20/20 by 2020

20/20 by 2020 is the progressive goal to get the United States and other countries of the world to commit to 20% of power production by solar power and 20% by wind power, by the year 2020.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

How Retailers Can Prevent Climate Change


How Retailers Can Prevent Climate Changehttp://www.retailpackaging.com/blog/2013/02/27-ways-to-prevent-climate-change-a-guide-for-independent-retailers/

Thanks for the head's up, Jennifer Carter (jennifer@outbounding.com)

Saturday, October 18, 2008

20/20 by 2020: Three Views

These are the goals of 20/20 by 2020:
  • 20/20 = 20% wind power, 20% solar power = 40% Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS)
  • 20/20 = -20% greenhouse gas/carbon emissions, +20% MPG in fuel standards = cleaner air & transportation
  • 20/20 = -20% waste production, +20% recycling = cleaner communities, land & water

Monday, September 29, 2008

Whirligig, Inc.

I am proposing to do a Wind Power Zoning Map with this company, to show the wind-rich neighborhoods of the Bay Area, as well as to map local zoning ordinances for height, noise restrictions, etc.

Hopefully we can work together to make this a possibility.

Perhaps you can create your own map, or already have such a map for different places in the world. If so, please share the URLs for where such information can be found on the web!

Thanks!

-Peter Corless.
petercorless@mac.com
650-906-3134 (mobile)

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Sharing a Letter from Environment California

I got an email I thought I'd share:

On Aug 17, 2008, at 5:21 PM, Dan Jacobson, Environment California Legislative Director wrote:

Should we endorse Barack Obama for president or stay out of the election?

What do you think?

[Click here] to tell us what you think.

Hi Peter,

Before we make a decision on endorsing a candidate for president, there's one thing we need to know: Do you think we should endorse Barack Obama or stay out of the presidential election?

Tell us today:

http://www.environmentamerica.org/action/voter-action/wdyt44440?id4=ES

We've done our homework.

We think electing Barack Obama offers the best chance for advancing the environmental progress we've worked so hard to achieve together.

As you might know, our national federation of state environmental groups and Washington, D.C.-based staff has formed Environment America Voter Action, the electoral arm of our network.

You can use this online form to send text comments or, if you prefer, a video or audio file, to let us know what you think:

http://www.environmentamerica.org/action/voter-action/wdyt44440?id4=ES

As you might imagine, we're not making this decision lightly.

We're proud of the progress our staff and supporters have made in promoting clean energy, tackling global warming, and protecting the rivers, lakes, forests and other places we know and love.

Yet, too often, the politicians in Washington, influenced by powerful special interests, have stood in the way or even made matters worse.

Given the environmental challenges that are staring us in the face -- not least our dead-end dependence on oil and coal and the need to break our fossil fuel addiction in order to solve global warming -- we can't afford to sit on the sidelines this November.

Think about it:

If we had the right president now, he would be pushing Congress to solve global warming and lay out a bold plan for a new energy future that ends our dependence on coal and oil.

If we had the right president today, with the stroke of a pen he could be raising gas mileage standards to 50 mpg or more by 2020.

If we had one more pro-environment vote in the U.S. Senate this year, we would be on track to supply 15 percent of our electricity with clean, renewable energy by 2020.

If we had one more pro-environment vote in the Senate, the wind and solar power industries could depend on federal tax credits for new clean energy production.

This November, we have a chance to get the political and environmental winds blowing in a new direction.

That's why, working together with the leaders of our national federation, we decided to join forces and take a stand in this election. And, as you might expect, if we're in it, we're in to win it.

Yet why Barack Obama?

We've studied the votes, the scorecards, the statements, the platforms and the plans. Our conclusion: Barack Obama is the right choice for our environment. Here's some of what we learned:

In 2008, Sen. Obama earned a 90 percent score on the Environment Illinois Congressional Scorecard. [1]

His pro-environment stands include adopting stronger gas mileage standards, protection for a pristine Alaskan national forest, and co-sponsorship of the most far-reaching global warming bill in the Senate. [2, 3, 4]

He has said, in response to how we should judge his performance as president: "If I haven't... created a new energy policy that speaks to our dependence on foreign oil and deals seriously with global warming, then we've missed the boat." [5]

He has backed up this pledge with specifics, including a cap on global warming pollution, making carbon emitters pay to pollute, a $150 billion investment in renewable energy, and within 10 years more oil saved than we currently import from the Middle East and Venezuela
combined. [6]

Make no mistake: John McCain is no George Bush.

He has, in the past, bucked his party's leaders to support action against global warming and to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

But he opposed making polluters pay for the cleanup of toxic waste sites, opposed giving the public the right to know more about toxic pollution in their environment, and opposed requirements to get more of our energy from clean renewable sources. In fact, our analysis of his voting record shows him on the wrong side of environmental protection 70 percent of the time. [7]

In the last month, we've seen Sen. McCain soften, and even reverse, some of the pro-environment positions he had, such as opposing the federal moratorium on drilling in the last remaining coastal areas that are protected. [8]

It's disappointing. This could have been a contest between green and greener. No more.

The closer we looked, the more convinced we became that Sen. Obama is not only the right choice, but a clear choice.

We think the record is clear, but maybe there's something we're missing. That's why we want to hear from you. Do you think we should endorse Barack Obama or stay out of the presidential election?

http://www.environmentamerica.org/action/voter-action/wdyt44440?id4=ES

And in case you're wondering if it's worth your time or whether we can make a difference, consider this:

We have a plan to hire thousands of organizers and canvassers to reach out and help persuade undecided voters, register new voters (especially younger voters who have the most at stake), and turn out pro-environment voters in 11 key states that could make the difference on Election Day.

Not only could this outreach effort help us elect the next president, but we will also mobilize to support more pro-environment congressional candidates, building a stronger majority for clean energy, stopping global warming and protecting special places and open spaces.

Of course, as you know from experience, we'll still be here on November 5, preparing to hold the feet of whomever wins to the fire when it comes to the health and future of our environment.

Thank you, in advance, for sharing your thoughts with us.

http://www.environmentamerica.org/action/voter-action/wdyt44440?id4=ES

And, as always: Thanks for making it all possible.

Sincerely,

Dan Jacobson
Environment California Legislative Director
DanJ@environmentcalifornia.org
http://www.environmentcalifornia.org

P.S. In the interest of full disclosure, we're part of Sen. Obama's back story. As a young man, Sen. Obama worked as an organizer with NYPIRG (the New York Public Interest Research Group). As you might know, Environment California became the new home of [XXXPIRG's] environmental work not long ago. Small world.

BACKGROUND
[1] You can access Environment Illinois' scorecard at www.EnvironmentIllinois.org.
[2] Read more about support for increasing gas mileage standards here: http://www.barackobama.com/issues/energy/
[3] Sen. Obama voted in favor of Amendment 1026 to H.R. 2361, which would have banned subsidies for road-building in the Tongass National Forest.
[4] Obama co-sponsored the Lieberman-Warner Climate Stewardship and Innovation Act of 2007. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s110-280
[5] http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/21472234/a_conversation_with_barack_obama/print
[6] http://www.barackobama.com/issues/energy/
[7] McCain's lifetime Environment Arizona score is 30 percent.
[8] http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/26/AR2008072601891.html

Paid for by Environment America at www.EnvironmentAmerica.org and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

This message was sent to petercorless{at}mac.com. If you want us to stop sending you e-mail then follow this link -- http://www.environmentcalifornia.org/action/unsubscribe -- to a web page where you can remove yourself.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tell them what you think too.

-Pete.

(How) We Can Solve It

I just signed up for We Can Solve It [No longer available on the Internet; you might want to go here instead: http://www.climatecrisiscoalition.org/].

They asked the question:
How can the We Campaign help you and your blog?
This is what I shared with them:
Help me find or help me to put together/maintain national maps!!!!!

• Where do we use/don't use power; BTUs and BTUs per capita (by US county)

• Where do we use/don't use renewables; green BTUs and green BTUs per capita (by US county)

• Where do we emit greenhouse gases (in tons) per US county

• Rate of increase in greenhouse gas emissions (in tons, over time) per US county

• Rates of energy efficiency (where is the US best/worst in saving energy)?

• Energy intensity map of the US (BTUs needed to create $1 GDP) in the US.

Help show us all where we are doing well, who and where the leaders are, and where we need improvement! Make it apparent!

I have a vision, and ideas for patentable technologies on how to create the equivalent of 'weather maps' to track the social needs and changes occurring in our world.

I want to work together with We Can Solve It to create these maps for you and with your team. Please contact me at my mobile phone: 650-906-3134, or email petercorless{at}mac.com.
I altered the email here, adding braces to avoid the auto-spammers.

To my blog readers, if you have any desire, technological training, mapping tools, computing resources or ideas to help in this regard, I would love to hear from you. This interweaves directly into the Global Understanding Institute I am endeavoring to found.

The campaign inspires me, the way they are linking in the social networking aspects of the web into its activist nature of social change. I spent just a few minutes getting set up, and earned through signing petitions, the equivalent of a 50 cent donation. I am apparently the 1,482,043 person to sign up to be a Climate Champion. They are well on their way to get 2 million people to sign up by 2009.

Is 20/20 by 2020 “Clearsighted”?
We Can Solve It wants to get to 100% renewable power within 10 years (2018). Whereas I had proposed, through 20/20 by 2020, to get to 40% from renewable power, specifically solar and wind.

It is vital we even consider logically the possibility to get to 100% renewable by 2018. My prior proposition of 40% by 2020 can be considered a “backstop” or minimum. Yet this is higher than the California state goal of 33% from renewables as presented in the current CARB proposed Climate Change Draft Scoping Plan (June 2008 Discussion Draft), pursuant to AB 32.

Yet California only recently elevated that number to 33% from a lower figure. We are ramping up what we need to do, because what we are doing to the environment is also ramping up.

The image “http://www.arb.ca.gov/cc/inventory/images/graphs/2020_forecast_plot.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
Source: Greenhouse Gas Inventory Data - Draft 2020 Forecast, California Air Resources Board.

As you can see from this chart, since the time when I first came out to California in late 1989 (c. 1990), our state has increased its Greenhouse Gas (GHG) output from ~440 million tonnes CO2 equiv. to ~470 million tons in 2002-2004, when I was having Green Knight Publishing wilt around my ears.

That is roughly a 7% increase over the period of 12-14 years, or about a half-a percentage per year (not figuring in “compounded interest” or any other true mathematical progression).

The future is going to get warmer before it gets cooler. Oil and other fossil fuels will increasingly be pressed for their utility value, price, and distribution. I mean that also sociologically. Pressures will drive greater competition and conflict between individuals, companies, communities, countries, and entire regions and alliances.

Hence why I have to step up my game now. History will judge us on what we do. This is why I went to the Department of the Environment, and posed the 20/20 challenge to them, to get to 20% solar and 20% wind, instead of the 33% goal in the report.

It is mentioned on page 9 of my copy, under II. Preliminary Recommendation:
This standard, proposed by the wind power industry c. 1997, and adapted by the US Department of Energy and National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners c. 2000-2001 has really not been pushed far enough.

California already has a standard to get 20% of California utility power from renewables (solar PV, solar thermal, wind, biomass, landfill gas, digester gas, geothermal, and ocean) by the year 2010. This goal is coded in law, has regulatory oversight in place, and, though challenged like any program for budget, commitments and completion, it is on its way for successful compliance.

In fact, this 20% rate was originally set for 2017, but SB 107 accelerated the requirement from 2017 to 2010. Amazingly seven years were shaved off and automagically we could still get it done. Which simply means we weren't pushing hard enough for change. We were lowballing what we could do.

In the same manner, we are now raising the goal, and the rate of change to reach the goal from 20% by 2010 (based on a 1% increase per year) to 33% by 2020 (about 2.55% per year). Which means we are just now raising our heads and realizing a) how far we have to go, b) how much we can change things if we set our sights higher, and c) we haven't craned our necks back far enough yet.

This standard only includes utility power, not overall power use in California. So, for instance, transportation fuel and power and off-grid power use is not included in these numbers.

Let's look at this in terms of national numbers:

Source: Energy Analysis, NEED Project, Manassas, VA, 2006-2007, Grade Level 7-12 study guide. www.need.org

Renewables, as you can see in this graphic derived from EIA data, comprised 6.12 quadrillion BTUs (“quads” or Q's) out of a total energy supply of 104.17Q. That is only 5.88% of total U.S. power needs.

How did matters change in the past three years? Here's the latest EIA chart:
Source: Energy Information Administration (EIA), State and U.S. Historical Data, http://www.eia.doe.gov/overview_hd.html

According to the 2007 data, out of a total supply of 106.96Q, renewables were 6.8Q, or only 6.36% of our total energy production. That's an 11% increase in renewable power production in 3 years, and an 8% increase in renewable power contribution to overall national needs.

If we presume this trend continues at the present rate, of 11% increases over periods of 3 years, by 2019, the US will achieve about 10.36% of energy production from renewables.

That is far short of my projected 20%/20% by 2020. In fact, it would be about a quarter of the 20/20 by 2020 goal, and only, of course, 10% of the goal for We Can Solve It.

What it does not take into account, though, is increasing growth rates in the renewable energy markets. I have not sat down and done trendline analyses of current rates of growth, or when we would expect to start seeing bends and jiggles in that perfect "S-curve" for adoption.

As an aside, check out this older article on Energy Intensity, and see what it has to say about California. I'll return to that thread another day I hope. Yet what this article alludes to is that California, with its better energy intensity numbers, may have more flexibility and freedom to get on the early adopter curve than many other states in the country. This is not to brag or lord over those other states and geographies who will have a harder time adopting. Yet like many things in California history, we may be able to learn, and then allow other states to follow based on our lessons learned.

Overall, though, we have to raise our sights from where they are presently set if we want to move from better than 10% energy from renewables to 20%, not to mention 20%/20%, and then, of course, the “We Can Do It!” goal of 100% by 2020.

Hence why I am compelled to toss my hat in the ring, or, to be more gallantly belligerent, my own gauntlet down. I must challenge myself!

The Once and Future Green Knight

It is happenstance my own business withered during a time when the world was warming. Yet even then we were watching fuel prices rise, causing paper product costs to skyrocket. Once gas hit $2.00 a gallon, and after having a few wholesalers go south on us, I decided to send my inventory off to other businesses and just cut back to the bone. Fuel and, thus, shipping costs for products, were getting too expensive for me to manage given the lack of distribution networks and marketing infrastructure we had.

We were also watching as people were moving from dice-and-paper games to online games. That was a bandwagon I wished to get on, yet felt the right circumstances were not present during the time of the Dark Age of Camelot.

Unlike a few thousand dollars for a print run for a game product, online games take a huge startup cost to really get going. It is the equivalent of the difference between writing a short story for Analog or Asimov magazines, or getting a blockbuster Hollywood movie made out of the same idea.

Anyway, I still have dreams to revitalize ways to make King Arthur, his Knights of the Round Table, and the themes of the Grail and chivalry more popular. After all, he's still around after centuries. In comparison, and thank heavens, I am still here after only a few years of a dry spell of personal energy.

So, I wished to hereby declare my intent to revitalize Green Knight. Not just the publishing company, but to truly stand up and declare myself as a Green Knight!

Environmentalism, stewardship of the earth, renewal of life, and that Quixotic view of chivalry, humor, love and the world are all compelling me to declare this.

It's a cute schtick that makes people laugh. Yet it is also based on some sublime philosophies of ethical respect and duty for those who I shall serve, and also infuse my work with natural business practices and organic organizational processes. I'll file a DBA later this month. Get business cards. Put the web site back up.

Stay calm! I am sound in mind and body. I have not gone completely starkers.

Yet just as Don Quixote de la Mancha tilted at windmills, it is time for a whole new generation of people to tilt at our own windmills. Yet now, the windmills are metal turbines like those parked at the top of the Altamont Pass and other wind-producing sites around the world. And rather than mistake them for monsters, these shall be the gentle giants to enable us to power the world for the century to come.

We Can Solve It challenges each of us to become a hero in this world epic. No Gandalf is going to call upon you. No stormtroopers will land to force you to take action. It is up to you, young Jedi, young hobbit, young Harry, to cast off any fantasy of the problem solving itself and take factual, personal action.

How can we change the world? For my own part, I am renewing my commitment to the world in many ways. Follow my blogs and you will see. I know how I want to help change it now. How do you want to commit to this epic?

Onwards to adventure!

-Pete.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

On August 8, 2008, at 1555 Berger Avenue, San Jose, California, the Santa Clara County Department of the Environment held a meeting for the California Air Resources Board (CARB).

I spoke at the meeting, and I never felt more "participatory democratic electorate" in my life. More of what happened there coming soon!

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Just had a great conversation with Steve Patton of Bay Solar Power Design tonight. He was quite glad to tell me about the penetration of solar power in the Pacifica community. I recall many cloudy days in Pacifica. Now, if that sort of cloudy city can make a fair go of solar power installations, there's no reason why other locales cannot do even better.

San Francisco definitely got solarized by Vote Solar.

Steve shared with me a ballpark calculator for installing solar power in your home.

1. kWh day x 200 = Wattage of System Production

2. Wattage x $6.50 = Cost of Solar Power Installation

Examples:

Using 10 kWh/day would require 2 kW (2,000 watts) production x $6.50 = $13,000

And 40 kWh/day would be a 8 kW system, or $56,000.

Remember, call for discounts! Also look for energy efficiency savings around the home to cut down usage. Read your PG&E bill carefully.

The payback on most solar systems is rapidly dropping below 10 years now, and if the cost of energy goes up with rising oil and gas prices, then the savings should happen far sooner.

Mother Earth News ran an article on how to calculate your ROI once you get a price quote on a system. They even posted a solar power ROI calculator as an Excel spreadsheet.

The issue with solar power is that people have to see it as a long-term investment. In a world where the average savings is far down and many people are worrying about short-term money management, one might think to put it off. Yet it is an investment in one's home, and in the world.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

20/20 by 2020 is a political movement.

The revolution starts now.

The goal is simple.

Let's convert to more renewable energy sources so that by the year 2020, 20% of the world's energy demands are met by wind power, and 20% by solar power.

The eventual goal is to get as close as possible to 100% renewable energy by 2100. Admittedly a specious goal, because of the debate over "100%" and "renewable." There will be other forms of energy in the mix of requirements necessary to support our ecological and economic demands. Energy is always lost in power utility; you cannot truly renew energy without some admission of loss or entropy in the system any more than you can believe in a perpetual motion machine. There are also likely times when renewable power systems are inappropriate. Renewable energy is not "free," and such systems, no matter how "green" they seem, do have environmental impact. We need to be sober-minded and admit the costs and limitations of these means of power production, even while touting and championing their success. It is simply truthful to admit that these systems have less impact on the world in terms of consummable fuel utility for the production of power than other comparable energy systems.

If we cannot get to 20/20 by 2020, we should get as close as possible.

If we can achieve some significant measure towards this goal, the world will be in a significantly better state, ecologically and economically.

If we cannot do this for the whole world, then let's set this as a goal for each nation.

If we cannot do this for a whole nation, then let us set this as a goal for our region, our state, our county, our municipality, home or business.

If we work well together, we will make progress, friends, and fortunes developing this new power utility sector.

If we work towards this as a strategic goal as a species, eager for well-being and survival, then we will succeed.

If we build it, it will hum.

20/20 is not a government-funded project. Nor is it funded by a power company. It was simply an emergent meme whose time had come. An idea that I came up with thinking about the present revolution in the energy sector. Who am I? I'm Peter Corless. A contientious and concerned citizen of the world.

Moving to 20/20 by 2020 would be one of the world's great macroengineering projects, in line with the Great Pyramids of Egypt or the Great Wall of China. Yet it would be a project with a much clearer Return on Investment (ROI) for the investors and inhabitants of the world.

If you personally are a backer of other energy technologies, whether petrochemical, nuclear, hydroelectric or tidal, geothermal or biomass, you know that the answer is "yes!" Like Captain Kirk on the Enterprise, the captains of Spaceship Earth are saying, "Scotty, we need more power!" We cannot leave aside a single joule, watt, and certainly we cannot ignore the source of more quads (quadrillions of BTUs) necessary to sustain our growing world population.

As a final note, I'd like to dedicate this project to Thomas Dolby (Thomas Robertson), who, back on the Golden Age of Wireless, wrote the project's unofficial theme song Wind Power. (Thomas, if you come across this, please let me know if you would bless the notion, and we'll make it official.)

Onwards to our future!

-Peter Corless.