• Home
  • Insights
    • About Customer Insight
    • Ad Hoc Poll Results
    • Customer Insight
    • Green
    • Musings
    • Research Statistics
    • Top Performers
    • 495
    • RSS Feeds
  • Mobile UC
    • Mobile UC Business
    • Mobile UC Observations
    • Mobile UC Product Reviews
    • Mobile UC Service Reviews
    • Mobile UC Applications Reviews
    • Mobile UC Devices Reviews
  • Coms
    • IP Video
      • Video Conferencing Consultants
      • Telepresence Consultants
      • Video Conferencing Strategy
    • Applications
    • E911
    • Email
    • LANs & WANs
    • Messaging
    • Quality
    • Security
    • SIP
    • VoIP
    • VoIP History
  • Scores
  • Reports
    • Register?
      • Be Heard. Join our Panel.
      • Prize Winners Do Surveys
      • Unregister
    • Research Catalogs
    • Recovery Series
    • Collaboration
      • Exchange Review
    • Fundamentals
    • Messaging
    • Mobile UC
      • Alcatel-Lucent Users
      • Avaya Users
      • Cisco Users
      • Nortel Users
      • Product Manager's Guide
      • Siemens Users
    • Web 2.0
    • Pre-2007 Research
    • Comments
    • Brainshark Content Network
  • About
    • About Peter Brockmann
    • Contact Us
    • News
    • In the News...
    • Request a User Briefing
    • Request a Vendor Briefing
    • Full Disclosure Notice
    • Famous Brockmann's
  • David
Insights Green

Green

Noting and commenting on the fundamental science, the amazing business dimensions and the emergence of sustainable technologies, green metrics and the business aspects of trending towards carbon emission reductions and alternative energy sources. We have a pragmatic view of new technologies and are particularly skeptical of regulatory regimes mandating or subsidizing markets and industries. These tend to distort the natural forces of supply and demand and have equal or greater consequences in unintended ways.

Why Do We Want High Speed Rail?

Sunday, 01 August 2010 04:08 Written by Paul Brockmann
User Rating: / 11
PoorBest 

AmericasnicheAmerica's passenger rail system is a joke. Amtrak has consumed enormous subsidies with negligible economic impact on the nation and this administration wants to up the ante with even bigger subsidies for high speed rail.

However, America's freight railroad industry is the envy of the world. The average horsepower has increased by nearly three quarters while the fuel efficiency increased by nearly 40% in the past twenty years. US railroads have been investing billions in improved tracks, bridges and intermodal (trains-trucks-ships) capacity.

A recent The Economist, an article, High-Speed Railroading, brought to my attention that America's freight railroads are the world's best. Sadly, the Obama administration's love for high-speed passenger trains are likely to ruin this industry and its well-deserved reputation. America's rail-freight rates are the lowest among the supposed greatest rail nations and regions, such as Europe. Comparing rail-freight rates at purchasing-power parity, India, Russia, and China are also beaten by US rail-freight rates.

Now, the article goes on to show that because passenger traffic is uncommon in America compared to these other places that already have high-speed passenger trains, the US freight trains travel relatively uninterrupted. High speed passenger trains force the slower and longer freight trains to idle on sidings as they fly by. Idling uses more fuel and the constant starting and stopping increase the wear and tear on the brakes and engine which in turn increases costs. This reduces competitiveness of the freight railroad which moves more traffic onto the less-fuel efficient trucks. The freight trains now take longer to the get to their destinations, reducing the overall capacity per month of the freight system.

Here are a few myths about the advantages of high speed passenger rail:

  • Trains compete with the airline industry. But in a highly competitive airline industry as it stands today, fliers can get pretty cheap flights wherever airlines compete, not to mention getting to their destination faster than trains.
  • Trains consume less energy per passenger mile than airplanes or cars. But, this estimate does not reflect the negative impact on freight trains that passenger trains present.
  • Comparing safety, cost and other factors depends a lot on the distances and terrain.

With the plan to create high-speed passenger trains and then to force them onto the privately owned freight tracks, can only result in higher freight costs, lower transportation productivity and fewer advantages for our economy. The consumer demand for rail traffic is non-existent since consumers would rather get to their destinations faster or more flexibly by driving or flying.

Now tell me, why do we want high speed trains again?

Add new comment

If Only The Government Would Be An Energy Source Instead of Drain

Tuesday, 27 July 2010 06:00 Written by Paul Brockmann
User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 

WindsolarandcarsThe largely discredited implementation of cap and trade seems to have given way to a different approach in US law, which is the idea of the renewable portfolio standard (RPS). Like the standards established decades ago for ever tightening standards for the fleet-wide efficiencies of automotive companies aka Corporate Average Fuel Economy, the RPS is a requirement for regulated power companies to produce some minimum percentage of energy via socially-preferred methods such as wind or solar.

The idea is to use regulation to wean the power companies to build and use the more environmental-friendly sources. Although implemented in 27 states, some worry that RPS is going to be a part of a federal energy bill (Son of Cap and Tax) that sets national standards on state regulatory initiatives that are supposedly more stringent (read most costly).

It should come as no surprise that RPS has consequences - after several studies, RPS leads to consumer price increases of about 4% each year.

Interesting enough, it seems that the power companies are already managing their portfolio of generating assets. They are looking at cleaner energy sources in the future since the administrative or regulatory cost of using abundant and cheap coal are likely to increase anyways.

My worry is that by making privately owned companies do something that they are already doing anyways with a politically forceful gesture that translates inevitably into higher prices for consumers is a wasted effort in that the costs exceed the benefits. The same type of political push has been made by the government last year to force the car companies to build plug-in electric cars within some timeline. These companies were working their way towards that goal anyways, but with this regulatory pressure they will be encouraged to get there before the consumer is willing to pay for it.

Comments (1)

New Codes, More Money

Monday, 26 July 2010 11:35 Written by Paul Brockmann
greenerstandards

In Massachusetts and probably elsewhere around the country, towns and cities are trying to do their part to make the world a 'greener' place. Although the role of municipal politics and local social action in green matters are not well defined beyond the 3Rs of post-consumer waste management, zoning and land use control and some disastrous anti-herbicide experiments on playing fields, some towns in central Massachusetts are stepping up the expectation and activism. Some towns are changing the energy conservation standards in the building codes, making them 20% stricter than required by the state.

Of course, I didn't know that towns could legislate building codes and interesting enough, building codes do change over time as new materials, methods and technologies become widely available and property owners, contractors and architects adjust accordingly.

However, the 20% tightening is actually a huge change for these people, especially during a recession. They will need to go through training to deliver on these standards. To make matters worse, the codes are changing in some towns spread throughout the region but not others, reducing competition for contractors and architects in those towns. The contractors and architects without the training will not be able to get those jobs in those towns, because they will not be qualified for such a job.

Another side-effect for this 20% increase is that in those particular towns, buildings will cost more to construct, since the contractors have to recoup their training expense and since the higher standards use more materials. Special doors, windows, more, higher quality insulation will be needed, which will cost more than the run-of-the-mill performance products.

Yes, the new building will cost less to operate and there will be less carbon-emissions because of these tougher standards. Do we really need to make it more costly to be a builder or to build a building in this state right now?

 

Add new comment

More Articles...

  • Green vs Green
  • Tesla to the future!
  • The Smog Police?
  • Electric Cars Not Pulling Their Weight
  • Is The Green Fest Over?
  • Predicting Hurricane Frequency Still a Big Guess
  • Verne Global - Lowest Data Center TCO
  • Challenging Assumptions About Marketing Low Carbon Products
  • Debunking Climate Change Myths
  • The End of Cap & Trade Is Near
  • No Consensus on Climate Change Science
  • IBM Explores Water-Cooled Computers
  • Green Bill Perpetuates Faulty Accounting Practices Leading to Bad Decisions
  • Shame on Congress
  • Frightened by The Rhetoric
  • Gadgets Make Energy Efficiency Fun
  • Ethanol Subsidies Are a Slippery Slope
  • Ethanol: The Big Disappointment
  • Light Bulb Wars
  • President's Earth Day Hipocrisy
  • Earth Day 2009
  • Cisco Announces The Greening of Switching
  • HP and Recycling
  • Empathy Gone Too Far?
  • P2P Refrigerators
  • About Wave Power...
  • Carbon Banking
  • Mobile Network Power
  • Guest Blog: Importance of Segmentation
  • Global Wind Power Production
  • FAA's New Radar Replacement Saves 100,000 Acres Too
  • Guest Blog: Convincing Business Leaders About The Green Value of Their Low-Carbon Products
  • Green Coffins
  • Renewable Energy Market Consolidates
  • Multi-Monitors and Power Consumption
  • 'Pay-As-You-Throw' (PAYT) Gaining Popularity?
  • IBM's New Energy Tech
  • Is Global Warming A Hoax?
  • HP Shows the SmartWay to Greener Supply Chain
  • The Politics of Energy
  • Avoiding Carbon Offsets
  • How Green is Your Telecom Company?
  • Incentives Versus Penalties?
  • When Taxes Don't Make Sense
  • WSJ: Cisco Energy Tax
  • Don't Expect a 'Tide G'
  • Why Oil Prices Will Remain High
  • US / Canadian Carbon Footprint Calculator
  • UN and Trees Combat Climate Change
  • Energy Tax Calculator

Page 1 of 28

Start
Prev
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next
End

70% of the Web 2.0 panel have no plans for Public Forums.

Related Report:  Web 2.0 For Business:  A New Class of Coporate Memory

Login

  • Forgot your password?
  • Forgot your username?
Follow us on Twitter

Posts: All-Time Highest Rated

  • Why Register?
  • Guest Blog: Convincing Business Leaders About The Green Value of Their Low-Carbon Products
  • Internet on Us
  • 10 Most Popular Blog Entries of 2009
  • Brockmann Guest Blogs for No Jitter
  • Cisco Cius
  • Swatting Is a New Dangerous Sport
  • Cost Saving Strategies: Why Video Managed Services?
  • Identity Thieves Masquerade as Job Sites
  • Video Conferencing Consultants

Posts: Year's Most Popular

  • Why Register?
  • Mobile Apps Are Addictive
  • Now, I Have Seen It All
  • Taxes and Telecommuting
  • Breaking News - Avaya to IPO
  • Android Users Suffer Security Problems
  • Google Removes More Mal-Apps
  • Innovations in Screen Technologies
  • Applying Email Marketing Features to Personal Email
  • Where Have I Been?

Reports: All-Time Most Popular

  • Forums in Small Companies
  • Forums in Large Companies
  • The Problem With Email
  • Video Communications 2.0: Tips for Improving The Experience
  • The Manager's Recession Survival Guide video

Reports: Year's Most Popular

(c) Brockmann & Company 2002-2011 Scroll To Top