Category: Energy

  • Dynadec, Harvest, and Konarka: A Trio of Friday Fundings

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Three New England firms rounded out the first week of the New Year with new financing rounds.

    Konarka Technologies of Lowell, MA, which is famous for its flexible “Power Plastic” photovoltaic material, raised $23.8 million in Series G funding through an offering combining equity and warrants. All of the money came from a single source, according to a regulatory filing published yesterday, but Konarka hasn’t yet identified the investor. The company’s existing investors include 3i, Chevron, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Good Energies, Mackenize Investments, the Massachusetts Green Energy Fund, the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, New Enterprise Associates, Partech International, and Vanguard Ventures.

    Dynadec of Providence, RI, has raised $2.1 million toward an intended $2.4 million round of financing, according to a regulatory filing yesterday. As I explained in a profile last summer, Dynadec, formally known as Dynamic Decisions Technology, is commercializing software developed by Brown University computer scientist Pascal Van Hentenryck that can help companies solve complex optimization problems, such as the most efficient way for a utility to deploy power-line repair personnel after an ice storm. The four investors contributing to the round weren’t named in the filing, but Dynadec’s board includes representatives of Liberty Capital Partners, Velocity Equity Partners, and the Slater Technology Fund.

    —In yet another regulatory disclosure filed yesterday, Groton, MA-based Harvest Automation said it has collected $3 million out of an intended $5.75 million funding round. Harvest told Mass High Tech that the investment came from Amsterdam-based Life Sciences Partners and Indiana-based Midpoint Food & AG Fund, as well as Dina Routhier, a principal at the Massachusetts Technology Development Corporation. The startup, which was founded by iRobot alumni and was originally known as Q Robotics, is building agile mobile robots for large-scale agricultural operations. As Greg explained in a July 2008 profile, the robots are designed to adjust the spacing between potted plants as the plants grow.







  • Energy Efficiency Leaders to Gather in Chicago

    Eighth Annual Midwest Energy Solutions Conference Explores Energy Technology, Policy and Innovation

    Can policies that promote energy efficiency spur economic growth in a sluggish economy?

    How will Midwestern states invest the $2.86 billion in federal stimulus funds directed toward energy efficiency projects?

    Hundreds of energy leaders from throughout the Midwest will gather next week in Chicago to discuss these and many other pertinent issues at the Midwest Energy Efficiency Alliance’s (MEEA) eighth annual 2010 Midwest Energy Solutions Opportunity Now! Conference and Inspiring Efficiency Awards dinner and gala.

    The three-day conference kicks off Wednesday, Jan. 13 at 1 p.m. at the Chicago Hotel InterContinental with a keynote address from Dr. Kathleen Hogan, deputy assistant secretary for energy efficiency in the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) at the U.S. Department of Energy.

    Highlights of the 2010 Midwest Energy Solutions Conference include:

    Wednesday, Jan. 13, 2010

    • Keynote address from Dr. Kathleen Hogan about priorities for the U.S. Department of Energy, the impact of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and support for energy efficiency at the federal level.
    • National Energy Efficiency Policy Debate: Representatives from various energy sectors review important national energy efficiency policies, such as the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 and what the bill’s proposed cap and trade system means to the energy industry. They’ll also discuss the status of energy efficiency legislation and building codes and appliance standards across the country.

    Thursday, Jan. 14, 2010

    • Keynote addresses from Kris Bowring, Sr. of Best Buy about the company’s new green initiatives and Kurt Yeager of Galvin Electricity Initiative about priorities for the future on smart grid and integration of efficiency.
    • The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act – One Year Later: The federal government’s stimulus bill tripled funding for energy efficiency initiatives in the Midwest to $2.86 billion, and you can find out where the money might go. State leaders from Illinois, Minnesota and Missouri will discuss their current and future projects and programs.
    • 2010 Inspiring Efficiency Awards dinner and gala.

    Friday, Jan. 15, 2010

    • Financing Energy Efficiency: Learn about efforts to develop financing mechanisms for energy efficiency projects. Legislative, administrative and other challenges will be discussed as well as strategies for surmounting them.
    • Community Development and Energy Efficiency: Business and state government leaders review plans to leverage energy efficiency policies to propel economic growth and development through job creation, tax incentives and industry expansion for efficient technologies.

    MEEA also will honor eight Midwest leaders who deliver groundbreaking advancements for energy efficiency at the Inspiring Efficiency Awards dinner and gala the evening of Thursday, Jan. 14.

    The evening begins with a reception at 5:30 p.m. followed by the gala dinner and awards presentation from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. This year’s award recipients include:

    • Leadership Award: Janine Migden-Ostrander, Ohio Consumers’ Counsel for her role in creating the Ohio Consumer and Environmental Advocates, demonstrating that consumer and environmental groups can work together; and Tom Casten, Recycled Energy Development in Illinois for his expertise in industrial energy recycling and efforts to advance industrial energy efficiency.
    • Education Award: Commonwealth Edison for its partnership with the Chicago Urban League to create a program that provides energy efficiency information and money management training to first-time homebuyers and for building local awareness for a national energy efficiency campaign; and Smart Energy Design Assistance Center in Illinois for its efforts to assist commercial and municipal entities in identifying energy and money saving opportunities and minimizing pollution.
    • Impact Award: Interstate Power & Light Company, an Alliant Energy Company based in Iowa for launching a post-flood rebate program that helped customers affected by the catastrophic flooding in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to rebuild their homes with energy efficient features.
    • Innovation Award: Ameren Illinois Utilities for developing a Watt Solutions kit that allows customers to learn the cost of operating appliances. These kits were given away at several public library systems throughout Ameren’s service territory.
    • Marketing Award: Interstate Power & Light Company, an Alliant Energy Company based in Iowa, for its development of the “Being Green” calendar for customers that highlighted energy efficiency programs and best practices; and R.L. Just & associates, p.c. in St. Louis for the creation of The St. Louis Green Building Guide, which increased awareness of sustainable and efficient building practices and included tips for building green.

    More information about the Inspiring Efficiency Awards and this year’s recipients can be found at meeaconference.org/awards_winners.php

    About Midwest Energy Efficiency Alliance – The Source on Energy Efficiency

    The Midwest Energy Efficiency Alliance (mwalliance.org) is a collaborative network advancing energy efficiency in the Midwest to support sustainable economic development and environmental preservation.

    MEEA bridges the gap between policy adoption and program implementation.

    MEEA promotes the market transformation of energy efficiency technologies, processes and best practices within a 13-state area, through policy advocacy, program design and facilitation and piloting of energy technologies.

    Energy efficiency is the critical first step in meeting our nation’s myriad energy challenges due to low entry costs, proven and emerging technologies, ease of implementation, fast return on investment and measurable results.

    Through our diverse network of members and regional allies, MEEA possesses the practical experience and informed vision to effect positive change today by supporting the region’s stakeholders to achieve their efficiency goals for the future.


  • A New CEO at Mascoma

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Lebanon, NH-based Mascoma, which is developing technology for making biofuels from cellulosic ethanol, said today that chemical industry veteran William Brady has been appointed chief executive officer. Brady steps into a post vacated last August by Bruce Jamerson, who became chairman of venture-backed Mascoma and its subsidiary Frontier Renewable Resources. Brady previously spent 23 years at Cabot Corporation, a Boston-based materials manufacturer that makes rubber and carbon-based materials for inkjet toner and other applications. “Bill has extensive experience running large commercial divisions for a major chemical company, which is exactly the skill set we need as Mascoma transitions into a commercial enterprise,” Jamerson said in a statement.







  • Google Forms Energy Subsidiary and Requests to Buy and Sell Power on the Open Market [Energy]

    On December 16th, Google formed a new subsidiary in Delaware known as Google Energy. They then requested permission from federal authorities to buy and sell wholesale electricity. What could Google want to do with this?

    In all likelihood, according to Cnet, Google doesn’t want to give us free power, but rather they want their operations to be carbon neutral, maybe they want to do some research on the side. In the past, Google has helped to develop power monitoring software, looked at using electric car batteries to stabilize power grids and hinted at getting involved in renewable energy.

    In any case, it will be interesting to see where the Silicon Valley giant goes with this one. [Cnet]







  • Ameren Energy Resources Completes $1 Billion in Environmental Improvements at Its Illinois-Based Coal-Fired Power Plants

    Ameren Energy Resources Company, LLC (AER), the holding company for merchant generation and its energy marketing services for Ameren Corporation (NYSE: AEE), today announced the 2009 completion of more than $1 billion in environmental improvement projects at its Illinois-based, coal-fired power plants.

    In 2009, the AER merchant generating segment completed the 36-month installation of state-of-the-art environmental control technologies at two plants.

    AER installed a scrubber on its Duck Creek Power Plant, near Canton, Ill., and a scrubber on Unit 1 of Coffeen Plant, near Coffeen, Ill.

    “Our investment in these technologies reflects our commitment to environmental stewardship and our support for the communities we serve,” says Chuck Naslund, AER chairman, president and chief executive officer.

    “Through these projects, we have not only offered continued permanent employment to hundreds of Illinoisans, but we have also provided jobs to contract employees who call Illinois home. Clearly these projects have had a positive impact on the economies of central and southern Illinois – areas hard-hit by tough economic conditions.”

    Reducing sulfur dioxide emissions by more than 90%, the scrubbers are designed to redirect the outlet stack gas through a spray-tower scrubber design where the gas mixes with water, a 20% limestone mixture and compressed air.

    The sulfur dioxide in the flue gas then reacts with the limestone to produce a gypsum by-product that can either be sold for commercial use or placed into a landfill for disposal.

    In addition, the company will be completing installation of yet another scrubber and electrostatic precipitator within the first quarter of 2010 on Unit 2 of the Coffeen Plant.

    In 2009, a new precipitator was also installed at the Duck Creek Plant. Electrostatic precipitators offer an efficient way to capture particulates before they go into the atmosphere.

    To further reduce mercury emissions, AER in 2009 also installed activated carbon injection systems at the E.D. Edwards Plant, at its Meredosia Plant near Jacksonville, Ill., at Newton Plant, in Jasper County, Ill., and at the Joppa (Ill.) Power Plant (an Electric Energy Inc., plant that is 80% owned by Ameren).

    With activated carbon injection systems, powdered activated carbon absorbs the oxidized mercury from the flue gas, and the mercury is then collected with the fly ash in the plant’s particulate collection device.

    These initiatives follow the installation of a range of combustion control technologies, like low-nitrogen oxide (NOx) burners that reduce NOx emissions at many of the Illinois plants.

    Between 2001 and 2003, AER’s merchant generation operators also installed selective catalytic reduction units at both plants, and in 2003, a selective catalytic reduction unit was installed at the E. D. Edwards Plant in Bartonville, Ill.

    Designed to significantly reduce NOx emissions, selective catalytic reduction breaks down NOx present in the exhaust gases into elemental benign nitrogen and water.

    “We continue to invest in environmental improvements as we strive to lead the way to a secure energy future,” Naslund added.

    “At AER, we remain committed to finding new approaches to reducing emissions, while keeping costs as low as possible so that we can remain competitive in the marketplace and improve the environment we all share.”

    Ameren’s non-rate-regulated operations include AER’s Ameren Energy Generating Company’s and Ameren Energy Resources Generating Company’s six coal-fired plants plus multiple natural gas-fired units.

    In addition, AER includes Ameren Energy Medina Valley Cogen L.L.C., which operates a natural gas-fired facility in Mossville, Ill., and Ameren Energy Marketing Company (AEM).

    AEM is responsible for the marketing and trading portfolios of 11 generating facilities in Illinois and Missouri. AEM serves the power needs of utilities, municipalities, electric cooperatives, energy aggregators, business customers and financial institutions.

    With assets of approximately $24 billion, Ameren companies serve 2.4 million electric customers and one million natural gas customers in a 64,000-square-mile area of Missouri and Illinois.


  • SpectraWatt, Now in NY, Gains $12M

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Solar cell manufacturer SpectraWatt, a spinoff from Intel formerly based in Hillsboro, OR, has raised $12 million in equity, debt, and options (out of a $41.4 million offering), according to a regulatory filing. The investors were not disclosed. Last spring, SpectraWatt announced it was moving its headquarters to upstate New York, citing “green business incentives.” The company has since set up offices and manufacturing facilities in Hopewell Junction, NY. Back in June 2008, Intel Capital led an initial $50 million investment in SpectraWatt, and was joined by Cogentrix Energy, PCG Clean Energy and Technology Fund, and Solon AG.







  • Mullen to Relinquish Biogen Idec Reins, Joule to Test Ethanol Tech, Dicerna to Team with Kyowa Hakko Kirin, & More Boston-Area Life Sciences News

    Rebecca Zacks wrote:

    I’ve got a couple weeks’ worth of New England life sciences news to catch you up on, so let’s dive in.

    —Shares of Watertown, MA-based pSivida (NASDAQ: PSDV) jumped more than 50 percent after the company reported its treatment for diabetic macular edema, an eye disorder, did well in a clinical trial. The treatment employs an implant that is placed in the back of the eye and releases a steady dose of the corticosteroid drug fluocinolone acetonide.

    —Ryan caught up with Bill Sims, the CEO of Cambridge, MA-based Joule Biotechnologies, which is out to produce fuels and chemicals with a process that mimics photosynthesis. Sims shared his firm’s plans to build a pilot ethanol production operation in the American southwest and to advance its process for making diesel without using food crops as feedstock or expensive refining techniques.

    —Boston Scientific (NYSE:BSX), the Natick, MA-based medical device giant, agreed to pay $22 million in a civil settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice. The settlement ends the DOJ’s investigation of post-marketing surveys conducted by a Boston Scientific subsidiary, Guidant, before it was acquired by the Natick firm.

    —Watertown, MA-based drug developer Dicerna Pharmaceuticals inked a potentially mammoth deal with Japan-based Kyowa Hakko Kirin. The agreement gives the Japanese firm access to use Dicerna’s RNA-interference-based drug technology against one undisclosed target on cancer cells, in return for $4 million upfront cash, $120 million in potential milestone payments, and royalties. Over time, the partnership could be expanded to cover as many as 10 more drug targets, each with the same financial terms.

    —Cambridge-based Biogen Idec (NASDAQ: BIIB) announced that its CEO, James Mullen, will step down in June after more than 20 years at the company. Mullen and the rest of the Biogen leadership have been the subject of blistering criticism from billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who launched a proxy battle for control of the company’s board last May. A spokesman said that pressure from shareholders was not a factor in Mullen’s decision to step down.

    Ryan profiled the efforts of Newton, MA-based AesRx to bring its experimental treatment for sickle cell disease into clinical trials. The startup’s founder, Stephen Seiler—the former CEO of Cambridge -based Idera Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:IDRA) has used his own money to support the company so far, and is now looking to raise about $10 million in venture capital.







  • Oregon Scientific Wireless Appliance Manager Measures How Much Juice You Lose [Energy]

    The Oregon Scientific Wireless Appliance Manager consists of two devices: a wireless transmitter that sits between an appliances plug and an outlet, and a display unit that then tells you just how much juice it’s using.

    The simple device comes in two flavors: the basic Wireless Appliance Manager, which handles one appliance, and the Advanced Wireless Appliance Manager, for the truly obsessive, which can handle up to 8 transmitters at once.

    The single-appliance version will run you $60, while the fancy version will run you $80 (plus more for extra transmitters, one assumes). [Oregon Scientific]







  • Verdiem Nabs $4.7M To Help Make Computers Use Less Energy

    Verdiem
    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    Verdiem, the Seattle-based developer of software that helps computers use less energy, has raised $4.7 million in new equity financing out of a round that could be worth as much as $5.9 million, according to a regulatory filing.

    The filing doesn’t say who is pumping in the new capital, although it says eight investors have participated in the round, and the filing lists the same five directors on the board that are profiled on the Verdiem website. A spokesman for the company didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    My colleague Greg Huang has reported on the growth at Verdiem, most recently in August, when it said it reached a milestone of having its software installed on one million desktop computers. Verdiem was founded in 2001, and is led by CEO Jeremy Jaech, the co-founder of Aldus, Visio, and Trumba. The Verdiem software, as Greg has described, is supposed to help big companies cut their energy bills by offering simple features like automatically turning off computers when they’re not in use, and turning them back on when they need to install software updates. Back in August, the company said more than 300 corporations, government agencies, and universities had used the software, and slashed their PC energy costs by 30 to 60 percent.

    Verdiem’s board of directors includes Jaech; Mark Silverman of Catamount Ventures; Trevor Traina, an entrepreneur and private investor; Ted Schlein of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers; and John Laing, a technology executive.







  • Horizon Technologies to debut desktop hydrogen generator at CES

    horizon hydrofill_1

    Eco Factor: Portable hydrogen generating device.

    Horizon Fuel Cell Technologies made waves in 2006 when the company launched the first hydrogen-powered educational toy car. The company has some big plans for this year’s CES with the launch of the first portable desktop hydrogen generator being unveiled.

    (more…)

  • 2010 Venture Capital Oscar Predictions

    Michael A. Greeley wrote:

    Even though Oscar buzz is not yet in the air, it is pretty clear what film titles will rule in 2010. So sit back, grab your popcorn…the envelopes please.

    Precious: The statuette goes to this film about the Greenback, which continues to be really hard to come by. The venture industry weathered a swift-yet-painful contraction in 2009, which shows little sign of letting up. In 2008, the U.S. venture capital industry raised nearly $30 billion; although the 2009 data are yet to be compiled, it appears that last year the industry will have raised less than $15 billion—which may be the new annual reality. For entrepreneurs, this contraction will continue to make capital precious and hard to access.

    New England-based companies raised nearly $3 billion in 2008; my guess is that this number will look closer to $2 billion in 2009. The New England Venture Capital Association, which I currently chair, had 138 dues-paying members two years ago; right now, we have 108 members. Fortunately for New England, more than 20 percent of all venture capital is managed by firms based in Massachusetts.

    It’s Complicated: The star of this film: the local business environment, which will continue to be tricky to navigate. While there is abundant innovation and a number of high-quality entrepreneurs in the market, it is hard to handicap which compelling and profitable investment themes will emerge. Last year investors thought 2009 was going to be the “year of cleantech,” but instead of (global) warming, that investment theme seemed to have cooled. I continue to see great opportunities in the convergence of the IT and life sciences sectors, which New England is uniquely positioned to exploit. There are also wonderful opportunities in cloud computing and with new advertising technologies, but all of this is complicated by the absolute dearth of liquidity.

    2012: And the Academy is pleased to recognize this blockbuster, which unfortunately may portend that the real economic recovery is still a few years away. All of us are desperate for predictable, sustainable, and meaningful liquidity. Many of our portfolio companies are at a point of maturity, where in more normal times they would either go public or be sold at attractive M&A prices. Average holding periods have extended to more than eight years, which is unprecedented; normally VC’s expect this to be between four and six years. There will be around a dozen venture-backed IPOs in 2009; this would be closer to 100 in more normal years.

    And honorable mentions go to….

    In the Air: This flick recognizes that all of us will have to work much harder this upcoming year just to stay in place!

    Blind Side: Although this title better describes how we all felt (blind-sided, to be more exact) in the fall of 2008, we should expect that there well may be additional economic shocks as we collectively crawl out of this turmoil.









  • WRI’s Jonathan Lash to Brief Journalists on Environmental “Stories to Watch” for 2010

    WHAT: For the seventh straight year, Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, will hold a briefing for journalists to preview key environmental issues to watch this year.

    WHEN: Thursday, January 7, 2010
    9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. EST
    Presentation and Q-and-A Session
    (Continental Breakfast will be served at 9 a.m.)

    WHERE: National Press Club
    First Amendment Room
    529 14th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20045
    (Metro: Red, Orange and Blue Lines to Metro Center)

    WHO: Jonathan Lash, president, World Resources Institute

    WHY: Will the Copenhagen Accord be implemented and, if so, how? With the help of the “London Challenge” and other initiatives, how much is the long-neglected potential for forest restoration beginning to change? Are SEC laws relating to climate change likely to be enforced due to the financial crisis? What options do the EPA and Congress have for reducing CO2, and who will provide federal leadership? What environmental and political factors will come into play as China focuses on implementing its 40 percent to 45 percent target to reduce carbon intensity? What progress is Congress making on a bill to limit Chesapeake Bay pollution?

    Jonathan Lash has a strong record of working closely with CEOs of major corporations, members of Congress and the White House, and leaders from countries worldwide. He is a unique and trusted voice from the environmental NGO community for these leaders, and journalists can benefit from his insight for their future stories on issues ranging from climate and business action to water and forests.

    Rolling Stone called him a “climate warrior and hero,” recognizing him for bridging the divide between industry and environmental leaders. He was named one of the world’s Top 100 Most Influential People in Finance by Treasury & Risk Management magazine, and was the only leader of a non-profit environmental organization to make the list.

    A former co-chair of President Clinton’s Council on Sustainable Development and secretary of natural resources in Vermont, Lash currently serves on the advisory board of Generation Investment Management, on the GE Ecomagination Advisory Council, and as a leader of the United States Climate Action Partnership.

    RSVP: Paul Mackie, WRI director of media relations, +1(202) 729-7684, pmackie@wri.org
    Jessica Forres, WRI media officer, +1(202) 729-7684, jforres@wri.org

  • North Sea countries come together for a green energy ‘supergrid’

    european supergrid

    Eco Factor: Renewable energy supergrid to be developed in Europe.

    Several North Sea countries have come together to develop a renewable energy supergrid that will connect wind farms across the north coast of Scotland, vast arrays of solar panels across Germany and hydro-electric dams located in Norway’s fjords.

    (more…)

  • Nine European Countries to Build an Electricity Grid that Will Link Renewable Energy Projects Around North Sea 2010

    800px-Dünenübergang_Juist

    2010Jan3: Germany, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Denmark, Sweden, Ireland, and the UK, announce plans to build an electricity grid that will link renewable energy projects (i.e., wind, solar, hydro, geothermal) around the North Sea. The grid would link thousands of kilometers of highly efficient undersea cables and could cost about €30bn (Guardian.co.uk).

    Reference: Guardian.co.uk http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/jan/03/european-unites-renewable-energy-supergrid

    Image Description: Dünenübergang im Norden der ostfriesischen Nordseeinsel Juist in Niedersachsen, Germany. Photo by 4028mdk09, 2009Oct5. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:D%C3%BCnen%C3%BCbergang_Juist.JPG Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License. In short: you are free to share and make derivative works of the file under the conditions that you appropriately attribute it, and that you distribute it only under a license identical to this one.

  • It’s the Start of the New Year, the Start of the New Decade, and the Start of My Sixties. Some Simple Strategies for Staying Healthy and Happy. At Least I Can Hope!

    Bluezones

    Author Dan Buettner has scoured the Earth — not for the fabled Fountain
    of Youth — but for the key to a happy old age. He spent five years
    visiting areas of the world where people tend to live longer, healthier
    lives, areas he calls "Blue Zones."

    Buettner says he has identified four things people can do that can
    potentially increase life expectancy:

    • Create an environment that
      encourages physical activity
    • Set up your kitchen in such a way that
      you're not overeating
    • Cultivate a sense of purpose 
    • Surround
      yourself with the right people.

    "These are long-term fixes that have been shown over and over to add not only more years of life, but better years of life."

    -NPR story, "Can 'Blue Zones' Help Turn Back the Biological Clock?", June 8, 2008-

    If you're reading this through via email, click here to get to the more readable web-version.

    It's the start of the New Year. 

    It's the start of a new decade.

    It's the day I turn sixty.

    Look, I'm not a big-birthday-celebration-kind-of-person.  They come and go and I don't even think about the years.  But turning 60 is different.  It's the last quarter of life, with no guarantees on what that quarter is going to look like.

    Judging by my parents–that last quarter of life doesn't look so promising.  Which is exactly why I've been paying attention to exercise and eating right since I turned 30. 

    That's when my dad had one of those massive debilitating strokes that left him unable to communicate, unable to read or fully understand speech, and eventually unable to walk or do anything.  He was 69 at the time–just when he was getting ready to kick back a little, work a little less, travel, and just enjoy life.  He spent 16 years living in this kind of post-stroke-limbo-state, spiraling downward.

    My mom was 62 at the time, and my dad's stroke changed her life in an instant.  One minute she was planning all the trips they'd finally have a chance to take–and enjoying their new role as grandparents–and in the next she was jockeying the world of wheelchairs and therapists.

    With the stress of full-time care-giving, and years of no exercise or attention to diet, by 72 she had developed severe coronary artery blockages, hypertension, kidney stones, and painful spinal fractures.  Then came the mini-strokes that finally added up to vascular dementia in her eighties.

    And unfortunately, this scenario is all too common.  "[M]ost elderly Americans – more than two-thirds of current 65-year-olds, according to a detailed 2005 projection by a team of health policy analysts — at some point will need assistance to cope with daily living, either paid help or unpaid, at home or in a facility."

    So, sixty seems kind of scary to me.

    Which is exactly why I'm ready for a more "Conscious Aging" plan.  We already have all the evidence we need to stay healthy.  It's not about adding more years to our lives.  It's all about adding more life to our years!

    Just a sampling of the evidence.

    • The 52 country INTERHEART study was very clear.  There are 9 easy-to-modify risk factors that are associated with 90% of heart disease.  This was a huge study–30,000 people from every inhabited country–and the results were the same for all races, all sexes, all countries.  All 9 of these risk factors are within our control–and would eliminate 90% of heart disease, regardless of one's genetics. 1. Keep lipids (cholesterol & triglycerides) down; 2. Stop smoking; 3. Prevent or control hypertension; 4. Prevent or control diabetes; 5.  Reduce belly fat; 6.  Find ways to control psychological and social stressors; 7. Increase fruit and vegetable consumption; 8.  Moderate alcohol consumption is protective; 9. Get regular physical exercise   Lancet 364:937-952, Sept. 11, 2004.
    • The Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study.  "The largest and longest study to date, done as part of the Harvard-based Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study, included almost 110,000 men and women whose dietary habits were followed for 14 years.  The higher the average daily intake of fruits and vegetables, the lower the chances of developing cardiovascular disease…[F]or every extra serving of fruits and vegetables that participants added to their diets, their risk of heart disease dropped by 4%." Harvard School of Public Health
    • The China Study.  This is Dr. T. Colin Campbell's mammoth 2006 study on the effects of a plant-based diet on health–citing over 750 studies.  The conclusion: People who ate the most-animal-based foods got the most chronic disease.  People who ate the most plant-based foods were the healthiest and tended to avoid chronic disease.  According to Campbell, "Good nutrition supported by exercise, clean water, and sunshine is greater than the sum of its parts.  It's a biological symphony.  My introduction to Dr. T. Colin Campbell
    • The Longevity Personality.  From the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, April 2009 comes this conclusion: Those who live the longest are more outgoing, more active, more easy-going, more empathetic, and more agreeable than those who live a normal life span. The Blue Zones calls it, "likeability".

    Here's My Strategy for Staying Out-of-Trouble After Sixty

    Some of these are long-time habits, and they're easy for me to follow.  Some of these I don't do as regularly as I should.  Some of these are new goals.  But this much I do know:  If I don't have a plan, if I don't do these consciously, and if I don't carve out time to make them happen–they won't.

    1.  Stick with 7-9 servings of fruits and vegetables a day.  The Green Smoothies make it easy.  I get 6 servings in a 27 ounce Klean Kanteen that I divide over breakfast and an afternoon snack.  I calculated the nutritional info on my daily 27 ounce serving that includes, 2 1/2 cups kale, 8 mini-carrots, 1/2 cup pomegranate juice, 1/2 apple, 1/2 orange, 1/2 kiwi, and 3/4 cup frozen black raspberries.  Check out the nutrient content for 27 ounces:

    Nutrition Facts
    The Healthy Librarian's
    Green Smoothie-kale,blackberries,carrots,orange,kiwi,pom juice,apple
    Serving Size: 1 serving
    Amount Per Serving
    Calories 342
    Total Fat 2.2g
          Saturated Fat 0.2g
          Trans Fat 0g
    Cholesterol 0mg
    Sodium 140mg
    Carbohydrate 82.1g
          Dietary Fiber 13.8g
          Sugars 49.1g
    Protein 8.9g
    Vitamin A 729% Vitamin C 485%
    Calcium    35% Iron 28%

    Then throw in some veggie-based soup, a salad, a veggie-based dinner entree, some fruit for dessert, and I'm good to go. 

    This eating plan is the same as the DASH Diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension)–guaranteed to stop hypertension.  The Cache
    County (Utah) Study
    on Memory shows it also prevents cognitive decline.   Dr. Amy Lanou and Michael Castleman, authors of Building Bone Vitality claim it will build and strengthen bones–because the 17 nutrients necessary to build strong bones are all found in a diet high in fruits and vegetables.

    2.  A balanced exercise plan.  It's not just about cardio–there are 4 areas that need attention: Cardio (spinning-my fave), Weight-training, Flexibility & Balance (yoga-my fave), and Core Strength.  No, you can't just walk and think you're in good shape.  I'm super regular with my cardio, and not as regular with the weight training and yoga.  Click here to see what my workout looks like. As for core strength–that's pretty much non-existent.  And when it comes to weight-training, according to Randy Raugh, the Canyon Ranch physical therapist, and author of the excellent Prime for Life–Functional Fitness for Ageless Living–to get the maximum benefits you need to do it for 3 non-consecutive days a week–2 at the minimum.  Unfortunately, I often weight train only 1 day a week.  If you want to build strong bones and prevent osteoporosis, and maintain your muscle strength as you age–weight-bearing exercise for the lower body, and weight-training for the upper body is a must-do!  Yoga, helps with balance, preventing future falls, and building strength.  As for core strength, I'm upping my game with Dr. Stuart McGill's routine, and my birthday-present to myself is the physical therapist-designed Pelvicore exercise ball.

    3.  A plant-based diet with minimal added fat.  I'm nearing the 2 year mark on eating plant-based, so this is the easy part. I've got this down pat. I still use a little olive oil for cooking and in salads, and very occasionally eat some seafood or dairy when eating with friends.  I'm convinced.  If you want to lower your cholesterol, reduce your risk for type-2 diabetes, lower your blood pressure, reduce your risk of heart disease & stroke, and reduce your belly fat–this is the way to go.  Dr. David J. Jenkins of St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto is one of the pre-eminent researchers on the benefits of a plant-based, low-glycemic diet (like beans, nuts, oats,& quinoa) for improving diabetes control, lowering cholesterol, and preventing cardiovascular disease.  Click here for Jenkins research.  And that's not all–keeping your blood sugar stable with low glycemic plant-based foods and exercise will preserve your brain.  Click here.  And as for too much fat–not only is it bad for your belly–it's bad for your brain–so just ditch it Click here.

    4. No time urgency.  This is what keeps the Okinawans calm, relaxed, and living longer.  I'm really working on this one–which goes hand-in-hand with flexibility.  Things don't always go as planned–you either go-with-the-flow or get stressed and anxious.  My favorite 2 words, "Oh well."  Life goes better when you stay in the moment, chill, and don't worry about getting there fast.  When our Christmas Day trip to New York City was aborted because of an ice storm, we checked into a hotel at noon, and enjoyed a dinner of cranberry nut mix, Larabars, Cliff Bars, and clementines.  All the restaurants were closed in this Pennsylvanian town.  Oh well.  We had a good time, and made it to New York safe and sound the next day.

    5. More Dancing, Singing, Laughing, Playing, Schmoozing, and Mahjing.  What's the point of staying healthy without having fun?  That's the reason we work at staying healthy. Cool fact: There's a little organ deep in the ear, called the sacculus–and it gives us a great sense of pleasure and well-being when it's stimulated.  But, it can only be stimulated through singing!  So, bring on the Singstar Karaoke!  Click here.

    6.  The Supplements.  I'm really bad at regularly taking supplements.  I'm good at counting them out, taking them to work, and bringing them back home with me.  Truth is, there are some supplements worth taking because there's no easy way to get enough of them through diet alone.  Here are my favorites:  Omega-3s (I use Omega-Brite), DHA, (an omega-3 for brain health), Magnesium, Citracal, Vitamin D (I'm up to 3000 IUs), Curcumin (also known as turmeric, the yellow color in curry), and Juvenon (the combo of acetyl l-carnitine & alpha lipoic acid) developed by Dr. Bruce Ames.  Click here to read more about what I take, and what some prominent physicians take.  

    7.  Eliminate the time-wasters from my day.  Except for watching "The Middle" or "Glee", TV watching always leaves me bored and unsatisfied.  So, why bother wasting the precious time?  The same goes for my mindless internet cruising, checking in more than necessary with email, the NYT, and other favorite sites.  Enough already!

    8.  Maximize my peak energy times of the day.  Over a year ago I blogged about getting in sync with our natural energy ebb and flow throughout the day.  It works–and I intend to start planning my day around them, when possible.  For instance, 9-11 is the peak time for brain work-creativity-and analytical work.  On days when I don't work I would usually use this time for exercise & errands.  Poor use of brain time.  Better to exercise between 3-6.  To read more, click here:  Maximize Your Energy-Match Your Tasks to Your daily Energy Levels.

    9.  Give a gift a day for 29 days a month.  When 36 year old Cami Walker of LA learned she had multiple sclerosis, her spirits flagged.  She was tired, in pain, and had the prospect of a debilitating disease ahead of her.  When a holistic health educator gave her the prescription of giving 29 gifts a day for a month she thought it sounded it crazy.  Nothing big (and that's the point)–something like making a supportive phone call or saving a piece of yummy cake for her husband.  Of course the prescription didn't cure her,  but it had a startling effect of helping her cope with her illness and gave her a more positive outlook on life.  I love this idea.  It's a planned regular way to just think about kindness.  No big acts, just something little-done everyday.  To read more, click here.

    10. Cultivate my garden of friends and family.  Regular phone calls, visits, dinners, outings, and celebrations.  At 60 there's no time to delay any of these.  It's the glue that keeps us together and makes life worth living.

    11.  Once You're Through Learning–You're Through.  This is the philosophy of John Wooden, the 97-year-old retired UCLA basketball coach.  No doubt about it, learning and sharing what I learn is my purpose in life.  I'm lucky to have a job that gives me access to learning about health and medicine, and a hobby that gives me a chance to share what I learn.

    12.  Start Eating Less.  OK, I'm ready to shed a few pounds, and I know from past experience that writing down exactly what I eat, and how much I've exercised, really works.  I use something called MyFoodDiary.com and it's set up with all my favorite recipes.  Unfortunately, I haven't used it in quite some time.  The new year is a great time to start!  To read more about this tool, click here.

    For some good reasons to eat less, read:  CALERIE: The NIH Calorie-Restriction
    Experiment. Lessons for Health, Slowing Down the Aging Process,
    Longevity, and Disease Prevention
     

    Time to end this list.  I've already maximized my 9-11 brain time and written this post.  It's now time to make my smoothie, do some core exercises, take those supplements, answer birthday phone calls, enjoy a birthday lunch, followed by an evening out with friends who all share the same wedding anniversary–if we can just make it through our foot of snow!

    I'd love to hear from anyone who is 60 or over with advice, tips, and wisdom about maximizing life in the sixties, seventies, and more.



  • Where Are Oil Prices Heading in 2010?

    Alternative-energy companies not only compete with each other, they also compete in a sense with oil firms. While it’s easy to overstate the inverse relationship that oil prices have with the demand for and investment in green companies, it’s also helpful to keep an eye on them.

    So where are oil prices heading now? Higher in […]


  • Siemens puts world’s first 800kV HCDC link into operation in China; More Energy Efficient Power Transmission

    High-Voltage Direct-Current TransmissionIn late December 2009, Siemens Energy and the utility China Southern Power Grid put into operation the first pole of a HVDC system of enormous scale and magnitude: With a transmission capacity of 5000 megawatts (MW) und covering a distance of more than 1400 kilometers the Yunnan-Guangdong high-voltage direct-current transmission system (HVDC) recently is the world’s most powerful of its kind implemented. At the same time it is the first HVDC link operating at a transmission voltage of 800 kilovolts (kV). A high-voltage, direct current (HVDC) electric power transmission system uses direct current for the bulk transmission of electrical power, in contrast with the more common alternating current systems. For long-distance distribution, HVDC systems are less expensive and suffer lower electrical losses.

    Siemens is thus setting new benchmarks in energy-efficient transmission of ecofriendly electricity. Commissioning of the second pole and thus startup of the entire system is scheduled for mid-2010.

    China has raised the DC voltage of its new long-distance HVDC links to 800 kV in order to further reduce transmission losses and to be able to bridge even greater distances. For example, the ecofriendly, CO2-free power generated by several hydro power plants will be transported with low-loss transmission via the new 800-kV HVDC link to the rapidly growing industrial region in the Pearl River delta in Guangdong Province with its megacities Guangzhou and Shenzhen. This high-efficiency HVDC system can reduce annual CO2 emissions by over 30 megatons, which would otherwise have been produced by additional fossil-fueled power plants linked to the interconnected grid in Guangdong Province.

    “Successful commissioning of the first pole of currently the world’s most powerful HVDC system shows that our efforts to get 800-kV HVDC technology ready for concrete projects have paid off. As technology leader in this field we have thus set new benchmarks,“ said Udo Niehage, CEO of the Power Transmission Division of Siemens Energy.

    Together with its Chinese partners Siemens designed the entire HVDC system for the Yunnan-Guangdong project and supplied the core components, which included 800-kV and 600-kV converter transformers, DC filters and 800-kV direct-current components.

  • What’s Your Green Resolution for 2010?

    It’s the time of year when people are making resolutions to lose weight, better manage their finances, better manage their anger, and myriad other things. Is increasing your commitment to environmental sustainability on that list?

    As I wrote in my very first post for The Inspired Economist in the fall of 2008, the neat thing about committing to environmental sustainability is that you don’t have to make extreme changes to make a difference. You don’t have to install hemp carpet in the office or replace your roof with solar panels.

    If we all make small incremental changes, the difference will be exponential. It’s a lot easier to get a lot of people to make small changes than to rely on a few people to carry the entire load.

    What small, incremental changes can you pledge to make this year? Here are a few ideas.

    Read more of this story »

  • 12 Binaural Beats Mp3 Audios – Motivation | Energy | Relaxation | Life.

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    12 Binaural Beats Mp3 Audios – Motivation | Energy | Relaxation | Life.

  • Readers’ Picks: Xconomy San Diego’s Top 5 Stories of 2009

    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    There are many differences between this new world of online media and the old world of ink-on-paper that I used to inhabit. So many, in fact, that sometimes I feel like the earthling in the blockbuster “Avatar” who must take archery lessons and learn how to live in an alien culture.

    One of the most important differences, though, is that Web-based technologies make it possible nowadays to measure exactly how many people view every story we publish. This can be a humbling experience, and it tends to upend some of those old-world media sensibilities that decreed by front-page fiat that certain stories—like lima beans—are important for readers to digest, whether they like them or not.

    So, with the end of 2009 drawing near, I can share some of the stories that attracted the most traffic over the past year at Xconomy San Diego site. I have listed them below, ranked according to popularity, so think of them in a way as Xconomy’s “People’s Choice Awards.” It’s a mixed bag, for sure, which suggests perhaps that we’re appealing to a diverse audience with a variety of interests in our coverage of what we like to call “the exponential economy.” Which is a way of saying, you know, when the facts speak for themselves, what else can an editor to do but interpret and analyze?

    The Untold Story of SAIC, Network Solutions, and the Rise of the Web

    This story was No. 1by a long shot. SAIC, the defense contractor that specializes in IT integration, research, and engineering projects, has maintained a low profile since it was founded in San Diego in 1969. So the story behind SAIC’s 1995 acquisition of Network Solutions Inc., which held exclusive rights to register Internet domain names was not widely known. Looking back, former SAIC executive Mike Daniels told me: “Nobody really understood that NSI basically had an exclusive contract to sell dot-com, dot-net, and dot-org to every human being on the planet…”

    San Diego’s Stem Cell Startup Reports Hair-Regrowth Results

    The bald truth is many people are yearning for information about new biomedical innovations with the potential to redress an age-old inequity—some people have hair and some don’t. San Diego-based Histogen, which was founded to develop a variety of medical therapies that use stem cells, reported in February that results of an overseas study of its ReGenica treatment for hair growth were encouraging. But a patent infringement lawsuit filed by SkinMedica, a Carlsbad, CA-rival, triggered a funding crisis and forced Histogen to lay off its entire workforce.

    Arena Eagerly Awaits Answer to $1Billion Question: Does it Have a Big Time Obesity Drug?

    Sometimes readers show more interest of the story published in advance of a big news announcement than in the announcement itself. That may have been the case with San Diego’s Arena Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: ARNA) in reporting the final results of a clinical trial for its experimental weight-loss pill, lorcaserin. The subsequent results were encouraging enough for Arena to file a new drug application earlier this week with the Food and Drug Administration.

    San Diego Biofuels Industry Gains Steam With R&D Consortium

    As a journalist, it’s always great to get the big scoop before the rest of the pack.In the case of the formation of the San Diego Center for Algae Biotechnology, I broke this story about four months before the official announcement. Steve Kay, the dean of Biological Sciences at UC San Diego, told me in January that SD-CAB was being organized as a consortium of academic and industry researchers, and represented a regional effort to establish a sustainable algae biofuels industry here in the next five to 10 years. When the formation of SD-CAB was officially announced on April 28, Cleantech San Diego chairman Jim Waring said, “Maybe someday, if the history of algae is ever written, this will be remembered as the day when it all started.”

    La Jolla Pharmaceutical Stock Crashes After Drug Fails in Pivotal Clinical Trial

    Luke’s breaking news story about the failed clinical trial of Riquent, a drug developed by San Diego’s La Jolla Pharmaceutical, noted that the announcement wiped out almost 90 percent of the San Diego-based company’s stock value. It also marked the beginning of a series of Xconomy stories that chronicled the layoffs, liquidation plan, and eventual merger of La Jolla Pharmaceutical with Adamis Pharmaceuticals of Del Mar, CA, earlier this month.