standing message that only a small proportion of the fluids is left behind at most wells.

    But while the message has not changed, the drilling has.

    The Marcellus Shale, denoted in brown, primarily cuts across large swaths of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. (Map by Jennifer LaFleur/ProPublica)
    The Marcellus Shale, denoted in brown, primarily cuts across large swaths of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. (Map by Jennifer LaFleur/ProPublica)

    In the nation’s largest and most important natural gas fields, far more chemicals are being used today than when Congress and the EPA last visited the fracturing issue, and far more of those fluids are remaining underground. Drilling companies say that as they’ve drilled in the Marcellus they’ve discovered that the shale rock — which is similar to many of the nation’s largest natural gas projects in Louisiana, Texas and several other states — holds more fluids than they expected.During hydraulic fracturing, drillers use combinations of some of the 260 chemical additives associated with the process, plus large amounts of water and sand, to break rock and release gas. Benzene and formaldehyde, both known carcinogens, are among the substances that are commonly found.

    If another industry proposed injecting chemicals — or even salt water — underground for disposal, the EPA would require it to conduct a geological study to make sure the ground could hold those fluids without leaking and to follow construction standards when building the well. In some cases the EPA would also establish a monitoring system to track what happened as the well aged.

    But because hydraulic fracturing is exempt from the Safe Drinking Water Act, it doesn’t necessarily have to conform to these federal standards. Instead, oversight of the drilling chemicals and the injection process has been left solely to the states, some of which regulate parts of the process while others do not.

    As the industry was lobbying Congress for that exemption — and ever since — the notion that most fluids would not be left underground continued to emerge as a recurring theme put forth by everyone from attorneys for Halliburton, which developed the fracturing process and is one of the leading drilling service companies, to government researchers and regulators.

    “Hydraulic fracturing is fundamentally different,” wrote Mike Paque, director of the Ground Water Protection Council, an association of state oil and gas regulators, to Senate staff in a 2002 letter advocating for the exemption, “because it is part of the well completion process, does not ‘dispose of fluids’ and is of short duration, with most of the fluids being immediately recovered.”

    In May, ProPublica heard a similar explanation from the industry-funded American Petroleum Institute.

    “Hydraulic fracturing operations are something that are done from 24 hours to a couple of days versus a program where you are injecting products into the ground and they are intended to be sequestered for time into the future,” said Stephanie Meadows, a senior API policy analyst who has been closely involved in fracturing legislation issues. “I don’t see the benefit of trying to take that sort of sequestration type activity and applying it to something that is temporary in time.”

    Asked how much fracturing fluid can remain underground, and whether it could be as high as 30 percent, the figure that was still being included in government reports earlier this year, Meadows said: “I guess I didn’t know that the statistics are that high.”

    Neither the American Petroleum Institute nor the Ground Water Protection Council responded to requests for further comment.

    EPA officials maintained in 2005, and say now, that the volume of fluids left underground had little to do with its opinion that hydraulic fracturing for gas wells is not the same as underground injection. They say that distinction is because the primary function of the two types of wells is different: Gas wells are for production processes, while most EPA-regulated underground injection wells are intended for storage.

    But Stephen Heare, director of the EPA’s Drinking Water Protection Division in Washington, said that both the circumstances and the drilling technology have evolved. When asked to explain how hydraulic fracturing today is different from other forms of underground injection, he said the bottom line was simple.

    “If you are emplacing fluid, it does not matter whether you are recovering 30 percent or 65 percent of it, if you are emplacing fluids, that is underground injection,” Heare said. “The simple explanation for why hydraulic fracturing is different from other injection activities,” he added, is that hydraulic fracturing “is exempt from regulation under the Safe Drinking Water Act.”

    The argument that fracturing should not be regulated by the EPA became prominent in the 1990s, after the EPA said that fracturing lay outside the scope of the Safe Drinking Water Act, because the primary purpose of gas wells was energy production, not fluid disposal.

    A 1997 Alabama lawsuit challenged that position, and the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the EPA.

    [2] In that decision, the judges wrote that “According to the state agency, hydraulic fracturing is not underground injection because it does not result in permanent subsurface ‘emplacement’ of the fluids, as these fluids are pumped out of the ground before methane gas is extracted out of the well.” But the judges called that assertion “untenable” and ordered the EPA to regulate fracturing in Alabama under the Safe Drinking Water Act. They also ordered the EPA to more clearly define fracturing as a type of underground injection, a move that could have paved the way for regulation in other states as well.

    But in 2005, before such regulation could happen, Congress stepped in and gave hydraulic fracturing its special exemption from the Safe Drinking Water Act.

    When Congress voted for the exemption, it referred to a 2004 EPA report, which concluded that fracturing did not pose a threat to drinking water. That report, which has since been criticized as incomplete, said that while some of the fracturing fluids remained underground, “Most of the fracturing fluids injected into the formation are pumped back out of the well along with groundwater and methane gas.”

    Lee Fuller, vice president of government affairs for the Independent Petroleum Association of America, said that the emphasis on wastewater removal was made to help legislators understand how fracturing was different from underground injection, but that those legislators also knew that much of the water stayed underground when they voted for the exemption.

    “The EPA study said there was a certain amount of the water that does stay in the fractured formation. That information was known,” he said, adding that more of the water may seep out over the life span of the well. “So I think there was an understanding of it on the part of the proponents of the proposal.”

    In the 2004 report, the EPA said as much as 59 percent of fracturing fluids can remain underground. A 2009 Department of Energy report titled Modern Shale Gas put that figure at 30 to 70 percent, but emphasized that most wells fall into the lower end of that range, explaining that “the majority of fracturing fluid is recovered in a matter of several hours to a couple of weeks.”

    Just six months ago that point was reiterated in testimony before the House Committee on Natural Resources, when the Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission repeated a statement that former Alabama state geologist Donald Oltz made in the 1997 Alabama court case: “Almost all hydraulic fracturing fluid is recovered to the surface after a hydraulic fracturing operation.”

    That statement contrasts sharply with the latest reports from regions where gas drilling is on the upswing.

    Spokesmen for Cabot Oil and Gas, Range Resources and Fortuna Energy — three of the most active companies developing gas resources in the Marcellus Shale — say that more water is trapped underground in newer drilling areas because the “tight shale” that is loath to give up the gas is likely to hold on to the fluids too.

    “It’s not like you pump a volume of water into the frack and then it gives you that volume back,” said Ken Komoroski, a spokesman for Cabot Oil and Gas, who says only 15 to 20 percent of the fluid comes back out. “Most of the water and sand stays in the formation compared to in other geologic formations.”

    In Pennsylvania, where regulators had once predicted that drilling in the Marcellus would produce about 19 million gallons of wastewater per day, that estimate has been revised to just a fraction of that volume, largely because so much of the fluid is remaining underground.

    Range Resources now reuses 100 percent of the wastewater it extracts from its Pennsylvania wells by diluting it with fresh water and using it to drill more wells, said spokesman Matt Pitzarella. Range has been able to do that, Pitzarella said, in part because it’s extracting only 20 percent of the 4 million gallons it pumps underground for each of its wells.

    Gas industry officials say the amount of fluids they leave behind in their wells should have no bearing on whether hydraulic fracturing is or is not regulated by the federal government. What’s important is managing the risk, says the Independent Petroleum Association’s Fuller, a job he says the industry is doing very well without additional oversight.

    “You are wrapping yourself around a distinction of whether something should or should not be regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act as opposed to whether something does or does not pose an environmental risk,” said Fuller, who asserts that despite numerous reports of contamination in drilling areas, the fracturing process has never been conclusively proven to be the cause.

    Regulation, Fuller said, “may shut down natural gas drilling for a long time, but it is not going to make the environment any better.”

    It will fall to Congress — and then to the EPA — to decide whether that is truly the case. Sponsors of the Frack Act hope for a vote this spring. If it passes, and if the EPA finds reason to change the conclusions it reached in 2004, the agency would then have to decide exactly how fracturing will be addressed by the Safe Drinking Water Act.

    “The thinking we did then, the study that we did then, we were really looking at a different set of circumstances,” said Heare, the EPA’s Drinking Water Protection Division director. “The agency has not investigated the impacts of hydraulic fracturing in other settings such as shale gas production and at this time is unable to quantify the potential threat.”

    Write to Abrahm Lustgarten at [email protected].

  • Investigation finds wrongdoing in events leading to loss of U.S. jaguar

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Arizona wildlife authorities should have notified federal officers before setting a trap last year that ensnared a jaguar, leading to the death of the cat, according to an investigative report by the U.S. Interior Department’s Inspector General’s office released last week.

    Because the jaguar is an endangered species, the local authorities were supposed to notify the federal wildlife overseers and obtain a permit for the capture, investigators found. Their failure to apply for a permit was a violation of the Endangered Species Act.

    Arizona Game and Fish Department authorities have maintained that the capture of the jaguar, known as Macho B, was inadvertent. But the IG’s office found that even that circumstance did not exempt local wardens from needing a permit while conducting operations in known jaguar territory.

    “We found that the AZGFD was aware of Macho B’s presence in the vicinity of its mountain lion and black bear study in late December 2008 and January 2009, yet it did not consult with FWS, as required by the Endangered Species Act (ESA) of 1973,” investigators wrote.

    The death of the cat has been under investigation since environmentalists raised questions about the animal’s suspicious death in 2009. Macho B was possibly the last jaguar alive in the wild in the United States. He died in February 2009 after being captured in a leg hold snare meant for mountain lions an black bear.

    Arizona Fish and Game personnel affixed a GPS tracking device to the  jaguar and freed him.  But in days, the GPS collar indicated Macho B was not moving. Researchers found him, lethargic and ailing; veterinarians determined that Macho B was suffering from renal (kidney) failure and euthanized him.

    The death prompted calls for more details about the trapping, and raised questions about whether the stress of the capture contributed to Macho B’s demise. The cat was older, and estimated to be 16-20 to years old. After the ailing cat was recaptured, experts agreed he was suffering from lethal renal failure, and he was euthanized.

    The Center for Biological Diversity is suing the AGFD over the death in an effort to prevent any further operations from jeopardizing any possible remaining U.S. jaguars, or those that might wander across the border from Mexico.

    “This report affirms all of the legal claims in our litigation to prevent Arizona Game and Fish from killing another jaguar, and will be critical evidence at trial,” said Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity.

    The IG report also suggests that Macho B may have been injured in his capture, which the Arizona GFD denies, concluding that the animal lost a canine tooth while ensnared and not before the capture, as state officials had argued. The tooth was broken to the root, according to the report, which suggests it could have been the entry point for infection.

    Federal investigators also found that the autopsy of Macho B was less than thorough. It was performed as a “cosmetic necropsy,” which preserved the pelt but was less exploratory than a full autopsy, because a state authority did not know the difference between a “cosmetic necropsy” and a “complete necropsy.”

    The Department of the Interior encompasses the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which administers the Endangered Species Act.

  • Recycle your shoes for Haiti

    From Green Right Now Reports

    While major humanitarian groups continue to need cash donations to pay for food, water and medical supplies for Haitians injured and displaced by the earthquake, other relief efforts are now well underway. Some involve getting clothing and personal supplies to Haitians. Even cash-strapped Americans can recycle gently used items, designating them for  Haitian relief. Clothing collections are still coalescing, but two major shoe collection efforts are in place:

    • Foot Solutions, on behalf of Soles4Souls, the international charity that provides free footwear to people in need, continues to collect gently used shoes at any of its 240 worldwide locations. Foot Solutions stores have already collected 100,000 pairs of shoes, in response to their intial appeal just after the earthquake on Jan. 12. “Like so many others, we want to do everything we can to help,” said Ray Margiano, Foot Solutions CEO and founder. “Almost everyone has shoes in their closet that they don’t use and donating them is a great way to help….” See the website or call 1-888-FIT-FOOT for details.
    • The Finish Line also is collecting gently used shoes at its retail locations to be sent to Haiti via Soles4Souls, which has pledged to collect 1 million pairs of new and used boots and shoes for Haitian earthquake survivors. In addition, the Finish Line is collecting cash donations for Samaritan’s Feet, another non-profit that collects shoes for poor children around the world. Samaritan’s Feet is redirecting $50,000 from its current collection drive to distribute shoes in Haiti. Finish Line also is collected donations from its employees, which number more than 12,000, and will match cash contributions up to $25,000. The money will be given to Action Against Hunger to distribute food and supplies in Haiti. “Our employees, customers, vendors and charitable partners have all been moved by the tragic images and stories coming from Haiti,” said Glenn Lyon, Finish Line chief executive officer. Lyon continues, “We are eager to do our part to support the relief and rebuilding efforts in Haiti.”

      CoachNagy

      SDSU basketball coach Scott Nagy and daughter Naika

    A footnote: South Dakota State University basketball coach Scott Nagycoached the team’s game over the weekend in barefoot to draw attention to the need for donations, including shoe donations, for Haiti. Nagy’s adopted daughter Naika is a Haitian native.

    “She doesn’t say a whole lot, but I know it’s heavy on her heart,” Nagy told the AP.

    And remember while you’re digging for shoe donations in your closet, if you can make an immediate cash donation to Haiti before March 1, it can be deducted as a charitable expense on your 2009 taxes as a result of a special law quickly passed by Congress last week.

    Did we just say “law quickly passed by Congress…” ?

    See our previously posted list of major relief groups that can use your donation.

  • Tree museums, the time is now

    They took all the trees and put them in a tree museum. And they charged all the people a dollar and a half just to see ‘em.

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Joni Mitchell predicted it would come to this. But she had the admission price wrong. Instead of a dollar and a half to get into the tree museum, it will be $15 for adults to visit the tree exhibit opening today in Philadelphia. The interactive  Exploring Trees Inside and Out exhibit will debut at Philly’s Please Touch Museum where kids and adults will be able to explore trees and how they help our environment.

    The 2,500-foot exhibit, sponsored by Doubletree Hotels and the Arbor Day Foundation, has already been to six other museums and will travel to other locales in 2010 and 2011 (including Los Angeles and Chicago), spreading its message that trees are helpful and fun, and showing kids how they work. Children visiting the exhibit are able to crawl up through the middle of a manufactured tree trunk to see how the plant sustains itself. They can plant a “seed” and watch a simulation of a tree growing, and they can hear the sounds of the animals that live in the forest. Wee folk also can “become” a creature in the woods and “fly” over the tree tops, using the wonders of technology.

    Which is all good. Arbor Day and Doubletree hope to foster appreciation of nature with Exploring Trees. And we’re happy that they care. Kids and their parents should have a great time visiting the “forest”.

    But mischievously, I can’t help but wonder what this exhibit might look like if it were radicalized. Say someone wanted to send a more urgent message about trees, warning the world that we are literally eating our trees by consuming snack foods that use cheap palm oil; that the multi-national companies that use this palm oil have been denuding the rainforests our Earth needs to survive.

    Malaysia, rainforest replaced by palm oil plantation (Photo: Debra Erenberg, Pesticide Action Network)

    Malaysia, rainforest replaced by palm oil plantation (Photo: Debra Erenberg, Rainforest Action Network)

    Such an exhibit might include a burning wasteland where the trees have been felled. Walking across the area, you’d choke in the smoky air. Through burning eyes you’d see dead orangutans and observe native workers doing back-breaking labor.

    Perhaps in another room, you’d see the palm oil being added to a host of packaged goodies destined for grocery stores; stuff we could probably get by without, some items that we really shouldn’t be eating anyway and others that could be reformulated without palm oil. Yet another room could have maps of Indonesia and Malaysia, showing the forest cover before and after huge losses of rainforest caused by logging and converting biodiverse forests to palm plantations. Charts could explore the large and needless carbon contribution to the atmosphere.

    This walk on the dark side would not be an exhibit for kids. But it could be a real wake-up call for adults.

    Yeah, I know, it wouldn’t be a big commercial draw.

    I guess you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone.

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • High levels of PFOA may cause thyroid issues

    By Harriet Blake
    Green Right Now

    PFOA, aka Perfluorooctanoic acid, is everywhere. It’s in the wrappers of frozen pizza and microwave popcorn; it’s in Teflon pots and pans; it’s in the stain resistant coating that protects new carpets.

    PFOA is a stable man-made chemical used in industrial and consumer goods because it is good at repelling heat, water, grease and stains.

    It is found in the blood of 98 percent of Americans and in 100 percent of all newborns, according to Bill Walker, vice president of the Environmental Working Group.

    British researcher Tamara Galloway, who is the author of a new report on PFOA, says there’s some debate about how exactly PFOA gets into the body. ” It’s generally thought to be from the diet (e.g. fast food wrappers), from handling consumer and industrial objects and from ingesting household dusts.”

    Concerns about PFOA have been around since the ‘70s, and the EPA has labeled PFOA as a potential carcinogen.
    Now, British scientists have come up with additional cause for worry: people with higher concentrations of PFOA in their blood appear to have higher rates of thyroid disease.

    The new study that was published this week in Environmental Health Perspectives, observed 3,966 adults 20 or more years of age. Their blood serum was tested between 1999 and 2006 for PFOA and all were questioned as to whether they had had thyroid problem. The researchers discovered that those with the highest 25 percent of PFOA levels were more than twice as likely to report being on medication for ongoing thyroid disease compared to those with the lowest 50 percent of PFOA concentrations.

    The study was led by Galloway, a professor of ecotoxicology at the University of Exeter (U.K.) School of Biosciences, who notes, “These results highlight a real need for further research into the human health effects of low-level exposures to environmental chemicals like PFOA that are ubiquitous in the environment and in people’s homes. We need to know what they are doing.”

    A scientist with the EWG reports that PFOA doesn’t break down and because it can live forever, it contaminates the environment, the food chain and the population.

    The chemical industry has often defended its product saying that a small dose of PFOA is not a concern, but Walker disagrees.

    “We now know that small amounts of PFOA exposure at the wrong time – such as to the fetus or to an infant, are of even more concern than PFOA exposure to an adult.” Olga Naidenko, senior scientist with EWG, agrees, adding that while no scientific study is definitive, “this paper strengthens our understanding that these chemicals have an effect on hormones.”

    More research is needed, says Galloway, to determine how PFOA affects the functioning of the human thyroid. It’s possible that the PFOA compounds might be disrupting the binding of thyroid hormones in the blood, or might be altering their metabolism in the liver. Another point she makes is that it’s nearly impossible to figure out whether the higher PFOA levels already existed before the thyroid diagnosis.

    So, what’s the answer? Naidenko says the best thing to do is decrease the source of our exposure to PFOA. “Avoid microwave popcorn. Try making good old-fashioned popcorn on the stove,” she says. “Also, instead of buying clothes that are coated with PFOA, consumers need to ask tough questions of their manufacturers. “Don’t buy it, if you discover that the item may be made with PFOA.”

    In addition to curbing individual exposure, local governments need to monitor drinking water that has been found to have detectable levels of PFOA.

    PFOA is not just an American phenomenon. It is a global problem, says Galloway. “PFOA is very hard to break down once it’s been made, which makes it a very persistent compound. It is found in humans, wildlife and in soil and water samples from across the globe, even in the Arctic. The data we used is from the largest study to have measured the chemical in the general population — studies that suggest that human and wildlife populations in other countries are exposed to similar levels.”

    “We will definitely be doing more research to find out more about the links between PFOA and adverse health,” she says.

    EHP is published by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences which is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Pennsylvania man denied permission to install solar panels

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Robert Caffro found a solar solution for his home, then acquired a problem that’s cast a cloud on his plan.

    The front of Bob Caffro's house

    The front of Bob Caffro's house; solar panels would be on the rear roof.

    Caffro’s homeowners association in his neighborhood in Chester County west of Philadelphia denied his request to install the low-profile rooftop solar panels that he’d arranged to buy at Home Depot.

    The governing group sent him a letter on Jan. 5 citing this clause in the neighborhood’s rules:

    “Any addition, enclosure, garage, appurtenant building, fence, wall, planting or other improvement or modification erected, placed or maintained within a Unit shall be harmonious in design with the single family residential dwelling within the Unit.”

    Which left Caffro, 45, scratching his head over the meaning of the word “harmonious.”

    He thought the black rooftop solar panels he had selected were harmonious with the traditional homes in the Brook Crossing subdivision where he bought his four-bedroom home about five years ago. The 34-panel array by BP Solar was to be affixed to the back-facing slope of the roof of his two-story home, rising less than four inches above the shingles, and following the same grade of the roof, he said. It would be architecturally unobtrusive.

    His neighbors to the rear of the house would see “essentially a black roof” that would blend in, he said. Caffro also reasoned that such a home improvement would add value to his house, a positive for the neighborhood, and the earth. It would have powered his entire house, virtually eliminating his reliance on fossil fuels and greatly diminishing monthly electricity bills.

    “Who stops someone from doing something that’s good for the planet, lowers your costs for energy and helps you survive?” he asks.

    In this case, the “who” appears to be two members of the HOA: President Thomas Madonna, and the vice president, Marc Marucci. Both are named on the denial letter to Caffro, which is signed by Marucci, who did not return an email asking for more information on the denial issued to Caffro. Madonna also did not respond.

    Solar panels that would be similar to Caffro's, on a nearby house. (Photo: Bob Caffro)

    Solar panels that would be similar to Caffro's, on a nearby house. Caffro's would be framed in black. (Photo: Bob Caffro)

    Whatever Marucci and Madonna were thinking, they are not the only ones who view solar panels with trepidation. Across the U.S., there have been countless neighborhood skirmishes over solar panels, sometimes leaving embittered homeowners with no choice but to move away from their carefully controlled housing developments to places where they can exercise their on-site energy plans. Perhaps more often, homeowners likely just gave up on the idea.

    But discouraging homeowners from becoming solar consumers is less in fashion than it might have been at another time. With federal and state incentives aimed at helping property owners make the leap to renewable energy projects, states are passing additional laws to shore up homeowners’ rights — and homeowners’ associations are finding that they don’t always have the authority to intercede.

    The state of Arizona has a law dating to the 1970s that protects homeowners’ private property rights, allowing them “solar access” that supersedes any conflicting language in their deed restrictions. The law survived a legal challenge in Maricopa County in 2000, when a Superior Court judge ruled against an association trying to force homeowners to take down their rooftop panels.

    A recent Arizona law clarified matters, stating that homeowners’ groups cannot deny a resident’s right to add solar energy devices, but can adopt “reasonable rules” about their placement. While the law returns some authority to the neighborhood associations, it also confirms the rights of homeowners, stating that the rules around solar devices should not  “prevent the installation of devices” or impair their performance.

    California went through a similar process, with legislation in 2005 expanding upon the coverage of a 1978 “solar access” law.

    In fact, more than half of states have laws pertaining to residential solar installations, according to the Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency (DSIRE). Many of them are “access” laws that directly help protect a homeowner’s right to install solar power generation equipment. Many others, however, deal with mainly with easements for solar and wind installations. These easement laws also aid “access” by making it legal for governmental entities to create buffer zones and set up other provisions for wind and solar installations. These laws pave the way so that industrial, commercial or residential buildings can position  solar arrays to get adequate sunlight (or place wind turbines to catch the wind) and local authorities can permit such projects.

    But many easement laws are silent on the dilemma of homeowners whose HOAs have issued ambiguous wording or outright restrictions against solar or wind projects.

    So far, Pennsylvania currently has neither a solar easement nor access law, though neighboring Rhode Island and New Jersey have easement legislation.

    Pennsylvania State Rep. Tom Houghton (D-Chester) proposed legislation earlier this month to remove obstacles for homeowners who want to install renewable energy. “As we continue to wage a battle between over-reliance on fossil fuel and rising energy costs, we must provide support to homeowners and consumers who wish to utilize alternative energy sources,” he said in a news release.

    Caffro, a former safety director for a transportation company who was left with disabilities after being hit by a car a few years ago, lives partly on disability assistance. He said he checked the homeowner’s covenants when he moved in five years ago, and did not find any mention of solar panels. He assumed that meant they would be allowed.

    The letter from Caffro’s homeowner’s association does not elaborate on any potential harm from the solar panels, but notes that the two officers of the HOA, after consulting an attorney, determined that  “… solar panel arrays are not harmonious in design with the design of your unit or that of others in the community.”

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Best places to view the wintering Bald Eagle

    From Green Right Now Reports

    As mascots go, the U.S. Bald Eagle has been much beloved, but not always well tended. Once prolific in the U.S., the population wavered and fell dramatically in the 20th Century — until biologists discovered that DDT and other pollution was impairing the bird’s ability to reproduce.

    Bald Eagle (Photo: National Wildlife Federation.)

    Bald Eagle (Photo: National Wildlife Federation.)

    That was one big canary in a coal mine.

    With DDT now banned, the Bald Eagle has rebounded, and was removed from the Endangered Species list in 2007. Where once the U.S. Bald Eagle numbered only several hundred breeding pairs, there are now an estimated 9,000 or more Bald Eagles living in the wild, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

    The National Wildlife Federation, knowing that familiarity breeds fondness (at least when it comes to wildlife), is asking Americans to celebrate the return of the Bald Eagle by going bird watching.

    NWF compiled this list of places in the U.S. where one is likely to spot the national emblem in its winter habitat.

    Bald eagles can be seen in every state except Hawaii, according to the NWF. The group’s list includes an Eagle-inhabited spot in every state, but notes that some state’s enjoy larger winter congregations of the birds, while others may support just a few breeding pairs.

    The places to visit:

    Alabama
    Lake Guntersville State Park, (256) 571-5440 or

    Alaska
    Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve, (907) 465-4563 or

    Arizona
    Mormon Lake, (928) 527-3600

    Arkansas
    Beaver Lake, (479) 636-1210

    California
    Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge, (530) 667-2231

    Colorado
    Alamosa National Wildlife Refuge, (719) 589-4021 or

    Connecticut
    Connecticut River Shepaug Eagle Observation Area

    Delaware
    Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge, (302) 653-9345

    Florida
    Three Lakes Wildlife Management Area: Prairie Lakes Unit, (407) 436-1818

    Georgia
    Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, (912) 496-7836

    Hawaii
    Bald eagles are found in every state but Hawaii.

    Idaho
    Lake Coeur d’Alene/Wolf Lodge Bay, (877) 782-9232 or

    Illinois
    Cedar Glen Eagle Roost

    Indiana
    Monroe Lake, (812) 837-9546

    Iowa
    Keokuk Riverfront Area and Lock and Dam 19, (800) 383-1219

    Kansas
    Perry Reservoir, (620) 672-5911

    Kentucky
    Ballard Wildlife Management Area, (502) 224-2244

    Louisiana
    White Kitchen Preserve, (225) 338-1040

    Maine
    Moosehorn National Wildlife Refuge, (207) 454 -7161

    Maryland
    Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge, (410) 228-2677

    Massachusetts
    Quabbin Reservoir, (413) 323-7221

    Michigan
    Erie Marsh, (517) 316-0300

    Minnesota
    Voyageurs National Park, (218) 283-6600

    Mississippi
    Nelson Dewey State Park, (608) 725-5855

    Missouri
    Sandy Island Natural History Area, (314) 968-1105

    Montana
    Hauser Lake, (406) 454-5840

    Nebraska
    Kingsley Dam, (402) 471-0641 or

    Nevada
    Lake Mead National Recreation Area, (702) 293-8906

    New Hampshire
    Adams Point Wildlife Management Area, (603) 271-2461

    New Jersey
    Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, (570) 426-2452

    New Mexico
    Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, (505) 248-6911

    New York
    Mongaup Falls Reservoir, (845) 557-6162

    North Carolina
    Jordan Lake State Recreation Area, (919) 733-4181

    North Dakota
    Riverdale Wildlife Management Area, (701) 328-6300

    Ohio
    Ottawa National Wildlife Refuge, (419) 898-0014

    Oklahoma
    Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge, (580) 626-4794

    Oregon
    Bear Valley National Wildlife Refuge, (530) 667-2231

    Pennsylvania
    Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area, (717) 787-1323

    Rhode Island
    Scituate Reservoir, (401) 222-6800

    South Carolina
    ACE Basin National Wildlife Refuge, (404) 679-7154

    South Dakota
    Karl E. Mundt National Wildlife Refuge, (605) 487-7603

    Tennessee
    Reelfoot Lake State Park, (731) 253-9652

    Texas
    Lake Fork Reservoir

    Utah
    Ouray National Wildlife Refuge, (435) 545-2522

    Vermont
    Harriman Station, (603) 448-2200

    Virginia
    Mason Neck National Wildlife Refuge, (703) 490-4979

    Washington
    Skagit River Bald Eagle Natural Area, (360) 445-4441

    West Virginia
    South Branch of the Potomac River, Potomac Eagle Scenic Railroad, (304) 424-0736

    Wisconsin
    Nelson Dewey State Park, (608) 725-5374

    Wyoming
    Buffalo Bill State Park, (307) 587-9227

    For more information on the recovery of the Bald Eagle, see these resources:

    The Eagle Institute, based in the Northeast U.S.

    The National Eagle Center in Wabasha, Minn.

    Where Would They Be Now?, an article published by NWF about species brought back from the brink of extinction.

  • Do we have to limit growth to save the planet?

    (The question “Do We Have To Limit Growth To Save The Planet?” was posed to sustainability expert Frances Moore Lappe by the Corporate Social Responsibility’s Talk Back Blog.)

    By Frances Moore Lappé

    We humans create the world according to ideas we hold. Our biggest ideas, our frames, determine what we can see and what we can’t. Ultimately, they will decide whether we can turn our beautiful planet toward life…or not.

    Two frames I increasingly hear are “Because growth is killing the planet, we need no-growth;” and “We’ve hit the limits of a finite earth.”

    Hmm.

    “Growth” sounds pretty good to my ears, especially when I consider the opposite: shrink, shrivel, decline, decrease, die. So it’s hard to visualize excited crowds waving “No-growth NOW!” placards!

    The danger in this frame goes far beyond its lack of sex appeal. The real danger is what it leaves unchallenged: the assumption that today’s economy is in fact defined by “growth” — ever-expanding abundance.

    It keeps us blind to the truth that our current path is much more about waste and scarcity than abundance—for many now and for many more in the future.

    In 1969, squirreled away in the University of California–Berkeley “ag” library, asking “why hunger?,” I discovered that our “efficient, modern, productive” U.S. food system is actually a waste machine. It funnels sixteen pounds of grain and soy into cattle to get back one single pound of steak.

    Wait, this crazy ratio has to be an exception, I thought, only to learn that our food system’s gross inefficiency is the rule. Energy analyst Amory Lovins and his co-authors argue in Natural Capitalism that 6 percent or less of the “vast flows of materials” that go into production to make our goods actually end up in products we use. Fifty-six percent, on average, of all energy in the U.S. economy is wasted.

    Let’s call it like it is. Let’s call what we’ve been doing an economics of waste and destruction that stymies growth and quickens death. Growth then becomes that which enhances life — generation and regeneration; what our planet needs more of.

    And “we’ve hit the limits”?

    It encourages us to see the problem as “out there” — in the fixed quantity that is Earth: its limits are the problem. More usefully, the limit we’ve hit is that of the disruption of nature we humans can cause without catastrophic consequences. In this frame, attention shifts to us.

    The limits frame conjures up the notion of an overdrawn bank account. The solution?  Cut back what we withdraw.  But if most of destruction is designed in, then we could cut back and still be massively disrupting natural regeneration. What if farm runoff, say, were killing sea life in “only” two hundred instead of over four hundred dead zones worldwide? Still way more than ecological rhythms can absorb.

    So let’s shed “no-growth” and “limits.” Let’s reframe the challenge as that of aligning with the laws of nature to enhance life; and from there ask, What are the frames about human nature that drive the current waste and destruction within an economy driven by one rule, highest return to existing wealth? From there, fear eases, as we work to align with nature, including human nature.

    About Frances Moore Lappé

    • Frances Moore Lappé is a democracy advocate and world food and hunger expert who has authored or co-authored 16 books. She is the co-founder of three organizations, including Food First: The Institute for Food and Development Policy and, more recently, the Small Planet Institute, which she leads with her daughter Anna Lappé. In 1987 she received the Right Livelihood Award (a.k.a, the “Alternative Nobel.”) Her first book, Diet for a Small Planet, has sold three million copies and is considered “the blueprint for eating with a small carbon footprint since long before the term was coined”. Her most recent book is Getting a Grip: Clarity, Creativity, and Courage in a World Gone Mad. You can hear an interview with Lappé about the book with Talkback’s Managing Editor, Francesca Rheannon, here. Lappé’s forthcoming book is Liberation Ecology.

    (Re-posted with permission from the Corporate Social Responsibility wire service.)