News: Federal flood insurance program; Turning a mall into a walkable community; Electric cars for power storage; Solar power poised for a huge year

> Federal Flood Insurance Program Drowning In Debt. Who Will Pay?: "Millions of American property owners get flood insurance from the federal government, and a lot of them get a hefty discount. But over the past decade, the government has paid out huge amounts of money after floods, and the flood insurance program is deeply in the red."

> How A Giant Mall Parking Lot Turned Into A Park And A Walkable Community: "Instead of paving paradise for a parking lot, this Seattle shopping center is showing how America's suburbs are changing: There are now nearly 400 LEED-certified apartments going up where cars once parked."

> The Dramatic Makeover of New York's Streets Under Bloomberg: "Filmmaker Clarence Eckerson has been documenting conditions on the city's streets since the 1990s, and he has a huge archive of footage. Here, he juxtaposes images of key New York locations before, during, and after radical redesigns that took place under the jurisdiction of the Bloomberg administration’s transportation commissioner, Janette Sadik-Khan. Eckerson shows the transformation of Times Square, Herald Square, the Brooklyn waterfront, the Queensboro Bridge, and several other formerly car-choked areas that are now havens for human beings on foot and on bicycles."

Image: Evan Krape

Image: Evan Krape

> Electric cars may hold solution for power storage: "In a Delaware pilot project, electricity is stored in and retrieved from the batteries of idle vehicles. Car owners would be paid."

> Meanwhile, Ford creates plug-in car that runs on sunlight: "Ford is going to show a concept version of its electric plug-in hybrid C-Max crossover at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas that comes with a giant solar panel on the roof. As a result, Ford says the C-Max Solar Energi Concept can get the same performance from collecting a day's worth of sunlight as from plugging in its regular C-Max Energi into a socket. The automaker estimates that the sun could power 75% of a typical drivers' trips in the concept."

> Solar Power Poised For A Huge Year In 2014: "The equivalent of a 5-megawatt solar farm every hour of every day – that’s how much new solar photovoltaic power is being installed around the world right now, according to a leading industry analyst, and it’s a surge that will help the industry to a mammoth total for 2014."

> 2013's 12 Greatest Strides Towards Reducing Food Waste: "The year of 2013 has been an exciting one for the future of food. Amidst moving to ban trans fats and demonstrating the threats of routinely using antibiotics in animal feed, the country woke up to the opportunity and moral obligation to waste less food. "

> The 2014 Clean Energy Resolution: "The most commonly made resolutions focus on health and well-being -- to stop smoking, eat better, get more exercise, spend more time with family and friends, and so forth. Sometimes they focus on more outward ambitions: to change jobs, get out of debt, or pick up a new hobby. But how many people make resolutions aimed at the kind of changes that are not just best for themselves, but best for everyone? Is there a way to do both?"


News: Water-free dyeing a reality; 10 greenest college campuses; Solar, wind energy continue to make headway; Oil from algae

> How Did A Small Illinois Town End Up With 300 Plug-In Cars?: "Don't let the name fool you; Normal, Illinois, is actually unique. Dubbed EV Town, the [electric-car] initiative includes electric-car purchase incentives, and an aggressive effort by the local government and businesses to develop charging infrastructure."

Image: Nike

> Nike Unveils Water-Free Dyeing Process: "The eco-friendly method called 'ColorDry' eliminates the use of water and harmful chemicals, reducing energy consumption."

> The Greenest Things to Do With Your Body After You Die: "Every year cemeteries across the U.S. bury over 100,000 tons of steel and 1,500,000 tons of concrete from coffins and re-enforced vaults. Green burials are all about reconnecting death and nature, reducing exorbitant costs, and sparking an environmental paradigm shift. "

> How Green is Your Campus? The 10 greenest college campuses in the U.S.

> Downtown Denver Launches Denver 2030 District: "The Denver 2030 District is a unique public/private partnership that brings property owners and managers together with local governments, businesses, and other community stakeholders to provide a business model for urban sustainability through collaboration, leveraged financing, and shared resources. The District's goals include an aggregated reduction in energy and water use, and an increase in alternative methods of transportation among the District member buildings by the year 2030."

> Solar Energy Is Heading to Mainstream in the United States: "Shayle Kann, Vice President of Research at GTM, wanted to assess whether solar is becoming mainstream. He decided to use a checklist, since the U.S. solar market is so complex... So Kann devised a checklist to help answer the question, At what point does solar become mainstream in US? And how close are we?"

Image: Paso Verde

> Paseo Verde in Philly First to Achieve LEED-ND Platinum: "Maximizing mixed use and transportation connections helped this Philadelphia project score the most points since LEED for Neighborhood Development’s creation."

> Haiti switches on to solar power as sustainable electricity solution: 'Solar energy is clean, green and can help to solve Haiti's power crisis. Now the world's largest solar hospital is lighting the way"

> Wind Power Rivals Coal With $1 Billion Order From Warren Buffett: "The decision by Warren Buffett’s utility company to order about $1 billion of wind turbines for projects in Iowa shows how a drop in equipment costs is making renewable energy more competitive with power from fossil fuels."

> SISCA asks students to innovate sustainable solutions: "Grad students from 17 universities around the world submit project proposals to the Sustainability Innovation Student Challenge Award (SISCA) competition, hoping to win the $10,000 grand prize or a $2,500 runner up prize."

Image: PNNL

> Algae to crude oil: Million-year natural process takes minutes in the lab: "Engineers have created a continuous chemical process that produces useful crude oil minutes after they pour in harvested algae — a verdant green paste with the consistency of pea soup."

News: Competition announced for Sandy recovery; Obama talks climate change; Empire State building sees returns; pollution management ideas

Image via Wikipedia

Image via Wikipedia

>HUD secretary Shaun Donovan announces competition for Sandy rebuilding: "On Thursday, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) secretary Shaun Donovan launched Rebuild by Design, a multistage competition meant to generate designs that increase resiliency in vulnerable coastal communities."

>President Obama lays out broad plan to address climate change in address at Georgetown University.

>Empire State Building's energy savings beat forecast: "The upgrades, which included installing new lighting and windows, modernizing boilers, and insulating radiators, earned the building LEED Gold certification in 2011. Once the building is fully retrofitted, which will happen within four years, the upgrades are expected to save $4.4 million annually in energy costs, or about 38% of the building's current bill."

>Video: Green: Vegetation on Our Planet (Tour of Earth)

Image via the New York Times

Image via the New York Times

>Solar-powered boat harnessed for climate research: "In some ways the boat is suited to research. Being completely powered by the sun — the high-efficiency solar cells charge the batteries that power electric motors connected to the craft’s twin propellers — it produces no emissions of carbon dioxide or other gases that could contaminate air samples. And the boat has no problem going slowly, if necessary, as it samples the water — average speed is a sluggish five knots."

>MIT creates ‘plug-and-play’ CO2 scrubber for existing power plants: "As with the conventional thermal-amine scrubber systems, this technology should be capable of removing 90 percent of CO2 from a plant’s emissions, the researchers say. But while the conventional CO2 capture process uses about 40 percent of a plant’s power output, the new system would consume only about 25 percent of the power."

>This climate fix might be decades ahead of its time: "If you looked at knowledge as a commodity, we had generated this enormous amount of knowledge and we hadn't even begun to think of the many ways we could apply it," Eisenberger says. He decided he'd settle on a problem he wanted to solve and then dive into the pool of knowledge for existing technologies that could help him."

>MillerCoors brewery now recycles all waste.