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  • Charles Fishman: The Big Thirst: The Secret Life and Turbulent Future of Water

    Charles Fishman: The Big Thirst: The Secret Life and Turbulent Future of Water

  • Mike Natalizio: Unraveled: The Art of Leading in a Complex World
  • Andy Kessler: Grumby

    Andy Kessler: Grumby (*****)

  • Matt Ridley: The Rational Optimist: How Prosperity Evolves

    Matt Ridley: The Rational Optimist: How Prosperity Evolves (*****)

  • Hugh MacLeod: Ignore Everybody: and 39 Other Keys to Creativity

    Hugh MacLeod: Ignore Everybody: and 39 Other Keys to Creativity

  • Matthew E. May: The Elegant Solution: Toyota's Formula for Mastering Innovation

    Matthew E. May: The Elegant Solution: Toyota's Formula for Mastering Innovation

  • Jerry Porras, Stewart Emery, Mark Thompson: Success Built to Last: Creating a Life that Matters

    Jerry Porras, Stewart Emery, Mark Thompson: Success Built to Last: Creating a Life that Matters

  • Mark Sanborn: You Don't Need a Title to Be a Leader: How Anyone, Anywhere, Can Make a Positive Difference

    Mark Sanborn: You Don't Need a Title to Be a Leader: How Anyone, Anywhere, Can Make a Positive Difference

  • Dan Kennedy: No B.S. Sales Success: The Ultimate No Holds Barred, Kick Butt, Take No Prisoners, Tough and Spirited Guide

    Dan Kennedy: No B.S. Sales Success: The Ultimate No Holds Barred, Kick Butt, Take No Prisoners, Tough and Spirited Guide (*****)

  • Thomas Friedman: The World is Flat

    Thomas Friedman: The World is Flat

Gallup Poll Indicates US Decline in Worry Related to Environmental Threats

Maybe it’s because there are so many other things for Americans to worry about (making the mortgage payment, getting a job or keeping a job, for example), but according to a recent Gallup Poll (www.gallup.com) conducted March 8-11, 2012 (http://www.gallup.com/poll/153875/Worry-Water-Air-Pollution-Historical-Lows.aspx), worrying about water and air pollution have both declined significantly and to historic lows.   In fact, both numbers reflect a decline of more than 20% since 2000.  Concern about global warming, which has always been relatively low (despite the hype) declined an additional 10%,  while pollution of rivers, lakes and reservoirs; contamination of soil and water by toxic waste; loss of tropical rain forests and extinction of plant and animal species all declined as well.   

 

Gallup speculates that the decline might be due to the notion that Americans are more positive and about the environment today than they were in 2000 (that seems to be stating the obvious), in addition to Americans' increased concern over personal economic issues, which they suggest might be distracting Americans.  My personal belief is that Americans are making judgments with their eyes and noses (rather than just what they read), and both provide undeniable proof that the US has made tremendous environmental progress, not just in the last 12 years, but in the last 30,  across the board.  The reasons for the improvement have been many but, overall, they have been due to the power of sensible regulation and awareness (especially about what each individual and company can do to help) combining with proactive industry attention to improving what can be improved.   Amazing thought, pay attention to a problem and the problem gets better.   Best of all, the Environment, both due to its own restorative capabilities as well as continued positive action of all Americans, will only continue to improve.  Congratulations!

 

Is improving the US debt crisis next .  .  .  ?

 

April 30, 2012 in Environmental News | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Alta Rock Energy Mines The Earth for Renewable Hot Water Energy

Most people visiting Yellowstone National Park make a point of seeing the Old Faithful Geyser shoot it's boiling water 150 feet into the air every hour or so.  It's amazing, powerful and, maybe most importantly, predictable.  So predictable, in fact, that some think its source -- water superheated by hot magma deep in the earth -- might just be able to be harnessed (or harvested, as the case may be) as a renewable and infinitely available source of clean energy.  On a small scale, this is already a reality.  More and more homes and buildings now rely on geothermal energy, delivered through a well drilled into the earth, as their primary heat source.  And that may only be the beginning.

Alta Rock Energy, www.altarockenergy.com a Seattle, Washington based alternative energy company, is racing to develop the first power-plant-sized, renewable electric generating system using water, or more accurately steam, super-heated in the earth, to power turbines and create electricity.  Alta Rock's technology piggybacks on, and is similar to, the hydraulic fracturing technology (hydraulic shearing in this case) that's proven to be so successful extracting oil and natural gas that was, until recently, not economically feasible to extract.  They call their process Engineered Geothermal Systems, or EGS.  In a nutshell, the EGS technology pumps millions of gallons of water into the earth under high pressure, shearing the rock and creating fissures into which the water can flow.  They follow that up with directional wells into which they inject water that heats up and recirculates on a loop through the power plant and back into the well on a continuous basis, resulting in a powerful, closed-loop power generation system. 

Emission-free and carbon-neutral, they say.

There's a cool video in the link that explains the process.  It's narrated by Ed Begley Jr., www.edbegley.com, the actor / environmentalist who (personal disclosure) I really like as an actor, but not so much otherwise.  I think they could have chosen a more powerful, less "President-Obama-wants-him" (a complete supposition on my part) narrator, for whatever that might be worth.  Maybe Morgan Freeman or Anderson Cooper.....

Unfortunately, Alta Rock's technology still needs a huge dollop of government funding to make it through the test phase.  And they've had several projects that have simply not worked.  The good news is that they're now attracting funding from the Google's of the world (www.google.com) and others.  Their newest project, a $43MM venture to drill and fracture a well in the side of a volcano in central Oregon is backed by the Department of Energy, www.energy.gov. Learn more about the project at http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2012/01/15/project_to_pour_water_into_volcano_to_make_power/

Will Alta Rock Energy's EGS technology change the game, replacing our much-maligned, but conveniently efficient, coal and natural gas-fueled power plants?  It seems no one knows at this point.  To me, it sounds like a great idea that, economically, might be a bit ahead of its time.  But, then again, that's what the guys with the oars probably said the first time they saw Fulton's (or the guy he's suspected of stealing the idea from) steam engine.  "It'll never work" is, perhaps, the most uninformed (and grammatically incorrect?) sentence in the English language.  This just might.  And, regardless, it's cool to think about.

Take a look at the picture below to get a sense of how EGS is supposed to work.  You can learn more by checking out the video at www.altarockenergy.com as well as several others on the topic of geothermal energy at www.youtube.com. 

 

   Volcanic Energy

January 15, 2012 in Business, Current Affairs, Environmental News, Industry, Science | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: alta rock energy, carbon, carbon neutral, department of energy, ed begley jr., EGS, emission, energy, energy independence, geothermal, geyser, google, hydraulic shearing, old faithful, renewable energy, volcano, yellowstone

US Landfill & Petroleum Supply Shortage Is So Yesterday's Hysteria

It’s been almost universally predicted that the United States will, within my lifetime, run out of two things.  First, room to put the ever-expanding tons and tons of garbage produced by our nonstop desire for what we want, when we want it – the kind of compulsive consumerism with which we are often said to be addicted.  Second, our supply of the fossil fuels that power our automobiles, boats, airplanes and homes, particularly oil and natural gas.  The arguments, as I recall, have never been based on “whether or not” this will happen but, rather, only when.  For decades we’ve been alarming ourselves about these “inevitables,” doomsday-thinking ourselves into scenarios requiring us to ship our garbage on rocket ships into outer space, or the necessity to take over the Middle East to satisfy our desperate yet insatiable need for oil. 

Turns out, though, that much of the hysteria around these two inevitables has been just that.  Fortunately, there are those among us who choose to focus on finding solutions, rather than simply feeding the hysteria.  And those solutions are working.  Today, in many marketplaces across the country, the US has more landfill disposal capacity than trash to fill it.  The development of recycling technologies and re-use markets, and the collaboration between packagers, retailers and recyclers have made much of our already existing landfill space, once coveted like the gold at the end of a rainbow, now a challenge to fill.  For proof, you need look no further than what’s happening at Waste Management www.wm.com, the largest garbage company in the world.  For most of its history, WM’s strategy has focused, laser like, on building landfills and filling them with as much garbage as possible.  Their landfills converted low-value farmland to huge-dollar garbage repositories, often with gross margins that likely rivaled Microsoft’s www.microsoft.com (at least in the good old days).   Today, you won’t find WM’s CEO, David Steiner http://investors.wm.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=119743&p=irol-govBio&ID=205216  describing his company in terms normally associated with “garbage.”  Instead, he will tell you that Waste Management plays a  critical role in the product supply chain; that the company’s mission, and future success, is predicated on its ability to create value out of every ton of “garbage” they handle.  And he actually means it.

And, in a hysteria turnaround of generational proportions, in 2011, the United States, for the first time in 62 years will be a net exporter (you read that right) of petroleum products http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203441704577068670488306242.html.  Largely due to the development of hydraulic fracturing technology, http://www.energyfromshale.org/shale-extraction-process?gclid=CNfgm4Tz6KwCFQyFQAodz3TlKw  oil and natural gas production in the US is soaring.  “Proven” fossil fuel reserves have exploded and new discoveries, not only in the US but around the globe as well, are announced with increasing frequency.  These discoveries have, in an amazingly short period of time, made the long-standing, gloomy predictions and accompanying hysteria about the inevitable and shocking speed with which the US would run out of petroleum look, today, almost silly and uninformed. 

What’s caused us to accomplish these amazing and, until very recently, seemingly impossible supply turn-arounds?  Human Innovation.  Hysteria often stems from a misguided worry about what the future will bring.  It worries about the complexity of solving a future problem and presumes, based apparently on the notion that present-day thinking won’t continue to evolve, that a solution is impossible.  What it fails to consider, though, is that the present day thinking about solving a problem evolves as the urgency and incentive to solve the problem increases.  While hysteria seeks an immediate solution, innovation weighs the need for a solution against both the realities and the possibilities.  When the realities and the possibilities converge, that is when the time, resource, economic and innovation axis’ cross, as they have today in the US with landfill and petroleum supply, it’s amazing how the solutions that seemed so difficult to conceive not so long ago, seem so, well, timely today.

So what’s next?  What are we hysterical about at the moment?  Global Warming (aka Climate Change), Increasing CO2 in the Atmosphere, Our Supply of Clean Water, Feeding 7 Billion and quickly on our way to 10 Billion People, Coal-Fired Power Plants.  The axis’ crossing for these problems will likely happen in my lifetime and Human Innovation will, I believe, come to the rescue over and over again!

December 04, 2011 in Business, Current Affairs, Environmental News, Industry, Science, Waste Alerts | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: clean water, david steiner, fuel, garbage, global warming, Human innovation, landfill, microsoft, natural gas, net exporter, oil, petroleum, waste management, water

We Energies Coal Pile Slides Into Lake Michigan

I'm used to seeing pictures and videos of tornados, mud slides, tsunamis and other unforeseen tragedies that make me marvel at Mother Nature's power.  Normally, they don't seem as real because they happen far from home.  Not yesterday.  Around 11AM Monday, a large portion of Lake Michigan bluff on the We Energies www.we-energies.com Oak Creek, WI Power Plant site slid into the lake.  Miraculously, no one was injured.  That's the good news.  The bad news is that coal and coal ash, and who knows what else, made their way into the water, creating a potential environmental mess.  I have no doubt this will be cleaned up properly and that the cause will be studied, blame will be assessed and endless debate will ensue.  To read more, click the link to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel for the rest of the story and some cool photo's of the devastation.

 http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/authorities-investigate-bluff-collapse-at-we-energies-plant-132929538.html

This frame grab provided by TMJ4 Television shows part of a bluff that collapsed at We Energies power plant along the Lake Michigan shoreline Monday, Oct. 31, 2011, in Oak Creek, Wis.

 

 

November 01, 2011 in Business, Current Affairs, Environmental News, Waste Alerts | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: bluff, bluff slide, coal, coal pile, environmental, lake michigan, mud slide, oak creek, we, we energies, WI, wisconsin

Superfund Liability is NOT a Thing of The Past

As I've written before, the risks related to your waste management activities and supply chain are NOT any smaller.  Too many companies continue to make waste vendor and disposal site selections based solely, or nearly solely, on what appears on the surface to be the cost (cheapest is bestest)  without considering what could be the actual long term costs and ramifications.  Case in point:  A client of ours recently received a nasty gram from the US EPA www.epa.gov called a "Demand Letter" advising them that they have been identified as a Potentially Responsible Party or PRP in a disposal site clean up action taken by EPA.  The letter matter of factly advised the client that 1.) "EPA believes that you may be liable for the payment of all costs incurred by EPA in connection with this site"  2.) "PRPs are jointly and severally liable for the whole amount" and 3.) "We hereby demand (I think that explains the letter's title) that you make payment...by cashier's or certified check made payable to "U.S. EPA Hazardous Substance Superfund" within 30 days.

This is one of those letters that can really ruin a person's, and a company's day.  It has a way of grabbing your attention and not easily letting go.  In this client's case, the EPA's demand is in excess of $2MM.  And as I've previously noted, these kinds of exposures are NOT typically covered by a companies General Liability Policy meaning, for most, whatever ends up being due is coming out of the corporate coffers directly.  Ouch...!

You don't ever want to get a Demand Letter and, since no one can predict the future, there is no sure fire to guarantee you'll never get one.  But there are ways to dramatically reduce the likelihood.  Here are 5 of those ways:

1.) Visit EVERY facility to which you are sending or considering sending any waste outside of your regular garbage (as long as that's going to a lanfill operated by a recognized industry leader like www.wm.com, http://www.republicservices.com/ or others).  This includes any recycling facilities you're using for fiber, tires, scrap metal (this client's demand letter related to a scrap metal yard clean up).

2.) Look for obvious housekeeping issues.  If the place looks sloppy on a tour, just think what it might look like when no ones visiting.  Poor housekeeping is a major cause of environmental contamination and a major potential liability for you.

3.) Make sure the facility is processing material when you are there.  If everything is shut down for you, or everyones on break during your visit, that's a sign...and not a good one.

4.) Make sure the disposal or recycling company is financially stable.  Ask for financial information, check for UCC filings, http://www.wdfi.org/ucc/ (this is WI's UCC site, court judgements and lawsuits pending.  Do this regardless of the size (or apparent size) of the company - large companies as well as small ones can be over leveraged and capital poor - neither of those scenario's should make you feel warm and fuzzy. 

5.) Make sure - Make sure - Make sure that the companies you deal with have an insurance policy that provides Sudden & Accidental Pollution insurance and that you are named as an additional insured on that policy.  Do this whether you are shipping Hazardous OR Non Hazardous (many Superfund sites were licensed only for non hazardous waste activities).  And be careful if someone tries to hand you An MCS 90 Endorsement which is NOT a pollution insurance policy!

Don't make short term decisions that may come with long term risks.  Don't have your day or your comapny upended by a PRP letter.  A little work up front is necessary, easy worth it and way less costly than responding to a Demand Letter will ever be! 

June 23, 2011 in Business, Current Affairs, Environmental News | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)

Technorati Tags: Advanced Waste Services, Clean Water, Demand Letter, environment, Environmental, EPA, Hazardous Waste, Landfill, Non Hazardous Waste, Pollution, Pollution Insurance, PRP, Scrap Yard, Superfund, Waste Management, Waste Water

AWS Named to Inc. 5000 List of Fastest-Growing Companies for 2010

We are pleased and proud to report that Advanced Waste Services has again been included in in  Inc. Magazine’s List of the 5,000 Fastest Growing Companies in the U.S. for 2010.  This is the fourth year in a row AWS has been included in this list.  AWS ranked No. 3,318 on the list, with a three-year growth rate of 57%.  You can view the entire list at http://www.inc.com/inc5000/list.

We all know it’s difficult to grow in a recession, and every company faced many obstacles in their day-to-day operations.  Fortunately, AWS was able to overcome those obstacles and, despite the significant downturn in the economy, we've remained on track to still accomplish many of our goals.  We know we were only able to do this because of the trust and the continued opportunities our clients have afforded us, and we remain grateful for each and every opportunity to deliver positive and memorable experiences to our clients. We also know we couldn't have weathered 2009 as well as we did without the many contributions of the team of professionals we have assembled throughout Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana and Pennsylvania.

  Thank You!!!

 

Inc5000_2010_logo 

 

August 26, 2010 in Environmental News | Permalink | Comments (0)

Waste and Pollution Are Good Partners

I hate paying for pollution insurance. It’s expensive.  .  . really expensive. And so many of my competitors don’t have it. “Why bother,” they say .  .  . “I’ll just ‘save’ the money” and “customers don’t know any better.  .  . “ But while I hate paying for pollution insurance, I buy it because I need it, for my company and for my clients’ companies as well. You see, neither of us can afford The Risk.

If you generate hazardous or non-hazardous wastes (in other words, everything more than standard garbage) and you’re working with a broker, a transporter or a disposal site that does not carry sudden and accidental pollution coverage, you’re taking a big chance and you need to ask yourself a question – Is this a chance I’m willing to take?

So, what’s at stake? Well, like all insurance, if nothing happens, your risk is minimal. But if something does, that’s another story. It’s not an exaggeration to suggest that your company could be at risk. Why’s that? 

1)      Chances are that the insurance you carry for your business does not cover pollution-related incidents. In fact, in all likelihood, pollution protection of any kind is specifically excluded.

2)      Accidents, fires and spills happen. And if, when they happen, they involve your waste, you’ve got an exposure problem.  .  .  and no coverage. That’s Risk

One of the biggest misconceptions (or misrepresentations, depending on the source) I often hear goes something like this, “I don’t need pollution insurance, I only generate non-hazardous waste.” Wrong! The facts contradict this sentiment. Most, by a wide margin, pollution events that occur on our nation’s roadways and in our streams, fields and storm/sewer systems involve “non-hazardous” wastes.

Just because the EPA defines a waste as “non-hazardous” doesn’t mean it also defines the same waste as “non-polluting.”  That’s not a subtle distinction, it’s an expensive one.

February 01, 2010 in Environmental News | Permalink | Comments (2)

Wisconsin to Ban Oily Waste from Landfills

On December 2, 2009, Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle signed a bill into law that prohibits the disposal in Wisconsin landfills of used oil filters and materials that have been used to absorb spent or used engine oil, like socks, oil dry, mats, etc. This ban takes effect in December or 2010.

While the majority of oil filters and oil-absorbent materials are still non-hazardous, the Governor felt that this new law would better protect Wisconsin's citizens and resources by encouraging the increased recycling of oil filters from the present rate of about 20% and oil-absorbent materials from the present rate of about 3% and by decreasing the potential risk impact to groundwater that oily wastes can pose.

As a leading processor and recycler of used oils and oily waste, AWS already offers our clients the safety and responsibility that Wisconsin's new law seeks to encourage and increase. We annually convert hundreds of thousands of tons of these wastes into clean, reusable energy-producing materials.

February 01, 2010 in Environmental News | Permalink | Comments (3)

US EPA Details Heightened Enforcement Actions for 2009

While the recession was doing its damage through most of 2009, the EPA, according to its latest enforcement action data, remained plenty busy pursuing civil and criminal settlements, prosecutions and penalties. 

Some Highlights.  In 2009, EPA:

  • Opened 387 New Environmental Crime Cases
  • Obtained $371 Million in Settlements and Penalties
  • Required Companies to invest $5.4 Billion to reduce pollution
  • Concluded 51 Enforcement Actions against Federal Agencies and Federal Contractors

To read more about what EPA has been up to on the enforcement side, go to:

http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/reports/endofyear/eoy2009/index.html

http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/cases/criminal/highlights/2009/index.html


January 06, 2010 in Business, Current Affairs, Environmental News, Industry, Waste Alerts | Permalink | Comments (0)

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