The Green Village News for the ‘Sustainable Development’ Category
Monday, June 15th, 2009
You would be forgiven for thinking that all supermarkets are born equal; the same blueprint for design and layout. However, the new supermarket being built in Gloucester by Sainsbury’s is challenging convention by fitting kinetic road plates in its car park. These plates will generate electricty that can be used in the store’s checkouts, which will help reduce the store’s carbon footprint.
Although not widely known about, the technology isn’t new; the kinetic plates are on trial in a number of distribution warehouses, but this is the first time they have been put to use in a supermarket carpark. Developed by a scientist in Dorset, Peter Hughes of Highway Energy Systems, the kinetic road plates are designed to transfer energy from the the tyres of cars as they pass over them as they travel across the car park. The cars create a rocking motion in the plates which drives a generator to produce the electricity; electricity generated from energy that would otherwise be lost.
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Tags: carbon emissions, eco store, kinetic plates, sainsburys, supermarkets
Posted in Companies and Organisations, Energy and Resources, Environmental Impact, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | No Comments
Monday, June 8th, 2009
A new 195-house eco village has been given the go ahead at a former hospital site near Bristol. The eco houses will be part of the Hanham Hall development being led by building contractors Barrett Developments PLC, where the Grade II listed hospital building will be revamped into a community centre.
The planning proposal, which was submitted to the council in December 2008, also includes 2.5 hectares of agricultural land that will be split into allotments and for community amenities. In addition, a Sustainable Living and Energy Centre will be built as part of the development. A CHP power plant within the eco village, powered by a biomass boiler, will be responsible for providing the village’s hot water and electricity supplies, and will be a key component of the zero carbon development.
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Tags: carbon emissions, carbon footprint, eco-village, hanham hall
Posted in Eco Home, Environmental Impact, Green Living, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | 1 Comment
Monday, June 1st, 2009
An existing estate of concrete construction REEMA housing in Privett Green, Petersfield has been redeveloped into a low impact, environmentally friendly community.
Following extensive consultation, the houses have been redeveloped by housing association, Drum. As part of the consultation, Drum spoke with community members of all ages, including local children, to find out what people wanted from the development. The green credentials and community aspects of the program of regeneration has earned Privett Green a number of awards including the Countryside & Design Award from CPRE (Hampshire).
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Tags: CPRE, eco development, environmentally friendly houses, REEMA Drum housing
Posted in Companies and Organisations, Eco Home, Green Living, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | No Comments
Sunday, May 31st, 2009
Supermarket giant Tesco has unveiled plans for a new carbon neutral store which they will build in Ramsey, Cambridgeshire.
The plans for the carbon neutral store are the latest in a list of new green objectives and promises from the company, who recently featured in the Sunday Times Green Businesses list as the greenest supermarket. In addition to the new store, Tesco have promised to install charging points in their carparks for electric cars, and an extension to their carbon labelling scheme, which provides customers with information about the carbon footprint of their products of choice.
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Tags: carbon emissions, carbon footprint, carbon neutral, corporate responsibility, supermarket, tesco
Posted in Companies and Organisations, Energy and Resources, Environmental Impact, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | 1 Comment
Monday, May 25th, 2009
The city of Bath is renowned for its healing spas and history and attracts around 4 million visitors each year. City officials have approved plans as part of a £6 million transport scheme to build a new park and ride facility at Bathampton Meadows, which they argue will help stem the congestion and traffic problems Bath currently experiences.
Campaign group ‘Save Bathampton Meadows’, who began a petition in October 2008 to promote their cause and help get names on paper to show the council that the park and ride is not wanted. The site is thousands of years old, greenbelt and bordering the River Avon and sits in a valley, which campaigners say will make the development an eyesore and a blot on the landscape; unable to be missed from the viewing points all around the area. Save Bathampton Meadows’ spokeswoman Alison Millar said,
“This park and ride would spoil the meadows and be visible not only to hundreds of homes nearby but to people walking in the hills around it.”
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Tags: bath, bathampton meadows, greenbelt, park and ride
Posted in Conservation and Wildlife, Environmental Impact, Environmental Politics, Green Planet, Sustainable Development, Transport and Travel | No Comments
Thursday, May 21st, 2009
Sitting at the top of Scotland with 22,000 inhabitants, Shetland receives more than its share of wind, making its small wind farm of 5 turbines, including Betsy, a 660kw turbine believed to be the world’s most efficient wind turbine in existence, very well placed.
Betsy reaches outputs of between 52 and 59% of the potential maximum output for the turbine; one reason why it is difficult to argue against the effectiveness of a full scale wind farm were it to be approved and built on Shetland. Not everybody is happy with the proposals for the Viking wind farm however. Although the proposed development could provide 20% of the energy needed to power Scotland, islanders have expressed concern about the detrimental effect the building of the site, including access roads and quarries, would have on the island’s environment.
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Tags: on-shore wind farm, renewable energy, scottish and southern energy, shetland, viking, wind farm, wind power, wind turbine
Posted in Energy and Resources, Environmental Impact, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | 3 Comments
Wednesday, May 13th, 2009
The plans for the London Array, originally proposed in 2001 and which have stood in jeopardy for the last few years have finally been approved thanks to new funding secured by the UK government in last month’s Budget.
German energy giant, E.ON, the company responsible for the majority of Denmark’s wind power and for building half of the off shore wind farms in the world, DONG Energy, and an Abu Dhabi government controlled fund, Masdar, have come together to make the London Array a reality, investing £2.2bn in the development. Work on the onshore farm will begin this summer, with the offshore farm development due to begin in 2011.
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Tags: dong energy, eon, government, masdar, renewable energy, wind farm, wind power
Posted in Companies and Organisations, Energy and Resources, Environmental Politics, Green Family, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | No Comments
Friday, May 8th, 2009
Yesterday, the Housing Minister for Wales, Jane Davidson, announced that Wales will be setting stricter rules on new buildings from September 1st. The building regulations currently in place are outdated and this movement will help create more sustainable homes in the future.
The new regulations will reduce the carbon emissions of new home builds by over 31%, compared to the old system and new houses will need to consume less water and be built of more sustainable materials to meet the standards set.
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Tags: Eco Home, energy efficient, new build property, wales
Posted in Eco Home, Energy and Resources, Environmental Politics, Green Living, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | No Comments
Saturday, May 2nd, 2009
Solar technology company Abengoa Solar announced this week that their second solar tower in Seville, Spain, PS20, has begun commercial production with the capacity to power 10,000 homes, which will prevent 12,000 tons of CO2 being released into the atmosphere.
The solar power tower plant works through a field of 1255 heliostats, which are mirrored surfaces that can be turned to the direction of the sun’s rays, that reflect and focus the sun’s energy on a receiver mounted on a central tower. The radiation heats water or molten salts, which then produces steam that in turn powers a turbine affixed to a generator. The power could be stored in molten salt storage tanks, a further technology that Abengoa Solar are currently working on. This would then enable power to be supplied during the night and during cloudy weather.
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Tags: abengoa solar, renewable energy, solar energy, solar power, solar tower
Posted in Energy and Resources, Green Planet, Sustainable Development | No Comments
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009
The Empire State Building in New York is leading the way in retrofitting old buildings by taking advantage of green technologies to reduce emissions. $20 million will be spent, beginning in the summer, to reduce energy usage by 38% a year by 2013. The building was constructed in 1913 and although renovation work has been carried out over the years, the efficiency of the building has been rather low compared to newer buildings in and around the New York area.
This project is set to show that eco retrofitting very large buildings can be cost efficient. The Empire State Building could recoup the costs incurred in as little as 3 – 4 years, and because large buildings account for a significant proportion of emissions in large cities such as New York, renovating them with green technologies would save them many millions of dollars in wasted energy costs.
The money invested in the project will go towards replacing 6500 of the building’s massive windows with more efficient versions, as well as upgrading the electrical, heating and ventilation systems so that they save as much energy as possible. Much of the work will be carried out on site to reduce costs and emissions from transportation.
New York’s finest building will show the rest of the world that upgrading large buildings to be energy efficient does not mean expense and compromise.
Tags: carbon emissions, empire state building, energy efficient, new york
Posted in Green Planet, Sustainable Development | No Comments