Truckee River Flood Management Project

The Builders Association of Northern Nevada

5484 Reno Corporate Drive, Suite 100

Reno, Nevada 89511

Invites you to:

A workshop for the discussion of proposed changes to Reno/Sparks/Washoe permitting and development process for flood management. 

Thursday, October 14 – 10 AM at

The Builders Association of Northern Nevada Board Room

Presented By:

Truckee River Flood Management Project 

New review requirements will be employed to execute new regulatory powers proposed under the Joint Powers Agreement for the Truckee River Flood Management Project 

Please RSVP  

Interested guests and business associates are welcome.

Free Teleconference: “Available Metrics and Dashboards to Gauge Sustainability Efforts”

The Northern California Sustainable Healthcare Group (NorCal)

Invites You to a Free Teleconference.

Reporting on sustainability efforts is becoming increasingly more important both within healthcare organizations’ internal communications as well as in external communications.  But what metrics and dashboards are out there to help organizations report on their progress and how user friendly and helpful are they?  This informal, interactive conference call will allow local hospitals to share the tools, metrics and dashboards they are currently using in reporting their sustainability efforts.

Join us in conversation and learn:

¨      What sustainability activities are local Northern California hospitals currently measuring?

¨      What tools are currently being used to report their sustainability efforts?

¨      What are the implementation realities, challenges and advantages of these various measures and tools?

¨      What benefits have organizations derived from using these measurements?

¨      What could you be measuring that you aren’t?

NorCal has developed a spreadsheet that will summarize the tools and metrics used by the participating organizations (see attached) and this tool will be shared with participants once completed.

When:  Wednesday, November 3rd from 12 noon-1 pm

Please RSVP to Judy Levin by November 1st (judy@ceh.org)

Call in Information:  We will send you call in information once we have received your RSVP.

Green Your Hotel’s Laundry Operations Webinar

Greetings!  Please join us on October 20, 2010 from 1:00-2:30 pm (Eastern) for a free webinar sponsored by the Environmental Sustainability Resource Center on “Greening Your Hotel’s Laundry Operations.”  Learn from hospitality and water efficiency experts about opportunities to reduce operating costs, reduce water consumption, better manage and reduce chemicals in your laundry operations, and how to implement innovative programs to save money and water without diminishing the guest experience.  This webinar is the fifth in the “Sustainable Hospitality” webinar series.  Please share this information with your networks.  

US EPA and the Environmental Sustainability Resource Center would like to announce a free Webinar on Greening Your Hotel’s Laundry Operations.  Learn from experts in the hospitality industry about opportunities to reduce operating costs, reduce water and energy consumption, and how to implement innovative programs to save money, time and improve your laundry operations.  
 
This webinar is the fifth in a series of planned “Sustainable Hospitality” webinars for the Hospitality Industry.

 

Webinar date: October 20, 2010 – 1:00 – 2:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time

PLEASE NOTE:

Registration is limited, so please register soon


Please register here.


Contact Jamie Ragan at 919-715-6519 with questions.

Choosing the right product is easy when you have the City’s help.

In keeping with San Francisco’s commitment to the Precautionary Principle, the Board of Supervisors passed legislation in 2005 requiring that all City department purchasers adhere to an approved list of environmentally preferable, or “green,” products. The San Francisco Department of Environment created the SF Approved List to share the very best in authoritative green purchasing information within City government and with the world at large.  To create the List, we review ingredients, recycled content, energy efficiency, and many other factors, along with collecting reports on product performance.  

This is your one-stop shop for over 1,000 green products.

Today’s Energy Standards for Refrigerators Reflect Consensus By Advocates, Industry to Increase Appliance Efficiency

Washington, D.C., September 27, 2010 – Advocacy groups and appliance manufacturers hailed a 25 percent increase in energy efficiency for most new refrigerators, starting in 2014, thanks to new efficiency standards that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced today, continuing a 40-year trend of improving energy efficiency for this essential home appliance.

The groups said the new standards are the first step in the department’s implementation of the recommendations they proposed to DOE in July for new minimum efficiency standards, tax credits and ENERGY STAR incentives for smart appliances affecting six major categories of home appliances.

“We appreciate that DOE has moved so quickly to adopt the agreed-upon standards,” said Andrew deLaski, executive director of the Appliance Standards Awareness Project (ASAP). “The consensus standards not only save consumers a huge amount of energy and money, they also save DOE the energy, time and money that a contentious rulemaking process can require.”

“The appliance industry has a strong history in reaching agreement with a broad base of energy and water efficiency advocates, as well as consumer groups, to develop energy conservation standards for home appliances,” said Joseph McGuire, president of the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers. “The new minimum energy standards are a significant part of the agreement, as is the extension of the current super-efficient manufacturers’ tax credits, which we are urging Congress to act on, and a soon-to-be-submitted petition to ENERGY STAR on smart appliances.”

According to the proposed rule, a typical new 20-cubic-foot refrigerator with the freezer on top would use about 390 kilowatt hours (kwh) per year, down from about 900 kwh/year in 1990 and about 1,700 kwh/year in the early 1970s. On a national basis, the new standards would, over 30 years, save 4.5 quads of energy, or roughly enough to meet the total energy needs of one-fifth of all U.S. households for a year. Over the same period, the standards will save consumers about $18.5 billion. DOE will finalize the standards by year’s end, and they take effect in 2014.

“This big step forward for refrigerator efficiency proves that the well of innovation leading to energy savings is very, very deep,” said David B. Goldstein, energy program director for the Natural Resource Defense Council and winner of a MacArthur Prize for his work on refrigerator efficiency. “These standards pave the way for manufacturer investments in a next generation of products that demonstrate ever-increasing energy and cost savings.”

Based on the July agreement, home appliance manufacturers and efficiency, environmental and consumer advocates have agreed to jointly pursue with Congress and the administration new standards for six categories of home appliances (refrigerators, freezers, clothes washers, clothes dryers, dishwashers and room air conditioners), as well as a recommendation that ENERGY STAR qualification criteria incorporate credit for Smart Grid capability and a package of targeted tax credits aimed at fostering the market for super-efficient appliances. (See agreement at www.aham.org/agreement.)

While DOE or Congress can act on the standards, the extension of the manufacturers’ tax credit for super-efficient appliances requires new legislation. EPA and DOE will consider the recommendation to jump start the Smart Grid through incentives for the deployment of smart appliances through the ENERGY STAR program.

As part of the new refrigerator standards, ice maker energy consumption also will be reflected in product energy-use ratings, giving consumers a better way to gauge actual energy use when making a choice among refrigerators.

“Even though refrigerators have become much more energy efficient, they still account for about 10 percent of household electricity use,” observed Alliance to Save Energy Vice President for Programs Jeffrey Harris. “With the new standards, consumers will not only save energy, they’ll also have a better picture of total energy use, because the ratings will include automatic ice makers.”

Several prior refrigerator standards, including those put in place in 1993 and 2001, are also the result of joint industry/advocate agreements.

“This kind of joint recommendation can expedite new standards,” said Steven Nadel, executive director of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. “By moving quickly to adopt the agreement, DOE encourages all parties who are willing to work in a collaborative way to agree on new standards.”

Here are the energy savings achieved by the proposed standards, relative to current standards for select categories:
Refrigerator-freezers                                                Percent savings
Top mount freezer                                                         25%
Bottom mount freezer                                                    20%
Side-mount freezer with through the door ice                   25%
Compact units                                                              10-25%

Freezers
Upright                                                                        25-30%
Chest                                                                           25-30%

~~~~~

The Alliance to Save Energy is a coalition of prominent business, government, environmental and consumer leaders who promote the efficient and clean use of energy worldwide to benefit consumers, the environment, the economy and national security.

The Appliance Standards Awareness Project is dedicated to increasing awareness of and support for cost-effective appliance and equipment efficiency standards. Founded in 1999, ASAP is led by a steering committee that includes representatives from energy efficiency organizations, the environmental community, consumer groups, utilities, and state government. See standardsASAP.org.www.aham.org.www.nrdc.org.

The Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers is a not-for-profit trade association representing manufacturers of major and portable home appliances, floor care appliances, and suppliers to the industry and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. You can visit the AHAM Web site at

The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, nonprofit organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has 1.3 million members and online activists, served from offices  in New York, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Beijing. More information on NRDC is available at its Web site:

 The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy is a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing energy efficiency as a means of promoting economic prosperity, energy security, and environmental protection. ACEEE was involved in the legislation establishing federal efficiency standards, and has been active in all rulemakings since then. For information about ACEEE and its programs, publications, and conferences, contact ACEEE, 529 14th Street N.W., Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20045 or visit aceee.org.

California big solar binge continues with approval of more projects

Since Aug. 25, the energy commission has licensed six solar thermal power plants that would cover some 39 square miles of desert land and generate 2,829 megawatts. That’s nearly six times as much solar capacity as was installed in the United States last year, mostly from rooftop solar panels.

“Consider how important it is that California move aggressively toward renewables and how important these pioneering projects are,” Jeffrey Byron, a member of the California Energy Commission, said at a hearing Wednesday.

Regulators and developers are racing to put shovels to ground before the end of the year when federal incentives for large renewable energy projects will expire. The loss of federal incentives could threaten the financial viability of some of the solar projects.

Read the complete article at GRIST

Obama Administration Announces Plans to Install New Solar Panels on the White House Residence

U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Council of Environmental Quality (CEQ) Chair Nancy Sutley today announced plans to install solar panels and a solar hot water heater on the roof of the White House Residence. These two solar installations will be part of a Department of Energy demonstration project showing that American solar technologies are available, reliable, and ready for installation in homes throughout the country. Secretary Chu and Chair Sutley made the announcement during CEQ’s 2010 GreenGov Symposium, which is bringing together leaders from federal, state, and local governments, nonprofit and academic communities, and the private sector to identify opportunities around greening the federal government.

Full story

Energy Tax Incentive Legislation Targets Building, Industrial Energy Efficiency

Senate Energy & Natural Resources Chairman Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) and Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) teamed up on Wednesday to introduce legislation providing tax incentives to the energy sector, The Hill reports.

The bill, the Advanced Energy Tax Incentive Act of 2010, focuses on building and industrial energy efficiency, domestic manufacturing, emerging clean energy technologies and carbon mitigation, the Washington Independent Reports.

The legislation would enables home and business owners to defray upfront costs of investing in energy-saving technologies, including performance-based tax credits for whole home retrofits.  It would make $2.5 billion in tax credits available to manufacturers dealing with clean renewable energy or enhanced energy efficiency products.

The measure would also establish a $1 billion tax credit program to enable domestic manufacturers to undertake energy-saving measures that advance their competitiveness, and facilitate the growth of renewable electricity by creating a tax incentive for energy storage systems.

The bill would also revamp the tax credit for carbon capture and storage, provide credits to promote off-shore wind production facilities and the development of domestic fuels derived from algae.

A summary of the bill outlines the various credits in detail (pdf).

Read the complete article at Environmental Leader