Thanks to Mary Anne Carter for this
Alternative Energy Resource Map. Kudos for private businessmen who aren't waiting anymore! Great work. Keep it up! Rooftop wind turbine seen as green energy starter kit By Shelley Widhalm
Loveland Reporter-Herald
If the power fails in Loveland, Wesley Baldassare knows that his refrigerator and heater still will work. Baldassare, a home improvement contractor, installed a home wind turbine on his roof Wednesday after showing it off at a few area home and garden shows. The turbine uses wind energy to produce power for his home.

“This is designed as a starter kit for green energy,” he said. “It’s designed to go on the roof, which makes it practical for homeowners.” Baldassare is a Colorado and Wyoming dealer for
Windenergy7, a green energy company out of Ohio. He started selling and installing the wind and solar turbine systems in February.
“It is possible for many homeowners to produce their own green energy, which would not be possible with the larger pole-mounted systems that cannot be installed in many residential neighborhoods,” Baldassare said.
Baldassare knows of only one major company that sells rooftop generators, and it is out of Europe, he said. “This is the product of the future,” he said. “We need to, as a country, become independent of foreign oil.”
Homeowners can opt for a roof-mount turbine kit, which starts at $2,990, and add solar panels later as an upgrade or buy a combined wind-solar hybrid kit. They can add turbines to generate and store more energy to power additional areas of the home.
The wind and the wind-solar turbines can be used off the electrical grid, or for an additional cost be hooked into the grid, as long as the power company approves, Baldassare said. The grid converters add another $1,500 to the cost of the unit, he said.
Hooking into the grid can, over time, provide cost savings, because the turbine can generate extra power beyond what is used and the power company provides a credit for that power, Baldassare said.
“Your house is totally powered by the grid, but you’re adding your electricity to it,” Baldassare said. “You have to, by law and code, have an automatic shutoff. You don’t want power to come back through the lines.”
Baldassare uses his turbine off the grid, so when the unit generates energy, it charges a battery pack he stores in his garage, he said. He uses a circuit separator to operate his refrigerator, fan for the heater and some of the lights in his home, he said. The refrigerator, fan and lights are hooked to the battery pack instead of the power box, he said.
“If it’s off grid, the turbine generates electricity, and it goes through a charger convertor ... to charge the batteries,” Baldassare said.
Baldassare said he plans to market the turbines mainly as a backup system.
“It not only saves you some electricity, it gives you power,” he said. “I don’t plan on being totally independent of power. I’m just going to save myself some money.”
The turbine qualifies for a 30 percent tax credit for green energy.
Minneapolis International Airport Installs Wind Generators May 15th, 2009 (My comments are mixed in with an article published by Alternative Energy.) Ok. It isn't much but it moves in the right direction. If we keep moving, we'll get there.
These days many companies are exhibiting awareness of clean and green energy and using that technology to reduce costs too. Recently Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport set up ten wind-powered electricity generators. They are using the energy to power an electric utility vehicle. We are acquainted with the fact that airports are windy places. So a knowledgeable management is using this resource boosting its environmental credentials as they reduce fuel costs. They have installed ten 1 kW Aerovironment wind turbines on top of the airport fire station to harness the power of prevailing northwest winds. The turbines are expected to generate 10 kilowatts of electricity an hour. They are powering their fully-electric Cushman Motors e-Ride exv2 utility vehicle with the energy generated by these turbines. Their utility vehicle has a range of 45-55 miles and costs around $200 a year to run.
Jeff Hamiel, who is the Metropolitan Airports Commission director, talks about the goals and future plans, “Testing the potential of wind power and electric vehicles is part of an ongoing effort to explore cost-effective, environmentally sound alternatives in the development and operation of Metropolitan Airports Commission airports. We will monitor how well the wind-power generators and the electric vehicles perform at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport to determine whether they might play a bigger role in the airport’s future.” So right now they are looking into the financial and operational viability of using wind-generated electricity to power electric vehicles at the airport. They want to reduce the fuel costs and poisonous emissions as well. If they find the whole exercise beneficial they will implement it further.
The Metropolitan Airport Commission (MAC) expects the turbines to bring down the costs of fuels. The turbines cost them USD$94,000 and have a life span of more than 20 years. Each unit has five black fan blades and a shroud to protect the blades and turbines from snow, ice and birds.
MAC launched the Stewards of Tomorrow’s Airport Resources (STAR) program in 2008. The goals of this program are to advance airport activities that are environmentally, operationally and financially sustainable.
The MAC’s new Cushman Motors e-Ride exv2 electric utility vehicle possesses a 72 volt AC motor. The vehicle will be used chiefly by parking management staff. But Mac is planning to test it for other potential uses as well. The Cushman utility vehicle is not a hybrid vehicle. It is run on entirely by electricity. So obviously it doesn’t emit exhaust and does its work silently. Its maintenance cost will be approximately $202 per year.
Jeff Hamiel shares his views and future plans by stating, “We continue to look for sustainable solutions to meet our airports’ operating needs. Testing the potential of wind power and electric vehicles is part of an ongoing effort to explore cost-effective, environmentally sound alternatives in the development and operation of MAC airports.”
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Sweden's first swine flu death confirmed Swine flu claims first Swedish victim: report Mother in the red after costly childbirth Fancy a Fika? (Notes From Sweden) Happy Birthday Duke! - Concert and show April 29th Talk to Me, Baby News about Uppsala University
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Algae could be used in batteries
8 hours ago
Algae could be used in batteries A research team from Uppsala University, Sweden, could potentially stumble upon a discovery that could revolutionize the world of batteries, where these new "green" lightweight batteries are a snap to roll off the production line and could even even out the environmental... by ubergizmo.com | related posts
Eco Tech: Swedish scientists develop lightweight batteries from algae
Sep 12, 2009
Eco Tech: Swedish scientists develop lightweight batteries from algae Eco Factor: High-performance batteries made from algae. Of all the materials that have been used to make batteries, algae seems the most uncommon, but scientists over at Uppsala University in Sweden have created a lightweight, flexible battery from algae that blooms globally.... by ecofriend.org | related posts
Tags: algae Brands: uppsala university
Algae-Based, Non-Metallic Batteries Could Revolutionize Energy Storage...
Sep 11, 2009
Algae-Based, Non-Metallic Batteries Could Revolutionize Energy Storage... A group of researchers at Uppsala University in Sweden have discovered that a particular type of algae — with a bad reputation for causing damaging algal blooms in oceans throughout the world — produces a substance that can be used to make inexpensive, non-toxic,... by gas2.org | related posts
Tags: algae, cellulose Brands: uppsala university Places: sweden
DNA from Linnaeus' botanical collections
Sep 10, 2009
DNA from Linnaeus' botanical collections Scientists at Uppsala University has succeeded in extracting long DNA fragments from dried, pressed plant material collected in the 1700s by Linnaeus' apprentice Adam Afzelius. It is hoped that the study, led by Associate Professor Katarina Andreasen, will shed light on whether... by biology-blog.com/blogs/plant-science-blog.html | related posts
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22nd ECNP Congress 2009: are the Monoamines Involved in Shaping Conduct...
Sep 13, 2009
ISTANBUL, Turkey - New findings on the significance of platelet MAO activity and MAO gene variants with regard to antisocial behaviour have today been presented by Prof. Lars Oreland, University of Uppsala, Sweden, at a press conference during the 22nd ECNP Congress. Prof. Oreland... by blog.taragana.com | related posts
Places: istanbul, turkey
Scientists say climate change mitigation strategies ignore carbon cycling...
Sep 02, 2009
In the paper, The Boundless Carbon Cycle, published in the September issue of Nature Geoscience, scientists from the University of Vienna, Uppsala University in Sweden, University of Antwerp, and the U.S. based Stroud Water Research Center argue that... by physorg.com/weblog | related posts
Tags: climate change, carbon cycle Brands: water research, uppsala university, university of antwerp
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Blue Monday: Uppsala University Jazz Orchestra
Feb 23, 2009
Blue Monday: Uppsala University Jazz Orchestra This afternoon a new concert series will start in Uppsala: Blue Monday at Universitetsaulan. First out in this attempt by Uppsala University to make mondays more fun is Uppsala University Jazz Orchestra which will play big band... by swingjazzblues.blogspot.com | related posts
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Unique study isolates DNA from Linnaeus' botanical collections
Aug 27, 2009
Unique study isolates DNA from Linnaeus' botanical collections Researchers at Uppsala University has succeeded in extracting long DNA fragments from dried, pressed plant material collected in the 1700s by Linnaeus' apprentice Adam Afzelius. It is hoped that the study, led by Associate Professor Katarina Andreasen, will shed light on whether... by physorg.com/weblog | related posts
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Diarrhea disorder Giardiasis caused by two different parasite species
Aug 21, 2009
(PhysOrg.com) -- Researchers from Uppsala University and the Karolinska Institute have found major genetic differences between the human variants of the intestinal parasite Giardia intestinalis. Sequencing of the genomes using the latest technologies shows that people are infected by... by physorg.com/weblog | related posts
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Children, Biobanks and Consent
Aug 18, 2009
in biomedical research". In a related news story, Mats Hansson of Uppsala University in Sweden, Karen Maschke, of the Hastings Center, Ronald Green, director of the Ethics Institute at Dartmouth College, and other ethicists comment on the Science policy forum; see: Child DNA donors... by predicter.blogspot.com | related posts
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Evolutionarily preserved mechanism governs use of genes
Aug 18, 2009
Researchers at Uppsala University have found that the protein coding parts of a gene are packed in special nucleosomes. The same type of packaging is found in the roundworm C elegans, which is a primeval relative of humans. The mechanism can thereby be traced back a billion years in... by scienceblog.com/cms | related posts
Brands: uppsala university
Evolutionarily preserved mechanism governs use of genes
Aug 18, 2009
Researchers at Uppsala University have found that the protein coding parts of a gene are packed in special nucleosomes. The same type of packaging is found in the roundworm C elegans, which is a primeval relative of humans. The mechanism can thereby be traced back a billion years in... by physorg.com/weblog | related posts
September 1st, 2009 In the paper, The Boundless Carbon Cycle, published in the September issue of Nature Geoscience, scientists from the University of Vienna, Uppsala University in Sweden, University of Antwerp, and the U.S. based Stroud Water Research Center argue that current international strategies to mitigate manmade carbon emissions and address climate change have overlooked a critical player - inland waters.
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Streams, rivers, lakes, reservoirs, and wetlands play an important role in the carbon cycle that is unaccounted for in conventional carbon cycling models. The commentary comes just months before COP15, the December 2009 UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen where representatives from 192 countries will gather to decide upon a 2012 climate agreement that will succeed the "Kyoto protocol."
Dr. Tom J. Battin of the department of Freshwater Ecology at the University of Vienna and lead author of the paper states that "While inland waters represent only 1% of the Earth's surface, their contribution to the carbon cycle is disproportionately large, underestimated, and not recognized within the models on which the Kyoto protocol was based."
The team of scientists points out that all current global carbon models consider inland waters static conduits that transfer carbon from the continents to the oceans. In reality, inland waters are dynamic ecosystems with the potential to alter the fates of terrestrial carbon delivered to them including: burial in sediments leading to long-term storage or sequestration; and metabolism in rivers and subsequent outgassing of respired carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.
"Twenty percent of the continental carbon sequestration actually occurs as burial in inland water sediments," said Dr. Lars Tranvik, Professor of Limnology at Uppsala University in Sweden.
"River outgassing of respired carbon, contributes carbon to the atmosphere in an amount equivalent to 13% of annual fossil fuel burning," said Dr. Anthony K. Aufdenkampe, a scientist at the Stroud Water Research Center. Because the amount of atmospheric carbon is well known and conservation of matter requires a balanced global carbon budget, this previously unaccounted for source of carbon to the atmosphere implies the existence of an additional continental carbon sink such as higher rates of biomass accrual in forests. "A larger accumulation of carbon in forest ecosystems that could offset the outgassing from rivers would be more consistent with current independently-derived estimates of carbon sequestration on the continents," said Dr. Sebastian Luyssaert of the department of Biology at University of Antwerp in Belgium.
The authors feel that a Boundless Carbon Cycle - that accounts for carbon transfers between the land-freshwater boundary, the freshwater-atmosphere boundary, and regional boundaries within continents - presents opportunities and challenges for scientists and policy makers alike. They stress the need for collaborative scientific investigations augmented by new observatories and experimental platforms for long-term research to improve insights into carbon cycles across terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. For policy makers, the authors note that riverine transport presents a book keeping challenge as carbon in rivers that escapes burial or outgassing flows downstream, traversing geographic regions and political boundaries, and thus altering regionally based carbon accounts.
Source: Stroud Water Research Center
art 2
http://gov.ca.gov/press-release/13204/
Richard
Richard Barnard
Solution for the 18 Wheeler
From You to Mike Pickens
I sent the following to EATON this AM. I wanted Mr. Cutler to see the latest Video.
From: Richard Barnard [mailto:light22@msn.com]
Sent: Friday, August 14, 2009 12:39 PM
To: SandyCutler EATON
Cc: MarkMMcGuire EATON
Subject: RE: Yesterday was a great day for the Pickens Plan!
Mr. Cutler:
I have pasted below the latest video on Boone’s “Clean Energy Summit 2.0” with Clinton, Gore and other influential leaders; in addition, excerpts of my previous e-mail to you. EATON has the solution Al Gore and Mr. Pickens mentioned in the video about the battery. The hybrid electric NG (natural gas), LNG (liquid natural gas) is the obvious solution for 18 wheelers. Tweak the diesel engine Heavy Duty propulsion trucks are using to use NG or LNG using your hybrid electric technology already in use with diesel. This would hasten cutting our imports in half as stated by Mr. Pickens.
http://push.pickensplan.com/video/nat-gas-more-than-we-ever
Sincerely yours,
Richard Barnard
Copy: Mr. Mike Pickens
From: Richard Barnard [mailto:light22@msn.com]
Sent: Wednesday, August 12, 2009 4:29 PM
To: SandyCutler EATON
Cc: MarkMMcGuire EATON
Subject: FW: Yesterday was a great day for the Pickens Plan!
Mr. Cutler:
I’m forwarding you an e-mail from Mike Pickens. Would you be interested in speaking to his father T Boone Pickens? I have asked Mike to help in arranging a summit with you and his father. If you are interested Mike has given me his private telephone number (XXX-xxx-xxxx). You or your counsel are welcome to call Mike to coordinate a meeting with T Boone if you wish. I sent the following paragraph to Mike showing recommendations for subject matter that may be of interest for you and Mr. Pickens.
“It’s my recommendation the topic with Mr. Cutler and your Dad is the manufacture of hybrid electric NG components for the Heavy Duty propulsion trucking industry, components for automobiles and possible discussions with the EPA and legislatures they both know for ease of implementation. This is the obvious. Many other topics can be discussed. Your Dad would be the best to decide what they are because of his vast knowledge of NG. In addition, your Dad’s assistance in helping EATON implement change with suggestions. Your Dad is the leader with the most knowledge of NG. His advocacy and leadership has already convinced legislatures and other influential leaders. Eaton is already the leader in hybrid electric diesel components.”
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Pickens [mailto:mail@push.pickensplan.com]
Sent: Wednesday, August 12, 2009 10:13 AM
To: Richard Barnard
Subject: EATON
Mike Pickens has sent you a message on PickensPlan
You might suggest to Mr. Cutler that he speak to Boone -it would make sense that they talk.
Richard Barnard
From: Richard Barnard [mailto:light22@msn.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 09, 2009 10:37 AM
To: SandyCutler Eaton
Cc: KevinMHinman Eaton; MarkMMcGuire Eaton
Subject: RE: Opportunity
Mr. Cutler:
I wasn’t overly optimistic when I suggested you should be providing the HEV components to automobile manufacturers for a goal of 8 million a year in America. You were a little pessimistic when you suggested it would take 10,000 units to make the technology profitable thus making it feasible. The Japanese have already done that. We only have two automobile manufacturers left in America you can sell your components to that will exceed your 10,000 unit projection – Ford and GM. Ford will probably do it next year with their fusion and mercury. Neither Ford nor GM has plans to come out with a diesel version. You are the only provider of diesel components that can easily be adapted for automobiles. It won’t be long before Volkswagen introduces one. They have already introduced in America a diesel Volkswagen that gets approximately 53 miles to a gallon. It’s just a matter of time before they introduce an electric hybrid version that will obviously exceed that.
Toyota and Honda both have NG (natural gas) cars. Both can provide NG connections to residential homes. I have already suggested you should consider hybrid electric NG components for the Heavy Duty propulsion trucking industry. You should consider electric NG automobile hybrid components. In addition, I’m suggesting you work with California and the EPA with legislation that will ease the use of NG delivery components that can easily be retrofitted to residential homes. With the smart meter it would be easy for government to tax the NG used for automobiles. If the home doesn’t have a smart meter then adding a second meter for NG will still allow the government to tax. Everyone in California has easy access to NG - Talk to Arnold.
I’m sure your vehicle components hierarchy has already made these suggestions to you. If not it might be something to consider. Change it good. Who would have ever thought 17 years ago EATON would have been in the electrical distribution business.
Sincerely yours,
Have you figured out what to do with $1 million interests free?
Lets get this thing going, Alabama! -p/.
I guess I’m turning into an advocate for Eaton. Why not? The realization hit me when it became apparent very few people know what’s happening behind the scenes in the automotive industry. It’s all about lowering our dependence on Middle Eastern oil and people should know there is progress being made. My candy is knowing the HEV is being manufactured. I may have been pushed but I didn’t go quietly and I obviously haven’t hidden anything from Sandy Cutler. I want Eaton to be successful. I have attached a link I just commented on. You may have interest.
http://push.pickensplan.com/group/truckingandthepickensplan
Regards
Richard Barnard
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