The environment in the news thursday, 22 May 2008


Firms honored for green ingenuity and commitment



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Firms honored for green ingenuity and commitment

Companies prosper while doing good for the planet


By Ilana DeBare

San Francisco Chronicle

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Insurance policies geared to green buildings. Methane from beer brewing that is turned into energy. Company shuttle buses that cut pollution by getting employees out of their private cars.

These were among the cutting-edge environmental moves by Northern California companies that were singled out for praise in a report released Tuesday by the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund.

In a news conference with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, EDF called attention to innovative environmental practices by large companies throughout the country - including some familiar Bay Area names such as Sun Microsystems, Fireman's Fund, Google and Yahoo.

"We cast a wide net looking for innovations that are good for business, good for the environment and have the potential to be implemented right now by a broad range of companies," EDF Executive Director David Yarnold said.

The EDF report focused on specific green practices that can be copied by other companies. It did not rate the overall environmental performance of any companies.

Among the ideas and California companies highlighted in the report:

-- Green insurance policies. Novato's Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. sells a policy that allows companies to rebuild their conventional structures with alternative green materials after a loss.

Another Fireman's policy offers a discount to green-certified buildings and lets solar-powered businesses recover the cost of buying power from the grid if their solar apparatus has been damaged in a loss.

-- On-site energy production. Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. of Chico uses fuel cells and solar panels to generate 80 percent of the energy it uses. The fuel cells are powered in part by methane generated from the brewery's water treatment plant.

-- Large-scale telecommuting. Santa Clara's Sun Microsystems allows half of its employees - about 18,000 people - to work from home or from satellite offices close to their homes.

Meanwhile, Cisco Systems and Hewlett-Packard are selling new high-quality videoconferencing systems that could eventually cut the amount of pollution generated by business travel.

-- Company-run transit. Google and Yahoo both operate their own transit systems, giving free rides to work to many of their employees.

-- Closed-loop manufacturing. This refers to a process in which worn-out products can be remade into new, similar products of comparable quality. Patagonia, the outdoor wear company based in Southern California, has a pilot program to collect customers' used fleece clothes, break them down into fibers, and reweave them into new textiles.


Online resources


The EDF report is available at www.edf.org/innovationsreview.

E-mail Ilana DeBare at idebare@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/05/21/BUMV10PN3A.DTL

This article appeared on page C - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/05/21/BUMV10PN3A.DTL&type=printable


Carbon dioxide increases in 2007

By H. JOSEF HEBERT, The Associated Press

The Washington Post
Tuesday, May 20, 2008

WASHINGTOIN -- The Energy Department reports that carbon dioxide emissions increased by 1.6 percent last year with most coming from residential and commercial energy use. Emissions from transportation and industrial sources were essentially flat, compared to 2006.

The increases came from a greater demand for heating and cooling because of weather. Carbon dioxide, the leading greenhouse gas linked to global warming, declined in 2006, also because of weather-related circumstances.

Meanwhile, Senate Democrats are proposing $800 billion in tax reductions over more than three decades to help pay energy costs under a revised global warming bill. The proposal is aimed at blunting Republican criticism that the climate legislation is too costly and will harm average Americans. The legislation, scheduled for debate on the Senate floor next month, would cut greenhouse gas pollution by 71 percent by 2050.

© 2008 The Associated Press
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/20/AR2008052001157_pf.html
Report: Iran's nuclear program feeding proliferation

By RAPHAEL G. SATTER, The Associated Press

The Washington Post
Tuesday, May 20, 2008

`LONDON -- Iran's disputed nuclear program has sent a wave of interest in atomic energy across the Middle East, a think tank said Tuesday, warning that it risked setting the scene for a regional nuclear arms race.

At least 13 Middle Eastern countries either announced new plans to explore atomic energy or revived pre-existing nuclear programs between February 2006 and January 2007, the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, or IISS, said in a report.

While the flurry of interest in nuclear power is still tentative, the report said countries such as Saudi Arabia, Algeria or Egypt could soon feel the need to match Iran's nuclear ambitions.

"If Tehran's nuclear program is unchecked, there is reason for concern that it could in time prompt a regional cascade of proliferation among Iran's neighbors," it said.

Israel, the United States and others have accused the Islamic republic of covertly seeking nuclear weapons under the guise of a civilian nuclear program.

Iran insists its intentions are peaceful, but its program has helped push nearly all its Middle Eastern neighbors into drawing up their own nuclear plans.

The report cautioned that most of the programs were still immature _ it noted that sustainable new reactor projects in the Middle East were at least 10 or 15 years away _ and said motivations were mixed.

Countries such as Jordan, Morocco or Tunisia have comparatively few energy reserves and were spurred on at least in part by a desire for energy independence in an age of soaring oil prices.

But nuclear programs in those countries face major financial hurdles, the report said. Environmental concerns could limit development, too: Jordan's proposed nuclear site near the Gulf of Aqaba could damage the area's ecosystem, for example.

Oil-rich Saudi Arabia would largely be driven by the need to maintain its edge as a regional power, the report said.

While the conservative Sunni Arab kingdom has no reactors and little in the way of nuclear infrastructure, it is a longtime rival of Shiite Iran. The report said Saudi Arabia's strategic calculus could tip in the favor of a nuclear arsenal should Tehran acquire such weapons itself.

Still other countries, such as Egypt or Turkey, are motivated both by exhaustion over high energy prices and wariness of Iran, the report said. Turkey said in 2006 that it wanted to produce 5,000 megawatts of nuclear energy by 2015, the same year that Egypt announced that its first reactor would be built at El-Dabaa, on the Mediterranean coast.

Turkey's place in NATO and the prospect of EU membership would likely preclude a nuclear weapons program there, but the report accused Egypt of doing little to dispel "the lingering impression, that, as at times in the past, it is keeping its weapons options open."

The report was dismissive of Syria's nuclear prospects, saying the country's plans for civilian atomic energy had largely been put on ice. While last year Syria was the target of an Israeli raid allegedly aimed at destroying a covert nuclear weapons program, the report said it made little sense for the country to secretly build nukes when it already had an arsenal of chemical weapons.

Other countries mentioned in the report included uranium-rich Algeria and even impoverished and politically unstable Yemen, which has said it wants to pursue civilian nuclear power despite an International Atomic Energy Agency assessment that it lacks a power grid capable of handling it.

The report said that it was difficult to squeeze nuclear weapons out of legitimate, IAEA-monitored nuclear power programs, but it warned that the perceived threat of an Iranian nuclear bomb increased the risk of civilian nuclear programs being diverted to military uses.

"Over time, Iran's program could become a powerful proliferation driver, building on regional rivalry, security concerns and one-upmanship," the report said.

___


On the Net:

http://www.iiss.org

© 2008 The Associated Press


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/20/AR2008052000604_pf.html



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