Lost Dog. Jack London Square. Is She Yours?

Internet friends, help us spread the word!  Someone out there is missing a dog we like to call, “Honey, the Sungevity Superdog.”

Blake (one of our Project Managers) and some coworkers found her in Jack London Square last Friday. After getting to know her a bit they named her Honey, which is not an homage to a classic Mariah Carey song, but rather a hint at how sweet she is!  They gave posters to the Oakland SPCA, and put posters all over downtown Oakland, but so far no one has called.

 

Honey is approx 1 1/2 yrs old, a mixed breed, and approximately 50 pounds.  She is not microchipped and her collar didn’t have a tag on it.  According to people in the area, Honey had been seen the previous week wandering around all over Oakland, Telegraph/29th, Broadway/30th, Broadway/10th.

 

Unfortunately, the current Sungevity Foster Parent can not keep her any longer and she needs a new home ASAP (ideally by tomorrow).  Can you help us get the word out and connect Honey to her rightful owner?  She’s a total sweetheart and someone out there must be heartbroken that she’s gone.  Please spread this blog post to all of your social networks if you live in the Bay Area or have a lot of Bay Area friends.

 

Honey is very friendly with kids, babies, adults (men and women), and comfortable with noise.  She is house trained, but currently in heat.  She is great in the car and okay on a leash (she pulls a bit, but not too bad).  Most importantly, she loves to give hugs, cuddle and play fetch.

 

If we can’t find her owner then we will need someone to foster her or adopt her.  If you’re interested then please leave a comment and I will connect you to Blake.

 

 

The Making of a Revolution

VIVA LA SUNSHINE!

 

After a long summer on the road, Tonks is finally taking a well-deserved breather.  As she kicks back and gets a new mani, pedi, and everything in between, I am going to take advantage of the down time to  show you how everything started.  Do you remember those Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood episodes where Mr. Rogers gave kids insight into the unsolved mysteries of the world?  Mysteries like, “how are crayons made” and “what does the inside of a construction paper factory look like”?  This video you’re about to watch is our version of a Mr. Rogers peek at how we took an ordinary postal truck and transformed it into a Rolling Rooftop Revolution:

 

 

If you think this revolution is over then think again; we’re just getting started.

 

As soon as Tonks’ spa treatments are over we are loading her onto a flatbed so that she can bring solar power to the people in a new part of the country.  A part of the country that won’t scoff at the idea of eating ice pops in October :-)

 

P.S. If you missed the Mr. Rogers crayon episode (which is one of my all time favorites) click on the image below for an early holiday gift from me to you.  You’re welcome, neighbor :-)

 

2011 Solar Decathlon

A decathlon without pole vault?  Without javelin throw?  But…But…

 

That just doesn’t make any sense.

 

Unless of course it’s a SOLAR DECATHLON!

If you follow all the solar news that’s fit to print then you probably already know about the Solar Decathlon, which officially kicks off tomorrow at the National Mall’s West Potomac Park in DC.  If not, here’s the background (straight from the DOE’s website):

 

The U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon is an award-winning program that challenges collegiate teams to design, build, and operate solar-powered houses that are cost-effective, energy-efficient, and attractive. The winner of the competition is the team that best blends affordability, consumer appeal, and design excellence with optimal energy production and maximum efficiency.  Open to the public free of charge, visitors can tour the houses, gather ideas to use in their own homes, and learn how energy-saving features can help them save money today.


The first Solar Decathlon was held in 2002, and the competition is biennial, meaning this year is the 6th anniversary of the event.  Twenty teams from all over the world gathered in DC on September 13th to transform their cutting-edge designs into realities.  Tomorrow the homes officially open to the public.

 

 

The DOE Solar Decathlon official website has lots of bells and whistles, including time lapse videos of the creation of the solar village and photos of the houses from past decathlons.

 

Planet Forward also has an outstanding section of their website devoted to the Solar Decathlon, complete with snapshots of each team, videos, and even a matchmaking quiz where you can figure out (in 6 simple questions) which house is the best for your lifestyle.  I matched to the indoor/outdoor New Zealand house called First Light house

 

 

Take the quiz and find out which house is right for you, then share the results in the comments.

Don’t Be Fooled: Solar is Hot

There’s a lot of confusion about the promise of clean energy jobs, and the picture only got murkier two weeks ago with the bankruptcy of Solyndra, a start-up US solar equipment manufacturer.  Given the funereal coverage of the Solyndra collapse, you might think solar is shaping up to be another dud in a series of attempts to make something good happen in this economy.  It turns out you’d be dead wrong.

 

Solar is the fastest growing energy sector and fastest job-creating industry in the country right now, and is likely to remain so for years to come, the failure of one company notwithstanding.

 

So what’s going on in solar?

 

Solyndra’s bankruptcy is regrettable, but not surprising.  This one company’s business model was dependent upon providing a particular design of cheaper solar equipment. Unfortunately for them, their U.S. and overseas manufacturing competitors developed technologies and processes that reduced the price of solar panels by 67% over the last three years.  (Repeat: The price of solar panels has dropped 67% in the last three years!) These changes in technology passed Solyndra by, leaving them with the cold, hard facts of business – Solyndra could not compete with the rest of a fast-evolving industry.

 

Like the constantly evolving cell phones and computer industries, economies of scale and innovation will force individual, non-competitive companies out over time.

 

But the bigger picture for U.S. solar is bright.  Last year, the solar energy industry grew more than 100% in the U.S., compared to overall GDP growth of less than 3%.  This industry growth was mirrored in job figures.  The number of solar jobs nearly doubled from 2009 to 2010 and growth continues in 2011.  Over the next 10 years, growth in this renewable energy sector is likely to expand exponentially.

 

This progress ultimately benefits consumers. In many parts of the U.S. today, homeowners can see their overall electricity bills go down 10 - 20 % overnight by switching to solar electric service through the availability of solar leases, without putting any money down or taking on debt.  That prospect – switch to solar for free and save money – is driving mass adoption, in the US and globally, and mass adoption is driving scale and price reductions further.

 

This is a great development for Americans, both as consumers of cleaner, cheaper electricity, and as participants in an economy that is seeing massive job growth from the solar industry in all 50 states.  While solar equipment manufacturing creates jobs, it turns out that there are four times more jobs in construction, innovation, software and marketing. These are jobs where America excels, and can’t or won’t be exported.

 

Solar’s growth is even more compelling when compared to the fossil fuel industry it is disrupting. In fact, the rate of solar job creation is significantly higher than the expected three percent net job loss in fossil fuel power generation.

As solar energy continues to disrupt fossil fuels’ monopoly on energy generation, it should be no surprise that opponents of solar, many of whom are funded by the oil and gas companies, often claim that solar benefits from outsized policy investment.

 

In fact, solar receives a small fraction of the subsidies the fossil fuel giants are granted, in spite of the fact that oil, gas and coal are mature industries that expose the country to environmental and geopolitical risk while individual companies break world records for quarterly profits with frightening regularity – in fact each time our gas prices spike.

 

Solar and other renewables do receive some policy support, but on a much smaller scale than the fossil fuel industries.  A recent study from the Environmental Law Institute showed that fossil fuels companies received a total of $72 billion in subsidies, compared to less than $2 billion for solar companies, during most of the last decade.

 

Or taking the longer view, in the aggregate, oil and gas companies have received about $450B in subsidies since World War I, while renewables in total have received about $6B.  And it’s not just because oil and gas have received subsidies for a longer period.  The same study found that oil and gas has received an average of $4.86B per year during its subsidy period (since 1918), while renewables, of which solar is just a subset, have received only $.37B per year, and only since 1994.

 

The point of a subsidy is to help a new industry achieve scale, so that the whole country can benefit.  With smart policy investments for solar, the goal is being achieved.  Today, nearly100,000 American construction workers, installers, innovators and other support service employees are building the US solar industry.  And small businesses are sprouting up all over the country.  Job figures are swelling, uniquely in this economy, subsidies are falling in many places, and US energy consumers are better served.  Within the next decade, solar will no longer need policy investments, unlike the fossil fuels that have depended upon them for nearly a century.

 

Consider this: every single day, more energy from sunshine falls on this country than we can consume in 10 years.  We’re finally figuring out how to convert and use that energy cheaply, so we don’t have to dig up, transport and burn 200 million year old carbon to power our lives.  There will be the occasional business casualty along the way like any other industry, but this is a journey that will make America more prosperous and secure.

 

A Liter of Light — Isang Litrong Liwanag

Thanks to a team of industrious MIT students and a social entrepreneur named Illac Diaz, people in the Philippines have a new way to power their lives with sunshine.  All it takes is an empty plastic bottle, a liter of water, and a bit of bleach.   Puzzled?  Just watch:

The program is called A Liter of Light, and not only is it creating green jobs, it is breathing new life into plastic bottles and changing the way many Filipinos live.  A Liter of Light aims to fit 1 million homes in the Philippines with plastic bottle lights by the end of 2012.  At present there are a bit over 10,000 bottle lights installed in Manila and Laguna.

If you think about it, it seems like an obvious recipe for success.

 

Ingredients:

  • 1 country with ample sunshine (avg. solar radiation in the Philippines is 128-203 watts/m2).
  • 1 large heap of households with black painted ceilings and no windows, where the homeowners can not always afford to turn their lights on.
  • 3 million+ homes outside of Manila without power
  • 1 surplus of plastic bottles, destined for landfills
  • Water
  • Bleach (to prevent algae growth)

Instructions:

Blend all six ingredients at high speed.  Slowly add in the light refracting properties of water.  Bake under the sun.  Serves 1 million.

 

The recipe is so obvious, in fact, that others who came before MIT and Illac also built the light bottles, but without all of the press.  Many credit the invention of the lights to a Brazilian named Alfredo Moser, who installed some in his own home during a long electrical shortage in São Paulo in 2002.

However they came to be, they are an innovative way to channel the sun’s light and change the way entire communities live.

 

The bottle lights have a 5 year life expectancy, as the end of which it will be simple for homeowners to swap out the old bottle for a new one.

How Lowe’s Can You Go? Sungevity & Lowe’s Partnership

In mid-May, Sungevity announced its Partnership with Lowe’s — we have an in-store presence in 36 NorCal stores, and are available to all of California through http://www.lowes.com/sungevity.

 

What this means is that now Lowe’s shoppers have three easy ways to get an iQuote – online, by phone, or via mobile scan.

 

Have you been inside of a NorCal Lowe’s store this summer to see what it all looks like?Here’s a peek:

Stirring up some Sunshine Yellow paint?  Why not stir up some savings by going solar?

Grabbing a key?  Did you know that the key to saving money on your electric bill is going solar with Sungevity?

Fancy a plant to purify the air in your house?  Purify the air AROUND your house by switching over to a clean energy source — the sun!

 

We have a thorough in-store experience where strategically placed displays provide portals to the iQuote sales process so that customers can get firm quotes within 24 hours without a home visit.

 

While going solar isn’t exactly a d.i.y. project, it’s certainly e.z.p.z. when you do it through Lowe’s and Sungevity. :-)

 

For those of you who live in New Jersey, you can catch our solar powered ice pop truck at Lowe’s in Paramus on 9/17 and at Lowe’s in Patterson on 9/18 from 11-2.