Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Vote Solar’s Adam Browning elaborates his views on solar+batteries vis a vis utilities




 In an article published yesterday by Bloomberg entitled “Battery-Stored Solar Power Sparks Backlash from Utilities,” which describes efforts by California’s privately-owned utilities to block network access for residential and commercial solar systems seeking net-metering benefits, at:


Adam Browning, executive director of the San Francisco-based lobbying group Vote Solar Initiative, was quoted as saying, “The next step is that people with solar and batteries will find a way to make it work without utilities.”

Etopia News contacted Mr. Browning, asking him to elaborate his views on the evolution of battery-assisted solar systems and their relationship with utilities.  He responded with this statement:

I think the parallel to the telecom industry is striking.  At one point, customers could only lease a landline telephone from AT&T.  And it came in one, maybe two colors.  With the advent of the mobile phone, choice, innovation, and value exploded…and customers finally had an option other than to simply take whatever their phone company decided.  In the case of AT&T, they were faced with developing the mobile business their customer wanted, or losing their customers.  Solar + batteries presents that same proposition: either utilities figure out a way to make it work for their customers, or customers will figure out a way to make it work without utilities.  With the drop in costs driven by expanding scale for both solar and batteries (the latter driven by EVs [electric vehicles]), that day is not far off.”


Monday, October 7, 2013

Update on Divest Harvard, October 7, 2013






A discussion of Harvard’s attempt to shut down discussion of fossil fuel divestment at the University, and student and alumni efforts to generate that discussion, with Akhil Mathew, alumni liaison at Divest Harvard; Beth Newhall, freelance editor and Harvard alumna, and Harvard alumna and founder and co-director of Mothers Out Front; recorded from Cambridge and Boston on October 7, 2013.
 

Friday, October 4, 2013

Drew Gilpin Faust’s views on divestment are ripped to shreds by pro-divestment critics


After being petitioned on September 16th by Harvard students and alumni to convene a public forum to discuss divestment of the University’s fossil fuel holdings, Harvard President Drew Gilpin Faust issued a statement declaring, in effect, “no divestment today, no divestment tomorrow, no divestment forever.”  You can read what she had to say here:

(http://www.harvard.edu/president/fossil-fuels).

            It didn’t take long for critics to start pick apart her arguments.  Here’s what Tim DeChristopher had to say in the Nation:


            Then Climate Progress published “Harvard’s Four Reasons For Not Divesting From Fossil Fuels, And Why They’re All Wrong at:


            The movement to divest Harvard from entanglement in the fossil fuel/carbon bubble debacle-to-come is the culmination and flowering of the same ideals and commitments that President Faust declares to be at the center of Harvard’s mission as an institution of higher learning and research, something which also carries with itself a certain degree of heightened moral responsibility, which the University could exercise by divesting itself of its fossil fuel holdings sooner rather than later.

            All these issues are expected to be raised on the next episode of Etopia News, now scheduled for broadcast online at 12:00 pm Pacific Daylight Time on Monday, October 7th.

            Guests scheduled to appear on the show include Kelsey Wirth, Steven Aldrich, Beth Newhall, and, possibly, Divest Harvard alumni wing liaison Akhil Mathew.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Pocket Review of “This Town” by Mark Leibovich




I enjoyed reading This Town by Mark Leibovich very much.  He amusingly paints a picture of a Washington, D.C., called “this town” by its denizens, inhabited by a coterie of self-seeking ego-maniacs interested in their own branding and completely disinterested in, and disdainful of, the plight of the people of the United States

In This Town, everyone important knows everyone else, and mostly they look out for each other, while hypocritically claiming to be serving the public good.  Colin Powell comes out looking OK, though, and so does Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee.

It’s entertaining and informative, and I highly recommend it.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Harvard Alumni for Divestment rally in the Yard/crowdsourcing divestment



            According to Divest Harvard via its Facebook page, “over 100” people attended the Harvard Alumni for Divestment rally this afternoon (Monday, September 16, 2013). 

            So far the only footage from today’s Harvard Alumni for Divestment rally in front of Massachusetts Hall in Harvard Yard is still footage, available online, here: 


            Calls have arisen for public access to audio and video coverage of the day’s events, and for a text transcript of the presentations, a package of media that could be produced with funding from Kickstarter, if someone would just organize that connection.

            In fact, a continuing fund for the digital documentation of the divestment movement should garner even more support than one just committed to the production of content dealing solely with today’s Harvard Alumni for Divestment rally.

            Crowdsourced investment in divestment could underwrite a fund dedicated to the production of high-quality, multi-media materials dealing with divestment.

            A Divestment Investment Fund fueling a diverse and powerful movement for divestment.