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Archive for the ‘Smart Grid’ Category

Franklin, NJ: Solar Energy System Project

Tuesday, July 10th, 2012

– GeoPeakEnergy on YouTube

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Charging Forward: The Emergence of Electric Vehicles and Their Role in Reducing Oil Consumption

Tuesday, July 10th, 2012

ENVIRONMENT AMERICA
America’s reliance on gasoline-powered vehicles has long contributed to air pollution, including global warming emissions, and our nation’s dependence on oil. In the past decade, however, the automobile market has begun to change, integrating new technologies that are dramatically less dependent on gasoline. Hybrid electric vehicles, powered in part by energy stored in a battery, have become increasingly popular.

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Lighting the Green Revolution: The Rise of LEDs and What it Means for Cities

Tuesday, July 3rd, 2012

THE CLIMATE GROUP
Efficient lighting in our homes, offices and city streets is a key part of the Clean Revolution – a swift and massive scaling up of clean technologies to create a safe climate, boost economic growth, and secure a prosperous future for all.

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Gearing Up: Smart Standards Create Good Jobs Building Cleaner Cars

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

BLUEGREEN ALLIANCE
These proposed standards would reach the equivalent of 54.5 miles per gallon (mpg) and 163 grams of carbon dioxide per mile (g/mi) for the average new vehicle in 2025. Hereafter we refer to these proposed joint fuel economy and greenhouse gas pollution standards simply as “the proposed standards.” In this report, we analyze the macroeconomic impacts of the proposed standards with particular attention to the net gain in U.S. employment.

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Vantage, WA: Wild Horse Wind Farm

Monday, May 28th, 2012

This video was taken during a Puget Sound Mini road rally on August 28 2010 – From Issaquah WA to Wild Horse Wind Farm in Vantage WA. This video just pans back and forth to show the wind mills (turbines) at this facility. Each one is more than 300 feet tall and generates enough electricity […]

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Smart Buildings: Ten Trends to Watch in 2012 and Beyond

Monday, May 28th, 2012

PIKE RESEARCH
The smart building industry has been busy over the last few years. Advances in technology that make it easier to manage energy have considerably broadened the energy conversation, engaging not just facility managers, but also CEOs and CFOs. Although the effects of the global economic recession are still felt throughout the building and construction industries, technology vendors and integrators have continued to uncover new opportunities to improve energy efficiency in the existing building stock. The potential for energy efficiency has hardly been tapped even today.

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Salt Lake City, UT: Solar Panel Construction Time Lapse at the Natural History Museum of Utah

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

http://www.facebook.com/frostjeffIn December of 2011 I was commissioned to do a time lapse film of the solar panel installation at the brand new Natural History Museum of Utah in Salt Lake City by green energy company, S Power (http://www.spower.com). This film was shot during all of December; only taking one single day off, Christmas (but only […]

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Greening the Grid

Monday, May 14th, 2012

Part of Climate Desk’s future energy series, this video looks at how real-time pricing can modernize the biggest machine on Earth. –ClimateDesk on YouTube.

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Failure to Act: The Economic Impact of Current Investment Trends in Electricity Infrastructure

Friday, May 4th, 2012

AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS
This report illustrates the importance of electric power generation, transmission and distribution systems to the national economy. The analysis performed focuses on a trend scenario that presumes the mix of electricity generation technologies (e.g. electricity generation from oil, natural gas, coal, nuclear, hydro, wind, solar) continues to evolve as reflected in recent trends, including a long-term evolution towards smart grid technologies.

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Preliminary Analysis of the Jobs and Economic Impacts of Renewable Energy Projects

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

NATIONAL RENEWABLE ENERGY LABORATORY
Historically, federal incentives for renewable energy development in the United States largely consisted of the investment and production tax credits (ITC and PTC) and the accelerated depreciation benefit for renewable energy property [the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) and the bonus depreciation]. Both the ITC and the PTC provide financial incentives for development of renewable energy projects in the form of tax credits that can be used to offset taxes paid on company profits.

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