Ingersoll Rand announces bold new 2030 goals

Ingersoll Rand announces bold new 2030 goals

On the same evening that Ingersoll Rand was recognized by the World Environment Center for their exemplary international sustainability leadership, the company announced its new set of ambitious 2030 Sustainability Commitments. We applaud our long-time friends and clients on this momentous next chapter and look forward to sharing in their progress.

Highlights include the following achievements by 2030:

  • Carbon-neutral operations
  • 1 gigaton (1 billion metric tons) reduction in customer carbon footprint
  • 10% absolute reduction in energy consumption
  • Zero waste to landfill
  • Net-positive water
  • Increased access to sustainable cooling and fresh food
  • Gender parity in leadership
  • Investment in STEM education
  • Seed grants for critical mobility needs

 

IR2030 Final Fact Sheet

Net Power & The Possibility of Clean Fossil Fuels

Energy start-up Net Power is leading the way in deploying carbon capture and sequestration. INC takes a look at the future of cleaner fossil fuel production:

“In the Texas city of La Porte, about 30 miles outside of Houston, the power plant of the future generates enough electricity to power 5,000 homes simultaneously. It burns old-fashioned fossil fuels. And yet it produces no carbon emissions.

Sound impossible?

Net Power, the Durham, North Carolina-based startup behind the plant, is on a mission to prove it’s not only possible but also a potential solution to one of the biggest contributors to climate change. If all goes well, the plant will be the first of many like it around the globe. 

Founded in 2008, Net Power has been on a long journey to create a new type of power plant that will appeal to established energy companies. The hope is this first plant serves as the proof of concept necessary to show the industry a path to zero emissions–and, for Net Power, a path to profitability.” 

Read the full story: https://www.inc.com/kevin-j-ryan/net-power-zero-emissions-plant-global-warming.html

Roger writes in The Hill: KeystoneXL is an important debate for yesterday.

Roger writes in The Hill: KeystoneXL is an important debate for yesterday.

Listening to the Republicans in Congress, one might think that the Keystone XL pipeline is the biggest energy issue facing the country today and that swift approval of the controversial project is vital to America’s interests. Election-year politics aside, however, the merits of the case for the pipeline have been eclipsed by changing circumstances.