EcoZest

Join the Sustainable Development Group

Content to follow...

 

 

 

ECOZEST has been established to help all those concerned with sustainable development to work together to achieve a sustainable future.

ECOZEST provides this website to facilitate access to information on everything relevant to sustainable development.

ECOZEST provides within the website facilities for your to search for literature, products, services, manufacturers, designers, consultants, installers and contractors dedicated to sustainable development.

ECOZEST brings you news, reviews, literature and films on all matters relevant to sustainable development ˆ climate, change, global warming, world happenings, national and international government policy, energy supplies, alternative energy installations, carbon dioxide emissions, carbon trading, solar heating, photovoltaics, biofuels, hydrogen, power cells, insulation, combined heat and power, ambient energy installations, wind power, water power, geothermal heating, zero energy developments, etc,etc.

ECOZEST brings together a group of companies dedicated to the provision of design expertise, products and installation services to create complete zero carbon installations on existing developments and for new developments. The group members will work together to provide a coordinated service that achieves the optimum performance from the interactive combination of their products to give most cost effective investments ˆ including the financing of the installations and ongoing monitoring and maintenance where appropriate.

 

 

 

 

19°C - Sunny intervals with variable cloud cover
SCOTLAND is to host a major pan-European conference on how best to protect the environment. More than 100 delegates from across Europe will attend the meeting in Dunblane to discuss a range of topics including climate change and the effects of the financial crisis.
Marine energy test site installed in south-west
The Knutsford Great Race
With entrants on penny farthings, hobby horses, bone shakers, this was British eccentricity at its best? In pictures: Knutsford's penny farthing race Cycling's answer to the Goodwood Festival of Speed was held in a small, quiet town south of Manchester on Sunday.
Letters: Forget ecotowns, we need smarter cities
Use of terms like smart cities to describe technological fixes for urban areas only shows the narrowness of UK thinking on cities and sustainability (Smarter cities, Society, 8 September). The smart growth movement has been well-established in North America and elsewhere for the last 15-20 years and has shown that towns and cities are the future for most of us. But the challenges and sustainability they offer lie in much wider spatial, transport and community planning innovations.
Wind power's growth is blowing Europe toward green goals
Europe is installing more wind power capacity than any other form of energy, and wind is leading the way to making the continent's electricity generation 100% renewable by 2050. Today, only five percent of Europe's electricity comes from wind. But that will not be the case for long.
Minister defends cut in Welsh MPs
A government minister has defended plans to reduce the number of MPs, which the opposition claims will hit Wales harder than England.
Scotland to align green energy laws with England
The Scottish government launched two public consultations on Wednesday aimed at bringing its small-scale green project planning and renewable rewards laws in line with those in the rest of the United Kingdom.
The greenest government ever? Only if the Treasury can be tamed | Michael Jacobs
The silence from Osborne and Cable is ominous. The next few weeks are crucial to keep the low-carbon economy on track. This would be "the greenest government ever", David Cameron declared in May - easy words in the first flush of office. The difficult thing is making them true. In the next few weeks the coalition will confront a series of decisions that will tell us if the heady rhetoric of spring is to be fulfilled ? or regretted.
UK windfarms set generation record
Although there are many who do not think that 'windfarms' are the way forward when it comes to electricity generation, it seems that the increasing numbers of turbines are starting to make a difference in terms of generating capicity. Whereas until recently renewable sources accounted for around 2.5% of UK electricity, according to the National Grid, a record was set during the first week of September.
Smart meters alone may not save much energy: study
LONDON (Reuters) - Smart meters to boost energy efficiency in homes do not automatically achieve a significant reduction in energy demand, research showed on Wednesday.