*** WAYS FORWARDS ***
Sustainable Energy Supplies
NATURAL... Never ending power, non-polluting, sustainable, safe, clean!
* EARTH * WIND * FIRE * WATER
Geothermal Energy - the Power of the Earth
For "Base Load" supply... safe, clean and PROVEN!
not convinced? do a bit of research and/or check out the links supplied below...
1. Geothermal Education Office
2. US Dpt Of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Geothermal Technologies Program
3. Energy Quest CA
4. Google search on Geothermal Energy
5. Geothermal Energy Facts
snip: ...shallow regions of relatively elevated crustal heat have high temperature gradients. Perhaps the best known of these volcanic regions are in the countries that border the Pacific Ocean -- the geologically active area known as the Ring of Fire -- where the oceanic plates are being subducted under the continental plates.
Wind Energy - the Power of the wind
1. Wind Power- An Illustrated History of its Development
2. Wind Systems - Greenhouse.gov.au
3. Renewable Energy Sources
4. Google search on Wind Energy
The Power of Fire
A - Solar Energy
1. Wikipedia - Solar Power
2. Solar Energy
3. Teaching Treasures, Solar Energy
4. Google search on Solar Energy
B - Solar Thermal Energy
1. Wikipedia - Solar Thermal
2. CSIRO - Solar Thermal Energy Research
C - Solar Towers
1. The Bulletin - Solar Towers
2. Biotower
The Power of Water
A - Tidal Energy
1. Marine Turbines News
2. Wikipedia - Tidal Power
3. Think Quest - Solutions Now - Tidal Energy
4. RISE - Tidal Power Systems and
B - Wave Energy
1. Wikipedia - Wave Power
2. BBC News - Wave Power
3. Free Energy News - Wave Power
4. Catalyst - Wave Power
Further research is also needed into Ocean Thermal Energy and Ocean Current Energy.
Other useful sites:
Alternative Energy Sources
Energy Resources
CLIMATE CHANGE - THE FATE OF THE EARTH IS IN OUR HANDS
Take action now! Sign the Greenpeace Petition... http://stop_fueling_climate_change.org
Comments
a wake up call - Power Switch
Recently I stumbled across this rather frightening article.
"Major Problems of surviving peak oil"
http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/portal/index.php?option=com_content&task=v...
Certainly a wake up call.
Reality:
The realisation that our oil reserves on this planet are finite;
They are depleted;
Wars are being fought NOW over who holds power over the remaining reserves;
And the time is fast approaching when life "as we know it", is going to end.
When this time comes, will you be prepared?
Right now, we need political action if humanity is to survive.
In the case that REAL AND EFFECTIVE political action does not come to fruition... are you doing all you can right now to ensure your family will survive?
Now is the time to prepare, as best you can.
1. Get out of debt
2. Learn everything you can about the land you live upon, until you understand it completely.
4. Learn how to survive without conventional energy supplies.
5. Learn how to use the natural resources that surround you.
6. Grow your own food, save (and share) seeds.
7. Utilise your family's waste.
8. Enspire your friends and neighbours to do the same.
9. Do not wait for someone else to do the work for you!
10. Share what you have learned with others.
The Garden of Eden is on your doorstep :-)
Bob (from The Climate Change Action Group: http://au.groups.yahoo.com/group/ClimateChangeAction/)
wrote:
"Yes, but too little too late as always. The emergency is STILL upon us."
:(
Bob
regarding the dangers we face with Climate Change....
and my reply to him is pasted below:
Hiya Bob :-)
Yes we know of how bad it is going to get... that's why our little group was formed.
Our collective minds have done some great things already, there is a lot of (hard) work ahead to ensure survival of our own species and (the many) others we have effected in our clumsy attempts to control and rule the
planet to date.
and to add fuel to our collective fire, little lights of hope continue to shine out of the darkness... nothing can extinguish hope when just one of us survives. When projects like the one below continue to blossom (and bear fruit).... I see a wonderful future for us all.
:-)
The story below outlines a project that does not have to be exclusive to the place it is happening.
I have 41 acres to grow stuff on...
i just need (quite a few) willing helpers,
already, they come...
a quick phone call to my local council could add a lot of unused land to that 41 acres.
When you open your eyes to the possibilities before us... there are so many lawned over parks and so much "waste" land everywhere...
projects like this one are the way forwards.
If we can feed the people...
We will survive this crisis.
Warmest regards
Anne
...via www.bluegreenearth.com
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8126-2337359,00.html
"How to grow a healthy society"
A community project that provides free organic fruit and veg for schools, the unemployed and refugees deserves its plaudits, says Jayne Dowle
Andrew Boardman is pottering about in his shed, like a mad professor with a Lancashire accent. He has lined up a row of test tubes containing old chip oil in varying stages of decomposition. Andrew, 42, is trying to find the
most efficient way of recycling the oil into car fuel.
This former council gardener is a volunteer with the Bolton Gathering of Organic Growers (Gog), a green collective of individuals and groups dedicated to growing their own healthy produce. And the fuel that Andrew produces powers Gog's van, a former Parcelforce vehicle, which volunteers are planning to fill with organic fruit and vegetables grown on their own
allotments. The van will call at school playgrounds to offer free healthy alternatives to tuckshop sweets.
This is the latest project spearheaded by Alan Brown, 42, a health improvement specialist working for Bolton Primary Care Trust (PCT), who this week jointly took the prize for the Local Food Initiative of the Year, sponsored by the Soil Association and Highland Spring Natural Mineral Water.
Under the scheme, Alan works with Gog and other groups to help individuals to find land to grow on - often unused land and derelict allotments - to organise training in organic growing and help with funding applications. The
produce grown is not only distributed to schools; the unemployed, asylum-seekers and refugees also get free fruit and veg.
What the Soil Association judges picked up on was the way that each project that Alan oversees is driven by the needs and ideas of more than 100 volunteers, who are themselves mainly refugees, asylum-seekers and people
from other hard- to-reach groups, such as teenagers who have been excluded from school.
"I think it was the ordinariness of the project that made it extraordinary,"
says Lynda Brown, a food writer, organic campaigner and a judge of the Soil Association Awards. "It really was a totally inspirational example of a grass-roots movement that is coming from local people and not being handed
down to them from on high."
Alan, through Bolton PCT, and with help from volunteers from Gog, co-ordinates a variety of healthy eating initiatives: community cafés,
organic kitchen gardens in 13 schools, and cookery classes for young men.
"The Kurdish kids work in fast-food shops, then come over and cook healthy stuff with us," he says. "They were wary at first but when I had a go, they saw that it was OK for a bloke to cook, and got into it."
Alan's initial remit with the PCT was to introduce the Government's Five-A-Day scheme, which encourages us all to eat five portions of fruit or vegetable a day. But his interest in growing and eating healthy food goes much deeper. His dream is to obtain a large plot of land in Bolton where food can be grown and sold, like a proper market garden.
At the Haslam Park allotments, where there are three community plots, Marie-Louise, 43, an asylum-seeker from Burundi, is wielding a right-angled hoe with tremendous force. "We call this an African hoe now," she explains. "It's what we would use in Africa but most people here hadn't seen one before. It's so much better at breaking up the soil, as you can see, so we
managed to get hold of them to use here."
Marie-Louise, who has two teenage daughters, was a French teacher in Burundi. She had little experience of growing her own food. "But when I came here, in June 2003, it was awful," she says.
"I realised that I had to do something. You go mad just sitting in the house, reading the latest letter from the Home Office, crying. Being here allows you to think, gives you space and people to share your troubles with.
I started working as a volunteer with various groups, and met Malcolm and Jessie, who are from Zimbabwe. Together, we came up with the idea to get this plot going with the support of Gog. We grow the food; what we don't eat
ourselves we give away to those who can't work."
Her fellow volunteers include several Congolese people, a woman with Ukrainian/Israeli
nationality, young Iraqis and Phil, an IT specialist who likes gardening.
Other volunteers include Gulcan Mizra, who came to Bolton from Turkey to marry a local man, and Roy and Kathleen Swannick, Bolton-born-and bred, the wise elders of the group. "We've been doing this since the Second World
War," says Kathleen, 86. "It was Dig For Victory then." Roy, 80, who had a
distinguished career in park maintenance and horticulture, says that in return for his advice, some of the lads from the allotment come and dig over his garden at home because he can no longer manage it himself.
Teamwork is the key to being a produce gardener. "People turn up and do what
they can," says Kath Baron, a project worker and Andrew Boardman's partner.
"We understand that sometimes their commitments mean that they can't come.
But there's always somebody around to step in and help out."
The Haslam Park group grow potatoes, carrots, cabbage, sweetcorn, pumpkins, rhubarb, tomatoes, strawberries, beetroot . . . There are plans to introduce Japanese vegetables and salad crops. Yet it seems a fairly conservative
selection, given the range of nationalities that toils here and the exotic species with which they must be familiar.
"You've got to think about the soil and what will thrive," says Marie-Louise. "Although, look over there at the amaranth grain. That's from Africa but it's doing really well. You can get it in healthfood shops, but it costs a lot. We use the leaves like spinach back home."
"And we use all these vegetables in traditional Turkish cooking," calls out Gulcan, 31, who is pulling up new potatoes. Point to a vegetable, and will give you a recipe for it. Runner beans? "Slice them with onions and
tomatoes, cook them with salt in their own water, add black pepper," she
says. "We call it fasulye."
Red cabbage? "Slice and chop thinly. Mix in vinegar, salt, oil and lemons.
You can also add peeled garlic. Put it a container, and the following day, the cabbage will have absorbed all the juices. It's crunchy and soft at the same time."
Gulcan jokes that her husband, who works as a painter and decorator, doesn't get involved because he hates worms. For her though, with no family of her own in Britain, this allotment has provided solace and support, as well as
plentiful healthy food. "When I had my daughter Zaynab, now 2, I wanted her to eat the best food possible," she says. "I used to shop in the market, but it can't be healthier than this. We pick it, and take it straight home to
cook it."
"There's all that war and fighting in the world," says Kathleen, sitting on a bench with a cup of tea, as little Zaynab toddles after nine-year-olds Joanne and Edwin, from Zimbabwe and Bolton respectively. "Yet look here, it's
so quiet, so peaceful. You can't even begin to imagine why all the bloodshed happens." Food then, for the mind, as well as for the body.
Getting your own allotment
Contact your local council, which will either allocate you a plot or add your name to the waiting list. A typical allotment is 250sq m (2,700sq ft).
You can apply to rent half a plot or share with a friend.
Rent varies depending on the location, council policy and site costs. It can be as little as £10 a year for a small plot, up to about £50 for a large plot.
In some areas, selling off allotment land for housing is a big issue. There are three types of
allotment: statutory allotments cannot be sold or used for other purposes;
temporary allotments are not protected from disposal; and allotments leased on private land are not protected from disposal.
No allotments in your area? The National Society of Allotment and Leisure Gardeners advises that if you can get together a group of six like-minded residents who are registered on the electoral roll you can put your case to
the local council. It has a statutory duty to provide a sufficient quantity of allotments and to lease them to people living within its remit.
For links to your local council and information on how to rent an allotment, visit
www.directgov.co.uk. The National Society of Allotment and Leisure Gardeners
offers advice at www.nsalg.org.uk
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8126-2337359,00.html
via...
www.bluegreenearth.com / www.europeansocialecologyinstitute.org
global community, ecological, environmental and social reportage, opinion and analysis + news, views and facts
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