Environmentalist Wins Hispanic Leadership Award


 Environmentalist Wins Hispanic Leadership Award

andreadelgado Environmentalist Wins Hispanic Leadership AwardI am honored to have been selected as the MillerCoors 2011 Lider of the Year and grateful for the opportunity to continue helping my community,” said Andrea Delgado. “I want to thank everyone who voted for me. Your support inspires me to continue doing everything I can to address the issues that affect our community.”The MillerCoors Lider of the year is chosen by public vote on www.MillerCoorsLideres.com. Andrea won 42 percent of the 25,464 votes cast. She was among twelve outstanding Latino leaders nominated by MillerCoors for their leadership and contributions to their communities. Andrea will receive a $25,000 grant for LCLAA to implement a Latino leadership project with MillerCoors.

Andrea’s dedication to the Hispanic community and the environment serves as an example and an inspiration to all of us,” said Jose Ruano, multicultural relations manager for MillerCoors. “The competition among this year’s 12 Lideres was tough, as each is an incredible example of Latino leadership. We are proud to highlight the achievements of Latino leaders, like Andrea, so they may continue to be role models for future generations.”Through her work with LCLAA, a national non-profit organization representing the interests of approximately 2 million Latino workers and their families, Andrea helps raise awareness about workers’ rights and environmental problems that impact Latinos in their workplaces and their communities. Through her work with the National Latino Coalition on Climate Change (NLCC), Andrea engages and educates minorities and elected officials about climate change and the importance of environmental protection to safeguard public health and create quality jobs.

To know Andrea is to understand how passionate she is about addressing the issues that affect the Latino community, especially those related to achieving justice and dignity in the workplace and protecting the environment.  Andrea is an example that Latino youth hold a lot of promise for our workplaces, communities and the nation as a whole. We are fortunate to have her as part of our team,” said Hector E. Sanchez, Executive Director, LCLAA. Since 2006, the MillerCoors Lideres program has raised awareness and highlighted the achievements of national and local leaders within the Hispanic community through an online public voting competition and a national advertising campaign.

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A Solar House Divided


 A Solar House Divided

456px Abraham Lincoln Portrait 228x300 A Solar House DividedWhat  would Abraham Lincoln think about the internal divide within the US solar industry and its reaction into claims that China is using unfair trade practices to dump solar panels in the US market? A few days go the Coalition for Affordable Solar Energy (CASE) representing dozens of U.S. solar companies and thousands of American jobs, have joined  to urge policymakers to help find a resolution to SolarWorld’s harmful trade petition. The Coalition now represents 52 American solar companies from across the United States and throughout the solar value chain or nearly 10% of the U.S. solar industry workforce.”Every day, new American solar companies are stepping forward to oppose SolarWorld’s bid to block competition in the U.S. solar industry,” said Alan Epstein, President and COO of KDC Solar LLC, a new CASE member based in New Jersey. “Competition is good for the U.S. solar industry, good for solar jobs, and most importantly, good for creating and preserving long-term jobs for our electric customers and therefore the economy. The solar industry must remain united in its mission to make solar energy affordable for everyone.”

The Coalition for Affordable Solar Energy actions comes on the heals of the U.S. Department of Commerce‘s decision  to initiate an intensive, year-long investigation into Chinese solar export practices. “The anti-competitive tactics of Chinese exporters have threatened to wipe out U.S. producers and jobs said,” Gordon Brinser, president of SolarWorld and a leader for the Coalition for American Solar Manufacturing (CASM) Brinser said. “Domestic producers look forward to returning to steady increases in efficiency and sustainable decreases in pricing that directly result from legal international competition – and to advances in America’s renewable-energy future.” CASE members represent a large cross section of the U.S. solar industry, both large and small companies, including silicon and module manufacturers, project developers, financial and real estate services and installers.

We’ve hired 400 employees this year, including electricians, roofers, salespeople, call center professionals – affordable solar energy in the United States is the catalyst for this new economic opportunity and these jobs,” said Ken Button, co-founder and president, Verengo Solar Plus. “If SolarWorld is successful with its petition, it would hurt the broader U.S. solar industry. Are SolarWorld’s jobs more important than ours?” In a recent solar industry report, Jefferies analyst Jesse Pichel explained why SolarWorld’s anti-trade petition could hurt broader U.S. solar industry growth: “The U.S. solar industry, already suffering from a lack of financing, will experience higher panel prices and lower demand if countervailing duties are imposed as early 2012. SolarWorld may see backlash as U.S. developers and installers are hurt by this scorched Earth approach.”SolarWorld‘s trade action has been largely unpopular in the U.S. solar industry, given its potential to hurt thousands of jobs throughout the solar value chain.

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One Day Electric Vehicles Will Rule LA Auto Show


 One Day Electric Vehicles Will Rule LA Auto Show

MI4 300x199 One Day Electric Vehicles Will Rule LA Auto ShowThe LA Auto Show is serious business. It’s been going on since 1907 with ninety-nine la bmw 17c8tbd 17c8tgs 300x180 One Day Electric Vehicles Will Rule LA Auto Showvehicles on display at Morley’s Skating Rink. As the auto industry grew, the auto show changed venues four times throughout the 1920s to accommodate the growing needs of vendors. In 1926, it took place at the corner of Hill and Washington where it stayed for the next four years. Certainly there have been alot of changes since that time. Such as after 50 years  the show has changed its name from The Greater Los Angeles Auto Show to the LA Auto Show. Take note as Sam Mui writes, What A Difference A Decade Makes: Electric Vehicles Become Mainstream at the LA Auto Show.

Over at Honda the Honda Civic Natural Gas was Named 2012 Green Car of the Year at Los Angeles Auto Show Press Conference.  7f2e8t 300x224 One Day Electric Vehicles Will Rule LA Auto ShowGreen Car Journal announced the Honda Civic Natural Gas as the highly-anticipated 2012 Green Car of the Year winner at a press conference Thursday morning during the Los Angeles Auto Show’s press days.  The cleanest running internal combustion vehicle certified by the EPA, the all-new 2012 Civic Natural Gas is the fifth generation of this alternative fuel vehicle and the only assembly-line produced natural gas passenger model manufactured for sale in the United States.  It runs on a clean fuel that is almost exclusively domestically sourced and typically priced about 30 percent less than gasoline.

The Ultimate Driving Machine People were on it, As scenes from the latest installment of the Mission Impossible film series played on an 18-foot-tall, 39-foot-wide silk screen, the screen itself was whisked away to unveil the first concept vehicles of the new visionary and sustainable brand, BMW i – the fully electric BMW i3 Concept and the hybrid-electric BMW i8 Concept – from which Paula Patton, star of Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol and BMW President Ludwig Willisch emerged, officially unveiling the vehicles for the first time in North America at the 2011 Los Angeles Auto Show.  The BMW i3 and i8 Concept vehicles represent the first purpose-built electric and electric-hybrid vehicles to be made primarily of carbon fiber when they become available in 2013 and 2014, respectively.

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US Could Save $80 Billion With Renewable Energy


 US Could Save $80 Billion With Renewable Energy

Runing Save 300x134 US Could Save $80 Billion With Renewable Energy New findings of  the nonprofit Civil Society Institute finds, Contrary to “Common Wisdom,” Fossil Fuels Are Not the Cheaper Route for Nation’s Future. It is a myth that switching to safe, renewable energy would mean an unreliable U.S. power supply that also is too expensive to afford. That is the major conclusion of a new Synapse Energy Economics report prepared for the nonprofit Civil Society Institute that details a future with more energy efficiency and renewable energy and less reliance on coal and nuclear power.

Titled “Toward a Sustainable Future for the U.S. Power Sector: Beyond Business as Usual 2011Synapse-Toward-a-Sustainable-Future-11-11, the new Synapse/CSI report outlines a realistic transition to a cleaner energy future that would result in a net savings of $83 billion over the next 40 years.  The Synapse report also details other major benefits, including:  the avoidance of tens of thousands of premature deaths due to pollution; the creation of hundreds of thousands of new jobs; sharp cuts in carbon pollution; and significant cuts in water consumption for power production.

The new Synapse report findings for CSI are particularly significant in view of the fact that a strong majority of Americans want the U.S. to make the investments needed to be a clean energy leader on a global basis.  More than three in four Americans (77 percent) – including 65 percent of Republicans, 75  percent of Independents, 88 percent of Democrats, and 56 percent of Tea Party members — agree with the following statement:  “The U.S. needs to be a clean energy technology leader and it should invest in the research and domestic manufacturing of wind, solar and energy efficiency technologies.”

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Global Green Steve Elfman 300x200 US Could Save $80 Billion With Renewable Energy Energy Secretary Testifying Today

New Solar Solutions Could Put Angelenos To Work


 New Solar Solutions Could Put Angelenos To Work

10108192 large 1 300x211 New Solar Solutions Could Put Angelenos To WorkWhile Los Angeles is fast becoming a major player in the electric vehicle industry, a new  jointly authored report by UCLA and USC research teams finds that Los Angeles is lagging behind  on solar energy installation despite a significant trained workforce ready to perform clean-energy solar jobs. Further, the study finds that the areas in Los Angeles with the greatest potential for rooftop solar power – and thus the greatest capacity to support solar-related jobs – include many areas suffering from high unemployment and economic need.

9635146 woman engineer on solar panels site New Solar Solutions Could Put Angelenos To WorkThe report urges officials to adopt a rooftop solar energy program known as a solar FiT (or feed-in tariff) that enables business owners and residents to install solar panels on their rooftops and sell surplus energy to the local utility. Such a program has been endorsed by a coalition of environmental groups, labor leaders, business organizations and other stakeholders. Thus  far city leaders have failed to enact policies that would take advantage of this resource and put city residents to work.“Unless civic leaders ramp up efforts to expand solar programs, the city and region face the prospect of being left behind,” states the report, Empowering LA’s Solar Workforce: New Policies that Deliver Investments and Jobs.LABC_Solar_Workforce_Study_2011 “This report is, above all, a wake-up call to policymakers to make certain they are utilizing an important workforce segment – and creating policies that will put qualified people to work.”

While California has set a goal of generating 33 percent of its energy from renewable energy by 2020, the study reveals that the LA region lacks sound policies to meet these goals and employ ready green-economy workers. In fact, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) has one of the weakest solar track records among major California utilities, generating less than one sixth as much solar power per customer as the state leader, Southern California Edison.The report, presented by the LABC Institute, will be formally released at the LA Business Council’s “Building LA’s Workforce” Summit at UCLA today, Nov. 16. It will be discussed at the event by a panel that includes three leading mayoral candidates– City Council President Eric Garcetti, Controller Wendy Greuel and Councilwoman Jan Perry.

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California’s Ninety Nine Percent Buying Solar Energy


attari20111013171557450 300x200 Californias Ninety Nine Percent Buying Solar EnergyPV Solar Report, an authority on California solar market data and SunRun, a leading home solar company, today announced that families in median income zip codes make up the majority of California’s home solar market.  Two thirds of California home solar installations in 2009, 2010, and 2011 year-to-date have been in zip codes with median annual household incomes of less than $85,000 and not in the wealthiest areas of the state.  In addition, the number of residential projects in lower income zip codes continues to increase as solar prices decrease.   The top cities on the list are not California’s wealthiest and are home to more mainstream families.  For example, Bakersfield and Fresno are among the state’s top five solar cities with annual household incomes averaging between $40,000 and $50,000.  By comparison, Malibu, which was not even in the top 25, has a median annual household income of $160,000.  The percent of total installations in California’s highest income zip codes is only 2-3 percent.

solar city san rafael resid Californias Ninety Nine Percent Buying Solar EnergySunRun Director of Government Affairs Ethan Sprague said, “The data from PV solar report shows this model is working, and that it’s not just the wealthy driving and benefitting from solar adoption.  We are working to educate consumers that solar is finally affordable.” “This is exactly the market transformation that the California Solar Initiative (CSI) was designed to achieve when it started in 2007. SunRun owns, insures and maintains solar panels and installs them on a homeowner’s roof.  Families pay a low monthly rate for clean energy, fixing their energy costs for 20 years.  The service makes solar accessible to more Californians because families who could not afford cash purchase can now go solar.  One of every four SunRun customers reporting income makes less $50,000 per year.

“It’s exciting to analyze how the industry is growing right now, especially when trends indicate that solar is becoming more mainstream and not just reserved for the wealthiest individuals,” said Stephen Torres, founder and managing director of PV Solar Report.  “Solar prices are coming down, it’s great for job growth from installing, financing, and servicing solar in local communities, and models like SunRun are helping drive growth because they eliminate large upfront investments.”

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