solar energy

Weekly Mulch: How the Status Quo Benefits Natural Gas Companies

by: The Media Consortium

Fri Sep 24, 2010 at 11:42

by Sarah Laskow, Media Consortium Blogger

There won't be any national or international movement on climate policy for the rest of this year, at the very least. And while Washington waits to act on climate  change, at least one group is benefiting. The natural gas industry is flourishing, despite reports that its practices lead to  flammable tap water, poisoned aquifers, and multiple health problems.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-NM), who is emerging as a new leader in Congress on these issues, said this week that a comprehensive climate bill had little chance of passing through the Senate in the next two years. Furthermore, the expectations for the next round of international climate negotiations, to be held this winter in Cancun, are abysmally low, as Inter Press Service reports.

Say no to the status quo

In the past, the volatility of gas prices limited the industry's share of the energy market, but now, hydrofracking techniques guarantee a more steady supply, meaning steadier prices. It helps that green leaders have talked up natural gas as a clean energy source.

Natural gas does emit less carbon than coal, but the process of extracting it through hydrofracking-pushing chemical-laden water into the ground to create cracks and allow gas to bubble up to the surface-has serious environmental impacts.

Sandra Steingraber, in Orion Magazine, calls the rise of hydrofracking "the environmental issue of our time." Environmentalists based support for natural gas production on the premise that natural gas would serve as a "bridge fuel" while renewable energy infrastructure grew enough to provide much of the country's fuel needs. But without stronger support from Washington for renewables, that bridge may never reach the other side.

The high cost of hydrofracking

The alliance between the environmental movement and the natural gas industry has always been uneasy. Both sides regard each other suspiciously. As evidence mounts that hydrofracking pollutes air and water, posing health risks, the worries of local environmentalists are beginning to outweigh the advantages of gas.

"Fracking is linked to every part of the environmental crisis-from  radiation exposure to habitat loss-and contravenes every principle of  environmental thinking," Steingraber writes in Orion. "It's the tornado on the horizon that is poised  to wreck ongoing efforts to create green economies, local agriculture,  investments in renewable energy, and the ability to ride your bike along  country roads."

On the ground, fracking is frightening, as Kate Sinding, an attorney with the National Resources Defense Council told Change.org's Jess Leber.

"Drinking water wells are being  contaminated, livestock are being   poisoned, explosions are occurring  when methane has gotten backed up   inside a drinking water well after the  underground water supply became   contaminated," Sinding said.

Facing down gas companies

Steingraber argues that these effects-the true impact of natural gas extraction-should be factored into the cost of gas and that the public health implications deserve the benefit of the doubt. Even weighed against a lower level of carbon emissions, these considerations make gas look much more like a bridge to nowhere.

In New York, the state government is trying to reign in the industry, Sinding says. "Culturally and politically, I think New  Yorkers may be more skeptical about a new heavy industry coming in," she told Leber. While the promise of jobs is as tempting in New York as it is in places like Pennsylvania and Wyoming that had rushed ahead with fracking, New Yorkers are seeing, Sinding says, that "now residents still face the same problems as they did  before, but  now, in addition, also can't drink their water."

Outside of New York, there are other initiatives that could slow the momentum behind fracking. The Nation's Peter Rothberg suggests supporting United for Action, a group that's fighting the practice, or pushing congressional reps to support the FRAC Act, which would increase regulation of the fracking process. (FRAC stands for Fracturing Responsibility and Awareness of Chemicals.)

Fracking and flammable tap water

Fracking can pollute water supplies, as the flammable tap water in fracking areas demonstrates. But the process also demands huge volumes of water as a matter of course. Fracking companies mix chemicals into the water and use it to keep the cracks in the earth open in order to access gas.

But fracking isn't the only water-guzzling energy process. Keith Schneider, speaking for a network of journalists and scientists called Circle of Blue, told Inter Press Service that "the competition for water at every stage  of the mining, processing, production, shipping and use of  energy is growing more fierce, more complex and much more  difficult to resolve."

More than 200 billion gallons of water go to cooling power plants each day. Harvesting solar energy also demands huge quantities of water.

As water resources grow scarcer, this demand could drive huge conflicts, both internationally, and in the United States. As Making Contact reports, in Michigan, lawmakers are weighing the idea of putting water resources into a public trust, but already the ecological arguments for that idea and the economic arguments against it are clashing. Imagine how much harder it will be to divvy up water if energy companies got involved.

This post features links to the best independent, progressive   reporting about the environment by members of   The Media  Consortium.   It is free to reprint. Visit the Mulch for a complete list of  articles on environmental issues, or follow us   on  Twitter. And for the best   progressive reporting on critical economy, health care and immigration   issues, check out The Audit,   The Pulse,   and The   Diaspora. This is a project  of The Media Consortium, a network  of   leading independent media  outlets.

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Serious Solar Breakthroughs

by: Matt Stoller

Thu Dec 20, 2007 at 22:24

I was looking at OnPoint Technologies, the military's venture capital arm, and I noticed that the investment portfolio is dominated by battery technology firms and solar energy companies, including Nanosolar, which has huge buzz in the technology world.  Nanosolar is also backed by Google, and the company is shipping its first low cost solar panels this week.

I haven't seen rhetoric like this since the dotcom boom.

How to get hold of our product 

That's a difficult question.  Because we value the tens of thousands of inquiries we have received - yet our product is allocated so much in advance already.

Our product will be introduced into the market through a very small group of the most distinguished wholesalers there exist. 

For instance, our first 100,000 panels are set to go into a very small number of private commercial installations where we deploy them in fenced or otherwise secured environments.

Focusing on a small number of non-public deployments simply makes everything so much easier for us to manage initially.  Plus this also has the benefit of allowing us to secure an additional period of proprietary protection for all the new and product features we have.

All of the remainder of our 2008 product allocations are spoken for already too (for quite some time already in fact).  This means that if your local system integrator has not secured any quantities from us, which typically will be the case, the next opportunity is in 2009.

The CEO of Nanosolar, Martin Roscheisen, is truly a remarkable man.  I keep my eye on politics to the extent of pretty much everything else, but it's worth remembering that so much is possible and so much more is becoming possible every day.  We are only one piece of a very large cultural movement to recraft a more peaceful and just global society.

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