Back to: Homepage
Rocky Mountain Institute
Donate to RMI  |  Contact RMI  |  Site Map
About RMI Consulting Participate Areas of Impact Publications Multimedia Press Room
Make an On-line Donation
Support RMI's most critical work.

Carbon Neutral Celebration
RMI25 is a Carbon Neutral Celebration. Travel emissions can be offset through:

www.flyneutral.com
www.nativeenergy.com
www.terrapass.com



About FlyNeutral: FlyNeutral is a grassroots, nonprofit organization that enables people to act today to stop global warming. FlyNeutral helps make it easy for individuals and organizations to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions directly and through participating in innovative market-based solutions to global climate change.

Q: Where do these carbon reductions come from?

A: When you buy a carbon-neutral certification from FlyNeutral, they buy emissions reduction credits on your behalf through the the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX) — CCX supplies third-party-verified and legally accountable emissions reduction credits.

www.flyneutral.com

RMI's 25 Years — past and future

RMI25 Lead Sponsors

Peace Ranch logo


Peace Ranch logo


Community Banks of Colorado logo
www.cobnks.com


PG&E logo
www.pge.com


Related WestPac logo
www.related.com


Tecolite logo
www.tecolite.com


Alpine Bank logo
www.alpinebank.com


Gran Farnum Printing logo
www.printing4you.com


New Belgium logo
www.newbelgium.com


Vin Aspen logo
www.sinfullyaustralian.com


More Event Sponsors >>



RMI25 A Huge Success

The World’s Problems Were Acknowledged; A Commitment to Work on Them Formed

"Paying attention is the most important thing we’ve been missing." —Amory B. Lovins

Well, whether you were there or not, RMI25 (the celebration of RMI's 25th birthday) came and went and can be called anything but a failure. The venues were packed, the conversations were poignant, and the audiences were enthused.

In the linked pages you can read about:

If you attended, I don't know what you might have gotten out of it (other than brain overload leading to a fullness headache), but there were several things that made me sit up (which you can read about in the linked pages):

  • One was the fact that inventor Dean Kamen has devised "black boxes" that produce clean water and electricity with no infrastructure whatsoever (why are these not being mass produced and used already?).
  • Bill Joy's three things that are not ready to deploy, but which are three things we as humans need to stay within the energy footprint we must now live within — and the fact that they're outside the "financing envelope."
  • Carpet company Interface's $350 million saved in wasting less in terms of resources.
  • Clare Lockhart's description of "how aid gets done."
  • And Jim Woolsey's description of the security threat that oil poses.
These conversations are ongoing, and at RMI were trying to address some of the root causes of the problems discussed. So we appreciate your support, and hope you'll think about the choices you make, because as Amory said at the end of the event: "Whenever we chose to use energy in a particular way that shows up as part of as huge aggregate of energy demand, enormous carbon emissions. Well, it only takes a lot of little decisions, smarter decisions, of the same kind, better informed, to turn that right around."

Enjoy!
—Cam Burns, RMI



Newcomer to the Sustainability Arena

Andrew WinstonAndrew Winston, a self-described newcomer to the sustainability arena, RMI25 Symposium panelist, and author of Green to Gold made some great observations and collected some of the best quotes of the event at his blog: www.andrewwinston.com/blog.


Home  |  About RMI  |  Jobs at RMI  |  Contact RMI  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map
© Rocky Mountain Institute. All rights reserved.   Powered by Intrcomm Technology's SMC