Schreiner’s Media Landscape

September 8, 2010

Oil Shale Debate is Back with New Report on “Fossil Foolishness”; A Defining Issue in Utah’s Race for Governor

Utah’s governor goes on a statewide fact-finding/discussion sort of campaign starting today to develop an energy policy or something. An admirable endeavor seeing as Utah’s energy policy has basically been oil/coal/natural gas since the invention of the internal combustion engine and the forced-air furnace. The only mistake Gov. Herbert seems to be making is assuming oil shale development is acceptable. It simply is not.

Yet another report is now out showing how oil shale development is bad for the environment, bad for consumers, a waste of water and, ironically, energy. But you can bet with the BP disaster, scarcer resources, and the lack of any national energy policy that, in the coming weeks, the pressure from fossil fuel makers on Utah’s governor to bow to their demands and piles of special interest money is going to be enough to squeeze oil from his skull.

Herbert would be best advised to open his mind to Utah’s major renewable resources of solar, geothermal, wind, and biomass and lead their development on a global scale, bypassing our myopic and unstable federal government. Renewable is where the rest of the world is going and the market for related products is being cornered by China, Germany, Japan and other countries who see the future clearly and are seizing it.

If Herbert can’t see it, then I suggest we get a new governor. Democrat Peter Corroon has been a long-time advocate of renewable energy and is adept at actually implementing it as Salt Lake County mayor at the Salt Palace and elsewhere. If energy is not a defining issue in this November’s election, I don’t know what is.

September 4, 2010

Notes from the Road: Obsession is Good- If You’re Not Obsessed with It

Filed under: Schreiner Productions, Solar, journalism, media, video — Ken Schreiner @ 3:48 pm

I believe obsession can be just a severe case of attention to detail. But that doesn’t make it more enjoyable. The recent, hopefully-noticeable absence of posts here was due to my eleven days traveling through Ohio, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Virginia. It was the most grueling trip in my company’s history and right up there with the marathons I pulled during 9/11, the first Gulf War, a couple of World Series and other big stories during my TV news days.

I shot everything from spinal implants to motorcycles to utility-scale solar inverters. Because some of this stuff is really tiny (see pic), it can be a real strain on the eyes. Good thing I have focus-assist on my Panasonic HD camera. It’s perfect for the tight closeups of small objects I have to get. I also got to shoot from the back of a pickup truck driving through the backwoods of Virginia. Sounds dangerous but it sure beats getting stuck in traffic in South Boston. I also shot one of the largest solar farms in the country north of Columbus, Ohio.

I usually like traveling for business because I see the world on someone else’s dime. But it’s tough to take in the local attractions when you’re doing the work of three people yourself: photographer, logistics coordinator, and producer. It’s nerve-wracking because I have to think of everything constantly which means I’m not concentrating on anything ever. Equipment must work, flights cannot be missed, traffic must not be bad. Oh, and don’t forget to eat something. Because one of the clients I worked for on this trip is new, there’s also the get-acquainted part. Not so easy when you’re setting up a camera, booking your next hotel, and negotiating with the insurance company over a fender bender on your rental car at the same time.

Despite the aggravations and a week and a half of obsessing, fretting, worrying, over-planning, and under-sleeping, both I and the most important thing- the raw material for at least ten videos- survived. This despite the TSA at Logan Airport in Boston running the scanner line backwards and sending some of my fragile electronic gear, including my 500 GB portable hard drive which holds EVERYTHING I shoot on the road, crashing to the floor. The nightmares about that are beginning to subside. A big shout-out to Seagate. Your stuff saved my career.

It ended up being a great trip and the most lucrative of my company’s history. I also learned that a little obsession goes a long way. But a lot of obsession causes you to go nowhere.

August 19, 2010

Negative Gas Bill? Impossible Dream Comes True Thanks to Solar Hot Water!

Filed under: Environment, Power Grid, Schreiner Productions, Solar, Utah, conservation, pollution, renewable, water — Ken Schreiner @ 6:00 pm

Cubs win World Series. Bill O’Reilly gets a story right. Some things you just can’t believe will ever happen. Ever. What about a natural gas bill of- nothing? In fact, negative nothing. That’s what I got today from Questar. We installed a solar hot water system in our home earlier this year. Ever since, our gas bills have averaged around $4.00 less per month than before installation. But this past month’s was a whopper- as in a big, fat zero. Not only did we not use any natural gas all month (we barbecue, the furnace is off for the summer, and our water is heated by the sun), due to an accounting error, Questar’s corrections actually resulted in a credit of $2.18. They owe us.

Our solar hot water system makes all the difference and, while it’s not rocket science and is easily affordable, it’s unique in several ways. Most notably, it saves even more money and pollution (though natural gas is arguably clean by fossil fuel standards) by not only heating the water using the sun, but storing the saved hot water in a tank heated by electricity (nearly all water heaters are gas). Our home is solar electricity-powered so you see the savings there.

I can’t say that a zero gas bill is ever going to happen for us again. But I can tell you that solar power and solar hot water work and save you money. And the panels look great wherever you put them.

August 15, 2010

Solar Power Growth in Utah Finally Paying Off? Major Developments Prove The Sun is Too Big to Fail

It’s been four years since we went solar. It started with Solarius Precarious (pic left), our 2 kWh, sun-tracking array in November 2006 (it went on-line in March 2007). We expanded our commitment in January 2010 with the installation of our solar hot water system (video below). During this time, we’ve felt strangely alone. Not only do the vast majority of people not share our beliefs, commitment, and investment. Many of them still consider us stupid, crazy, and perhaps even dangerous.

After a couple of years endlessly talking about and promoting solar energy- part of my role as director for the Utah Solar Energy Association which I left in 2009 after three years- I’ve pretty much stopped. In conversation or at parties, I still get the blank disinterested looks, the angry eco-terrorist-in-our-midst reactions, and more than anything, the I-just-don’t-get-it capitulation. It’s at that point I cease my ramblings and return to the subjects of other people’s kids, movies, celebrity scandals, and the other stuff most people seem to care about.

Throw in the lousy economy and a president who seems to have abandoned his commitment to clean energy and solar appears to be a dead issue. But a couple of developments the past few days have me encouraged again. First,

the Salt Lake Tribune ran this article today about the growth of Utah’s solar industry. There are woefully few articles about the subject here despite the fact that we are one of the best places in the world to have solar. FYI: I

was featured in one of the few in the Deseret News last year (pic from the article at right). Things have definitely improved in Utah from when I got here in 2006. But the change has been glacial, mostly because of the ruling

Republican Party’s blind allegiance to coal, the fossil fuel lobby, the bad economy, and lack of effective renewable energy industry lobbyists.

Second, my commitment, promotion, and knowledge of solar power may have scored my biggest renewable energy video gig. I can’t give out details yet. I’ll know more this week and report it here. All I can tell you is it’s big- really big. That’s why I’m so excited about solar again. Not just for me but for the entire planet. Things are indeed changing for the better. And it makes me want to talk about it again- even if I still get the blank looks and have to talk about other people’s kids first.

August 2, 2010

Where’s the Wave of Support for Rewewables After BP’s Gulf Disaster?

Filed under: America, Children, Earth, Environment, Nature, Oil, Solar, Utah, coal, conservation, mining, pollution, renewable — Ken Schreiner @ 1:08 pm

As I rode my bike along Willow Creek near downtown Park City the other day, I noticed something new since I’d been there a year ago. There were about seven new homes, built not only to be affordable but also passively and actively solar. They all had at least 1kWh of solar PVs and enough solar thermal panels to provide hot water for a family of at least four. As a construction guy told me at a bar later on, it’s the first subdivision of its type in Park City. This from one of the most otherwise progressive towns in America. I mean, they have a dog park.

But instead of being happy, I was actually rather sad. Seeing these new homes, which fit my idea of what all new home and office and construction should be, I thought about the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. I tried to detect a change in my own attitude as well as the rest of America. It didn’t change me much because, frankly, I changed my mind about renewable energy about ten years ago. Sadly, it has had almost zero impact on the rest of America.

No one seems to understand that our dependence on fossil fuels- oil as well as coal- is finite. No one seems to care that the toll on our children is going to far outweigh the convenience we enjoy now because of our fossil fuel folly. No one seems to care about anything except not wanting to hear about it any more. Just as they don’t want to think about energy, power, pollution or any of that ever, they don’t want to hear any more about BP, oil spills, solar power, or the people of Earth having to change their habits or face a bleak and avoidable future.

We just don’t care. Do we?

July 19, 2010

China Now World’s Biggest Energy Hog; Is America Losing- or Learning?

The U.S. is still by far the biggest energy consumer per capita, with the average American burning five times as much energy annually as the average Chinese citizen…”

- Fatih Birol, chief economist, International Energy Agency

There was a time a hundred years ago when being the biggest consumer of energy was considered good. No, not just good. The best. That’s when the United States surpassed England as the preeminent world economic power. Now China has done it to the USA. It was only a matter of time.

Energy for manufacturing and commerce has previously been more important than energy for simply living. China is now the leading manufacturing nation so it stands to reason it would use more energy. But with humans having more spare time on their hands, and manufacturing becoming more efficient, it follows that China- the most populous nation on the planet- would surpass everybody in energy use because they simply have more people. Computers, TVs, video games, iPhones, cars, lawn mowers, air conditioners and furnaces. All these things require using utility-provided energy. And in case you hadn’t noticed, gas is not 29 cents a gallon anymore.

However, statistics from the International Energy Agency show Americans use FIVE TIMES as much energy as the average Chinese citizen. With China’s hard times still visible in the rearview mirror, their people have not become as lazy, stupid, and wasteful as Americans are. Hey, it took us 100 years to get that way. Given China’s rapid growth, you’d think they’d catch up to us pretty soon. But as consumer products become more and more energy efficient, the chances of that happening look pretty dim- kind of like the lights of New York City on a hot, summer day.

Does this spell doom for the USA as the world’s leading country, as it did with Great Britain at the turn of the 20th century? Happily, no. Conservation has always been an evasive characteristic of a powerful nation. Wealth leads to waste. Luxury largesse. Now, because of dwindling resources and a poor economy, Americans are being forced to conserve as we did  during World War 2. The Chinese will soon find out after exhausting their seemingly inexhaustible supplies of fossil fuels, they must make hard choices. Hopefully, they will learn from America’s bad example and choose conservation now to avert the energy crisis the USA is now in the grips of.

America’s energy crisis has resulted in more conservation. But it has not spurred competitive development of renewable energy resources as it has in China, Germany, Japan, Spain and virtually every other country. The good news is America is finally stopping the insane, profligate use of fossil fuels to power and pollute our country and planet. But the new champions of insane, profligate energy use- China, India, Brazil- have already put in place industry and residential incentives for renewable energy development and use anticipating the problem that has crippled America due to its continuing dependence on oil and coal, failure to plan for the ultimate exhaustion of those supplies, and the damage they ironically cause its economy and inhabitants.

That puts China and the rest even farther ahead of the USA. And that- as they say in Beijing- is the bad news.

July 15, 2010

My Sustainable Delivery Run: Schreiner Productions and eGO Hit the Road as World’s Leaders in Sustainable Video, Transportation

Filed under: Environment, Internet, Salt Lake, Schreiner Productions, Solar, Utah, media, pollution, renewable, video — Ken Schreiner @ 2:18 pm

I don’t get a chance to ride our eGO as much as I would like because my wife uses it most of the time to commute to and from campus during the warm months. But today, she had to take her car and I had a bunch of videos to deliver to four different campus locations. So I got the toy to play with on my totally-sustainable, non-polluting excursion into video and environmental history. It would be the first-ever solar-powered delivery of solar-powered videos.

For those of you who don’t know, the eGO is a battery-powered bike. It doesn’t have pedals and the weight of the batteries on the bottom makes it weigh about as much as a VW Beetle. We’ve had it more than a year now and it’s worked great, even on the big hills we have to climb around here. You can ride it on bike paths, sidewalks, streets, you don’t need a license, or any kind of crazy fuel or lubricants.

We live about four miles from campus. I hit the road at 10 a.m., made all four stops (it’s a big campus), and had enough juice left to stop at the bank to deposit the money I made from the videos I delivered and the grocery store. Yes, the eGO has storage baskets on the back and you can even use a backpack too as long as you don’t weigh it down too much. Ten miles round trip. I got home around noon. That’s great time.

It just shows again that not only is the technology required to create a sustainable fleet of mass consumption vehicles literally on the horizon. The technology already exists for anyone willing to spend a couple thousand dollars to avoid traffic, curb pollution, and have fun all at the same time. How else can you do that?

May 7, 2010

BP Gulf Oil Spill: Compare Renewable vs. Fossil Fuels First, Then Debate

Yet another major disaster involving fossil fuels has people talking about renewable energy again. But only until the corporate news media get tired of the story and start chasing Sarah Palin and Tiger Woods again. So if you want to REALLY understand the difference between a nation and world that run on poisonous crap and one that runs on non-polluting, natural energy, here’s a simple chart put together by RenewableEnergyWorld.com.

Argue over taxes, geopolitics, supply and demand, and economies of scale all you want. The reality is we can’t survive in a fossil fuel world anymore. We can switch to renewables now or when it’s too late- if it isn’t already.

April 30, 2010

BP Gulf Oil Rig, Massey Coal Disasters Show We Don’t Understand Energy Independence or Security

Filed under: 9/11, America, Bush, Oil, Power Grid, Solar, coal, dualism, geothermal, mining, nuclear, politics, pollution, renewable, wind — Ken Schreiner @ 4:23 pm

The latest oil-coal-nuclear-or-whatever in the Gulf of Mexico is just another headline unless you understand this:

OUR LACK OF ENERGY INDEPENDENCE AND SECURITY IS MORE FRIGHTENING THAN GETTING ATTACKED IN A SKYSCRAPER.

But Americans spend more time trying to discredit innovative, job-creating, decentralized, cleaner and renewable energy sources than finding and using alternatives to the crap we’re addicted to. We can’t get past the idea that fossil fuels are the only thing that works when the reality is that fossil fuels are perhaps the worst thing humans could possibly come up with to provide electricity, heat, etc. Even manure is cleaner.

If one oil rig, one power plant, or just one feeder cable goes out and you are crippled, that’s wrong. If you have viable, sustainable and affordable energy sources like solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, soy diesel and a myriad of other fuels available and affordable and you’re still dependent on fossil fuels, you’re stupid. If we trust the future of our entire country to companies like BP, Exxon-Mobil, Enron, and Massey Energy, we’re doomed.

America could be the world’s leader in renewable energy development. Instead our captains of industry and so-called “leaders” have lashed us to the oil rig and coal bin and we’re getting- well, drilled by the rest of the world because of it. Regardless of the cause of the Deepwater oil rig calamity, it exposes the Achilles Heel that America’s current energy “policy” is. And if we don’t break the chains of enslavement that Saudi Arabia, Russia, Massey and other fossil fuel masters have around our necks, we have no right to complain or expect improvement.

April 28, 2010

Mormons Build First Solar-Powered Meetinghouse; Conservatives Finally Live Up to Their Name

“We’re trying to be as energy efficient and conservation conscious as we can.”

- Bishop Richard C. Edgely

Where the LDS Church stands on environmental issues has been a moving target since right-wingers (which the mostly Mormons are) demonized caring for the Earth as somehow un-Christian. But now, the church has created its first totally-solar-powered meetinghouse. And the controversy appears to have shifted from what environmentalists outside the church think to what the Mormons and other right-wingers think of it themselves.

As usual, the best part of the story is reading the comments to it, especially in the Mormon-owned Deseret News. Some say it was done for economic reasons, some say for environmental reasons, using quotes from the Book of Mormon to support both positions. Which is exactly THE REASON why renewable energy makes sense: it is both economical and environmentally friendly. How some commenters feel Al Gore or leftist radicals are somehow responsible for this act of faith and adherence to church principles is tragic and destructive.

For those of us in the renewable energy movement, this is a momentous occasion. It’s affirmation of renewable energy’s benefits, regardless of where you stand politically. America’s other so-called “conservatives” would be well-advised to take notice of the root word of their name- “CONSERVE”- and recognize that neither renewable energy nor environmentalism are political issues- but social or even spiritual responsibilities.

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