1 Stop Energy Shop is currently a virtual show room. We present our products to businesses in Mexico to educate CEO'S and their employees on how they can help reduce their carbon footprint and helpsave the planet. This is a climate change story.
See how you all can be involved in this great project to fund the 1 Stop Energy solar shop mobile showroom
We offer solar solutions to residential owners and business, solar back packs, ebikes, water filters, Toyota Prius 5-10 years old, energy storage home and business, ebikes, EV charging units.
The next stage of the business is to develop the mobile showroom. The 1 Stop Energy shop mobile showroom is a refurbished 20ft container on a lowboy trailer. The mobile showroom will be pulled by a truck with a fuel injection motor ,which will allow us to dilute the fuel with ethanol. An image of the showroom is in the updates section or gallery. The 20ft container will be an off-grid mobile showroom with solar on the roof with energy storage batterys. Back-up will be the ethanol fuel motor.
All the items in the image will be on offer to businesses in Mexico and at certain public events. Our business products are available to all Mexicans who want to reduce their dependence on carbon and use their SUV's less. Let's promote climate change initiatives at every level promoting the policies of President of Mexico Enrique Peña Nieto - President of United States of America Barack Obama - Climate Change Terminator and Former Governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger - see their statements on Climate Change in the updates section.
@1STOPENERGY2020
1 Stop Energy Shop Solar Mobile Showroom
Until now we have only been a virtual showroom - www.1stopenergyshop.net . Our main business is solar and ebikes. We now have many more products and people like to see them. We make many presentations and exhibit at green expo's - the ebikes are always a huge hit. We offer green energy solutions too residential and business owners who want to save money on their energy bills. Solar in Mexico is a no brainer and now our installed proces are 50% cheaper than California.
We plan to tour the cities of Mexico showing off our products. The 20ft container will be transformed into a solar mobile showroom and positioned on a low boy trailer. We will be using a fuel injection truck to pull the show room as the fuel can be diluted with ethanol helping to reduce our reliance on fossil fuels. We plan to build a fleet of mobile showrooms the big cities of N. America, spreading the word on how we can all save the planet and reduce our reliance on fossil fuels.
We have chosen to take the funds as they are contributed. We have the partner companies ready to convert a 20ft container and want to start ASAP. Each $50,000 we can raise is a new solar mobile showroom.
With your help we can make this a sustainable success moving forward the worlds reliance on fossil fuels and Mexico is a country at risk from climate change.
The Future - 1 Stop Energy Shop retail look
The Products
1 Stop Energy Shop - virtual showroom- www.1stopenergyshop.net
Solar back packs - E-Bikes - Solar for your house and business -Solar back packs - E-Bikes - Solar for your house and business - EV solutions for home and business - energy storage solutions - water filters - sustainable buildings - BIPV - Solar Glass
We also hope this campaign stimutaes other solar mobile applications that can be used around the world where energy is a problem. The 1 Stop Energy Shop mobile showroom can go anywhere as it is energy independent.
Perks are all in USD
1 Stop Energy Shop solar mobile showroom- love these products please support our campaign
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President Barack Obama
Stood on the steps of a Georgetown University hall on a hot and humid Tuesday afternoon to reinforce his pledge to tackle climate change -- a challenge he said carries direct consequences for "our children and the health and safety of all Americans."
"Someday, our children, and our children's children, will look at us in the eye and they'll ask us," Obama said. "Did we do all that we could when we had the chance to deal with this problem and leave them a cleaner, safer, more stable world?"
Arnold Schwarzenegger
"It is also important that I play the Terminator and terminate the environmental problem in real life - and that is exactly what I am doing,"
"Our message today is clear: We need to persevere - green and growth can go together.
"Green growth is good for people's health, it is good for our climate, and can also be good for our economy."
Mexican President Presents National Climate Change Strategy
Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto this week presented a National Climate Change Strategy aimed at developing “green growth” in the country.
He said that the plan was based on eight axes of action, as well as the basic goals of increasing research, promotion of environmental issues and international cooperation. The eight axes are reducing vulnerability to climate change; decreasing the vulnerability of production systems; increasing the capacity of ecosystems to adapt to the effects of climate change; accelerating clean energy; reducing energy consumption; transitioning towards models of sustainable cities; promoting better agriculture and forestry practices; and reducing emissions of short-life pollutants.
The government will gradually begin to remove subsidies for electricity and water, so that rates for these services reflect real costs, including the environmental damage involved in their provision, Peña said.
He said the federal government would require energy pricing that uses a life cycle analysis, taking into account emissions of greenhouse gases. There will still be compensatory measures for vulnerable groups, however, he said.
In addition, new rules will soon be published on reducing carbon emissions in new cars, and a Commission of Environmental Quality will be created for the center of the country.
Peña called on Mexicans to care for the country’s natural biodiversity, and to not lose it through “carelessness or negligence.”
The climate change strategy was presented at the inauguration of National Environmental Week in Mexico.
According to a government document on the new strategy, a Mexican Network of Climate Modeling diagnosis found that 27 million Mexicans in 1,385 municipalities are at risk from the effects of natural disasters. These risks including phenomena from flooding and landslides to heat waves, reduced food production from lack of rain, and increased disease transmission.
The study also found that 1,202 municipalities are at risk due to drought, and 1,020 due to heat waves.
Environmental damage costs the country 7 percent of its GDP, while barely .6 percent of GDP currently is generated through green technologies.
He said that the plan was based on eight axes of action, as well as the basic goals of increasing research, promotion of environmental issues and international cooperation. The eight axes are reducing vulnerability to climate change; decreasing the vulnerability of production systems; increasing the capacity of ecosystems to adapt to the effects of climate change; accelerating clean energy; reducing energy consumption; transitioning towards models of sustainable cities; promoting better agriculture and forestry practices; and reducing emissions of short-life pollutants.
The government will gradually begin to remove subsidies for electricity and water, so that rates for these services reflect real costs, including the environmental damage involved in their provision, Peña said.
He said the federal government would require energy pricing that uses a life cycle analysis, taking into account emissions of greenhouse gases. There will still be compensatory measures for vulnerable groups, however, he said.
In addition, new rules will soon be published on reducing carbon emissions in new cars, and a Commission of Environmental Quality will be created for the center of the country.
Peña called on Mexicans to care for the country’s natural biodiversity, and to not lose it through “carelessness or negligence.”
The climate change strategy was presented at the inauguration of National Environmental Week in Mexico.
According to a government document on the new strategy, a Mexican Network of Climate Modeling diagnosis found that 27 million Mexicans in 1,385 municipalities are at risk from the effects of natural disasters. These risks including phenomena from flooding and landslides to heat waves, reduced food production from lack of rain, and increased disease transmission.
The study also found that 1,202 municipalities are at risk due to drought, and 1,020 due to heat waves.
Environmental damage costs the country 7 percent of its GDP, while barely .6 percent of GDP currently is generated through green technologies.
During National Environmental Week in Mexico last week, President Enrique Peña Nieto presented the National Climate Change Strategy, which lays out a domestic plan for reducing emissions and promoting resilience.
In 2012, Mexico became the second nation to enact national climate change legislation. It also saw a 595% increase in domestic clean energy investments in 2012, up to $1.9 billion, showing important progress on its climate ambitions.
President Peña Nieto said that the plan was based on eight axes of action, as well as the basic goals of increasing research, promotion of environmental issues and international cooperation.
The eight axes are:
- Reducing vulnerability to climate change;
- Decreasing the vulnerability of production systems;
- Increasing the capacity of ecosystems to adapt to the effects of climate change;
- Accelerating clean energy;
- Reducing energy consumption;
- Transitioning towards models of sustainable cities;
- Promoting better agriculture and forestry practices; and,
- Reducing emissions of short-life pollutants.
The government will gradually begin to remove subsidies for electricity and water, so that rates for these services reflect real costs, including the environmental damage involved in their provision, Peña said.
He said the federal government would require energy pricing that uses a life cycle analysis, taking into account emissions of greenhouse gases. There will still be compensatory measures for vulnerable groups
- See more at: http://tcktcktck.org/2013/06/pres-pena-nieto-unveils-mexicos-national-climate-change-plan/53256#sthash.bnS1cN2r.dpuf
Matt Damon recounts landfill shoot for 'Elysium'
Actor says time spent in a Mexico dump was 'the toughest two weeks of shooting I've ever had...'
To realistically set the scene for the ruined, polluted Earth featured in Neil Blomkamp's new sci-fi film "Elysium," the director chose to shoot for several weeks in Mexico City's Bordo Poniente landfill, the world's second largest dump. In an new interview, actor Matt Damon says the location, which spans more than 975 acres, was one of the worst he's ever filmed in.
"(It was) the toughest two weeks of shooting I've ever had," he says. "(We had to) literally eat s**t... It was explained to us that, like any dump anywhere in the world, the dust is actually comprised largely of fecal matter. After they tell you that the dust is all fecal matter, then they see what you're doing (on set), they go, 'You know, not your dust ... all the other dust!' So, at the end of every day, as we'd wipe this stuff off, we'd be basically throwing these s**tty towels at each other."
The dump is now closed and going to be used for biofuel production.
Growing the Grid: EV Taxis Drive Infrastructure Transformation in Mexico, North America
Climate change: A guide for the perplexed
Our planet's climate is anything but simple. All kinds of factors influence it, from massive events on the Sun to the growth of microscopic creatures in the oceans, and there are subtle interactions between many of these factors.
Yet despite all the complexities, a firm and ever-growing body of evidence points to a clear picture: the world is warming, this warming is due to human activity increasing levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, and if emissions continue unabated the warming will too, with increasingly serious consequences.
Yes, there are still big uncertainties in some predictions, but these swing both ways. For example, the response of clouds could slow the warming or speed it up.
With so much at stake, it is right that climate science is subjected to the most intense scrutiny. What does not help is for the real issues to be muddied by discredited arguments or wild theories.
So for those who are not sure what to believe, here is our round-up of the most common climate myths and misconceptions.
There is also a guide to assessing the evidence, as well as a blog looking at the history of climate science. In the articles we've included lots of links to primary research and major reports for those who want to follow through to the original sources.
What is happening now?
Does CO2 cause warming?
Why should I worry?
Is the sun to blame?
What happened in the past?
What is going to happen?
Can we trust the science?
Jalisco Government Desarrollo Econmico
This project has the backing of Jalisco Government Desarrollo Econmico - see updates for more info.