Day to Day Green
Duct Tape Saving the Environment! 
Thursday, July 30, 2009, 04:02 PM
Posted by Administrator
This may seem far fetched, but if you consider that any item repaired for further use is not going to a landfill or generating extra CO2 in the recycle process, it is a benefit.

Making use of duct tape, glue or mechanical fasteners to repair items for a longer useful life is a simple way we can take action every day to curb our impact on the environment.

Take a moment before discarding items and evaluate wether or not they can be repaired.

By the way, vacation was GREAT! Now that I am back and survived my first day, I hope to get the daily updates going here again.


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Vacation - Wear Sunblock 
Sunday, July 19, 2009, 09:19 AM
Posted by Administrator
Hi, I had a very busy couple days on the 16th and 17th. I am now on vacation! Yeah!

In preperation to be gone until the 29th of July, I had a lot of work to do. I have a very full day of appointments on the 29th including a meeting to kick off the solar water heating system at Pleasant Hill Ed Center for the pool. I may not write here again until things settle down. My goal, as I stated in the beginning, is to keep you up to date on significant activities regarding my position as well as news related to the environment. I plan to continue chasing that goal.

For now, I am in Maryland with my inlaws. We will be in Ocean City for the next few days right on the beach. Yeah! Because we will be on the beach, I have had sunblock on my mind. Be sure to check those labels. I have a whole new view on what makes a good sunblock after learning what I did recently.

If you missed it, I put an item here on this blog about sunscreen that lists the U.S. approved UVA protective ingredients. UVA is the type of light that causes cancer and pre-mature aging of the skin. SPF is not a measure of UVA protection but UVB only. You have to read the labels.

That's it for now. Talk to you all when I return unless something significant happens or comes up.

- Brad

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About my meeting yesterday 
Wednesday, July 15, 2009, 02:48 PM
Posted by Administrator



It is another slow environmental news day. So I will share a bit about my meeting yesterday.

There were over 50 employees from water districts around the bay area and I was the only "customer". The group was somewhat informal and designed to allow the water districts to share ideas and experiences.

As a customer I was given about 15 minutes to share my experience with the Ecoblue Cube. This is a retrofit option that turns a standard urinal into a waterless one. This system is highly affordable and more cost effective to maintain than other systems. Specifically the Ecoblue cube is the only conversion that prevents scale and is good for the environment. This is different than deodorizers that we are used to seeing in urinals.

With my 15 minutes I was able to share how I am saving the Mt Diablo Unified School District over 2.5 Million Gallons of water a year and at a cost of less than $2000 a year. This means the cost of the cube vs the cost of the water match at 72 days into the year. Another way to say this is that in our installation the cube has a 72 day return on investment. So not only is it cheap to install, it pays for itself and saves 99% of the water.

I say 99% because we still need to run some water through the urinals during normal maintenance cleaning. Added benefits include a pleasant scent and reduced mechanical maintenance on the urinal plumbing.

If you have a urinal where you work, even in a port-o-potty, check into the Ecoblue Cube. There is no substitute or alternative that will lower maintenance costs while saving this much water.

Ecoblue Cube Website


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Water Water Water! 
Tuesday, July 14, 2009, 10:24 AM
Posted by Administrator
Yesterday I spent a good amount of time going over water saving strategies and products with the Contra Costa Water District. As a follow up I will be spending a good portion of the day with them again today.

Specifically we have been talking about the Ecoblue Cube for urinals, saving over 3 million gallons of water a year from the installations this far and the Touch and Flow faucet.

You can find out more about these two wonderful products at their websites:

This allows you to convert a standard urinal to waterless.

This is the supplier of the Touch and Flow faucet.

Note: The faucet does more than save water, it prevents more PCBs from entering land fills and prevents the use of batteries that are required for other automated faucets. This is a very good environmentally sound product. One other benefit is a lower maintenance cost from reduction of maintenance. Simpler design also means quick cost effective seal replacement when it eventually fails as they all do.


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Global Warming and Developing Nations 
Sunday, July 12, 2009, 01:07 PM
Posted by Administrator
Why not worry about helping developing nations with green energy? I have spoken to people who don't really think that developing nations contribute that much to global warming and that they should be given aid after the leading countries figure out solutions to their own problems.

I just read an article about India's largest power producer, the National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) and how they will be setting up a 4,000 MW coal-fired power plant for the Chhattisgarh government. 4,000 Mega Watts! That is run from coal!

We are spoiled in the U.S. We are used to having stable electricity and water at any given moment and almost cry if the power goes out and wine everytime we are in a drought. When is the last time you remember turning on the faucet and not getting any water? If you do remember, falling behind on the bills doesn't count. The point is that in developing nations, they walk for their water, and generally do not have electricity at the ready.

If we take new technologies to developing nations as a test ground, we improve their lives while finding out what works well and what does not. We both benefit. When we don't do this the developing nations take advantage of whatever help they can get, which is perfectly reasonable, and install 4,000 MW coal fired power stations!

I know that when we do have established green power infrastructure that the developing nations will follow suit, but doesn't it make more sense to help them get it right the first time while we can both benefit?

To read more about the power station, follow the related link.


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