Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Geothermal Energy

From the Monday, December 24, 20007, Business section, Toronto Star, pages B, B4, an article about geothermal energy:

THERE'S STILL TIME TO GET INTO THERMAL GAME

Tyler Hamilton

The year 1984 is more than just a George Orwell novel. It's also when the federal government packed in its geothermal energy program, more or less taking one of Canada's best renewable resources off the radar screen of the public and investors.

In the 23 years that have passed, the world has become a different place. Drilling technologies have improved dramatically. The ability to detect geothermal hotspots to detect geothermal hotspots deep below the Earth's surface has also gotten better. Climate change concerns have drawn much-needed atention to development of renewable energies such as wind-solar, hydroelectric and even wave power.

Around the world, including the United States, a great deal of investment - and in some cases, reliance - has been placed on the ability to tap the Earth's emission-free geothermal resources. Canada, however, isn't even on the map.

We remain the only country in the Pacific Rim to not generate electricity from the intense heat deep underground, and the federal government remains somewhat ignorant and uninterested in the potential. One company, Western Geopower, is trying to give it a shot on a 100-megawatt project in British Columbia, but operating alone without federal support hasn't been an easy endeavour.

"We're so far out of the game," says Alison Thompson, vice-president of the Canadian Geothermal Energy Association, based out of Calgary.

The organization has existed for three decades, but you'd never know it. No funding and no program over the years has gutted its profile, and limited its function to an academic exercise.

Thompson, research and development manager with oil company Nexen Inc., hopes to change that. Calling herself a "concerned citizen," she volunteered for the association earlier this year and has been part of an effort to rejuvenate the industry's image and boost its public profile.

The association's website at www.geothermal.ca has been revamped. It even got singer Sarah McLachlan to volunteer her "World on Fire" single as the association's theme song. And because Thompson is associated with the oil industry, it brings some credibility to the organization when it comes to lobbying the government for help.

"I'm a composting, rain-barrel type of gal, so this is something I want to hang my hat on," says Thompson, adding that she wants to bring the same kind of mindshare to geothermal as what we currently see in the wind industry. "They really have marketed themselves well, and that's what geothermal hasn't done a good job of.

"I just think the future is enormous for this."

The association's immediate goal is to lobby the federal government to reinstate its geothermal program and start collecting up-to-date data, through the Geological Survey of Canada, on geothermal hotspots and potential across the country.

Thompson says existing data suggests that "easy" geothermal projects in British Columbia could amount to 3,000 megawatts, but figures the number is likely closer to 6,000 megawatts. Alberta and the Yukon also have tremendous potential, but a lack of data "makes it hard to pin down."

If you drill deep enough you can even find potential sites in Ontario and other parts of eastern Canada - at least according to a comprehensive study released this year from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology - but Thompson says the focus at the moment is out west. Next year the association hopes to put out a white paper that will serve as a starting point for developing provincial and federal geothermal energy policy.

There are four potential types of geothermal energy Canada can tap. There are the clear-cut hotspots that are relatively shallow and provide enough heat - between 100 and 300 degreses Celsius - and the right geological conditions for building geothermal power plants. Such opportunities exist in B.C. and Alberta.

Then there's enhanced geothermal, which can tap similar temperatures but requires far deeper drilling and an attempt to engineer the right underground conditions for producing geothermal electricity.

The other two options involve medium-grade heat. For example, the fluid that comes out of conventional wells - a combination of oil and water - provides enough heat to run special micro turbines that can generate 250 kilowatts of power. There are hundreds of thousands of wells in B.C. and Alberta, "so put them all together and it's a sizable position on the grid," says Thompson.

There's also potential to find medium-grade heat from drilling relatively shallow holes at sites where you need it - what's called low enthalpy geothermal. "It's the lowest hanging fruit. Everyone knows that heat is there. Now the challenge is in finding technology that can use it on a massive scale in the oil sands," she adds.

Thompson firmly believes that Canada, while behind on geothermal, could leapfrog other countries by jumping into the game with the latest technologies. "Much like developing countries don't have land phone lines and skipped directly to cellular phones," she says.

She encourages individuals and companies interested in the technology to get involved, and give the association a stronger voice. "That grassroots ground swelling is what we're trying to create."

Friday, February 15, 2008

Birdwatcher Watching Decline of Birds

From the Greater Toronto, Toronto Star, Wednesday, January 23, 2008, page A11, an article about birdwatcher Graeme Gibson and his concerns about the birds:

AND FEW BIRDS SANG

'If you are a birdwatcher, you know the Earth is in trouble,' says author Graeme Gibson, who sees their decline as bad for the globe - and our souls

Catherine Dunphy
Staff Reporter

The birdman of the Annex despairs at this time of year. The only sound from outside the plate glass of the Avenue Rd. restaurant where he sips his organic beer is that of the horns of motorists furious at the person making an illegal left at Davenport.

Birdsong?

Graeme Gibson's generous eyebrows rise behind his glasses.

"There are relatively few birds around town now," he says. "It's like creeping senility."

There were once many more cardinals, blue jays - even crows, which were decimated by the West Nile virus - about town. The best we can do now is salute winter's rough 'n' weather-ready starlings, pigeons, gulls - admittedly brown birds the colour of slush, ordinary birds, not the stuff of awe, wonder, colour and musicality.

The 82nd annual Christmas bird count held by the Toronto Ornithological Club on a balmy Sunday in December recorded 89 species, including 56,022 individual birds. Then again, 21,523 of them were European starlings, up from their 2005 tally of 12,000-plus.

On the bright side, there is a red-tailed hawk - "very big, very handsome" - lurking near a Richmond St. condominium.

"It's two feet when it stands on my friend's balcony. A marvellous bird. I've seen it."

He once watched it chase a flock of pigeons on Charles St. just west of Yonge. Thrilling. "They exploded into the sky," Gibson says.

He is often watching for birds. A respected author (Five Legs, Perpetual Motion) before he compiled the best selling The Bedside Book of Birds, in which he turned a passion begun at age 37 into an orgiastic, glorious - and award-winning - book not about birds but about people's relationship with them.

In it Gibson writes: "One of the rewards of birdwatching is the brief escape it affords our ancient and compelling need to make Nature useful. There may even be something of Thoreau's 'true knowledge' in that evanescent taste of freedom."

He also writes: "At its best, in its heightened moments, birdwatching can encourage a state of being close to rapture - the fogetfulness that blends the individual consciousness with something other than itself. Some people call it 'flow,' others enlightenment.'"

Gibson, 73, believes it might save the world.

"If you look out the window and don't see nature," he says, gesturing towards Avenue Rd., "all you see is culture. You are separated from nature."

Here connects by birdwatching in Toronto's ravings, the Summerhill reservoir, beside the Humber and Don rivers where migrating birds fly by, at Mt. Pleasant cemetery and in Rosedale's Craigleith Gardens. It grounds his activism these days. He was one of the founders of the Writers Union of Canada, the Books and Periodical Council, the Writers Development Trust, plus an early president of PEN Canada in 1987.

He is a founding user of Bullfrog Power, an alternative energy provider, at the Annex home he shares with his partner, writer Margaret Atwood. The pair are also joint presidents of the rare birds club of Bird Life International, a global alliance of conservation organizations.

"If you are a birdwatcher, you know the Earth is in trouble," he says.

He believes he first glimpsed the spectable of bird life in full flight as a 14-year-old in 1948, from the bow of the freighter that brought his family from Austrlia back to Canada and London, Ont., where he grew up.

He moved to Toronto to pursue teaching, then writing, and although he was an outdoorsy person keen on canoeing and hiking, he was pretty much oblivious to birds - until one day when, while walking in the Don Valley in the late '70s, he spotted a red-tailed hawk under the Bloor viaduct. Intrigued, he bought a bird book, then a pair of binoculars.

His birdwatching has since taken him all over the world. While sailing near Isabella Island, part of the Galapagos Islands, he spotted an albatross through an unexpected break in blinding rain. He felt as if he had received a gift, he says, and decided then to begin collecting writings and artifacts about how humans relate to birds.

For years he led birdwatching tours to Cuba, a primary source of his income, he notes.

Now, for about a third of every year, he and Atwood live in their home on Pelee Island, where he was instrumental in founding the Pelee Island Bird Observatory six years ago.

"Graeme has been critical to the (conservation) movement," says conservation theorist Elizabeth Agnew. "He and Margaret are both crack birders."

Agnew visited Cuba with Gibson. "Oh my goodness, it's like travelling with Mick Jagger," she says. "He's an entity and a quantity."

He's bemused by this. And by the propensity of birdwatchers to keep competitive lists of sightings. The only list he keeps is of birds seen in his backyard - because he's competing with no one, only revelling in the whir and strobe light flash of the fleeting presence of the creature believed to represent all our dreams.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Banning Dirty Cars From City Centres in Germany

From the business section of the Toronto Star, Wednesday, January 2, 2008, page B4, an article about Germany's plan for taking car of air pollution and dirty cars:

GERMANY BANS AIR-FOULING VEHICLES

Berlin - Three German cities, including the capital Berlin, began implementing a new air pollution system yesterday that bans the dirtiest vehicles from their centres.

Drivers in Berlin, Cologne and Hanover are now required to display a coloured badge showing the level of pollution cuased by their vehicle, with a scale of red, yellow and green.

Some vehicles, notably an estimated 1.7 million old diesel cars and vans, will not qualify for even the most polluting red badges and will be prohibited in central areas.

Drivers without a badge who are caught in the city centre will face a 40 euro, or $58 (Canadian), fine and will be docked a point on their driving licence.

The system is to be extended to about 20 German cities this year, including Stuttgart and Munich.

It applies to all vehicles, including those registered outside Germany, but some officials have indicated that foreign cars will be treated with leniency.

In Berlin, city authorities have decided not to punish errant drivers until the end of January.
gence France-Presse

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Greening Las Vegas

From the November/December 2007 issue of E The Environment Magazine, Volume XVIII, Number 6, www.emagazine.com, page 12:

THE GREENING OF LAS VEGAS

Las Vegas is all about the "experience." In a city focused on spontaneous and gluttonous consumption, the trick is to keep the tourists entertained and the green innovation transparent, or the city will undermine its sole reason for being. But, with environmental concerns now looming large, even Las Vegas is looking to replace the Luxor beam with compact fluorescents.

"The bigger question is, do we even need a Luxor beam?" says Steve Rypka, president of GreenDream Enterprises, a Las Vegas green living consulting firm." Las Vegas has worldwide recognition. How wonderful it would be for the city to be seen as a leader in green."

From a building perspective, the multibillion-dollar Project City Center by MGM Mirage slated to open in 2009 has applied to become a LEED-certified development, the largest of its kind in the U.S.

"MGM Mirage has a commitment to sustainability but our sheer size requires examining the world of possibilities," said Gordon Absher, an MGM Mirage spokesperson. "The company overall is focused on three key areas for becoming greener: new resort construction, existing resort renovations and maintenance and general sustainable opportunities."

Taxis are a staple on the Strip, and Lucky Cab Company of Nevada introduced Toyota Prius hybrid taxis in 2005. Desiree Dante, vice president of Lucky Cab, says, "We're expecting that 20 per cent of our fleet will be Prius by the end of 2007. We save about $5,000 per vehicle annually with the hybrid cars." Other taxi companies in town are now testing hybrid vehicles in their fleets.

Las Vegas is also the first city in the West to put hydrogen-powered buses on the road to transport tourists from downtown to the Las Vegas Premium Outlets. Meanwhile, Nevada Solar One, a solar thermal installation in the desert outside Las Vegas, is producing 64 megawatts of power.

"We're stewards of the planet," says Rypka. "We now have a tremendous opportunity to use our intelligence to make a difference. There's currently no green solution for long-distance rapid transportation like air travel, yet Las Vegas is dependent upon tourism. We need to be more creative, to bring people in and lessen the environmental impact."

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Bureau slogan is "What happens in Vegas, Stays in Vegas." But, when it comes to green living, everybody is affected.

CONTACTS: Green Dream Enterprises (702) 285-6845, www.green-dream.biz; Project CityCenter,(866) 722-7171,www.citycenter.com.

-Cindi R. Maciolek

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Green Living

From the Wednesday, December 26, 2007, Canada section of the Toronto Star, page A36, an article about climate change and the need for environment friendly lifestyles:

IS NEW SOCIAL CLIMATE NEEDED FOR GREEN LIVING?
Eco-crusade gaining momentum, but rules, infrastructure lacking

Gregory Bonnell
The Canadian Press

It was the year of living environmentally, or at least being implored to go clean and green as politicians of all stripes took up the global-warming cause in the wake of Al Gore's climate-change crusade.

Amid messages of new technologies and altering lifestyles, Canadians looking to make a change in 2008 should take heart that it doesn't all have to be sacrifice.

Experts say an environmentally friendly lifestyle can mean not only lower household bills but also improved mental and physical health when forgoing the automobile.

Still, just how many people are willing to move beyond lip service is a pressing question.

"You have polls where people say, 'Yes, we're willing to pay more to be green.' I think this is a premise that has yet to be fully tested," said Clifford Maynes, executive director of Green Communities Canada.

Buying organic food, installing high-efficiency furnaces or going hybrid for the next vehicle purchase are all options that mean spending more than one would if they stuck with the status quo.

Ali Squire, 63, said she tries to live as green as possible, which has meant buying more expensive organic foods - something that wasn't always an option when her children were still at home.

Squire, who lives on her own in Advocate Harbour, N.S., buys organic, grows her own vegetables, reuses and recycles.

"Between myself and sharing other people's gardens ... in the summer, very much so, you really notice the different in the grocery bill," said Squire.

When recycling came to her tiny community several years ago, Squire said her efforts were buoyed. But the lack of public transportation in the area means she needs a car to get to work, which she says she feels guilty about.

The goal, said Chris Winter of the Conservation Council of Ontario, "is not to become perfect, just to become better."

The Toronto resident is launching a website, www.weconserve.ca, that asks Canadians to assess how green they're living and set a green resolution for 2008.

Winter, a married father of two young children who doesn't own a car, said nothing about his lifestyle leaves him wanting.

In the political realm, climate change went from a non-existent issue in the 2006 federal election campaign to seemingly the most pressing matter on Parliament Hill.

The Conservative government's performance, including its call for a 20 per cent emissions reduction by 2020, has not impressed activists.

"We also need Canadians to be taking the steps in their own lives that they possibly can," said Green Party Leader Elizabeth May. "It's not easy when all the signals are going in the wrong direction."

It's a point well taken by the environment movement - even if public will exists, fiscal and social infrastructure is sorely lacking.

"The whole ability to adopt a conserver lifestyle depends on having that support structure there," said Winter. "In Toronto, we have it in spades now and it's beginning to spread."

Friday, December 21, 2007

Forest Industry Pledges to Clear the Air

From the Tuesday, October 30, 2007, Toronto Star, News section, page A3, the forest industry pledging to become carbon neutral:

CANADA'S FOREST INDUSTRY TO TURN OVER A NEW LEAF
Making plans to meet carbon-neutral pledge

Peter Gorrie

Environment Reporter

Canada's forest industry says it will be carbon neutral by 2015.

In what is likely the first such pledge by any major industry sector in the world, the forest companies say their logging, paper and pulp operations, and the products they produce, will, in effect, no longer be a source of greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change.

And they'll do it, they say, without resorting to offsets - the controversial practice in which polluters continue to spew emissions, but contribute to projects elsewhere that claim to reduce them.

The effort must extend beyond forests and mills to wood and paper consumers, such as construction sites, homes and offices, Avrim Lazar, president of the Forest Products Association of Canada, said.

The aim is to protect both the environment and the industry's bottom line, said Lazar, who was to announce the pledge this morning at a conference in Ottawa.

Global demand for wood products is soaring, he said, "If people continue to do it the old way... it won't be very good for the planet."

The devastating spread of pine beetles in British Columbia - partly because winters are no longer cold enough to kill the insects - is a wake-up call, he said.

"We got a lesson in the impact of climate change before most of the rest of Canada."

As well, global buyers increasingly demand products from "sustainable" operations. That can be an edge for Canadian firms, which face fierce competition from China, Brazil and other places where trees grow faster, costs are lower, and environment rules can be lax.

The Canadian industry has reduced its greenhouse emissions 44 per cent since 1990, when its output increased by 20 per cent.

That puts it far ahead of Canada's Kyoto Protocol target - a 6 per cent cut.

Most of the industry's reductions have been at pulp and paper mills, which have become more efficient and, in many cases, converted from oil and gas to renewable fuels. But much of the effort will involve keeping wood and paper out of landfills where, as it decomposes, it releases methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

About half the paper used in Canada is recycled, Lazar said. To improve that figure, the industry will use publicity to target consumers in offices and apartment buildings, where recycling rates are low.

Another focus will be recycling wood waste at construction sites. The aim is to have it recycled into plywood, particleboard or paper; or sent to high-tech plants that burn wood for heat and electricity.

"We hope other industries will rise to the challenge" of doing the same, or better, said Lorne Johnson of World Wildlife Fund Canada, which is working with the association. Other green groups are on an advisory panel.

Johnson added the odds are good the industry will meet the target. "They're already doing a good job."

Shifting Into Neutral
How the Canadian forestry industry plans to meet its 2015 target:

* Become energy self-sufficient - switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy.
* Adopt energy-efficient technologies.
* Increase diversion of used forest products from landfills.
* Cap more landfills to prevent methane leaks.
* Increase cogeneration - using waste heat to generate electricity.
* Increase potential of forests and wood products to store carbon.
* Maximize recycling of paper and wood products.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

British Business Group & Climate Change Commitment

From the Business section of the Toronto Star, Tuesday, November 27, 2007, page B4:

U.K. EMPLOYER GROUP VOWS TO FIGHT CLIMATE CHANGE

London - Britain's top employer's organization pledged yesterday to help combat climate change, saying the issue is an urgent priority for business, government and consumers alike.

The Confederation of British Industry has placed global warming at the heart ofits agenda at the start of its annual two-day conference in London.

Reporting the findings of its climate change task force, the federation called for fundamental change in British business and issued a series of pledges to help companies adopt greener practices.

Firms must "change their business models to meet consumers' and society's needs in an era of climate change," it said.

One key pledge was to "develop new products and services that will empoyer households to halve their emissions by 2020."

Another vow was to save an extra 1 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions.

Federation director-general Richard Lambert added: "This report makes clear that in the future, businesses will have to be green to grow."

The task force comprises top executives from 18 well-known companies, such as BP, Royal Dutch Shell and steel maker Corus, which employ some two million people.

"Today the ... task force has demonstrated its commitment to tackling climate change," said chair Ben Verwaayen, who is also head of telecommunications group BT.

Meanwhile, the federation has questioned the British government's ambitious targets to slash carbon emissions by 26 per cent to 32 per cent by 2020 and 60 per cent by 2050.

"The U.K.'s carbon reduction targets for 2020 are likely to be missed , but that 2050 goal, whilst stretching, can be achieved at a manageable cost - provided a greater sense of urgency is now adopted, " it said, citing analysis by McKinsey consultants.

Agence France-Presse