Archive for September, 2009

Fed Clean-Energy Officials Meet w/ State Leaders in Austin


A high-powered group of state and local leaders met in Austin on Friday with officials from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory as the lab explores the prospect of collaborating with Central Texas groups on clean-energy initiatives.

The delegation from the U.S. Department of Energy lab was led by Robert McGrath, the lab’s deputy director for science and technology. Also attending were Robert Hawsey, an associate lab director for renewable electricity and end-use systems; Pete Sheldon, a scientist in the lab’s National Center for Photovoltaics, and David Ginley, a research fellow working with HelioVolt Corp., a pioneering solar power technology company in Austin.

“Texas is moving forward smartly and aggressively with deployment of renewable and energy efficiency technologies,” McGrath said. “We see multiple opportunities for partnerships for technology development and for renewable energy and energy efficiency deployment with many of the industry and university groups with which we met today.”

McGrath said his organization, which is based in Golden, Colo., wants to “capitalize upon the very productive, long-standing and continuing collaboration that NREL has with HelioVolt.”

Friday’s introductory meeting with state officials, led by Comptroller Susan Combs, included representatives from Gov. Rick Perry’s policy office and the Texas Enterprise Fund, state and federal lawmakers or their aides and Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce representatives.

Another meeting took place with managers of area utilities, including Austin Energy and CPS Energy of San Antonio, and officials with the University of Texas and Texas A&M systems and Texas State University.

McGrath said the officials all “enthusiastically encouraged” the lab’s expanded participation in planning and implementing renewable energy projects in Texas.

Laboratory officials also toured HelioVolt’s Southeast Austin plant with company executives and U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin.

“Obviously we want to transform Texas into a clean-technology leader, and we want to make the greater Austin region a center of innovation for clean technologies,” said Jose Beceiro, director of clean-energy initiatives for the Austin chamber.

Beceiro said local officials have been talking to the lab for a while. He was not at Friday’s meetings but has been involved in previous discussions about collaborating with the lab.

A larger presence of the lab in the Austin area could help recruit clean-technology companies and green jobs, developing new clean-energy technologies and attracting more federal grant money, Beceiro said.

B.J. Stanbery, chairman of both HelioVolt and the nonprofit Texas Foundation for Innovative Communities, said that “Central Texas’ unique combination of diverse utility markets, world-class research institutions and farsighted public leadership provide an opportunity for NREL to further their mission of accelerating commercialization and deployment of renewable energy.”

Bob King, president of Good Company Associates Inc., a business development consulting practice focused on energy efficiency and renewable energy, said his company helped the Texas Foundation for Innovative Communities organize Friday’s meetings.

King emphasized that discussions are in the early stages about how “the Central Texas communities can benefit from a relationship with our national lab,” which he called “the only national lab whose entire responsibility is energy efficiency and renewable energy.”

King said the meetings were productive.

“Everyone left with the next actions to take, and we’ll be having follow-up meetings,” he said. “This could be a long process, but I think we made some progress today.”

Article courtesy AAS, snovak@statesman.com; 445-3856

Sustainable Living Seven (Part Two)


Buy Less, Buy Conscientiously- Consider Life Cycle of Purchases

 We have become a nation of consumers. We all have so much STUFF we don’t really need, and we are not very aware of the ultimate cost of these habits.  The more STUFF we buy, the more materials are mined, harvested, or otherwise extracted, and the more waste we have to dispose of.   That’s a problem with serious environmental costs on both ends of a process called the Materials Economy, which involves extraction (use of finite natural resources), production (producing pollutants, using energy), distribution (more pollutants, more energy use), consumption (that’s us, and ok, the fun part), and disposal.  You KNOW that last one is a problem…

 Our enthusiastic (and not very well thought out purchasing) strains finite natural resources of water, minerals, oil, forests, animals; contributes billions of tons of unnecessary pollution, and goes quickly (only 1% of what we buy is still in use in six months!) into landfills that pollute water and soil.  We all know the toll that buying all this STUFF on credit has on our financial health, too.

 There is a wonderful, entertaining little video called “The Story of Stuff” that delightfully illustrates this whole idea, and you might even find it appropriate for children to help them understand how it helps the planet to resist the siren call of “more stuff!”

It’s high time we become more conscious in our buying decisions.  We need to reclaim thrift as a value, and be wise about the whole cycle of purchasing.  The next time an ad tempts you to be happier, healthier, sexier, or smarter by buying “whatever”; think twice.  Consider whether this purchase will REALLY deliver on that promise.  Maybe you could: Buy used/refurbished, borrow it from a friend, rent it, repair the one you have, trade or share. 

We have to work to change the paradigm we currently operate in, which has been humorously identified as “The one with the most toys when they die wins”.  Maybe instead of buying YET another pair of shoes to feel better, we call a friend. Or volunteer to clean up a local park.  We can learn to be involved with other people in ways that don’t involve getting in the car and going to the mall and buying things we don’t really need because we saw them on TV.  It can be so satisfying to grow things yourself, make it from scratch, repair, and otherwise be a wise and conservative steward of  dwindling resources.

 If buying is really the only good solution, compare carefully.  Consider the entire life cycle.  Buy products produced as intelligently as possible; minimal packaging, produced as locally as possible.  Consider the extraction part of the cycle.  Fair trade? Animal friendly?  Renewable resources? Read labels for toxic chemicals in the products.  A good one for cosmetics is the Cosmetics Safety Database. Is the same product available without coloring or additives?  Is it sturdy; will it last?  Many products now are intended to be disposable for convenience, but consider the wastefulness of that with each purchase.  Maybe a real razor with refills over plastic disposables.  Buy larger sizes to cut down on wasteful packaging.  Buy in bulk.  Also shop locally, and carry your own bag.  Stanberry has sturdy, reusable tote bags available for the asking!  

Tune in to Stanberry Sustainable Living Seven (3) for the next step in the process, disposing of waste in the best ways possible.

Air Quality Call to Action!


This call to action came to members of the HBA (Home Builders Association) from the President of that group. As members, we share it here because it’s so important and all of us can help:   

Your action is needed during the next 90 days to help comply with federal air pollution regulations. Failure to do so means we could receive a federal designation that could harm our local economy for the next 20 years. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could place limitations on industry and construction projects or restrict the number of cars allowed on the road. It could even mean losing federal transportation funds for local governments. That’s not good for our industry and our business.

 Travis County Commissioner Karen Huber and Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell have taken the helm, urging residents to take action. That is why I am asking HBA members and their employees, subcontractors and vendors to take a leadership role in reducing air pollution.

  1. A avoid rush hour traffic. Have crews start very early and end the day at off-peak hours. Since heat builds through the day, doing so also has safety benefits
  2. Refuel vehicles after 6:00pm
  3. Share a ride
  4. Park and turn off your vehicle instead of idling
  5. Bring lunch to work or school to reduce driving
  6. Turn off lights ; use compact fluorescent light bulbs
  7. Store paints, gas and lighter fluid in a garage or shed
  8. Encourage your owners to paint during cooler months when there is not likely to be an Ozone Alert. 
  9. Use gas powered lawn equipment after 6:00pm
  10.  If you have a choice, use the more efficient equipment, especially heavy equipment. Additives like Oryxe that help diesel equipment run more efficiently
  11. If buying new equipment, look to more efficient alternative fuels, like propane. The Texas General Land Office has grant programs for many of the counties in the Austin region
  12. Conduct teleconferences or Web meetings instead of forcing people to drive. The HBA is distributing free “on-line plan room” software that allows your trades and suppliers to bid on projects without having to drive to your office to pick up a set and gives them estimating tools to cut down on waste or extra delivery trips.
  13. Sign up for Ozone Action alerts at www.cleanairforce.org so you can encourage others to take action on critical days.

 Keep a record of what you do and submit it to the HBA. We will compile the entries and have the Green Builder Council prepare awards for the most engaged and effective programs. 

 I encourage you to join me and the HBA in overcoming this EPA threat.

 Sincerely,

 Wesley J. Peoples, President