Archive for December, 2007

CorVel Data Center Tour Service

Monday, December 3rd, 2007
December 3, 2007
3:00 pmto10:00 pm

Private shuttle for CorVel Corporation. Regional Managers of data centers from different branches visiting the all new Hillsboro Data Center.

Cap, trade is more appealing than a tax

Monday, December 3rd, 2007

Sunday, December 02, 2007
BY KATHIE DURBIN, Columbian staff writer

OLYMPIA – A climate change panel appointed by Gov. Chris Gregoire is leaning toward recommending that Washington become part of a regional cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions rather than impose a tax on polluters who emit carbon dioxide.

The panel, which will meet Tuesday in Seattle to unveil its initial recommendations, also wants local governments to analyze how new projects would contribute to Washington’s greenhouse gas emissions under the State Environmental Policy Act.

The Climate Action Team’s most dramatic initiatives will wait for the 2009 legislative session, said Jay Manning, director of the Washington Department of Ecology and co-chairman of the climate team. That’s because a separate effort of which the state is a part, the Western Climate Initiative, will announce its own strategy for dramatic reductions in greenhouse gas emission reductions next August. Six states and three Canadian provinces are part of that regional effort.

“2009 will be a significant year for climate change legislation,” Manning said Friday at a briefing for the Senate Water, Energy and Telecommunications Committee. “It’s the biggest issue we face by far. There’s nothing remotely close to it.”

A cap-and-trade system that allows polluting industries to buy credits from clean industries within an overall carbon emission cap will be as effective as a tax on carbon emissions and will give industries and other carbon emitters more flexibility, Manning said.

“There are companies who will really have trouble meeting that cap and, in fact, can’t meet it,” he said. “A carbon tax may be more specific, but won’t be very popular. The consensus is that the flexibility of cap-and-trade outweighs the certainty of a carbon tax.”

“The cap will ratchet down over time,” he added. “Meeting those reductions will be hard.”

The Climate Action Team is expected to ask the 2008 Legislature to pass an emissions reporting bill that will give the state more data about what kinds and amounts of greenhouse gases are being emitted now, Manning said.

His agency also will issue guidelines to state and local governments and private-sector industries, letting them know that they are expected to describe the potential impact on the climate of proposed projects as part of their SEPA documentation.

“This won’t require legislation,” Manning said. “We think the statute already requires this.”

Committee Chairman Phil Rockefeller, D-Bainbridge Island, asked how the Climate Action Team is addressing the challenges the state will face in adapting to climate change, from rising sea levels to shrinking snow packs.

“Slowing it is critical,” he said. “How will you be able to forecast what our climate impacts will be around the state?” he asked.

Manning said it’s clear from work done by the University of Washington Climate Impacts Group that the loss of snowpack will be extreme, and will have a major impact on Eastern Washington farmers, who depend on runoff from winter snowpack for irrigation water. “We don’t know whether it’s going to be 30 percent or 70 percent. Either one of those is going to be a big deal,” he said.

Similarly, whether sea levels rise one or two feet, the impact on coastal areas will be great, he said.

Sen. Jim Honeyford, R-Sunnyside, wanted to know what reducing greenhouse gases will cost the residents of Washington.

“Washington contributes three-tenths of one percent to global warming,” he said. “Is it really worth the cost for this minuscule benefit?”

“That is a fair question,” Manning responded. But the costs of adapting to changes already under way, like the diminishing snowpack, also will be significant, he said.

“If you care about salmon recovery, clean water, recreation in streams, you’re going to have to replace that storage capacity with something,” he said. Aquifer storage high in the mountains is one possibility. “Well-designed, multiple-benefit water storage will be part of our future.”

The team’s report to the governor is due Feb. 7.

Buy Local Week

Thursday, November 15th, 2007
December 1, 2007 10:00 amtoDecember 9, 2007 8:00 pm

Celebrate the Season 2007: Buy Local Week (Dec 1-9)!
Help bring cheer to our local economy by visiting your favorite neighborhood businesses, restaurants and service providers, the week of Dec 1 thru Dec 9th.

Forget about traffic and parking for a stress-free Holiday shopping spree on our 100% biodiesel EcoShuttle. We can tailor any request for travel to any local store for up to 9 passengers.

Vote with your dollars to make the season about a celebration of connection and relationships within your community. Look for a special Buy Local Coupon Book at a variety of SBNP member businesses, including all New Seasons stores. Call 877-ECO4PDX for reservations for your Buy Local Shopping Green Spree!

Check out the website for Sustainable Business Network of Portland’s local week participants:lf_logo.jpg

Our Friendly Shuttles

Currently powered by 100% biodiesel.

Most Recent Entry

Happy Friday Blog Readers!

 

I hope you are all ready for Cinco De Mayo tomorrow! The weather here in Portland is supposed to clear up this weekend, so be careful if you go out on your bicycles.

Read the rest of this page »

Browse by Category

100 billion 1869 2010 Affordable Health Care Act 4th of July Adam Yauch adopt a highway Ages and Ages agriculture air pollution Alberta Canada Alexana Winery algae algae blooms alternative energy American Chemistry Council Americans animal exctinction animals Archery Summit Athens Atlants Falcons Bamboo Sushi Bangladesh Barack Obama basic rights bear Beastie Boys beer Bengals Berkeley Better Living Show bike bike lanes BikeBar bikes biodiesel biodynamics Birdfest and Bluegrass Birdfest and Bluegrass Nature Festival birth rate Bison Organic Brewing Black Mountain BLIZZAKS blog Bluefin Tuna bluegrass Blues Fest Bobcats Booker T Brazil brew tours brewpubs Buddy Guy bus buses California Cape Wind Project carbon carbon dioxide carbon emissions carbon foot print carbon legacy Carbon Neutral Challenge carless in portland cars Central America Champoeg Farms Chehalem Winery Chernobyl Chicago Chicago Cubs Chicago River China Christmas Christmas tree Cincinnati Reds Cinco De Mayo clean coal clean energy clean energy initiatives climate change coal coal ash cold water laundry colonizing the ocean Columbia Boulevard Columbia River Gorge Community Supported Agriculture consumption Cooper Mountain Wines CSM Monitor Cuyahoga River cyclist Daryl Hanna Dave Kestenbaum Daves Killer Bread Dawn of the Bed De Ponte Cellars debris department of defense deposits Dhani Jones dogs dolphins Domaine Drouhin Dr. Robert Ballard drilling Duck Pond eco friendly eco friendly christmas tree eco friendly holiday eco portland eco toys EcoHouse ecoShuttle Ecotrope electric cars electricity energy environment Environmental Defense EPA facebook Fake Plastic Trees fall travel fauna federal government first thursday fiscal responsibility fish deformities Fish Tale Organic Beer Fisker Karma. Chevy Volt food food supply football Forbes forest park Fourth of July fracking fun Galactic Galleria building Germany Glass Candy Glen Jackson Bridge global warming Google Gorge Tour Gov. Schwarzenegger Grain and Gristle Great Willamette Cleanup green beer Green Coach Certification green house gases green oregon Green Path Green Path Transfers green portland Green Portland Tours green roofs Green Sports Alliance green sprouts Green Tips greenest city in america greenloop Grochau Cellars Growing Gardens GrowingGardens growler Happy Hour Holiday Waste hopworks Hopworks Urban Brewery hot green Hotel Monaco Hotel Oregon hoyt arboretum hydrothermal energy Iberdrola Renewables Indiana interstate bicycle highway Italy Ivan Neville Jamal Crawford Jason Jesse and Fiona Yun junk to funk Keystone XL Pipeline KGW Lake Michigan LEED Certified Left Coast Cellars Lemelson Vineyards Les Schwab Amphitheatre license plates Little Big Branch lobbyists lobsterman lungs MAC Maceo Parker Macindoe Family Cellars Mark Klosterman Mayor Emanuel McMenamins mcminnville Meatless Monday Memorial Day Miami Erie Canal Microsoft migrating birds military Miss Teen Earth Mississippi River mt hood Multnomah Falls MusicFest Northwest MusicfestNW New Seasons New Year New York City New York Times NFL Niger Nissan Leaf Northwest Shingle Recyclers NPR Obama Administration ocean off shore oil platform Ogallala Aquifer Ohio Ohio University oil oil platforms Olympia Oregon oregon beaches Oregon Ducks Oregon State University Oregon wines oregon zoo organic coffee overpopulation Ovie Mughelli party pdx pedestrians Philadelphia Eagles pickathon Pink Floyd plastic plastic bag ban plastic bags plate and pitchfork polar ice caps politicians pollution population growth portland Portland Oregon portland oregon in the fall Portland tours Portland Trailblazers powells books preservation President Obama Prius privatized recycling pub crawls rain forests Rainbow Wedding Expo rainforest raised gardens recreation recycle recycling Red Lion renewable energy Renewable energy ghost towns reuse Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Ridgefield Nature Preserve roads Robert Cray Rose Festival Rose Garden Arena Sam Adams Sasquatch Music Festival Sauvie Island Sauvie Island Organics Science Daily Seattle Seahawks see portland sewage runoff sharks Siria Bojorquez Smith Berry Farms Smithsonian Institue snow Sokol Blosser solar energy solar power Solyndra Soter Vineyards spell check spiders State of the Union stem cell research Steve Miller Band Steven Chu Stoller Vineyards studded tires stumptown coffee Styrofoam summer Sun Gold Farms Sunnyside superfund site sustainability sustainable energy sustainable gift wrapping sustainable living sustainable transportation sustainable travel SW Washington Talk of the Nation Science Friday Tesla Texas Thanksgiving the Antlers The Flaming Lips the Wall Thee Oh Sees Three MIle Island Titanic Toronto tours toxins Toyohashi University of Technology Toyota Prius Trail Blazers transfer service transportation trash trashion travel oregon travel portland Travelocity trees University of Vermont Univore Van Wert Vancouver Canucks Viridian Farms washington washington park oregon Washington Post Waterfront Blues Fest waterfront blues festival weddings weekend Will Sampson Willamette River Willamette Riverkeepers Willamette Valley Willamette Valley Vineyards wind energy wind farm wind farms wind power wind turbines Winderlea Vineyards wine wine tasting winter Yale Yale Project on Climate Change Communication Yucca Mountain Zanzibar

The Green Commuter

Sign Up for our Quarterly Newsletter to find out what we and the rest of the industry are doing to make Green Commuting work.