Saturday, April 7, 2012

Scene-on-Green Eco-tourism program gains momentum



It's taken several years of planning to craft this program which gone through several iterations " Be Natures Guest " being one of them; a major difference now is the use of Social Media, Mobile and Cloud based technology and concepts have been employed to create and develop a system that could be easily emulated once our collaboration group provides a well thought out "Tool Kit" with the expertise to back it up; at all levels —including the students!

Monday, March 12, 2012

Karenia brevis, starting to pop up in samples



Southwest CoastKarenia brevis, the Florida red tide organismwas not detected in water samples collected this week alongshore of Pinellas, Hillsborough, Manatee and Charlotte counties. One sample collected each alongshore of Lee and Collier counties, two samples collected alongshore of Sarasota County and one sample collected offshore of Pinellas County contained background concentrations of K. brevis. Samples collected last week just offshore between the Pavilion Key and Ponce De Leon Bay areas (northern Monroe County) contained concentrations of K. brevis ranging from low to medium.

Bloom Boundary: Sample analysis confirmed patchy concentrations of Karenia brevis last week in southwest Florida just offshore of northern Monroe County between the Pavilion Key and Ponce de Leon areas.  Recent satellite images suggest the continued presence of a small bloom in this area.
 
Northwest CoastKarenia brevis, the Florida red tide organism, was not detected in water samples collected this week offshore of Dixie and Hernando counties.
 
East CoastKarenia brevis, the Florida red tide organism, was not detected in water samples collected this week in the Indian River Lagoon system (Brevard County) or alongshore of Volusia and Dade counties.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Red Tide report

The red tide organism, Karenia brevis, was not detected in water samples collected so far this week in the Indian River Lagoon (Brevard County) or offshore of Hernando and Dixie counties.  On the southwest coast of Florida, one sample collected alongshore of Sarasota County (out of 21 total samples) and one sample collected alongshore of Collier County (out of 9 total samples) each contained background concentrations of K. brevis.  Two samples collected late last week offshore of Pavilion Key (northern Monroe County) contained medium concentrations of K. brevis.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

More investment to spur further Solar Energy Sustainable Solutions



After the recent news that the U.S. is becoming more domestically Energy Independent; EERE announced yesterday — as part of the Obama Administration's blueprint for an American economy built to last, today U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced over $12 million to speed solar energy innovation from the lab to the marketplace through the Energy Department's SunShot Incubator program. The funding will accelerate American innovation in solar energy and manufacturing by supporting advancements in hardware, reductions in soft costs, and the development of pilot manufacturing and production projects.
Full story

Friday, February 3, 2012

Red Tide report for the Gulf Coast



Yesterdays report from via FWC — Background concentrations of K. brevis were detected in one sample collected alongshore of Sarasota County.  Yet, with medium to high concentrations of K. brevis present last week along Lee and Collier counties, it is possible that patches are still present in unsampled (offshore) areas of these regions.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Eco Programs: Hydrogen Learning Demonstration

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and its National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) will be hosting a webinar titled "National Hydrogen Learning Demonstration Status" on Monday, February 6 from 12:00 to 1:15 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. During the webinar, NREL researchers will report on progress the lab has made in deploying fuel cell electric vehicles and hydrogen fueling stations through DOE's National Hydrogen Learning Demonstration. This webinar will also update participants on the metrics used by DOE and industry to evaluate the performance of fuel cell electric vehicles and fueling infrastructure in terms of fuel economy, fuel cell durability, refueling time, and fueling station use.

Student Teams, New Location for Solar Decathlon 2013


Energy Department Announces Student Teams, New Location for Solar Decathlon 2013


January 26, 2012

At an event today in Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced the 20 collegiate teams selected to compete in the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon 2013 and unveiled the competition's location, the Orange County Great Park in Irvine, California. The 20 teams from colleges and universities across the United States and from around the world will now begin a two-year process to build solar-powered, highly energy-efficient homes that combine affordability, consumer appeal and design excellence. Throughout the two-year process, the teams will design, construct, and test their homes before reassembling them at the Solar Decathlon 2013 competition site. As part of the Solar Decathlon, teams compete in ten different categories—ranging from best architecture and engineering to energy production for heating and cooling—while gaining invaluable real-world experience in a growing global industry.
"As President Obama made clear in the State of the Union address this week, we need to ensure that the next generation of America's architects, engineers and entrepreneurs have the hands-on experience and training they need to lead our nation's clean energy future," said Secretary Chu. "The Solar Decathlon will unleash the ingenuity, creativity, and drive from these talented students to demonstrate new ideas for how families and businesses can reduce energy use and save money with clean energy products and efficient building design."
Full story

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

EERE Progress Alert for Eco Programs in the Housing Industry


The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today invited energy efficient product manufacturers, manufactured housing experts, and other home performance industry stakeholders to review and comment on its Standard Work Specifications for Manufactured Housing. Developed under DOE’s Guidelines for Home Energy Professionals project, the specifications are voluntary guidelines that outline minimum requirements for high-quality energy upgrades in manufactured housing. The industry review period will remain open through February 3, 2012.
The Guidelines for Home Energy Professionals project is a collaboration between DOE and the home construction and energy upgrade industry to support high-quality home energy upgrade work through voluntary standard work specifications, accredited training programs, and a national worker certification program. In addition to the Standard Work Specifications for Manufactured Housing, specifications are under development for single-family and multifamily housing.
Full story

Friday, January 27, 2012


The Karenia brevis bloom that has been present in southwest Florida for the past several months was detected late last week and early this week in water samples collected offshore and south of the Cape Sable area (Monroe County).  Samples in this area ranged in concentration from medium to very low.  One sample collected this week at Goodland Bridge (southern Collier County) also had very low concentrations of K. brevis.
Karenia brevis was not detected in water samples analyzed so far this week alongshore of Pinellas, Hillsborough, Manatee, Charlotte, Sarasota and Lee counties, in the Indian River Lagoon (Brevard County) or alongshore of Levy, Flagler and St. Johns counties.

EERE News: DOE Webcast February 2: New Lighting Technologies

EERE News: DOE Webcast February 2: New Lighting Technologies

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Red Tide diminishing

Red Tide is diminishing at long last; the latest report via FWC


Southwest Coast
The Karenia brevis bloom which has been present in southwest Florida for the past several months was only detected this week in two alongshore areas. Very low concentrations were detected at Lighthouse Beach and Lovers Key State Park (southern Lee County) and very low to low concentrations were found at Caxambas Pass, South Marco Beach and Goodland Bridge (southern Collier County).
Karenia brevis was not detected in water samples analyzed this week alongshore of Pinellas, Hillsborough, Manatee, Sarasota and Charlotte counties or alongshore of the Florida Keys (Monroe County) and offshore of Sarasota County.

Bloom Boundary:  Sample analysis confirms that the K. brevis bloom is present in small patches alongshore of southern Lee County and southern Collier County at very low and low concentrations.

Northwest Coast
No samples were analyzed this week for the Northwest coast of Florida.

East Coast
Karenia brevis, the Florida red tide organism, was not detected in water samples collected this week in the Indian River Lagoon system (Brevard County) or alongshore of Dade County

Friday, January 20, 2012

More Red Tide and Nutrient Load for Florida? HB 421


I find it pretty "mind-boggling" that under consideration are potential changes to allow for an increase of nutrients into the water-ways of Florida after what we have had to endure with the likes of the BP disaster and the effects on tourism, fishing and sports fishing industry etc, etc.

After all of the extensive pro-active measures that Sarasota County implemented; Florida on a State level is actually considering removing the local ability to address these issues, then I guess as we have to remedy the ramifications on a local basis and get landed with the costs too.



Do we really need to take a chance of exasperating the situation let alone the remedial costs incurred by a severe out break of Red Tide or waterway pollution, be it travel industry or on a local basis? The incalculable cost to wild life and health associated to polluted algae laden waters. What I'm I missing here? Common sense?

Article below...

House committee delays vote on fertilizer bill amid questions, opposition | The Florida Current

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Eco Programs: Guide for 50% More Energy Efficient Retail Buildings


DOE Announces Guide for 50% More Energy Efficient Retail Buildings


Would it be feasible (cost-wise) to potential add green roofs? There's so much acreage available in the retail locations alone — you would think there would be a terrific source of potential income should a strategic plan be implemented; first on a trial basis or at least emulate some of the already successful projects, either domestic or international.





The DoE Progress Alert article: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced the release of the third installment in a series of four 50% Advanced Energy Design Guides (AEDGs). This latest guide will help architects, engineers, and contractors design and build highly efficient retail buildings, helping to save energy and cut store operational costs. The 50% AEDG series provides a practical approach for designers and builders of retail stores, and other major commercial building types, to achieve 50% energy savings compared to the building energy code used in many parts of the nation. These commercial building guides support President Obama's goal to reduce energy use in commercial buildings 20% by 2020. The Advanced Energy Design Guide for 50% energy savings in retail buildings is now available for download.






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