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 Posted: Wed Jun 10th, 2009 11:03 am
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Joe Kelley
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http://gas2.org/2009/06/09/electric-superbike-uses-iphone-for-its-dashboard/



The E1pc can go from zero to 120 mph in “seven or eight seconds” according to Michael Czysz, the company’s founder. It uses ten lithium-ion battery packs with three electric motors all mounted on a carbon fiber main frame.

 

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 Posted: Wed Jun 10th, 2009 06:14 pm
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Joe Kelley
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15 Year Old Invents Complete Algae Energy System

The basis of Javier’s system is salt-water loving algae, and the beauty of VERSATILE is the interconnectedness. The efficiency comes in part from the ability to take waste from one part and use it for nourishment for another, and the modular nature of VERSATILE allows customization to meet individual needs.

 

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 Posted: Tue Jun 23rd, 2009 04:58 pm
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josf.kelley@hotmail.com
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http://money.aol.com/article/autos/ford-nissan-tesla-to-get-us-loans/538097


Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced the loan recipients at Ford's Research and Innovation Center in Dearborn. The loans to Ford will help the company upgrade factories in five Midwest states to produce 13 fuel-efficient vehicles.
Nissan was receiving $1.6 billion to retool its plant in Smyrna, Tenn., to build advanced vehicles and build a battery manufacturing facility. Tesla would get $465 million in loans to build electric vehicles and electric drive powertrains in California.
"By supporting key technologies and sound business plans, we can jump-start the production of fuel efficient vehicles in America," Energy Secretary Steven Chu said in a statement. "These investments will come back to our country many times over — by creating new jobs, reducing our dependence on oil, and reducing our greenhouse gas emissions."

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 Posted: Wed Jun 24th, 2009 10:22 pm
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/06/22/tesla-ceo-elon-musk-sets-the-record-straight-about-pending-lawsuit/

The tale from Musk is quite different than Eberhard’s allegations that Musk and Tesla pushed him out of the company for no reason. According to Musk’s post, Eberhard grossly miscalculated costs of production of the Roadsters and purposely withheld this information from Musk and investors:

The real reason that Roadster development cost so much more than can be accounted for by typical entrepreneurial hubris is that we essentially had to spend the development money twice. After Eberhard was asked to step down from the CEO role two years ago, almost every major system on the car, including the body, HVAC, motor, power electronics, transmission and battery pack, had to be redesigned, retooled or switched to a new supplier.
The post is a fascinating read in its own right, diving deep into some of the early missteps at Tesla and how they were overcome. For instance, the company’s decision to move production of the battery packs from Asia to the United States was counter-intuitive, but crucial to its survival. Writes Musk:

Avoiding the cost of shipping a half ton pack from Asia also meant significant savings on shipping costs. This is a much bigger deal for a heavy and bulky product than a small consumer electronics device, where outsourcing to Asia makes a lot more sense. Very importantly, our supply chain went from a tectonically slow six months and having to pay for tens of millions of dollars of inventory in transit to a matter of a few weeks.
 

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 Posted: Thu Jun 25th, 2009 08:27 am
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.quietrevolution.co.uk/

The UK has the largest wind resource of any country in Europe, making it the ideal choice for a renewable source of energy.

Last edited on Thu Jun 25th, 2009 08:28 am by Joe Kelley

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 Posted: Thu Jun 25th, 2009 11:32 am
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Joe Kelley
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 Posted: Thu Jun 25th, 2009 05:35 pm
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.wired.com/autopia/2009/06/electric-car-share/



 

Baltimore has rolled out an electric car sharing program featuring 10 small city cars that deliver as much as 120 miles per charge, and the people behind the program hope to see it catch on in other cities.

 

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 Posted: Fri Jun 26th, 2009 09:00 am
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,2845,2349174,00.asp

Yes, I'd Do It Again
The eternal question of price/performance always crops up. Clearly, I'm saving money, but I also sank around $38,000 into the system. At $3,000 per year in savings (which assumes a constant rate for power cost and the same power usage pattern), that's a 12.5 year payback.


 

Power will be consumed or power will be "saved", so the equation isn't exactly as follows:

Total cost = 38,000

Production per year 3,000

Total time of production 25 years (not confirmed)

25 years times 3,000 = total production of power

25 x 3,000 = 75,000

Total production minus total cost equals total profit

75,000 - 38,000 = 37,000

How much is that profit when comparing that rate of increase, which is almost 100 percent increase in 25 years, to a typical interest rate charged to a typical buyer for a loan on 38,000 dollars, straight interest for 25 years?

http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/mortgages/amortization-calculator.aspx

That page defaulted to 7% interest rate and that page didn't show the total sum of payments where the borrower pays interest and principle for 25 years.

The monthly payments are 268.58

Try 5.5 percent interest and get 233.35 per month

Times the monthy payments by 300 total payments to get the total: 70005.00

The idea here is to look at the Solar Panel investment as if you are a Banker loaning out 38,000 dollars to see how much your borrower will pay you back in interest payments over that 25 years when the loan is being paid off. At 5.5 percent interest the 38,000 dollar loan pays you back a total of 70,005, which means that the Solar Panel investment returns more than 5% interest since the total return on investment (cost of the Solar Panel plus the power produced after the Solar Panel was paid off in full) is 75,000.

See?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Last edited on Fri Jun 26th, 2009 09:24 am by Joe Kelley

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 Posted: Mon Jun 29th, 2009 02:50 pm
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http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20227143.100-africa-alone-could-feed-the-world.html

DOOM-MONGERS have got it wrong - there is enough space in the world to produce the extra food needed to feed a growing population. And contrary to expectation, most of it can be grown in Africa, say two international reports published this week.

The first, projecting 10 years into the future from last year's food crisis, which saw the price of food soar, says that there is plenty of unused, fertile land available to grow more crops.

"Some 1.6 billion hectares could be added to the current 1.4 billion hectares of crop land [in the world], and over half of the additionally available land is found in Africa and Latin America," concludes the report, compiled by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

 

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 Posted: Mon Jun 29th, 2009 04:34 pm
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcSSwW4K4AU

CNN Covers Unlawful Detention Of Steve Bierfeldt Of Campaign For Liberty

 

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 Posted: Thu Jul 2nd, 2009 09:13 am
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.cheniere.org/

How much power is enough and for what is it enough?

If power is produced into abundance, what happens to the price of human labor?

 

 

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 Posted: Tue Jul 7th, 2009 07:30 pm
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2009/07/06/best-buy-mcdonalds-evs

Perhaps this isn't really a signal that electronics consumers are scrambling to buy electric vehicles when they purchase a new TV or camcorder. As the article suggests, it could be a way to fill empty space in stores, and an attempt to go out on a limb on what might put the store ahead of the curve.

However, a representative from the company said the introduction of electric-powered personal vehicles is a test, "designed to determine consumer likelihood for adoption."

Kelly Groehler, a spokesperson for Best Buy continued, "You see the popularity with personal transportation options that are more cost effective and energy efficient," and the West Coast was a good place to begin the test.

 

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 Posted: Fri Jul 10th, 2009 12:49 pm
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http://www.greenbiz.com/news/2009/07/09/dod-enlists-ge-for-microgrid-model

GE announced today that it was awarded the contract, which is being funded with Recovery Act money from the DOD's Environmental Security Technology Certification Program.

The move advances GE in the smart grid arena as an increasing number of public-private partnerships and projects emerge to develop intelligent, integrated systems to efficiently manage energy from its generation at multiple sources to the many points of its delivery.

"The way to think about microgrid technology is that it's another tool in the tool box when you look at the smart grid -- it is designed to address specific challenges, but it is also an important piece of the overall smart grid strategy," John Kern, the manager of GE's Smart Grid Research Lab, told GreenBiz.com and GreenerBuildings.com.

 

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 Posted: Mon Jul 13th, 2009 08:53 am
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.vivapalestina-us.org/

It shows what can be achieved with the determination and commitment of a collective body of people.

 

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 Posted: Tue Jul 14th, 2009 12:56 pm
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.nydailynews.com/money/galleries/coolest_concept_cars/coolest_concept_cars.html#ph12

The cat (EV) is out of the bag

 

 

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 Posted: Sat Jul 18th, 2009 10:51 am
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Joe Kelley
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http://www.reuters.com/article/GCA-GreenBusiness/idUSTRE56G17220090717

Auto executives say that with fewer moving parts, easy-to-assemble electric cars may also lower the bar for entry into the cut-throat autos industry and make battery manufacturers the unlikely competitors for car giants.

 

"I've said for years that Toyota's rival will be Hitachi," said Kenichiro Senoo, a professor at the Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Tokyo.

 

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 Posted: Wed Jul 29th, 2009 10:40 am
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Joe Kelley
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Super Secretive Supercapacitor CEO Tells All in Leaked Phone Call

We have been losing hope that the eeStor ultracap would ever arrive, but it appears that a car that charges in minutes and runs for hours, a wind turbine that stores its own energy, notebook computers and cellphones that charge in seconds and run for days could be months, not years, away.

 

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 Posted: Wed Jul 29th, 2009 10:48 am
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http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/e117987e-74eb-11de-9ed5-00144feabdc0.html

The real challenges for Tesla – and the true test of Musk’s mettle – will come over the next three years, as it makes the risky transition from a niche producer of about 1,000 cars a year priced at $100,000 to a high-volume manufacturer of about 20 times that many cars, selling at half that price and destined for a much more crowded middle-premium market. The company’s main concern will not be breakthrough propulsion technology, but the more routinely brutal demands of the car business. From a quirky start-up whose growing pains were chronicled in excruciating detail, Tesla is taking a much bigger step into the public eye as a mass-market carmaker benefiting from a taxpayer-funded loan for closely watched new technology. The status may put new demands on the amount of transparency and accountability required of the company – and on the gravitas demanded of its straight-talking CEO. “Tesla’s not a private company any more if they’re taking public funds,” says Siry. “It’s a big leap,” Musk acknowledges in Knightsbridge. But “every company goes through transformations”.

Rival electric or plug-in cars produced by Renault/Nissan, Toyota, GM and other carmakers will have hit the road by 2011, when Tesla’s Model S saloon launches. The biggest question – and not just for Tesla – will be whether consumers with less money than the rich first-adopters are ready to buy. Like other carmakers, the company will need to persuade people that the higher price tag of a plug-in car will be recouped in the lower running costs of petrol-free driving. But Tesla’s saloon will also be competing against petrol-engined luxury cars of similar quality that cost about half as much. Daimler will be taking a seat on Tesla’s board, and helping it in areas like supply, production and vehicle engineering. Musk says that he still plans an IPO, “probably a couple of years from now”.

 

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 Posted: Wed Aug 5th, 2009 03:13 pm
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Joe Kelley
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Re:        News Release - Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Title:     Valcent'S First Commercial Verticrop System Now Operational

Valcent Products Inc. (the "Company", or "Valcent"),
http://www.valcent.net - Valcent Products (EU) Ltd, http://www.valcent.eu, the UK based wholly owned subsidiary of Valcent Products Inc., announce that their first full scale VertiCropTM High Density Vegetable Growing System is now operational. Constructed as a joint venture with Paignton Zoological and Environmental Park in South Devon, the final touches to the system have now been completed and the VertiCropTM planted out with its first crop of lettuce.

Occupying a purpose built polytunnel in the centre of the Environmental Park and open to the Zoo's 500,000 visitors on a year round basis, the Paignton VertiCropTM is the world's first moving vertical growing system capable of producing over 11,000 heads of lettuce or other vegetable crops every 3 to 4 weeks. Eventually the system will be planted to allow sequential harvesting to provide the Zoo with fresh vegetables daily for its many animal species.

In addition to lettuce, the VertiCropTM will produce red chard, mizuna, mixed leaves, and a variety of herbs as well as edible flowers and fodder crops such as wheat grass and barley. The Zoo will use the VertiCropTM system to bring greater variety to the diets of its animals as well as adding nutritional value from having these fresh crops grown on site.

Three members of the Zoo staff have been trained to operate the VertiCropTM system, and they will be working closely with the Valcent Research Team to gather data on different plant performances, growth rates and nutritional update. Of the trained staff, one member will be allocated two hours a day to operate and maintain the system on a rota basis. The Paignton VertiCropTM system has been designed to be low maintenance with computerized controls to regulate irrigation and water supply and the environment within the polytunnel. Loading and unloading of the plant trays onto the conveyor system will be fully automated to facilitate harvesting and re-planting.

The Zoo currently has large quantities of vegetables delivered to them for animal feed. Growing their own on site in the VertiCropTM system will give them a wider variety of produce, control over nutritional value and enrich the lives of their animals, in addition to providing substantial savings in their weekly food bill. With the VertiCropTM operating in a continuous production cycle, the Zoo now has the capability to be self sufficient for most, if not all of their total vegetable requirements. The Zoo estimates that this will reduce their overall feed bill by up to £100,000 per year.

Over the course of the next three months it is expected that over fifty potential commercial customers for VertiCropTM will visit the Paignton site to see the system in operation. Representing interests from the Middle East, Asia, Australasia, North and South America as well as Europe, the viability of the system to produce vegetable crops in many different environments will be fully assessed and the Valcent team anticipates a full order book for the VertiCropTM system by year end.

About Valcent Products Inc:

Valcent Products Inc. (OTCBB: VCTZF) develops highly innovative consumer and industrial products and processes for global markets. Valcent is a pioneer and leader in ecotechnology with its core research and development in sustainable, renewable, and intense growth of agricultural products. For more information, visit:
http://www.valcent.net and http://www.valcent.eu and visit and contribute to http://blog.valcent.net.


Contacts:

Media Relations


Nancy Tamosaitis-Thompson
Vorticom Public Relations
212.532.2208
Nancyt@vorticom.com


Investor Relations

Gerry Jardine or Mike Parker
(800) 877-1626 or (888) 506-7979
or worldwide (604) 630-2941
info@valcent.net

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 Posted: Sun Aug 16th, 2009 11:21 am
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Joe Kelley
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