Global carbon emissions reach record, says IEA

Tuesday, May 31, 2011 Posted by
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Energy-related carbon emissions reached a record level last year, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

The watchdog says emissions rose again after a dip caused by the financial crisis in 2009, and ended 5% up from the previous record in 2008.

China and India account for most of the rise, though emissions have also grown in developed countries.

The increase raises doubts over whether planned curbs on greenhouse emissions will be achieved, the group says.

At a meeting last year in Cancun, Mexico, world leaders agreed that deep cuts were needed to limit the rise in global temperature to 2C above pre-industrial levels.

But according to the IEA’s estimate, worldwide CO2 emissions from the energy sector reached a record 30.6 gigatonnes in 2010.

The IEA’s Fatih Birol said the finding was “another wake-up call”.

“The world has edged incredibly close to the level of emissions that should not be reached until 2020 if the 2C target is to be attained,” he added.

“Unless bold and decisive decisions are made very soon, it will be extremely challenging to succeed in achieving this global goal agreed in Cancun.”

Source: BBC news

Lincoln bus firm unveils fleet of eco-buses which use landfill food waste for fuel

Saturday, May 28, 2011 Posted by
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A TRAILBLAZING project that uses food waste from landfill to fuel buses has been officially launched.
A fleet of 11 Stagecoach buses, which are the first of their kind in the UK, was unveiled at Lincolnshire Showground yesterday.


And the programme managers say reduced emissions from the biomethane gas-powered vehicles will reduce damage to the environment.


The project was joint funded by Lincolnshire County Council, which provided £260,000 of investment, and the East Midlands Development Agency (EMDA), which injected a further £100,000.

3cohosting Server Status Page

Tuesday, May 17, 2011 Posted by
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The 3cohosting server status page has gone live, you can find all the service updates on this page…

http://3cohosting.com/status

If you want service updates on the go then you can follow 3cohosting.com on Twitter!

You can now offset carbon for your own web site or web server even if you aren’t hosted with 3cohosting.com! – check it out here

The World’s First Carbon Neutral City Opens For Business

Tuesday, May 3, 2011 Posted by
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Masdar City, the world’s first carbon neutral city that’s banned cars and skyscrapers from its streets, gives us a glimpse of what other parts of the world might look like in the future. Located in Abu Dhabi and financed by the city’s ruler Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan (who has pumped between $15bn and $30bn into it already), the city spans six square kilometers and will house around 50,000 people.

The city staged its first open day on the weekend, giving locals and tourists a look at what they could be living in if they choose the Masdar way of life. You can see in the gallery at the source link that they allow Mitsubishi i-MiEV electric cars in Masdar, and have driverless electric pod trains, but apart from that it’s two legs all the way.

Source: gizmodo.com

Apple named ‘least green’ tech company

Friday, April 22, 2011 Posted by
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Apple has come bottom of the most comprehensive green league table of technology companies because of its heavy reliance on “dirty data” centres.

The list, which is compiled by Greenpeace and released in San Francisco on Thursday, shows that the company relies heavily on highly polluting coal power at the sites that house its banks of servers.

Greenpeace’s report, How Dirty is Your Data? reveals that the company’s investment in a new North Carolina facility will triple its electricity consumption, equivalent to the electricity demand of 80,000 average US homes. The facility’s power will be supplied by Duke Energy, with a mix of 62% coal and 32% nuclear. On Wednesday, Apple posted a large boost in quarterly earnings, which grew by 95% to $6bn (£3.65bn).

Gary Cook, Greenpeace’s IT policy analyst and lead author of the report, said: “Consumers want to know that when they upload a video or change their Facebook status that they are not contributing to global warming or future Fukushimas.”

Companies in the US are not required by law to disclose their energy use or carbon emissions. But Greenpeace drew on publicly available information on investments made in data centres, to estimate the maximum power these facilities will consume, and matched that information with data from the government or utilities.

The report estimated dependence on coal for Apple’s data centres at 54.5%, followed by Facebook at 53.2%, IBM at 51.6%, HP at 49.4%, and Twitter at 42.5%. Top marks in Greenpeace’s clean energy index went to Yahoo, followed by Google and Amazon. Greenpeace is also campaigning for Facebook to “unfriend coal” and use cleaner energy to power its servers.

Cook said: “Many companies treat their energy consumption a bit like the Coca-Cola secret formula, because they don’t want competitors knowing how much they spend on energy. The amount of electricity they consume would give some indication of what kind of arms race they were in. They don’t really want this story to be told.”

Cloud computing relies on large data centres, rather than in-house based IT services, to power internet-based services such as Hotmail or Gmail. Data centre energy demand already accounts for 1.5% to 2% of world electricity consumption and is set to quadruple over the next 10 years.

Molly Webb, head of smart technology at the Climate Group in London, said: “Greenpeace is calling for transparency from companies which rely heavily on data centres, and that would ideally highlight the need for investment and ambitious government policy to ensure enough clean power is available to green our tweets.”

Jonathan Koomey, a project scientist for the End-Use Forecasting Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, whose work was cited in the study, said that the IT industry wrongly attracted criticism: “The use of IT often reduces environmental impacts. When we compared greenhouse gas emissions for downloading music to buying it on a CD, for example, we found downloads reduced emissions 40-80%.”

Apple declined to comment on the Greenpeace report. But at its last shareholder meeting, Apple CFO Peter Oppenheimer said the company would have more to say on the new data centre in Maiden, North Carolina, in the spring.

Source: guardian.co.uk

Extra £2 billion pledged for green bank

Wednesday, March 23, 2011 Posted by
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Britain on Wednesday committed an additional 2 billion pounds ($3.27 billion) to its Green Investment Bank in its budget measures and introduced a 16 pound price floor for carbon emissions permits from 2013.

Both measures are aimed at driving investment in green infrastructure and low-carbon electricity generation.

They were mostly welcomed by investors but criticized for not going far enough by some environmental groups.

Britain is trying to bolster a faltering economy without compromising plans to erase 81 billion pounds of spending over the next four years.

The government has already committed 1 billion of funding to create a Green Investment Bank (GIB), aimed at leveraging investment for low-carbon technology from the private sector.

It will now increase that funding to 3 billion and the bank will commence operations in 2012-13 – a year earlier than planned.

In the current fiscal environment committing 3 billion pounds is an achievement and by allowing the GIB to borrow mid-decade, its lending can ramp up quickly when the country’s low carbon capital requirements reach a critical point,” said James Cameron, vice chairman of Climate Change Capital.

The bank should start raising its own funds from 2015-2016 when the national debt starts to fall, through issuing bonds.

(The bank) should leverage an additional 15 billion pounds of investment from the private sector,” finance minister George Osborne told parliament.

Britain needs to invest around 200 billion pounds by 2020 in greener technologies so it meets ambitious emissions cut targets.

Source – http://www.telegraph.co.uk

Eco-friendly detergent comes in 100% recycled cardboard bottle.

Friday, March 11, 2011 Posted by
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There’s a new laundry detergent for eco-friendly consumers.

The company “Seventh Generation” are set to release new packaging for their laundry detergent. It uses 100% recycled cardboard for the bottle.

According to USA Today there’s a plastic pouch inside that holds the detergent. Overall it uses 66% less plastic than conventional laundry bottles.

When empty, the entire thing can be recycled. The detergent will cost you $13 to $15, but can be used to wash up to 66-loads of laundry.

ktnv.com

Prisoners in Gloucester repair bicycles for Africa

Wednesday, January 12, 2011 Posted by
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Inmates at Gloucester prison are repairing and restoring bicycles for children in Africa to ride to school.

Thousands of bikes are donated to the group Jole (pronounced Jolly) Rider who have them refurbished before shipping them to schools in The Gambia.
Prisoners get involved in repairing the bikes that are received in Gloucester.
HMP Gloucester’s Steve Norris said the project had been “enormously successful” and the prison was “extremely proud” to be involved.
‘Tremendous effect’

He said: “It’s provided very useful activity to a group of our prisoners through which they can gain an accreditation and learn some useful skills.”
Bikes arrive in various states of disrepair with some just needing a quick wash but others need to be stripped down to have new parts fitted.

A minimum of 333 refurbished bicycles are then packed into sea containers which are delivered to The Gambia.
David Swettenham, director of Jole Rider, said donating the bikes “has a tremendous effect”.
“It can take two to three hours for a student to walk to school from home and the same amount of time to come back in the afternoon.
“So having a bicycle makes all the difference in the world to them. They get to school on time, they’re not exhausted – it has a tremendous effect.”

Via the BBC

Tarquin Clark Photography

Saturday, January 1, 2011 Posted by
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www.tarquinclark.co.uk

Tarquin Clark photography has gone live. Tarquin has offset carbon using 3cohosting.com carbon offset scheme.

Tarq is doing his bit, offsetting carbon and going that extra mile for our environment. Showing off his photography skills and keeping an environmentally friendly theme Tarquin has taken this photo for the imaginegreener blog…

Loads more photo’s on www.tarquinclark.co.uk – Check them out!

Green Christmas Tree?

Monday, December 20, 2010 Posted by
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What’s more green: a Fake Christmas tree or a real Christmas tree?

A fake Christmas tree can theoretically be used forever. A real Christmas tree has to be cut, bought, tossed out and replaced every year. So which one is better for the planet? According to the NY Times, the real one.

How is something reusable, worse for our environment? The reason is because a fake Christmas tree is made from mostly plastic and metal, which both have a high extraction cost. On top of that, most of the fake trees are made in China, which along with being thousands of miles away from your living room, also means there’s a terrible shipping fee attached to its carbon footprint.

The benefits of a real Christmas tree? For being green: because it’s completely natural and biodegradable. For just being better: because it smells wonderful and looks great. So next time you go Christmas tree shopping, ignore the fake and go for the real. You’re doing yourself, and your planet, a huge favor. [NY
Times]