Blog - Emerging Technology Corporation, Green Division Emerging Technology Corporation - Green Division : The Green Energy Company https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/ Mon, 30 Jan 2012 15:58:57 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb EV Tech - Postmortem https://www.etcgreen.com/general/ev-tech-postmortem https://www.etcgreen.com/general/ev-tech-postmortem The phrase "Who Killed the Electric Car" has been in the press again lately with the recent release of the documentary, "Revenge of the Electric Car". While it is our dire desire to be rid of all dependency on petroleum for our transportation needs, current generation EV technologies are still far from viable per a list of issues... economically, environmentally, safety, human health, longevity, scalability and sustainability. These high-tech vehicles simply do not make sense for the vast majority of American drivers. Per our exhaustive evaluation, we consider the EV "dead" to the general American public until the various technologies surpass a long list of reasonable thresholds. The following is the postmortem report on the current generation of EV vehicles.

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[email protected] (Steve) General Fri, 02 Sep 2011 22:45:09 +0000
MPPG https://www.etcgreen.com/general/mppg https://www.etcgreen.com/general/mppg Everyone today seems so focused on MPG, yet this unit of measure is outdated. If the fuel is scalable, sustainable, economically viable and environmentally friendly, then MPG is actually not that important.

Petroleum is a finite resource. Focusing our resources to double or even triple the Miles Per Petroleum Gallon (MPPG) for vehicles is wrong headed in that this direction only delays the depletion of this finite resource. The correct focus is sustainability. We must migrate to sustainable fuels as soon as possible to reduce the impact the end of the petroleum era will have on our economy and on all our lives.

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[email protected] (Steve) General Wed, 17 Aug 2011 15:02:35 +0000
Japanese Announce Source of Rare Earths https://www.etcgreen.com/general/japanese-announce-new-source-of-rare-earths https://www.etcgreen.com/general/japanese-announce-new-source-of-rare-earths The Japanese have been searching for an alternative to Chinese rare earth minerals for more than a year and claim to have found it with this recently published paper.

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[email protected] (Steve) General Wed, 06 Jul 2011 03:16:57 +0000
Letter to our Friends in the Sierra Club https://www.etcgreen.com/general/letter-to-our-friends-in-the-sierra-club https://www.etcgreen.com/general/letter-to-our-friends-in-the-sierra-club Rachel Rye Butler
National Conservation Organizer
Sierra Club, Green Transportation
e: [email protected]
w: sierraclub.org/transportation

RE: Invitation to participate in your Transportation Activists Blog

Dear Rachel,

Thank you for the opportunity to contribute to your Transportation Activists Blog. Working together we can move this nation into more environmentally friendly solutions while still supporting our economy and way of life.

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[email protected] (Steve Frazer) General Mon, 06 Jun 2011 16:53:10 +0000
U.S. Migration https://www.etcgreen.com/general/u-s-migration-to-diesel-biodiesel https://www.etcgreen.com/general/u-s-migration-to-diesel-biodiesel There are a dozen transportation infrastructures with a poll position to "wean" U.S. drivers off of OPEC petroleum. Only one of them is economically attractive, has the potential to become a large scale solution and can achieve rapid success. It is a win, win, win solution in that it can (1) eliminate 100% of all U.S. purchases of OPEC petroleum within 5 years. It is great for the environment in that it results in (2) 30%-35% lower emissions with a 25% petroleum volume reduction over-all each year going forward at the same number of miles traveled in comparable sized vehicles. It is economically viable (3) - while this Migration will save U.S. drivers a considerable amount of money individually, many economists are suggesting this immediate solution has the best potential to boost our economy of any option on the table today.

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[email protected] (Steve Frazer) General Sat, 30 Apr 2011 19:00:39 +0000
Secrets to Success - Colin Powell https://www.etcgreen.com/general/secrets-to-success https://www.etcgreen.com/general/secrets-to-success

"There are no secrets to success"

]]> [email protected] (Steve) General Wed, 08 Dec 2010 22:36:59 +0000 Letter to our Friends in the EPA https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/letter-to-the-epa https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/letter-to-the-epa Public Information Services Team
U.S. EPA
Office of Transportation and Air Quality
2000 Traverwood Drive
Ann Arbor, MI 48105-2195

Thank you so much for your politically correct reply. There is a level of awareness in the letter that suggests the author has some engineering credentials and the experience to apply the knowledge. Also, I will share that I spent a great deal of time in Ann Arbor years ago - I have fond memories of good times and wonderful people.

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[email protected] (Steve) General Thu, 14 Oct 2010 18:17:40 +0000
EV's and Hybrids are not our Future https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/evs-and-hybrids-are-not-our-future https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/evs-and-hybrids-are-not-our-future While we appreciate the concept of limited EV production for specific markets, using battery powered vehicles to replace liquid fuel vehicles on a mass scale is problematic.

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[email protected] (Steve Frazer) General Sat, 31 Jul 2010 18:04:06 +0000
Are you driving your last gasoline powered car? https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/are-you-driving-your-last-gasoline-powered-car https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/are-you-driving-your-last-gasoline-powered-car Vehicle owners now understand the ever dwindling supply and higher expense and risks of extracting petroleum will continue to increase the price at the pumps.

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[email protected] (Steve Frazer) General Sat, 05 Jun 2010 19:30:29 +0000
Peak Oil - Ride the Slide https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/peak-oil-ride-the-slide https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/peak-oil-ride-the-slide A fun animation for perspective. Consider that the US is now consuming 375 million gallons of oil per day. This is unsustainable. How will you "Ride the Slide"?

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[email protected] (Steve) General Thu, 27 May 2010 03:02:45 +0000
Change the World - Plant a Tree https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/a-worthy-task-plant-a-tree https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/a-worthy-task-plant-a-tree Produced in 1987, the message of this video, L'homme qui Plantait des Arbres, or The Man Who Planted Trees, is even more important today (runtime - 28 minutes). The narrator is Christopher Plummer.

Jean Giono, the author of the short story upon which the movie is based, wrote the story after American editors in 1953 asked him to write a few pages about an unforgettable character. They intended him to write about a real unforgettable character, but he created the fictional Elezeard Bouffier. When the editors objected that no Bouffier had died in Banon, he donated the story to all humanity. It was soon after published by Vogue in 1954. Many people have assumed that Bouffier is a real person.

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[email protected] (Steve) General Mon, 05 Apr 2010 16:30:54 +0000
Semper Fi! https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/semper-fi https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/semper-fi The ETC Green Staff has surveyed and developed dozens of Green Energy Managed Sites (GEMS) over the past 2 years. We are initially attracted by the site's resources and sometimes later excited and inspired by the site's history and character. A few times we have been motivated to stop our regular operations and efforts to raise a flag. It is simply the right thing to do at the time. Semper Fi!

US Flag on tower

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[email protected] (Steve) General Mon, 22 Mar 2010 05:11:34 +0000
Thank you Dr. Borlaug https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/thank-you-dr-borlaug https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/thank-you-dr-borlaug Norman E. Borlaug, the plant scientist who did more than anyone else in the 20th century to teach the world to feed itself and whose work was credited with saving hundreds of millions of lives, died Saturday night. He was 95 and lived in Dallas.

The cause was complications from cancer, said Kathleen Phillips, a spokeswoman for Texas A&M University, where Dr. Borlaug had served on the faculty since 1984. Dr. Borlaug’s advances in plant breeding led to spectacular success in increasing food production in Latin America and Asia and brought him international acclaim. In 1970, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

He was widely described as the father of the broad agricultural movement called the Green Revolution, though decidedly reluctant to accept the title. “A miserable term,” he said, characteristically shrugging off any air of self-importance. Yet his work had a far-reaching impact on the lives of millions of people in developing countries. His breeding of high-yielding crop varieties helped to avert mass famines that were widely predicted in the 1960s, altering the course of history.

Largely because of his work, countries that had been food deficient, like Mexico and India, became self-sufficient in producing cereal grains. “More than any other single person of this age, he has helped provide bread for a hungry world,” the Nobel committee said in presenting him with the Peace Prize. “We have made this choice in the hope that providing bread will also give the world peace.”

The day the award was announced, Dr. Borlaug, vigorous and slender at 56, was working in a wheat field outside Mexico City when his wife, Margaret, drove up to tell him the news. “Someone’s pulling your leg,” he replied, according to one of his biographers, Leon Hesser. Assured that it was true, he kept on working, saying he would celebrate later.

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[email protected] (Steve) General Tue, 15 Sep 2009 22:18:09 +0000
National Clean Energy Summit 2009 https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/national-clean-energy-summit-2009 https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/national-clean-energy-summit-2009 ETC Green was an exhibitor at the 2009 National Clean Energy Summit 2.0 (NCES). We enjoyed meeting the several hundred people who passed through our booth and we have already built new relationships with dozens of individuals and businesses as the result of this event.

We were very interested to hear the opinions and directions of the Energy Panel and Summit Speakers assembled by Senator Reid. However, the statements and suggested solutions were as diverse as found in the press most everyday. General Clark was even promoting an increase in Ethanol production and Public Administrative Policy to raise the current Ethanol limit from 10% to 15% at the pumps. Many of these solutions are in opposition to one another and without more focus, there cannot be success.

The price of petroleum sourced fuel in Europe has been x2 the price of petroleum sourced fuel in the US for over a decade. The Europeans have responded to this challenge with cleaner diesel standards, biodiesel blends and extremely efficient CRD/TDI engines. Yet no one with a microphone suggested clean diesel, biodiesel and eventually syndiesel as the common sense and attainable solution for US transportation needs.

Following the "smart money" investors such as Bill Gates, several top Venture Capital firms, Exxon, Chevron, Shell Oil, GM, Toyota, Daimler, etc., have all made a committment to bio-sourced synthetic diesel as the primary fuel for the transportation sector (road, rail, air and sea) in the near future. There seems to be a communication disconnect between government and these top research firms.

There was a great deal of discussion about EV's throughout the day, but Dr. Chu must be aware there is not sufficient mineral reserves on the planet to produce more than a few hundred million cars therefore EV vehicles are not sustainable. The proverbial Hydrogen Economy was effectively put on hold in recent weeks with the elimination of the funding when the US National Labs reported the technology is too expensive and too many years away to justify the immediate expense.

Now the US government has taken on the multi-$B R&D burden to help fund emerging battery technologies and is hoping they will be developed in time to be able to mass produce EV cars in larger quantities. This is a huge gamble and even if such batteries become available in the next 3-5 years, the energy density of liquid fuel is many times that of a solid rechargeable battery and the manufacture and recycling of batteries is simply far from being Green. Hybrids have far more issues in that they have 2 propulsion systems. When shopping for a new car, ask the price for battery replacement, transmission repair or even a diagnostics test for the electronics. The response costs will be twice or even three times that of a clean diesel.

As a side note... we were surprised to notice many of the other NCES exhibitors were using halogen technology light bulbs to brighten their booths. It was not difficult for us to find LED powered spot lights for our booth and banner illumination.

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[email protected] (Piotr) General Tue, 18 Aug 2009 06:32:25 +0000
ETC Green CRD Jeep Performance https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/etc-green-crd-jeep-performance https://www.etcgreen.com/blog/general/etc-green-crd-jeep-performance ETC Green runs the Common Rail Diesel engine powered Jeep Grand Cherokee for our survey vehicles. We use biodiesel blends in the Jeeps (up to B50) and are happy with the typical 52 MPPG (Miles Per Petroleum Gallon) performance. This is a photo of one of the Jeep's dashboards on a ~400 mile trip - pretty typical for highway driving. Since we use B50, this represents 52 MPPG.

So while these Jeeps are full-sized, AWD SUV's, with as much torque as a Corvette and the towing capacity of a full-sized truck, our fuel performance exceeds the MPPG rating of what the media has labeled "Green" cars such as the Prius, Insight, Fusion, Volt, etc..

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[email protected] (Steve) General Tue, 30 Jun 2009 14:42:27 +0000