Archive by Author
Commuter Water

Commuter Water

Posted 05 October 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: water | No Comments

An article in London’s Observer newspaper details a creative plan to install modern day drinking fountains in underground, bus, and railway stations across London and the south-east before the 2012 Olympics. According to the article, Hydrachills will be installed at Hammersmith bus station and at the Tower Bridge museum to help lure the roughly 400,000 [...]

Flying Above the Fray

Flying Above the Fray

Posted 24 September 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: video | 1 Comment

Spanish photographer Jose Luis Ortiz placed a camera on his pet golden eagle, and the bird provides another perspective. Turn the music off as it takes away from the flight itself.

Looking Down on Climate Skeptics

Looking Down on Climate Skeptics

Posted 17 September 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: climate change | 2 Comments

The question posed 20 years ago by scientists at NASA was pretty straight forward:  “Is the current human occupancy and activity of planet Earth sustainable?” The answer was complicated given the lack of data. The Earth Observing System or EOS was conceived in 1990 as a way to systematically track changes on earth, from the [...]

Carbon De-Sequestration

Carbon De-Sequestration

Posted 11 September 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: climate change, video | 1 Comment

Timelapse – Los Angeles Wildfire from Dan Blank on Vimeo. Environment Canada estimates that for every acre of primarily coniferous forest burned, approximately 4.81 metric tons of carbon is released into the atmosphere—between 80 percent and 90 percent in the form of carbon dioxide (CO2), with the rest as carbon monoxide (CO) and methane (CH4). [...]

Utilities Seek Stimulus Funds to Upgrade Meters

Utilities Seek Stimulus Funds to Upgrade Meters

Posted 11 August 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: energy | No Comments

The first deadline for smart grid stimulus funding (Funding Opportunity Number 58) from the Department of Energy has passed and it appears, from public statements made by the utilities themselves, that the program may already be close to oversubscribed. According to greentechgrid, “…the rough tally of publicly announced grant requests now stands at a total [...]

California Faces Further Water Cut Backs

California Faces Further Water Cut Backs

Posted 01 July 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: water | No Comments

In June, the National Marine Fisheries Service issued a ruling under the Endangered Species Act that water deliveries in California must be curtailed by an additional 5 to 7 percent (330,000 acre feet) to prevent further loss of protected species. The species in question included the Chinook salmon, the Central Valley steelhead, the southern population [...]

Reinventing the Electric Grid

Reinventing the Electric Grid

Posted 27 April 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: energy, news | No Comments

This whole week, National Public Radio is examining the costs, the politics, and other challenges of upgrading the country's electricity grid. From discussing the state of the grid to siting much-needed new transmission lines to how best to accommodate the intermittent nature of renewable power, the series covers the important issues faces our nation's energy [...]

Climate Change, Snowmelt, and Water Politics in the West

Climate Change, Snowmelt, and Water Politics in the West

Posted 23 April 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: climate change, water | No Comments

There’s much talk about how climate change will affect weather patterns, causing more intense events such as hurricanes and tornadoes. In California, one consequence of the greenhouse gas buildup is a change in precipitation type; climate change is expected to cause a shift from snow to more rain during winter months (i.e., a diminished snowpack), [...]

Intersection of Water and Energy

Posted 26 March 2009 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: energy, uncategorized, water | No Comments

This site has been largely ignored since I took a full-time position back in September 2008 with KEMA, Inc., a global technical and management consulting firm focused on the energy industry. As I wondered how best to archive old content including past articles that I'd written for green building publications, these pages have remained static. [...]

Communicating CSR Progress

Posted 04 September 2008 | By Jeff Stephens | Categories: What is PR? | No Comments

The ongoing challenge for companies implementing corporate social responsibility initiatives is how much to 'toot their own horn' about progress. At what point does calling out tangible company improvements become overly promotional and dismissed as empty marketing speak, or worse greenwashing? Also, what are the most effective communication vehicles? According to the Natural Marketing Institute's [...]