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GreenForAll

This is a group where everyone can get together to organize and discuss ways to bring competitive green jobs mainstream for millions of Americans. Together we can get private industry and government to cooperate and push this through! NEW UPDATE!

Website: http://www.greenforall.org/
Members: 246
Latest Activity: Oct 31

Group updates


Resources for Green Entreprenuers Ecoprenuers, I have some great info for you! Whether you already have your own company or you're interested in starting one, I have something to help you out! Enjoy!
Book: 75 Green Businesses You Can Start to Make Money and Make a Difference
Author: Glenn Croston
Published: August 1, 2008

Buy it here: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1599181800/greenbizcomA


Book: Going Green: Outstanding Green Business Practices
Author: PR News
Published: July 30, 2008

Buy it here: http://www.prnewsonline.com/store/13.html


Book: Green Manufacturing: Case Studies in Lean and Sustainability
Author: Association for Manufacturing Excellence
Published: November 12, 2007

Buy it here: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1563273896/greenbizcomA


Book: Ethical Markets: Growing the Green Economy
Author: Hazel Henderson
Published: August 2, 2007

Buy it here: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1933392231/greenbizcomA


Book: The Plot to Save the Planet: How Visionary Entrepreneurs and Corporate Titans Are Creating Real Solutions to Global Warming
Author: Brian Dumaine
Published: June 24, 2008

Buy it here: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0307406180/greenbizcomA


Enough with the books! Here are some websites!

http://www.greenforall.org

http://www.solarrichmond.org/

http://www.ci.richmond.ca.us/

http://www.careerbuilder.com

http://www.alternativeenergy.com

http://www.alternativeenergy.com/jobs

http://www.neweconomics.org/gen/z_sys_PublicationDetail.aspx?pid=258#

http://greenjobsforamerica.org/greenjobs/

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2007-04-18-wave-power_N.htm?lo...

http://www.renewableenergyworld.com

http://www.AWEA.org

http://www.greenbiz.com

http://push.pickensplan.com/group/pickensmejobs

http://www.ases.org

http://www.ases.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=81&Itemid=6

http://www.ases.org/images/stories/ASES-JobsReport-Final.pdf

Sincerely,
Tom Zellars


Discussion Forum

Kiema Inc

Is Your Home: 'going green' worth the cost? 1 Reply

Started by Kiema Inc. Last reply by Lou De Frog Jul 12.

Ray Osborne

LEED certfication professional? 2 Replies

Started by Ray Osborne. Last reply by Lou De Frog Feb 23.

Don Clayton

Solar information. 7 Replies

Started by Don Clayton. Last reply by Lou De Frog Feb 22.

Ray Osborne

Sample of recent jobs posted at A1A Jobs

Started by Ray Osborne Oct. 4, 2008.

Troy Salmon

Land available. New Jobs!!!

Started by Troy Salmon Oct. 4, 2008.

OffTheGrid

Resources for finding a Green Job 3 Replies

Started by OffTheGrid. Last reply by Ray Osborne Oct. 2, 2008.

Tom Zellars

RichmondBuild Program in Richmond, CA

Started by Tom Zellars Sep. 19, 2008.

Tom Zellars

Idea: Rappers embracing green jobs (what do you think?)

Started by Tom Zellars Sep. 18, 2008.

Comment Wall

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Karen Nardella Comment by Karen Nardella on September 17, 2008 at 3:40am
I wanted to share this, in case you have not read them. I just read Obamas New Energy Plan, you will find it at www.scribd.com. I also read Mcain-Lieberman Act, S. 342 and his New Energy Plan "Lexington Project" you will find it at www.nrdc.org/energy. I will say that God Help us if Obama does get in-this man is truely without a clue. Mcain is more in line and I wrote him sujecting he just try and out ego aside and partner with T. Boone. Together the three of them would have a real plan. We will see if old ways can be over come. Anyway, we should be informed on all sides. So, if you want to know where our candidates stand this is where you will find your answers. Thank you for reading this. Karen Nardella
Tom Zellars Comment by Tom Zellars on September 16, 2008 at 1:29pm
Ken and Paul,

The last thing I'd ever want it is for people to misjudge me as someone trying to mislead people and cause political turmoil. My primary focus is of course, supporting green job development. Politics does play an important role, but I think perhaps I've gone a little too deep into it. I've gotten another response, not quite as harsh, from Jeff Hulgan, telling me that this should not be a site for political discussion. Politics still have an important role in my group, but the attack ads on McCain probably where overdoing it. I'm not trying to force people to vote against John McCain, I'm just trying to put out some rarely seen perspectives on him. Anyway, my group obviously isn't purely political. Did you recieve my email about ASES and Solar Today magazine? I'm going to create discussions on ASES and attracting young green job seekers into the workforce if you're interested.

-Tom
Ken Maroney Comment by Ken Maroney on September 15, 2008 at 9:24pm
I'm choosing to leave this group due to it has seemingly lost touch with what the Pickens Plan is about. It is not a political forum for a miss leading and clearly mis guided lost soul, Tom Zellars. Tom, you choose to corrupt the site so I choose to leave the group you organized and I'm sure there will be others that follow my lead.
Paul Comment by Paul on September 15, 2008 at 7:56pm
Re: Real McCain

If you thing the main stream media (msm) has given McCain a free ride, *what* has Obama been handed?

The msm is toothless and corrupt to the core! They care more about access than they care about truth or objectivity. A journalist without objectivism is a propagandist!

The problem is they don't even know what they're defending anymore! The American Free Press was the envy of the free world -- Today they are no better than the Soviet era Pravda.

The journalists should be crawling up the proverbial asses of both of the candidates... Not for sensationalist puff pieces, but for critical insight into the mind and hearts of the candidates.

Furthermore, enough of this 7th grade rhetoric! Journalists should pick a topic, investigate, report the facts, and publish an opinion. Be prepared to face the fire of the folks that disagree, but have the facts. Then follow up on the challenges raised to the published opinion. Defend the attacks, print more facts, but above all -- be fair and be neutral.

If the Fourth Estate would return to the tenets of the craft, the politicos would hoist themselves, and we would have decent & honest government again.
Paul Comment by Paul on September 15, 2008 at 7:41pm
Re: Enron Loophole Video

The only solution is to stop allowing unrelated riders on bills in Congress. Why the Farm bill? How did the thing get railroaded in the first place? I bet there were a lot of Democrats that voted for the damn thing too...
Tom Zellars Comment by Tom Zellars on September 8, 2008 at 3:42pm
Hi everyone!

RoseMarie LaCoursiere has just put out a new green jobs group on Saturday called "PICKens ME!~JOBS!" I know it sounds strange I would be putting out an ad for another jobs group, but the principles of "PICKens ME!~JOBS!" is different than mine. My primary goal is to organize, promote, and discuss ways to bring green jobs into mainstream America. RoseMarie's primary goal is to provide a business link between employers and jobseekers, and to provide business and career advice. She herself has an amazing record of business experience in biofuels trading, global communications, and business development.

You can read more of her accomplishments by viewing her personal page at http://push.pickensplan.com/profile/RoseMarieLaCoursiere

I highly recommend joining "PICKens ME! ~JOBS!" to all of my members. I also recommend continuing to work with my group to discuss and promote ways to bring green jobs mainstream for millions of Americans, jobs that cannot and will not be shipped overseas! I congratulate my group, because we have now reached 200 members! Thank you all so much for the support! Let's keep the creative discussions flowing! America needs the voices of each and every one of you to make an impact!

PICKens ME! ~JOBS! link:
http://push.pickensplan.com/group/pickensmejobs

Thank you all!
Tom Zellars
Green Metro West Massachusetts Comment by Green Metro West Massachusetts on September 7, 2008 at 10:58pm
Brookfield Renewable Power moves control center to Marlborough
Brookfield Renewable Power moves control center to Marlborough
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Bob Tremblay/Daily News staff
The MetroWest Daily News
Posted Aug 18, 2008 @ 12:01 AM

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MARLBOROUGH — Glow, Canada!

Brookfield Renewable Power Inc., the Toronto-based energy company with 164 hydroelectric plants and wind farms in North America and Brazil, has not only decided to establish its U.S. headquarters in Marlborough, it has chosen the city as the site for its national system control center.

The twin decision is expected to generate 100 jobs.

The company moved into temporary quarters on Donald Lynch Boulevard in February and has since begun the bidding process for construction of the center. It plans to move into its new confines, currently under renovation in a building near the temporary site, in November. The center, to be located in the same building, is expected to become fully functional by the end of next year.

"It’s about a $2 million investment to bring the headquarters to Marlborough," says Julie Smith-Galvin, Brookfield’s director of communications in the United States. "That doesn’t include the national system control center. That’s a significantly bigger investment."
The exact amount won’t be known until the bidding process and construction are completed, Smith-Galvin says.

Before the move to Marlborough, Brookfield had its Canadian, American and Brazilian management operations centralized in Gatineau, outside of Ottawa.

"In order to be more nimble and flexible for the growth we see in renewable energy, we thought it was important to move these management centers into the appropriate countries. So now there’s one in Canada Á Gatineau; Brazil Á Curitiba in the state of Parana; and United States Á Marlborough. We’re building up our core management team within each country."

Marlborough was chosen as the site for the U.S. headquarters and national system control center for a number of reasons, according to Smith-Galvin.

"We looked at many different areas," she says. "Some of it was simple geographics in so much as our projects are very heavily based in the New York and New England regions so geographic proximity to our existing projects was a factor.

"More importantly, our number one priority was to recruit and secure the best people and we thought this was the region we could do it in. And we did a lot of demographic studies of where there were high-quality employees. Also, when you look at this area, there is a concentration of energy companies, research institutions and educational facilities."

Brookfield currently has system control centers in New York and Maine. Once the Marlborough center becomes fully functional, these centers will be closed "though Brookfield will continue to maintain staff in these states for the maintenance and operations of our hydropower projects," says Smith-Galvin.

The center, as its name applies, controls the operations of Brookfield’s plants, including the dispatching of energy, and does so remotely.

Brookfield’s $13 billion portfolio in hydroelectric plants and wind farms includes U.S. facilities in Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Minnesota, New York and Louisiana. Seventy of its generating stations are in New York with 20 in New England. The first U.S. plant was acquired in Maine in 2002.

Its lone Bay State operation is Bear Swamp Power LLC located on the Deerfield River in the Berkshires. All of its facilities in the United States and Brazil generate hydroelectricity with power from 63 river systems. Its only wind farm is located in Ontario. With 126 turbines, it’s one of the largest wind farms in Canada.

In the last 10 years, Brookfield has invested close to $3 billion in acquiring more than 2,900 megawatts of electric capacity in more than 22 transactions.

Brookfield’s facilities now total more than 4,000 megawatts of electric capacity, of which 95 percent comes from renewable energy. The remaining 5 percent comes from two natural gas plants. Brookfield also has a 6,500 megawatt hydroelectric and wind project pipeline.

The average household in the United States uses 10 megawatt hours of electricity a year.
Brookfield’s origins date back to 1899 with the formation of the Sao Paulo Tramway, Light and Power Co. It subsequently became the largest light and power company in Brazil. Following various acquisitions, incorporations and name changes over the years, Brookfield Renewable Power emerged.

Today, the company, with about 1,000 employees, is owned by Brookfield Asset Management Inc., a $95 billion global asset management company based in Toronto.
Brookfield Renewable Power sells the energy it produces on the merchant market or through bilateral contracts with utilities. "You would never see us on your electricity bill but the power may be coming from us via your utility," says Smith-Galvin.

Brookfield’s net operating income increased from $172 million in 2003 to $627 million in 2006. It dropped to $615 million in 2007. Smith-Galvin attributes the growth to acquisitions over this time period.

"We hope to continue this growth trajectory as we continue to look for new development and acquisition opportunities," she says. "The company plans to invest $10 billion in renewables over the next five years, a significant portion of which is expected to be made in the United States."

The decrease last year was largely due to lower water flows, says Smith-Galvin. "As a result, generation was lower in 2007 than in 2006. Some of this decline was offset by new facilities acquired or developed in 2007 and 2006 and higher realized pricing," she said.

Overall, the future for renewable energy looks bright, according to Smith-Galvin. For example, nearly 25 states have laws that require utilities to provide renewable energy. Meanwhile, wind farms in the United States now generate more electricity than any other nation. While West Germany has more generating capacity installed, the United States is producing more electricity because of its much stronger winds.

That said, renewable energy constitutes only 9 percent of all the power in the United States. Coal, by comparison, generates 49 percent.

Advantages of renewable energy include its sustainability - it will never run out. Also, its energy facilities generally require less maintenance than traditional generators, according to the National Solar Schools Educational Web site.

More importantly, renewable energy produces little or no waste products, such as carbon dioxide or other chemical pollutants, so it has minimal impact on the environment, the site states.

Disadvantages include the reliance on the weather for its source of power, the site continues. "Hydro generators need rain to fill dams to supply flowing water," it states. "Wind turbines need wind to turn the blades, and solar collectors need clear skies and sunshine to collect heat and make electricity."

Another disadvantage is it’s "difficult to generate the quantities of electricity that are as large as those produced by traditional fossil fuel generators.

Also, while many areas in the United States would be prime locations for wind farms, such as the Plains states, transmission issues pose a problem.

"The American Wind Energy Association states that ‘North Dakota alone is theoretically capable (if there were enough transmission capacity) of producing enough wind-generated power to meet more than a fourth of U.S. electricity demand,’ " says Smith-Galvin. "The problem is transmission restraints. You can put plants there that can harness the energy but you can’t move it to the load centers - to the cities where it’s really needed. People are working on this issue now.

"Transmission is one of the key issues, and I think that it also reflects the need to diversify renewable energy technologies - not just wind but also hydro, solar, biofuels, geothermal - in order to cover different geographic regions, dispatch needs, etc."

Wind farms have also drawn aesthetic complaints.

"With any technology there are footprints and pros and cons," says Smith-Galvin. "With wind or hydro, you just need to find where you have a good resource, and you have to manage the community issues. You have to start that early. It’s about getting out there and talking to communities early and helping them understand. If they have problems you can’t overcome, you try to find a different place."

With hydroelectric power, the potential for growth is already in place, Smith-Galvin notes. "There are a lot of unused dams in this state that could be used for hydroelectric power," she says. "Only 5 percent of the 70,000 dams in the United States are used for power generation. Not all are appropriate, but there’s a lot of emphasis on looking at existing resources as alternative energy for fuel-cost reasons and domestic-security reasons."

Green seems to be becoming a popular color. "A recent study showed 92 percent of new graduates want to work for environmentally sensitive companies," says Smith Galvin. "We’re talking to Marlborough High School about their internship program. Traditionally, we’ve had a large intern program."

As of June, 36 people have been hired at Brookfield. Of those hires, 75 percent have come from Massachusetts. "We’re on track for 100 new hires within 18 months of opening," says Smith-Galvin.
Gregory L. Smith Comment by Gregory L. Smith on September 7, 2008 at 9:17pm
I saw the www.valcent.net video that was put on by Jeri F and I am impressed. I did have a question about using CO2 as an agent to improve the growth factor of the system. Why not set these company systems near coal burning plants that can capture their CO2 and therefore create another production opportunity, as well as reduce the CO2 expenditures of the scrubber plant. This would not only improve the yield of the algae, but also reduce the carbon footprint of a dangerously high, carbon dioxide generator!
In fact this could be the way to reduce all carbon dioxide major producers, and it would cost less than pumping the CO2 into holes in the earth that might eventually need to be released. Or it might release itself in such a way that it could kill all life in the area, since this does occur sometimes naturally near lava flows adjacent to volcanoes. Why not take the creative path instead of forcing nature to find a way to solve the issue? Algae is a simple way to create another cleaner burning fuel, but it still is just one piece of a complex puzzle that needs solving very soon. Yet, check out the video, it is very interesting!
Also, couldn't you pressurize CO2 and create dry ice to freeze the residual from the Algae and make it more easily transportable, while using the CO2 in an effective non-heating method? This way bricks could be formed to create large tablets for feed and livestock products, as well as used for starting grass seed or garden seed in a spray-on Slip complex. There are many applications to design, including nutrient products for digestion and health.
Gregor Smith gregors@att.net
Jeri Francis Comment by Jeri Francis on September 7, 2008 at 7:23pm
awesome, must see

http://cc.pubco.net/www.valcent.net/i/misc/Vertigro/index.html
Wind4me.com Comment by Wind4me.com on September 6, 2008 at 8:15pm
with ''''your ATTITUDE'', NO wonder nobody wants your free services.........you keep on strapping on your tool belt, I will keep on PEDALING for some solutions
Skibare
 

Members (246)

Tom Zellars Bruce Eric Montgomery Lou De Frog Joy Montgomery Paul Anachronism Ed and Harriet Griffith OffTheGrid Ray Osborne Tiffany Wilson Luane Todd Wind4me.com garry jeffries Don Clayton Kurt Stiffel JohnG Jonathan Steele Mike Anthony Fernald Sr. Gregory L. Smith Andrew M D Streit Robert Jackman Joe Van Eeten  aka The White Buffalo Reformer Lauren Weitzman John Braman Troy Salmon Kiema Inc FutureMedia Rick Cassoni James von Stein
 
 

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