Daily Archives: September 22, 2015

Tesla Energy “Power Packs” Using Solar PV Power

Energy Storage Boom Predicted

Bring it on!

The energy storage market is set to soar, predicts Navigant Research.

Tesla Energy “Power Packs” Using Solar PV Power
Tesla Energy “Power Packs” Using Solar PV Power

How big will the market become? According to Navigant, we can expect market revenue of nearly $75 billion for energy storage enabling technologies from 2015 to 2024:

Energy Storage Enabling Technologies Revenue is Expected to Total Nearly $75 Billion from 2015 to 2024, According to Navigant Research

Systems integration services are projected to be highest in the energy storage enabling technologies value chain, report finds

Read more: Inside EVs

Bring it! Scott Hunt on his prepper property in South ­Carolina (Image: B. Finke)

Boom Times

An overview of the US prepping movement from 2012

Meet the preppers, a rattled, robust survivalist movement whose members just hate being called survivalists. Emily Matchar investigates the 21st century’s wildest new apocalyptic scene.

BEING PREPARED is just the sensible thing to do, Scott Hunt tells me. Power outage? Superstorm? Nuclear attack? He’ll be ready. That’s why he has a pickup truck that runs on wood.

Bring it! Scott Hunt on his prepper property in South ­Carolina (Image: B. Finke)
Bring it! Scott Hunt on his prepper property in South ­Carolina (Image: B. Finke)

We’re standing by a toolshed in the backyard of Hunt’s home near Pickens, South Carolina, staring at a tall metal contraption that sits in the rusting bed of a Ford F-100. It’s a generator that can turn wood chips into wood gas, which, in turn, can run an internal combustion engine.

“I look at a tree, I see a battery,” Hunt says amiably, grabbing his yellow Bernzomatic Fat Boy torch and firing up the “gassifier.” He fans the flame with a gush of compressed air and the truck rumbles to life. “It’s my Mad Max backup.”

The 46-year-old Hunt, whose blue polo shirt and neat goatee say soccer dad more than road warrior, believes in backups. He’s got his water supply: a 1,600-gallon spring- and well-fed tank on a hill overlooking his property. He’s got power and heat: an enormous wood-fueled generator, a diesel generator, a propane generator, an old Army immersion heater, solar panels, a wood-burning stove, and solar ovens. There’s food: five rotating vegetable gardens backed by a basement full of canned salmon and refried beans, white and red wheat kernels, potatoes, and dried milk. To turn the wheat into flour, he’s rigged up an old Healthmaster 750 exercycle with a belt and grinding wheel.

“In a grid-down situation,” Hunt says, “I believe you need to be prepared to live like in the 1800s.”

Read more: Outside Online

Instead of Doomsday, How About ‘Now’ Day?

A view on Prepping from April 2014

While channel surfing a little while back, I stumbled across the National Geographic channel’s show Doomsday Preppers which follows people who have essentially made a lifestyle of preparing for what they believe is going to be a catastrophic disaster that will lead to the end of civilization as we know it.

Almost all of the people profiled appear to be gun-and-ammo-loving Americans, who stockpile decades worth of food and paper products and believe having gazillions of gallons of gas will be their new world’s currency — when they come out of hunkering in their bunkers.

images_doomsday_preppers_unk

I can’t claim to have seen every episode, but I saw enough to find it ironic how often its subjects are preparing for something like a collapse in the banking system or faith in paper currency, or for a dirty bomb, but no one ever seems to be preparing for global warming in this extremely fretful segment of society.

It’s an odd and unfortunate paradox that the people who seem most concerned about future threats to our way of life seem to disregard one of the most dangerous and obvious ones we face at this very moment, today.

A United Nations (UN) report has put the world on notice that climate change will force millions of people to relocate triggering famine, inciting conflict and losing trillions of dollars worth of economic gains. The irreversible consequences of climate change will lead to economic mass migration. Then, there is a risk of violence which will increase from protests triggered by international or civil conflicts.

While I don’t think it’s a good thing to scare people unduly, a healthy respect for something on this scale is warranted. It’s a good idea to get an emergency preparedness kit, decide on a plan, and have awareness of what to do in the event of a disaster. It’s doubtful you will need an underground bunker with a year’s supply of canned food; it is, however, common sense to have a weather radio, flash light, and some non-perishable food items and all your necessary medications on hand in case the power is knocked out by a storm for example.

Along with your emergency plans, find the time to discuss with your family where you would go if you needed to take shelter in your home or if you needed to leave town for an impending hurricane or earthquake. Are you are unsure of what disasters are likely in your area or where you should go during an earthquake or tornado? Do sensible research. There are a number of resources online to get informed about disaster preparedness.

CDC’s preparedness website and FEMA’s emergency strategies and solutions are excellent resources for reliable and credible information on how to look after yourself and your family. Share your research with your neighbors and other members of your community. Knowledge is powerful and life-saving, and should not be wasted in the selfish pursuit of only looking after number one.

I find the Doomsday Preppers resembling escapists more than survivalists. Focusing on how to abandon modern life with the motto of the SHTF scenario — when the “Shit Finally Does Hit the Fan,” alarming and void of any caring for mankind, outside their own families. We’re in this world together, and our responsibility to preserve this planet goes well beyond any single individual’s bunker’s walls.

Source: Huffington Post

2015 Ford Focus Electric

Electric Car Drivers Will Never Go Back to Petrol

News from Ford in the US (but note that unfortunately the Ford Focus Electric is still not available in the UK)

Fully nine out of 10 electric-car drivers say they won’t go back to cars with internal-combustion engines, according to a new Ford survey.

2015 Ford Focus Electric
2015 Ford Focus Electric

The results included responses from 10,000 drivers of both battery-electric cars and plug-in hybrids.

It found that 92 percent of battery-electric drivers, and 94 percent of plug-in hybrid drivers, plan to purchase another plug-in car as their next vehicle.

More often than not, that specifically means a battery electric car, Stephanie Janczak–Ford’s Manager of Electric Vehicle Infrastructure and Technology–said in a recent interview with CleanTechnica.

Janczak noted that most current all-electric drivers said they would stay with that type of car, while plug-in hybrid owners were more inclined to consider switching to an all-electric vehicle.

The driving experience, and an appreciation of clean technology, were cited as the main reasons for staying electric, she said.

Read more: Inside EVs

Just a week left on low ZOE prices

For most of this summer Renault has had an astonishing offer on the sale of the all-electric ZOE. However on 1st September Renault announced that the low prices would only last until the end of the month:

£5000 deposit contribution on ZOE Dynamique Nav

That means that this offer has just one week left to run. This applies to all ZOE Dynamique Navs – the main model – for sale in the UK.

Renault-ZOE_2013_wallpaper_3f_cs

In particular it means that the current amazing Fuel Included offer will also run out next week:

New Renault ZOE from £145 per month fuel included

– a new car with 10000 miles of free fuel for less than many people spend just on fuel.

For more details on this offer before it runs out contact Trevor at Fuel Included on 07920-790600, or email trevor.larkum@fuelincluded.com.