Economic development is a high priority on the mind of many people. If you read the local paper you will see page after page of foreclosures, failing businesses, and unemployment at a all time high. Please explain to me how we can address these problems through energy needs?Councilmember Wright elaborated later that same day: Continue reading
Category Archives: Environment
Call to action for City Council not to sell water to biomass plant –Karen Noll @ VCC 24 March 2011
“500+ signatures from community members and organizations”asking for that. She also said
“…furthermore a response to our request each member of the council is expected before the next council meeting.”Here’s the video.
Regular meeting of the Valdosta City Council, 24 March 2011,
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia.
Videos by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
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Angela Manning and her extended ovation @ VCC 24 March 2011
This time, 24 March 2011, Angela Manning, minister of the 1500-member New Life Ministries in Valdosta near the proposed site for the Wiregrass Power LLC biomass plant, read from the Valdosta City Council’s own mission statement and asked,
How do you adhere to your mission statement?Here’s the video: Continue reading
Biomass protesters @ VCC 24 March 2011
As Dr. George said Continue reading
We have plenty of sunshine here –Dr. Serrán-Pagán @ VCC 24 March 2011
We have plenty of sunshine here.You’d think the Valdosta City Council would know that, since only about a month ago Mayor Fretti assisted groundbreaking for Wiregrass Solar LLC. Maybe it takes somebody from Spain to remind everyone. Spain, which is a leader in solar power in the world. Spain, which is actually north of Georgia.
Here’s the video:
Regular meeting of the Valdosta City Council, 24 March 2011,
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia.
Videos by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
-jsq
Current costs of major power sources
Here’s a four page explanation of that table.
Coal is not the cheapest: natural gas is. Onshore wind actually costs about the same as coal, and less than nuclear. Offshore wind is currently about 2.5 times more expensive.
Solar photovoltaic (PV) currently costs a bit more than twice as much as coal, and already less than offshore wind.
The table does not take into account the environmental costs of the various power sources, or obviously coal would fare far worse, and biomass would not be rated anywhere near as good as wind.
Remember, the cost of solar is falling rapidly, so solar will rapidly become more cost-effective compared to other energy sources.
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What Are Our Priorities? –Dr. Noll @ LCC 22 March 2011
The Sierra Club letter he mentions was posted last week. For NOAA Weather Radios see previous posts. Here is the video:
Video by Gretchen Quarterman for LAKE, the Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange.
South Georgia already in drought: parameters for industry?
According to the AP, Ga. foresters brace for busy wildfire season:
A cold, wet winter has left northern parts of the state in decent shape, but in southern Georgia river flows and soil moisture are both at some of the lowest points that would be expected in a century, said David Stooksbury, Georgia’s state climatologist at the University of Georgia.The nearterm effects:
“We have a good fuel load with plenty of dry vegetation, the soil is dry and there’s a low relative humidity and there’s wind,” Stooksbury said. “That is the simple recipe for a trash fire to get out of control very quickly and become a wildfire.”Yes, Sunday Georgia Forestry cut off burn permits in Lowndes County because some fires had gotten out of control.
The long term problem? Continue reading
Ecological value of Georgia Forests –Georgia Farm Monitor
Urban growth boundary –Portland
Local governments must ensure balanced growth, as sprawling residential growth is a certain ticket to fiscal ruin*Here’s a place that does something about it: Portland, Oregon.
* Or at least big tax increases.
Thanks to Matthew Richard for pointing out this documentary.
As the documentary says, the key to Portland’s way is: Continue reading