standforless: C'mon TeamUSA.... RT @TreeHugger: China Beat US in Offshore Wind, Europe Still Trounces Everyone Else in Solar Power http://bit.ly/aI7byB Tue, Sep 7th @ 10:29am

  • Drive down pollution! You can also eliminate one pound of greenhouse gas emissions by eliminating just one mile of driving.
  • Californians bought 21.9 billion drinks in aluminum, glass, plastic and bi-metal containers last year. More than 16.2 billion of those were recycled, saving natural resources and extending the life of our landfills.

  • The U.S. transportation sector as a whole is responsible for almost 9% of the world's total CO2 emissions. That stinks.
  • Cut your monthly energy bills by as much as 30% by replacing the old equipment in your home with state-of-the-art Energy Star appliances.
  • CRV stands for California Refund Value. It equals 5¢ for each beverage container less than 24 ounces and 10¢ for each container 24 ounces or greater.
  • Report "smoking" vehicles. Call 1-800-28-SMOKE to report vehicles with excessive tailpipe emissions.
  • Shade provided by trees can reduce your air conditioning bill at home by 10-15%. Cool.
  • Save paper...save resources. Change your printer settings to 2-sided printing to reduce the amount of paper you consume at the office.
  • Close the loop! Visit greengiftguide.com and discover a wide range of household, recreational and beauty products made from recycled materials.
  • Unplug your cell phone charger and other household electronics from the wall when you're not using them. Even when they are turned off, they use phantom power.
  • Use cold water when you can. Water heating accounts for about 13% of home energy costs.
  • Carpools and vanpools can use High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes and HOV by-pass on ramp meters, which allows you to get to work faster.
  • Help eliminate the use of disposable plates, cups and utensils. Bring re-usable dishware to work.
Jul
28

Can we find some common ground?

How do we go beyond polarizing arguments to find common ground and common sense solutions?

The following came from Thomas Friedman’s column today:

The Senate’s failure to act is a result of many factors, but one is that the climate-energy policy debate got disconnected from average people. We need less talk about “climate” and more about how conservation saves money, renewable energy creates jobs, restoring the gulf’s marshes sustains fishermen and preserving the rainforest helps poor people. Said Glenn Prickett, vice president at the Nature Conservancy: “We have to take climate change out of the atmosphere, bring it down to earth and show how it matters in people’s everyday lives.”

What do you think?

Jul
26

No climate/energy bill? We’ll be sorry . . .

Thomas Friedman’s response to the demise of the latest climate bill in the U.S. Congress is “we’re gonna be sorry.”

In California, for now, there is a consensus that global warming is a serious problem that requires serious action. Under Governor Schwarzenegger’s Administration this consensus has had bi-partisan support.

Clean energy technologies like solar require the support of government policies because of the long-term nature of the investment required by the private sector.

Clean energy technologies like solar require the support of government policies because of the long-term nature of the investment required by the private sector.

For anyone not ready to accept that global warming is caused by human activity, or that it is even bad–there are other compelling reasons for supporting most of the key aspects of the climate/energy bill that was just abandoned by Congress. At the top of the list is our dependence on oil and all that that entails. Since the early 1970s an increasing majority of oil consumed in the U.S. has been imported. This means we are shipping our wealth to other nations. That’s bad enough, but we’re also depending on them for the lifeblood of our economy–a dangerous and precarious place for us to be from a national security perspective.

Alternative energies are gaining increased adoption in the U.S., but we have a long, long way to go.

Last August we encouraged our readers to read “The Elusive Green Economy,” from The Atlantic Monthly–if you haven’t read it yet, it’s an important and educational piece (and not a short one!). This article does an outstanding job of demonstrating the price we continue to pay as a nation by not supporting policies that make alternative energies feasible in the marketplace. During the 1980s, the collapse in oil prices made such policies a low priority in Washington. The Atlantic Monthly article does an excellent job of explaining the long term cost of those policy choices.

The downside of lower oil prices is both high carbon emissions and the massive transfer of American wealth overseas.

Journalist and author Thomas Friedman has made the promotion of environmental awareness and clean energy two of his signature causes. “We’re Gonna Be Sorry,” is Friedman’s reply to the news that the U.S. Senate will not pursue a climate/energy bill. The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill last year so Senate action was the only thing separating the legislation from becoming the law of the land (the president is eager to sign it into law).

Friedman ends his column with various reports, including this one, that demonstrate the folly of inaction:

“Just as the U.S. Senate was abandoning plans for a U.S. cap-and-trade system, this article ran in The China Daily: ‘BEIJING — The country is set to begin domestic carbon trading programs during its 12th Five-Year Plan period (2011-2015) to help it meet its 2020 carbon intensity target. . . . Putting a price on carbon is a crucial step for the country to employ the market to reduce its carbon emissions and genuinely shift to a low-carbon economy, industry analysts said.’”

It is ironic that communist China may embrace a market driven solution to that nation’s energy problems before the U.S. Like the U.S., China imports most of its oil.

We will be sorry if we don’t STAND FOR LESS and stand for more sensible policies from our leaders. California, as is often the case, is ahead of the curve in this effort. An initiative will be on this fall’s ballot to delay implementation of the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006.

This would be much less likely to occur and the arguments in favor of delay would have less relevance if the U.S. would adopt a sensible national policy regarding climate change and energy.

Jul
16

William James encourages San Diego to STAND FOR LESS

“Lives based on having are less free than lives based on either doing or being.” -William James 1842-1910

Jul
12

Running the Numbers: An American Portrait, by artist Chris Jordan

Our STAND FOR LESS artist of the summer is Chris Jordan. Jordan creates innovative art highlighting the waste involved with mass consumption. He describes his work as depicting the “problem of unconscious collective behavior.” We know a little bit about this at STAND FOR LESS and we applaud Chris for his creativity and passion.

Consider his work Light Bulbs, part of the “Running the Numbers” series. It incorporates 320,000 light bulbs, “equal to the number of kilowatt hours of electricity wasted in the United States every minute from inefficient residential electricity usage.” The images on his website allow you to zoom in to see the elements behind his work. Light Bulbs literally incorporates 320,000 bulbs within the image.

Another image from “Running the Numbers” is Cans Seurat which utilizes 106,000 aluminum cans (American use that many every thirty seconds) to create a copy of neo-impressionist artist’s George Seurat’s A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte.

Visit Chris Jordan’s site, and when you do, be sure to interact with the images (by clicking on them) to see how he composed them.

Very well done Chris!

Source: Running the Numbers: An American Portrait by Chris Jordan

Jul
7

Creatures of the grid

light-bulb

An early application of electricity. Many more would follow.

“We are creatures of the grid,” is the opening line to this month’s National Geographic article by Joel Achenbach. 

And we are. From the heating and cooling systems that control our indoor environments, to the power for our cell phones and computers–we have grown so accustomed to reliable and affordable electricity that we take it for granted as much as the air we breathe.

But our grid was built for the 20th century. What we have works, most of the time. It’s not, however, equipped for the growing demand of our ever increasing population. It is also unequipped to handle the new, greener sources of electricity that we hope will be powering our lives in the years ahead.

One of the first steps in developing a smarter grid for this century can be found here in San Diego through SDG&E’s implementation of smart meters. This is a logical step since the technology is readily available to provide both consumers and producers of electricity with vital real-time, two-way communications regarding energy usage. SDG&E is a national leader in this upgrade.

Smart meter technology will allow homeowners and businesses to see how they are consuming electricity, and adjust their energy use accordingly. Utilities will have real time information to prevent or deal with brownouts or localized outages. Today most power companies don’t know that the power is out until somebody calls in a report. By implementing this relatively simple technology, we are taking an important step forward toward a smarter grid for this century.

Green energy and the grid

Forty percent of all energy used in the U.S. goes into making electricity–and today only 3% of that energy comes from renewable sources. The vast majority of our energy for electricity comes from coal and natural gas-powered plants (almost 50% is from coal-powered generators).  If we are going to deal with climate change, we need to move away from these carbon-dioxide belching energy sources.

Developing a smarter grid is especially important as Americans shift toward greener sources of energy, including wind and solar.

Today, Texas is capable of producing far more wind energy than the existing grid can handle. Because of this, as well as the collapse in the price of natural gas over the past two years, an ambitious project to build a giant wind farm in west Texas was abandoned.

Arizona is capable of producing enough solar power for the entire nation. There too, the grid is not capable of distributing what  Arizona could produce.

There are a few grid-related issues limiting the sun and the wind as energy sources including: distribution capacity, storage capabilities and grid intelligence. Wind and solar depend on the wind blowing, and the sun shining. Mechanisms need to be developed and deployed to store power for night time and calm days.

Moving to different sources of energy and upgrading our grid are important steps toward standing for less oil, gas and coal being used. These are also vital steps for national security. Oil is not a significant source of electricity in the U.S., but by generating clean energy and moving toward electric vehicles, we can decrease our need for foreign oil–which literally fuels our economy today–and keeps us hostage to the whims of the market and to foreign nations that are at times less than friendly.

As creatures of the grid, these are issues that affect all of us.

Read “The 21st Century Grid,” by Joel Achenbach.

Jun
30

How much are we talking about climate change in San Diego? Is it a safe topic?

The accelerated melting of the world's glaciers is one symptom of climate change.

The accelerated melting of the world's glaciers is one symptom of climate change.

At STAND FOR LESS we focus on issues related to how we can use fewer resources and how this opens the way to a richer, healthier life for all of us.

Writing for Treehugger, Brian Merchant asks “is it safe to talk about climate change again?

Merchant asserts that “the clearer the science gets on climate change, the easier it is for the public to digest it, the more willing our politicians will be to address the issue head-on.” We hope this is true!

Here in California we are leaders when it comes addressing climate change. Governor Schwarzenegger signed the Global Warming Solutions Act into law in 2006.

The fact of the matter is, safe or not, we must talk about climate change, energy policy, and other pressing issues regarding our use–and all too often overuse–of natural resources.

A few days ago, utilizing sarcasm and dark humor, the following tweet came through from @BPGlobalPR: “Keep in mind, the more your interest in the oil spill wanes, the less damage the oil does. #outofsightoutofmind #day67.”

Whether the issue is the oil spill or global warming: Out of sight out of mind indeed!

Let’s talk.

Jun
14

Josh Tickell, transforming our views on fuel

This post originally appeared on our site on June 23, 2009. We are republishing it because Tickell’s film “Fuel” will be released June 22, 2010 on DVD. This is a timely movie given the situation in the Gulf of Mexico and our continued dependence on petroleum.

Josh Tickell and Rebecca Harrell taking a STAND FOR LESS.

Josh Tickell and Rebecca Harrell taking a STAND FOR LESS.

We met Josh Tickell at Street Smart San Diego where he was a featured speaker. Tickell is an author, filmmaker, and champion of alternative fuels. He wrote the book Biodiesel America. He also wrote and directed the Sundance award-winning film titled “Fuel.”

We encourage you to read his book and watch his film. He is an elegant writer and speaker. His research is thorough and he masterfully explains technical issues in an engaging way that the average person can understand. If you missed him at Street Smart San Diego you can get a quick introduction to Tickell by watching this short video:

A few days after we met him, Tickell was named a United Nations Goodwill Ambassador for his work promoting alternative fuel sources.

Visit The Fuel Film website for more information.

May
28

SeaWorld San Diego rescues young gray whale!

The ongoing, and depressing, news out of the Gulf of Mexico reminds us of the importance of keeping our oceans clean and healthy. It’s inspiring to see stories like this one, thanks SeaWorld SD!

Mar
23

La Jolla!

la-jolla

The Pacific Coast at La Jolla in San Diego, California. Photo by one of San Diego's newest residents: Oliver Fluck.

This post is offered in the spirit of why we STAND FOR LESS. We do so because we live in one of the planets most beautiful locations. If you click on the image above you can see more photos from Oliver who graciously allowed us to use this image.

Keep scrolling for more from STAND FOR LESS . . . .

Mar
22

In the spotlight: San Diego County Water Authority and National Geographic’s water issue

It’s world water day today.

It’s also a good day to recognize our partner and water provider: The San Diego County Water Authority.

The water authority and all of the local water districts work hard every day to bring clean water to all of us in San Diego County. Water is vital for all life. What are you doing to conserve and to help keep our water clean?

Learn more about the importance of water from this National Geographic video which highlights their April 2010 issue: Water Our Thirsty World.

world-water