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    efficiency and conservation

    Rates Can be Deceiving

    Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

    This article recently brought up an excellent point on how some rates can be deceiving, and even reduce the likelihood that we will make the right decision. The example involved comparing impressions of fuel efficiency in miles per gallon versus gallons per mile, or gallons per ten thousand miles. While identifying the better of two […]

    True Progress is Looking for Writers

    Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

    True-Progress.com is looking for writers to contribute to the mission of finding enduring solutions. If you or someone you know would like the opportunity to regularly publish articles on this site, please see the details here.

    Development and Official Regulation

    Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

    If we consider development to be the general increase in well being of a population, then we have to recognize that there are times when the increase in one type of measure (real income) is countered by the negative action of another type of measure (disease rates). In these cases, government often steps in to […]

    Energy Efficiency: Good News onto Deaf Ears ?

    Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

    Energy efficiency is a wonderful investment both for businesses and consumers often paying far better returns than the stock and bond markets. If so, then why don’t we take advantage of it? Increases in efficiency can reduce energy consumption for the same or increasing amount of output. All the while, pollution is reduced and money […]

    Review - Kill-A-Watt Electricity Usage Monitor

    Friday, May 16th, 2008

    With energy costs increasing faster than inflation and much faster than income in the United States, many have a desire to conserve. But, without information, our conservation may be more expensive than it is worth and hardly as effective as it could have been. The kill-a-watt electricity usage monitor provides a useful way to be […]

    CAFE Standards and Speed Limits, Round 2

    Thursday, May 15th, 2008

    In this earlier article on the new CAFE standards, I found that depending on the assumptions made for the number of future miles driven, restricting the speed limit to 55 miles per hour would be a more cost effective and more energy efficient solution than changing the CAFE standard. That analysis only considered the total […]

    Landfills as an Energy Source

    Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

    As landfills which hold municipal solid waste are closed the emissions from decay of the material in the landfill becomes a pollutant. That pollutant can either contribute to smog and the increase in greenhouse gases, or it can be used as an energy source. A free, environmentally friendly fuel, potentially harmful if released, is not […]

    Defining Sustainable Technology

    Friday, May 9th, 2008

    Sustainable technology is an idea that may produce a new level of real progress around the world. But often today, the term is more of a marketing badge that may or may not prove to be true when put to the test. I have written before about sustainable technology and some of the problems with […]

    Conservation and the Marketplace

    Thursday, May 1st, 2008

    How Conservation and Efficiency Can Sometimes Increase Consumption
    Conservation and efficiency are always good, right? Unfortunately, not always.
    Many of us, myself included, consider ourselves conservationists. We don’t buy or take things that we don’t need (for example, lots of extra paper napkins at the restaurant). We consider the energy efficiency of […]

    Green Production versus Conservation

    Thursday, April 24th, 2008

    In honor of Earth Day on 4/22 (a little late, I know), let’s consider the relationship between “green” production and conservation.
    Our question is does conservation or “green” production result a greater positive impact regarding our use of resources. I am going to take the case of paper, as it is relatively simple product to […]

    Durability and Progress

    Friday, April 18th, 2008

    Some would say progress is continually achieving a higher and higher level of capability as individuals and collectively as a society. For example, we can buy improved cell phones, computers, and automobiles each year. Others would say that progress involves reaching a state of balance such that we are not destroying any nonrenewable resources and […]

    CAFE Vehicle Standards Compared to Speed Limits

    Monday, April 14th, 2008

    What would more effectively reduce pollution from small vehicles?
    Recently, there was a significant political argument in the United States about the costs and benefits of increasing the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards. Increased efficiency, the argument went, would reduce the consumption of fuel, and therefore help restrain fuel prices, also reducing pollution from vehicles […]

    Root Cause Analysis and True Solutions

    Saturday, April 12th, 2008

    In Search of The Best Answer, Not a Better Answer
    Whenever there is a major man-made disaster or some kind of accident, responsible officials usually convene a team that conducts an investigation. The results of that investigation will usually identify a “root cause” and several “contributing causes”. If it was a plane crash, the team will […]

    Landfills, Mines of the Future ?

    Friday, April 11th, 2008

    So, how long will it be before our trash is more valuable than existing iron mines?
    The municipal waste collection system in the United States is very efficient at removing whatever materials we place in our trash bag. So much so, that we normally find it difficult to imagine the scale of the operation, and especially […]