Search Results for: cloud

post

GreenMonk news roundup 08/27/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

Friday Green numbers roundup 07/31/2009

I am going to start posting numbers based posts regularly on Fridays from now on (as soon as I return from my holidays i.e. from August 26th onwards).

I’d love to hear from people if there is an appetite for these kinds of posts. Feel free to leVe your opinion or suggestions in the comments section below. Thanks.

  • EcoSystem Corporation today announced its execution of agreements for the sale of EcoSystem preferred stock and warrants to purchase common stock to five investment funds for $76 million.

    Funding under the agreements is expected to occur prior to August 5, 2009 upon the satisfaction by EcoSystem of pre-funding conditions. The funds will be held in a restricted EcoSystem account and will be available for use according to the use of proceeds schedule and other conditions specified in the agreements.

    EcoSystem will use the investment proceeds to acquire distressed ethanol production facilities, to acquire other strategically-compatible assets, and to develop and integrate EcoSystem’s Cellulosic Corn™ technologies into EcoSystem’s planned ethanol production facilities.

    tags: EcoSystem Corporation, ethanol, Cellulosic Corn, GreenNumbers

  • Green computing company Convey Computer Corporation has closed $24.15m in Series B financing. The round of funding was led by new investor, Braemar Energy Ventures. Series A investors CenterPoint Ventures, Intel Capital, InterWest Partners, Rho Ventures, and Xilinx also participated.

    Additionally, the company has announced two new board members in Jiong Ma, PhD, of Braemar Energy Ventures and Joshua Ruch of Rho Ventures.

    tags: Convey Computer Corporation, Braemar Energy Ventures, GreenNumbers, CenterPoint Ventures, Intel Capital, InterWest Partners, Rho Ventures, Xilinx

  • San Francisco-based NaturEner USA LLC has closed on a $117.5 million construction loan and a $120 million tax-equity facility arranged by Morgan Stanley for NaturEner’s Glacier II wind farm outside Ethridge, Mont.

    tags: NaturEner, Morgan Stanley, glacier II, Wind farm, GreenNumbers

  • Intel Corp’s global investment arm Intel Capital is actively looking at additional investments in cleantech companies and could announce more deals this year, a senior executive said on Wednesday.

    “We are actively looking at companies,” said Steve Eichenlaub, head of Intel Capital’s cleantech investments.

    “In this environment where a lot of venture capitalists had to pull back, for whatever reason, … we are seeing more companies come our way as our doors are open,” he added.

    Intel Capital said earlier on Wednesday that it has invested about $10 million in five cleantech companies, including energy efficiency company CPower and Grid Net, which builds software for smart meters.

    tags: intel, intel capital, cpower, grid net, smart meters, GreenNumbers

  • Electric sedan maker Coda Automotive has attracted some well-connected people with its latest round of funding, including former Treasury Secretary and Goldman Sachs CEO Henry Paulson.

    The company, which plans to sell an all-electric sedan in California next year, said on Tuesday that it has completed a series B round of $24 million in equity. The money will be used to bring its car to market and fund a joint venture to manufacture the car battery.

    The Coda is a highway-capable sedan with a 100-mile range to be made in China.
    (Credit: Coda Automotive)

    Joining Paulson as an investor and President Clinton’s former chief of staff Thomas “Mack” McLarty. Other investors include investment bank Piper Jaffray, energy investor Tom Steyer, former Edison International CEO John Bryson, and company executives

    tags: coda, coda automotive, hank paulson, bev, battery, GreenNumbers

  • Residential solar company SunRun closed a Series B round of funding for $18 million led by Accel Partners and joined by existing investor, Foundation Capital.

    The San Francisco-based company, founded in 2007, said it plans to use the funding to expand into new markets.

    SunRun expanded its solar-as-a-service business to Massachusetts and Arizona in early 2009.

    SunRun provides turnkey residential solar systems with minimal start-up costs as low as $1,000. Customers do not own the systems, but instead buy the electricity at a fixed rate from SunRun.

    tags: SunRun, Accel Partners, Foundation Capital, GreenNumbers, solar energy

  • Net financial debt falls 59 per cent to 7.353 billion euros; revenue amounts to 2.931 billion euros and EBITDA comes to 393 million.

    ACCIONA closed the first half of 2009 with an attributable net profit of 1.198 billion euros, 343 per cent more than in the same period of 2008. This increase comes mainly as a result of the balance between income and expenses derived from the Endesa operation. Net profit excluding extraordinary items came to 68 million euros, a 45.5 per cent fall on the same period of last year.

    tags: GreenNumbers, Acciona, Endesa

  • U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Steven Chu recently announced more than $54M in funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to support energy efficiency and renewable energy projects in Nevada, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Under DOE’s State Energy Program, states and territories have proposed statewide plans that prioritize energy savings, create or retain jobs, increase the use of renewable energy, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

    “This funding will provide an important boost for state economies, help to put Americans back to work, and move us toward energy independence,” said Secretary Chu. “It reflects our commitment to support innovative state and local strategies to promote energy efficiency and renewable energy while insisting that taxpayer dollars be spent responsibly.”

    These states and territories are receiving 40 percent of their total State Energy Program (SEP) funding authorized under the Recovery Act today. They will now have received 50 percent of their total Recovery Act SEP funding. The initial 10 percent of total funding was previously available to states to support planning activities; the remaining 50 percent of funds will be released once they meet reporting, oversight, and accountability milestones required by the Recovery Act.

    tags: steven chu, GreenNumbers, ARRA, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, DOE, energy savings, renewable energy, greenhouse gas emissions

  • Energy efficiency–it’s not just the low-hanging fruit, it’s the fruit that’s lying on the ground, Energy Secretary Steven Chu recently quipped. Now McKinsey has put a number on the potential savings: $1.2 trillion on an investment of $520 billion over 10 years.

    The consulting firm on Wednesday released a follow-up report to its often-cited economic analysis for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

    tags: energy efficiency, GreenNumbers, steven chu, mckinsey, greenmonktv

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

GreenMonk news roundup 07/31/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

GreenMonk news roundup 07/30/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

GreenMonk news roundup 07/29/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

GreenMonk news roundup 07/28/2009

  • Police today set up road blocks around a music festival site to keep thousands of environmental campaigners away from one of Britain’s longest-running festivals.

    Up to 15,000 people had begun to gather for the Big Green Gathering in the Mendip hills, Somerset, which was officially due to start on Wednesday. But organisers were forced to cancel it on legal advice yesterday after the police took out an injunction to prevent the festival going ahead.

    tags: uk, uk police, big green gathering, police, greenmonktv, climate camp

  • Before you head for the hills or plan your next outdoor BBQ, think twice about using DEET to keep the mosquitoes at bay. DEET has been recently linked to brain damage, and since there are many natural options that are as effective or more effective than DEET there’s no need to take the risk.
    DEET, or diethyl-meta-toluamide, as its known in chemistry circles, has recently been linked to brain cell damage. Duke University research shows that regular use of chemical repellents like DEET may damage brain cells and interact with medications. The pharmacologist conducting the study observed brain cell death and behavioural changes in animals exposed to DEET after frequent and prolonged use. Another study showed that up to fifteen percent of DEET is absorbed by the skin into the bloodstream.

    After more than 30 years of research on the effects of chemicals on the brains of rats, Mohamed Abou-Donia, Ph.D, discovered, in two separate studies, that the frequent and prolonged applications of DEET cause neurons to die in regions of the brain that control muscle movement, learning, memory and concentration. Moreover, rats treated

    with a comparable human dose of DEET (40 mg/kg body weight) performed far worse than control rats when challenged with physical tasks requiring muscle control, strength and coordination. Such effects are consistent with physical symptoms in humans reported in medical literature, especially by Persian Gulf War veterans, claims Abou-Donia.

    Even U.S. Evironmental Protection Agency (EPA) toxicologist Michael Watson noted an instance “where exposure to DEET caused six cases of brain damage in girls aged one through six – and three of them died.”

    So what do you do if you wish to avoid the potentially dangerous effects of DEET while still keeping the mosquitoes at bay? While Mother Nature offers dozens of different options, here are some of my top natural mosquito repellents:
    Before you head for the hills or plan your next outdoor BBQ, think twice about using DEET to keep the mosquitoes at bay. DEET

    tags: deet, mosquito, mosquito repellent, brain damage, citronella, greenmonktv, soy oil

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

GreenMonk news roundup 07/24/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

GreenMonk news roundup 07/23/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

GreenMonk news roundup 07/22/2009

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

post

Mobile phones – distributed air quality sensor network?

Since giving my talk on sustainability in the mobile phone sector at Mobile 2.0 in Barcelona a few weeks back and writing my post about how Augmented Reality on mobiles could be transformative for Green tech I have been thinking a lot about how mobiles could make a significant positive contribution to the planet.

The context behind this is that while there are 1 billion PCs in the world and 1.4 billion internet users, there are 4 billion mobile phone subscriptions and climbing. One possibility I posited at Mobile 2.0 was that mobiles could become clients for grid computing projects like IBM’s World Community Grid. This would add significantly to the compute power of the grid (but for now battery life considerations probably means this is still a few years out).

The other thought rattling around in my head was probably sparked off by my discussions with IBM execs around their Smarter Planet initiative. It occurs to me that if mobile phones had built-in air quality monitors, you could very quickly build up a real-time map of pollution hotspots. Current municipal pollution monitors are static and far too few in number to give a meaningful picture of air quality but if mobile phones had this capability, the combining of the air quality information with the GPS data from the phone would allow for pinpointing of pollution trouble spots very quickly.

Obviously for this to be effective, the data would need to be anonymized and uploaded to a central server. Also, the pollution information would need to be made freely available for everyone’s consumption. There may even be a business model there for someone to pay mobile phone users to sample air and upload the information.

A quick bit of research around this thought and I found the video above showing that not alone is it feasible but it wasn’t a hugely original idea on my part 😉

With the recent news of urban pollution being responsible for lower IQ in children and being implicated in premature births of infants and preeclampsia, there is a definite health imperative for something like this. Especially in China, where air pollution is causing massive health problems. Imagine if the Chinese authorities mandated this the way they mandated that all mobile phone chargers use usb back in 2006! Very quickly economies of scale would drive costs down and competition amongst manufacturers would mean smaller chipsets to do this.

Original Rockwell GPS receiver - image from ion.org

Original Rockwell GPS receiver - image from ion.org

For anyone who thinks that air quality monitors would be too bulky for mobile phones, just have a look at what the original GPS receivers looked like (large backpacks) and now they are embedded in most smart phones!

One final thought harking back to my post on Augmented Reality, with air quality data from mobile phones uploaded to the cloud (unintentional pun, sorry!) it would be very straightforward to create an Augmented Reality view of air quality allowing mobile phone owners to ‘see’ pollution in their immediate environment – imagine how quickly that would drive home to people the seriousness of their air quality situation.