Monday, October 31, 2011

Selling scrap metal? Now there's an app for that, too



New Jerseyan Tom Buechel, 26, owner of Rockaway Recycling, was looking for ways to get the word out about his business. So he created one--The iScrapApp for the iPhone, Android and other platforms.

Simply touching the application’s icon can help consumers find the nearest scrap yard, learn pricing, and allows them to send photographs of their goods to the yard to see if there’s interest, and vice versa.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is even considering the iScrap app for recognition as part of its “Apps for the Environment” contest.

Read more about Tom's app here in today's Asbury Park Press 

To read more than a dozen other interesting environmental, energy and political news stories every business day, try a complimentary, 30-day subscription to EnviroPolitics.




Sunday, October 30, 2011

A peek at environmental events coming up in November

Here are just a few of the coming weeks' environmental events.
See dozens of other great educational, social and networking opportunities on our Enviro-Events Calendar. While you're there,
be sure to sign up for free email updates.



November 1, 2011

New Jersey Technology Council  Webinar
Pro’s and Con’s of Solar and Energy Efficiency Opportunities in NJ

Noon to 1 p.m.
Company Presentation:  Green Waste Technologies, Inc. along with Research & Development updates, news from NJTC member companies and much more. After registering you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the Webinar. Space is limited. Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/227798688



November 1, 2011 
Planning for a Sustainable Water Supply in Lakewood and Beyond
2 p.m.
The Little Theater, Georgian Court College
Lakewood, NJ
Water supply and water conservation issues are of vital importance in New Jersey right now. As population increases and townships plan for increasingly dense developments, the problems of providing a safe, clean water supply for citizens-while retaining adequate water supplies in rivers, streams, and aquifers for healthy ecosystems-become more acute. River and stream levels are already falling precipitously low in dry summers, and the water supply and its safety for humans and wildlife alike are an increasing concern within the Barnegat Bay Watershed. Join us for this informative and engaging panel that will showcase the need for a water supply plan in this region and be a catalyst for developing the necessary process to create that plan.
Moderator: Lisa Auermuller, Watershed Coordinator at Jacques Cousteau Reserve, Rutgers University
Panelists: Senator Robert W. Singer (R-Ocean); Justin Flancbaum, Executive Director, Lakewood Municipal Utilities Authority; Robert Nicolson, Supervisory Hydrologist, U.S. Geological Survey; Peg Sturmfels, Program Organizer, New Jersey Environmental Federation; Richard Bizub, Director of Water Programs, Pinelands Preservation Alliance.
 
Admission to this event is free. Guest registration is requested to ensure that there is sufficient seating for all guests. To register, and to learn more about the week-long program on building sustainable communities, please contact Trish Passuth, director of service learning, at 732.987.2713 or passutht@georgian.edu.
 


November 2, 2011

How has Newark’s industrial legacy shaped its contemporary landscape?
6:30-9:00 pm
The Newark Museum
49 Washington Street
Newark, NJ 07102
How has Newark’s industrial legacy shaped its contemporary landscape? What does this history mean for today’s residents? Join our panel of scholars, activists, and residents as they explore how history has complicated this postindustrial environment. Free. Refreshments
To RSVP: Email njch@njch.org
or call 1-888-394-6524
(Reservations are strongly recommended)


November 2, 2011

NJ Business and Industry Association  Seminar:
How to Manage Your Energy Costs
8:30 - Noon. (with continental breakfast)
Pines Manor
Edison, NJ (Route 27)
This program will provide employers with the best strategies to manage energy costs. Learn about the latest state, federal and private programs that can help you with energy efficiency projects. You will also hear the latest on energy policy and regulations. $129 per person for NJBIA members and $169 for nonmembers.
For more information, contact Katie Wittkamp at 609-393-7707, ext. 239. To become a sponsor, contact Sherry Esteves at ext. 219.
Download event brochure





November 2, 2011
Commercial Building & Construction

6-9 pm, (Nov. 2nd 6-8 pm) 3 Wednesdays
Bucks County Community College - Green Jobs Academy
310 George Patterson Blvd, Suite 108, Bristol PA 19007
Participants will gain an overall understanding of the Green Building Design and Construction process. This program is for both the contractor and design professional. The program presents in a step by step/connect the LEED® dots fashion, the LEED® specific construction concepts applied throughout the building process.  The goal of the training is to provide an understanding of the core concepts and the construction principles behind sustainable buildings, show how to integrate green practices and strategies into the processes and, to become knowledgeable about the LEED® rating system, as it applies to construction.  This workshop qualifies for 7.5 LEED® specific credentialing hours for both BD&C and ID&C disciplines, 8 CES credits for AIA, and 8 PDH units for registered professional engineers.Instructor: Lisa Grayson Zygmunt  Course No. WTMCO 3553 JA1/Cost $325 per person.
For more information, contact the Green Jobs Academy (215) 788-3594 or visit www.bucks.edu/green
 


November 3-4, 2011
International Sites & Spills Expo
Toronto, ON
TEEX Workshop Nov 2
Information and Registration


November 3, 2011

What's fracking and should we be worried?                             
6:45 p.m.
Lesbian Gay Bisexual &Transgender Center
208 West 13th Street, Room 301, Manhattan
Screening and discussion with invited guests: NY Assembly Members Danny O'Donnell, Deborah Glick, Linda Rosenthal, Richard Gottfried, Civil rights attorney Yetta Kurland, David Braun, Co-founder United for Action Free Admission  The LGBT Center will screen PBS "Now" host David Brancaccio's interview of Josh Fox about his film GASLAND- winner of the 2010 Sundance Festival Special Jury Prize, 2011 Academy Award nomination and 2011 Emmy winner. The environmental and health impacts from fracking in other states are shocking and well documented, with a significant number of spills, blowouts, accidents and gas and contaminant releases. Now the gas industry wants to drill in New York, which could ruin our water supply. Discussion and Q&A with invited guests will follow the screening. Sponsored by:
Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter, United for Action, and NYH2O For more information, go to http://unitedforaction.org/     


November 3, 2011
Introduction to Wetland Identification 
8:30am - 4:30pm
$285
Virtually all activities conducted in and around wetlands are regulated – from excavating underground storage tanks to soil compaction for paving a driveway or patio to pruning of overgrown vegetation – and violators are subject to hefty penalties and fines from the NJ-DEP. Knowing if a wetland is on your property or a site on which you work is incredibly important! But how do you determine if a wetland is present?  Why not educate yourself? Take our class to get the basic tools you need to identify a wetland’s presence. Once you make a determination, you will know if you need to go further and hire an environmental professional to evaluate the site and assist you with the permit process. In this one-day combination classroom and field course, a nationally recognized wetlands expert will review the skills you need to identify freshwater wetlands and their boundaries and introduce you to wetland plant identification and soil recognition. You will learn: Why wetlands are important, How they differ, What indicators are used for wetland identification and about the current regulations in New Jersey.


November 3-12, 2011
Advanced P V Systems Design & Installation
Thursdays 6-9 pm, Fridays & Saturdays 8 am-5 pm
Bucks County Community College - Green Jobs Academy
310 George Patterson Blvd, Suite 108, Bristol PA 19007
The six (6) day, 40-hour course is designed to prepare individuals for the NABCEP PV Installer Certification exam.  The course will include hands-on lab work and design exercises including in-depth review of NEC Article 690, calculating requirements for rooftop conduit runs, determination of the proper distance between PV arrays using sun angles and module dimensions, string sizing, PV racking methods and final commissioning processes and troubleshooting.   The content follows the NABCEP Installer Certification Job Task Analysis for preparation for the certification exam. Instructor: Jeff Gilbert, NABCEP PV Solar & Thermal Prerequisites: Previous PV training, such as NABCEP Entry Level and/or experience installing solar PV systems. Course No. WTMCO 0344 JA1/ Cost: $1,460 per person early bird; $1,560 per person after October 6th 2011; 10% discount prior to October 6th, 2011 for IEC Members
To register, contact Continuing Education (215) 968-8409, and select option 2. For more information, contact the Green Jobs Academy (215) 788-3594 or visit
www.bucks.edu/green 


November 4, 2011
Green Marketing

Jacquie Ottman, Presenter
9 a.m.-3  p.m.
Bally's Atlantic City
Atlantic City, New Jersey
Ms. Ottman, nationally recognized expert in Green Marketing will be discussing the New Rules of Green Marketing from her latest book.For more information contact Dharmesh Dave ddave@atlantic.edu or visit Atlantic Cape Community College Website 


Saturday, October 29, 2011

New Jersey mayor welcomes solar farm over housing




A 100-acre site in Tinton Falls, NJ that likely would have resulted in the construction of a new school and costly municipal services like fire and police protection will instead be generating enough new electricity to power some 3,000 households within a year.


At a groundbreaking ceremony on Friday, Mayor Michael Skudera hailed the $80 million solar farm project that will see the installation of  85,000 solar panels and generate between 200 and 300 construction jobs.

The alternative energy project is being built by Tinton Falls Solar Farm, a subsidiary of the China-based Zongyi Solar America Co.

“We probably would have had to build a new school” had the housing development been approved, Skudera said. “That would have been a huge strain on the taxpayers of Tinton Falls.”

In other energy and environmental news last week, Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSE&G) and Rider University cut the ribbon on a new .74-megawatt (MW) solar farm at the Lawrenceville, NJ school. PSE&G owns the solar system and provides Rider University with a lease payment for the parcel of land it occupies.

Related:
Ground broken for solar panel farm in Tinton Falls
Work to Begin on 100-Acre Solar Farm in Tinton Falls
 


Friday, October 28, 2011

Former New Jersey PIRG activist Rob Stuart dies at 49


 
We are sad to learn today that environmental activist Rob Stuart, who got his start in New Jersey with the Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) and later moved on to causes in the city of Philadelphia, suffered a heart attack and died Wednesday at the age of 49.

Rob is pictured, left, at a 1990 ceremony to mark the signing of the N.J. Clean Water Enforcement Act. Then NJ Gov. Jim Florio, who signed the legislation into law, is seated at right.

In an obituary written for the Philadelphia Inquire, Miriam Hill writes that, from 2006 to 2009,  as president of the Logan Square Neighborhood Association, Rob was a constant presence in City Hall as he lobbied for progressive causes, from opposing drilling in the Marcellus Shale to bringing bicycle cabs to Philadelphia.

"He was like the 18th member of City Council," said Councilman Curtis Jones Jr., who eulogized Mr. Stuart Thursday.

Phil Goldsmith, a former city managing director, worked with Mr. Stuart at CeasefirePA, which aims to reduce trafficking in illegal guns. He praised Mr. Stuart's foresight and passion.

"He was a tireless and optimistic social entrepreneur," Goldsmith said. "I didn't always understand his ideas, but I always knew it was something to make the city a better place to live."

Rob did technology and political consulting for various companies before founding his communications firm, Evolve Strategies, in 2006.

You'll learn more about by reading the Inquirer obituary and this Daily News piece.

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Saul Ewing 'Corporate Environmental Update' Nov 29



NOVEMBER 29, 2011
Time: 8:00 AM – 10:00 AM

BREAKFAST SEMINAR

“2011 Corporate Environmental Update”

Presented by the Environment and Natural Resources Practice Group of Saul Ewing LLP

This seminar will focus on two evolving areas of the law:

  • Corporate officer personal liability under an array of federal and state environmental statutes. What should you be doing?
  • Environmental Justice and its impact on siting or upgrading a facility.
In-house counsel are invited to attend this free breakfast seminar that will answer these and other important questions as we near 2012.

Presenters for the seminar are Christopher R. Hall and David C. Apy, attorneys with Saul Ewing LLP. Chris is chair of the White Collar and Government Enforcement Practice Group and David is special counsel in the Litigation Department where he concentrates his practice on environmental civil litigation.

Location: The Westin Philadelphia, Georgian Room, 99 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, PA

Saul Ewing
To register, please click here.
For more information, please contact Shamus McCarty at smccarty@saul.com or 215.972.8582.






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Interested in events like the one above?

Visit our Enviro-Events Calendar

While you're there, sign up for free email updates.  


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Fuel cell factory, 30 MW installation coming to Delaware

The state of Delaware is betting taxpayer money on a California fuel cell company that plans to open a factory on the site of  the old Chrysler assembly plant in Newark, create 900 jobs and pump new electricity into the power grid.

Delaware Approves Bloom Energy Factory, 30MW Project

Delaware utility regulators on October 18 approved a plan to bill customers of utility Delmarva Power to build a factory for Silicon Valley fuel cell startup Bloom Energy.

The company says its natural gas-powered Bloom Box fuel cells will generate 30 megawatts of electricity in the state.

Greentechmedia said the decision was a "coup" for Bloom since Delmarva will be raising more than $100 million over 20 years to help finance the project. That equates to a $1.34-per-month surcharge on customer bills. Delaware is also providing $18 million in state incentives, and the project is seeking a federal cash grant for renewable power projects.

The project reportedly could grow to as much as 50 megawatt--an order of magnitude larger than Bloom’s biggest projects so far, with California customers such as Google, eBay, Adobe and AT&T.

Some critics, however, question how well the tetchnology will compete with the natural gas-fired power plants that presently serve the grid.

Delaware legislators helped Bloom's chances this past summer by re-defining natural-gas fuel cells as a renewable energy source. The change will allow Delmarva to claim the project in meeting its state renewable energy mandates and will help Bloom market the electricity as green power.

Greentechmedia reports:
Bloom hasn’t put a price tag on the project yet, but it has touted the potential economic benefits for Delaware -- up to 900 jobs at its factory and an estimated $300 million in annual economic activity. That’s boosted project backers against critics who worry that Bloom’s projects won’t come off in time or on budget. One conservative critic has testified that the cost to Delmarva ratepayers could reach as high as $3 to $4 a month if Bloom and the utility can’t maximize the value of their “Bloom Electrons” in markets for renewable power. For its part, Bloom has agreed to pay Delaware a fine as high as $41 million if it fails to build the factory.

Governor Jack Markell was ebullient in announcing Bloom's plans back in June.




Wilmington News-Journal editorial gave last week's funding decision this cautious support:
In a perfect world, Bloom Energy would have plopped its factory down on the old Chrysler site, hired its workforce and started manufacturing electricity-producing boxes out of sheer love for Delaware.
But in a perfect world, the Chrysler plant would still be operating and employing thousands of Delawareans in good-paying manufacturing jobs.
Knowing what happened to Chrysler and the overall state of employment in America today, we all recognize the world's not perfect.

So some hard steps have to be taken. And every step to overcome a deficit, such as the loss of those Chrysler jobs, involves risk.

The Bloom deal with the state and Delmarva Power and its customers does involve risk. But it also offers Delaware an opportunity.

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Ericsson is new environmental chair at Cole Schotz

Richard J. Ericsson
Richard J. Ericsson has joined the law firm of Cole, Schotz, Meisel, Forman & Leonard, P.A. as a member and will chair of the Hackensack, NJ firm’s Environmental Law practice.

He was previously with Farer Fersko in Westfield.

Ericsson’s experience includes counseling clients on the impact of environmental laws on corporate and property transactions and financing, the cleanup and redevelopment of contaminated properties, responding to governmental enforcement actions, and air, water and waste regulatory compliance. His practice also concentrates on issues related to development permits, environmental insurance, brownfield funding and cost recovery.

Prior to joining his previous firm, Mr. Ericsson was an attorney with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, where he handled enforcement of Superfund and Spill Act cleanup obligations as well as air water and waste regulatory requirements.

Ericsson serves as co-chair of the Regulatory Affairs Committee for the National Association of Industrial and Office Properties (NAIOP) New Jersey Chapter. He is past chair of the American Bar Association’s Environmental Transactions and Brownfields Committee, part of the organization’s Section of Environment, Energy and Resources. He has been recognized by his peers and clients as a leader in his field through accolades such as Chambers USA and New Jersey Super Lawyers.

Ericsson earned his undergraduate degree at Skidmore College and his law degree at Vermont Law School. He is a frequent speaker on environmental and brownfields topics.

In addition to its Hackensack location, Cole Schotz has offices in New York, Delaware, Maryland and Texas. Founded in 1928, the firm has grown to 120 attorneys who work in nine primary areas of practice: Bankruptcy & Corporate Restructuring; Litigation; Real Estate; Tax, Trusts & Estates; Corporate, Finance & Business Transactions; Employment; Environmental; Intellectual Property and Construction Services.


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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

In New Jersey, energy is the big new environmental story


Remember back when toxic waste, leaking landfills, industrial discharges and syringes on the beaches were scoring daily headlines in New Jersey newspapers?

The good old days of prop-wielding PIRG-ies jamming committee hearings in Trenton and legislators scrambling to outdo each other in solving environmental problems with groundbreaking new laws and tighter regulations have abated--almost to silence.

It must even be difficult for the NJ Sierra Club's Jeff Tittel to get up every day and work up his normal quotient of outrage. Thank God, he's got Chris Christie to prod him.

Yes, many of the state's environmental problems (most involving pollution) have been addressed.

New Jersey today is greener and healthier and public interest has moved on to other issues. Like jobs and upside-down mortgages and outsized corporate influence in every aspect of life. (You have been paying attention to the 'Occupy wherever' movement, haven't you?)

That does not mean that that there are no important environmental issues left.

They've just shifted.


Today the focus is on energy--the power that heats your latte, cools your townhouse, and lets you  flip through the pages on your iPhone 4S at record speed.

The environmental imlications--and they are huge--reside in decisions about what resources are consumed to produce that power, how it travels to your home and whether you consume it wisely or squander it

These are the new environmental issues that New Jersey's businesses, governor, legislators and regulators are grappling with in 2011/2012.

They don't make for sexy reading like back when the mob would bury drums of chemicals in the back reaches of some field, nor are they as photo-friendly as foamy stuff oozing out of of a discharge pipe and into a river.

In fact, they're pretty darn boring.

They're complicated, too, involving engineering and technical terms that will put you to sleep within minutes of the opening of a legislative or BPU hearing. And they involve all sorts of economic projections and jargon. The boys down at Goldman Sachs love this stuff. Hold on to your wallets, New Jersey!

Tom Johnson is one of New Jersey's original environmental reporters. He reported environmental news for the Star-Ledger back when the stories were a lot more fun to write. Today, he's covering the new environmental beat--energy--for New Jersey Spotlight.

Tom not only understands what he's following but he translates it in terms that the rest of us can understand, too--minus the political and ideological shadings that often creep into other reports.

Some of his recent stories include:
Coalition Formally Asks State to Extend Utility-Sponsored Solar Installations 
Regional Grid Operator Agrees to Ease Impediments to Building New Power Plants

Today, Tom reported on a stakeholders' meeting at which Assemblyman Upendra Chivukula and his colleagues grappled with recent problems that are troubling the state's wildly successful solar-energy industry. Also covering the hearing was a less likely source of environmental reporting--Blue Jersey--the daily blog that chronicles state political news with a distinctly (and often delightfully) left-leaning flair.  

Blue Jersey contributor deciminyan (I have no idea why they use names like that--maybe it's a blog thing) did a solid job of framing some of the larger issues. He then summarized the meeting and even shot and appended two video interviews.  Nice job, deciminyan! 
**Warning: Shameless Plug Ahead**


If environmental/energy (call it what you will ) news is important to you, you should check out our daily newsletter, EnviroPoliticsWe carry all the environmental and political news of the day, from every daily newspaper, many blogs (like Tom's and denciminyan's) and other sources worth reading in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York and Delaware. We also track all environmental and energy legislation in New Jersey and Pennsylvania--from introduction to enactment. Our publication has become 'must reading' for scores of the region's leading businesses, attorneys, consultants, utilities, real estate and development interests, green organizations, educators, students and legislators and regulators, too. If you never heard of us, take a second to remedy that embarrassing oversight by filling in this form.  Why? It will get you a free, no-obligation, 30-day subscription. It will impart knowledge and inner peace. Well, OK, at least you'll learn important stuff. Take us up on the offer. You won't regret it. If you do, complain to Jeff Tittel.


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New York report on fracking cost impacts to be delayed

The state's environmental agency says a key advisory panel will not be issuing a report on the impacts of hydrofracking by a November 1 deadline, delaying part of the process of allowing the natural gas drilling on some private lands in New York until early next year.

WXXI's Karen DeWitt reports:

The State's Environmental Commissioner Joe Martens, says the report from the advisory committee, will be not be issued next month as originally planned, partly because data on costs of fracking to other state agencies, including the departments of health and transportation, aren't ready yet.

Martens says the panel, made up of industry, environmental and community representatives, will be meeting through January of 2012 to try to issue a report that will now also address costs to local governments , as well as the state costs.

"There's no firm timetable," Martens said.

Martens says the data on the potential costs of hydro fracking to the state is "unlikely" to be ready in time for the governor's budget proposal in January, and he says if it's not completed until February or March, it might be "push it out" beyond the start of the new fiscal year, on April 1st.

The DEC Commissioners was asked, following the three hour meeting, whether he thinks hydrofracking permits will be issued in 2012.

"It is really hard to predict," Martens said. "We have a lot of work left to do".

Commissioner Martens says just the review of the thousands of comments that have been received during an ongoing public comment period will take months. The public comment period is scheduled to end December 12th.

Rob Moore, with Environmental Advocates, and a panel member, says giving the group extra time to complete its work is a "positive development".

"We don't let the budget clock dictate the state's deliberations on this," said Moore. "The gas has been down there one hundred million years, it will be down there forever, we've got plenty of time to get to it."

Eric Goldstein, with the Natural Resources Defense Council, also a panel member, says he's relieved that the process is slowing down a bit.

"The entire fracking train from here on in will be traveling at a more reasonable pace," said Goldstein.
See full story here

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