Sustainable Living | AzSustainability.com - Part 3
Apr 7

Looks like valley cities are doing well to improve their environmental scores on Valley Forward’s report card. The city of Phoenix did particularly well scoring straight A’s. The report looks at city’s air, land use, transportation, and water. To see the report click here.

Apr 4

This is a really interesting documentary about working toward no waste, making products that are truly recyclable or compostable, buildings that respect the occupants and the land, and doing it in a way that is beneficial to business.

Man is the only creature that produces landfills. Natural resources are being depleted on a rapid scale while production and consumption are rising in na­tions like China and India. The waste production world wide is enormous and if we do not do anything we will soon have turned all our resources into one big messy landfill. But there is hope. The German chemist, Michael Braungart, and the American designer-architect William McDonough are fundamentally changing the way we produce and build. If waste would become food for the biosphere or the technosphere (all the technical products we make), produc­tion and consumption could become beneficial for the planet.

http://www.vpro.nl/

Apr 1

BioTour The crew from BioTour made a stop on ASU’s Tempe campus today to promote sustainable living, biofuels, and solar energy. They welcomed everyone to take a tour of their bus and eagerly answered everyone’s questions. As I walked up to the bus I was immediately welcomed by BioTour co-director Ethan Burke and asked if I’d like a tour.

Their bus is powered by waste veggie oil (wvo) which they collect from restaurants in whatever town they happen to be in that day. Ethan said they usually stick to Chinese restaurants because they have the highest quality oil (i.e. it is changed frequently as opposed to used and reused and used again at a fast food chain).WVO filters

The first thing Ethan showed me is the side of the bus where they suck the oil from grease traps and filter it into storage tanks. He said they are working on better ways to filter the oil because the filters clog a little too frequently. One solution they are looking into is using a centrifuge to achieve better filtration.

Next he showed me the actual tanks they haveWVO tanks mounted under the bus. These tanks are heated to thin out the oil making it closer to the viscosity of diesel fuel which is more more fluid than veggie oil when at room temperature. Before they can even run off of wvo it has to reach at least 160 degrees before it can be injected in the engine. They have to start the bus on biodiesel and then switch over to the wvo once it’s hot enough. The switch over is very seamless and can be done while moving.

Bus Engine I asked if they ever have trouble finding enough restaurants to get oil from and he said every once in a while they do but that it’s usually not a problem. They’ll use biodiesel or even regular diesel to get them to their next wvo pickup.

So after seeing where they suck up the oil and store it Ethan took me up to the front of the bus where the engine cover is open, exposing the modificationsHeated Fuel Filters they’ve made. Unlike biodiesel, which doesn’t require any engine modifications, to run off of wvo a few things have to be done. Since they have to warm up the engine on biodiesel before switching over to wvo a system must be installed to do the actual switching. Also heated tanks need to be installed and heated fuel filters. In the picture on the right you can see they use the heat from the engine’s coolant system to heat the fuel filters. These filter out anything in the oil larger then 20 microns. I asked how long they can go before these clog up and Ethan said they can usually go just over 2,000 miles before they have to change them. That’s one reason they are looking at better pre-filtering so that they can get more life out of these filters. So basically that’s it, after leaving these filters the clean wvo is injected into theEthan Burke showing biodiesel with glycerin seperated out engine and off they go.

Quite a few people were asking if the wvo has caused any engine trouble, and being that this is an old bus (1989) Ethan explained they’ve had a few breakdowns, but these weren’t related to the wvo system. I believe he said the steering went out once, and a few other things, but the engine is still running strong.

That was about it for the nuts and bolts of how things worked, Ethan was surrounded by curious onlookers asking about how it all worked, so I headed inside the bus to take a look around. In the bus I ran into Alan Palm who is the other co-director. He was telling stories of their adventures to a few people that were already inside. I caught part of a story about when they broke down and someone that worked for an oil company towed their bus to his house and let them stay for a week while they fixed it.Alan Palm

So this is where they live all year long, touring the country, visiting schools, colleges, and community gatherings. They are continually giving presentations and tours on sustainability on these visits. They drive around 40,000 miles a year and have so far visited 42 states. The two other crew members who I didn’t get to talk to are Fernando Austin and Jenny Sherman. Check out their website where you can get tons more information about their mission, what they do, and even a blog.

BioTour is a journey that aims to enliven the Sustainability Movement while exploring the depths of America—the people, land, and cultures. BioTour addresses the vital issues of climate change, environmental degradation, and peak oil while presenting pathways toward sustainability in renewable energy, active democracy, and understanding the interconnectedness of all living things. www.biotour.com

Welcome to BioTourLinkageFront of BusSide of BusBack of Bus Art on Ceiling Art on ceilingExitDriverEco SudsBioTourSouth Dakota Sunset

Mar 28

Just a couple days ago I posted about cohousing and today I noticed this story about Manzanita Village in Prescott. They are receiving a matching grant from the Arizona State Land Department to enhance it’s urban forest and to expand it’s networks of information sharing. They are going to achieve this by hosting workshops where they install cisterns to collect rainwater that falls on their common house. They will be using this to water new forest garden catchment basins that they will also be installing at the workshops. On April 26th and 27th Andrew Millison, local permaculture expert, and Prescott College Instructor, and Macrae Nicoll, of High Desert Rain Catchment will lead the workshops at Manzanita Village. For the full story head over to www.readitnews.com.

Mar 22
30 Days Off the Grid
icon1 James Towner | icon2 Film, Sustainable Living, Video | icon4 03 22nd, 2008| icon31 Comment »

This is a entertaining look at two typical New Yorkers taken out of their element and off the grid for 30 days to see what happens. It’s a couple years old, but it’s a entertaining, educational, and funny look at how we’re affecting the planet and what some people are trying to do to fix it. Solar power, biodiesel, composting toilets, eco-footprints, veganism can the New Yorkers take it? Perhaps a happy medium will be found?

Watch it Online

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