by Mark Pawlosky
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Corporate Green
A review of Joel Makower’s Strategies for the Green Economy 5
Posted 1 year ago If there were an M.B.A. school for green executives, Joel Makower undoubtedly would be its dean, historian, and booster-in-chief.
Joel Makower.
During a 20-year career, Makower has chronicled the rise of the green movement in corporate America through books, hundreds of stories, and countless speeches. Along the way, he has carved out a mini green business empire for himself. He is executive editor and chairman of Greener World Media, which owns Greenbiz.com, a website that reports on the burgeoning industry. He also has marketing ties to… Read More
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Paved With Good Intentions
Green, Inc. author says big environmental groups have sold out to big business 4
Posted 1 year, 1 month ago For my money, there's nothing more delicious than a book that lays bare the rot of a corrupted industry from an insider's perspective. In the hands of a skilled observer, the subject can spring to life. Liar's Poker, Michael Lewis's hilariously disturbing account of Wall Street's investment-banking industry in the late 1980s, comes to mind.
Green, Inc., by Christine MacDonald.
Lewis's book traces its lineage to Mark Singer's Funny Money, a masterpiece of nonfiction that exposed the double-dealing and corruption that led to the collapse of the savings and loan… Read More
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A new marketplace for trading GHG permits
A chat with Philip V. Adams of the World Green Exchange auction system 2
Posted 1 year, 9 months ago Last week, World Energy Exchange, an online energy trading platform, officially launched a new marketplace for renewable-energy certificates and greenhouse-gas permits. The World Green Exchange employs an auction system -- think eBay -- to bring buyers and sellers together. In theory, auctions create a more transparent marketplace and drive out cost inefficiencies by directly connecting the buyer and seller and removing the middleman.
Philip V. Adams.We caught up with World Energy President and COO Philip… Read More
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A trillion here, a trillion there
Another day, another trillion dollars for the clean-tech industry 2
Posted 1 year, 9 months ago It seems that a day doesn't slip by without someone raising the stakes in the alternative-energy poker game.The most recent bombshell wager: Cambridge Energy Research Associates report that alternative energy investments will -- hold on to your hats! -- top $7 trillion by 2030. That's an audacious number by any measure, and normally it would be enough to suck the oxygen right out of a convention of wind-farm enthusiasts. But that's not the half of it. The most startling aspect of the report is that it barely raised a ripple in the investment community.
And why should… Read More
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Whither the alternative energy market?
Q&A with Eric Janszen on whether an alt-energy bubble is in the making 25
Posted 1 year, 9 months ago
Eric JanszenEric Janszen, the founder and president of iTulip.com, recently argued in Harper's Magazine that the alternative energy segment is a prime candidate for a massive asset bubble, potentially dwarfing both the dot-com and housing bubbles. I wrote about Janszen's prediction last week. This week, Janszen joins us for a question-and-answer follow-up. Read More
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Bubbling up ...
Could alternative energy companies drive the next big market bubble? 23
Posted 1 year, 10 months ago In case you missed it, the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced a violent and exhausting 1,000-point swing the past week, down 450 points on Tuesday before trimming its losses and then tumbling 330 points on Wednesday before rebounding with a 299-point gain.It's not the only financial freefall of late. The housing market bubble was punctured last fall and has been leaking like the Hindenburg ever since. (And long before that, the economy experienced the dual dot-com and technology implosions in the spring of 2000.)
Read MoreCan the environmental economy dodge a recession?
As economic indicators trend downward, the clean-tech sector is still looking up 3
Posted 1 year, 10 months ago As one key economic engine after another -- housing, finance, autos, retail -- sputters and stalls out, the fledgling eco-economy is purring right along, fueled in no small part by venture capital firms hungry for new opportunities in industries that promise outsized returns on their investments. In the first three quarters of 2007, VCs poured $2.6 billion into alternative energy and clean-tech firms, more money than they invested for the whole of 2006. The new year promises to be another record breaker.And it's not only the Silicon Valley sharpies that are on the prowl: GE is promising to Read More
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