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Capital flowing into green
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit in Menlo Park, Calif., Cascadia Capital CEO Michael Butler discusses three subsectors of the green-building industry that recently ...
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Who will manage the smart grid?
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., tech executives discuss the future management of smart-grid technology and whether ...
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Speeding up construction on ‘green’ homes
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., Serious Material Chairman Marc Porat discusses the challenges associated with building ...
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Tech execs talk smart design for ‘green’ buildings
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit at SRI International, in Menlo Park, Calif., tech executives discuss what is needed to construct and design "green" ...
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Tomorrow's smart grid
At the Churchill Club's 11th Annual Top Ten Tech Trends, venture capitalists discuss whether the smart grid and smart meter trends will continue to ...
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The future of clean-tech investing
At the Greentech Media and Groom Energy, Enterprise Carbon Accounting Summit in Burlingame, Calif., venture capitalists discuss the outlook of investing in smart grids, ...
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Autodesk's five core strategies
At the Greentech Media and Groom Energy, Enterprise Carbon Accounting Summit in Burlingame, Calif., Emma Stewart, who heads up Autodesk's Sustainable Business & Operations ...
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Counting carbon to find bottom-line benefits
What could your business do better? At the Greentech Media and Groom Energy, Enterprise Carbon Accounting Summit in Burlingame, Calif., panelists explain what "The ...
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E-motorcycle hits S.F. streets
CNET News reporter Mats Lewan takes the brand new Zero S electric motorcycle for a test drive in downtown San Francisco. Currently, electric scooter-style ...
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'60 Minutes': Powered by coal
Coal is America's most abundant and cheapest fossil fuel but, as Scott Pelley reports, burning it happens to be the biggest contributor to global ...
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The Green Enterprise: HP
Hewlett-Packard plans to cut its global energy use 20 percent by 2010. Correspondent Sumi Das looks at "green" strategies the company is implementing to ...
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Revving up the electric-car industry
At the Green:Net conference in San Francisco, John Clark of GridPoint and Richard Lowenthal of Coulomb Technologies discuss how the largest obstacle for next-generation ...
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Getting green consumers to take action
At the Green: Net '09 conference in San Francisco, Erin Carlson, director of Yahoo for Good, breaks down the demographics of green-minded consumers who ...
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What is the smart grid?
At the Green: Net '09 Conference in San Francisco, Jesse Berst, managing director of Global Smart Energy, breaks the smart grid down into three ...
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From Internet to enternet, creating the energy network
At the Green: Net '09 Conference in San Francisco, Bob Metcalfe, a general partner at Polaris Venture Partners, explained how Washington actually helped the ...
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San Francisco's green plans
At the Green: Net '09 Conference in San Francisco, Mayor Gavin Newsom lays out the city's future plans for reducing emissions even further. He ...
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Will cheap oil affect green innovation?
At a Churchill Club event in Santa Clara, Calif., Bill Joy, co-founder of Sun Microsystems and partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, calls ...
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Bill Joy's green investing ideas
At a Churchill Club event in Santa Clara, Calif., Bill Joy, co-founder of Sun Microsystems and partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, explains ...
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The Green Enterprise: Autodesk
Autodesk tools aim to help designers conceptualize projects on a computer before starting the costly (and energy-intense) production process. ZDNet correspondent Sumi Das takes ...
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Car-friendly outlets pave way for electric driving
At the AlwaysOn Venture Summit in Half Moon Bay, Calif., Praveen Mandal, president of Coulomb Technologies, outlines the difficulties in finding places to plug ...
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The lightbulb of the future?
Silicon Valley's Luxim has developed a lightbulb the size of a Tic Tac that gives off as much light as a streetlight. News.com's Michael Kanellos talks to the company about its technology and its plans to expand into various markets.
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Fill your car for $1.10 a gallon?
Menlo Park, Calif.'s ZeaChem has come up with a way to turn wood chips into ethanol that will sell for around $1.10 a gallon or less when it comes out in 2010. Brewing and petrochemical technology go into the mix. News.com Editor at Large Michael Kanellos talks with founder Dan Verser and CEO James Imbler about their plans for cheap fuel.
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Who will manage the smart grid?
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., tech executives discuss the future management of smart-grid technology and whether the balance of power will go toward utility companies, government regulatory agencies or building owners.
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Capital flowing into green
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit in Menlo Park, Calif., Cascadia Capital CEO Michael Butler discusses three subsectors of the green-building industry that recently began receiving the most capital from the stimulus plan and private sectors.
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Speeding up construction on ‘green’ homes
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit at SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., Serious Material Chairman Marc Porat discusses the challenges associated with building "green" residential homes. He believes it's important for the green industry to persuade governments to mandate environmentally sustainable buildings in order to speed up construction.
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Autodesk's five core strategies
At the Greentech Media and Groom Energy, Enterprise Carbon Accounting Summit in Burlingame, Calif., Emma Stewart, who heads up Autodesk's Sustainable Business & Operations program, lays out the company's five strategies for reducing its environmental impact. It wants to not only build better design tools for itself and customers, but also to become more and more sustainable from within the company by examining everything from square foot usage to future partnership possibilities.
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E-motorcycle hits S.F. streets
CNET News reporter Mats Lewan takes the brand new Zero S electric motorcycle for a test drive in downtown San Francisco. Currently, electric scooter-style and offroad bikes can be used on the streets. But the Zero S can reach up to 60 mph, and its creator, Zero Motorcycles, says it's the first electric high-performance street motorcycle that's ready to ship.
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Tomorrow's smart grid
At the Churchill Club's 11th Annual Top Ten Tech Trends, venture capitalists discuss whether the smart grid and smart meter trends will continue to produce innovation and what the motivating factors will be.
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Tech execs talk smart design for ‘green’ buildings
At Greentech Media's Green Building Summit at SRI International, in Menlo Park, Calif., tech executives discuss what is needed to construct and design "green" buildings. Executives contend that many "green" buildings are not energy efficient and smart design means more than picking the right materials and products.
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The future, reusable paper
At the Gartner Symposium/ITxpo in Las Vegas, Steve Hoover, vice president with Xerox Research Center Webster, shows off a technology being developed in the company's labs that enables people to reuse a piece of paper. The paper contains a photochromic compound that makes ink disappear when hit by direct heat.
Are IT managers buying into 'green'?
At the Business Goes Green conference in San Jose, Calif., last week, Christopher Mines, senior vice president of Forrester Research, talked about the importance of changing the procurement process to be more eco-friendly. He told attendees that green practices will help refresh infrastructure IT and provide a longer life cycle for equipment. But are IT managers interested in acquiring green goods and services for their businesses?
Christopher Mines: One of
the crucial processes that we work with IT organizations to change is procurement;
putting standards in place to buy greener hardware, software, services and buy
them from greener companies. So it's not only the product and services that
those companies bring, but what about their internal practices. They're part of
your supply chain, you want to make sure that you're doing business with the
greenest companies you possibly can.
So, when you think about changing procurement criteria, and really infusing
green into the procurement process of an IT organization. It does two things,
one it starts the process of refreshing their infrastructure. It starts getting
more energy efficient gear, smaller, lighter, longer life cycle gear hopefully
into the asset base of the firm. That's a big change and a big improvement in
an IT organizations environmental footprint. But it also serves as a signal
back to the supply side of the industry. And I work with these guys all the
time; they track this stuff very carefully.
How many of our RFPs have green criteria in them? How stringent are those green
criteria? Are customers willing to pay more for green characteristics, or more
likely not.
So by changing the procurement criteria and procurement process, an IT
organization not only affects itself, but also ripples back into its suppliers.
And believe me those guys pay a ton of attention to what they see in their
customers RFPs. That is the single most powerful thing, a lot of reasons that
HP s and IBM s and Dell s of the world want to be greener. But the biggest one
is that their customers are asking for it and increasingly demanding it.
So changing that RFP process and tightening that RFP criteria around buying
greener products and services from their suppliers is a really crucial leverage
point, we think, for changing how the industry behaves overall.
So, where are we in terms of adoption, we ask our survey respondents this
question, "Has your company included environmental criteria" and that
can be pretty much anything here, greener manufacturing, energy efficiency,
recyclability of the products. Have you included any environmental criteria in
evaluation and selection of IT purchases.
And you see a nice steady increase in the number, the percentage, of our survey
respondents saying, "Yes, we are including those green criteria into our
IT procurement process, Now up to 50 percent of the companies in our latest
survey of just a month ago, or so.
Now, the challenge underneath this is, well how heavily weighted are those
criteria, how stringent are they, how rigorous are they, are you really walking
away from products, or from companies, that don't meet your environmental
criteria. And here, I must say you know getting underneath this a little bit,
as I talk to IT procurement folks, they are not very rigorous, there not very
stringent with these green criteria, at least not yet.
Most often, I hear these kinds of criteria and company's RFPs, when they're
there, they are tie breakers. If everything else is equal then we'll pick the
most environmentally friendly product. If the other 99 criteria are a flat footed
tie this will be our tie breaker. And its right before we get to coin flip in
the overtime hierarchy here.
Very few, I wouldn't get off one hand counting the number of clients that I've
talked to who say "We walk away, these are deal breakers." Not tie breakers,
deal breakers in terms of looking for more energy efficiency within our gear.
So that's something that we need to get underneath the high level questions we
ask in our surveys and really understand OK, how rigorous, how heavily weighted
are these purchase criteria? Today generally speaking they are pretty lightly
weighted and really fall more, as I said towards the tie breaker end of the
spectrum.






















