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The Next Green Meme: Zero Waste

by Navstar Admin on March 13, 2010

Zero Waste: the consumer who never throws anything away; the industry focus on diverting trash away from landfills to be reused as a consumer product; a complete life cycle for products.

This year Navstar is building its presence at SXSW 2010 with its Director for Green IT, Steven Mandzik, giving a talk on Zero Waste. It is considered an intimate “core conversation” and gives everyone a chance to talk and learn.

The discussion will be catered towards five areas of focus:

  • Innovation
  • Global Warming
  • Green Technology
  • Zero Waste
  • Local Austin

Navstar is proud to support the Zero Waste effort and use the opportunity to bring its work on Green IT to all the SXSW attendees. Green IT is a total solutions product that offers IT departments a way to reduce energy costs, improve their environmental record, and in doing so improve the reliability and quality of their IT services.

Now, a little more on each focus area with link resources:

Innovation

Global Warming

  • Direct/Indirect Global Warming. Not many know this but some areas may not feel global warming at all. These are the drier and warmer places on the planet. I call this indirect global warming. While other places will feel direct global warming, although it may be global cooling as well. Just something to think about as we try to help everyone understand this concept. Not everyone will be experiencing the same weather changes, or none at all.
  • COP15 was a big deal in 2009 because Obama was in office and that meant a new chess board for world leaders to play on. He announced early that he would be attending and stated his desire for a treaty. Still don’t overlook that the 15 in COP15 stands for the fifteenth meeting world leaders have had, with number 16 occurring this December in Mexico. Global Warming is a process and its going to take probably another 15 meetings before we all understand the issue and know what to do.
    • I was very upset when mass media failed to mention this and sold the event as a winner-take-all failure. When really a treaty was signed to save the world’s forests (no small thing) and several billion dollar investment funds were created (put capitalism to work on this).
  • Climate Refugees (documentary film) is another term you’re going to hear a lot more of. Technically the Africans in Darfur are global refugees. Any region that fails to sustain its people because the weather has changed so drastically will soon be forced upon the world. There are several island nations that are only a foot above sea level which are already facing this trouble.
  • Man-Made Debate is for all those skeptics out there. Really no one who has looked into this disputes that global warming is happening. They have stopped doing that. Now the major dispute is over whether it is man-made or “natural”.

Green Technology – (electric cars, million dollar MRFs, fuel cells)

So much to talk about here and a lot covered under innovation, so I will just touch on two of my favorite:

  • MRFs, pronounced Merve’s by those in the biz, are Material Recovering Facilities. These uber recycling facilities exist in every city in America and are high tech, clean, and well run. They have these Rube Goldberg machines that cost millions of dollars and sort our trash into various types. Which are then bundled by more machines, loaded onto trucks, and sold on the open market. They have folks in space suits sorting the really complicated stuff. Trucks, bulldozers, separate facilities for the really toxic stuff. Absolutely fascinating to visit.
  • Fuel Cells are not dead yet, just read this post on Bloom Servers to see why.

Zero Waste & Austin

I thought it fitting to end this post on Zero Waste by highlighting a city making it happen. Austin, TX, passed a zero waste ordinance in January 2009. I have to admit that I love presenting on Zero Waste in a city also trying to make it happen. Check out the city webpage on the program and contact us to learn more.

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Sustainable Strategic Planning

by Navstar Admin on December 17, 2009

**co-written with Geoff Stack of STACK Consulting**

As you may have read in a recent post all federal agencies are facing a sustainability push. President Obama has tasked every Federal Agency for a target in Greenhouse Gas (GHG) reductions. This target is self-reported and is for the year 2020.

Both of these moves are unique in government since they focus on GHG’s and look for a deliberative planning process (take it seriously!).

Phew, what a complex set of taskings from Obama. This is going to require a tremendous amount of effort. We at Navstar have a growing expertise in this area to help you with your auditing, planning, and consulting.

To bolster our knowledge and broaden our capabilities we have teamed up with Geoff Stack of STACK Consulting Coordination. Geoff brings a wealth of strategic knowledge in sustainability from private enterprise.

The first step in our partnership was to dive into this executive order to see where we can help out. The results were a few best practices in key areas to guide the newly appointed Senior Sustainable Officers. Hopefully, these tidbits can alleviate some pressure as they get a crash course strategic sustainability planning:

Sustainable Contracting – Procurement

Per the order, Federal agencies must:

“Ensure 95% of new contract actions, task orders, and delivery orders for products and services are energy efficient, environmentally preferable, contain recycled content, etc.”

In addition to using EPA recommended Energy Star and EPEAT products. The Regional Municipality of Whistler has developed and implemented an excellent Sustainable Purchasing Guide that uses a six-step decision-making process to help managers make sound decisions. It guides decisions towards those that reduce costs and impacts and ensure long-term success and demonstrates that this seemingly daunting requirement can be met.

Agency Energy Audits – Baseline Assessments

The best way to develop a strategic plan is to develop a baseline of energy use. It is quite a challenge to measure your overall energy use, including the new challenge of identifying them as direct (scope 1 and 2) and indirect (scope 3) carbon emissions.

The Natural Step Framework and the PROBE for Sustainable Business tool offer ways to comprehensively evaluate and measure your organization’s full impacts and potential for improvement and change. This can provide the much needed longer term, budget focused, understanding of the sustainability challenge.

Reducing Energy Intensity

How to reduce our energy use? Where to start? Who to contact?

Many of these answers can be found in the commercial world. Some key takeaways to keep in mind when searching for ways to increase energy efficiency:

1. Begin by implementing a few proven projects and easy wins to get the ball rolling. Here are some great examples from the Midwest Energy Effeciency Alliance.

2. Bank the savings earned from your early wins and get familiar with the people and information sources that will help you with more difficult projects along the way:

3. Plan for the long-term savings by integrating energy efficiency into ongoing operations with a comprehensive Environmental Management System (EMS).

Zero-Net-Energy Buildings

Getting to net zero, it’s possible but complex. The tips above help you to reduce the impacts of existing operations and maintenance, but much more can be done in longer term planning. Things like retrofitting our old buildings to designing new buildings. This reaches deep into top-of-the-line strategic planning in building design, construction, operation, management, maintenance, and more.

To meet this challenge is essential to work through the design process with an understanding of how the building, its surroundings and the design team function as a whole. Creating ‘zero-energy,’ ‘green,’ or ‘sustainable,’ development requires extensive coordination to ensure that the building’s various systems work together in an effective way.

The Whole Building Design Guide is a great place to start, as is the GSA Sustainable Design Program.

Even more is possible when we “redesign the design process” as explained in a new book on the integrative design process for green building.

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