TransAtlas: a new and interactive map for alt-fuel hunters, policymakers

Ever wondered where all the biodiesel drivers are? Or how about where to find the most corn ethanol is made? Questions like these can be answered over at TransAtlas, a new project by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL). While good old Joe Internet can use the Google Maps-based map to find information, the DOE and NREL really designed the system to help industry and government planners make decisions on how best to east America's dependence on oil. The alternative "fuel" types included on the map include: biodiesel, compressed or liquefied natural gas, ethanol (E85), electricity, hydrogen, and propane (sorry, diesel). Current and future refueling stations are included. Check out the map here.
[Source: NREL]
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Green Crusader 10:21AM (6/11/2009)
This blog has some interesting comments on the subject: http://bloginsidegreen.blogspot.com/
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paulwesterberg 11:58AM (6/11/2009)
blogspam
Green Crusader 1:02PM (6/11/2009)
How did the Environmentalist Movement begin ?
People have been concerned with issues relating to their environment as far back as the earliest human civilizations.
At least 4,000 years ago!
The Bible states that you should rest your fields on the 7th year:
But in the seventh year the land is to have a sabbath of rest, a sabbath to the LORD. Do not sow your fields or prune your vineyards.
Governing the availability of food, water and habitable land, the stability of the environment is crucial to our survival as human beings. It is therefore human nature to be concerned in some way, at the prospect of an environmental catastrophe.
Concerns for water and air pollution can be found in Ancient Roman texts and soil conservation was practiced in China, India and Peru 2000 years ago.
Most people use the publication of Rachel Carson's book "Silent Spring" (1962) as the starting point for modern environmentalism. The 1st Earth Day occurred in 1970.
The generation that founded the modern ‘green’ movement in the 1960’s could not have been the first to act in a belief that the damage being done to the environment might be a danger to civilization.
The Industrial Revolution brought up the first bout of health issues related to harmful particles in the air, as well as the first measures to protect the countryside.
So it seems safe to say that as civilization has expanded, concerns about the environment have increased hand in hand with economic and social development over time, like a rising tide.
How has it developed?
The difference between the way we view the environment today has changed in a very important way.
Awareness of the environment and issues concerning it are now a major part of our global consciousness, affecting us on a much deeper level than ever before.
With the onset of the industrial revolution a new, global environmental problem emerged which we have come to call ‘Global Warming’.
The key word here is ‘Global’.
Rather than affecting a local area, the threat is now international.
Some forecasts say that sea levels will rise by 1 meter by the end of this century displacing 72 million people in China alone.
People displaced by flooding around the world would create an unimaginable humanitarian disaster.
This is the driving force behind our desire to save the environment. It is simply the fundamental human instinct of survival.
Our urge to preserve the environment has mutated into a need to save humanity itself, tapping into our most basic human desire.
Fact: The average temperatures over the last 15 years have been the highest ever recorded.
There may be 200 million climate refugees by 2050.
The issue of global warming has sprouted a forest of interested groups around the world. Charities, companies and political parties, even individuals are putting more and more emphasis on their ‘green credentials’.
Are they motivated by the wish to help put off global disaster?
Or just to benefit themselves without any real concern for the environment itself?
How can we tell?
paulwesterberg 12:07PM (6/11/2009)
The map is a good start, it uses google maps api, but they need to improve it so that the markers are interactive so you can expand to get the address and click to get directions to the location...
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GoodCheer 4:44PM (6/11/2009)
... and for electric, it needs to give the plug type and power availability.
Witt 5:07PM (6/24/2009)
Click 'Query->By Point' and you can get details (including the address) of any station by clicking on it. No driving directions yet.
For driving directions, visit http://www.afdc.energy.gov/afdc/locator/stations/
lvy 1:25AM (6/19/2009)
This is good ,more please visit: http://www.jb-electricbikes.com/
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