Hold The Line. Energy Changes Are a Long Time Coming

 spaceballBy Mike Mulvihill

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 Wind Power. Renewable Energy. Green Economy. There is an awesome amount of momentum in the America right now around all of these topics. We’re on the cusp of real change in how we create the gobs of energy we increasingly consume in a manner that is kinder and gentler to Mother Earth.

One problem – we have a power grid infrastructure (i.e., those big transmission lines that cut across the landscape), once the best in the world, that has gone neglected for many years. The current system was built for few big energy on-ramps (like coal-fired power plants and nukes) not a lot of small, variable energy outputs like the on ramps needed for renewable energy sources like wind, solar, hydro, geothermal and biomass. Expanding and updating the transmission system is perhaps the most contentious project you could ever undertake. They are often ensnarled in protests and lawsuits so it takes decades to build even small additions to the grid. And the current transmission grid is far from smart right now.

We’re making progress. Last week President Obama cut loose $3.4 billion dollars worth of stimulus money to roll out the American smart grid. Realistically, $3.4 billion is just a drop in the bucket, but it’s a move in the right direction.

According to ABB, one of the major players in the power transmission game, North America is “not close” to developing a true smart grid. ABB CEO Enrique Santacan, cut a YouTube video where he says:

  • The process of developing and implementing the smart grid is just starting in North America.
  •  Lots of old equipment will have to be replaced.
  •  And, many new automation technologies will have to be deployed in order to get there.

According to Dean Anderson’s blog  the DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory defines a smart grid as having the following characteristics:

  • Self-healing from power disturbance events
  • Enabling active participation by consumers in demand response • Operating resiliently against physical and cyber-attack
  • Providing power quality for 21st century needs
  •  Accommodating all generation and storage options
  • Enabling new products, services, and markets 
  • Optimizing assets and operating efficiently

If you saw this weekend’s 60 Minutes broadcast. we should all be greatly concerned about creating a smart grid that is resilient to cyber-attack. In typical 60 Minutes style, our electrical grid was “exposed” as a prime target for cyber terrorism potentially dropping our nation into darkness and confusion. More alarming was the interview that pointed out that some of the components damaged in a cyber or physical attack could take four months to replace. (I once spent 11 days without power due to an ice storm. I can’t imagine what four months would be like!) Remember that in 2003, a simple tree limb on a power line in Ohio resulted in a power failure that in mere seconds enveloped the Midwest to Broadway in darkness.

It will take time to develop a smart grid system designed to be more like your office and home wireless LAN but less susceptible to hacking.

Patrick Mazza’s blog on Grist from more than 27 months ago  pointed out that “It’s time to bring the grid into the foreground because it positions at the exact center of the world’s most crucial issue, global climate change.”

Two years later, we’re enthralled with harnessing wind and solar, but all that excitement won’t get us far if we don’t address the much more mundane but essential infrastructure needed to turn all that excitement into real progress.

 

Follow on Twitter = Planting Trees

TwitterforTrees_WED The United Nations Environment Programme has engaged in a really cool Twitter campaign. For every follower @UNEPandYou gets by midnight on June 5 — World Environment Day — the Programme will plant a tree, with a cap of 100,000 trees.

The Twitter effort seeks to raise awareness of the World Environment Day initiative by not only getting followers, but also rewarding them with an actionable result. It’s a great PR move, not only for the immediate program, but it helps the UN build a following for the long term.

InsertImage.asp This will be especially crucial as the environmental movement braces itself for the United Nations climate change talks in Copenhagen this December. Having a Twitter network will allow the UN to participate in the social context, answer questions, as well as offer news news and facts.  Social media is something traditional green players are struggling to master while newer online brands like Ecogeek, Treehugger and Triple Pundit have risen to the fore.

This campaign is reminiscent of the Nature Conservancy’s Lil Green Patch initiative.  Lil Green Patch is wildly successful, in large part because of the call-to-action is easy (little badge), and creates a feel good action, saving one square foot of rain forest.

The Friends of Live Earth Network (join today) is supporting the initiative, so I’d like to ask any of my green conscious readers to participate, too.   Go plant a tree by following @UNEPandYou.  If you would like your tweet to be tracked, use the hashtag #t4t.  Thank you in advance!

 

Treehuggers vs. Suits

One of the biggest barriers to success can be traditional political positioning, the legacy of past representations and stances. Organizations can be encumbered with their prior actions, permanently creating a legacy that will always be part of the fabric of their brand reputation. And rebellious types can permanently alienate the establishment. There is no market space that seems to embody this quite like the environmental arena, where “treehuggers” regularly do battle with “suits.”

3560396919_bdfce91a7e_m.jpgUnfortunately, the rebellious treehugger and the corporate suit were very appropriate images as short a period ago as five years. That was before Al Gore put to bed the questioning of global warming’s legitimacy . Now, in my opinion, that dichotomy is hurting the green movement.

While appropriate positions to combat or not combat political activism, it’s time for these antagonistic positions to move on as part of our ecological history. Yes, there is room for further political discourse, but it’s no longer a world of black and white. This is particularly true now that a vast majority of Americans and companies see general environmental action as a good move.

2901331485_a09f2185dc_m.jpgThe common ground has to be taking action, whether that’s using filtered water instead of bottles, or refitting factories and buildings for energy preservation. All actions equal forward motion. That’s the common ground.

What should be viewed as wrong is extremism on either side. The only requirement for participation in sustainability is a desire to participate, from activist to large energy companies. Positive activity fuels more activity. Everyone wins when we all move forward in leaps or baby steps. That’s the positioning of now, and the environmental view we should all encourage regardless of our political stance or history (suit image by Greg Verdino).

We need a sense of compassion for the problem, and forgiveness for past legacies… So long as there is genuine interest to move forward in a progressive fashion (as opposed to greenwashing).

That’s one of the reasons why I really enjoy the Live Earth work. It’s about embracing everyone in an effort to move forward rather than get stuck on old positions. In that sense, it’s a recognition of the very significant problem we have, something that affects every single person on this planet.

 

Green + WIRED = Sexy

Now that almost everyone across the political spectrum agrees that we are facing an ecological crisis, the main challenge of the green movement seems to be getting people to actually change behaviors. But this challenge is greater than it seems. It involves changing lifestyles that have become central to our culture for the past 100 years, ever since electricity has become part of our lives.

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One of the best examples of marketing this lifestyle change is the Smart Home Green + WIRED exhibit at Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry (pictured above). This fun exhibit takes green and conservation needs and mixes it with the sexy, sizzle of the geekery known as WIRED! But more on this later. First, let’s take a look at the communications challenge that the green movement faces.

Three Big Hurdles

This inability to get past acknowledging the ecocrisis and actually acting upon it reminds me of an old adage. If a frog decides to jump off a log what happens? Nothing. He just “decided,” he didn’t do anything to actually physically leave the log.

So people talk green, but don’t act green. They keep taking 20 minute showers, leave the lights and computer on, and buy gas guzzlers while avoiding hybrid cars or mass transit. Companies greenwash their marketing message, and then serve bottles of water and print every email possible. As we can see, green is not necessarily pure green, it’s light green, medium green, and dark treehugger green (or any shade in between).

There’s a core of barriers stopping green from achieving immediate movement status with people. These issues are beyond the political differences that stand between the various range of liberal and conservative stakeholders in the ecomovement. For green to be quickly and successfully adapted, these hurdles need to be addressed by environmental groups, companies, and governing bodies alike:

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1) Green products and services are technological innovations, too. That means the diffusion of green is suffering from the usual cycle of innovators and early adopters, as discussed by Everett Rogers in his timeless classic, “Diffusion of Innovations.” So while they make sense, they’re unproven, expensive and quite frankly, most people don’t feel comfortable (safe) buying these products yet.

2) The cost of green does not outweigh the cheapness and comfortable lifestyle of the current carbon footprint. And the good samaritan argument is not compelling enough to get people to move forward. Many feel the situation needs to get worse before people act. The most common lament I hear about this from green bloggers and environmentalists is, “by the time the crisis hits, it will be too late!”

3) There’s still a school marmish attitude towards green. I associate the word “conservation” with this attitude. In short, beyond the economics, beyond the fear of new technology, it’s just not cool or sexy to be green. It’s the right thing to do, but so is staying home on school nights. :)

These three factors equal a massive communications problem for everyone, businesses and consumers alike. And to me, this is not a public awareness campaign, more the need for green companies to make their wares attractive to end-users — as opposed to the right thing to do. We need Steve Jobs now, not Al Gore.

Green + WIRED = Sexy

Remember when nerds were really just nerds? You know, dorks?

Well those days are long over. The iPhone culture means being a geek girl or boy is sexy, and popularity contests for follower or friend counts dominate discussions of what makes for a good community member. Social media and tech geekery has become avant garde.

Nothing epitomizes this more than WIRED magazine, which has been at the forefront of the tech revolution for past two decades. Heck, WIRED even has a sexiest geeks contest every year.

One of the more interesting aspects of WIRED editorial coverage is its evolution beyond Internet related matters into the environmental space. Exhibits like the Green + WIRED teaming make environmental technology more than just the right thing to do, or an act of conservation. Accompanying efforts online, include blogs like EcoGeek and ecofriend are adding to the fire.

The geekification of green technology has begun in earnest, and in it lies great promise for societal adoption of environmentally progressive purchasing en masse. The discussion and seeding of green tech amongst innovators and early adopters in today’s geek community hastens the adoption curve. We’ve already seen the widespread adoption of social media and Internet access toys like netbooks and mobile Internet phones over the past few years.

It’s no secret that when there’s an air of panache associated with products, people are willing to pay a higher price for them. Hello iMac! Making green technology products more than the right thing to do, and adding an air of attractiveness to them is just smart.

In our current context, these activities open green tech to a new stakeholder beyond the do-gooder ecologist. And they add an element of sex appeal to green. While the climatologist is necessary, it’s time to move beyond brow beating environmental action into slow adoption. It’s time to market green + geek.

 

Ning Jujitsu: Nine Tips

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Friends of Live Earth Senior Ambassador Alexandra Rampy and Ning’s Charles Porch.

Some of us on the Friends of Live Earth team recently had the opportunity to sit down with Charles Porch from ning, who gave some general pointers on network building best practices. Porch has worked with thousands of the 1.1 million communities now using the ning social community platform. So here’s your quick jujitsu:

1) The network should have a purpose. It shouldn’t be just a fan club, instead it should try to achieve something, and if it’s a nonprofit have a clear call-to-action.

2) Give them a welcome wagon. Make it personal and easy for people to come in. Let them feel welcome, give them tips, and allow them to move into the socnet naturally.

3) Give people clear ways to engage. Make it easy for them. Give them the power to engage in subgroups by topic and by region. Let them “spiff up” their own profile page. Provide people feedback mechanisms and loops. Ensure there are icebreakers for people to easily participate with.

4) Understand the push-pull effect. Never just push information, and always assume it’s a two-way conversation.

5) Enable people who want to be active. Provide ways to allow them to rise to the top and lead. Create a leaders group, feature most active and distinguished members, and allow people to become heroes!

6) Make the network a little sexy. People love video, photos and checking out other people’s profile pages. These are the features that people are most interested in. Use the latest activity stream to highlight the latest and hottest topics, content and media that community members discuss.

7) To start, keep it simple. You may not need every single feature on Ning to make the network successful. Add features as your network grows and function demands.

8) Commitment to the community means creating content and opportunities to talk regularly, from once a week to once an hour depending on the level of activity you have.

9) Consider creating some guidelines, too. Suggestions help people self regulate their own community.

What would you add to the list? Also, if you are interested in an even deeper information, check out this Ning Workshop which Charles recommends.

If you are interested in the Friends of Live Earth initiative, stay tuned or join the network. We are revamping the site currently, but there are some exciting things about to happen!

P.S. For the record, my work with Friends of Live Earth is strictly on a volunteer basis. I am not getting paid as Senior Advisor; I just believe in the cause that much, and have decided to spend a few months of my extracurricular time helping the good people organizing Live Earth.