Global Green USA Plans Post-Sandy Rebuild

SANTA MONICA, Calif. — Global Green USA, the Santa Monica-based American affiliate of Green Cross International that has influenced more than $20 billion in green building projects, is planning its next endeavor: to help the areas devastated by Hurricane Sandy rebuild green.

The organization’s president and CEO Matt Petersen announced the new project on Dec. 3 at the 13th annual Sustainable Design Awards in New York. The plan includes three initiatives: Solar for Sandy, Search for Citizen Sandy, and Greening Schools and Neighborhoods.

Read More

Nanotechnology Could Increase Efficiency of Solar Panels

DURHAM, N.C. — New research suggests microscopic technology could help increase the efficiency of solar panels in the not-too-distant future. David Smith, a scientist at Duke University in Durham, N.C., and his team developed a metamaterial that has the unique property of maximizing the absorption of solar rays. A metamaterial is a substance that isn’t found in nature but is usually created by taking the blueprint for a previously existing element and altering it to create a new material with different properties.

Read More

USA Today and Green Building Council Debate LEED Program

MCLEAN, Va. — A recent article in USA Today has reenergized the debate on green building. The report, titled “Green schools: Long on promise, short on delivery,” lambasted the U.S. Green Building Council and its LEED certification program, which led to a reply from the non-profit organization, titled “Response to 4th USA Today Article Attacking Green Buildings.” Needless to say, the very public sparring match has made some headlines across the nation and stirred up the discussion about green schools.

Read More

Energy-Efficient Rooftop Technology

Trane, a provider of indoor comfort systems and services, unveils the next generation of IntelliPak I unitary rooftop systems in configurations from 20 tons to 130 tons. The redesigned energy-efficient units are built to work with air conditioning as well as heating. Featuring Trane’s eDrive, a direct-drive plenum fan technology that is up to 20 percent more efficient than traditional forward-curved fans, the systems’ belt-free design prevents particles from building up in the filter, according to the company.

Read More