Utilities Going Small
/Last month in Rio de Janeiro, I spoke at a conference of the non-profit Global Sustainable Electricity Partnership (GSEP), which may be the most disruptive and subversive organization you’ve probably never heard of.
Read MoreLast month in Rio de Janeiro, I spoke at a conference of the non-profit Global Sustainable Electricity Partnership (GSEP), which may be the most disruptive and subversive organization you’ve probably never heard of.
Read MoreFor nearly half a century, homeowners and utilities have mounted solar panels on rooftops and in massive generation projects in the desert.
Read MoreBy now you’ve heard about the epic drought threatening every California water user, from almond growers to swimming pool owners, resulting in mandatory cutbacks and ostracism from neighbors for being the last on the block with a green lawn.
Read MoreSenate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) recently urged states to join those already “refusing to go along” with USEPA regulations that would cut air pollution from coal fired power plants.
Read MoreI just spent a week at the 15th Annual Delhi Sustainable Development Summit in India, a four-day eco-extravaganza for hundreds of participants from government, business, academics, and community organizations.
Read MoreThink how quickly we evolved from landline phones, that took weeks to install, to cellphones that take a few minutes to buy and activate.
Read MoreChina and the US announced a substantial policy down payment on tackling greenhouse gas emissions in Beijing this week.
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It was fitting that New York hosted the recent UN climate change summit for several reasons. Let’s start with the old joke about the guy who jumps off the Empire State Building and, as he passes the 50th floor on this way down, is heard to say “so far so good.” But the pavement, that is looming larger by the minute to our clueless friend, is about to smack all of us in the face.
Read MoreThank goodness the graduation season is finally over. I witnessed pomp and circumstance at prep schools from Orlando to the Napa Valley and at colleges from Los Angeles to the Ivy League. The surprising topic at all of these cap-and-gown fests? Endowments divesting their holdings in fossil fuel companies.
Read MoreAny American civics lesson includes the “balance of powers” of our government among its three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial.
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What do you get Mother Earth on her big day (reminder: it’s April 22nd!)?
Read MoreOverheard at the water cooler this week:
Tom: Sally, did you know we can solve climate change for as little as $35 per person?
Sally: I’m afraid that’s a waste of my money, Tom.
Read MoreEver hear of a reality show called “Snake Salvation?”
Me neither, until one of the serpent-handling co-stars was bit last month by a snake during a church service and later died.
Read MoreAs the confetti is swept away and the world gets back to work, will 2014 be a banner year or will we be singing that “old acquaintance be forgot and never brought to mind” a year from now?
Read MoreLegend says that naughty kids get a lump of coal in their Christmas stocking, so do nice kids get clean energy in theirs, at least metaphorically speaking?
Read MoreInventor and futurist Ray Kurzweil predicts that before mid-century the exponential acceleration of information technologies, robotics, medical science, and artificial intelligence will result in a “singularity”, a point at which humans will essentially merge with their technology.
Ten years ago this week, Arnold Schwarzenegger was elected governor of California and he appointed me to be the Secretary of the California Environmental Protection Agency.
Read MoreLast year Americans spent $65billion on lottery tickets. In some games, the odds of winning have been compared to the probability of being struck by lightning while sinking a hole-in-one.
Read MoreGlobal population hit 7 billion well ahead of most predictions. The UN now forecasts that we will share the planet - - and its increasingly scarce natural resources - - with about 10 billion fellow humans by 2050.
Read MoreLast week Arnold Schwarzenegger, chairman of the R20 Regions of Climate Action, signed an agreement in Algeria to address waste and sustainable energy challenges in the Mediterranean and North Africa. At the same time, a meeting of officials in Bahrain examined technologies and strategies to help that nation evolve into one of the most energy and water efficient economies in the world. Are there lessons in those examples for the U.S. now that President Obama has reignited the debate over climate change policy?
Read MoreSeventh Generation Advisors puts into modern practice the ancient Native American philosophy that the decisions we make today should result in a sustainable world seven generations into the future. Ensuring that decisions being made about our energy, water, and natural resources are sustainable is central to this belief and to our mission.