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Mike's Blog

Mike's Blog

We've designed my blog to help keep our community informed of interesting and important environmental and business topics. To get regular updates, subscribe to this blog via email (yep, that link down there), or add our feed to your RSS feed reader. Enjoy!

Mike Burke
Founder and Chair
San Antonio Clean Tech Forum
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  • 07-Aug-10 21:13 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    These two excellent presentations were given at San Antonio’s City Council “B” Session this past week.  You clearly will want to carefully review both.


    Mission Verde Update – August 2010

    W. Laurence Doxsey, Director

    Office of Environmental Policy

    http://www.sanantonio.gov/oep

    http://sanantonio.gov/oep/pdf/OEP-MV-BSession-2010.pdf

    **********************************************************************************************************************

    Update from Mayor Castro's Green Jobs Leadership Council   - August 2010

    Larry Zinn, Committee Chair

    http://sanantonio.gov/oep/pdf/GJLC-BSession-2010.pdf


    Here we go again.  Our federal government sends out $1.2 billion of “Recovery Act Funds” (also known as your tax payment dollars) for broadband infrastructure funding.  Texas receives 0.7% of the funds.  You Texas citizens pay seven to nine percent of all federal income taxes. So in another federal initiative, you Texans send $10 to Washington and get $1 returned.  Don’t be frustrated, just think of yourself as a benevolent giver to others.


    $8 million in broadband infrastructure funding heading to Texas

     

    Four projects among 126 in 38 states to be allocated Recovery Act money

    Nearly $8.5 million of $1.2 billion in federal Recovery Act funding announced this week for broadband infrastructure projects is headed to Texas. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has announced that 126 projects in 38 states and Native American tribal areas will share the $1.2 billion in this round of broadband allocations.

  • 04-Aug-10 21:20 | Mike Burke (administrator)
    • 1.     CleanTX Forum- Natural Gas  and Clean Energy: Friends or Foes?

    • This  Forum in Austin next week should be of interest to many San Antonions.  Michael Webber is an excellent Moderator – almost  as good asBob Rivard.
    • 2.     'The Decade of San Antonio': An Interview with MayorJulian Castro
    • Below is another very favorable article on San Antonio’s vibrant economy and our city’s excellent leadership.  Actually the decade started a number of years ago under the leadership of Judge Nelson Wolff, Mayor Phil Hardberger, and City Manager Sheryl Sculley.  Mayor Julian Castro is doing an outstanding job of sustaining that momentum with just a little bit of help from his cohort City Manager Sculley.
    • *************************************************************

    • 1.     CleanTX Forum- Natural Gas  and Clean Energy: Friends or Foes?

      Natural gas is an abundant, domestic energy resource. It is also an important part of the Texas economy. Natural gas is much less carbon-intensive and less polluting than coal. And, natural gas plays a key enabling role for renewable power by providing backup generation when the wind doesn't blow or the sun doesn't shine. Natural gas can be used directly in the homes, for transportation, and can be made from renewable sources such as livestock waste. But natural gas is also a competitor for renewable power in  Texas and its production in complicated shale formations has potential water and air quality impacts. This panel will discuss the various roles, tradeoffs, benefits and risks associated with a ramped-up penetration of natural gas into the national fuel mix.

     

    When: 
    Thursday, August 12th, 2010   5:30pm - 8:30pm

    Where: 
    Austin City Hall   301 W. Second St. , Austin , Texas 78701

     

    Moderator:
    Michael Webber , Ph.D.

    Associate Director, Center for  International Energy
     and Environmental Policy, UT Austin ; Co-Director, ATI-CleanEnergy Incubator

    Invited Speakers: 

    Michelle Foss: Chief Energy Economist, Center for Energy Economics

    Paul Wilson:  Regional Vice President
    , Texas Gas Service
    John A. Satterfield: Director, Environmental & Regulatory Affairs, Southern Division, Chesapeake
    Amy Hardberger: Attorney, Environmental Defense Fund
    Karl Rábago: Vice President, Distributed Energy Services,  Austin Energy

    Gregory Kallenberg: Producer/Director, Haynesville
    Paul Ballentine: Director of New Business Development, Complemar Partners

    Cost:
    General: $15.00 pre-registration, $25 late registration
    Registration PLUS Haynesville Shale DVD: $25.00 pre-registration, $35.00 late registration

    Register:  https://s07.123signup.com/servlet/SignUp?PG=1532410182300&P=15324101911421177100

    ***************************************************************************

    • 2.     'The Decade of San Antonio': An Interview with Mayor Julian Castro

    Derek Thompson   The Atlantic    August 3, 2010 

    San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, 35, is a true rising star. The youngest mayor of a Top 50 American city, the subject of a fawning New York Times Magazine profile -- "The Post-Hispanic Hispanic Politician" -- and the recent recipient of a light dusting on The Colbert Report, Castro is one of the nation's most promising young Democrats -- even more so since he's cutting his teeth in the Republican-dominated Lone Star State.

    During a recent trip to San Antonio, I spoke with Mayor Castro for half an hour about San Antonio's remarkably resilient economy, the Arizona immigration law, the stimulus, and the state of Texas. Here is an edited transcript:

    There's a recession going on out there, but San Antonio is weathering it beautifully. Whether you look at jobs or home prices, your city is near the top of so many positive metrics. Why?

    I think three sectors underpin the resilience of San Antonio. The first is the health care and the bio sciences, which have a $16 billion impact on the local economy. The second is education. There are about 100,000 students enrolled here, more than San Diego, Austin, or Dallas. Because we have such a young population, the education sector is not only business, but big business. The third is government investment. We still have several military installations. And then you have the traditional hospitality that SA has offered since the 1968 "Hemisfair."

    Complete article at: 

    http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2010/08/the-decade-of-san-antonio-an-interview-with-mayor-julian-castro/60825/

  • 02-Aug-10 23:01 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    The San Antonio Express News is doing a wonderful job of keeping us

    apprised of important regional Energy news and opportunities for Energy EfficiencyAlternative Energy, and Water 

    Conservation.  Below is a sampling from the past week:


    CPS’ new CEO kept reaching higher

    By Vicki Vaughan - Express-News  July 28, 2010

    Doyle N. Beneby Jr. said he doesn’t regret choosing a career in engineering and energy over his first goal: becoming a professional basketball player.


    Beneby, who Thursday was named president and CEO of CPS Energy, San Antonio’s city-owned utility, grew up “fairly poor” in inner-city Miami and was offered a four-year scholarship playing basketball at Montana Technical College, thousands of miles from home.

    Even then, Beneby said his college choice was influenced by a burgeoning interest in math, science and engineering that began in high school.


    “When it was time to go to college, I felt it was time to spread my wings. I tried to select a good engineering school that offered a basketball scholarship,” Beneby said in a phone interview from his office near Philadelphia.

    Twenty-five years and a master’s degree later, Beneby, 50, has earned a reputation as a skilled leader and executive after moving up the ranks at a number of utilities, including giantsExelon Corp. and Florida Power & Light.


    When he starts at CPS on Aug. 1, Beneby will lead the nation’s largest municipally owned utility, with annual revenue of $1.98 billion and assets of $9.3 billion.

    He’s leaving a high-powered job as president of Exelon Power, where he’s responsible for functions including power generation, engineering and developing new sources of power.


    He was pleased with his career at Exelon and had recently been promoted. But the opportunity to be CEO was appealing. “Anybody who is ambitious and who wants to excel at their craft deserves the chance to have the corner office. It’s something I’ve always wanted, but not needed, to be fulfilled,” he said.


    Beneby’s boss at Exelon described him as “a wonderful individual.”

    Complete article at:  http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/CPS_new_CEO_kept_reaching_higher_99473374.html

    Taking control of energy costs

    By Elizabeth Allen - Express-News    August 1, 2010





    Increasing summer temperatures and federal stimulus money aimed at energy conservation are keeping home energy auditors busy testing out leaks, while homeowners can perform many of their own simple checks.

    Scott was chagrined by the results of his energy audit. He'd built the house himself 11 years ago with energy efficiency in mind. Double-paned windows, R38 insulation, vapor barriers and high-tech roof decking were among the materials he chose.


    But time has taken a toll on the ductwork in two of his three air conditioning systems, causing them to develop numerous leaks, and he realized he could have done a better job of installing the insulation.

    “The insulation that I used is great if it's installed properly,” Scott said. “At the time most of us didn't really understand what that meant.”


    nsulating materials also have improved greatly in recent years, and Scott was delighted to find he could make many of the recommended improvements himself.


    An energy audit can cost from $300 to more than $1,000, depending on the size of the house, and the auditor can take several steps that include using a thermal imaging camera to detect heat leaks, a “blower door” test, and a “duct blaster.”

    Complete article at: http://www.mysanantonio.com/business/real_estate/professional_auditors_can_find_air_leaks_and_the_fixes_to_plug_them_and_lower_costs_99656164.html

    Building futures

    By Jennifer Hiller - Express-News  July 29, 2010


    On a normally quiet East Side street, a construction site buzzes with the voices of students hammering away at their last best chance.

    The building isn’t the only thing under construction. Dozens of high school dropouts are learning a trade and getting their GEDs or diplomas that eluded them earlier in life.


    At the same time, they’re building one of the greenest houses in the city. The nearly complete three-bedroom, 1,200-square-foot home is aiming for silver certification under the rigorous Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design program.

    Michael Marinez, 19, last attended high school in Waco, where he was getting into so much trouble that his father pulled him out of school and moved to San Antonio to get away.


    However, his father didn’t re-enroll him in school, and when he turned 17, “We went our separate ways,” Marinez said.

    He worked odd jobs and eventually found YouthBuild Construction Corp., a program of San Antonio Youth Centers. Marinez finished his GED in March and will start college classes soon. He’ll carry a full-time course load this year and through a leadership program will help new students learn the ropes of the construction site.

    “If it wasn’t for this program I think I’d be locked up or someplace bad,” Marinez said.

    Students work half the day to complete high school and can start working on college credits. The other half of the day is spent in training related to green jobs.

    If a program like ours with very little resources and high school dropouts can do this, then other people can do this as well,” said Cynthia Le Monds, CEO of San Antonio Youth Centers.

    Each year, YouthBuild trains 40 students between the ages of 16 and 24.

    Complete article at: 

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/business/Building_futures_99592849.html

    Schools, teams will score funds from green energy

    By Vicki Vaughan - Express-News  July 27, 2010

    Two new companies, Texas Longhorns Energy and Texas A&M Aggie Energy, will make contributions to the universities they’re named for and their athletics programs for each customer who buys renewable energy. 

    Longhorn power versus Aggie power. Soon it will mean more than bruising football teams.

    Within weeks, fans of the University of Texas and Texas A&M will be able to buy renewable energy to power their homes or businesses and contribute to their favorite university at the same time when they purchase electricity from one of two new companies: Texas Longhorns Energy or Texas A&M Aggie Energy.


    For each customer who joins, the companies will make contributions to the universities they're named for and their athletics programs. And customers will be able to get discounts on merchandise, events and tickets to some games, said Jason Helms, CEO of Dallas-based Branded Retail Energy Co., who put the deals together.

    Helms said he believes his venture is a first. It's not just for graduates of the University of Texas at Austin or Texas A&M, he said, but for all their fans.

    “They'll be able to support their university and do something for the environment as well,” he said.

    Longhorns Energy will be launched in mid-August and Aggie Energy on Sept. 3.

    Complete article at:  http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/maroon_versus_orange_power_for_homes_99389474.html

    LivingGreenSA.com tips

    SA Express News   LivingGreenSA.com -  July 26, 2010

    Green your back-to-school routine: Purchase recycled or recyclable school supplies and buy things you'll need all year in bulk. (Tip fromCity of San Antonio)

    Check for water leaks: Check the meter when no water is being used. After two hours, check it again. If the number has changed, there's a leak somewhere.


    Oooo ... that's cold: Using the cold cycle when washing your clothes can reduce your electricity use by 90 percent. (Tip from SFgate.com)

    Meat smart: Eat less red meat, and buy only grass-fed or organic meat. Feedlot operations produce large amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, and pollute water. (Tip from SFgate.com)

    Products packed smart: Reduce your packaging consumption by choosing products with less packaging and buying items in larger quantities.


    Made for shade: Drawing blinds and curtains before you leave will help cool your home more efficiently.

    Reuse your brew: Instead of throwing away the coffee grounds from your morning cup, use them to scrub the gunk off your grill and greasy pans. (Tip from City of San Antonio)

    Air care: clean air filter improves your car's mileage by up to 10 percent. (Tip from the U.S. Department of Energy)


    Start slow: Aggressive accelerating drops mileage by 33 percent on highways and 5 percent in town. (Tip from the U.S. Department of Energy)

    Reuse the news: After enjoying your Express-News, use the newspaper pages to clean your windows. The paper will also leave a film that's resistant to dirt. (Tip from HowStuffWorks.com)

    Complete article:  http://www.mysanantonio.com/livinggreensa/LivingGreenSAcom_tips.html

     

  • 30-Jul-10 21:16 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    he state of water innovation

    Annual review of water ventures and the VCs that backed them

    Mia Javier   www.cleantech.com      (Contributed by Robyn Knocke)

    The water sector remains a challenging investment environment for venture capitalists.


    The price of water does not reflect its scarce nature and ultimately betrays its value. Holistic water policies and regulatory structures are emerging, but slowly. And buyers of water-related goods and services across public and private sectors have very different needs.  


    The winning venture backed water companies in 2009 are increasingly emphasizing solutions that help reduce customers’ water and energy use. Meanwhile, early-stage deals in resource management technologies focused on improving water treatment and distribution efficiencyincreased despite a drop in investment dollars.


    The overall surge in early-stage activity is a particularly promising and unique trend in the cleantech industry where later-stage deals rule. Water innovation is on the rise, scarcity issues are gaining visibility and water policy is catching up – and so begins the floodgates of the water sector’s opportunity.


    Key Takeaways


     Water innovation surges despite drop in investment dollars. 2009 deal activity reached a record high of 50 deals. 60 percent of the financings went to early-stage deals, hinting at a sea of change for a historically challenging sector in which to invest.


     Energy-water relationship heats up.  Energy efficient treatment technologies that fundamentally aim to improve the productivity of water treatment and distribution are quickly emerging


     Water reuse is another twist on the energy efficiency play. Reducing water conveyance has an energy component is most compelling Businesses must learn to do more with less and reusing wastewater is a practical way alternatively source water.


     Water analytics are critical across the entire water cycleAs the saying goes, you cannot manage what you do not know - the need for more data and analysis persists.


    Complete report at:

    http://info.cleantech.com/rs/cleantech/images/The%20state%20of%20water%20innovation.pdf

    *****************************************************************************************


    Developers who anted up deserve power line priority

    Diana Liebmann - Special to the Express-News    July 31, 2010


    In parts of West Texas, wind turbines extend across rocky mesas as far as the eye can see, turning otherwise unproductive land into a source of clean, renewable energy. Our state has world-class wind resources, and wind developers want to expand generation into the area of the state with the best wind resource. There has been just one problem: The Panhandle lacks transmission lines to carry the power generated by wind to consumers around Texas.


    But that's changing. On Friday, the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUC) approved a plan to bring needed transmission lines into the windy Panhandle. In 2005, the Texas Legislature established the Competitive Renewable Energy Zone (CREZ) process to build transmission lines to areas with exceptional wind resources like West Texas and the Panhandle. Local residents want to capture their wind generation potential and reap the economic benefits of job creation, new income for landowners and tax revenues for school districts and cities.


    In reaching its decision, The PUC required wind developers that wanted to use the new lines to demonstrate a financial commitment to develop wind projects by putting collateral at risk. To meet the PUC's financial threshold, some wind developers anted up more than their fair share, and some wind developers made no commitment at all.


    In the coming years, as the transmission lines are brought on-line and become oversubscribed with new wind projects from a myriad of developers undefined the companies that made the financial commitment necessary to achieve approval for the development of these transmission lines should be given priority to remain on-line and generate electricity.


    This “dispatch priority” is needed so that wind developers who supported the transmission lines with real dollars when credit is tight, power prices are low and the economy is in a recession, are not bumped off-line by developers who sat on the sidelines with their hands (and money) in their pockets.


    This situation must be remembered in the coming years when the new transmission lines become oversubscribed undefined a situation that has occurred in West Texas, and was a driver behind the CREZ legislation.


    When too much electricity is being generated, reliability of the system will require that wind generation on those lines be choked back. When that happens, priority should be given to the wind developers who posted a financial commitment. These developers should be entitled to utilize the transmission that was built based on their financial commitments. Those that posted no commitment, and took no risk, should be first to be backed down.


    The state has managed this process in a way that protects the interests of taxpayers and consumers; using a resource in a manner that brings real benefits without undue financial risks. All Texans will benefit from increased transmission to allow for the development of no-cost fuel generation that wastes no water nor harms the quality of the air we breathe.


    Now that the Panhandle transmission lines have been approved, and a completion date anticipated to be in 2013-2014, Texas needs to reinforce its sound policy and ensure that dispatch priority is given to companies that supported the transmission build-out, invested resources, and shouldered the risk.


    Diana Liebmann is a partner in the Energy and Power Practice Group of Haynes and Boone, LLP's San Antonio office.

    Energy Innovation Hubs and the Quest to Turn Sunlight Into Fuel, Deputy Secretary Daniel B. Poneman

     

    Deputy Secretary Daniel Poneman announces an award of up to $122 million over five years to establish an Energy Innovation Hub aimed at developing revolutionary methods to generate fuels directly from sunlight.  The Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis (JCAP, for short), will be led by the California Institute of Technology in partnership with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and other California institutions, and will bring together leading researchers in an ambitious effort aimed at simulating nature's photosynthetic apparatus for practical energy production.

  • 30-Jul-10 18:07 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    UPCOMING IMPORTANT FORUMS AND CONFERENCES

    A.   SA Clean Tech Smart Grid Forum September 16, 2010 atSouthwest Research Institute

    B.   Clean Energy Venture Summit “Re-Imagining the Built Environment” September 29-30, 2010 at the AT&T Conference Center in Austin, Texas

    C.   SA Clean Tech Water Forum II October 6, 2010 at Pearl Stable

    D.   2010 Fuel Cell Seminar & Exposition October 18-21, 2010 at SAConvention Center

    E.   Texas Renewables 2010 Conference 
    November 7 - 10, 2010       San Antonio, Texas

    **************************************************

    A.   SA Clean Tech Smart Grid Forum September 16, 2010 at Southwest Research Institute

     

    Les Shephard - Executive Director, Texas Sustainable Energy Research Institute

    Cris Eugester – Chief Sustainability Officer, CPS Energy

    Brewster McCracken – Executive Director, Pecan Street Project

    Corey King – Manager, System Security and High Reliability Software Section

                            Automation and Data Systems Division

    **************************************************************************

    B.   Energy and the Clean Energy Incubator's Fourth Annual Clean Energy Venture Summit “Re-Imagining the Built Environment”September 29-30, 2010 at the AT&T Conference Center in Austin, Texas.

    This event focuses on early stage clean-energy companies (through Series B Financing) not only looking for funding but in their audition for inclusion in Austin’s $10.4M DOE smart-grid/smart-home demonstration project also known as Pecan Street Project.  These companies will fall in one of the below categories:

    • Energy management 

    • Building-integrated energy efficiency technologies 

    • Smart appliances 

    • Energy information systems 

    • Smart resource management (electricity, water, gas and waste) 

    • Distributed energy storage 

    • Distributed fueling for transportation 

    • Electronic vehicles 

    • Software and communication technologies

    The top 20 applicants will present their innovations to venture capitalistsangel investors and potential strategic investors as well as decision makers from Austin Energy, the Pecan Street Project, and local government. 

    You can check out their website at www.cleanenergyventuresummit.com for further information

    ******************************************************************************

    C.   Water Forum II at Pearl Stable October 6, 2010

    Presented by The Chamber Water Committee, KLRN, SA Clean Tech Forum,

    San Antonio Water System, and UTSA – Texas Sustainable Energy Research Institute

    Moderator – Robert Rivard- Editor, San Antonio Express News

    Opening Remarks – Mayor Julian Castro

    Panel to be determined

    **************************************************************************

    D.

    2010 Fuel Cell Seminar & Exposition  October 18-21, 2010

    San Antonio Convention Center

    http://www.fuelcellseminar.com/

    Fuel Cells: Delivering the Power of a Greener Future

    The Fuel Cell Seminar & Exposition (FCS&E) provides an exciting opportunity to learn about and experience the latest advances in fuel cell research, development and demonstration/application. The Seminar was created in 1976 as a forum for researchers and developers alike to share new findings, as well as successes and failures, within the fuel cell community. Since then, the FCS&E has grown along with its industry, in terms of the numbers of participants; the numbers of demonstrations of fuel cells; and the state-of-the-art of the technology.


    This year's conference, Fuel Cells: Delivering the Power of a Greener Future, expands on the conference's mission to advance the global energy, environmental, and economic benefits offered by fuel cell technology. Through our extensive technical program and exciting exposition featuring international partners, the FCS&E showcases the importance of fuel cells in the development of energy strategies that reduce or eliminate greenhouse gas and criteria pollutant emissions.


    With exhibitors from Canada, Finland, Germany, the UK, Denmark, Taiwan, Greece, and Japan, the 2010 Exposition provides attendees with a global perspective on the market. The exposition allows attendees to touch real fuel cell systems and components and it provides the opportunity to network with leaders of the international fuel cell industry.


    Attendees can also enjoy several of the educational opportunities for which The Fuel Cell Seminar & Exposition has become known, including technical poster presentations and short courses. And make sure to find about our FCS&E Ride & Drive in which participants drive the latest models of fuel cell vehicles. Networking is one of the essential missions of the FCS&E, and participants get to know the rest of the fuel cell community during our Welcome and Industry Receptions!

    Fuel Cell Seminar & Exposition Headquarters, c/o South Carolina Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Alliance, PO Box 12302,Columbia, SC 29211

    Phone: (803) 737-8031    Fax: (803) 737-0101    Email: fuelcellseminar@schydrogen.org

    ***************************************************************************

    E.     Texas Renewables 2010 Conference 
    November 7 - 10, 2010       San Antonio, Texas

    http://www.treia.org/mc/community/eventdetails.do?eventId=247316

  • 25-Jul-10 22:36 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    The San Antonio Clean Technology Forum Smart Grid presentation

    date has been changed to September 16 from September 9.


     

    I did not realize that Sep 9 was the Rosh Hashanah holiday .  I apologize for my regious ignorance,

    mike

  • 25-Jul-10 17:41 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    The San Antonio Clean Technology Forum is planning a Smart Grid presentation during a
    luncheon on September 9, 2010.

    This forum will be held in Southwest Research Institutes’ newest conference center that features some of the best Audio/Visual presentation equipment in the nation. 

     

    Opening comments by:

    Dr. Les Shephard – Executive Director, UTSA’s Texas Sustainable Energy Research Institute

     

    Our presenters will be:

    Cris Eugster - Chief Sustainability Officer, CPS Energy

    Corey King -  Manager System Security and High Reliability Software
    Section Automation and Data Systems Division

    Brewster McCracken - Executive Director, Austin's Pecan Street Project

     

    Please mark your calendars now for this September 9 event.  The good news is that our topic, the presenters, and the venue are not to be missed.  The bad news is that seating is limited and we will very likely not be able to accommodate all interested participants.  So please plan to register early.

     

    We will open our web site www.sacleantech.org for registration within the week.

     

     

    A recent GE survey of U.S. consumers, conducted by StrategyOne, involved 1,000 people reached by phone nationwide. Among other things, it found that of those who are familiar with the term "smart grid," 80 percent believe it will help the country make better use of clean energy sources, 74 percent believe it will help them make better decisions about energy use, and 72 percent believe it will save them money.

     

  • 24-Jul-10 20:44 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    2.  Schertz pipeline may transport SAWS water

    3.  Ask the U.S. Ambassador to Support the Human Right to Water

    By Calvin R. Finch - Special to the Express-News     July 24, 2010-07-24

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/life/SAWS_can_help_control_water_bills_99145374.html

    It is summertime, and the water bills for most area residents go up significantly this time of year. The San Antonio Water System is a national leader in helping its customers keep their water bills at a reasonable level. Some of the best assistance is available to any area resident, whether you are a customer or not.

     

    One of those benefits is the weekly Water Saver e-newsletter. The newsletter can be sent to your e-mail address on the day of the week you designate. The publication features the weekly watering recommendation for your lawn but also includes several short features on area landscaping and gardening. The price is right, too - it's free. You do not have to be a SAWS customer to receive the publication. Just visit the SAWS website at www.saws.org and then click Conservation, where you will find the Water Saver e-newsletter sign-up application.

    The watering recommendation provided each week on the Water Saver e-newsletter is based on your lawn species and the amount of sun it receives applied to the evapotranspiration data for the last week.

     

    Evapotranspiration rates are determined by temperature, wind, humidity and sun intensity. The weather data is collected by a Texas A&M weather station in San Antonio and translated to water use by applying it to a formula. The watering recommendations were tested over four years in the 1990s and have been confirmed as effective by 15 years of use. The water recommendations provided will keep your lawn green and healthy without wasting any water.

    The SAWS Landscape Care Guide was created to help homeowners with low water landscapes to care for them in a manner that takes advantage of the water savings that are possible and at the same time maximizes the blooming and other performances of plants in the landscape.

     

    The publication relies heavily on color photos to get its message across. It has sections on roses, attracting hummingbirds and butterflies, xeriscape, trees, lawns, herbs, perennials, annuals, pruning, insects, problem solutions and, of course, water.

    The material is organized by season so you can know which plants are in their prime and which are past their prime and when tasks should be tackled to minimize work in getting the most out of your garden.

    Some retail nurseries sell the Landscape Care Guide, but the best way to get it is to attend a SAWS sponsored event. Attendees at such events receive the publication free as an incentive to use the information to maintain a more beautiful, environmentally appropriate landscape.

     

    To find a schedule of SAWS sponsored gardening events, visit the SAWS website.

    Among the events listed where you can find the SAWS Landscape Care Guide are presentations by me, Mark Peterson and other authors of the publication that speak on environmentally appropriate gardening.

     

    Last week I mentioned the new drip irrigation guide, Drip-Line Gardening by Ron Csehil and Dr. Tom Harris (www.the hillcountrygardener.com). One of the sections of that publication describes how you can convert a sprinkler irrigation zone to a drip irrigation zone. It is easy to do and appropriate if the zone waters trees, perennials, annuals, vegetables or shrubs. Drip irrigation is more efficient than a sprinkler because it puts the water at the soil level over the roots rather than in the air.

    If you are a SAWS customer, you can even get a rebate if you make the conversion, $100 per zone converted up to $400.

    There are other improvements you can make to your irrigation system that qualify for a rebate. For more information and an application, visit www.saws.org.

     

    While you are at the website, SAWS customers can sign up for a free irrigation audit. The auditor will tell you how to save water on your landscape and, if you are interested, also advise you how to take advantage of new irrigation technology or simple steps to save money while maintaining an attractive landcape.

    Calvin R. Finch is a horticulturist and director of special projects with San Antonio Water System. Contact him at Calvin.Finch@saws.org.

    Schertz pipeline may transport SAWS water

    By David DeKunder - Staff Writer/Northeast Herald   July 24, 2010-07-24

    A decision by a Gonzales County water board last week could open the door for San Antonio to transport some of its water through Schertz's pipeline.

    In a split vote, the Gonzales County Underground Water Conservation District July 13 approved a permit for San Antonio Water System to pump 11,687 acre-feet-of water from the Carrizo Aquifer.

     

    The board's 3-2 vote sets up the possibility, through negotiations, that SAWS will transport its newly acquired water to San Antonio through a pipeline owned by the Schertz-Seguin Local Government Corporation, which provides water to and is owned by both cities. The pipeline runs from Gonzales County to Seguin and Schertz.

    Ask the U.S. Ambassador to Support the Human Right to Water

    For the first time since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted 60 years ago, the UN General Assembly is finally poised to recognize the Human Right to Water and Sanitation. Billions of people are suffering because the world is not focused on providing water and sanitation for all. A strong UN General Assembly resolution will signal that water and sanitation is a key priority for the international community.

    Can you take action to make sure the U.S. Delegation to the United Nations supports the Human Right to Water?

    Go to:    http://action.foodandwaterwatch.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=4405


     

  • 22-Jul-10 20:23 | Mike Burke (administrator)
     

    Article 2. Hispanic chamber is moving to Pearl

     

    New CPS Energy chief hired

    By Vicki Vaughan and Tracy Idell Hamilton - Express-News   July 22, 2010

     

    CPS Energy's new chief executive and president is Doyle N. Beneby Jr., who formally accepted the job Thursday after the CPS board offered it to him in a phone call.

    Beneby, 50, is a 25-year veteran of the energy industry and is now president of Exelon Power and senior vice president of Exelon Generation. He will start at CPS on Aug. 1 and will succeed Milton Lee, who retires Sept. 30.

     

    In a brief telephone conference after he accepted a formal offer from the CPS board, Beneby said he is “incredibly excited” about the opportunity to head the nation's largest municipal utility. He cited CPS' status as “a great company that has a great reputation” as a reason he pursued the job.

    Beneby has spent his career in the energy industry with investor-owned utilities. He has held several leadership positions since he joined Exelon Corp., parent of Exelon Power and Exelon Generation, in 2003. He was promoted to his current position in May.

     

    “I believe the skill sets I have are transferable to CPS,” Beneby said when asked about transitioning from investor-owned Exelon to muncipally-owned CPS. “And I understand there are high expectations for transparency at CPS, and I expect to exceed those expectations.”

    And Beneby said he understand the importance of customer service, having spent more than half of his career in jobs that were directly related to serving customers.

     

    Mayor Julian Castro, an ex-officio member of the CPS board, said, “Beneby's wealth of experience in the energy sector made him a highly qualified candidate. I believe he will serve the ratepayers well and do a good job of meeting San Antonio's energy needs.”

    CPS Board Vice Chairman Derrick Howard, who headed the search committee, said CPS and Beneby agreed on a three-year contract that calls for him to receive base pay of $360,000 a year and a chance to earn incentive pay equal to his base pay if he meets certain goals. Half of the incentive pay, if awarded, will be deferred in the first two years of the contracts and paid in the third year.

     

    CPS' hiring of Beneby ended months of speculation, as trustees secretly worked through a list of candidates from Korn/Ferry International, the consulting firm it hired to direct the search.

    Four finalists, including acting General Manager Jelynne LeBlanc-Burley, were interviewed in late May. The other candidates' identities were closely guarded by the board, which denied an open records request for release of the names from the San Antonio Express-News, arguing that releasing the names would put the utility at a competitive disadvantage. An opinion from the state attorney general is pending.

     

    Chicago-based Exelon Corp. is one of the nation's largest power companies, with more than $17 billion in annual revenue. Its family of companies are involved in areas including energy generation, power marketing, transmission and energy delivery. Exelon Generation oversees a mix of fossil, hydroelectric, solar, landfill gas and wind generation sources, and it has the largest group of nuclear plants in the nation.

    As president of Exelon Power, a business unit under Exelon Generation, Beneby is responsible for managing, operating, and maintaining roughly 8,000 megawatts of natural gas, coal, hydroelectric and solar generation in five states, including Texas.

     

    Beneby said he is familiar with Texas as a result of generation units Exelon owns in Houston and in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. “And I have family in the Dallas area,” he said.

    Beneby spent 17 years with Florida Power & Light. After a brief stint at Consumers Energy in Michigan, he joined Exelon.

    In May, the American Association of Blacks in Energy, congratulating Beneby on his promotion to president of Exelon Power and senior vice president of Exelon Generation, called him “a trusted colleague, a confident leader, and an important role model to many.”

     

    Beneby will face a number of challenges if he accepts the utility's offer, including steeply rising capital costs, decisions about future power generation capacity, reducing the carbon emissions of an aging group of power plants and the expansion of the utility's renewable energy portfolio undefined all while keeping rates affordable and maintaining CPS' high credit rating.

    CPS briefly explored a partnership with Exelon in 2007 when the utility was first looking at options to increase its nuclear generating capacity. It ultimately chose to focus on the expansion of the South Texas Project, of which it already is a part owner.

     

    In another near miss, Exelon could have been CPS' partner in that expansion, had the energy giant been successful in its attempt at a hostile takeover of NRG Energy a year ago.

    CPS retains a 7.6 percent stake in the STP expansion, with NRG holding the rest. The proposed expansion is expected to receive crucial loan guarantees this year, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is on track to license the project by 2012.

    Express-News Researcher Mike Knoop contributed to this report.

    Hispanic chamber is moving to Pearl

    By David Hendricks - Express-News    July 22, 2010

    The 81-year-old San Antonio Hispanic Chamber of Commerce will move to the Full Goods Building at the Pearl Brewery campus next week from its decadelong home at the Alameda Building on Houston Street downtown, the chamber said Thursday.

    Gov. Rick Perry will make a formal announcement of the move Tuesday afternoon during a news conference on small-business issues at the Pearl site.

     

    The chamber will move July 29-30 to occupy about 4,000 square feet of Class A office space on the second floor of the Full Goods Building, space that already is furnished.

    Complete article at: 

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/hispanic_chamber_moving_to_pearl_99033949.html

     

     

  • 19-Jul-10 23:47 | Mike Burke (administrator)

    Thank goodness we live in San Antonio.  Almost all national and international news continues to depress me.  Almost all San Antonio major news continues to inspire and impress me. 


    Another major positive development for our region:

    • 1.   Robert Puente and the San Antonio Water System staff forge an major win-win-win deal with Gonzales County UWCD and Schertz/Sequin water pipeline system


    • 3.   Robert Rivard, Editor of the SA Express News, pushes it up a notch with his excellent column today.  (see below)


    On a related note, please mark your calendar for our Water Forum II

    luncheon at the Pearl Stable on October 6, 2010.  We are working diligently to ensure that this Forum meets the high standards of our March 9, 2010 Water Forum I.  To help ensure that we do so, we have teamed up with:


    The SA Greater Chamber Water Committee – Mayor Howard Peak

    UTSA – Sustainability Energy Research Institute – Dr. Les Shephard

    San Antonio Water System – Robert Puente

    San Antonio River Authority – Suzanne Scott

    KLRN PBS – Bill Moll


    Robert Rivard will serve as Moderator, and Mayor Julian Castro will deliver a “Call to Action” address.


    The Water Forum II will be broadcast in prime time at later dates by KLRN, PBS television throughout the State, and Texas Public Radio.

    ***************************************************************************************

    No losers in SAWS deal on Carrizo Aquifer


    Robert Rivard – SA Express News  July 18, 2010

    The 3-2 vote was a reminder that nothing comes easily, and a single vote stood between success and failure.


    Still, significant progress was made last week when the Gonzales County Underground Water Conservation District voted to let the San Antonio Water System tap into the Carrizo Aquifer and pump enough water to meet the annual needs of 40,000 households here.


    SAWS secured what it needs most undefined a new and reliable supply of water to supplement the Edwards Aquifer undefined and it demonstrated the ability to close a complex, mutually beneficial deal with another South Texas water management entity. Gonzales County gets a dependable flow of revenue from its wealthier urban neighbor.


    There is one other beneficiary in this deal whose essential participation might escape the attention of readers. The Schertz-Seguin Local Government Corp., which owns a pipeline running from the Carrizo Aquifer to serve its customers, will sell excess pipeline capacity to SAWS to facilitate the water being pumped from Gonzales County to San Antonio.


    Like their neighbors to the east, the residents of Schertz and Seguin will enjoy a new revenue stream that allows them to see SAWS as a water management partner rather than an adversary.


    SAWS, in turn, will save the tens of millions of dollars it would cost to build an independent pipeline. Instead, the city will build two shorter lines, one linking its Carrizo Aquifer pumping well to the Schertz-Seguin line and from there another connecting to the SAWS network.


    The water and cash will not start to flow until 2013, and the deal is likely to be challenged by dissenting Gonzales County citizens, but models that show the outflow to SAWS will not threaten the Carrizo Aquifer's viability probably will carry the day in court just as they did with a majority of the five-member board.


    Cyclical droughts, periodic water conservation mandates and decades of regional and local political wrangling have led many people to believe South Texas, particularly San Antonio, faces a near-constant shortage of water, a predicament that swings from tolerable to severe.


    However, “The fact is there is no shortage of water,” SAWS CEO Robert Puente said. “There is a perception that there is a shortage, but with conservation, the brackish water desalination project and the underground water storage we now have, we can meet our needs now and in the future. It's the politics of water that makes things so difficult.”


    Put another way, water managers and water users in South Texas have an unprecedented opportunity to forge new regional relationships that serve everyone's long-term interests. Adversarial mind-sets need to change, compromises need to be struck, and everyone has to see an economic benefit. Public education along the way is important.


    Continued good will and cooperation among the members of the Edwards Aquifer Authority is essential, as is a consensus among the dozens of stakeholders participating in the Regional Implementation Process, an ongoing initiative designed to keep water management out of the hands of federal authorities. For that to happen, a comprehensive plan that guarantees spring flows and protects endangered species has to be forged.


    Water management and politics are complicated. Some people just want to know water will be there when they turn on the faucet. If that's you, at least know that last week's water deal was a win-win-win. It's also a model for other regional accords on the drawing board.

    Robert Rivard is the editor of the Express-News. E-mail him at rrivard@express-news.net. Or follow him on Twitter at @editorrivard.

 
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