Posts Tagged 'Vampire Proof'

Vampire Proof™ Charger Pre-Order Coming Soon!

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Vampire energy loss occurs when an electronic device, like a cell phone charger, continues to draw and waste energy when left plugged in, which adds wasted watts to your electric bill! The US Department of Energy has noted that vampire energy loss is responsible for up to 15% of a home’s annual energy costs.

Vampire Proof  Chargers are here to put a stake in vampire energy loss once and for all! Coming soon Vampire Labs will be offering an exclusive pre-order for our revolutionary vampire energy eliminating mobile phone chargers. Our patent-pending technology eliminates vampire energy loss at its core – reducing your home’s wasted energy, saving money, and ultimately saving our planet.

Visit www.vampirelabs.com to learn more about our exclusive pre-order, which guarantess you will be among the first people in the world to own a piece of tomorrow’s energy-efficient, ground-breaking technologies.

Happy Earth Day, Earth

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Today marks the 40th official year of recognizing the Earth for being, well, the Earth. Check out the certified Earth Day website and see what you can do to help celebrate our cosmically singular yet ubiquitous home.

Unfortunately for our planet, April 22nd will come and go like so many other honorary holidays or birthdays where a calendar day recognizes or memorializes something that is forgotten the next day. If everyone on the planet observed 4/22/2010 with 100% earth-friendly practices, it would not change the Earth’s plight. This is not to say that Earth Day is not important or that it having its own day of recognition is not valuable. It is; it is.

The message just comes with a caveat – Earth Day should be everyday and practiced by everyone in a rational manner. Human behavior is not hard to change for a single day once a year. Most people are incentivized by a mix of peer pressure and conscious that comes with an official Earth Day to think green (but just for today). Instead of going overboard on green-this and eco-that all packed into 24 hours, why not incorporate more sustainable (and attainable) practices in one’s everyday life?

Aside from spurring more people to think about how their everyday actions represent themselves as stewards of a world, hopefully this Earth Day will add fuel to the new climate bill being introduced on April 26th in the U.S. Congress. Because while everyday individual choices do, can, and will make a collective difference, changing our laws in order to move to a more sustainable, more energy-efficient and less oil-dependent world is worth all the carbon free activities one can cram into a late day in April.

Abusus non tollit non nocet – Happy Earth Day, Earth.

Energy Efficiencies’ role in Obama’s 2011 Budget Request

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Green EnergyPresident Obama released his Administration’s 2011 budget request on Tuesday, and energy efficiencies’ role in the United States’ energy policy is increasing. According to the President’s budget proposal, the DOE will be appointed around 28.4 Billion, which is $2 Billion more than what has been slated for 2010. As Energy Secretary Steven Chu expressed, “This budget supports new approaches to energy research and invests in the next generation of scientists and engineers, and it will spark clean energy projects nationwide.”

Highlights per the Office of Management and Budget website on the Energy Department’s 2011 budget allocation:

  • $4.7 Billion in clean energy technology investments at DOE, including:
  • Nearly $2.4 Billion for energy efficiency and renewable energy programs.
  • $300 Million for the Advanced Research Projects Agency- Energy to accelerate game-changing energy technologies in need of rapid and flexible experimentation or engineering.
  • $793 Million for clean energy activities, including R&D and infrastructure programs.
  • $5.1 Billion for the Office of Science, including $1.8 Billion for basic energy sciences to discover novel ways to produce, store, and use energy.
  • Double newable energy generating capicity by 2012.
  • Assist in the development and deployment of advanced battery manufacturing capacity to support 500,000 hybrid electric vehicles a year by 2015.
  • Retrofits for 1.1 Million housing units through 2011.

Obama on the 2011 energy allocations, “We will build on the largest investment in clean energy history, as well as increase investment in scientific research so that we are fostering the industries and jobs of the future.”

The United States’ energy policy is finally moving in the right direction under the Obama Administration.

CES: Personal Technology and Entertainment Platforms Wow … Energy Efficiency an afterthought …

Monday, January 11th, 2010

ces-pic1CES is history. Crazy entertainment platforms ruled the long weekend and why not? Personal entertainment is where the money’s at. The consumer electronics’ industry is vying for your entertainment dollars. Every product poses itself as the next big breakthrough.

We didn’t quite see what we came for – exciting  energy efficiency technology. There were a wide variety of power strips that reduce vampire power. These same type of products have failed to be viable in past years. What do they lack? Aside from high cost, the biggest hurdle these products face is that they require consumer behavior change. A downfall of many valuable eco-friendly products to date.

It is no secret that most consumer electronics waste the majority of the electricity they draw during charging and conversion of the electricity from ac/dc power and when left plugged into the outlet when not in use. This is known as vampire energy loss, standby power consumption or vampire power. It was unfortunate that the engineers behind 3D TV, tablet pc’s and some of the other potential game-changers did not aim to eliminate vampire energy loss – only curb it. energy-prices-surge

Tomorrow’s headlines reaffirm the need to stop wasting today’s energy resources that yesterday were just an afterthought …

CES 2010: Vegas, baby, Vegas – Betting on Innovation & Energy Efficiency

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

las-vegascesThe International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) officially begins tomorrow the 7th and runs through the 10th. Although it’s been reported that CES 2010 has scaled back in size from previous years, the hype, speculation and predictions from tech-insiders has not.

While most every one’s focus is tuned towards 3D TV, viable touch tablets and competing e-readers, we will do our best to stick with speakers, sessions and exhibits that combine technology and energy efficiency – like the Innovations Movement, Greener Gadgets Tech Zone and Sustainable Planet. It’s really the creative prowess  of technology and gadgetry that is truly amazing.

As an innovative,ted-levitt ground-breaking company, Vampire Labs thrives in creative atmospheres. We’re geared up to take it all in – the ingenious, the impersonators, the unreal, and, yes, a few games of roulette here and there. Hopefully, you’re joining us, but, if not, check us out on Monday for a recap.

As our flight descends, I close with this quote and hope for an exciting, safe and, hopefully, promising weekend: “Just as energy is the basis of life itself, and ideas the source of innovation,  so is innovation the vital spark of all human change, improvement and progress.” (Ted Levitt, 1925-2006)

The Copenhagen Accord

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

istock_000011292882xsmall3Missed opportunity. The Copenhagen Climate Conference has come and gone. Some argue it was a success; others are disappointed. Those arguing for success point to the fact that the Kyoto Protocol does not include developing nations; the Copenhagen Accord does. However, it’s non-binding and has not been well received by developing nations that feel they were suckered by the more prominent and powerful nations in attendance. What the case, the resulting document is the Copenhagen Accord.

The Copenhagen Accord is a whopping 2.5 pages in length and originally “brokered” by the US, China, Brazil, South Africa and India. So far, only 25 out of the 194 nations in attendance have signed it or roughly 13%.

High on rhetoric and low in substance, the Accord targets keeping global temperatures from rising 2 degrees Celsius by 2050 in order “to stave off the worst effects of global climate change“. It also promised that “rich countries” will provide funding to “poor countries” to help them combat climate change through 2020 “by providing developing countries $10 Billion a year from 2010 to 2012 with a goal of raising that to $100 Billion a year by 2020 to finance their action to adapt to climate change and develop green technologies“. Yet, the Accord doesn’t address how either of those goals will be met.

Powerful and influential nations, people and corporations have historically thrown money at problems with little success. More often than not, money turns out to be man-made much like the carbon emissions from a coal plant. In this case, if the money is ever distributed, it would most likely pad the bank accounts of those developing nations’ ruling class and do little for the people suffering the affects of climate change.

New York Times columnist, best selling author of Hot, Flat and Crowded, and self-described green hawk, Thomas Friedman, who was in attendance at Copenhagen, described the end result as an “unprecedented breakdown” not an “unprecedented breakthrough”. Watch his interview with Rachel Maddow below (he makes a lot of sense).

Friedman makes an interesting point to act on: Actions speak louder than accords. If America acts with legislation and through corporate, community and personal environmental-responsibility, then the world will follow.

For the last several years, proponents of clean energy, environmental activists and others have looked toward Copenhagen as the time and place to begin a new path to a sustainable energy future. The Climate Conference, which came on the heels of many climate reports that exhibited a changing world and an uncertain future for the planet’s most vulnerable peoples, was a failure. Rather than displaying how humanity can come together to fight common issues; participants were further marginalized by the undeniable and binary gap between rich and poor, influential and dispensable.

The time is ours to move passed the Copenhagen Climate Conference and act. Energy-efficiency is a real and venerable means to successfully realizing the influence all consumers hold in a world dominated by money and power. If consumers, rich and poor, have the option to affordably and pragmatically reduce their energy consumption, especially wasted energy or vampire energy loss, the US could reduce $10 Billion in annual energy costs. Extrapolated on a global scale, there are hundreds of billions of dollars to be found by eliminating vampire power. Coincidentally, if the US eliminated all of its vampire power in electronics, there would be enough money saved to fund the annual obligation to developing nations called for in the Copenhagen Accord.

Happy Holidays from Vampire Labs …

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Climate Change requires Business Sector to LEED on Energy Efficiency

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

green-businessmen-shaking-handsWith the UN Climate Conference underway, business leaders now take center stage. A recent New York Times OP-ED, Business Leaders, the Planet Needs You, provided some interesting data on American business and their commitment to environmental responsibility. The author, George Kell is the executive director of the UN Global Compact, a UN initiative aimed at urging businesses to take up socially responsible policies and practices.

According to the Times data, “A study of American companies provides an alarming analysis. Of the largest 1,000 U.S. companies by market cap, only 8.4% have stated environmental policies that address emissions of greenhouse gas.” They do cite regulatory uncertainty as a contributor to the reluctance of businesses to fully commit themselves to environmental responsibilities.

More data suggests that, “A recent analysis of the 300 largest global companies by market capitalization reveals a high level of unmitigated climate change risk.” Kell went further with his analysis.  “Of the companies in this group that have high carbon footprints, 60 percent have not set long-term emissions targets, while 80 percent have not disclosed targets related to the climate impact of their products.”

There is also a feeling that those “entrenched” in carbon heavy industries will not change, but there is hope for industry “fence-sitters”, or those unwilling to commit to or against climate change regulations. Kell lays a framework for convincing the fence-sitters to hop over to the greener side of the debate.

Kell’s framework is outlined below:

1)climate change is the test of business leadership in the 21st century;green-people-arrow1

2. the future of the global marketplace hangs in the balance;

3. addressing climate can trigger an era of sustainable prosperity;

4. transformation is possible and viable; and

5. climate change is an urgent ethical issue for the broader role business in society.”

Kell makes a great point and it is this – businesses drive our economy. If our economy is to become more viable through environmentally sound practices and sustainability, like promoting energy efficiency to thwart climate change and save wasted money and resources, then business leaders MUST work to convince their counterparts that NOW is the time to act responsibly. The benefits are almost always understated: creating a sustainable future for generations to come, saving wasted energy (means saving wasted money), and, most importantly, being leaders for the rest of world.

Real Answers to Climate Change: Energy Efficiency & Copenhagen

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Climate change is real and happening before our very eyes. From Bolivia’s rapidly changing landscape and way of life to massive floating ice heading towards New Zealand, the dissipation of glaciers and glacier calving are just a few examples of how to quantify what climate change means to the world. Many similar reports published this year point to the same overwhelming conclusion – something needs to change.

When climate change reports are released, it is easy to dismiss them as irrelevant to your life. Have you ever thought: yea, that’s bad, but I can’t do anything about it. And what you’re really thinking is:  yea, that’s bad, but I don’t want to change what I do everyday. Attempting to change some one’s behavior is as fruitless as assuming that individuals are helpless to change the world.

Scientist and innovators know that inconvenient truth all too well. That said, below are some of the more creative, interesting and experimental ways CNN found that experts and engineers around the world are proposing to battle climate change.

1. Cloud Whitening cloud_whitening

2. Space-based Frisbee Detectors2

3. A Permanent Haze3

4. Carbon Sucking Machines4

5. Ocean-Seeding5

6. White Deserts61

7. Biochar7

8. Hurricane-killing Wave Pump8

While those are fun and unique, they are also probably a far cry from being realized as formidable opponents to climate change; however, there are options that are available now and will make a difference like Energy Efficiency.

Whether it is building more efficient buildings, making new lighting and insulation choices or using Vampire Proof Chargers, energy efficiency is viable, effective and relatively inexpensive compared to the cost of doing nothing and continuing to waste massive amounts of energy that produces enormous amounts of unnecessary CO2 that heavily contributes to the depletion of our planet. Energy efficiency itself is a clean energy resource that is currently being ignored!

As the world looks to Copenhagen for the highly anticipated United Nations Climate Change Conference, where 190 world leaders are set to meet December 7 – 19th, we strongly encourage them to look towards energy efficiency as a dynamic and critical weapon in the fight against exponential climate change that is happening all around us.

NBC’s Green Week: Raising Environmental Awareness through Information and Hilarity

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

green-week-calendar-copy-edited1For the 3rd year, NBC is hosting their annual Green Week, November 15th – 21st, to raise environmental awareness. As such, their prime-time lineups, regular programming, affiliate channels, numerous websites and other media outlets will feature green/environmentally-friendly themes and messages (their site devoted to all things eco-friendly is pretty sweet).

Green Your Routine, an NBC “Green” site designed to educate and entertain visitors on everything from reducing their carbon footprint through fashion choices to video clips featuring Dwight Schrute as Recyclops …

The site’s robust video library is chalk full of cast member videos, some are funny and others feature more direct messages. The Green Highlights from this season were pretty good.

NBC continues their bold stance on environmental awareness and we love it. What we liked even more was what we discovered researching the story. NBC isn’t just putting on a good show with Green Week; they live it. The production of their TV shows has become increasingly more eco-friendly with cast members, crews and executives coming together to make earth-friendly decisions (like the removal of bottled water from sets) ,  NBC is delivering and living their message well. They are in an important position with the ability to reach a wide range of people through their numerous TV and other media outlets.

Not only is it good for the planet’s future, but it is also good business – personal budget or corporate best practices. Reducing waste, whether it’s paper, plastic, water or energy, saves money and decreases the depletion of natural resources and proves to save even more cash down the line for those, like NBC, that start forging ahead now. NBC, of course, is not the only corporation publicly going green. It’s been happening for years, because it is a time tested way to save money that is routinely wasted by inefficient systems, computers, laptops, servers and chargers.

You can easily make an impact on the planet and your budget by reducing the energy you unwittingly waste. Did you know most electronics continue to suck electricity when plugged in and not in use or fully charged? This energy crisis is called vampire energy loss or vampire power, and it sucks. It sucks power for our energy supply; it sucks power from your outlets; it’s sucking our natural resources with absolutely no benefit to anyone.

Due to the Billions of cell phones, laptops and mobile devices in use around the globe, their chargers are aggregately among the most prolific vampire electronics. As you probably remember doing on many occasions, cell phone chargers are often left plugged in at a certain spot in the house regardless if the phone is connected or not. While your charger may not melt the polar ice caps, the Billions being used everyday are adding significant amounts of unnecessary CO2 into our atmosphere. The EPA estimates that vampire energy loss is responsible for $10 Billion in wasted energy per year and millions of tons of dangerous CO2 emissions.green-evil-charger-no-vampire-labs-new5

As you enjoy Green Week, remember to be conscious of the little energy wasters in your life, like vampire chargers and electronics, that are sucking your budget dry when they are not in use and left plugged in. Put a stake in vampire energy loss and go Vampire Proofâ„¢.

Vampire Proof: Slaying Vampire Energy Loss

Friday, November 13th, 2009