Trade Shows & Events


The famous Goo Goo Cluster candy bar will turn 100 years old in 2012, but instead of reminiscing about the past, the company is looking forward to its future and the future of the planet.

Earlier this year, Standard Candy Company partnered with BEF to purchase green energy to power its Goo Goo Cluster manufacturing line in Nashville, TN. With the purchase, Goo Goo Clusters became the first candy bar to buy BEF Renewable Energy Credits.

“This was an important thing to do,” said Executive Vice President of Goo Goo Cluster, LLC, Lance Paine. “It helps move us into the 21st century.”

Long known as the premier candy bar in the south, Goo Goo Clusters are welcoming their upcoming 100-year anniversary with updated packaging graphics, a new website and several sustainability measures including compostable packaging and the purchase of green energy through BEF.

The company also looked at its ingredients. It improved the quality of its chocolate and removed vanillin, partially hydrogenated oils and wheat germ to create what they call a “clean” label product. Goo Goo Clusters come in three flavors – original, supreme and peanut butter. Visit www.googoo.com for more information.

The Bonneville Environmental Foundation hit the red carpet, rode along with the President and partnered with a National Park over the winter to continue to bring new renewable energy to the country.

The nation-wide tour began in January, when the Natural Resources Defense Council offset President Obama’s motorcade ride from the White House to Capital Hill for the State of the Union speech in Washington D.C.  NRDC purchased BEF Carbon Offsets for the ride.

“Offsetting the president’s motorcades is meant to put on tonight’s agenda an awareness of the need to move America more vigorously toward a clean-energy economy, and that personal actions matter,” said Peter Lehner, executive director of NRDC, in a press release.

The motorcade offset marks the second time BEF has worked to green an event for President Obama. In May, 2010, BEF partnered with NRDC to offset the travel of 2,600 attendees to the White House Corresponent’s Dinner.
BEF’s 2011 tour continued in February, when it landed at the Staples Center in Los Angeles for the 53rd GRAMMY Awards. The Recording Academy purchased BEF Renewable Energy Credits to offset the power needs of the event.

Later that month, BEF and the National Park Service partnered to provide collectable Carbon Offset Stickers at Lewis & Clark National Historical Park near Astoria, Oregon.

The stickers cost $2.00 and will create 100-kilowatt hours of clean, renewable energy each, or enough to offset the pollution associated with a typical drive to the park.

De-Watered? In Oregon?

The conventional thinking about the Pacific Northwest is that it rains here – and rains a lot. Oregon, for instance, is famously rainy. Its residents are more accustomed to donning rain slickers than sunhats. It is not surprising, then, that many people scratch their head when they hear the Bonneville Environmental Foundation is working to restore de-watered streams in Oregon. How can a stream run dry in Oregon with all that water?

Answers became apparent during a recent BEF trip to the Deschutes Watershed in Central, Oregon. Four BEF employees and a special guest visited the region with the Deschutes River Conservancy, a non-profit partner in BEF’s Model Watershed Program and its Water Restoration Certificate (WRC) program.

As you crest over the pass near Mount Hood, you quickly notice a change in foliage and a drop in humidity. Giant Douglas Firs give way to Pine trees. Lush, green undergrowth changes to scrub brush and brown grasses. The air is dryer, the elevation is higher and the clouds that managed to survive their journey from the Pacific have travelled through the Willamette Valley, up and over the Cascade Range, and en route lost much of their rain-making gusto.

At times, Central Oregon seems a state apart from the Willamette Valley and its large cities and Gore-Tex jackets. Central Oregon is a high desert with an arid climate. And water there is a scarce commodity.

High Demand in the High Dessert

Most of the small towns that sprung up in Central Oregon did so on or around the Deschutes River.

Bend, Oregon – Central Oregon’s largest city at just over 80,000 residents – was named after a bend in the river. And the river runs right through downtown. The Deschutes River Conservancy’s motto, — “It’s why we’re all here.”  — is a statement that holds true both historically and in modern times. What once was an attractive outpost for hunters and ranchers has also become a rafting, fishing and golfing paradise.

All of those activities require water, however. And as the region was promoted as an amazing outdoors playground, population exploded, and residents realized that the water supply had become stressed.

As we visited the Deschutes, our trip took on the feel of a sort of Charles Dickens tale about watershed restoration. With stories of the past, present and future health of the river told by our friends at DRC.

The Past

On the Upper Deschutes, home to some great rafting waters, the flow is regulated at its outlet at Wickiup Reservoir. Stream flows are actually higher than normal in the summer due to this management, and this altered stream-flow pattern erodes river banks and stresses riparian ecosystems. But as we navigated some class 3 rapids, including the 3+ Big Eddy, it was easy to imagine this river looking something very close to its natural state.

A massive lava flow runs along one bank, while native pine forests envelop the other. To birds, deer and other wildlife, the river provides valuable habitat. And the only signs of man could be found in raft pullouts and well-worn biking trails along the river’s bank. One can imagine settlers traveling over the desert and gathering along this river to hunt and fish in a once-bountiful wildlife corridor.

The Present

As the river tumbles further toward Bend it eventually slows and widens near the Old Mill shopping district before cascading over a man-made damn near McKay Park. Further downriver, just past popular downtown Drake Park, stands an irrigation diversion that cuts the river’s flow dramatically.  What water makes it past the diversion is halved again in another irrigation diversion just upstream from The Riverhouse Hotel.

This section of the Middle Deschutes visually represents how past and present demands for water have stretched the resource thin. Historically this portion of the river would run dry, effectively creating a dry swath in the river between the Upper Deschutes, famous for it’s rafting and recreation, and the Lower Deschutes, home to blue ribbon trout and steelhead fishing.

The Future

As we sat on a deck at the Riverhouse Hotel, overlooking the Middle Deschutes, we watched as two teenaged kids inner-tubed past the big rocks and through pools. It was the end of July, yet the water flowed clear and cold in a stream that had run nearly dry during many previous summers.

About 80 percent of the water in the stream was there because of the efforts of BEF and other’s work through the DRC in building partnerships between several, often competing, interest groups.  The Deschutes is one of BEF’s Model Watershed Programs that began in 2006. BEF has pledged to fund $300,000 worth of restoration work in the area over the life of the 10-year project. Through a series of water purchases, water conservation programs, water leasing and participation in BEF’s WRC program, DRC has increased the flow in the Middle Deschutes dramatically, from approximately zero Cubic Feet Per Second (CFS) to 100 cfs. DRCs goal is to eventually reach 250 cfs. And what once seemed an impossible goal, seems attainable today.

Restoration progress on area tributaries is also inspiring. On Whychus Creek, DRC is working with the Deschutes Basin Land Trust, the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council, and many other stakeholders to conserve water by piping large stretches of irrigation canals. These large piping projects help to reduce the approximately 50 percent flow loss that occurs because the water in these canals seeps into the ground through the porous, volcanic soil.

Further downstream, DRC and its partners are also restoring a critical habitat area known as Camp Polk Meadow outside of Sisters, Oregon.

The group is returning a straight, riffled stretch of stream back to its natural winding route and bringing back healthy steelhead and redband trout populations with it.

As with any effective watershed improvement approach, there are many pieces to the Deschutes puzzle. Thankfully, Central Oregon has many hard-working water stewards like the DRC.

Through their efforts, and their partnership with BEF,  the Deschutes Watershed will once again be filled with habitat that enriches the lives of all the creatures who call the region home.

Rob Harmon, BEF’s Chief Innovation Officer and Senior Vice President, is speaking at Law Seminars International’s Fifth Annual Renewable Energy Conference, Aug. 6 & 7, at the Westin Hotel, Seattle.  The conference addresses important current and emerging issues for renewable energy development in the region and features an outstanding faculty of leading legal, governmental and financial professionals.  For information and registration go to:www.lawseminars.com/seminars/09RENUWA.php

Rob has been working in the energy field since 1987, starting as an energy auditor in Massachusetts, moving on to manage an international marketing effort in the wind energy industry. He is responsible for the first web-based carbon calculator, here at BEF. In 2004, Rob won the EPA’s national Green Power Pioneer award for developing and selling retail Green Tags (now known as BEF Carbon Offsets). In addition, he has served as the Chairman of the Small Wind Turbine Committee of the American Wind Energy Association and as a member of the California Emerging Renewables Advisory Board, the Northwest Energy Coalition board, the New Energy Investment Club and Green-e. Rob has authored various published articles.

The Blachly-Lane Electric Co-op dedicated its 5.6 kW solar electric system and Solar 4R School Program involvement on Thursday with help from the installer, Eric Nill of Advanced Energy Systems and Brian Buhl, a teacher at Mapleton School.

The system is grid tied and offsets a portion of the co-op’s electric usage. The data collected from the system is also displayed on an informational kiosk located at the headquarters building and can be viewed here. One of the advantages of the system’s location on Hwy 99 north of Eugene Oregon is the visibility of the system to passing motorists.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQblr7Zb65c&hl=en&fs=1]

Energy for KeepsAs the video showed, the site gets plenty of auto traffic, but the number of cars that pass during this video may surprise you (it surprised us!). So we’d like to hold a little contest for all of you BEF blog viewers out there. Give us your guess for the number of cars that can be seen speeding by on the highway in the background and the first viewer who enters the correct number as a comment to this post will receive a great book about renewable energy called Energy for Keeps – An illustrated guide for everyone who uses electricity.

Good luck!

The 2009 Solar & Sustainability Science Fair on May 15 in Portland was a hit for those looking at the future of sustainability in the northwest. The event held more than 40 vendors – including BEF’s Solar 4R Schools program – who are shaping the future of the industry. It also showcased a few of the young minds who will shape our environmental future during a high school science fair. The projects and young scientists were impressive.

For example, Nathan Van Winkle here compared the carbon storage capacities in natural and mitigation wetlands.[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7W49u6Glb0&hl=en&fs=1]

Another great science exhibit came from Alex McCarthy, who’s looking for an organic compound to replace silica in photovoltaic cells.[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5exENVUlrs&hl=en&fs=1]

Congratulations to all the Science Fair participants.

Hello Renewable Energy Supporters,

We here at the Solar 4R Schools program would like to invite you to stop by our booth at the 2009 Solar & Sustainability Science Fair on May 15 at the PHC Northwest building in Portland.

The fair, held from noon to 6 p.m., is free to attend and will showcase more than 30 organizations that promote sustainability, energy-efficient technologies and renewable energy education.

The PHCNW building is located at 5414 NE 148th Ave. and is home to the Pacific Northwest’s largest single-roof solar array – it’s bigger than a football field!

Come see the array and then celebrate solar and sustainability science fair projects created by local student and community organizations, like us, that see people of all ages and abilities as our best renewable resource.

For more event details see the flyer below or visit www.phcnw.com/solar.

PHCNW Fair Evite

BEF recently joined the Outdoor Industry Association (OIA), and we’re not sitting idle as an OIA member. We have also joined the OIA’s Eco-Working Group to get a better idea of how companies are tackling the challenges of sustainable product development and to volunteer our skills.  We have been completely impressed with the enormous efforts put forth by each Eco-Working Group member. These outdoor industry company volunteers are taking time out of their busy days to research best environmental  practices and report back to peers (read: more meetings). The Eco-Working Group is striving to create an “eco index” that will contain environmental guidelines and performance metrics for companies to use at will.

BEF is no stranger to the outdoor industry. Outdoor companies that support BEF through the purchase of certified renewable energy certificates and carbon offsets include: REI and REI Adventures, The North Face, KEEN, Patagonia, NauLittle Hotties, and Clif Bar. We also have the opportunity to work with many ski resorts with SkiGreen and Alaskan tours at TourGreen. We’re really excited to have joined OIA and to learn so much more about the outdoor industry’s good works.

We just drew 3 names for our Jack Johnson ticket raffle!  The winners were all emailed today and they must respond by Tuesday to claim their prize!  I’d like to thank all those who participated in our contest by sharing their wonderful stories in the comment section of this blog post.

Thanks for reading!

I thought the afternoon and evening of May 14 was busy and informative. Here’s some of the staff, board, and friends gathering in the lobby before the bus arrived .

Taking 30 people on a field trip and being environmentally responsible isn’t easy. Eco Shuttle doesn’t have buses large enough at this point, so we settled for BlueStar, using biodiesel fuel and offsetting the miles with our Green Tags. First stop was SolarWorld, the new German solar cell plant in Hillsboro, where Dr. Gunter Erfurt showed us around and answered questions.We are excited to be doing a project with them to add solar panels to the German American School Second stop was Da Vinci Arts Middle School, where we have an older solar project and a new one going in. Teacher Dan is retiring this spring, but has been pushing sustainability projects in the school district, including this Rain Garden created and kept by his students. Here we see the Portland Public School District sustainability officer with a model of the planned zero energy classroom to go in behind her. BEF is helping with the solar panels for the roof. Standing to the right with the posters are Randy and Dave.  Next stop was an old project of the Johnson Creek Watershed group. Robin posted quite a bit about it so I won’t. We finished our evening at the Laurelhurst Club, an old dance hall near Laurelhurst Park in SE Portland – pretty, private, and low-key, just right for our party. Artemis Catering did the food – beautiful, delicious, organic, local, and environmentally conscious. Ever try to make centerpieces out of seasonal edibles? Asparagus is local and in season, but a challenge to arrange. Using vases from Goodwill, I added some new potatoes and radishes with their leaves and came up with something to look at and tasty to take home. Margie addressing the party at the Laurelhurst Club

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