Your Questions About Green Living

Donna asks…

Alternative Energy DRIP investments?

Are there any alternative energy stocks that offer direct reinvestment programs?

The Expert answers:

If you want to use alternative fuel than fossil fuel you must pay special attention it’s impact to environment.Tha’t stock in the stock market that sell alternative energy company list.

Sandy asks…

Is it good to invest money in buying stocks in Hybrid and other alternative technologies?

I want to know if it is at this point “wise” to buy stocks and invest in technologies such as Hybrid manufacturing and other alternative energy technologies since I believe this is the future of automation. With the intrdouction of Hybrids by car manfacturers I believe that eventually it will replace gasoline powered cars.

The Expert answers:

It depends upon the price you need to pay to invest in these technologies. To provide an example, had you purchased RCA at its peak in 1929, over its entire lifetime from that point until it was acquired by Bertlesman, it never reached more than 50% of its 1929 price. As the future would work out, television was bigger than anyone believed and RCA made more money than anyone thought possible. However, at its peak, the price was so high that there is no way RCA could ever have made enough money to meet the requirements that price produced. Just as when Yahoo! Was at 230 per share. At that price, Yahoo! Would have had to have been the sole source of advertising nation wide, forever, and advertising rates would have had to climb at their historical rates and Yahoo!’s margins could not have fell.

Price is everything.

Susan asks…

Best ETF/stocks to watch for alternative (wind) energy?

The Expert answers:

An ETF which invests exclusively in Wind Power may be a little too specialised, but you may want to consider the Lyxor ETF New Energy, whose top holding at 12.93% is in a Company called Vestas Wind. Over one year the fund has grown by 10.97% and over three years by 122.69%. This theme of the industrialised countries trying to move away from oil-based energy is topical and should remain so in the near future.

Disclaimer:
The answers above are for guidance only and should not be acted upon without you receiving independent financial advice relevant to your circumstances. To find and IFA please go to http://www.unbiased.co.uk.

Maria asks…

i’d like to invest in water treatment, renewable energy, alternative fuels. recommend any stocks or sites?

would like recommendations on alternative fuel, renewable energy mutual funds and websites that offer these choices

The Expert answers:

Check out the Powershares ETFs PHO (water resources) and PBW (alternative energy). Or Guinness Atkinson alternative energy mutual fund GAAEX.

William asks…

What kind of industry is alternative energy under on http://screen.yahoo.com/stocks.html?

The Expert answers:

The answer to your question varies. Some alternative energies such as fuel cells or solar power are technology-related, while wind turbines are considered industrial. I would suggest searching for a list of alternative energy companies using Yahoo! Or Google’s search features. Often, you can find lists of many, if not all, of the companies in the alternative energy space, or in a particular type of alternative energy. Searching for it on Yahoo! Finance could prove to be a challenge. I have included a link for a search of alternative energy stocks that may help. This is probably your most time-efficient option. I hope this helps.

Good luck!

Brendan Prewitt
President, New York Capital Investment Group LLC

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Your Questions About Green Living

Susan asks…

Hurricane Ike, Oil Supply, Oil Prices?

This is actually a rhetorical question but please read on, this may be our chance to do something about this crisis.

For to long now we have been hearing that the price of oil per barrel is being controlled by supply and demand. Well recently we have had a breathtaking spike in prices due to Hurricane Ike because the oil producing factories in Texas had to shut down. Meaning that supply temporarily went down meaning price per barrel should go up!

Then if they aren’t lying to us how come when i log into my yahoo homepage why do i see the price per barrel shot down $7????? But since there is less oil that means demand is up if 20% of our America’s oil supply is cut off right now!

Sounds like we are getting screwed and bush is getting one last big paycheck before he leaves office!

Oh and how come they get to hike the prices on this gas when they had already paid a set price for it???

When your company you work for shuts down do you increase the price for your services by a drastic amount because you shut down for a week or two? Why should they be allowed to in this time of economic strife when they are still making billions a year now in record profits?

Pass that on to your state elected officials maybe now we have the tool and evidence we need to up the pressure and finally put enough of these oil crooks behind bars and scare the others into fixing the prices back where they should be!!!!

My prayer for now and not just because of prices is this, “please god let someone discover a source of renewable energy to replace oil that is safe for our beautiful planet you gave us!”
Dont click on real new’s link, it isnt anything.

The Expert answers:

Found some info about it here:
http://AboutHurricaneIke.com
Hope this helps.

Daniel asks…

Should those of us in business friendly states thank Governor Jerry Brown?

California Governor Jerry Brown, bowing down to the wacko green lobbyists, will sign a bill today which will raise the required amount of costly renewable energy for electric generation in California from 20% to 33% by the year 2020. They will also be implementing a cap and trade program, which is a tax on fossil fuel use, but the leftist environmentalist say it doesn’t go far enough so they have taken the State to court. And who gets to pay the increased costs associated with the economy killing programs? Consumers and businesses. So, shouldn’t the western business friendly states like Texas, Arizona and Utah thank Governor Brown for sending more businesses and jobs our way?

Thanks, Jerry!!
Dimestore, all you need to do is look, how use google or something other than listening to the propaganda outlets and reading dailykos or moveon.org.

The Expert answers:

What’s really amazing is those who voted Brown back into the Governor’s office the second time thought he would do better this time! Well, he is by doing what he is doing after doing the same thing last time that got him fired from the governor’s office!

Sandra asks…

Isn’t it nice to see the stimulous creating so many jobs in China?

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-04-13/chinese-turbines-spun-by-texas-winds-spur-buy-american-push.html

when obama cracks and lets any ol slave labor country to ship in renewable energies, won’t that really help the “global economy *gag*”

The Expert answers:

Yes and thanks to Republcian Reagan lowering tariffs back when Wal-Mart had their made in the USA slogan they can bring that crap in cheap. But the real question is how do we get the tea party to act like a real tea party and block some ports and throw some oversea containers in the harbor.

James asks…

Why is the Republican alleged “Big Oil” link any worse than the Democrats “Big Green” direct involvement?

So everyone harps and harps and harps ad nauseum about Bush and Cheney having prior ties to the oil industry making them immediate mindless patsies to the Great Satan Big Oil, but what about the Democrats and Big Green? The funny part is that those like Pelosi have DIRECT investments in alternative fuel companies whose technology they’re trying to ran through in legislation. So when these Big Green companies that the Democrats are lackies to start making billions in profits, will there be a call for Windfall Profits Taxes? I guess that will depend on whether Pelosi and her cohorts have sold their stock or not.

How freaking hypocritical, LOL!

“August 18, 2008 (LPAC)–In May, 2007, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi bought stock in the initial public offering of T. Boone Pickens’ company, CNLE (Clean Energy Fuels Corp.). George Soros is a stockholder as well.

CNLE is part of the network of Pickens’ companies set to profiteer off his “Pickens Plan” for a massive shift to wind-generated electricity, and then–so he asserts, a massive freeing up of natural gas for transportation. CNLE provides compressed natural gas and liquified natural gas. Pelosi owns between 100,000 and 250,000 shares.

CNLE is reported to be a sponsor of Proposition 10 in Pelosi’s home state of California, calling for $10 billion in state and Federal funding for companies involved in renewable, clean energy–namely, wind power and natural gas. A sister company operated by Pickens, Mesa Power, is involved in $12 billion of mega-wind farm projects in West Texas. Pelosi also favors Federal tax breaks and financial aid for “renewables” energy projects.”

Pandering to Big Green? Hmmmmmm…billions? Hmmmmm…
dconstru, when did the US go to war for the oil companies? The US hasn’t taken a drop of Iraqi oil years later, but yet you keep blindly repeating the Dems tag lines. Leads to some credibility issues if you ask me. I wish we would’ve taken the oil, my gas would be cheaper.

The Expert answers:

Because there is no “Big Green” industry. There are no huge, consolidated, monolithic mega-corporations that have entire parties of government bought and paid for.

Because “green,” if successful in it’s goals, actually benefits the average person. Big oil uses up non-renewable resources while polluting the Earth. One has to make a choice between money and people with Big Oil. With “green” it’s not a zero-sum game, but rather is “win-win.” There’s no conflict of interest with one as there is with the other.

Also, when Pelosi made that investment, it wasn’t about “Green” – the Pickens company she invested in is natural gas focused. That’s not part of your imaginary “Big Green.”

Finally, you’re quoting the Lyndon Larouche site? You need to find something less crackpot for credibility.

Steven asks…

Science puzzle help? please help?

Hydoprower crossword
Across:
15. dam can control these dangerous events (6 letters)
3rd letter is an ‘O’
Down:
7. has magnets and coil of copper wire (9 letters)
2nd letter is an ‘E’

Geothermal crossword
Acrosss:
7. Montain with geothermal energy (7 letters)
second letter in an ‘O’ and last letter is an ‘H’ i think it might start with a V but could be wrong.
Down:
10. produced by geothermal plant (11 letters)
3rd letter is an ‘E’ 10th letter is an ‘T’

Petroleum crossword
Across:
1. possible environmental effect of burning petroleum (9 letters; pollution?)
4. Economy sector that uses most petroleum (14 letters)
7. petroleum is ditilled into __ fuel for flight (3 letters; gas?)
8. these are dug to find oil (5 letters)
9. much of our oil is under the__ (5 letters; earth?)
12. made from ancient plants and animals (6 letters, space, 4 letters)
14. houses drilling equipement (7 letters)
15. used to reach offshore oil (3 letters)
Down:
2. not replinished in a short time (12 letters; nonrenewable?)
3. main product of petroleum refinery (8 lettters)
5. these transport oil underground (9 letters)
6. Number one petroleum state (5 letters; Texas?)
10. petroleum as it comes from wells (5 letters, space, 3 letters)
12. most oil comes from __countries (7 letters)
13. We ___ wells to get to petroleum (5 letters)

Wind crosssword
Across:
1. average amount of time wind machines operate (5 letters, dash, 7 letters)
5. replinishes in a short time (9 lettters; renewable?)
7. energy source that produces wind (5 letters)
8. wind machine blade ___ the speed of the wind (5 letters)
12. turns motion into electricity (9 letters)
14. wind machine with blades (10 letters, dash, 4 letters)
15. wins is caused by uneven ___of the earths surface (7 letters)
Down:
2. number of blades on most wind machines (5 letters; three?)
3. warm air ___ (5 letters)
4. wind machine with blades liike egg-beaters (8 letters, dash, 4 letters)
6. part of wind machine that captures wind energy (6 letters)
9. group of wind machines (8 letters)
10. transfers motion to generator (5 letters, space, 5 letters; speed shaft?)
11. number one wind energy state (10 letters)
13. air over ___ heats up more slowly (5 letters)
14. wind increases with ___ (elevation) (6 letters)

please and thank you so much….
if you know any of them it will be a huge help….
Geothermal crossword
Acrosss:
7. Montain with geothermal energy (7 letters)
second letter in an ‘O’ and last letter is an ‘H’ i think it might start with a V but could be wrong.

Petroleum crossword
Across:
4. Economy sector that uses most petroleum (14 letters)
7. petroleum is ditilled into __ fuel for flight (3 letters; 2nd letter is ‘E’)
8. these are dug to find oil (5 letters)
14. houses drilling equipement (7 letters)
15. used to reach offshore oil (3 letters; last letter G
6 minutes ago

Petroleum crossword
Down:
5. these transport oil underground (9 letters)
11. plant that disstills petroleum (8 letters; 3rd letter is F)
the rest is the wind cross word

The Expert answers:

Hydoprower crossword
Across:
15. Dam can control these dangerous events – FLOODS
Down:
7. Has magnets and coil of copper wire – GENERATOR

Geothermal crossword
Acrosss:
7. Montain with geothermal energy VOLCANO
Down:
10. Produced by geothermal plant ELECTRICITY’

Petroleum crossword
Across:
1. Possible environmental effect of burning petroleum POLLUTION
4. Economy sector that uses most petroleum TRANSPORTATION
7. Petroleum is ditilled into __ fuel for flight JET
8. These are dug to find oil WELLS
9. Much of our oil is under the__ EARTH or OCEAN
12. Made from ancient plants and animals FOSSIL FUEL
15. Used to reach offshore oil RIG
Down:
3. Main product of petroleum refinery GASOLINE
5. These transport oil underground PIPELINES
6. Number one petroleum state TEXAS
10. Petroleum as it comes from wells CRUDE OIL
13. We ___ wells to get to petroleum DRILL

11. REFINERY

1. Average amount of time wind machines operate ???
5. Replinishes in a short time RENEWABLE
7. Energy source that produces wind SOLAR
8. Wind machine blade ___ the speed of the wind ???
12. Turns motion into electricity GENERATOR
14. Wind machine with blades HORIZONTAL AXIS ??
15. Wins is caused by uneven HEATING of the earths surface
Down:
2. Number of blades on most wind machines THREE
3. Warm air RISES
4. Wind machine with blades liike egg-beaters GIROMILL VAWT or possibly DARRIEUS VAWT or simply VERTICAL AXIS because ( VAWT = Vertical Axis Wind Turbine)
6. Part of wind machine that captures wind energy BLADES
9. Group of wind machines WINDFARM
10. Transfers motion to generator SHAFT ??

11. Number one wind energy state – only two US States have10 letters WASHINGTON and CALIFORNIA.
As of September 30, 2010, the top five states with the most wind capacity installed are
Texas (9,728 MW)
Iowa (3,670 MW)
California (2,739 MW)
Oregon (2,095 MW)
Washington (1,964 MW)
Therefore as your crossword requires 10 letters I would plump for CALIFORNIA

13. Air over WATER heats up more slowly
14. Wind increases with HEIGHT

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Your Questions About Green Living

Steven asks…

Eco-Friendly Cars?

can anyone give me two different but really good reasons why cars should be made eco friendly?

The Expert answers:

Better gas milage.
Better gas milage.

Helen asks…

Eco-friendly cars and kids??!?

I have recently found out that it is hard to fit rear-facing car seats into the back of almost all compact and even slightly larger cars. This just outrages me. I want a compact, ecofriendly (as friendly as they get anyway) car, and I find it outrageous that in order to fit a car seat into the back, the front seats will have to be pushed up to an uncomfortable and possibly unsafe position. On average, no adults sit in the backseats of cars, so what is the point in even having a back seat if you can’t fit kid seats into them? I am interested in the VW Golf or Jetta TDI, but might consider a Prius, and I have found people complaining about fitting car seats into all of these. Anyone have experience with rear-facing car seats and compact cars? I think it is outrageous that you have to buy a minivan or SUV just to have a 10-pound baby in the back!

The Expert answers:

TRY A TOYOTA COROLLA! That’s what I used for my family of three children. And i didn’t have any problems with a rear facing carseat! Good luck! PS. It is great on gas, BIG PLUS…

Michael asks…

do car manufacturers really support eco-friendly vehicls?

Are they really for green vehicles? or is it really for Public Relations purposes? ‘Cause if you think about it, if they developed this technology then sales would go to the ecofriendly cars rather than their petrol cars.

The Expert answers:

If they can make money on it and people are willing to buy them…they are all for it

supply and demand

Lisa asks…

Could you please answer these interview questions regarding eco-friendly car market?

I am currently studying Marketing in A Level Business Studies. As part of our primary research, would you kindly be able to answer the following interview questions?

What is your civil status? & Do you have any children?

Do you have a car? If yes, then is it regular or ecofriendly?

For which purposes do/would you use your car? Work/weekends/family etc.

Would you consider yourself to be environmentally friendly? If yes why?

What factors do you consider to be the most important when purchasing a car and why e.g. design, security, price?

Which information sources affect your awareness concerning environmental friendly cars?

How much will you be willing to spend on an ecofriendly car that fulfils both your desires and requirements?

Are you aware of the of the economical advantages regarding ecofriendly cars? If yes, how important do you find them when purchasing an environmentally friendly car?

Would you be able to describe your dream ecofriendly car? (brand, model, features etc.)

What are your personal views of the ecofriendly car market?

Thank you in advance(:

The Expert answers:

Im not sure what the first one means 🙂 sorry
No kids
Yes I have a car and no its not eco-friendly
For myself
I dont get that ?
30ish thousand
No
anything but Ford
That it won’t exactly thrive

Your welcome 🙂

Nancy asks…

Are eco friendly cars currently just a cop out?

Before anyone jumps on my back I’m all for saving the environment – I don’t even own a car – but surely the focus should be on getting (or forcing) people to be less dependant on their vehicles? Obviously sometimes it is necessary to drive, but I bet a hell of a lot of car journeys could be avoided – I see lot’s of people going down the local shop in their car that they could easily walk to.

Strikes me that more eco friendly cars will let them justify it.
Badger, no I don’t live in ‘the’ city, or a city. I live on the outskirts of a cotswold town. Not denying it’s a good idea, my point was about people thinking it offsets unnecessary use as they’re ‘ecofriendly.

The Expert answers:

You are correct no consumer item, especially big ticket items like cars, can be eco-friendly

but electric cars are eco-friendlier options if you have to have personal transportation over 5 miles.
An electric car can use less energy per mile than walking or cycling if you include the environmental impact of agribusiness and global food systems that produce most of our calories. (although many people also eat too much so need the exercise)

the main advantage of the electric car is not it’s eco-friendlinesss or not, but that it is quiet, smooth, smell free, high torque (acceleration) from zero from cold, few moving parts so reliable and low maintenance, refuel at home or work, fully recyclable components (no high temp alloys or contaminants) noqueueingg for unreliable finite fossil fuel sources – especially as we move into peak oil.

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Your Questions About Green Living

Linda asks…

Does this list of colleges fit in with my stats alright?

Alabama
Tennessee
South Carolina

UNC-Chapel Hill
UCLA
Davidson
Georgetown
Pomona
Occidental
Rice
UVA
Middlebury

Duke
Vanderbilt
Yale
Brown
Penn
Stanford
Chicago
Harvard

ACT
E-34
M-26
R-34
S-26

GPA
5.0 W
3.8 UW

Classes
2009-2010

Semester I-
Honors English I (B)
French I (A)
Contemporary Issues (A)
Honors Ancient History (A)

Semester II-
Honors Biology (A)
Honors Algebra I (A)
French II (A)
Health/PE (A)

2010-2011

Semester I-
Honors Geometry (B)
AP Art History (A)
French III (A)
Honors English II (A)

Semester II-
AP US History (A)
AP Chemistry (B)
Honors Algebra II (A)
French IV (A)

2011-2012 Schedule

Semester I-
AP Environmental Science
AP English Language
AP World History
Spanish I

Semester II-
AP English Literature
AP Statistics
AP US Gov’t and Politics/Macroeconomics
Spanish II

Extracurricular Activities (I went ahead and listed them in order of most important)
1. 10-month (paid) internship with a local production company (2010-2011)
2. Fencing, saber and foil (2009 to present)
3. Children’s book reviewer and guest blogger (2009 to present)
4. Duke TIP Center for Summer Studies (2008 to present)
5. Member and Volunteer for HoLa Hora Latina (2010 to present…and no, I’m not hispanic 😉
6. Statistical Coordinator of the Chess Club (2009-2010)
7. Volunteer for Children’s Festival of Reading (2009)
8. Member of the Math Club (2010 to present)

I’m not sure what else to add except that I expect to have pretty good recommendations (1 extra from my teacher at Duke) and that I’m adding a book review as a writing sample.

I’m also graduating a year early (hence the strange transcripts) and I started taking my classes online after 9th grade (I don’t know if this hurts or not?)

Anyway, please let me know if you think these schools are like WAY out of my reach or if I need some more mid-range schools (I’m open to suggestions) or anything else you can think of. I’m taking the SAT in May, so I don’t know if my score for that will be better or not (hoping for around a 2100 but who knows) I’m also taking the US History, Math 1b, and English Literature subject tests in June and of course the AP exams in May but I have no idea what my score will be like.

Thanks for the help! Sorry if this kind of rambling/messy. I’d also love it if you could suggest some schools for me to look at.

The Expert answers:

First off, good luck in the college process! I really don’t envy you at all! I just finalized my decision, and it’s basically the best feeling in the world.

With your college list, I seriously think you need to eliminate a few choices. You have 20 colleges; when applying that is going to cost you quite a bit of money AND time to fill out supplemental essays. Therefore, I’d eliminate a few (I applied to 9, but there’s no “right number.”)

Did you try to separate your college choices into three categories (Safety-Match-Reach)? Looking at it now, I think that a lot of your choices are low to high reaches. Your last section is all reaches; Georgetown, UVA, Pomona, and Davidson are all reaches as well. I can’t really speak for the other colleges, but maybe you should try to make your list not as top-heavy. Why are you applying to all these schools? If I were you, I would make a list of places that you could see yourself going, that you like, at least one that you can pay for, and a few reaches-it never hurts to try. When it all comes down to it, the name shouldn’t be that important: a prestigious university means nothing if you hate it!

All of these colleges have huge different feels (Occidental is quirky, Pomona is Californian). I understand that you want to keep a ton of options open, and I think you should do that. However, I seriously believe that you should consider the list. You have a 30 ACT, which is great, but people routinely get turned down by the Ivies with 2400, 36s, and 4.0 UW GPA.

Sandra asks…

please help with this accounting problem on bonds?!?

Environmental Concerns Limited (ECL) issued $500,000 of 10 year, 6.5% bonds payable at par value on May 1, 2010. The bonds pay interest each April 30 and October 31, and the company ends its accounting year on December 31.

Requirements:
1. Fill in the blanks:
a. ECL’s bonds are priced at _____________.
b.When ECL’s issued its bonds, the market interest rate was _____________.
2. Journalize for ECL:
a. Issuance of the bonds on May 1, 2010.
b.Payment of interest on October 31, 2010.
c.Accrual of interest at December 31, 2010.
d.Payment of interest on April 30, 2011.

The Expert answers:

There isn’t sufficient info to answer your homework problem.

Susan asks…

accounting help – bonds?

Environmental Concerns Limited (ECL) issued $500,000 of 10 year, 6.5% bonds payable at par value on May 1, 2010. The bonds pay interest each April 30 and October 31, and the company ends its accounting year on December 31.

Requirements:
1. Fill in the blanks:
a. ECL’s bonds are priced at _____________.
b.When ECL’s issued its bonds, the market interest rate was _____________.
2. Journalize for ECL:
a. Issuance of the bonds on May 1, 2010.
b.Payment of interest on October 31, 2010.
c.Accrual of interest at December 31, 2010.
d.Payment of interest on April 30, 2011.

The Expert answers:

1. Fill in the blanks:
a. ECL’s bonds are priced at
Since the bonds were issued at par value, 500,000.
B. When ECL’s issued its bonds, the market interest rate was
Since the bonds were issued at par value, 6.5%
2. Journalize for ECL:
a. Issuance of the bonds on May 1, 2010.
Dr Cash 500,000
Cr Bonds Payable 500,000
b. Payment of interest on October 31, 2010.
Dr Interest Expense 16,250
Cr Cash 16,250
c. Accrual of interest at December 31, 2010.
Dr Interest Expense 5,417 (rounded)
Cr Interest Payable 5,417
d. Payment of interest on April 30, 2011.
Dr Interest Payable 5,417
Dr Interest Expense 10,833
Cr Cash 16,250

Sharon asks…

Where’s the openness, Mr. President?

The day after his inauguration, President Obama promised a new era of “openness in government.”

But the reality has not matched the president’s rhetoric. We, presidents of two of the nation’s largest journalism organizations, and many of our thousands of members, have found little openness since Obama took office. If anything, the administration has gone in the opposite direction: imposing restrictions on reporters’ newsgathering that exceed even the constraints put in place by President George W. Bush.

Democrats criticized the Bush administration for not making decisions based on the best science. But the Obama administration now muzzles scientists and experts within federal agencies. When they are allowed to talk about important public-health issues, a chaperone often supervises every word. These constraints keep the public from learning whether decisions are science-based or politically motivated.

Consider these few examples:

• After last year’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, scientists and environmental groups accused the administration of hiding or underreporting the extent of the spill and its impact on the environment. Federal officials frequently deferred to BP in providing data on issues from cleanup workers’ health problems to oil-spill flow estimates. The government also placed restrictions on airspace for weeks, keeping media photographers from seeing the scope of the spill.

• The Food and Drug Administration placed an unusual restriction on reporters when announcing changes to its medical-device approval process this year. In exchange for providing the information to the media ahead of time, reporters were told they could not seek insights from outside experts before the formal announcement. This ensured the first version of the story contained only the FDA’s official position.

• In more than a third of requests made for public records last year, the administration failed to provide any information at all, the Associated Press reported. Despite an increase in requests, the Obama administration is releasing fewer records under the Freedom of Information Act than the Bush administration did.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/04/03/2145884/wheres-the-openness-mr-president.html#ixzz1ITFATgKu

The Expert answers:

It was never coming, the Scumbag in chief is to busy having vacations and partys.

James asks…

Isnt it safe to say that Gingrich supporters are big government NeoCons like him?

http://thenewamerican.com/reviews/books/6323-newts-contract-with-the-earth-offers-pseudo-science-big-government-and-earth-worship

Anyone who seriously believes that Gingrich is a small-government conservative in the mold of Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan, should look at the new Contract with America-style manifesto that Newt has proposed as the basis for Republicans to campaign on. Gingrich would expand No Child Left Behind to create national teacher competency standards, and he does not actually call for any specific spending cuts. What he proposes is budget legislation that would lead to a balanced budget in seven years. Perhaps balancing the budget takes so long because he wants to spend so much more on a national energy policy. Gingrich proposes an array of subsidies to every conceivable energy interest group and project from ethanol to hydrogen-powered cars. Of course, there’s nothing in Gingrich’s manifesto about reforming entitlement programs. That’s hardly surprising; Gingrich supported the Medicare prescription drug benefits.

It is within this context of fiscal liberality that Gingrich’s environmentalism finds a logical dwelling place, and many believe that it is these beliefs which resulted in his dismal, single-digit performance in the 2010 and 2011 CPAC straw polls.

Like his big-government manifesto, his treatise on environmentalism is merely another declaration of unconstitutional policies and ineffective, wasteful mechanisms to implement such proposals, including the continuation of unconstitutional federal agencies such as the Department of Energy, the strengthening of the United Nations and other global government enforcement bodies, and even the suggestion that the military ought to be used to enforce environmental policies, a picture Gingrich vividly paints in his book.

A Contract with the Earth differs from other stereotypically-liberal environmentalist treatises only in that it does offer some challenges to the left on the issues of regulation, global warming, and free enterprise. Gingrich does express some disdain for what he calls liberals’ failed reliance on legislation and litigation in environmental protection; he argues in favor of taxpayer-funded rewards to business, rather than government punitive regulations, as means by which an environmentalist agenda can be implemented. He seems to support measures such as tax incentives, rather than policies which curtail free enterprise, such as binding emissions limits. He calls for public-private partnerships in advancing the environmentalist agenda, and does not call for reducing the size of government, instead advocating making big government somehow more “efficient”: “…[O]ur government, at all levels, must be modernized to successfully partner, let alone compete, with the private sector,” (p.196).

The Expert answers:

You’re saying then you’d vote for Obama if Newtie is the “man” to run?

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Your Questions About Green Living

Joseph asks…

How do you like my budget?

So I was just playing this game online called Budget Hero and I think my resulting budget was pretty solid. Here it is:

Taxes:
Repeal Bush tax cuts, tax the rich. Cap and limit greenhouse gases. Reform and hike corporate taxes. Add 50 cents to the gas tax. Increase SS taxes for the wealthy. Raise tobacco taxes. No more tax breaks for extractive industries, including big oil. Tax toxic industries. Keep Bush tax cuts on capital gains and dividends for less wealthy.

Social Security:
Cut benefits across the board. Cut SS for the wealthy.

Health Care:
Tax high premium health insurance. Cut rates for private health plans in Medicare. Institute a public option. Freeze Medicare payments. Increase Medicare costs for the wealthy. Simplify and raise Medicare fees.

Defense and Diplomacy:
Bring troops home soon. Cut military spending by ten percent. Cut foreign aid in half. Redeploy troops in Iraq to Afghanistan.

Education:
End No Child Left Behind. More funding for arts in schools.

Science and Nature:
Fund research on clean energy. Ground NASA. Cut the EPA’s budget in half. Double funds for alternative energy.

Housing and living:
Cut federal housing assistance. Increase food stamp benefits.

Miscellaneous:
Cut discretionary spending. Cut “pork barrel spending” in half. Expand unemployment benefits. Cut FDA funding in half. Reduce aid for federal highways. Fund high speed rail.

In total, my budget would cut the national debt to just 16.9% of our GDP by 2019, as opposed to the 70.3% it is now. It would also delay the budget bust to 2070+, as well as minorly shrinking the size of government. Well? What do you guys think? Sound off.

The Expert answers:

If wishes were horses, then beggars would ride.

Good luck getting it through Congress.

Thomas asks…

Some wonder: Could more women executive leadership at BP have prevented the oil spill? Why or why not?

BP’s highest ranking woman executive, Vivienne Cox, resigned from her post as head of the company’s Alternative Energy department the day before the department was shut down last year. Critics like Rep. Luis Gutierrez claim that BP consistently ignored safety and environmental regulations, and several studies suggest women could have done better:

Women demonstrate a higher concern about the environment and demonstrate more pro-environmental behaviors (Dietz, et al., 2003)

Responsible environmental practices are more important for women than for men when considering a potential employer. (Aspen Institute, 2008).

Some wonder: Could more women executive leadership at BP have prevented the oil spill? Why or why not?

The Expert answers:

No. No matter the stats, it comes down to the person who already is in charge and whether they value increasing production over decreasing externalities.

Maria asks…

Could you correct this curriculum vitae please?

Curriculum Vitae

Gian Cus
Birth in Trieste, 26th of may 1962
Resident in: Italy Prospect, 1 Yerevan – Armenia (member of AIRE)
Drivers license: type D
Mobile Italy: e-mail:
Course of study
2006 Doctorate Degree in Mechanical Engineering at the Belford University
1981 Technique degree for the heat gained at the ‘Istituto Tecnico Industriale Statale A. Volta” of Trieste
Training courses
Heating plants conductor in the second degree to a potential greater more than 230 kW. – Regional Training Institute ENAIP of Trieste – over 100 hours
Maintenance of condensing boilers of various potential – at the factory boiler Remeha in Holland – course of 32 hours
Solar panels for hot water and heating – at the headquarters of “Paradigma” of Modena Italy – course of 12 hours

Professional experiences

1998-2006 Owner of a company for the construction and design of thermo hydraulic, air conditioning, gas and electric plants, construction of thermal and cooling power stations. I have gained experience of heat conduction of large installations buildings, design construction of heating and electrical equipment housing, industrial and commercial buildings, I have specialized in high-technology and alternative energy sources. My responsibilities were to coordinate the implementation of the various stages of construction, from the design stage, then to manage relationships with customers and suppliers and direct the workforce needed to finish the work.
2007 – 05/2011 Employed at the company Renco spa as a construction engineer for electro mechanical and HVAC (heating, ventilation, air conditioning plants) equipment, construction of thermal and cooling power stations, as well as like a site manager in some sites and technical supervisor in a field camp in Karabatan (Kazakhstan). My responsibilities were enforcing, coordinating the various teams of local workers, the directives of the project manager overseeing the work in the site for the electro-mechanical parts and, sometime the civil works, and eventually proposing the necessary modify to the details of the job, moving in various foreign countries as required. I am also responsible for the maintenance of all electric and mechanical systems of these plants. In these last years I have cooperated to built:
I worked like an electro mechanical and HVAC construction engineer in the extension of the River Palace Hotel in Atyrau, Kazakhstan.
I supervised the electro-mechanical works at the Training Center of ‘AGIP’ in Atyrau.
At the field extraction Karabatan I planned and follow, in compliance with the safety guidelines in the field, some technical jobs.
Site manager for civil works, electro-mechanical and HVAC construction for the American Company Synopsys in Yerevan, Armenia.
Site manager for the construction of two branches of HSBC Bank, in Yerevan, for both the civil works, electro-mechanics and HVAC plants.
Technical manager for the electro-mechanical, water, gas and HVAC construction of the Yerevan Palace, a building of 8 floors of offices.
Technical manager for the electro-mechanical and HVAC construction for the processing center of the HSBC Bank in Yerevan.
I was transferred to Zanzibar in Tanzania as a technical manager for the electro-mechanical and HVAC construction of one of the largest conference center on East Africa.
I returned to Yerevan for the completion an commissioning of the Yerevan Plaza building and for the commissioning of the electro mechanical plants in the Computing Center for the HSBC Bank.
I moved to Yuzhno Sakhalin, in Russia, like site manager and technical director for the electro-mechanical, water, gas and HVAC construction of the Mira Hotel.
I were temporarily transferred to Yerevan for overseeing the electro-mechanical and HVAC construction of a branch of Ameria Bank.
I went back to work in Yuzhno Sakhalin to finish the electro mechanical construction in the Mira Hotel.
Returned to Yerevan to overseeing the partial renovation of two hotels, both with regard to the electro-mechanical systems and the civil works.
Site manager for the construction of the another branch of Ameria Bank for both civil, electro-mechanical and HVAC works.
Technical manager, with other colleagues, for the construction of the electro mechanical plants in the residential and commercial complex “Piazza Grande” in Yerevan.
Technical manager for the construction for the electro mechanical plants for the cableway Halizor-Tatev in Armenia.
Technical manager for the electro-mechanical construction of the Pan Armenia Bank.
Languages
English: fluent spoken and written
Russian: good knowledge spoken and written
Italian: mother tongue

The Expert answers:

What is it that you need corrected?

Is it the wording, the layout or the spelling?

You need to be more clear on exactly what you need or you won’t get an answer that helps you.

Ruth asks…

Why should we spend trillions of dollars and lose jobs over AGW, when there’s no proof we can alter it?

Why should we spend trillions of dollars and lose an untold number of jobs over AGW, when there’s no proof that the proposed solutions will do anything to halt it or even mitigate it?

http://online.wsj.com/
The Climate Science Isn’t Settled
“…articles from major modeling centers acknowledged that the failure of these models to anticipate the absence of warming for the past dozen years was due to the failure of these models to account for this natural internal variability. Thus even the basis for the weak IPCC argument for anthropogenic climate change was shown to be false.”
“Mr. Lindzen is professor of meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology”

At this point, AGW is like cold fusion. There is no evidence to support AGW, and even if the proposals to address it would have desirable effects (reduce pollution, develop alternative energy sources), NOBODY has even attempted to quantify those desirable effects to show that it would be worth spending that much money and cost so many jobs for it, just because it MIGHT help with a climate change that MIGH be happening (or that might be reversing, according to the latest data).
Crickets chirping!

Don’t answer all at once, AGW defenders.

The Expert answers:

If cold fusion is real, we’d be swimmning in it right now here in Alaska!

Do you know how cold it is here right now!

BRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!

Count those R’s sweetie, that’s how cold my patootie is.

We could use some global warming right about now.

So where is it? Those Demmycrats always break their promises like a teenage boy after a romp in the back seat of his car.

You get another chance to vote for me in 2012!

You betcha!

Sandy asks…

Who still believes Global Warming is caused by man?

Global warming ethics, pork and profits

By Paul Driessen
web posted February 12, 2007

The ink has barely dried on its new code of conduct, and already Congress is redefining ethics and pork to fit a global warming agenda. As Will Rogers observed, “with Congress, every time they make a joke, it’s a law. And every time they make a law, it’s a joke.”

However, life-altering, economy-wrecking climate bills are no laughing matter. That’s why we need to recognize that the Kyoto Protocol and proposed “climate protection” laws will not stabilize the climate, even if CO2 is to blame. It’s why we must acknowledge that money to be made, and power to be gained, from climate alarmism and symbolism is a major reason so many are getting on the climate “consensus” bandwagon.

In accusing ExxonMobil of giving “more than $19 million since the late 1990s” to public policy institutes that promote climate holocaust “denial,” Senate Inquisitors Olympia Snowe and Jay Rockefeller slandered both the donor and recipients. Moreover, this is less than half of what Pew Charitable Trusts and allied foundations contributed to the Pew Center on Climate Change alone over the same period. It’s a pittance compared to what US environmental groups spent propagating climate chaos scare stories.

It amounts to 30 cents for every $1,000 that the US, EU and UN spent since 1993 (some $80 billion all together) on global warming catastrophe research. And it ignores the fact that the Exxon grants also supported malaria control, Third World economic development and many other efforts.

Aside from honest, if unfounded, fears of climate disasters, why might others support climate alarmism?

Scientists who use climate change to explain environmental changes improve their chances of getting research grants from foundations, corporations – and US government programs that budget a whopping $6.5 billion for global warming in 2007. They also increase the likelihood of getting headlines and quotes in news stories: “Climate change threatens extinction of rare frogs, scientist says.” Climate disaster skeptics face an uphill battle on grants, headlines and quotes.

Politicians get to grandstand green credentials, cement relationships with activists who can support reelection campaigns and higher aspirations, magically transform $14-billion in alternative energy pork into ethical planetary protection, and promote policies that otherwise would raise serious eyebrows.

Corporate actions that cause even one death are dealt with severely; but praise is heaped on federal mileage standards that cause hundreds of deaths, as cars are downsized and plasticized to save fuel and reduce emissions. High energy prices are denounced at congressional hearings, if due to market forces – but praised if imposed by government “to prevent climate change.” Drilling in the Arctic or off our coasts is condemned, even to create jobs, tax revenues and enhanced security; but subsidizing wind power to generate 2% of our electricity is lauded, even if giant turbines despoil millions of acres and kill millions of birds.

Alarmist rhetoric has also redefined corporate social responsibility, created the Climate Action Partnership and launched the emerging Enviro-Industrial Complex.

Environmental activists have turned climate fears into successful fund-raising tools – and a brilliant strategy for achieving their dream of controlling global resource use, technological change and economic development, through laws, treaties, regulations and pressure campaigns. Recent developments promise to supercharge these efforts.

Environmental Defense is collaborating with Morgan Stanley, to promote emission trading systems and other climate change initiatives – giving ED direct monetary and policy stakes in the banking, investment and political arenas, and in any carbon allowance or cap-and-trade programs Congress might enact. Other environmental groups, companies and Wall Street firms will no doubt follow their lead.

ED designed and led the disingenuous campaign that persuaded many healthcare agencies to ban DDT, resulting in millions of deaths from malaria. Greenpeace, Sierra Club, Union of Concerned Scientists, ED and other groups still post deceitful claims about DDT on their websites, further delaying progress against this killer disease. By blaming climate change for malaria, they deflect criticism for their vile actions.

Climate catastrophe claims enable activists to gain official advisory status with companies and governments on environmental issues. They also make it “ethical” for Rainforest Action Network and other pressure groups to oppose power generation in Third World countries, where few have access to electricity – and thereby keep communities perpetually impoverished.

Meanwhile, Prince Charles gets lionized for appropriating 62 first class jetliner seats for his entourage of 20, on a trans-Atlantic trip to receive an environmental prize and lecture Americans on saving the Earth – because at least he didn’t use his private jet.

Companies in the CAP and EIC can develop and promote new product lines, using tax breaks, subsidies, legal mandates and regulatory provisions to gain competitive advantages. They get favorable coverage from the media, and kid-glove treatment from members of Congress who routinely pillory climate chaos skeptics.

Some worry that this could become a license to further redefine corporate ethics, present self-interest as planet-saving altruism, and profit from questionable arrangements with environmental groups and Congress. Certainly, cap-and-trade rules will create valuable property rights and reward companies that reduce CO2 emissions, often by replacing old, inefficient, high-polluting plants that they want to retire anyway.

DuPont and BP will get money for biofuels, GE for its portfolio of climate protection equipment, ADM for ethanol, Lehman Brothers for emission trading and other deals. Environmental activists will be able to influence corporate, state and federal policy, and rake in still more cash. Insurance companies can blame global warming for rate increases and coverage denials.

Lobbying and deal-brokering will enter a new era. As Thenardier the innkeeper observed in Les Miserables, “When it comes to fixing prices, there are lots of tricks he knows. Jees, it’s just amazing how it grows.” Indeed, the opportunities to “game the system” will be limited only by one’s “eco-magination.”

To determine the losers, look in the mirror. Activists and politicians are creating a Frankenstein climate monster on steroids. Were it real, we’d need to dismantle our economy and living standards to slay the beast. How else could we eliminate 80–90% of US and EU fossil fuel emissions by 2050, to stabilize carbon dioxide emissions and (theoretically) a climate that has always been anything but stable?

Think lifestyles circa 1900, or earlier. Ponder the British environment minister’s latest prescription: World War II rationing, no meat or cheese, restrictions on air travel, no veggies that aren’t grown locally. France wants a new government agency that would single out, police and penalize countries that “abuse the Earth.” Others want to put little solar panels on African huts, while kleptocratic dictators get millions of dollars for trading away their people’s right to generate electricity and emit CO2.

We should improve energy efficiency, reduce pollution, and develop new energy technologies. But when we demand immediate action to prevent exaggerated or imaginary crises, we stifle debate, railroad through programs that don’t work, create enough pork to fill 50 Chicago stockyards, and impose horrendous unintended consequences on countless families. That is shortsighted and immoral.

The Expert answers:

EVERY CHILDREN OLDER THAN 5YR THAT IS STUDIING SCIENCE AT SCHOOL UNDERSTAND THAT HUMAN ACTIVITY ARE CAUSING Global Warming…

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Your Questions About Green Living

Maria asks…

Why isn’t our government doing more to promote and subsidize renewable energy?

Set aside your biases about global warming for a second. America’s energy consumption is outgrowing it’s ability to produce said energy. Every summer, power grids around the country have experienced brown-outs and shutdowns to keep the energy grids running. This is only expected to increase as the population and dependence on coal based electricty increases.
The technology exists to lower fossil fuel consumption and augment it with renewable resources. Why not spend less money providing subsidies and tax breaks to oil and coal, and instead work to subsidize renewable energy into the market. For instance, invest in private companies to develop and sell solar technologies to businesses at a reduced rate. Or, give a tax credit to homeowners for investing in solar roofs or windmills on their property. Renewable energy may never replace traditional fuels, but there is a definite need to grow this industry and it seems like the government doesn’t care.
I asked this question last night, but wanted some fresh opinions this morning.
Should states take the high road and start pushing for alternatives? Massachusettes already has a solar energy credit program for homeowners.

The Expert answers:

Some states have these tax breaks but not on a federal level because good ol’ oil boys Bush n’ Cheney are still in power.

Meanwhile, in reality-land, individuals can do alot to help conserve energy.

When you buy your next car, look for the one with the best fuel economy in its class.

In some states, you can switch to electricity companies that provide 50 percent to 100 percent renewable energy. In other states, utilities offer “green power” choices. Ask your electric company to provide you with “Green-e” certified renewable power.

When it comes time to replace appliances, look for the Energy Star label on new appliances. (Refrigerators, freezers, furnaces, air conditioners and water heaters use the most energy.) These items may cost a bit more initially, but the energy savings will pay back the extra investment within a couple years.

AND finally the simplest solution: RECYCLE!

Carol asks…

What are your thoughts on Obama scaling back on the business tax credits in favor of new and bigger tax breaks?

for renewableenergy development and production instead?

Another campaign promise broken? One that could help get people to work?

“During the campaign in October, Mr. Obama had proposed a tax credit of $3,000 for each new hire made by businesses, in response to mounting job losses”

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123180807306575741.html

The Expert answers:

He lied, lied and lied and continues to lie, and is doing NOTHING as he promised. He will have all kinds of excuses of why he can not do what he said, and I guarantee he will blame it on some one or some thing else. His agenda was to lie and get elected and to hell with promises cause , what ya gonna do…. Fire him. We can’t until 012

Obama’s bailouts if for Trial Lawyers, not citizens.

The jobless rate just hit its highest level in 16 years, 7.2%, which means more than 11 million Americans are unemployed. So the Democratic House responded by passing two bills making it more costly to hire workers.

Barack Obama has been preaching that our economy is in crisis and Congress absolutely must pass another mammoth stimulus package right now. The latest jobs report, he said, “only underscores the need to move with a sense of urgency and common purpose.”

But, alas, his first legislative priority is a stimulus package for trial lawyers and liberal-feminist special interest groups. The only things these two bills will stimulate is more litigation and a further exodus of jobs out of the United States.

President-elect Obama has promised to sign these bills if the Senate passes them. They are loaded with real money, so they are a big payback to the lawyers and feminists who supported him and the Democrats in 2008.

The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act would eliminate the current statute of limitations (either 180 or 300 days, depending on the state of employment) on discrimination claims so that a worker can sue in federal court for alleged pay discrimination 20 years earlier.

This bill would reverse the 2007 Supreme Court decision in Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.

The Paycheck Fairness Act would remove existing statutory caps and allow for unlimited money damages to be awarded, even without proof of discriminatory intent.

It would mandate new federal “guidelines” about the relative worth of different types of jobs, a long-sought feminist goal called “comparable worth,” which means imposing wage control by freezing wages of jobs traditionally held by men and inflating wages of jobs traditionally held by women.

Obviously, these bills would expose large and small companies to vast new liabilities extending back decades. What our economy needs now is for business to hire more workers, but they are not going to do that if it means exposing themselves to expensive and frivolous litigation.

Ledbetter was employed for 19 years at Goodyear Tire & Rubber, eventually retiring with benefits. She enjoyed the advantages of this job despite receiving poor evaluations from several supervisors, which resulted in slightly lower pay than other employees.

Out of the blue, Ledbetter suddenly claimed that her supervisor, now long dead, had committed gender discrimination against her more than a decade earlier. Many trial lawyers are eager to sue deep pockets and plead for a “victim” in front of a spread-the-wealth jury in this type of case.

It’s impossible to refute lies about discrimination dating back decades when supervisors and witnesses are no longer around to defend themselves. So the jury awarded Ledbetter a shocking $3,285,979 in punitive damages, plus $223,776 in back pay and $4,662 for mental anguish, thereby demonstrating how ignoring statutes of limitation is like winning the lottery.

New Haven plaintiff attorney Karen Lee Torre, who has won many sex discrimination cases, said: “I know a victim when I see one; Lilly Ledbetter is no victim. . . . She hawked her case to a jury without the man she accused of sexism there to tell his side.”

Imagine what this kind of verdict does to a company struggling to compete with foreign manufacturers that are not subject to this nonsense. Goodyear has manufacturing operations in 25 countries, and it would be no surprise if it downsizes its U.S. Work force even further to avoid this type of expensive litigation.

Statutes of limitation prevent frivolous cases like this, and the law under which Ledbetter sued contained such a provision. Goodyear appealed and won before the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.

The Supreme Court also agreed with Goodyear, remarkably ruling that “we apply the statute as written, and this means that any unlawful employment practice, including those involving compensation, must be presented to the EEOC within the period prescribed by statute.” Three cheers for the Supreme Court, which refrained from the liberal temptation to rewrite a law passed by Congress.

When Barack Obama was toadying to the trial lawyers and the feminists during last year’s presidential campaign, he tried to make Lilly Ledbetter his answer to John McCain’s Joe the Plumber. Ledbetter told the press that “Obama said he would see me in the White House when he signs the bill.”

Liberal special interest groups can barely control their excitement as they anticipate all this booty coming their way as they fleece businesses for alleged sins of 20

Lizzie asks…

Reduce your carbon footprint?

Would you pay an outside company to help you offset your carbon footprint like plant trees or buy renewable energy credits.

The Expert answers:

First thing you need to do is reduce your footprint on your own. Replace your incandescent light bulbs with CFLs or LEDs, insulate your ceiling, lower your heater temp in the winter and raise the temp in the summer, lower your water heater temp by 5-10 degrees, check the seals on any refrigerators or freezers, put as many non-critical electrical items on multi port power strips and then turn those off in the evening. AFTER you do as much as you can, then you can look at purchasing energy credits, but do some research on the companies that offer them. Like anything else there are some that are less than great.
Just purchasing credits without doing your part is much like the church in the middle ages selling indulgences. You could buy forgiveness without having to have real morals.

George asks…

Instead of threatening vets and old people with cuts and delayed payments, why not some of these programs?

ObamaCare $1.5 trillion

Planned Parenthood (annually) $330 million

Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac $145 billion

Amtrak $1.9 billion

Unspent Stimulus/ War Chest $60 billion

National Endowment for the Arts $133 million

National Endowment for the Humanities $140 million

National Broadband Coverage Map $350.0 million

Federal Employee Flight Upgrades $146.0 million

Beach Re-sanding $3.0 billion

Payments Not to Use Land (conservation) $2.0 billion

International Abortions/Population Control $650.0 million

Libya Kinetic Military Action $750.0 million

Consumer Protection Bureau $329.0 million

United Nations $6.4 billion

NPR/Corporation for Public Broadcasting $451.0 million

Renewable Energy Tax Credits (mostly wind) $6.9 billion

Tax Credits to IRS employees/Others $513.0 million

Federal Weatherization Programs $5.0 billion

Doesn’t it make more sense to cut these programs instead of holding social security recipients hostage?
My numbers are correct. I checked them on three different sites. And no we do not need to give more money to Planned Parenthood or anyone else. People can buy their own condoms or take themselves to the health department and get them for free.

The Expert answers:

Good point and good work. Obama wasted 1.6 million dollars in my city by replacing perfectly good siding and sidewalks in the projects.

Charles asks…

What do you think of Republicans screewing us again for big oil companies?

The tax changes would have channeled $11 billion over 10 years into development of renewable fuels such as ethanol, biodiesel and power from wind turbines. It provides an additional $18 billion in other tax breaks — from tax credits to clean and renewable energy bonds — to support improvements in energy efficiency, clean coal technology, development of gas-electric hybrid cars that could be plugged into the national power grid and other alternative energy programs.

Major oil companies would have paid most of the tab.

REPUBLICANS REJECTED THE CHANGE AGAINST DEMOCRATS 57YES-34-NO VOTES….60 VOTES NEEDED TO PASS

The Expert answers:

The first thing that should pop into any sensible person’s head when the Dem’s want to tax the oil companies is higher gas prices. Why do they not reduce the state and federal taxes on gasoline? You also (evidently) are not old enough to buy your own food, ethanol (a hoax) is driving the food prices up. Food is rising faster than gasoline.

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Your Questions About Green Living

Ruth asks…

any ideas for green investments? sustainable food, green buildings, lowering greenhouse gas, thanks?

The Expert answers:

Try the link below … Might be helpful to you.

Be well!

Laura asks…

stories about farmers and sustainable food?

video stories

The Expert answers:

Video for machinists or degrading bricks.

Betty asks…

Should the food industry begin to use local produce? And would this be a sustainable source?

Yes or no for both sides (you may put your opinion) that is all and if possible could you send this to others to answer so I can get a more accurate result (I am interviewing others as well)
Oh and is it practical ha ha

The Expert answers:

That all depends upon where you live. In some areas, such as where I live, the growing season for gardens and the like is very short. My tomatoes are not even near red yet! Only one chili out of 6 Hatch NM plants. My herbs are doing well, and the potatoes.
Yeah, it depends upon where you live. I’d love to have local produce and I do go to the Farmer’s Market when it’s open, but it’s only open a couple of months during the year. We have a short growing season at 6300 feet elevation.
It would be a sustainable source if you could grow for more than 6 months of the year, since then you’d have enough to can and freeze. Yes it would be quite practical if indeed you lived in an area with a decent growing season.

Helen asks…

Vertical farming… is it a sustainable and independent food alternative?

Vertical farming maximizes land usage and uses only 5% of water consumption that traditional farming uses. Vertical farming crops for secure, cost effective & safe local foods may be an independent sustainable solution for developing countries. Caroline Keddy http://blog.valcent.net, www.valcent.net

The Expert answers:

From what little i know about it and i am definately not an expert it would require massive amounts of capital to begin but looks feasible after that. Energy and sunlight might be a problem.

Michael asks…

What are the benefits and losses of sustainable/unsustainable management of natural resources?

What is the sustainable and unsustainable management of natural resources.

For example

Water: Sustainable (such as Water Harvesting)
Benefits:
Costs:
Unsustainable
Benefits
Costs

Soil: Sustainable
Benefits:
Costs:
Unsustainable
Benefits
Costs

Woodland: Sustainable
Benefits:
Costs:
Unsustainable
Benefits
Costs

Food production Sustainable
Benefits:
Costs:
Unsustainable
Benefits
Costs

Waste products Sustainable
Benefits:
Costs:
Unsustainable
Benefits
Costs

The Expert answers:

Water: Sustainable (such as Water Harvesting)
Benefits: reduce water demand from natural environment and increase environmental flows
Costs: excessive water use can result in salinity porblems and runn off of nutrient levels
Unsustainable aterial basin tapping
Benefits: short term water and income gain
Costs; lowering of ground water (envio-problems)

Soil: Sustainable compost
Benefits: cheep
Costs: transport costs
Unsustainable: soil cultivation
Benefits: agriculture
Costs: erosion

Woodland: Sustainable (sustainable harvest)
Benefits: income
Costs: less income than clear felling
Unsustainable (clear felling)
Benefits: lots of money
Costs: little natural revegitation

Food production Sustainable (native mixed crops)
Benefits:little environmental impact
Costs: less food produced
Unsustainable: broad acre cropping
Benefits lost of food in a good year
Costs: environmental degradation

Waste products Sustainable (recycling)
Benefits: less energy expenditure than creating new product
Costs:process more tedious than mining new product
Unsustainable: landfill
Benefits: quick cheep
Costs: soil contamination.

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Your Questions About Green Living

Thomas asks…

Can anyone tell me about eco-friendly christmas gifts that AREN’T trees?

I’d like to know of something inexpensive that I could give, but all the other questions i looked at were always answered with ‘a tree’ and I haven’t got any trees handy so…

The Expert answers:

Give some tote bags that people can take to the grocery store to minimize the use of plastic bags.

Jenny asks…

Suggest some eco-friendly gift ideas to add charm to the christmas party?

The Expert answers:

Sun Jar – it’s solar light in a jar
it looks really beautiful at night
http://www.innovatoys.com/p/SJARB

or Glow Brick – it’s also a solar light but with brick style
http://www.innovatoys.com/p/GBKG

Michael asks…

eco friendly christmas gifts?

The Expert answers:

Bedding is an idea.

Organic Sheets
Organic Pillows
etc.

They are healthy, chemical free, built from sustainable resources and are biodegradeable.

Daniel asks…

Fair-trade/organic/eco-friendly Christmas gift-basket ideas?

As one of my Christmas gifts this year, I am planning on making an entirely fair-trade/organic/ecofriendly gift basket full of all sorts of different things. The catch is that the basket has to be appealing to virtually anybody because it’s going to be part of a gift-swap (e.g. has to be good for a 12-year-old girl and a 50-year-old man at the same time).

So far I’ve thought of coffee/tea/hot chocolate, chocolate, reusable water bottle, jewellery… but I need more ideas. Also, the spending limit is between $25-$30.

Thanks so much!

The Expert answers:

Coffee/tea/hot chocolate
Reusable water bottle
Jewelery (like rope kind of bracelets and stuff)
Going Green books
Energy saving light bulbs
Reusable Starbucks mug
A stuffed animal

George asks…

Any ideas on an eco-friendly gift for a couple?

The Expert answers:

An air-cleaning plant.

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Your Questions About Green Living

Lisa asks…

Is China set to dominate the world in renewable energy industry?

China Leading Global Race to Make Clean Energy
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/31/business/energy-environment/31renew.html

“China vaulted past competitors in Denmark, Germany, Spain and the United States last year to become the world’s largest maker of wind turbines, and is poised to expand even further this year.

China has also leapfrogged the West in the last two years to emerge as the world’s largest manufacturer of solar panels.”

Does it matter that China is getting such a lead in the new technologies? Will we all be buying Chinese solar panels for ever after now? Why are British workers in our beleaguered heavy industry sectors not getting the chance to benefit from these new green jobs?
jeff, yes i know. But they are turning their tanker around a good deal faster than any of the ‘developed’ countries, its very impressive to watch, and very frustrating.
We too are still building coal power stations.
dana, yes, the engineers that run china can say ‘make it so’ and it happens. they dont have to slog through the sea of opposition from vested interests, they have a big advantage.

paul, spot on. it’s been happening since thatcher, and i spent several years waiting for nu-labour (= tory lite) to stem the arterial bleeding from the manufacturing sector. no chance!
you cant eat a city bank.
d/dx, lots to think about there. i only disagree about the innovation side; chinese patent numbers are rapidly catching up with ours, give it a decade and they will be up with europe and n. america. i dont know if we will see a cultural difference in the type of innovation, maybe more cautious steps?
On the wages side; there is far to much spread here, it is leading to a collapse of the social mobility that fuelled the innovations of the last four decades. the rich have clotted at the top of the milk again, time to shake the bottle.
i said to watch siemens didnt i;
http://www.greenwisebusiness.co.uk/news/siemens-invests-in-british-tidal-energy-developer-1179.aspx
but i’m not sure there’s not a much better design, this is too cribbed off a wind turbine. as for tooling up, harland and wolff got aid as no other shipyard did, because of the troubles.

The Expert answers:

The Chinese are currently doing well at manufacturing, but this is not the best indicator of who will dominate the future renewable energy market. The current manufacturing capacity will supply only about 5% of the total energy market in the next 10 years. The other 95% of the market is still up for grabs. The best technologies are not on the market yet and information about them is not in the public domain. You might get a hint of capabilities by looking at patent filings at
www.uspto.gov
However, you need to know a lot of science to realize that patent on topic A is an enabling (choke point) technology for new technology B which is not directly addressed. People that know about the new technologies are bound by confidentiality agreements. One common clause in confidentiality agreements is that the existence of the agreement itself is confidential. The information that you find on the internet is the information that industry wants you to see. The public can and should be concerned at the macro level about the level of investment in R&D and manufacturing capability. The US is at a disadvantage because
1. The overall level of investment in renewable energy is too low.
2. US investors are at a disadvantage because of the federal failure to regulate the industry. Companies with credible technologies under development tend to be more discrete than Wall St. Stock promoters. The result is that some of the investment in renewable energy (and all other industrial sectors) is misdirected to scams whose only purpose is to enrich Wall St. Bankers. The US is falling behind because Wall St. Scam artists skim $1 trillion annually that would be better invested in R&D and manufacturing capacity. The UK dependence on the financial sector has the same consequence: lack of investment in industry.
3. US labor is overpriced. Human capital is a critical element in the competition for the future economy. The Chinese are playing for the advantage of manufacturing experience by investing now. They hope to persuade companies with the next generation of technologies to locate in their country. The work force in Europe and North America (and Japan) is more skilled than the Chinese workforce at present, but overpriced. The auto sector workers collectively are more skilled than their Chinese competitors and merit more pay than the $2/hr earned by Chinese workers. $20-$25/hr is realistic, $80/hr demanded by the UAW is not. The critical question is whether the workforce will take realistic wages, stay employed and prevent the Chinese from building manufacturing expertise or allow their skills to decay to zero value. If this issue is not resolved, US workers will be worth $2/hr in 10 years and Chinese workers will be worth $20/hr.
4. The Chinese are good at copying and stealing technology, but lag in innovation. Europe and North America can improve their competitive position by making market access for Chinese goods contingent on Chinese respect (payment) for intellectual property. Trade policies should favor domestic innovators rather than implicitly condone Chinese theft of IP by allowing unrestricted market access. Consumer prices will be higher, but consumers will have more wealth the pay the higher prices.

I don’t think that it is too late for Europe and North America, but structural adjustments noted above are needed. The companies and countries that own the best technologies between 2020 and 2030 will be the big winners.

William asks…

How much of the energy produced in the world is from renewable sources?

The Expert answers:

Less than 3%.

Source has a good article on renewable energy.

Nancy asks…

I have an idea for renewable and sustainable energy that will change the world, what should I do?

I need help.
I am not going to tell you me idea, then you would steal it.

The Expert answers:

Write a letter to your congress person, explaining what it is and ask for a meting. If that doesn’t work you can get the idea patted and take it to a nonprofit environmental organization.

Michael asks…

future of renewable energy in the world?

The Expert answers:

I’m sure it will be hydrogen from water, because there is no pollution.

Jenny asks…

Approximately How Much Of The Worlds Energy Is Renewable?

Hey guys I am doing a speech for English on the problems with fossil fuels and why we need to change our energy production to renewable sources, and i think it would really help my argument if I could get some reasonably accurate numbers to put it in perspective. The problem is that I have looked in several different places and have got different answers for all of them, If anyone can help me out by finding out something reasonable and posting the source it would be very appreciated!!!

The Expert answers:

None

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Your Questions About Green Living

Richard asks…

What is the most sustainable city in America?

There are many discussions that anticipate or suggest that we are going to experience many environmental issues in the future. Water, climate, food, energy and so on.

The Expert answers:

Sustainable implies that the city requires no additional input or goods from outside sources. Using this criteria I can think of no cities in the U.S. That meet it. A city would have to recycle 100% of its trash, import no food (surviving only upon what it can grow within its confines), and reuse all of its sewage enriching agricultural lands within the city. There would also need to be a power generation source within the city limits if one expected electricity for all citizens and a water source that is regenerating (no groundwater pumping). Americans generally only go as far with the sustainability quagmire as it takes to get to the edge of their comfort zone. Beyond that, most are unwilling to tread upon the dirty details and increased human physical energy required for any single place to be considered ‘sustainable.’
My wife and I have a 20 acre parcel upon which we try to use and recycle everything (humanure, roof water catchment, foraging, chickens), yet we still fall short. Our climate requires more water than we have thusfar been able to reclaim and we use some electricity (thus this post). Once per week we walk two miles (with a 400 foot elevation gain), pushing a wheel barrow with two empty 5 gallon jugs so that we can fill them with water at a creek. Then we walk back. This is the water for our garden. It is very hard work to build a sustainable life! However, several years ago we decided it was better to act green than to talk green. Maybe we will eventually succeed, maybe not, but we have learned that a sustainable agrarian life is a bunch harder than most folks can ever envision.

There is a good book called “Collapse” by Jared Diamond that describes in vivid detail how past societies have succeeded or not. Perhaps we can learn from the island of Tikopia.

George asks…

Does increased knowledge of science make you more likely to be worried about environmental issues?

According to PISA (the international student assessment body), American students have an above-average level of optimism regarding environmental issues. This has been linked to the fact that out of the 30 countries tested by PISA, American students rank 21st for scientific knowledge.

Within America, PISA also reported that there was a fairly consistent trend where, the less students knew about science, the more likely they were to be optimistic about the dangers posed by environmental issues.

The report can be found here: http://www.pisa.oecd.org/document/2/0,3343,en_32252351_32236191_39718850_1_1_1_1,00.html
Scroll down to the bottom and click on United States under “Briefing Notes”.

So, do you agree that it seems likely that being more scientifically knowledgeable makes you more likely to see the threats caused by enivornmental problems? And does that, in turn, imply that a lack of concern about environmental problems is caused by ignorance?
Jake: Typical logic of a global warming denier – Taking what you yourself have experienced as more true than the conclusions of scientific studies. Just like, “It’s snowing outside my window, therefore global warming couldn’t be happening!” You claim you have a lot of scientific understanding and don’t believe in global warming, and think that counteracts the fact that most people with a high degree of scientific understanding DO believe in global warming.

The Expert answers:

Are you accounting for the effects of indoctrination in this study? Or do you really think that being in an enviornment where authority figures tell you that something is a problem has no effect on somebody’s opinion?

The fact of the matter is that there has not been an honest and open scientific debate on man-made climate change. And until there is – I will remain unconvinced.

David asks…

Is Corporate America financing Politics to thwart Ecological Developments?

There have been many rebuttals to Al Gore’s book and movie as well as other Environmental Issues. One example is the “light bulb controversy”. It would seem that many manufacturers and sales vendors have taken notice that standard light bulb sales have fallen dramtically being replaced by more efficient alternatives. This has created an “uproar” in Corporate America. Again this is only one example. Would this influence the political agendas of the current administration as well as those who’re vieing for offices in coming elections and who have their “hands out” for monetary support?

The Expert answers:

Anything to improve the bottomline, temporarily.

Lizzie asks…

Isn’t the America system and America in general doing alright?

I mean, the economy is still not where it should be, and environmental issues abound, but we still have a good system, we’ve got a decent setup, and progress is still being made socially & legislatively. I’m not worried about anything but our land & Water tables.

The Expert answers:

If you can read this “politics” section of Yahoo and still conclude that America is “doing alright” then you are not paying attention.
Americas is and has not :
1) Paid enough attention to its crumbling Infrastructure and the ability to renew it.
2) Developed an Infrastructure and Legislative Plan for the 21st Century.
3) Not acknowledged the changing Global Economy and the US place within that economy.
4) Addressed the obviously broken political system and governing procedure of its Democracy.
5) Not addressed its illegal “immigration” issues and how that impacts the development of social protections for a declining American social structure.

America is in the midst of an extremely destructive culture war wherein politicians are fractionating the country toward their own political and economic objectives. There will be no constructive growth in America until the fundamental structure of government is reformed. There is no will to do this and Americans are in Denial concerning its impact!

Betty asks…

Do black people in America care about the environment?

Do they recycle? Do they protest on environmental issues?

The Expert answers:

No.

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