Posts Tagged ‘Steven Chu’

Millions burn lamp oil for light; U.S. nudges change with solar l.E.D. lamps

January 23rd, 2010

We saw this presentation by Energy Secretary Steven Chu in the Bella Center, in Copenhagen last month. The video shows the night sky across the earth, and the disparity between where the most energy is used, versus population centers.

Picture 1

Secretary Chu was announcing a $100 million Climate REDI (Renewables and Efficient Deployment Initative), an international climate adaptation aid package, including a technology transfer grant for poor countries whose populations still use lamp oil to light their homes. As Americans, we often take basic electricity for granted. Fuel-based lighting is inefficient, provides limited and poor quality light, and exposes users to significant health and fire hazards. Burning the hurricane lamps and wick lamps indoors causes large numbers of premature death from indoor air pollution.

To promote solar and LED programs, the Climate REDI fund is supporting the Lighting Africa initiative, TERI’s Lighting a Billion Lives program, and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lumina Project.

Lighting_Africa_Students

The funding will help develop best practices and efficiency standards for solar-powered LED lamps, which should drive down the cost to around ten dollars each. Cutting the price is seen as a critical step toward broad implementation.

For all the complex, expensive climate solutions like carbon sequestration, there are some simple, affordable solutions that reduce pollution while providing millions of poor families across the world with the basics like lighting and water.

Ag Sec Vilsack One-Ups Energy Sec Chu

December 16th, 2009

treesTwo days after Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced at climate talks $350 million over the next five years to promote clean energy technologies in developing countries, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced today from Copenhagen $1 billion over the next three years to reduce carbon emissions caused by deforestation.

“Protecting the wold’s forests is not a luxury — it is a necessity,” said Vilsack. According to the UN, 20 percent of the world’s carbon emissions are caused by deforestation. The U.S. joins Australia, France, Japan, Norway and the UK to dedicate a total of $3.5 billion in initial public finance for 2010-1012 “toward slowing, halting and eventually reversing deforestation in developing countries.” Learn what causes deforestation to emit so much C02 and how we all affect it in our daily lives. Watch the Green Detectives Decoder video on REDD – Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation. (Photo: deforestation display inside Bella Center)

Quotable Quotes

December 15th, 2009
Valerie Davis and Kevin Tuerff hang out by the US Center inside COP 15 in Copenhagen prior to a US State Dept briefing for business

Valerie Davis and Kevin Tuerff hang out by the US Center inside COP 15 in Copenhagen prior to a US State Dept briefing for business and industry.

If I were a US businessman, I would say, ‘Please, please, please do a deal in Copenhagen, and please make it market-based. If we fail to get a market-based deal here, and if the US Senate fails to pass cap-and-trade legislation, then the EPA will be obliged to regulate. And every businessman knows that taxes and regulations tend to be a lot more expensive and lot less efficient than market-based approaches.” –Yvo de Boer, UNFCCC executive secretary

Switching the country (US) from coal to nuclear is like giving up smoking and getting into crack cocaine.” –Dan Becker, director, Safe Climate Campaign

A solution to climate change is closely related to population management.” Zhao Baige, vice minister of China’s National Population and Family Planning Commission

“By investing in stronger energy efficiency standards for buildings and products, consumers can have their cake and eat it, too.” –US Secretary of Energy Steven Chu