Pew Environment Group
http://www.pewenvironment.org/campaigns/clean-energy-program/id/8589935316/?WT.srch=1&WT.mc_id=SM-Clean_Energy-CA
Accelerating clean energy solutions that improve the economy, national security and the environment.
Introduction
Who's Winning the Clean Energy Race? 2010 Edition.
Download our latest report
Energy is a key pillar of our lives–it runs our cars, charges our computers and powers our factories. Globally, energy use is expected to increase 35 percent over the next 25 years, driven almost entirely by demand due to increases in electricity use and vehicle fleets. The growing need for energy around the world is likely to make it an ever more precious commodity–forcing up prices and increasing global instability. Additionally, the world’s energy sector is responsible for approximately 70 percent of global carbon emissions, the direct cause of climate change.
A business-as-usual approach to energy policy threatens global economic competitiveness, national security and the environment. We must fundamentally transform the manner in which we produce, distribute and consume energy if we are to reduce dependence on oil, create jobs, enhance global competitiveness and decrease carbon emissions.
Introduction
Project Team
- Phyllis Cuttino, Director
- Laura Lightbody, Manager
- Jessica Lubetsky, Senior Associate
- Joseph Dooley, Senior Associate
- Brendan Reed, Associate
- Tracy Schario, Communications Officer, 202.540.6582
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Electric Cars are Right for America
(Chicago Sun-Times) Former Michigan governor and clean/renewable energy missionary Jennifer Granholm stopped by the Sun-Times the other day to tell the Editorial Board that the cost of electric cars could be on par with the price of gas-powered autos as soon as 2017.More
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Energy Concerns Could Make Panetta First Green DOD Chief
(New York Times) When Leon Panetta was sworn in this morning as the 23rd secretary of Defense, he inherited a force that is more fuel-dependent than ever -- a fact that those inside the Pentagon increasingly say underlies the budgetary and battlefield issues that will consume his attention.More
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Tell President Obama to Increase Fuel Efficiency Standards
High gas prices may give us pause before taking a long road trip, but we still need to drive to work, the grocery store or school. Tell President Obama to set mileage standards at 60 miles per gallon.More
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Pew Calls for Obama Administration to Raise MPG Standards
The Pew Clean Energy Program launched a video this week to raise awareness of the benefits of increasing the fuel efficiency—or miles-per-gallon (MPG)—standards for cars and light trucks to as high as 60 MPG by 2025.More
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Increase My MPG!
High gas prices may give us pause before taking a long road trip, but we still need to drive to work, the grocery store or school. This Pew Clean Energy Program video highlights the benefits of increasing fuel efficiency—or miles-per-gallon (MPG)—standards for cars and light trucks to as high as 60 MPG by 2025. The Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Transportation (EPA-DOT) are expected to release a proposed joint rule by Sept. 30, 2011, that will elevate fuel efficiency fleet wide to a level between 47 and 62 mpg for cars and light trucks.More
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Clean Power, Good Jobs, Energy Independence: A Clean Energy Forum with Former Michigan Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm (Illinois)
Former Michigan Governor Jennifer M. Granholm, senior adviser to the Pew Clean Energy Program, will be in Chicago June 29 and 30 to participate in the Clinton Global Initiative and talk with local leaders about the role clean energy can play in creating jobs in America.More
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What is Clean Energy?
Sharing their bi-partisan agreement in this short video, former Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) and Former Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D-Mich.) discuss why America needs a national clean energy policy.More
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We Believe in Clean Energy
Clean energy can help create jobs, protect our national security, stimulate private investment and invigorate manufacturing. Sharing their bipartisan agreement in a new video, former Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) and former Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D-Mich.) discuss why America needs a national clean energy policy.More
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Postcard: Will America Settle for 3rd Place?
From 2004 to 2010, the global clean energy market grew by 630 percent. But in the race to attract private investment in this field, the U.S. fell from first place to third, behind China and Germany. To get back in contention and generate the jobs Americans need, we must have policies that ensure clean energy investors have the support they need.More
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Senator Alexander, Nissan and Pew to Highlight Importance of Electric Vehicles in Clean Energy Economy
U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.); former Michigan Governor Jennifer M. Granholm, senior adviser to The Pew Charitable Trusts; Phyllis Cuttino, Pew Clean Energy Program director; and Nissan leadership today at Nissan Americas headquarters discussed the role that electric vehicles (EVs) can play in growing the clean energy economy.More
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Ex-Governor Sees the Light on Green Issues
With the gusto of a liberated politician, former Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm said the American ethos of "consume, consume, consume," has to give way to a national environmental policy. She said it also has to give way to a new way of speaking to Americans about the environment.More
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MIT Reception with Former Michigan Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm
Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm will appear at a reception with clean energy and clean technology researchers and business leaders.More
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A Tour with Former Michigan Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm: Veolia Energy North America
This plant tour with former Michigan Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm, will examine how waste heat from the power production process is recycled and converted into useful thermal energy (steam). This environmentally-friendly, cogenerated “green steam” is imported from Cambridge to Boston. The waste heat recovery allows Veolia Energy to consume less natural gas in its production process and represents about 50 percent of the steam delivered to Veolia Energy’s customers in Boston.More
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U.S. Is Falling Behind in the Business of 'Green'
(New York Times) The Mark Group started hunting for a new untapped market when it realized that its core business — insulating old homes using innovative technology — would drop off in coming years. Based in this rust-belt city, the company had grown rapidly over the last decade largely because of generous and mandatory government subsidies for energy conservation that impelled the British to treat their homes.More
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Events of the Pew Project on National Security, Energy and Climate
Find out where the Pew Project on National Security, Energy and Climate has held events. More
Devastating paper on IPCC consensus
I’m pinched for time, so I’ll unashamedly pinch this from Bishop Hill (who I don’t think will mind):A devastating paper by Jane Goodwin on Iowa State university is discussed at Judy Curry’s blog. The subject is the IPCC consensus:
We shall argue that consensus among a reference group of experts thus concerned is relevant only if agreement is not sought. If a consensus arises unsought in the search for truth and the avoidance of error, such consensus provides grounds which, though they may be overridden, suffice for concluding that conformity is reasonable and dissent is not. If, however, consensus is aimed at by the members of the reference group and arrived at by intent, it becomes conspiratorial and irrelevant to our intellectual concern.Both the paper and the blog post are must-reads.
Climate Realists
Catastrophe Denied: The Science of the Skeptic’s Position
Doug L. Hoffman: Climate Models Fail To Predict Past Catastrophes
Recent Most Read
- #1 Dr. Roy Spencer: Understanding James Hansen’s View of Our Climate Future
- #2 James Delingpole: Australia counts the cost of environmental lunacy – and plots its sweet revenge
- $24.5 billion is too bloody much, too bloody much by far, for Australia to pay for the privilege of reducing the world’s temperature, by 2020, by 1/4000th of a degree.
- #3 Christopher Booker: Queensland floods and Russian heatwave will be used to justify 'climate change' policies: Updated by Piers Corbyn
- #4 You Could Not Make It Up: Global temperatures were seventh warmest on record for June
- #5 James Delingpole: The BBC is at Least a Thousand Times More Evil and Dangerous than Rupert Murdoch
- #6 Pat Michaels: Why Hasn’t The Earth Warmed In Nearly 15 Years?
- #7 David Archibald: Solar Based Climate Forecast to 2050
- #8 David Whitehouse: The China Syndrome
- More amazing were the comments on the story in Richard Black’s subsequent blog. He misrepresents the GWPF by using a quote made by the GWPF about one aspect of the story (the choosing of outputs of climate models) and criticising it using as evidence something completely different (picking 1998 as the start date for measuring temperature trends). As an aside, 1998 was the year mentioned in the research paper and the associated press release by the PNAS. Because of the 1998 strong El Nino it is generally not used as a start point in temperature trends, as the BBC should well know.
Then the blog does something rather amazing in that it performs a crude, statistically meaningless analysis of past temperature trends. This presumably impresses the author of the blog and also contradicts the central premise of the Kaufmann et al paper that prompted it. I wonder if the author had known that Kaufmann et al could be so obviously shown to be based on a false premise, that there was a standstill in global temperatures, he would have written the original report on the paper in such positive and supportive terms. - #9 Solar Wind Changes Atmospheric Pressure over South Korea
- #10 Families face £1,000 bill for green energy: Huge annual levy to appease the climate lobby by Sean Poulter
- Reply to article: Dr. Roy Spencer’s water pot by Alan Siddons
Tim Worstall: Fuel Poverty and Climate Change Legislation
To beat fuel poverty we either have to make energy cheaper or give more money to those fuel poor households so they can buy more of it.
To beat climate change we need to make energy and fuel more expensive and to actively dissuade people from using them.
Finding good information on the internet
In this new digital information age, how do we keep from being misinformed? As a skeptical environmental research scientist and educator I have picked up a few tricks that anyone can use to find and select high-quality information from the internet.
Skeptical Inquirer
Skeptical Inquirer is the official journal of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. Six times per year Skeptical Inquirer publishes critical scientific evaluations of all manner of controversial and extraordinary claims, including but not limited to paranormal and fringe-science matters, and informed discussion of all relevant issues. In addition to news, articles, book reviews, and investigations on a wide variety of topics, Skeptical Inquirer has a stellar stable of regular columnists including Joe Nickell (“Investigative Files”), Massimo Polidoro (“Notes on a Strange World”), Massimo Pigluicci (“Thinking About Science”), Robert Sheaffer (“Psychic Vibrations”), and SI managing editor Benjamin Radford's reader-driven (“The Skeptical Inquiree”). Yale University neurologist Steven Novella, M.D., founder of the New England Skeptical Society and executive editor of the Science-Based Medicine blog, contributes a new "The Science of Medicine" column, and contributing editor Kenneth W. Krause adds a regular science column, "ScienceWatch."Scientific American - Blogs
Blog Network Highlights Sunday July 17, 2011
Latest Posts
- Tetrapod Zoology
In pursuit of Romanian frogs (part I: Bombina)
By Darren Naish | July 16, 2011 |
- Oscillator
An Action Hero Approach to Energy
By Christina Agapakis | July 16, 2011 | 2
- Life, Unbounded
Smoke signals
By Caleb A. Scharf | July 16, 2011 |
- Disease Prone
Narcolepsy...zzzZZZzzz...
By James Byrne | July 16, 2011 |
- STAFF The Network Central
Friday Network Highlights #2
By Bora Zivkovic | July 15, 2011 |
- The Artful Amoeba
The Jellyfish that Conquered Land -- and Australia
By Jennifer Frazer | July 15, 2011 | 6
- The Ocelloid
First things first: so what are protists anyway?
By Psi Wavefunction | July 15, 2011 | 2
- EvoEcoLab
The Reality and Utility of Bear Paternity Tests
By Kevin Zelnio | July 15, 2011 | 1
- Oscillator
Summer Reading
By Christina Agapakis | July 15, 2011 | 2
- STAFF Streams of Consciousness
Crux of Schizophrenia’s Emotional and Social Deficits May Be Cognitive
By Ingrid Wickelgren | July 14, 2011 | 1
- PsiVid
Winners of the Inaugural Science Online Film Festival
By Carin Bondar | July 14, 2011 |
- Compound Eye
Thrifty Thursday: What's the difference between a $200 and a $2000 camera?
By Alex Wild | July 14, 2011 | 15
- Plugged In
One Footprint at a Time
By Robynne Boyd | July 14, 2011 | 2
- The Scicurious Brain
Ketamine and Major Depressive Disorder: Is it Better with Special K?
By Scicurious | July 14, 2011 | 4
- Assignment: Impossible
Visions: No Worlds Left To Conquer
By Charles Q. Choi | July 13, 2011 | 4
- Science Sushi
What's in a name?
By Christie Wilcox | July 13, 2011 | 6
- Context and Variation
To save your marriage, hold the mayo… but only if you’re a lady
By Kate Clancy | July 13, 2011 | 7
- STAFF A Blog Around The Clock
Telling science stories...wait, what's a "story"?
By Bora Zivkovic | July 13, 2011 | 15
- STAFF Budding Scientist
Adopting a Caterpillar, and other adventures
By Anna Kuchment | July 13, 2011 | 2
- Crude Matter
Blood suckers: disease vectors and drug innovators
By Michelle Clement | July 13, 2011 | 1
- The Thoughtful Animal
Rats, Bees, and Brains: The Death of the "Cognitive Map"
By Jason G. Goldman | July 12, 2011 | 3
- STAFF The SA Incubator
Weekly Highlights #1 - virtual embryos, snakebite ointment, science of 4th of July, suspicions about salt, and more
By Bora Zivkovic | July 12, 2011 | 2
- Symbiartic
5 Reasons Your Camera Won’t Steal My Job
By Kalliopi Monoyios | July 12, 2011 | 9
- Plugged In
Maybe ... a Half of a Cheer for Shale Gas? Maybe?
By Scott Huler | July 12, 2011 | 4
- Culturing Science
The conservation school of hard-knocks, or how I chose hope over futility
By Hannah Waters | July 12, 2011 | 2 When not collecting soul albums or gushing about sweaters, Hannah Waters writes about ecology, natural history, the history of science, and whatever else pops into her little head. She lives and works in NYC but, really, on the internet.Follow on Twitter
- Creatology
Lia Ditton: Messing around on boats
By Christine Ottery | July 12, 2011 | 1 Christine Ottery is a freelance journalist with a lust for the arts and a love for science. Follow her @christineottery Follow on Twitter
- Lab Rat
Communicating with electricity
By S.E. Gould | July 11, 2011 | 4 A biochemist with a love of microbiology, the Lab Rat enjoys exploring, reading about and writing about bacteria. She is currently in the process of applying for a PhD in order to do study the manipulation of bacteria through synthetic biology. Follow on Twitter
- The Primate Diaries
Frans de Waal on Political Apes, Science Communication, and Building a Cooperative Society
By Eric Michael Johnson | July 11, 2011 | 7 Eric Michael Johnson has a Master's degree in Evolutionary Anthropology focusing on great ape behavioral ecology. He is currently a doctoral student in the history of science at University of British Columbia looking at the interplay between evolutionary biology and politics. Follow
- Cocktail Party Physics
A Series of Tubes
By Jennifer Ouellette | July 11, 2011 | 5 Jennifer Ouellette is a recovering English major turned science writer who loves to indulge her inner geek by finding quirky connections between physics, popular culture, and the world at large.Follow on Twitter
- Science with Moxie
Please pay attention to the notes.
By Princess Ojiaku | July 11, 2011 | 2 Princess Ojiaku is a graduate student of Neuroscience. She is also a student of life, exuberant nerd, and musician. She often tweets her daily links of interest and digital personal mutterings.Follow on Twitter
- The White Noise
Legalize Pot? The "Harmless" Drug and Schizophrenia
By Cassie Rodenberg | July 11, 2011 | 15 I’m an Interactive TV Producer living and working in New York City; a writer and former chemist. I've seen people Want, Deal, do anything to Feel Normal. Talk to me @cassierodenbergFollow on Twitter
- Tetrapod Zoology
You have your giant fossil rabbit neck all wrong
By Darren Naish | July 11, 2011 | 20 Darren Naish is a science writer, technical editor and palaeozoologist (affiliated with the University of Portsmouth, UK). He mostly works on Cretaceous dinosaurs and pterosaurs but has an avid interest in all things tetrapod. He has been blogging at Tetrapod Zoology since 2006. Follow on Twitter
- STAFF The Network Central
Wow! What a week!
By Bora Zivkovic | July 8, 2011 | Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web.Follow on Twitter
- The Urban Scientist
Why Kanazawa is wrong, and it's not just because he dissed Black Women
By DNLee | July 8, 2011 | 2 DNLee is biologist and she studies animal behavior, mammalogy, and ecology . She uses social media, informal experiential science experiences, and draws from hip hop culture to share science with general audiences, particularly under-served groups. Follow on Twitter
- Plugged In
Hello, Pale Blue Dot
By David Wogan | July 8, 2011 | David Wogan is an energy and policy writer from Austin, TX. You can follow David
- STAFF Streams of Consciousness
Seeing Schizophrenia Before It’s Too Late
By Ingrid Wickelgren | July 8, 2011 | Ingrid Wickelgren is an editor at Scientific American Mind, but this is her personal blog at which, at random intervals, she shares the latest reports, hearsay and speculation on the mind, brain and behavior.Follow on Twitter
- Life, Unbounded
Smells Like the Beach
By Caleb A. Scharf | July 8, 2011 | 6 Caleb Scharf is the director of Columbia University's multidisciplinary Astrobiology Center. He has worked in the fields of observational cosmology, X-ray astronomy, and more recently exoplanetary science. Follow @caleb_scharf on Twitter. Follow on Twitter
- Thoughtomics
The end of E. coli
By Lucas Brouwers | July 8, 2011 | 3 Lucas Brouwers is fascinated by evolution. He writes about science on his blog and for a Dutch daily newspaper.Follow on Twitter
- Symbiartic
Science-Art: don't call it "Art"
By Glendon Mellow | July 7, 2011 | 12 Glendon Mellow is a fine artist and illustrator inspired by evolutionary biology working in oil and digital media. You can see his portfolio at glendonmellow.com and at The Flying Trilobite blog. Follow him solo at @flyingtrilobite and with co-blogger Kalliopi Monoyios at @symbiartic.Follow on Twitter
- Guilty Planet
The pros & cons of Amazon Mechanical Turk for scientific surveys
By Jennifer Jacquet | July 7, 2011 | Jennifer Jacquet (jenniferjacquet.com) is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of British Columbia researching cooperation and the tragedy of the commons. Follow on Twitter
- Anthropology in Practice
Shifting Stigmas: The Act of Crying in Public
By Krystal D'Costa | July 7, 2011 | 2 Krystal D'Costa is an anthropologist working in digital media in New York City. You can follow AiP on
- Basic Space
Cassini helps us peek underneath the surface of Enceladus
By Kelly Oakes | July 7, 2011 | 1 Kelly Oakes has just finished a physics degree at Imperial College London, and is taking the summer off to recover before going back to start a masters in science communication. In her spare time she writes about science and drinks cocktails. Follow on Twitter
- History of Geology
The discovery of the periglacial realm
By David Bressan | July 7, 2011 | Freelance geologist dealing with quaternary outcrops interested in the history and the development of geological concepts trough time.Follow on Twitter
- Doing Good Science
Dividing cognitive labor, sharing a world: the American public and climate science.
By Janet D. Stemwedel | July 6, 2011 | 11 Janet D. Stemwedel is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at San José State University. Her explorations of ethics, scientific knowledge-building, and how they are intertwined are informed by her misspent scientific youth as a physical chemist.Follow on Twitter
- PsiVid
Introducing John Boswell - Creator of 'Symphony of Science'
By Joanne Manaster | July 6, 2011 | 3 Joanne Manaster is a university level cell and molecular biology lecturer with an insatiable passion for science outreach to all ages. Enjoy her quirky videos at www.joannelovesscience.com, on twitter @sciencegoddess and on her Facebook page at JoanneLovesScienceFollow on Twitter
- Plugged In
Saving Water with Wind
By Melissa C. Lott | July 6, 2011 | 11 An engineer and researcher who works at the intersection of energy, environment, technology, and policy. Follow on Twitter
- STAFF Degrees of Freedom
Under a Blood Red Sky
By Davide Castelvecchi | July 6, 2011 | 5
- Creatology
The inevitable evolutionary effects of global warming
By Joseph Milton | July 6, 2011 | 5 Joseph Milton is an evolutionary biologist who gradually mutated into a journalist over time.Follow on Twitter
- Disease Prone
My Genographic Project
By James Byrne | July 6, 2011 | 6 Associate lecturer at the University of Adelaide, Bacteriology PhD student and part time science communicator. Purveyor of disease.Follow on Twitter
- STAFF @ScientificAmerican
Welcome to the Scientific American Blog Network
By Mariette DiChristina | July 5, 2011 | 3 Editor in Chief, Mariette DiChristina, oversees Scientific American,
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