March 2009

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By Susan Seliger

Go dark! Tomorrow – Saturday, 3-28-09 – is Earth Hour when cities, and businesses and tens of millions of people like yourself all over the world will be turning off their lights for one hour – from 8:30 to 9:30 PM (your time) –  in honor of saving energy to save the entire planet.

Join in – flip those switches to OFF and feel the powerful energy of tens of millions of others, like yourself, sitting happily in the dark, saving energy. Do it with a friend — it’s more fun that way.

Anybody who is anybody will be tuning in and turning off, according to the World Wildlife Fund, which has organized this delightful plunge into the dark. Nearly 200 cities in the U.S. are officially committed; 2400 cities in 82 countries have officially signed on.

Broadway theater marquees and other world-renowned landmarks will be turning off their lights:

  • Empire State Building
  • Rockefeller Center
  • Chrysler Building
  • Golden Gate Bridge,
  • Space Needle
  • Sears Tower
  • Great Pyramids and Sphinx in Egypt
  • Acropolis in Greece

For those of you with short attention spans who have difficulty reading past the first word “ Earth” and are confused – this is not Earth Day – it’s a little dress rehearsal. So if you are reading this after Saturday, and you didn’t get to join in the dark-hour fun, you can still make up for it to the gods of green on April 22, 2009, for the big Earth Day.

Turning off is a big turn-on.

Watch this video of the lights going out: Earth Hour in Years Past

Even the Las Vegas strip is turning lights off. And like Vegas, what you do during Earth Hour, stays in Earth Hour.

LINKS:

Earth Hour 2009 video

30 Second PSA voiced by Cate Blanchett

Want a minute-by-minute account? Here’s a new iPhone application “Earth Hour Trainer”:


Photo credit: 2witches.com/blog/tag/earth/

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By Susan Seliger

Here’s the simplest way to green your apartment — in a New York minute: buy one that’s already greened up. I visited a new condo-complex that fills the bill for all of you busy-lazy city dwellers who want to live greener but also say make-it-easy-for-me or fuggeddaboutit.

While there are a number of eco-friendly apartment complexes in NYC to pick from – most come with price tags that only Leonardo Di Caprio and friends can afford. (And we do hear he has bought one of those gorgeous, oh-so-bamboo-and-all-hand-carved-wood-furniture-in the-lobby versions in Riverhouse, so close to the Hudson River you could throw a tofuburger into it from his window – though, that wouldn’t be eco-friendly, now would it?)

However, the Kalahari on 115th Street in Manhattan is an eco-conscious condo with a difference. Sure, it’s green — it meets the US Green Building Council’s LEED Silver Standards. But what makes it unique among green buildings in this high-priced city is that half of the apartments are for sale at subsidized rates to low-income residents, and the other half are priced at fair (in this economy, that now means fairly decent) market rates.

The deal gets even better once you move in. The building uses almost one-third less energy than comparable new buildings (keeping maintenance costs low). And each homeowner will save an average of $1,200 per year on their energy costs.

The Kalahari Harlem also features some cool, green amenities like green roofs, ionic and plex-air filters for cleaner air, bamboo flooring (eat your heart out, Leo) and on-site Zip Cars (low-cost rental cars allowing you to drive only when you absolutely have to, without the costly-parking-headaches of owning in a big city). There’s also a nifty meter in every apartment so you can see just how much electricity you’re using — or saving, when you unplug all your stuff and cut out that phantom power waste.

“The tiles on the roof reflect the heat and they also allow for water to be retained underneath them, delaying water going down the drain,” explains Julia Lynch Siegel, Project Manager of Sustainability at Full Spectrum NY, the eco-real-estate developers for the Kalahari. Pointing to the solar panels on a different part of the roof, Julia says, “These panels supply all the electricity we need to light the lobby, the entry and the artwork in the building.” Though that’s only a small percentage of total energy needs, the building’s sponsors project that by 2030, the 200+ Kalahari homeowners will collectively have saved over $21 million in total energy costs.

During construction, the sustainable developers kept millions of tons of waste out of the landfills by using recycled materials, from the structural steel and concrete in the foundation to the carpets in the hallways and the recycled-glass tiles in the kitchens.

Inspiration for the name of the building and the dramatic colors and artwork used throughout come from the San bushmen of the South African Kalahari Desert, whose commitment to preserving the earth’s natural resources (and their “click” language) were made famous in the movie, “The Gods Must Be Crazy.” (Go watch it again – you know you want to.)

** If you’re in the market for a green condo in NY, check out the Kalahari website.

** If you’re not in the market for condos in NY, but want to let your local builders see how green building can be done, if the spirit is willing, forward them the website:

** For more on greening the apartment you’ve got, check out this blog post from Best Green Home Tips.



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By Susan Seliger
Every prize you can win in this “Live Green/Get Green” contest – except the big Grand Prize — was created with materials that would have gone to waste – but now can find a home with your favorite college student. If you’re over 18 and enrolled in a college or university, you can enter this General Mills contest every hour, for a chance to win some little green stuff (like a recycled Nature Valley messenger tote bag, Chex Mix laptop portfolio sleeve, or a Lucky Charms notebook). Each entry steps up your chances at the biggie – the fuel-efficient 2009 Prius.  So if you want to be a big green hero on campus and save energy and money while driving your friends around  (not to mention getting to back up like a pro using that cool TV screen gizmo) , start clicking – the deadline is April 30.

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By Susan Seliger

There’s nothing nicer — in life as in geometry proofs — than the simple, elegant solution. Why dig for oil when you can just grow it? Maybe not tomorrow — but just around the corner, there’s an exciting new green fuel source — algae biofuel.

In this video by Ecopolis, the award winning science show on The Science Channel, you’ll meet Valcent Products’ Glen Kertz explaining what part algae biofuel could play in our energy future.

Here are 10 companies that are doing more than talking about turning pond scum into fuel — they are small companies actually doing it. Maybe this is where you should put your retirement savings instead of that dwindling 401K.  (For more on these companies and a peek at five more, see this post from Earth2Tech on 15 algae fuel startups:

Aurora Biofuels
Bionavitas
Blue Marble Energy
GreenFuel Technologies
Inventure Chemical
Live Fuels
Petro Sun
Solazyme
Solena
Solix Biofuels

For more on saving money and energy, check out these posts:

And tell me what you’ve been doing to save energy and money in your daily life.

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By Susan Seliger
Who says we can’t afford to go green in these tough economic times? For those gloomy prognosticators, we’d suggest taking a look at a new report that shows how the U.S. can create two million jobs in the next two years by investing in a green economic recovery plan (focusing on six economic strategies, from biofuels to wind power).

If you want to find out if there are going to be any green jobs for you in the new green economy, check out which occupations in each state stand to win jobs. This report from the Political Economy Research Institute, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, looks at which occupations would be affected by six green economic strategies: building retrofitting, mass transit, energy-efficient automobiles, wind power, solar power and cellulosic biofuels.

> Alaska
> Arizona
> Arkansas
> California
> Colorado
> Florida
> Illinois
> Indiana
> Iowa
> Kansas
> Maine
> Maryland
> Massachusetts
> Michigan
> Minnesota
> Missouri
> Montana
> Nebraska
> Nevada
> New Hampshire
> New Jersey
> New Mexico
> New York
> North Carolina
> North Dakota
> Ohio
> Oregon
> Pennsylvania
> South Carolina
> Tennessee
> Virginia
> Washington
> West Virginia
>Wisconsin

  • For more on the report and the Blue Green Alliance, a partnership between labor unions (the “blue” in “blue-collar”) and environmental organizations (the “green”), here’s their web site.


Photo credit: www.city-data.com

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By Susan Seliger
Make a statement – put away the car, pull out the bike. Haven’t got one? Well, now you can try your hand at winning this cruiser free, sponsored by Fresh Produce Sportswear. The only question left is, Are you bold enough to make a statement in pink? Hey, if Pamela Anderson can do it – while holding a cup of coffee – you can, too. Be brave. Sign up to win – the deadline is 3/31/09..

Photo credit: http://www.cyclelicio.us/

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