Saturday, November 6, 2010

cause of accidents

What Causes Car Accidents?

What Causes Car Accidents?
The dictionary defines accident as "an unexpected and undesirable event, a mishap unforeseen and without apparent cause." Strictly speaking, most accidents are not accidents at all: they are collisions that could and should have been avoided. So, what causes them, and how can you avoid them?
Four factors contribute to the vast majority of collisions. In ascending order they are:
  1. Equipment Failure
  2. Roadway Design
  3. Poor Roadway Maintenance
  4. Driver Behavior
Over 95% of motor vehicle accidents (MVAs, in the USA, or Road Traffic Accidents, RTAs, in Europe) involve some degree of driver behavior combined with one of the other three factors. Drivers always try to blame road conditions, equipment failure, or other drivers for those accidents. When the facts are truthfully presented, however, the behavior of the implicated driver is usually the primary cause. Most are caused by excessive speed or aggressive driver behavior.

  1. Equipment Failure - Manufacturers are required by law to design and engineer cars that meet a minimum safety standard. Computers, combined with companies' extensive research and development, have produced safe vehicles that are easy and safe to drive. The most cited types of equipment failure are loss of brakes, tire blowouts or tread separation, and steering/suspension failure. With the exception of the recent rash of Firestone light-truck tire failures, combined totals for all reported equipment failure accounts for less than 5% of all motor vehicle accidents.

    • Brakes - Modern dual-circuit brake systems have made total brake failure an unlikely event. If one side of the circuit fails, the other side is usually sufficient to stop a vehicle. Disc brakes, found on the front wheels of virtually every modern vehicle, are significantly more effective than the older drum braking systems, which can fade when hot. ABS (Anti Blockier System) or anti-lock brakes prevent the wheels from locking up during emergency braking maneuvers, allowing modern vehicles to avoid many accidents that previously would have occurred.
    • Tires - Today's radial tires are significantly safer than the bias-ply tires of 25 years ago. They still, however, need attention regularly. Under inflation, the most frequent cause of tire failure is considered the main culprit in the recent Firestone tire-failure fatalities. Uneven or worn-out tires are the next most serious problem and can also lead to tire failure. Uneven wear is caused by improperly balanced tires, or misaligned or broken suspensions. Remember, all that keeps you connected to the roadway is your tires. If you don't check your own, have your mechanic check them every 5,000 miles.
    • Steering & Suspension - Your suspension keeps your tires in contact with the roadway in a stable and predictable manner. Your steering enables you to go around road obstacles and avoid potential accidents. Even a safe, well-trained driver is helpless in the event of a steering or suspension system failure. Such failures are catastrophic, especially at high speeds. Have your suspension and steering systems checked out by a mechanic every 10,000 miles.
    • With regular component inspections by trained individuals, equipment failures can be virtually eliminated.
  2. Roadway Design - Motorists may blame roadway design for accidents, but it's rarely the cause. Consultants such as the Texas Transportation Institute have spent years getting road barriers, utility poles, railroad crossings, and guardrails to their current high level of safety. Civil engineers, local governments, and law enforcement agencies all contribute to the design of safe road layouts and traffic management systems. State and federal governments provide guidelines to their construction, with design flexibility to suit local conditions. Roadways are designed by engineers with special consideration given to the following:

    • Hazard Visibility - Permanent roadway hazards consist of intersections, merging lanes, bends, crests, school zones, and livestock or pedestrian crossings. Temporary hazards include road construction, parked or disabled vehicles, accidents, traffic jams, and wild animals (especially deer).
    • Roadway Surfaces - Engineers can use different surfaces (for example, grooved pavement) depending on the environment, traffic speed, traffic volume, and location of the roadway (noise barriers). Roadway markings let drivers know about their ability to pass safely (dotted & double lines), the location of the roadway in inclement weather (reflective cats-eyes & stakes), and where road surface ends and the shoulder begins.
    • Traffic Control Devices - Traffic light signals, speed limit signs, yield and stop signs, school & pedestrian crossings, turning lanes, police surveillance cameras, and traffic circles or roundabouts.
    • Behavioral Control Devices - Built-in obstacles that limit the ability of a vehicle to travel, including crash barrels, speed bumps, pedestrian islands, raised medians, high curbing, guard rails, and concrete barriers.
    • Traffic Flow - Interstate highways remain the safest roads because their flow of traffic is in one direction. One-way streets ease traffic congestion in city centers as well. Rural two-lane roadways are statistically the most dangerous because of a high incidence of deadly head-on collisions and the difficulty impatient drivers’ face while overtaking slower vehicles.
    • Roadway Identification Signs - enable someone without a detailed map to travel from one place to another. They give advance notice of intersections, destinations, hazards, route numbers, mileage estimates, street names, and points of interest.
    • Weather - inclement conditions can aggravate existing hazards and sometimes create new road surfaces (ice & snow).
  3. Poor Maintenance - Roadway maintenance contributes to some motor vehicle accidents, but not to the extent that drivers use it as an excuse. Unfortunately maintenance schedules and procedures vary greatly from city to city and state to state, so nationwide standards don't exist. Below we outline some potential roadway maintenance shortcomings that you should be aware of.

    • Debris on the roadway can be a problem, and is the responsibility of local highway departments.
    • Faded road signs, and signs obscured by foliage, occasionally contribute to accidents. If you know of any offending signs, contact your local police department to see if they can get the problem remedied.
    • Potholes cause a small number of accidents (primarily tire & suspension failures), but the accidents usually occur at low speeds and don't cause many injuries. Call the police to get large dangerous holes attended to. Some Northern US cities have pothole complaint lines that are active during the winter and spring.
    • Roadway construction is an oft-mentioned reason for accidents. Again the blame usually rests on aggressive drivers who are unwilling to merge or slow down when approaching a construction zone. In most states, fines are doubled in work zones, making it expensive as well as unsafe to speed. Stop-and-go traffic requires thoughtful, alert driving to avoid a collision with the car in front of you. Too often we worry that someone will cut in front of us in a traffic jam. The real problem is that drivers forget about the vehicle directly in front, rear-ending it while looking in their rearview mirror or daydreaming. Leave plenty of room between your car and the one directly in front of you. Our 3 second rule applies to traffic jams as well. If a few people cut in front of you, let them.
    • Salting & Sanding - Many wintertime accidents are blamed on inadequate salting or sanding of icy roadways, but as so often, the real culprit is usually excessive speed. And salting only works if the ambient temperature stays above the middle teens. Recent environmental concerns have curbed widespread salting in recent years so less effective materials like clay, sand, and soot have replaced it in some areas. The fact remains that if highways are icy, speed needs to be reduced whether the roadway is salted or not.
  4. Driver Behavior - Humans tend to blame somebody or something else when a mistake or accident occurs. A recent European study concluded that 80% of drivers involved in motor vehicle accidents believed that the other party could have done something to prevent the accident. A miniscule 5% admitted that they were the only one at fault. Surveys consistently reveal that the majority consider themselves more skillful and safer than the average driver. Some mistakes occur when a driver becomes distracted, perhaps by a cell phone call or a spilled cup of coffee. Very few accidents result from an 'Act of God,' like a tree falling on a vehicle.
Speed Kills - The faster the speed of a vehicle, the greater the risk of an accident. The forces experienced by the human body in a collision increase exponentially as the speed increases. Smart Motorist recommends that drivers observe our 3 second rule in everyday traffic, no matter what your speed. Most people agree that going 100 mph is foolhardy and will lead to disaster. The problem is that exceeding the speed limit by only 5 mph in the wrong place can be just as dangerous. Traffic engineers and local governments have determined the maximum speeds allowable for safe travel on the nation's roadways. Speeding is a deliberate and calculated behavior where the driver knows the risk but ignores the danger. Fully 90% of all licensed drivers speed at some point in their driving career; 75% admit to committing this offense regularly.
Consider this example: a pedestrian walks out in front of a car. If the car is traveling at just 30 mph, and the driver brakes when the pedestrian is 45 feet away, there will be enough space in which to stop without hitting the pedestrian. Increase the vehicle speed by just 5 mph and the situation changes dramatically. At 35 mph, with the pedestrian 45 feet away and the driver braking at the same point, the car will be traveling at 18 mph when it hits the pedestrian. An impact at 18 mph can seriously injure or even kill the pedestrian.
Who are the bad drivers? They are young, middle-aged, and old; men and women; they drive luxury cars, sports cars, SUVs and family cars. Almost every qualified driver I know admits to some type of risky driving behavior, most commonly speeding.
Aggressive Drivers - As we've described, modern cars are manufactured to very safe standards, and the environment they're driven in is engineered to minimize the injuries suffered during an accident. The most difficult area to change is aggressive driver behavior and selfish attitudes. A 1995 study by the Automobile Association in Great Britain found that 88% of the respondents reported at least one of the behaviors listed below directed at them (in order of descending frequency):
  • Aggressive tailgating
  • Lights flashed at them because the other motorist was annoyed
  • Aggressive or rude gestures
  • Deliberate obstruction -- preventing them from moving their vehicle
  • Verbal abuse
  • Physical assault
The same group was then asked about aggressive behavior they had displayed towards other drivers. 40% indicated that they had never behaved aggressively towards another driver. A further 60% of the survey respondents admitted to one or more of the following behaviors (listed in order of descending frequency):
  • Flashed lights at another motorist because they were annoyed with them
  • Gave aggressive or rude gestures
  • Gave verbal abuse
  • Aggressively tailgated another motorist
  • Deliberately obstructed or prevented another from moving their vehicle
  • Physically assaulted another motorist (one positive response)
These behaviors are probably under-reported, since most people are not willing to admit to the more serious actions, even if no penalty exists. The majority of these incidents happened during the daylight hours (70%), on a main road (not freeway or divided highway).

NYS Police characterize aggressive driving by the following traffic violations:

  • Excessive speed
  • Frequent or unsafe lane changes
  • Failure to signal
  • Tailgating
  • Failure to yield the right of way
  • Disregarding traffic controls
  • Impaired driving
The NYS State Police point out that there is a difference between aggressive driving and "road rage." Road Rage behaviors, such as using the vehicle as a weapon or physically assaulting a driver or their vehicle, are not aggressive driving. They are criminal offenses, and there are laws in place to address these violent crimes.

The Meta Keywords Meta Keywords are Just Hype - You Can Ignore Them

By , About.com Guide
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What is the Meta Keywords

Meta keywords were originally created to allow search engines to know what keywords you wanted your page to be found when searching for. But many people used them to spam search engines with popular search terms that had nothing to do with the page, so many popular search engines stopped using meta keywords for anything at all. In fact, according to SearchEngineWatch, only two search engines used this tag: Inktomi and Teoma and Teoma's use is "unofficial".
So, if you're going to put meta keywords on your Web pages, don't spend more than 3 minutes thinking of them. And don't put more than a few, as it's just a waste of time, for the most part.

How Many Keywords to Include

The best use of meta keywords is for your own use. So the length isn't terribly important. I use the meta keywords to remind myself of the keyword phrase I'm targetting in the article as well as any (1-3) alternate phrases I might target.
You should note, however, that I only use keywords in my About.com articles, and I only use them because their CMS requires them. In every other page I write, I don't spend any time on keywords. I'd rather have a sharp opening paragraph and good use of my target phrase in the document than spend any time on meta keywords.

How to Write a Meta Keywords

The meta keywords are placed in the head of your HTML. You use the meta tag with the name="keywords" and the content="" containing your keywords. The meta keywords tag for this article is:
<meta name="keywords" content="meta keywords, meta tags, meta data, seo, search engine results">
  • separate keywords with commas
  • don't use any other punctuation beyond commas
  • put the keyword phrase you're targetting first
  • don't repeat phrases

Bottom Line: Stop Worrying About Meta Keywords

Do yourself a favor and stop spending any time worrying about the keywords. Unless you get the majority of your traffic from Inktomi, your keywords won't make a difference to your search engine rankings and they just create one more thing to worry about. Spend time creating SEO-Friendly Content that your readers want to read and leave the keywords to other people who have more free time.
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Comparison of Medical and Surgical Abortion

Comparison of Medical and Surgical Abortion

x
Medical Abortion with Mifepristone or Mifeprex
Surgical Vacuum Aspiration Abortion
How far along in the pregnancy can I be?
Up to 8 weeks (49 days) for best success (97%).  Success rates decrease as the pregnancy advances.
First trimester is through 12 weeks.  A pregnancy less than 6 weeks may increase the chance of failed abortion.
How long does it take?
-Usually 2 visits to the provider.
-Take mifepristone on day 1.
-Take misoprostol pill buccally (allowing the pill to dissolve inside the mouth between the cheek and gum, or under the tongue) on day 2, 3, or 4.
-It usually takes several hours for the abortion to occur.
-Follow-up scheduled two weeks from first appointment.
-One 3-4 hour visit to the clinic.
-The abortion procedure takes 3 to 5 minutes.
-Follow-up visit at your doctor or clinic, or the providers in 3-4 weeks.
How painful is it?
From mild to very strong cramping off and on throughout the abortion (commonly a 1 to 3 hour period).  Pain pills are provided for use as needed.
From mild to very strong cramping during the abortion (commonly a 5 to 10 minute period).  Pain medication is available during and afterwards.
How much will I bleed?
Heavy bleeding and passing clots is common during the abortion.  Afterwards, lighter bleeding is common from 9 to 14 days or longer.
Usually light to moderate bleeding and may continue for up to 6-8 weeks.
Can the abortion fail?
97% successful.  When it fails, a surgical abortion is necessary.
Over 99% successful. Less than 1% of the time it fails and needs to be repeated.
Is it safe, and can I still have children afterwards?
-Both medications have been formally studied and used safely.  Possible complications are rare.
-Childbearing ability is not affected, barring rare serious complications.
-Surgical abortion has been formally studied for over 25 years.  First trimester abortion has a less than 1% complication rate, and is at least 10 times safer than childbirth.
-Childbearing ability is not affected, barring rare serious complications.
What are the advantages?
-It may seem more natural, like a miscarriage.
-No shots, anesthesia, instruments, or vacuum aspirator machine, unless it fails.
-The pregnancy can be ended earlier than with Surgical Abortion.
-Being at home instead of a clinic may seem more comforting and private.
-Any support person can be there during the abortion process.
-It's quick, over in a few minutes.
-It's highly successful.
-There's less bleeding than with Medical Abortion.
-There's less time spent cramping than with Medical Abortion.
-Medical staff is present.
-It can be done farther along in the pregnancy than Medical Abortion.
What are the disadvantages
-It takes several days.
-It is not completely predictable.
-Bleeding can be very heavy and lasts longer than with a surgical.
-Cramping can be severe and usually lasts longer than with a surgical.
-Two visits to the provider are necessary, and possibly more.
-It fails more often than a surgical.
-A clinician must insert instruments inside the uterus.
-Anesthetics and drugs to manage pain during the procedure may cause side effects.
-There are possible complications, although in less than 1% of cases.
-The woman has less control over the abortion process and who is with her.
-The vacuum aspirator may seem noisy.
-It can't be done as early in the pregnancy as Medical Abortion.

"Our health depends on our ability to share love and pleasure. As women, our bodies have the capacity to create new life. This responsibility and privilege unites us with all our surroundings in an intimate relationship with the tides and the moon, with the family and community, with society and culture, and with the spiritual. The ability to choose how many children we wish to have, and what time in our lives we wish to dedicate to their care, assures us a healthy future for all. Precisely because we value so highly the sacred seed of life, we take so seriously the conditions for life's unfolding. We want to share with all women how to care for our bodies in a way that's clear and informed, taking into account all the respect our most vital decisions merit."
- Excerpt from the book Nuestros Cuerpos, Nuestras Vidas
www.medicationabortion.com - a multi-language website provides accurate information about medication abortion to health service providers including physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, counselors, and office staff as well as educational information for women considering the option of medication abortion. In English, French, Spanish, and Arabic.
updated October 5, 2010

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Friday, November 5, 2010

he Abortion Pill: Medical Abortion with Mifepristone and Misoprostol

What is the Medical Abortion?
Medical Abortion (brand name Mifeprex) is a form of early abortion caused by the combination of two medications, mifepristone and misoprostol that is an option for women who are 8 weeks pregnant or less. Also known as RU486 or medication abortion.
During the first appointment at the clinic you receive the mifepristone pill to take orally. Then 24 to 72 hours later, in the privacy of your own home, you take the the second medication, misoprostol. Misoprostol causes contractions resulting in a miscarriage. When used in combination, mifepristone and misoprostol are 95-97% effective within two weeks. Mifepristone and misoprostol are FDA approved.
How Does It Work?
Mifepristone blocks the hormone progesterone needed to maintain the pregnancy. Because this hormone is blocked, the uterine lining begins to shed, the cervix begins to soften and bleeding may occur. With the later addition of the second medication, misoprostol, the uterus contracts and the pregnancy is usually expelled within 6 to 8 hours.
Because the woman chooses when she takes the second medication within the time frame of 24 to 72 hours after the first medication, she has some control over the timing of when she expels the pregnancy and experiences the side effects of bleeding and cramping. Some women choose the Medical Abortion because of the privacy it offers. Some women feel empowered by taking an active role in the process.
Use
At your first appointment at the clinic, an ultrasound is performed to confirm you are less than 8 weeks pregnant. You then speak with an experienced counselor who explains how mifepristone and misoprostol work and makes sure you get answers to all of your questions. Your health history is carefully reviewed and if you meet the criteria, the doctor will give you the mifepristone to take orally. You are also given one bottle containing four tablets of misoprostol to be used 24 to 72 hours after taking mifepristone. If this first dosage fails to induce a miscarriage, please call the clinic to receive instructions on using your back-up misoprostol tablets.
What To Expect
Upon taking mifepristone at the clinic you may begin to bleed. As each woman's body is different, bleeding varies from woman to woman. Some may experience light bleeding much like spotting towards the end of a menstrual period. Others have heavier bleeding like their regular menstrual period, or like a heavy period. Some women do not experience any bleeding until taking the misoprostol.
Upon taking the second medication misoprostol tablet, cramping, bleeding, and clotting may begin as soon as 20 minutes. Within the next 6 to 8 hours, most women will miscarry. Cramping may come in waves with increasing and decreasing intensity. You can expect bleeding heavier than a menstrual period with large clots. During this time, you will pass the embryo although you may not see it since it is very small. The amount of bleeding when using the Medical Abortion is greater than with aspiration abortion.
Aftercare
A follow-up exam is scheduled for two weeks later to make sure the process is complete. If you have not yet miscarried, we will perform a aspiration abortion. A very small percentage (5%) of women do not pass the pregnancy tissue and need a suction procedure to complete the process.
Side Effects
Most of the side effects when using this early abortion option are caused by the second medication, misoprostol. Side-effects may include heavy bleeding, headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and heavy cramping.

Risks
Vaginal bleeding with medical abortion could be extremely heavy. In rare situations it could require a aspiration abortion and very rarely, a blood transfusion. You will be given our 24-hour hotline number to call if you have any problems. Medical staff are on call at all times to answer your medical questions and concerns.
If pregnancy is continued after taking these medications, there is a high risk of fetal deformities.
Criteria
Abortion Medication may be an option if you:
  • Are less than 8 weeks since your last menstrual period.
  • Are willing and able to give informed consent.
  • Have the support you need such as access to reliable transportation and ability to communicate with the clinic by telephone.
  • Live no more than 2 hours away from emergency medical care (a hospital).
  • Are able to come back to the clinic for 1 to 3 follow-up appointments.
  • Agree to have a surgical abortion if the misoprostol does not induce termination.
Your Health
Due to the risk of serious health problems, mifepristone and misoprostol may not be recommended if you:
  • Have had a blood clotting problem or are taking anticoagulant medicine.
  • Have severe anemia.
  • Have adrenal failure.
  • Are taking long-term systemic corticosteroids.
  • May have an ectopic pregnancy.
  • Have a mass in the tubes or ovaries.
  • Have inherited porphyria.
  • Have an allergy to mifepristone, misoprostol or other prostaglandin medicine.
  • Have severe diarrhea.
Future Fertility
According to studies of the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and the National Abortion Federation, there are no known long term risks associated with using mifepristone and misoprostol. Therefore, women may pursue another pregnancy whenever they feel the time is right after having a Medical Abortion.
Other Options For Early Abortion
If you are at least 6 weeks by ultrasound, you can choose to have a surgical abortion, in which the cervix is dilated and suction aspiration is used to remove the tiny pregnancy.
No Confusion
Do not confuse Medical Abortion with the "Morning After" Emergency Contraception Pills (brand name Plan B). They are completely different medications taken for different purposes.
  • Emergency Contraception Plan B contains the same hormones as in regular birth control pills; Plan B prevents pregnancy after sex when taken within days after unprotected intercourse. Emergency Contraception will not harm an existing pregnancy. You can get Plan B Emergency Contraception at your local pharmacy. You don't need a prescription if you are 17 or older. If you are under 17 you need a prescription but in Washington State you can get the prescription right at the pharmacy: call ahead to check if they have a trained prescriber on shift.
  • The Abortion Pill Mifeprex is ONLY sold to physicians. (You cannot get it at a pharmacy in the USA.) A physician or nurse-practition will first make sure that you are pregnant, that you want an abortion, that you understand how to take care of yourself and what to expect during the medical abortion, and then will give you the Abortion Pill which causes the pregnancy to end.
more:
last update: October 19, 2010

The life of a fetus cannot be separated from the life of the pregnant woman. This is unique in medicine and law. No one can create a set of medical principles or legal principles giving a right to life to the fetus, because by doing so, inevitably the woman's rights become limited.
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Wind Energy Projects

Jump to: Small Wind Systems | Transmission | Wind Storage | Cash Crop | Renewable Portfolio Standard | Connecting to the Grid | Net Metering
SECO's wind demonstration projects range in size and complexity from wind powered pumps which use a high-speed wind turbine for pumping water from a gas well to turbines that pump water for crop irrigation to generating electricity on a college campus or residence in rural areas. These wind projects have demonstrated the feasibility and economic viability of using small wind turbines to replace the use of conventional energy sources. The turbines, in most cases, were interconnected with the local rural electric cooperative through a net-billing meter and equipped with instrumentation to collect data on the wind resource and the unit's production of electricity.
These demonstration projects have served as an educational tool for both the utility and residential sectors.
Texas Coastal Wind Resource Assessment
Validated onshore wind resource maps have helped accelerate the development of wind energy in many parts of the country. AWS Truewind has provided wind resource modeling for off-shore Gulf of Mexico areas of Texas through a cost-share project between SECO and the National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL). It is the intent of NREL to produce high-quality validated off-shore wind resource maps from validated gridded model data and use the attendant wind characteristic data to compile a comprehensive database of U.S. wind resources. NREL also plans to use this data to analyze the off-shore wind shear plus other wind characteristics for turbine design and performance.
Collection of Wind Speed and Direction Data (DOE Special Project)
West Texas A & M University's Alternative Energy Institute collected wind speed and direction data at 50 & 100 meters at two Texas locations: Texas High Plains, 20 miles east-southeast of Amarillo, and West Central Region, between Abilene & Sweetwater. The wind data will then correlate wind shear with long-term data analysis for future tall tower wind applications.
Final Report: April 2006

Wind Energy Storage (DOE Special Project)
This project seeks to quantify the value of energy storage by analyzing a specific application of compressed air energy storage (CAES) to wind energy. The location in the study is the Panhandle area of Texas and Oklahoma and the eastern plains of New Mexico, a region with over 40 GW of potential wind development, but which is severely limited by the lack of transmission infrastructure and local load to support significant additions of wind generation capacity.

Final Report: June 2005
Bird Mortalities Risk Assessment
The Houston Advanced Research Center used radar and human observation to assess the risk of bird mortalities at potential wind turbine installations on the upper Texas coast. The project includes an estimation of the potential for bird mortality associated with the construction of wind turbines at the study site and the relationships among bird types, seasonal usage, daily activity patterns, and flight altitude. The Texas General Land Office has recently leased off shore sites and this study will be critical to gaining public trust for this type of wind development. The Bird Mortalities Risk Assessment study is the first due diligence study on the potential effects on the bird population along the Texas coast.
Wind Power for Schools
SECO has partnered with Texas A&M University's Texas Engineering Experiment Station and wind power experts from West Texas A&M University's Alternative Energy Institute to provide a hands-on engineering design experience that is fully integrated into the engineering magnet school curriculums at both Laredo ISD and United ISD.
The students experience all aspects of the engineering design and manufacturing process of producing and installing four 1-2 kW prototype wind turbines for each school. The schools districts have the option of installing the system on campus or at the Webb County Self-Help Center. The turbine design is available to colonia residents as an alternative until they are able to access the electric grid. This is a multi-year contract to ensure that the faculty and students feel comfortable continuing the program. For additional information, see:
Wind Power Trail
Wind is one of our nation's greatest natural resources. Used by pioneers to pull water from underground aquifers, it was the principal energy source that made settlement of the Great Plains possible. In the 21st Century, wind has been harnessed to create electrical energy, powering an increasingly larger and larger percentage of the power grid. The Wind Power Trail is an interpretive driving loop that continues to grow. The trail takes you to commercial wind farms, vintage windmill collections, and interesting waypoints along the highways and back roads of Texas and Oklahoma with the aid of an interpretive driving map and an audio CD and an informational web side. See the Wind Power Trail web site for additional information.

Compressed Air Energy Storage Study
SECO commissioned a study through the Lower Colorado River Authority to examine how a large-scale compressed air energy storage (CAES) plant could substitute for or complement transmission projects. A plant of this type could also be used to shape wind production, effectively dispatching this intermittent resource. The findings in the study are encouraging.
Final Report 2003

Installation of Wind Data Monitoring Equipment
SECO is working with the Texas General Land Office (GLO) and West Texas A & M University's Alternative Energy Institute to collect, analyze and document wind data on Texas state-owned lands. The project includes development and facilitation of a wind monitoring training workshop for interested groups and universities along the Texas coast. The project initiated ongoing development of Geographical Information System data on potential wind energy and continues to analyze the potential of coastal wind development through the use of satellite wave and other meteorological data as it becomes available. The coastal and off-shore areas of Texas look very promising for future wind development. Recently, the GLO announced a second off-shore lease. The funds generated from leasing state-owned lands go to the Texas Permanent School Fund, which provides findings for the education of our future generations.

Wind Analysis on Small Scale Wind Turbine Installations
The project goal is to collect and analyze wind data and the long-term operation and maintenance costs of small-scale wind systems in order to provide a more accurate cost of a small wind system. SECO worked with the Texas Department of Transportation and the Alternative Energy Institute to install wind energy systems at two highway safety rest areas, one located near Pine Springs and the other on I-40 Westbound near Alanreed. A third turbine was installed at the Hale County Historical Farm & Ranch Museum on I-27.
The wind turbine in Hale County provided a hands-on learning opportunity to work with the local utility cooperative. After attending a three-day wind installation workshop, the participants installed the system. Renewable energy information and educational materials are provided to the public at each of these locations. This project reinforced our strong partnership with the USDA office in Bushland through our work with West Texas A & M in Canyon, Texas. The work done by these two entities provides SECO with the most knowledgeable wind, solar, and bioenergy expertise in the state.
Integrated Wind-Water system
Texas Tech University will design, integrate and perform initial characterization tests on a prototype integrated wind-water system. There are three fundamental motivations for the project. First is the dwindling volume of potable water available from the Ogallala aquifer, the source of much of the region's water. Second is the increasing recognition that renewable energy sources are needed to augment dwindling and increasingly costly fossil fuels. Third is the recognition that the treated water represents a form of energy storage for wind systems. Depending on the details of the economic environment, the wind turbines of future operational wind-water systems can be used to generate electricity during peak demand periods and produce water during off-peak periods.

This educational-scale wind-water system has three near-term objectives: 1) to serve as the prototype for planned, larger wind-water systems utilizing a utility-scale wind turbine rated at 1.5 MW; 2) to identify system integration and operational issues and their solutions; and 3) to serve as a research and educational vehicle for students and faculty. Longer term, the facility and research results will form the basis for addressing the non-fossil energy and potable water needs of West Texas and the greater southwest region.

The integrated wind-water system of this project will be used to address system design, configuration and operational issues that are critical to the life-cycle economics. These include the necessity for grid connection and support; operation of the reverse osmosis (RO) pumps in variable speed mode where the electrical power is proportional to the wind speed; off-grid operation wherein the wind turbine shaft power is used to directly drive the pumps; the operational benefits of adding energy storage in the forms of batteries, fuel cells, flywheels and other energy storage technologies; and the effects of non-conventional utilization of the RO membranes together with solutions of problems revealed.

Renewable Energy at Work - Pflugerville The Renewable Energy at Work project includes a demonstration of renewable energy for a City of Pflugerville's Park and Recreation s0d bike trail. The trail will have a solar/wind system located on a picnic shelter sub-station. The barn will employ a PV system and wind generation. The City of Pflugerville will provide active and static renewable energy educational programs to the general public through the Pflugerville school district.

Renewable Energy Technologies Demonstration - Sheldon Lake Environmental Center
SECO contractor, West Texas A & M University's Alternative Energy Institute (AEI) is designing and installing solar PV energy systems, a solar hot water system, a wind energy system, a geothermal energy system and data acquisition systems at Texas Parks and Wildlife Department's (TPWD) Sheldon Lake Environmental Center in Houston. TPWD is coordinating and providing staff assistance to AEI on the design, site specifications, and installation preparation of each of the renewable energy technologies. The site is designated as a renewable energy technologies demonstration and educational site. For detailed information, see this Sheldon Lake State Park web site.
In addition to demonstrating renewable energy technologies, the Sheldon Lake Environmental Center has committed to purchasing five years of green power. The Texas parks and Wildlife Department has also published A Guide to Alternative Energy and Green Building.
SECO's Anemometer Loan Program
One of the most important criteria for determining the feasibility of a wind project is the level of wind resource available. An anemometer is a small cup-like device that rotates on top of a meteorological tower to measure the velocity or the pressure of the wind. The Alternative Energy Institute (AEI) at West Texas A & M operates an anemometer loan program for the State Energy Conservation Office. AEI will provide data logger, sensors, and wire to install onto the landowner-provided tower as part of the anemometer loan program for Texas residents. Wiring costs would vary according to tower size and the number of sensors. AEI will package everything with instructions and ship it to the landowner (custom to their site), and provide phone tech support. See the AEI Land Owners Cost Guide with contact numbers.