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| Tuesday, January 18, 2011 | | · | Arctic Split over Drilling - Shell's lease divides the region, the parties | | Friday, January 14, 2011 | | · | NUCLEAR IS THE ANSWER - EnergyBiz Leadership Forum Keynoter says Waste Issue Can Be Conquered | | Thursday, January 13, 2011 | | · | Cash Hungry Dynegy to go Private - Will the trend continue? | | Wednesday, January 12, 2011 | | · | Duke and Progress Vow to Unite - Mega Merger will get Muddy | | Tuesday, January 11, 2011 | | · | Israel's New Natural Gas Discovery - Find could feed internal demand, lead to exports | | Monday, January 10, 2011 | | · | Cap and Trade Comes to California - Critics say it will cost jobs | | Thursday, January 06, 2011 | | · | So Cal Motors up for the Electric Car | | Wednesday, January 05, 2011 | | · | IKEA quits selling incandescent bulbs | | · | To Retrofit or Retire Coal Plants - Regulations go forth | | Thursday, December 30, 2010 | | · | Shortening Off-Shore Wind Approvals - 2 years is tough goal |
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| Michigan at a Climate Crossroads |
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Strategies for Guiding the State in a Carbon-Constrained World The Michigan at a Climate Crossroads: Strategies for Guiding the State in a Carbon- Constrained World Project (MCCP) team developed state-level greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reduction policies for the State of Michigan to consider as it faces an emerging carbon-constrained world. The MCCP builds upon the results of the Michigan Greenhouse Gas Inventory 1990 and 2002, conducted by the Center for Sustainable Systems at the University of Michigan. Approximately 180 regional stakeholders representing the industrial, commercial, higher education, government, and non-profit sectors provided the MCCP team with input and feedback throughout the duration of the project. The MCCP team used the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) State Inventory Tool, the Energy 2020 model, and the Regional Economic Modeling, Inc. (REMI) Policy Insight Tool to calculate potential GHG emission reductions and economic impacts of state-level policies.
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| Climate Change and Collaboration |
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When utility and energy execs gathered at the Edison Electric Institute's annual conference to discuss how to combat climate change, they all shed their ties. They were amiable and informal, all part of their willingness to embrace the hottest topic now permeating the energy sector. Interestingly, all the corporate chiefs agreed that the phenomenon is real and that it must be immediately addressed. They disagreed, albeit politely, as to how to fix the matter. The common thread running among the group is that technology will win this battle and that the effort will be a public-private endeavor. In the end, it will require billions of dollars and decades of work to overcome.
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| ASHRAE to Provide Energy Guidance in Clinton Retrofit Program |
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ATLANTA - ASHRAE will play a primary role in former President Bill Clinton's initiative to reduce energy consumption in existing buildings by providing design guidance and tools to reach energy efficiency targets. On May 16, Clinton announced the creation of a global Energy Efficiency Building Retrofit Program, a project of the Clinton Climate Initiative (CCI). This program brings together four of the world's largest energy service companies, five of the world's largest banks, and 16 of the world's largest cities in a landmark program designed to reduce energy consumption in existing buildings.
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Posted by webmaster on Monday, June 18, 2007 @ 08:38:39 MDT (1464 reads)
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Topic: Energy News
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| New Nextenergy Brochure Touts Michigan Wind Energy Manufacturing |
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"Build it in Michigan," shouts the headline from a new brochure printed by NextEnergy, the state of Michigan's alternative energy promotion group.
NextEnergy used 1,000 copies of the report to tout Michigan's future as a wind energy equipment manufacturing center at last week's Windpower 2007 Conference and Exhibition, the world's largest annual wind energy event, which was held in Los Angeles.
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| Opec Biofuel Brinkmanship Is A Sign Of Things To Come |
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It was always going to happen. Like a lover fearful they are about to get dumped for a younger rival, the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) appears to have its scissors poised and ready to cut up the rest of the world's suits unless it stops flirting with those wanton biofuels.
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Posted by webmaster on Wednesday, June 13, 2007 @ 14:53:45 MDT (1380 reads)
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Topic: Energy News
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| Michigan GREEN Newsletter |
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