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May 14, 2013

KDC Solar and North Jersey Media Group Cut Ribbon on Large Solar Facility
by Staff Writers
Bedminster NJ (SPX) May 10, 2013


The solar operation will cover more than 60 percent of the power needs at North Jersey Media Group's printing plant.

KDC Solar LLC, headquartered in Bedminster, New Jersey, through its wholly owned subsidiary, KDC Solar NJMG, has commenced commercial operations at North Jersey Media Group's (NJMG) printing facility in Rockaway, New Jersey.

The solar project is the largest PV solar system (4.96 megawatts) at any printing facility in the State of New Jersey. The new system, which will generate approximately 6.2 million kilowatt hours of solar electricity per year, will allow North Jersey Media Group's facility to receive approximately 60% of its annual electric needs from clean renewable solar energy and substantially reduce its carbon footprint.

This is the equivalent of 700 homes being supplied with all their electricity for the year. In addition, there are discussions underway to add additional solar capacity when a new roof is installed on a portion of the facility.

A ribbon cutting ceremony marking the commencement of commercial operations was held at NJMG's facility on May 6th. Among the local dignitaries in attendance were Don Reddin, Rockaway Township Council Member, Dave Washington, Rockaway Township Council Member, Gregory Poff, Rockaway Township Business Administrator, Vincent Brennan, Rockaway Township Police Captain and Planning Board Member, Jim Lutz, Rockaway Township Engineer and Craig Babcock, Rockaway Fire Marshall.

KDC Solar signed an engineering and construction contract for the installation of the facility with Samsung C and T. J. Fletcher Creamer and Son, a fifth-generation contractor headquartered in Hackensack, New Jersey, was the general contractor.

The solar facility uses over 20,400 photovoltaic panels, 10 SMA America 500 kilowatt inverters and is ground mounted, roof mounted and on car ports across 50 acres of land.

"North Jersey Media Group is pleased and proud to have served as the host and electric off-taker of this solar project," said Stephen Borg, President of NJMG.

"This use of clean energy helps us continue our environmental stewardship as well as reduce costs. KDC Solar is a wonderful partner and I strongly recommend them to those considering similar projects," he said.

"We are very pleased to have worked with North Jersey Media Group and, in particular, the Borg family to bring this concept to reality. This facility is the largest PV solar facility at any printing facility in the State of New Jersey and will supply clean, lower cost, long-term solar energy to North Jersey Media Group for many years," said Hal Kamine, KDC Solar's Chief Executive Officer.

"This project is another example of a successful 'behind-the-meter' clean solar electric system for business/government and institutions, which in turn create or preserve both short and long-term jobs for the state."

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Posted: May 14, 2013 5:24am
May 6, 2013

Dominion Virginia Power Selects Old Dominion University For First Rooftop Solar Power Installation
by Staff Writers
Norfolk VA (SPX) May 06, 2013


File image.

Dominion Virginia Power has selected Old Dominion University to be the first participant in the company's Solar Partnership Program. More than 600 solar panels will be installed this summer on the roof of ODU's Student Recreation Center in the heart of the campus and generate 132 kilowatts for the electric grid.

"This installation will pave the way for us to assess the benefits of solar facilities on our electrical distribution system," said Ken Barker, Dominion Virginia Power vice president-Customer Solutions.

"This new program is already encouraging the growth of solar energy in Virginia as many other customers have contacted us and shown interest."

The Solar Partnership Program was approved by the Virginia State Corporation Commission last November. Dominion will construct and operate up to 30 megawatts of company-owned solar facilities on leased rooftops or on the grounds of commercial businesses and public properties throughout the company's Virginia service area. Fully implemented, the program would generate enough power for 7,500 homes. Each installation could generate as much as two megawatts of electricity.

"When the program was announced last year, it was readily apparent that Old Dominion University was a perfect fit for this innovative project," said ODU President John R. Broderick.

"Our Student Recreation Center is one of the main hubs of activity on our campus and our university, as a whole, is a hub of alternative energy research. This installation is yet another example of ODU's leadership in the development of solar installations and ground-breaking solar energy research."

The 132-kilowatt solar project should generate enough power during daylight hours to supply the energy needs of approximately 35 homes. The project is expected to be completed late this summer. Energy information from the installation will be available at a lobby kiosk inside the Student Recreation Center and in Kaufman Hall, ODU's engineering school.

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Posted: May 6, 2013 5:50am
Apr 17, 2013
Focus: Environment
Action Request: Petition
Location: United States

Save AmericaâEUR(TM)s Rivers: Stop Nutrient Pollution - ForceChange 
Environment  (tags: waterpollutionrivers ) 
 Alice - 17 seconds ago - forcechange.com 

A recent EPA sampling showed that only 23% of sampled rivers and streams were in "fair" shape and only 21% were in "good" biological health. The most common problem in these fresh water sources is nutrient pollution.
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Posted: Apr 17, 2013 6:54am
Apr 16, 2013
How Solar-Friendly City Permitting Processes Can Work in the US
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Posted: Apr 16, 2013 1:47am
Apr 2, 2013

Asparagus Growing Guide

Rich in B vitamins, vitamin C, calcium, and iron, asparagus is one of the first crops of spring harvest.

growing asparagusAsparagus is a perennial vegetable grown for its delicious young shoots. Rich in B vitamins, vitamin C, calcium, and iron, asparagus is one of the first crops of spring harvest. Fresh-picked spears are far more tender and tasty than store-bought ones.

Asparagus thrives in any area having winter ground freezes or dry seasons. The mild, wet regions of Florida and the Gulf Coast are about the only places where it’s difficult to grow.

Planting
Select and prepare your asparagus bed with care; this crop will occupy the same spot for 20 years or more. It can tolerate some shade, but full sun produces more vigorous plants and helps minimize disease. Asparagus does best in lighter soils that warm up quickly in spring and drain well; standing water will quickly rot the roots. Prepare a planting bed about 4 feet wide by removing all perennial weeds and roots and digging in plenty of aged manure or compost.

Asparagus plants are monoecious—each individual plant is either male or female. Some varieties of asparagus, such as ‘Jersey Knight’ and ‘Jersey Giant’ produce all male or primarily male plants, so they’re more productive—male plants yield more harvestable shoots because they don’t have to invest energy in producing seeds. Choose an all-male variety if high yield is your primary goal. If you like to experiment, you may also want to grow an heirloom variety or a purple-stalked variety like ‘Purple Passion’. With an all-male variety, twenty-five plants are usually adequate for a household of four; plant double that amount for standard varieties. (Ardent asparagus lovers recommend tripling these quantities.

Starting asparagus from 1-year-old crowns gives you a year’s head start over seed-grown plants. Two-year-old crowns are usually not a bargain. They tend to suffer more from transplant shock and won’t produce any faster than 1-year-old crowns. Buy crowns from a reputable nursery that sells fresh, firm, disease-free roots. Plant them immediately if possible; otherwise, wrap them in slightly damp sphagnum moss until you are ready to plant.



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Posted: Apr 2, 2013 1:37am
Mar 31, 2013
Discovery Opens Door to Efficiently Storing and Reusing Renewable Energy

Mar. 28, 2013 — Two University of Calgary researchers have developed a ground-breaking way to make new affordable and efficient catalysts for converting electricity into chemical energy.

Their technology opens the door to homeowners and energy companies being able to easily store and reuse solar and wind power. Such energy is clean and renewable, but it's available only when the sun is shining or the wind is blowing.

The research by Curtis Berlinguette and Simon Trudel, both in the chemistry department in the Faculty of Science, has just been published in the journal Science.

"This breakthrough offers a relatively cheaper method of storing and reusing electricity produced by wind turbines and solar panels," says Curtis Berlinguette, associate professor of chemistry and Canada Research Chair in Energy Conversion.

"Our work represents a critical step for realizing a large-scale, clean energy economy," adds Berlinguette, who's also director of the university's Centre for Advanced Solar Materials.

Simon Trudel, assistant professor of chemistry, says their work "opens up a whole new field of how to make catalytic materials. We now have a large new arena for discovery."

The pair have patented their technology and created from their university research a spin-off company, FireWater Fuel Corp., to commercialize their electrocatalysts for use in electrolyzers.

Electrolyzer devices use catalysts to drive a chemical reaction that converts electricity into chemical energy by splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen fuels. These fuels can then be stored and re-converted to electricity for use whenever wanted.

The only byproduct from such a 'green' energy system is water, which can be recycled through the system. To store and provide renewable power to a typical house would require an electrolyzer about the size of a beer fridge, containing a few litres of water and converting hydrogen to electricity with virtually no emissions, the researchers say.

Key to their discovery is that they deviated from conventional thinking about catalysts, which typically are made from rare, expensive and toxic metals in a crystalline structure.

Instead, Berlinguette and Trudel turned to simpler production methods for catalysts. This involved using abundant metal compounds or oxides (including iron oxide or 'rust') to create mixed metal oxide catalysts having a disordered or amorphous, structure.

Laboratory tests -- reported in their Science paper -- show their new catalysts perform as well or better than expensive catalysts now on the market, yet theirs cost 1,000 times less.

Their research was supported by the university's Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment and Economy, Alberta Innovates, Mitacs and FireWater Fuel Corp.

FireWater Fuel Corp. expects to have a commercial product in the current large-scale electrolyzer market in 2014, and a prototype electrolyzer -- using their new catalysts -- ready by 2015 for testing in a home.

Happy Easter !

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Posted: Mar 31, 2013 8:04am
Mar 31, 2013
They Paved Paradise and Put Up A Parking Lot 

Parking-lot owners are finding a new use for their vast expanses of pavement: solar power.

From Long Island to the Arizona desert, developers are covering their lots with canopies of solar panels. Lot owners get to double up on their use of underutilized land and to offset their utility bills at the same time. And very little stands between most lots and the sun, so they can produce plenty of power. What's more, the canopies provide shade when it's hot and prevent snow from accumulating in the winter. Some have charging stations for electric vehicles.

NRG Energy Inc., NRG +0.95% Princeton, N.J., installed and owns the panels, leasing the site and selling power. The company and the team both declined to disclose financial details about the project.


The solar parking-lot system meets 20% of FedExField's power needs on game days.

One of the country's largest solar carports is now under construction at Rutgers University's Livingston Campus in Piscataway, N.J. The eight-megawatt installation will cover about 32 acres and will cost about $40.8 million before federal and state incentives. The project is being built by a private company, which will lease the panels to the university. Rutgers expects to save $28 million in electricity costs over 20 years.

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Posted: Mar 31, 2013 3:28am
Mar 22, 2013

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZp9egjX974

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Posted: Mar 22, 2013 4:01pm
Mar 16, 2013
Another Banner Year for Solar Power: Industry Breaks Records in 2012
In 2012, the U.S. solar industry grew 76 percent over 2011, adding 3.3 GW of new solar capacity.
 
Nashua, NH -- Today the U.S. Solar Energy Industries Association along with GTM Research released the results of its annual year in review, and 2012 numbers give the solar industry another reason to celebrate.
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Posted: Mar 16, 2013 12:48am
Mar 14, 2013

New Zero-Down, No-Risk Energy Efficiency Investment Fund Aims To Unlock $150 Billion In Savings

Double your money, create more than 1 million jobs and make a big dent in US carbon and greenhouse gas emissions – that’s what could be realized if the US were to double energy productivity by 2030, according to the Alliance Commission on National Energy Policy’s recently release Energy 2030 report.

Looking to spur energy-efficiency gains across the US, CalCEF and Metrus Energy on March 13 launched a new financial intermediary service that could unlock the doors to a projected $150 billion in energy-efficiency savings by providing “otherwise hard-to-get financing for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs).”

With the Efficiency Resource Fund, CalCEF and Metrus have come up with a no-risk, zero-down way to offer SMBs funds to finance energy-efficiency projects, projects that could yield $15 billion a year in energy savings over the next decade, according to a joint press release.

Credit: NEEA's Suite Search

Credit: NEEA’s Suite Search


Read more at http://cleantechnica.com/2013/03/13/new-zero-down-no-risk-energy-efficiency-investment-fund-aims-to-unlock-150b-in-savings/#gASEEV0XuVWlQFJ4.99 
The CalCEF-Metrus Energy Efficiency Resource Fund

Working through the Efficiency Resource Fund process, building owners sign an Efficiency Service Agreement (ESA) of up to 10 years, “then hire contractors to design, install, measure and maintain energy-saving improvements,” the Fund partners explain.

The latest energy-efficient heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems and other energy efficiency equipment and appliances typically have useful lives that extend well beyond 10 years. Fund customers can continue to realize savings and benefits once the term of the ESA expires.

By making energy-efficiency improvements, building owners, as well as building inhabitants, benefit from improved safety, health, wellness, comfort, and productivity, and a reduced carbon and overall environmental footprint, while also realizing savings on utility bills. The Fund recoups its investment by billing customers for realized efficiency gains.

Moreover, the Fund bridges a big gap in financing available to SMBs looking to carry out energy efficient projects. According to the Fund partners, “This innovative approach bridges the funding gap that has stymied these small- and medium-sized retrofit projects – some 4 million building nationwide.”

Added CalCEF managing director Paul Frankel:

“The Efficiency Resource Fund is a trail-blazing investment vehicle that taps a massive, underserved market opportunity.”

“We’re enabling a whole class of projects that would otherwise not be completed, while at the same time delivering not just savings for customers but also attractive returns for impact investors and generating capacity for utilities.”

The returns and benefits from making investments in energy efficiency are increasingly being recognized in the US. CalCEF and Metrus are pitching the Efficiency Resource Fund to pension fund managers and construction industry in particular, prospects for whom such investments can prove particularly attractive.

Energy-efficiency investments, according to the CalCEF and Metrus, garner “a substantial return on investment, while also generating new local construction jobs that will increase pension contributions.”

The Wide-Ranging Benefits And Advantages Of Investing In Energy Efficiency

New York State Comptroller and trustee of the New York State Common Retirement Fund, Thomas P. DiNapoli, is encouraging portfolio companies to boost investments in energy efficiency and renewable energy, the Fund partners highlighted. Adding to the impetus, executive director of the Los Angeles County Chapter of the National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA) and 20-year pension trustee Jim Wilson was quoted as saying:

“There’s a huge amount of money to be saved—and, for investors, earned—by improving energy efficiency throughout our economy and putting professional contractors and skilled tradesmen to work.”

A long-standing supporter of CalCEF, Sidney E. Frank Foundation trustee Cathy Halstead emphasized the multiple, cross-cutting gains and benefits to be derived from investing in energy efficiency improvements.

“The Efficiency Resource Fund is a unique opportunity for investors to put money to work in an area that will produce multiple positive outcomes. We’ve supported the development of this novel financing mechanism because we see its potential for advancing green buildings, green jobs, emissions reductions, and cost savings for small and medium businesses.”

Now Accepting SMB Applications

The Efficiency Resource Fund is now accepting financing applications from facility owners with energy-efficiency retrofit project plans under $1 million.

CalCEF expects to raise another $10 million in capital from investors by the end of 2013. Fund details are available online in its concept paper, “The Sub-Million Dollar Question: Leveraging Impact Investment and Service Agreements for Small and Mid-Sized Energy Efficiency Projects.”


Read more at http://cleantechnica.com/2013/03/13/new-zero-down-no-risk-energy-efficiency-investment-fund-aims-to-unlock-150b-in-savings/#gASEEV0XuVWlQFJ4.99 

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Posted: Mar 14, 2013 1:55am

 

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Alice C.
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Ringoes, NJ, USA
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