Showing posts with label E4S. Show all posts
Showing posts with label E4S. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Akron Greenprint rollout delayed

I know I said I didn't have time to post, but -- at the E4S meeting in Akron tonight I learned some news that may interest my Akron readers. The schedule for tonight's event had been announced at the last meeting in August as including a preview of Akron's new Greenprint. That didn't happen. Evidently the process is taking much longer than anticipated. I had a chance to talk to some folks who are involved in the Greenprint, one of which works for a company that assists businesses, non-profits and now entire cities in assessing their green needs and helping to format a template for sustainability that will continue on no matter who is in political control at the time.

I was told that Cleveland's ongoing sustainability project began without any attention to the underlying system. Instead, the demand was for visible results from the get-go. One guy was hired to begin the project and was told that he would get funding if he could show bottom line efficiencies. There have been some dramatic results up by the mouth of the Cuyahoga, and evidently Akron's Greenprint folks are quite envious. However, the consultant I talked to felt it was better to put the underlying structure in place first. She said the Cleveland project is now faced with having to go back and do just that before they can continue to move forward.

E4S is all about networking. There is a "network weaver" who gives out conversation starting questions and gets people talking to each other around the room. I have had the opportunity to talk to very interesting and intelligent people. Tonight I met a local landscape designer from a firm that can help you conserve water through landscaping choices. I also met an architect who said he has worked on some of the Akron Public Schools new community learning centers. He says that the new schools yet to be built are going to feature more green elements. What fantastic news!

The Ohio new schools project began back in the era of Taft and his cronies, and nothing about green and sustainable building practices were included in the first rounds of urban school designs. Strickland has ushered in an era of progressive thinking about the buildings we work and live in. The Ohio Schools Facilities Commission has adopted the LEED for Schools Green Building Rating System. And just in the nick of time. As fuel costs go up, school districts investing in green energy systems will be ahead of the game. Green building practices in the urban setting will have a huge effect on student health and learning.

For more on the how and why of building green schools, go here.

It all makes me very glad that the building I teach in is on the list for the very final round of building and renovation. Maybe my dream of teaching in a school with a green roof with solar panels and geothermal wells under the parking lots is not so out there after all.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Thinking Solar in NE Ohio

As the last week of summer break for this teacher draws to a close, I'm happy to report that the thesis writing project is also reaching the final stages. There are a few holes left to fill in and then it must be examined by my academic advisers who will no doubt have valuable critiques that call for revisions here and there. But the bulk of it feels like it will stand on two legs and make its way through the official channels and eventually end up in electronic format for all to peruse.

I look forward to blogging regularly once again as well as having more time for participation in local events both environmental and theatrical. After attending last night's E4S session on commercial applications for solar power investment, I feel a wee bit more hopeful about Akron's chances of stepping forward and taking leadership in becoming energy efficient. The need to educate the public and private sectors remains paramount.

Last night we looked at solar installations at some forward-looking NEOhio businesses. Lake Erie Business Park near Toledo is installing a massive solar panel display on their roof. Prospective renters will benefit from lower energy costs, making this incubator highly attractive.

What most people don't get is how many grants and tax credits are available for commercial solar installations. Panel members at the presentation last night put up their figures for a number of installations and we could see how the initial cost figures are rapidly reduced by taking advantage of both federal and state assistance. Sorry I didn't take the time to write down the exact figures, but I can tell you we were all impressed to see 100k plus projects whittled down to a start up figure of between 20 and 30 thousand dollars.

The biggest hill to get over is resistance to invest in something that takes five to ten years before savings show up in energy expenditures. And yet, the solar panels (which are the most expensive part of the package) are good for 50 years. The electrical apparatus (not nearly so costly) will need to be replaced once every 20 years. Meanwhile, we know for sure that energy costs are on the rise. Both First Energy and AEP are petitioning to raise rates -- not just slightly, either! AEP is pushing for a 45% rate increase! First Energy is going for at least a 15% increase over the next three years.

If you live in or near the Akron area, don't forget the Green Energy Expo this Saturday at the JS Knight Center. It's free to attend and features an exposition of 50 plus vendors as well as a keynote address by Dr Lonnie G Thompson, on Retreating Glaciers: A Paleoclimate Perspective from the World's Highest Mountains. Dr Thompson was a featured adviser to Al Gore in the making of the Inconvenient Truth documentary. The afternoon will feature breakout sessions on a wide array of green energy issues, including solar, wind, wood gasifcation, LED lighting, energy efficiency, creating a sustainable office, investing in the green economy, and much much more -- and as cannot be stated too often -- it's free and open to the public!

September 10 -- put this date on your calendar so that you will attend the next E4S Akron session, at which the group working on Akron's Greenprint will be presenting some of their ideas and soliciting responses.

Monday, August 04, 2008

Akron Green Events in August - E4S

Two major green events are taking place this August in Akron. I would like to encourage all my local readers to attend. At one event you will have the opportunity to discover what is available locally in terms of going solar and at the other event, discover products and services that can help you build or renovate in green sustainable ways. Both events are free and open to the public.

August 13th is the Akron Entrepreneurs for Sustainability meeting (Info below)
August 16th is the NEOhio Green Energy Expo at the J S Knight center. (info in the following post)

Making Cents of Solar for Business // Learn from regional success stories
E4S Greater Akron Network Event
An E4S and Green Energy Ohio (GEO) Collaboration

Date: Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Time: 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm
Location: GOJO Industries, One GOJO Plaza, Suite 500, Akron, Ohio 44311
General Price: Free

Description:
  • What are solar myths and realties?
  • What does it cost? What is the ROI?
  • Explore Solar PV, Thermal and Passive Solar Opportunities

Join the E4S Network on August 13 as we explore when solar makes sense and cents for commercial and industrial applications in our region. What are the solar myths, realities, and resources available? E4S has asked local architects, installers and end-users to join us to share their experience and stories on commercial solar projects. We’ll talk about photovoltaics, solar thermal hot water heating and passive solar technology.

What do you need to know to be solar ready and understand the solar technology options for your business?

Green Energy Ohio will also join us to share a preview of their August 16th Northeast Ohio Green Energy Expo.

Speakers will include:

  • Bill Doty, Doty & Miller Architecs
  • Erica Weliczko, REpower Solutions
  • Others to be announced soon

Discover the Possibilities with the E4S Network
Join 120+ leaders from business, government, academia and nonprofit
organizations as we explore the possibilities to bring triple bottom line benefits to your business or organization and the region. Discover how to reduce costs, generate new revenue opportunities, start new businesses or product lines while reducing environmental and climate impacts.

Registration is Required: Click here to register online or call 216-451-7755.

Directions: GOJO Industries, One GOJO Plaza, Suite 500, Akron, Ohio 44311. Click here for directions.

Event Sponsorships Available:
E4S is actively seeking event and program sponsors to help grow the E4S Hub. Sponsorships start at $1,500 per event to reach nearly 6,000 people interested in building a sustainable economy in Northeast Ohio. Contact Holly for more information on sponsorship at (216) 451-7755.

Request a Display Table:
If you have sustainable products or services for businesses, we welcome your display table request. A staff member will get back to you within a few days of your form
submission. E4S Members receive $50 off tables. For more information, click here or call Peter at 216-451-7755.

  • $150 - Full Table
  • $100 - Half Table

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

E4S in Akron -- no more waste!

It's easy to get depressed about environmental issues -- so what a big emotional boost to attend the E4S event "Waste is a business opportunity" at the new Ohio Brewery on Main Street this evening. The event was packed, and the networking non-stop. What is more, the future for reducing and reusing waste streams is looking much brighter.

We heard some short testimonials from local business people, who shared what their companies are doing with and to various forms of waste. Shearer's (makers of chips and other food products) sells their used cooking oil to a company that extracts the nutrients to use in dog and cat food products. The potato peelings are sold to a company that turns them into cattle feed. Another company uses the potato peelings to make biodegradable "leather." The company also collects and resells shrink wrap to a local toy company that recycles plastic. They are working on installing heat exchangers to reuse the heat from the cooking process to heat the buildings and offices. Shearer's saved 200K by initiating sustainable practices last year and made an additional 200K by turning waste streams into profits.

GoJo Industries also sells plastic waste and donates soap to local charities who distribute it to those in need. Zerolandfill is an organization that recycles samples of fabric, brick, and other items used by architectural firms that would otherwise end up in a landfill. The samples are distributed to local artists and educators who can use the materials for a wide variety of arts and crafts projects. They are looking to expand into Akron, as there are many local architectural firms with resources to recycle.

A Piece of Cleveland harvests good wood from buildings that are being demolished. The materials are then turned into new pieces for the home, such as counter tops, built in furniture and so on. The owner of this company spoke with great passion about "upcycling" building materials and providing the purchaser with a "rebirth certificate" for each piece, detailing its point of origin and historical context.

The most exciting news of the evening hands down was a new process from PolyFlow, that supposedly can take all plastics, not just one and two, and turn them into a reusable polymer. That also includes compound plastic items as well as rubber tires and carpets. Sounds incredible, sort of a 21st century alchemical miracle. The man who spoke said the business plan is to lease the technology and establish plants all over the world.

E4S makes sure that people in the audience are thinking and connecting about the topic of the night, and we were instructed to talk in small groups to answer questions about waste streams in our daily lives and how we deal with them...or not! I talked to a young architect working in downtown Akron. He has worked to get everyone to turn off their computers every night when they go home, which saves a whole lot of energy. They are also going to invest in rain barrels to put at the corners of their building with drip lines attached and spread throughout their building's landscaping.

I thought about the school district in which I teach and how unsustainable so many of its practices are. Shouldn't all the food waste be going to a company like Paygro, which turns food and green waste into usable products such as mulch and soil enhancers. I've seen custodians toss fluorescent light bulbs into the trash, which is a huge no no, but who's paying attention? We let kids buy water and sports drinks in plastic bottles, but don't provide recycling for those plastic bottles or for aluminum cans. And we won't even talk about how much is left turned on and plugged in over night and the weekends.

Valley Park Association, Summit County Metro Parks, and a representative from Akron's E4S is expanding their Akron event calendar and by tonight's turnout, we can only hope for more green and sustainable business opportunities locally. Lots of movers and shakers were in the audience tonight, including folks from the Ohio EPA, KSU radio, The Sierra Club, CuyahogaGreenPrint, which is actually getting up and running -- look for a web site soon and invitations to join in the movement to turn our village green!

Monday, May 12, 2008

Blogging ennui

May has been a blogging bust here at the Village Green. The first word that came to mind was a fancy one, "ennui" -- which, according to dictionary.com means:

...a feeling of utter weariness and discontent resulting from satiety or lack of interest; boredom: The endless lecture produced an unbearable ennui.

In other words, sometimes you have to put a cap on it or satiety will wipe you out.

Sometimes you need a respite. I've been down with a virus, so I've been doi
ng little more than reading actual books, not blogs. Watching some television. NBA Finals. The weird last four weeks of House. Making plans for the garden as planting time approaches. I've managed to get some weeding done and have a few new perennials waiting to go in beds.

I tried to find a spice bush locally. We had one in the garden in Granger. I remember looking forward to it's amazing fragrance every spring. So I looked on Ebay and found a grower with Spice bushes for sale in Indiana. Two 24" bare rooted plants are on their way via US mail.

Obviously the garden is a good place to lose the ennui and find some renewal. Blogging energy is beginning to return! I'm going to the Akron E4S event this week at the new Ohio Brewery on Main St. The topic is
"Waste is a Business Opportunity." I hope to see lots of local interest in reducing and reusing various waste streams. Looking forward to blogging about it!


Saturday, March 29, 2008

E4S Cleveland Event: Waste Reduction & Recycling

The Village Green should be back up and running regularly shortly -- at least for another week. Spring break is just around the corner and boy, am I ready for it! In the mean time, Entrepreneurs for Sustainability just announced another event, this one set for Cleveland. I wish they'd do the same event in Akron, as waste reduction and recycling is an area in which all citizens can take direct action.



Tuesday, April 8, 2008

8:30 am - 3:30 pm


IMG_0097

  • Is your company looking for cost savings and other opportunities in your waste stream?
  • Are you ramping up a new or existing recycling program?
  • Is your organization ready to move beyond recycling to waste elimination or to set a zero waste goal?

Join E4S and the Cuyahoga County Solid Waste District on April 8th to learn about waste elimination best practices, resources and to tour the Oberlin Allied Waste facility. The Cuyahoga County Solid Waste District will provide participants with a hot off the press recycling and waste reduction resource kits.


Click here for more information and speaker details.


Registration limited, RSVP online or call 216-451-7755.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

E4S in Akron: Linking the Local Food Industry

Great news! E4S (Entrepreneurs for Sustainability) is expanding its Akron events calendar. Hope many of you can make it to this one -- it sounds really interesting and valuable. I will be out of town over spring break so I hope Terra Not Terror can cover this one for us:

New Akron Network Event

Linking the Local Food Industry
April 9th

DSC03638
Join us on April 9th for the first Akron E4S Network Event of 2008 and discover the opportunities for the local food industry in Greater Akron.

This is the first of six Akron Network Events that E4S is planning for the SECOND WEDNESDAY of each month in 2008. E4S Network Events attract leaders from business, government, academia and other institutions who want to put sustainable business practices to work and realize triple bottom line benefits (economic, environmental and social) for their organizations and the region.

On April 9th E4S is collaborating with the Cuyahoga Valley Countryside Conservancy
to explore the possibilities for triple bottom line benefits in the local food industry. Farmers, food distributors, groceries, urban gardeners, chefs and companies who are pledging to purchase local food will be in attendance. Connect with customers and suppliers of the local food supply chain and learn about the exciting local food businesses and projects in the region. Are you interested in starting a new business in the local food industry? Do you want to purchase more local foods?

Discover the possibilities!

_________________________________________________________

Register:
RSVP online or call 216-451-7755.


Request a Display Table:
If you have a business to business sustainable product or service, apply for a table by clicking here or call 216-451-7755.
  • $150 - Full Table
  • $100 - Half Table
  • The E4S Member standard rate is $50 off full or half table prices.


E4S Greater-Akron Network Event Sponsor

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Wednesday, February 06, 2008

E4S can help you become an Urban Farmer

Tired of waiting for your local government to do something to make your city greener? Entrepreneurs for Sustainability are here to help bring out the urban farmer in you! This event takes place in Cleveland, sounds fascinating -- and it's free!

Emerging Urban Farming Opportunities

DSC03638
• Why is increasing urban food
production vital to the region?


• How is this promising industry
budding in the region?


Attend the E4S Third Tuesday Network Event on February 19th to explore your inner farmer and find new business opportunities that will support the health of the regional economy and improve the health of all citizens.
_________________________________________________________

Register

RSVP early as this event has sold out the last two years.
RSVP online or call 216-451-7755.


Request a Display Table

Display tables are available at the E4S Third Tuesday Network Event on February 19th. If you have a business to business green product or service apply for a table by clicking here or call 216-451-7755.
  • $150 – Full Table
  • $100 – Half Table
  • The E4S Member standard rate is $50 off full or half table prices.
Emerging Urban Farming Opportunities E4S Third Tuesday Network Event

Date:
Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Time:
5:30 to 8:30 pm

Location:
Great Lakes Brewing Company, Tasting Room, 2701 Carroll Ave. Cleveland

General Price:
Free

Thursday, October 18, 2007

E4S helps you implement sustainability

Entrepreneurs for Sustainability continue to offer cutting edge workshops that can help us turn our building and manufacturing processes away from wasteful, mindless practices that harm our planet and our environment. This one looks very interesting and very useful:

Introduction to SI Workshop (SI = Sustainability Implementation Group)

Date: Thursday, November 1, 2007

Time: 9:00 am -11:30 am

Location: E4S Connection and Learning Center
540 E. 105th St., Suite 213 Cleveland, OH 44108

Price: $50 / organization (We recommend that 3-5 individuals from your management team attend)

What is an SI Group?
A eight month, peer-based, action focused, learning process that increases the rate you can learn new technologies and processes and the probability you will successfully implement what you learn. Develop relationships with other entrepreneurial leaders who will support you during and after the SI Group ends its journey.

Sample of Monthly SI Group Topics:

  • Principles of Sustainability – such as Natural Capitalism, Whole-Systems Design and more
  • Developing an implementation plan based on successful case stories
  • How to engage your employees in the process
  • Waste elimination
  • Green procurement
  • High performance, green building
  • Energy efficiency, renewable energy and alternative fuels
  • Curriculum for each SI Group will be custom designed to meet each group’s needs.

Who:
Entrepreneurial business leaders and their top management team (3-5 participants/organization) who want to learn how to implement sustainability principles in their buildings, processes, product, markets and company culture.
  • To read more about E4S SI Groups click here
  • To register for the E4S SI Group Intro Workshop click here

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Biomimicry Event sponsored by E4S

E4S is an amazing group that puts together events to help us achieve a greener life in NEOhio. Wish I could go to this one:

E4S Knowledge Network National Speaker Event

The Future of Design:
Biomimicry with Janine Benyus

September 25. Get the details here.

Picture 5 The real power of sustainability and triple bottom-line thinking is that it inspires innovation in design of products, processes, buildings and organizations. Many of the leaders who are putting this power to work agree that Biomimicry is the leading edge of design and Janine Benyus is its inspiring force.

Janine and her colleagues ask their clients for their toughest design challenges and turn to nature for what they call the “champion adapters.” Janine is calling for a biologist at every design table.

Multi-national companies like Dupont, GE, Herman Miller, Interface and Nike have answered the call and are among a growing list of corporate clients of the Biomimicry Guild.
Picture 6

Increasing numbers of engineers, architects, product designers, business leaders and economists from around the world
are consulting nature, and each month, new bio-inspired products, processes, and policies are announced.

Attend this event to help us plant the design strategies of Biomimicry into the region's DNA.


Friday, June 29, 2007

E4S at the Akron Zoo

Over 99% of what is being built right now in Akron will end up as toxic waste in a landfill -- probably sooner than later. That includes all the brand new spanking school/community centers we are spending heaps of money upon. I learned this from a green builder who works in the Akron area. I met him at an Entrepreneurs for Sustainability event in the brand new geothermal Komodo Dragon Hall at the Akron Zoo this past Wednesday evening.

I am not an entrepreneur and never will be, but I certainly have a passion for learning about how to make Akron a greener, healthier and happier place to live. I knew nothing about this group other than a short blurb announcing the event that appeared in the Akron Beacon Journal.

Every Third Thursday of the month, E4S sponsors an event that promotes networking and problem solving in developing businesses that will enhance our lives and the planet at the same time. This one was called Growing the Healthy, High Performance Building Industry in Greater Akron. I was very impressed with the organization of this event. It was a horizontal approach, with a concerted effort to not indulge in talking "down" to the participants. A very brief introduction set the parameters. There were three discussion areas set up in the room, each with a question posed and written on a large pad. Anybody could start at any of the groups. A facilitator-scribe in each discussion circle jotted down the ideas and comments on the pads of paper. It was inspiring to see so many women participating, in leadership roles and as entrepreneurs. At the end of an hour, highlights from each ongoing conversation were shared with the participants.

Cleveland was the seeding place for this organization and that city is much further along in actual green building projects and green business start-ups. A good many of the participants were down from Cleveland. A major player in Cleveland appears to be the Greater Cleveland Green Building Coalition. A woman from this organization encouraged us to call with any questions about green building -- they are a non profit that acts as a central clearing house on green building information and growing. They even have a blog with some very useful tips on how to find green products and services.

Both Jacobs Field and the Great Lakes Science Center are currently featuring new solar photovoltaic installations. These are to serve as highly visible beacons of renewable energy sources to lead us toward a greener way of living.

Akron is woefully behind in forward thinking. We allow buildings and housing to be thrown up without regard for sustainability and all other environmental costs. The bottom line is the low bid, which continues to be what traps us in the 1950s mindset. In that post war boom era, cheap housing tracts began to eat up the local surrounding countryside. Now new waves of mini mansions obliterate what few acres of family farms remain.

To find such a bustling crowd gathered in a beautiful new green facility was very encouraging. I met architects, builders and contractors, landscapers and a woman who has started a green cleaning company that will teach businesses how to use green cleaning products and techniques in their buildings to improve the health and safety of workers and customers.

The meeting room buzzed with discussions. Discussions about building awareness, educating the public and collecting data and analysis to show that green building is essential investment for society's future. Locally, some people felt that grass roots efforts to influence the local politicians would not be effective. The feeling was that the big energy companies and corporations must be influenced before the politicians will fall in line. Makes sense, for as long as candidates have to raise piles of money to be elected, it is the big corps that will set the agenda.

However, we can start to demand healthy buildings to live and work in. Costs will go down as green building becomes the norm rather than the oddity. Citizens are starting to learn the value in knowing where and how products are made and may start to think twice before buying the cheap made in China products. Meanwhile the E4S project is here to generate green growth by Connecting, Learning and Doing. They have over 4000 members in NE Ohio, quite amazing growth in only 7 years. I will definitely be attending more of their events. Coming up in Cleveland is the Solar 2007 Annual Conference. Sunday, July 8th is the public day of this conference and yours truly plans to attend and report back here.

Meeting/Dining Room in Komodo Kingdom

We were also given the opportunity to take a tour of the new Komodo Kingdom with the architect and a zoo official. This beautiful building cost only 3% more than "normal" to build it certifiably green. Every aspect of it was designed and selected based upon making the lowest impact upon the environment. For example, each waterless urinal in the men's rooms saves 20, 000 gallons of water per year! All the furnishings were made out of recycled materials. The facility houses the giant reptiles, a cafeteria, a hands on exhibit hall area, educational classrooms and special animal exhibition areas.

We were taken down to the lower depths to see the heat pump system that draws heat from collectors situated underneath the parking lot. Each room in the building has its own pump with a specific setting depending upon its needs. The giant reptiles housed in the building have special temperature needs as cold-blooded species and this system works perfectly to keep them comfortable all year round.

Finally, here's one of the two giant Galapagos tortoises who dwell in the new hall. They go outside during the day and inside at night. I love their faces. I felt an urge to strike up a conversation with them. Later, I observed their keepers luring them inside with succulent cactus and honeyed words!