Daily Kos

Email: terryhallinan@inbox.com

Cheap Power For The People or Mother Nature is a Dirty Fooking Commie Lib

Fri Jul 25, 2008 at 05:25:47 AM PDT

MIT graduate student researches Warm Springs geothermal potential

Since coming online in 2006, Chena's geothermal power plant has provided not only much-needed electricity—which previously came from large-scale diesel generators—but also an increase in tourist dollars.

In addition to reducing the cost of power from 30 cents per kilowatt hour (kWh) to 5 cents, the innovative renewable energy project heats 44 buildings, operates two greenhouses and keeps the Aurora Ice Museum frozen year-round.

See here.

Doing the Fandango - Geothermal Diary

Tue Jul 22, 2008 at 08:46:42 PM PDT

Pictures we took of Fandango Pass in the northeastern corner of California are not yet available so we used some that were much better anyway that can be found here.

Biomass Power: Environmentalists vs. Yogi Bear

Wed Jul 09, 2008 at 11:07:44 PM PDT

  O I met with Napper Tandy, and he took me by the hand
   And he asked 'How's poor old Ireland, and how does she stand?'
   She's the most distressful country this world has yet to see
   For they're hangin' men and women there for wearin' o' the green

   When law can stop the blades of grass from growin' as they grow,
   And when the leaves in summer time, their colours dare not show,
   Then I too will change the colour I wear in my caubeen,
   But 'till that day, praise God, I'll stick to wearin' o' the green.

The law may not stop the blades of grass from growing, but sun-worhiping environmentalists and their corporate allies might.

Children of the Dump and Other Tales For Your Enjoyment

Tue Jul 08, 2008 at 03:20:43 PM PDT

Nicaragua's 'Children of the Dump'

They walk naked through clouds of flies, their bodies covered with open sores.

They fend for themselves, competing with dogs, cattle and goats for the tastiest morsels of garbage.

They not only seek scraps of food to eat, but trash to sell.

Eight hundred children under the age of 5 scavenge a miserable existence in Chinandega, Nicaragua.

They are the "Children of the Dump."

That and other stories for your enjoyment.

Frankenstein Gas

Mon Jul 07, 2008 at 02:13:31 AM PDT

Sapphire’s goal is to be the world’s leading producer of renewable petrochemical products.

"Renewable petrochemical products?"  What new language do you speak, friend?

Mayfield is widely regarded as the world’s leader in the creation of transgenic algae. Briggs, who oversaw the sequencing of the rice genome, is a pioneer in the development of genetically modified crops.

Uh oh!  Dr. Frankenstein raises his loathsome specter on an innocent world.  If that doesn't make organic farmers quake, nothing will.

Mormon Democrats

Sun Jul 06, 2008 at 06:35:05 AM PDT

An excellent blogger in Utah said he had never talked to a Mormon that was not a Republican.  Therefore LaRocco started his campaign for senator from Idaho with a 36% deficit - the percentage of Idahoans who are Mormons.

Meet some, friend.

Frankly I get a queasy feeling visiting a site like MormonDemocrats as if I am intruding on people discussing their affairs and not mine.  Just a feeling but I won't be bookmarking the site and probably won't be back.  

Some items found here might be of general interest and hope.  Have faith. :-)

Killing The Planet With Kindness

Sat Jul 05, 2008 at 05:55:44 AM PDT

WWF: Baltic Sea ecosystem is on the verge of destruction

Isn't one Dead Sea sufficient?

The Dead Sea is a landlocked desert sea but the Baltic Sea is only one fragment of the entire system of oceans of our planet.

How exactly does one part die and not affect the whole?

Geothermal Power and Power of Another Kind

Sat Jun 28, 2008 at 07:46:36 AM PDT

The Lou Dobbsian paradise of St. Kitts and Nevis is doing Lou proud.  The aboriginal Kalinago won't be sneaking back in since they were long ago exterminated.  Not sure Lou would approve of the descendants of African slaves now being the vast majority of the population but humans have limited power - even Lou Dobbs.

The smallest nation in the Americas plans on being real big in energy.

Geothermal Power: Global Warming Not So Bad

Sat Jun 21, 2008 at 09:22:33 PM PDT

I just posted the following on a message board in answer to dire word on global warming.

Green Energy - New Motto for New Hampshire: Live Dirty or Die

Mon Jun 16, 2008 at 03:34:54 AM PDT

Or maybe that should be: "Live Free On Somebody Else's Dime."

Well maybe only Berlin, NH, has a hankering for that motto.  

And some others.

This is a diary about the rather astonishing fact that greens and some not-so-greens in the U.S. talk endlessly about abstruse technologies that may save the planet in the future while the most available and most proficient provider even now of low-tech clean, green energy is generally ignored.

Environmentalism at Bush's DOE

Tue Jun 10, 2008 at 03:44:43 AM PDT

Never forget that the DOE is currently being run by the same environmentalists who have been doing such a bang-up (so to speak) job in Iraq.

Geothermal Power in Germany

Mon Jun 02, 2008 at 10:28:48 PM PDT

Remember when we Americans prided ourselves on being a can-do country?

Now it is mostly can't do - at least when it comes to clean energy.

This is a fascinating look at the rapid growth of geothermal power in a country with minimal resources.

Poll

Unangans

50%2 votes
50%2 votes
0%0 votes

| 4 votes | Vote | Results

Geothermal Power For Unangans

Sat May 31, 2008 at 04:18:13 PM PDT

Life has never been easy for Unangans, an indigenous people of the Aleutians.

Recent archaeological investigation in the Unalaska area provides evidence that the Unangan (the People of the passes, according to linguist Moses Dirks) have inhabited the Aleutian Islands for at least nine thousand years.

The last thousand years seem to have been the worst.

Why Heat Homes When You Can Heat The Whole Damn Planet

Mon May 26, 2008 at 03:20:14 AM PDT

"We're a lot closer to making EGS economic where we can displace coal than we are to making carbon capture and sequestration economic," she said.

See here.

I have considerable doubt that we are very close to making EGS technically feasible, let alone economically viable, but it's worth a shot if you care about the planet.

There is an abundance of heat in the Earth's crust that can be tapped to generate electricity, but only so many locations in the world with the right temperatures, rock conditions, shallow depths and underground water reservoirs required to make a geothermal power plant economical.

Free Power For 50 Years

Sun May 04, 2008 at 04:36:46 PM PDT

Some upside down people Down Under must be jumping like kangaroos:


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