PickensPlan

Linda N

Break the Cycle of Energy Dependence

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Break the Cycle of Energy Dependence

Group of people who are willing to bike (as in bicycle) twice a year (less than 100 miles) to bring PR attention to The Picken's Plan. Second week in October and Second Week in April. We will bike to our state capitals - ALL 50!

Members: 26
Latest Activity: Jun 21

Dates for 2009

April 14, 2009
October 13, 2009

If you can not cycle on Tuesday, please choose an alternate day during that week.
Watch this page for more info.

General Goals:
Decorate your bike to promote the Pickens Plan
Pick a local spokesperson (Email me if you will be that grass-roots spokes person)
Cycle to your local government offices. HEAD TO YOUR STATE CAPITAL IF YOU CAN!
Hold a press conference...talk about Pickens Plan (see Pickens U for good subjects.
On your way, stop at gas staions, convience stores, etc and sign-up more people for the energy army!

Discussion Forum

Gary Revere

Help...

Started by Gary Revere Dec. 12, 2008.

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Bill Mollring Comment by Bill Mollring on February 16, 2009 at 7:21am
ubject: VBine contact info & WSM Marketing info
> To: "Bill Mollring"
> Date: Wednesday, February 11, 2009, 11:36 AM
> David Koyle
> >> Franklin Wind Energy Group LLC
> >> PO Box 250 092
> >> Franklin
> >> MI, 48025
> >> (248) 626 9012 O
> >> (248) 866 1425 M
> >> _www.franklinwindenergygroup.com_
>
> >> (http://www.franklinwindenergygroup.com/)
>
> >> dkoyle@franklinwindenergygroup.com
> WSM Marketing Group
Bill Mollring
>
> WSM Marketing Group
> 177 Webster Street #437
or502 North McKenna Ave # 6
Gretna, NE 68028
177 Webster Street #437
> Monterey, CA 93940
> mrbillmaui@yahoo.com
P O Box 1366
Kihei, HI 96753
> 831 402-2037 (C)
> 402 896-8628 (fax)
>
> 402 884-2217 (O)

To Watch VBine Video go to:
ww.franklinwindenergygroup.com

Click on "contacts"
Go to "VBine Energy" and see the video.
Eric Koch Comment by Eric Koch on January 25, 2009 at 8:36am
Choosing What Cities Will Look Like in a World Without Oil

http://www. worldchanging. com/archives/009304. html

Choosing What Our Cities Will Look Like in a World Without Oil

Sarah Kuck

As we draw nearer to reaching the point of Peak Oil, it benefits us to imagine what our cities will look like in a world without oil.
Does this conjure up images of cities turned into urban farms just to produce enough food for us all? Do we devote all our energy to growing, bartering and trading the food we grow? Or will the city become divided, with the wealthy moving to the center while higher costs of living force lower-income families to the outer-ring suburbs, where access to goods, services and transport will be limited?

If we start now, we can choose what we want our cities to look like in the future. We can make them the resilient, sustainable centers of culture, justice, art and creativity that we hope they will become.


Author and Professor Peter Newman is asking us to imagine and then get to work building these urban centers. His book and talk, both titled Resilient Cities: Responding to Peak Oil and Climate Change, ask audiences to honestly look at what will happen to our cities when we reach Peak Oil. During his 90 minute presentation last night at Seattle's City Hall, Newman explained to the full house how peak oil will soon change reality as we know it; and how if we choose to make it so, we can take this challenge as our opportunity to create a functional, just and sustainable world.


Picturing a future where we do nothing resulted in some frightening scenarios: ones where we are barely getting by and injustice is running rampant. But, as Newman explained, picturing a future in which we respond to the challenge by building resilient cities results in images of a flexible and supportive, flourishing society.


In order to build the new resilient city of the future, Newman said that “we need to stop building extra urban road capacity and urban scatter; we need to start building electric renewable cities with much greater localism in the economy and infrastructure.


“We need both at the same time," Newman said. "Or they will undermine what we need to do together.


Here are a few exceptional points, summarized from Newman's worldchanging presentation:

End Agglomeration Diseconomies
The freeway is a failed technology. Freeways don’t actually ultimately help people get where they want to go any faster; they simply scatter people and economies. Freeways fail as public spaces; as infrastructure, they are dinosaurs. Their impact on cities is not good for economics or people. So we should stop building them. We should instead organize and advocate for rail systems so we can reclaim and rehabilitate our open spaces. Car-dependent cities can begin to reclaim freeways by investing in rail transit and building up local economies around station hubs.


Density, Walkability and Affordable Housing
High quality, high rise developments in the city will increase walkability, and decrease the number of trips taken by car. These developments will function best if developers work in partnership with land use planners. To end the division and disagreements that high density development creates, we have to require all developments to allot 15 percent of space to social housing, and require 5 percent of the value of a development to go toward social infrastructure, like landscaped open-to-the-public space, public art, community centers, schools, arts facilities.


Complete Streets, Smart Grids
Cars won’t go away completely, even though the oil we currently use to power them will. The cars of the future will run on alternatively produced electricity. We can link the extra energy produced from solar and wind production systems to the batteries in our cars with Smart Grids. These energy linking systems help buildings and transportation power each other. (Read more about Smart Grids on Worldchanging here and here.
)

Eco-villages colonizing the fringe
Build eco-villages on the outskirts of the urban ring. Built with their own water, power and sewage systems, we can turn the crumbling suburbs into self sustaining eco-communities of the future.


What We Need to do Now
Newman gave vibrant examples of each of these ideas happening in cities all over the world, from Seoul to London, Copenhagen to Vancouver, B.C., these cities are proving that this is possible.
All we need now, said Newman, is imagination, post oil strategies, partnerships and demonstrations, and above all HOPE!

Let’s get to work.
Eric Koch Comment by Eric Koch on January 14, 2009 at 10:23am
Copy,Paste,and Send to everyone you know.

America is sitting on an amazing untapped wind resource,the wind corridor that stretches from Texas to North Dakota...our population is stabilized but our agricultural lands are devastated from decades of food exports.

with bio-char production as dump load regulation,in conjunction with power storage solutions the wind power capacity can go in at an astounding rate...the wind fixes the soil ,the soil sequesters the carbon and gives life......our entire world is unsustainable as is, and the changes required don't stop there...what will it take to get you out of your arm chair?

Mr.Pickens is out of his....and i'm sure as hell not going to tell him to sit down.

http://action.pickensplan.com
Eric Koch Comment by Eric Koch on January 6, 2009 at 9:43am
Hey,...some one who hasn't started a group, should start a group called......Pedestrians for reducing dependence on foreign oil....i'll join right away.
Eric Koch Comment by Eric Koch on December 22, 2008 at 10:52am
hahahahaaaa....yeah,likely so.
Dave Burnside Comment by Dave Burnside on December 22, 2008 at 6:25am
Toll bike roads...neat idea...pay to play...it must of been an Illinois export project :)

willofwill
Eric Koch Comment by Eric Koch on December 22, 2008 at 4:37am
I'm not shure actually...i remember riding on the trail as a 7-8 year old for the first time.....almost makes me feel like diging up the history on it...alot of maintainence and improvements have been done since then,paid for by patrons, as a toll is collected at entry points.
Dave Burnside Comment by Dave Burnside on December 22, 2008 at 3:18am
Great ideas Eric! Visibility and repetition! Madison sounds really friendly to bikers....that's great, were local leaders acitve and receptive or was it pesistence that "paved" the way?...
Eric Koch Comment by Eric Koch on December 18, 2008 at 10:49am
Commence Anarchy!!!!

find your place in the future...(any one who thinks someone else is going to do it for them is dead weight)...if nothing else..get the message out.


..Big turbines+big wind = bang/buck. leave the NG in the electrical power pie and promote people powered people transport and community NEV cargo fleets for grid blasting,and pv installations for reduced grid load.use excess capacity as an opportunity to phase out old,non-combined cycle, coal plants. wile phasing in ETT maglev to replace continental flights and interstate traffic.


stop at one consider none = less mouths to feed..(no time for day care or labor/delivery here)

suburban conversion project....suburban basements are reconfigured to earth sheltered green houses for food production..garages become houses with reconstruction leftovers....cold climates get south facing glazings at Latitude +21 degrees...two runs of 6' culvert pipe between basement and garage for thermal transfer.
Clint G. Salisbury Comment by Clint G. Salisbury on December 17, 2008 at 8:33am
I'm in--13 degrees in SLC so glad waiting until April.
 

Members (24)

Gary Revere US Web Talk Radio Mike Johnston Eric Koch Bill Tucker Michael, Houston Renee Klink Clint G. Salisbury Micah Lauer Mike Pickens Dave Burnside Dr Simon Harding jackinthegreen DavidinCalifornia warren F. Andrew Pickens Lainey Howard Bill Mollring Brandon Jordan Jeff Campbell jeffrey campbell Kimberly J Gray Marcell Walls Michael Simon
 
 

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