Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

My Comments from the North America Climate Presenter's Summit

  Posted By:  Jeff Wolfe

Date: May 19th, 2009

I am at the North American Climate presenter’s Summit. I am privileged, and burdened, by being one of the 1200 people in the US trained by Al Gore to deliver his climate slideshow. I say privileged because it is an incredible group of people and fantastic training. I say burdened because, well, ignorance is bliss, and not only am I not allowed to be ignorant, I am required to understand and spread both the message of the crisis confronting us and the solutions we must undertake immediately.

We’re getting updated science from some of the leaders in climate science. We’re getting information on human health effects (right now while I’m multi-tasking and typing this actually). We’re getting information on the just released draft of the Waxman -Markey climate bill. And of course, we’re getting motivation and direction for immediate action.

The overriding message is that the time is now, this is the moment. Historians look back through time and note those periods when significant change happened. It is unusual to be able to understand at the time of occurrence, that this is an historic moment in the history of the world. This is such a moment, such a time.
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Billerica, MA Ribbon Cutting

  Posted By:  Amanda Gillen

Date: May 14th, 2009

Category: Events

We celebrated the opening of our newest office and warehouse space in Massachusetts on Monday. The new location in North Billerica, MA expands groSolar’s presence in Massachusetts – we have another warehouse and office in Raynham, MA. Congresswoman Niki Tsongas and groSolar CEO, Jeff Wolfe both spoke about the benefits of green energy in Massachusetts and then cut our green ribbon. We were thrilled to see so many people in attendance!

Photo courtesy of Ryan Albert.



Vermont Green Up Day

  Posted By:  Amanda Gillen

Date: May 1st, 2009

Category: Events

Employees at groSolar’s headquarters in White River Junction, VT participated in Vermont Green Up Day today by picking up garbage along the road. Some of the trash picked up included 7 tires, 1 couch, 1 recliner, 1 computer monitor, 1 VCR, 1 baby stroller and numerous cigarette butts!



Operations Center now Open!

  Posted By:  admin

The Ribbon is Cut!The new operations center and warehouse in the Mid-Atlantic Region is now open!  The new space is located in Jessup, MD and will increase our direct installation services locally and introduce distribution capacity to our the Mid-Atlantic offices.  We hosted a ribbon cutting ceremony to celebrate on April 17th, and were joined by many local officials.  In the picture the ribbon is cut by (left to right), Director of the Maryland Energy Administration Malcolm Woolf, groSolar VP of Policy & Market Development Richard Deutschmann, and Howard County Executive Ken Ulman.



Opening Day at the New Britain Rock Cats

  Posted By:  Amanda Gillen

groSolar Outfield Sign at the Rock Cats Park

The New Britain Rock Cats, AA affiliate of the Minnesota Twins, had their home opener last night against the New Hampshire Fisher Cats. A couple of groSolar sales representatives were on hand for the opening night festivities and also got to see the new outfield sign featuring groSolar and hear the announcer read our Solar Fact. See pictures of our outfield sign below.

 

Check out groSolar.com/RockCats to receive special Rock Cats savings!

….The Fisher Cats pulled out a win against the Rock Cats but the season is still young!



groSolar, and the rest of the country, StepsItUp!

  Posted By:  Jeff Wolfe

Date: November 4th, 2007

This is the week of “StepItUp”, the campaign led by Bill McKibben one year ahead of the ‘08 elections. The idea being to reaise awareness of climate change and make it a campaign issue. This was certainly a StepItUp week for me personally and groSolar.
:
I attended 5 different events in 4 states, making a presentation or being on a panel in each one. That was:

  • Manchester, NH at the going Green Expo, (”Solar Energy – Making It Easy for You”)
  • Massachusetts H2 Coalition, Clean Energy Conference, “Solar Panel”
  • Investing in Solar II in Las Vegas, “Commercial and Residential Aggregated Rooftop Projects”
  • Vermont investors Forum “Introduction to CleanTech / GreenTech panel”
  • Vermont Environmental Consortium, Environmental Careers in the Era of Fossil Fuel Depletion and Climate Change”
  • So that was bad for carbon emissions, and good for getting our message out more broadly. And based upon response, I’ll be speaking quite a bit more going forward.

    Dori, my wife, co-founder, and continuing partner, was active in getting the StepItUp message out. We had some signs made up and distributed. Photos are just coming in to our website and the StepItUp web site. It’s not too late to add your photo, the action continues! Go to Take Action now and get a yard sign, then follow the instructions we’ll send with it to submit your picture. It’s easy, it’s fun, and it helps get the message out!

    As part of our action, we also financially supported the StepItUp actions in Burlington, Vermont and Concord, Massachusetts. groSolar also attended the StepItUp event in Concord, MA. (Thanks Kevin!) Like most locations in New England, the weather was dreadful, keeping numbers down. But what impressed us was that no elected officials failed to show. U.S. Senator John Kerry, U.S. Rep. Niki Tsongas and several state legislators were right on time. And the location!!! Just steps from the famous North Bridge in Concord where the first shots of the Revolution were fired. And a few more steps from The Old Manse, the house owned first by Emerson’s father and then by Nathaniel Hawthorne and visited frequently by Thoreau. What would they be thinking today as climate change legislation is slowed in Congress by legislators worried about preserving the carbon-based economy?

    About 50 hardy souls braved the monsoon-like weather and delivered their pitch to the political leaders. Kerry said not one more old-fashioned coal-fired power plant should be built anywhere in the world unless it has the latest in clean technology and has the ability to sequester the carbon. He called also for major new funding for solar, wind and other renewables, nothing short of an energy revolution. Thoreau would have been proud.

    the whole thing about StepItUp is to START actions, not be the only action. Keep it moving. Stay tuned to StepItUp, and 1Sky. Meanwhile,

  • Keep those letters to the editors flowing
  • Keep calling your Congressman, and their staff
  • Keep taking your own actions
  • Make this the subject of cocktail party, dinner time, and office conversation!

    If we all work on this, we CAN not only make a difference, we can make the difference we need to make.



    An Extreme Day

      Posted By:  Jeff Wolfe

    Date: September 11th, 2007

    I spent Monday afternoon, for the first time in a long time, on one of our solar installation crews working on a solar energy project in Vermont. And it was an honor to be there for several reasons. First, it’s an honor that the crew still let’s me work with them. They are a great group of people, working through adversity (also called rain), continually smiling. Of course, they let the new guy (me) do the caulking, so my hands will bear the marks of my work for a while (SikaFlex is good stuff. Does NOT come off). This crew was Amos and Hal on the roof with me, Andy at the inverter, and Dan Kinney, (the original Dan of our 4) running the show. Doc managed the logistics, and of course the rest of the groSolar team supported in their standard, but excellent, ways.

    Second reason that this was an honor, is the project is for an Extreme Makeover: Home Edition house. The Vitale family has a great and touching story, which you can read more about here, and at the McKernon Group web site, where you can also donate to the family. The entire house is being built in less than a week, 106 hours to be precise, around the clock, through all kinds of weather. I was on site Friday and it was still being cleared of the former house. Today, the house was, well, a house. Not done, but more complete than many I’ve seen that are being lived in! So being involved in providing clean, renewable solar power to this deserving family is a great feeling, and great that groSolar can do it. It’s a theme that runs through a lot that we do. Our page on Social Responsibility tells a lot of what we do, including our work with Habitat for Humanity.

    groSolar donated all the equipment and installation labor for the entire solar power system, except for the inverter, which was donated by our new partner, PV Powered.

    And third, well, I cannot tell you the third reason it was an honor to be on site, as I’m not allowed to give away story line. (No, I don’t think I’m on camera.) So you will just have to see the show in January (Sundays at 8/7c) to find out what makes us proud to be part of this particular Extreme Makeover.

    So Tuesday I will ache. It takes different muscles to stand at an angle on a roof for a few hours. But I’ll feel good and groSolar will feel good, about making a difference in a small way, as we continue making a difference in the larger world.



    Climate Change Presentation at groSolar May 11

      Posted By:  Jeff Wolfe

    Date: April 24th, 2007

    Category: Events

    I’ll be presenting the full-length version of the Al Gore Inconvenient Truth slideshow at the groSolar offices on Friday, May 11, at 4:00. This presentation will be open to the public. We expect a good number of people in addition to groSolar’s White River Junction staff to attend. Click here for directions to groSolar’s offices.

    Even if you’ve seen the movie, the slideshow is eye-opening. Significantly updated from the movie, it presents more depth and more focus. New slides reveal even greater evidence of the speed that climate change is occurring, as well as presenting what we can each do now, to solve the problem. For those who believe in climate change and for those who have doubts, for those who think they understand the science, and for those who do not, this is a great slideshow.

    We’ll have a time for questions and answers after the presentation, and we’ll also have light refreshments so people can network around actions.

    As always, I’m available for additional presentations to your group. Please contact me at JeffWolfeTCP@groSolar.com to schedule.



    Entrepreneurship panel at Cornell University

      Posted By:  Jeff Wolfe

    Date: April 19th, 2007

    Category: Events

    Three of us head to Cornell University today (Alma Mater for Dori and me) to be on a panel at the Entrepreneurship@Cornell Celebration 2007, “Investing in the future”. Should be quite fun to take our youngest daughter back to our school. She’s humoring us with the idea that show might even apply to Cornell, although probably not the College of Engineering.

    Our panel on “Advancing Innovation as an Entrepreneur: Transforming the Sustainable Industries”, is right on target for what we need to do. For too long the “Sustainable Industries” have not been run as solid businesses in the capitalist model. Not that I’m any Adam Smith, but we can either try to make a great business within the model everyone else works in, or we can try to change the entire construct of business in the US. Personally, I’m a little daunted by the second challenge, so instead I’m simply trying to create a solar company that can beat global warming while being capitalistic. Much easier than trying to change capitalism, and I think considerably more productive.

    I come at business from an incredibly pragmatic, logic driven viewpoint. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not all pluses and minuses, and I spend far more time now working on marketing ideas and strategy than on engineering. But my business philosophies and practices are much more motivated by what I see work and by trying things to see if they work, than by text book solutions. (A sticker in my office says “Always make new mistakes”.) Text books are great for replicating a business model, but when you’re in an emerging, fragmented, infantile industry, there are no “real” cases to study. With any luck, people will write the case studies about us in the future. So it’s with at least a little amusement that I am appearing on this panel.

    I’ve never taken a business course; I’ve never read a marketing book. (Well, I read half of Blue Ocean Strategy, great concept, no time to finish the book.) I have, however, developed a fine appreciation for those who acquire great business process skills, and I am not knocking those who have the Business degree. It’s also an honor to be with my fellow panelists. And I am very heartened that my Alma Mater’s B-School is holding a symposium with this theme. I’ll let you know how it goes.



    Nashville – climate Presenter training wrapup

      Posted By:  Jeff Wolfe

    Date: April 13th, 2007

    Category: Events

    Inspiring. Motivating. Humbling. Moving. Informing.

    Those are a few of the words that come to my mind as I reflect back on my training this week to be a Climate Presenter as part of Al Gore’s Climate Project. I met inventors, investors, educators, scientists, a beauty pageant queen, a rocket scientist, an artist who in an earlier career was a coordinator for the Greenland Ice Sheet project and more. And of course I met a former VP of the USA.

    The experience was also overwhelming. I already knew much of the material presented, although not in the depth its now been shown to me. I have tried to imagine how those with less of a background are coping with the information load. But TCP (The Climate Project) has set up a good support and information system for us. We also have the network of other presenters, over 1000 of us in the US alone. More in the UK and Australia.

    I have the slideshow on my computer now, many hundreds of Mmegabytes, and many hundreds of slides. Now I’m modifying it in small ways so that I can present it, so that my voice can carry the message, so that people I present to will see themselves in the solution. And so that it does not necessarily take two hours to present!

    Some of us wondered at the selection criteria for those who were chosen to be trained, out of the many thousands who applied. There seemed nothing in common. But perhaps the one commonality was that we all believe, fervently, that we must stop climate change, and that we can. As Al Gore said, “Once you know the truth about climate change, it is a moral imperative to stop it.” We are all now better prepared to further that work. We are all now emboldened to stand and deliver the message of hope, and of action, that the slideshow presents, and that the struggle against global warming requires.

    Global warming does not need to be a catastrophe. It will be if we do not change course. But if we do change course (and we must), we can turn it into the biggest economic engine this planet has seen yet. The investment, new technology, and social progress will be on a scale never before matched in history. This can be, and will be, our “finest hour”. And to be part of the group of 1000 who are in the forefront of bringing this message to the public is humbling.

    The science is in, the scientists have done their job. the scientific community is in broad consensus. There is refinement to be done, there are more causations and effects to be determined and understood. But now it’s our turn, to take the science and make it known. I’m preparing for my first presentation next Wednesday, and many presentations beyond. There’s a national listing of all presentation time’s and places on the Climate Project home page, as well as a way to request a presentation. Check there for a presentation near you! And let me know directly if you want a presentation by me. I’m going to be doing my best to fill these shoes.