Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 April 2016

Book Review: All-Electric America

Read the first chapter:
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All-Electric America 
(Nonfiction – Renewable Energy, Environment)

This is a must-read book for anyone concerned with the environment. It is timely, what with Tesla marketing its Tesla 3 this month.

I began reading this book at home, on a rainy day, and kept going whilst waiting for hubby at an appointment. The day before we had visited Wolfe Island, the site of both wind power and photovoltaic (PV) energy initiatives (see photos below). I was impressed.

It is excellent. Well-researched, with lots of resources, they also publish a blog. These are two people fighting for a change in the way we harvest energy.

They explain how the USA could transition to all-electric, renewable energy society, despite big business lobbying, and claims against such success. They are aiming for 2050, and show how our grandchildren could be living in a different world. 


Time Of Use 
There is much disparity across this continent, however, in terms of reducing our reliance on non-renewable resources, stopping fracking and polluting our world with coal and methane.  Many provinces have incorporated some of these ideas. 

Ontario Hydro hauls away old, inefficient appliances. They installed Smart Meters that incorporate Time Of Use (TOU) metres. (Sadly, they don't work in many rural Ontario homes, like ours! Too many trees.) 
Hydro energy saving support


Freeman and Parks Explain How To Rely on Renewable Resources

  • Educate the public to simply cut back on energy requirements.  
  • Reduce, Reuse, Repair, Recycle, Repurpose and Reimagine.
  • Change local transportation to all-electric: cars, busses, subways, trains.
  • Convert consumer products, such as lighting, A/C, and appliances, to high efficiency.
  • Convert building heating; from oil and natural gas to heat pumps, and more efficient methods.
  • Improve energy storage of wind and PV power. 
  • Fix the automobile industry. It worked on gas efficiency. Now, let's legislate electric cars.
  • Government subsidies, for now, for people like us to be able to afford to install our on-demand, tankless water heaters. Ours cost $3300, and we could have had a government subsidy ($650), if we'd known this BEFORE we installed it. It is not retroactive.
  • Subsidies for PV installations (until prices come down), the way they did for electricity in the previous millennium. We'd love it on our roof, but we won't get our money back in our lifetimes. (Once installed they last 30 years.)

Barriers abound

This was the vision in Orillia.
Lobby groups blocked it!
There are lots of barriers to reducing energy usage and converting to renewable energy sources, from 
many stakeholders.
  • Lobby groups, like the oil industry, and the automobile industry have a vested interest in keeping us in the dark. They are supporting fracking, and are not prepared to stop methane leakage from natural gas.
  • Uneducated politicians. The official opposition parties tend to blather on about barriers, or mistakes made, rather than getting on board with good ideas. 
  • Uneducated citizens regarding alternate energy sources. There is much controversy about wind power, for example. One woman didn't like our Muskoka home because it had an on-demand water heater. She didn't think it would work!
  • Old, inefficient appliances. Sadly, some people cannot afford their expense electric home heating, nor can they afford new, more efficient appliances.

Biographies

 Author S. David Freeman is a leading authority on energy policy. He was appointed by President Jimmy Carter as head of Tennessee Valley Authority, one of the nation’s largest electric utilities. After 7 years at TVA, he spent 30 years as the CEO of major public utilities in Texas, California, and New York.  

Author Leah Y. Parks is an associate editor for ElectricityPolic.com and Electricity Daily, a journal and daily newsletter that examine current events and the state of the electricity industry for utility executives, commissioners, regulators, and other experts in the field.  




EDMONTON — New research suggests that hydraulic fracking of oil and gas wells is behind earthquakes caused by humans in Western Canada.A study, published Tuesday by a group of top Canadian researchers, says problems in Alberta and…
VANCOUVEROBSERVER.COM



Wind power provides ~half of German electricity supply

We are different from Germany, however, this is where modern countries, who care about the earth, should be headed.




My Wolfe Island Wind Farm and PV Photos


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@Barrie Summy

Sunday, 4 September 2011

Reduce, reuse, recycle

I believe in this concept.

We also love to watch TV. Retired, we are happy to stop, drop and relax at the end of a volunteer day. We tape a LOT of shows, to watch in the evenings.

Yes, our TV died. I bought it for hubby 6 years ago. Wandering through a Sears store, it was last year's model and on sale.

It worked out to $100/year, far less than we pay for satellite in our rural home.

I told hubby, bless him - he's a good man with back issues this week (from lifting my Dad in long-term care) after sneezing, that he deserves a new TV.  It doesn't take much for me, either. I have a fragile back, too.

We cruised the stores in town. It turns out that the universe is looking after him again. Another on sale, last year's model TV at Sears. What a good deal. What is a hoot, is that the woman working there told me that Recycleyourelectronics.ca was going to be at the Perth Fair. What a great thing we can do. Off we went.
I love giving feedback!


To divert potentially hazardous materials from our landfills, the Ontario Government has designated Ontario Electronic Stewardship, a non-profit industry organization, to manage a program that encourages responsible reuse and safe recycling of old, used and unwanted electronic equipment. 
Visit their webpage for more info, or to find recycling spots near you in Ontario.

A delightful crew grabbed our old TV, and added it to the pile. I'm sure I have more lying around.

In just a little over two years, awareness of the electronic waste program in Ontario has increased from 22% to 65%. And thanks to you, since beginning operations on April 1, 2009, the program has diverted about 50,000 metric tonnes – that’s roughly 6,250 tractor-trailers full – of electronic items from landfill. In addition, the program encourages economic and job growth in the waste industry. Residents of Ontario welcome a safe and responsible solution for dealing with their unwanted electronics.



Happy man! Very personable.

What's Included?

  • Amplifiers
  • Audio and video players and recorders (DVD and VCR players)
  • Cameras
  • Cell phones
  • Computers and peripherals
  • Copiers
  • Fax machines
  • Monitors
  • Pagers and PDAs
  • Printers
  • Radios
  • Receivers
  • Scanners
  • Speakers
  • Telephones and answering machines
  • Tuners
  • Turntables
  • Televisions
  • Video projectors
Download the Recycle your electronics brochure (PDF 767 KB) - French (PDF 770 KB)