Summary: SunFarmer's Notable News Report
UPDATED DAILY

Seven
Starbucks stores in Manhattan have launched a
cup-recycling program in cooperation with
Global Green USA’s
Coalition for Resource Recovery (CORR). The pilot will test the
collection and recycling of coffee cups when combined with old
corrugated cardboard (OCC), which CORR says is the most extensively
recycled material in the U.S. The objective of the program is to
develop a cost-effective mechanism to close the loop on paper
packaging, reducing greenhouse gases and assisting municipalities
inreaching their solid waste diversion goals.
Starbucks participation in the pilot is an extension of the
company’s efforts to develop a comprehensive recyclable cup
solution by 2012. While Starbucks paper coffee cups can be
recycled and composted in some communities, most commercial and
residential services are not currently able to process this form
of packaging. “In addition to the cup design, it’s critical that
we address the full product life cycle—including the recycling
collection infrastructure,” says Jim Hanna, Starbucks director of
Environmental Impact. “Any enduring solution will require
collaboration with stakeholders across the value chain.”
ARTICLE
CONTINUES AT GREENERPACKAGE.COM
Date Published: Sep 15, 2009 - 11:48 am

Toyota is continuing to see impressive sales of its new 2010 Prius
hybrid here in the United States. Though not quite as high as last
month's 48-percent sales increase over the previous year, we're
sure Toyota is plenty happy to see the 45.7-percent bump in August
sales over the same month in 2008.
For those that like seeing actual number in black and white, Toyota
sold 19,173 Prius hybrids here in the States in July and another
18,866 in August. It seems highly likely that Cash for Clunkers
helped those figures a bit for both months, and the Toyota brand in
total saw a sales increase of about 15 percent last month over the
previous August.
ARTICLE CONTINUES AT AUTOBLOGGREEN
Date Published: Sep 02, 2009 - 11:00 pm

By Alana Semuels LA TIMES
The hundreds of glass mirrors break the dusty field in
Lancaster, a sea of silver in a landscape of brown.
When switched on for the first time today at an opening gala with
investors, local politicians and others, they'll make up the first
operational solar tower energy facility in the United States.
They reflect the sun into a tower in the middle of the field,
boiling water into steam that travels through pipes to power a
turbine and create electricity. The plant, created by Pasadena
company ESolar Inc., will be able to power 4,000 homes.
The strength of the small field of mirrors is surprising, but what
might be more surprising is the technology's source. It was
established by Pasadena incubator Idealab, a 1996 creation of
entrepreneur Bill Gross. Gross, whom Time magazine once called the
"man with a billion dollar brain," generated some big hits with
GoTo.com, Internet Brands Inc. and Cooking.com, along with such
misses as Eve.com and EToys.
ARTICLE CONTINUES HERE AT THE LA
TIMES
MORE INFORMATION AT
ESOLAR.COM
Date Published: Aug 13, 2009 - 3:37 pm

SolFocus, the leading developer of
Concentrator Photovoltaic (CPV) systems, announced today that its
SF-1000P module is the first CPV product to meet the rigorous
performance, qualification, and safety standards of the
International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 62108 standard. The
IEC is the world's leading organization that prepares and publishes
international standards for electrical and electronic technologies.
"The real-world testing conducted for the IEC CPV standard proves
that SolFocus systems meet both the performance, qualification,
and reliability criteria, critical in bringing CPV to a truly
global scale," said Mark Crowley, president and chief executive
officer of SolFocus. "We have already proven that CPV can yield
nearly twice the efficiency of traditional PV systems, but
meeting the IEC's rigorous CPV requirements proves that SolFocus
systems can perform consistently across a variety of climates and
environments. This validation sends a message to developers,
investors and customers that CPV is on track to global
commercialization."
The IEC 62108 standard for photovoltaic concentrators and
receivers was created to verify the safety, photoelectric
performance and environmental reliability of panels designed with
CPV technology and ready to be introduced to this emerging
marketplace. The standard was designed to be universal, taking
into account different environments and manufacturing
technologies across geographies.
The SolFocus system was shown to meet all requirements of the IEC
62108 standard, which specifies the design qualification and type
approval of concentrator photovoltaic modules and assemblies
suitable for long-term operation in general open-air climates.
The electrical, mechanical, and thermal characteristics of the
SolFocus CPV system were shown to be safe, high-performing and
capable of withstanding prolonged exposure in varied climates.
ARTICLE
CONTINUES AT SOLFOCUS.COM
Date Published: Jul 30, 2009 - 10:16 am

NEWARK, N.J., July 29
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- PSE&G today received approval from
the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU) to invest $515
million in 80 megawatts of solar projects, doubling the state's
solar capacity and creating green jobs. Under an agreement reached
in its Solar 4 All filing, the utility expects to complete the
installations by the end of 2013.
The program has two segments, each 40 megawatts in size. The
first segment consists of installing a solar unit (small
distributed solar system of approximately 200 watts) on 200,000
utility poles in PSE&G's service territory, which includes
the state's six largest cities and roughly 300 rural and suburban
communities. It will be the largest pole-attached solar
installation in the world. The solar units will be connected
directly into PSE&G's electric distribution system and the
power will be sold into the PJM wholesale grid.
The second segment will focus on centralized solar, with
PSE&G developing solar gardens and roof-top installations on
facilities it owns and also at third-party sites.
"Our program will effectively double the size of New Jersey's
installed solar capacity," said Ralph LaRossa, president and COO
of PSE&G. "That is more solar capacity than currently exists
in any state other than California. We have worked with New
Jersey regulators and the solar community to develop a program
that brings the benefits of solar to all of our customers."
PSE&G also announced today that it awarded the contract for
the supply of the 200,000 pole-attached units to New Jersey-based
Petra Solar. With headquarters in South Plainfield, Petra Solar
has committed to make the solar units in New Jersey and expects
to hire more than 100 employees to meet the needs of the
contract.
ARTICLE
CONTINUES HERE AT PRNEWSWIRE
Date Published: Jul 29, 2009 - 1:29 pm
I have welcomed several promising
signs coming out of the Obama Administration, from the president's
push for clean energy to Interior Secretary Salazar's efforts to
block oil and gas leasing near some of Utah's most
stunning landscapes.
But there is still something I am waiting to see: a bold new
vision for preserving America's wilderness.
Why does wilderness matter right now? It matters to me personally
because I believe that our last public wilderness areas, with
their rugged beauty, uncharted terrain, and ability to test human
strength, are essential symbols of the American spirit.
But it also matters legally. According to the Wilderness Act of 1964, once a landscape has
been altered by human development--including natural gas
pipelines, oil drill heads, or roads for seismic thumper
trucks--it can never become a protected wilderness area.
This is exactly the cynical calculus the Bush administration used
to convert America's public lands into money-making ventures for
a few energy companies.
OPED CONTINUES
HERE AT THE HUFFINGTON POST
Date Published: Jul 28, 2009 - 3:41 pm
Santa
Clarita,
CA – BioSolar, Inc. (OTC BB: BSRC) has
garnered media coverage in numerous high-profile publications
following its recent announcement that the company will be
shipping its first commercial product, BioBacksheet-C™, in the
second half of 2009. BioBacksheet-C is a protective covering in
the back of virtually all photovoltaic solar cells designed to
replace expensive and hazardous petroleum-based film with a
bio-based film.
“It’s no secret that solar panels,
while capable of producing clean renewable energy, are themselves
laden with potentially harmful materials. One California company
says it has developed products that will make panels more
environmentally palatable,” reported Sustainable Industries of BioSolar’s line
of proprietary BioBacksheet™ protective coverings on June 18.
The same article mentions BioSolar
has been working with several unnamed solar panel manufacturers
to test its products before transitioning into production mode by
the end of 2009 for its cotton- and castor oil-derived materials
that “match plastic’s durability and can be used in existing
panel manufacturing facilities.”
Date Published: Jul 28, 2009 - 1:20 pm

The World Solar Challenge is a grueling car race that runs across
more than 3000km of Australian outback, spanning the entire breadth
of the continent from Darwin to Adelaide. But the real challenge of
this race, which is rather obvious from the name, is that all the
competing cars must be completely solar-powered. The objective of
this race is to promote research on solar-powered cars and teams
from various enterprises and universities participate in it for
their quest to better alternative power source technology for
automobiles.
For the last four outings of the World Solar Challenge, the team
from the Delft University of Technology in Netherlands has been
taking home the top prize with their Nuna solar-powered racer. Now,
the Delft University's Nuon Solar team has unveiled its latest
contender for the 2009 challenge, the Nuna5. Like its predecessor,
the Nuna5 is covered by six square meters of solar panels, but now,
thanks to advancements in technology, weighs in 30kg less, a total
of 160kg excluding the driver, than the previous car.
ARTICLE CONTINUES AT
ZIGWHEELS.COM
Date Published: Jul 27, 2009 - 2:16 am
L1bHN]SSK2t]iNK06/)zvpnrV=xkQm>)S&V;aYX}QR]/AFA?hPi}=DeY{0WtS(}V3S0>LDNj'=AQnF^$&PRk`f|/_`UX'aIbWmPJ.[<7$PBd,Fl3Zl{YRU``VmupaAUGUSTA,
Maine -- From its roof sown with plants to the depths of its two
geothermal wells, a new
Hannaford supermarket has been declared the greenest
of the green groceries in the United States. It's the first to earn
the highest rating possible from the
U.S. Green Building
Council.
The 49,000-square-foot store on the grounds of a former high school
in Augusta, Maine, opens on Saturday.
With its newly minted LEED-Platinum certification, awarded this
week, the Hannaford store has become the most prominent symbol of
success among the growing efforts by supermarkets to make their
operations more environmentally responsible through stricter
management of energy and water use and waste.
Improving energy efficiency is a key challenge for food retailers
whose imperatives are to keep perishables chilled properly and
customers comfortable in buildings with large front doors that are
constantly opening and shutting. Typically,
refrigeration eats up the most energy (PDF) in a
supermarket and accounts for more than half the electricity
consumed. Lighting and HVAC systems are the No. 2 and No. 3 draws,
respectively, on power.
ARTICLE CONTINUES AT
GREENERBUILDINGS.COM
Date Published: Jul 27, 2009 - 1:31 am
“Once again, the Navajo Nation Council has
taken the lead in Indian Country and has displayed a leadership
role in paving the way for other Nations and tribes to begin their
own initiatives. It’s a good day in Indian
Country.”
— Navajo Council Speaker Lawrence T.
Morgan
WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — The Navajo Nation Council made history
today by becoming the first Nation in Indian Country to pass
legislation promoting green jobs. In a 62-1 vote, the Navajo
Council passed the Navajo Green Commission Act that will establish
Green Jobs across its sprawling 27,000 square-mile reservation
Legislation No. 0179-09 was sponsored by Navajo Council Speaker
Lawrence T. Morgan. On April 22, the legislation was tabled during
the Council’s Spring Session to allow more time to educate the
Council members about the commission, with a then directive to
create an Energy Policy by the Navajo Division of Natural
Resources.
In a presentation to the Council, Speaker Morgan urged his
colleagues to support the legislation which will have great
positive impacts on the Navajo people and the Navajo Nation.
NAVAJO PRESS RELEASE CONTINUES
HERE AT NAVAJO.ORG
Date Published: Jul 23, 2009 - 4:05 pm
6 August 1882: The operation of a solar-powered printing press,
which produced copies of Le Chaleur Solaire by Augustin Mouchot,
a newspaper that he created especially for the event. The press
rattled off 500 copies an hour. The experiment was conducted in
the Garden of Tuileries, Paris, for the festival of L'Union
Francaises de la Jeuenesse.
THE SLIDE SHOW CONTINUES HERE AT GUARDIAN
UK
Date Published: Jul 23, 2009 - 3:27 pm
They talk Cap&Trade, White Roofs and Climate Deniers.
Date Published: Jul 23, 2009 - 12:26 pm

The Sacramento Municipal Utility District (
SMUD) has established a
feed-
in tariff (FIT) that will become effective
in January 2010.
According to
SMUD, the FIT
will be aimed at systems up to 5 MW connected to
SMUD's local distribution system, and is
capped at 100 MW system-wide. The
SMUD FIT will apply to both renewable and
fossil-fuel generation technologies, and the utility states that it
will set higher prices for power produced from renewable sources
like solar and biogas.
SMUD adds that it sees the FIT
as a way to provide a new opportunity for customers to own or host
efficient small-scale generation plants, and that it will help the
utility meet its
renewable portfolio standard and greenhouse gas reduction
goals.
ARTICLE POSTED AT
ALTERNATIVE ENERGY RETAILER
Date Published: Jul 22, 2009 - 1:23 pm

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed the Energy and Water
Appropriations Act, which includes an amendment to restore $45
million in hydrogen fuel cell research funding, New York Democrats
Eric Massa and Steve Israel announced.
Because of the amendment, funding for the Department of Energy’s
hydrogen fuel cell budget for 2010 totals $153 million. The
initially proposed DOE budget included just $68 million for
hydrogen fuel cell research, a substantial decline from this year’s
levels.
“I want to thank Congressman Israel for joining me in our effort
to make a meaningful investment in zero-emission hydrogen fuel
cell technology. My district has a 21st century, state of the art
fuel cell research and development center where General Motors
has built and is literally driving the cars of tomorrow. By
making an investment in this technology today, we are paving the
road toward the clean energy economy of the future,” said Massa.
“Hydrogen fuel cell development is driving our auto industry
into the future. New York is already home to important hydrogen
fuel cell research and development centers. We can’t let Japan and
Germany leap frog the United States in the implementation of this
promising technology. That’s why I restored federal funding for
hydrogen fuel cell research,” said Israe
ARTICLE CONTINUES
AT THE ELMIRA STAR GAZETTE
Date Published: Jul 21, 2009 - 3:46 pm

By
David O. Williams 7/20/09 10:25 AM
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar today issued a notice of
withdrawal of nearly 1 million acres of Bureau of Land
Management and U.S. Forest Service land around the Grand Canyon
from new mining claims for the next two years to allow for more
study and analysis.
The move drew the praise of conservation groups such as the Pew
Environment Group, which has been hammering on the antiquated
1872 mining law and the pressing need for reform in light of
thousands of new mining claims for minerals such as uranium,
copper and gold in and around some of the nation’s most treasured
national parks.
“We are pleased that the Obama administration has encouraged
Congress to protect our national parks and other special places
by modernizing the country’s 1872 mining law,” Jane Danowitz,
U.S. public lands program director at the Pew Environment Group,
said in a release. “Clearly a law that is powerless to prevent
mining just outside one of the most iconic treasures in the world
needs to be reformed.”
ARTICLE
CONTINUES AT THE COLORADO INDEPENDENT
Date Published: Jul 20, 2009 - 11:23 am