Exergy TV is partnership between Sustainable Silicon Valley & KMVT 15 that grew out of this year's Leadership Mountain View cohort. KMVT Station Manager Josh Young, SSV's Dennis Murphy and Mountain View Chamber's Merisol Melara are producers. Melissa Dinwiddie is our on-air host.

Exergy TV #4: Responsible Recycling & 3D Upcycling

17 views11 months ago

Exergy TV #3: Getting Plastics Out of Food Packaging

38 views11 months ago

Exergy TV 3.1.24: The High Costs of Fake Plastic Fields

122 views1 year ago
SSV WET (Water, Environment, Technology) Talks are a popular series of provocative and insightful presentations where water leaders like Felicia Marcus, Peter Drekmeier and Dr. Newsha Ajami discuss lively topics such as squaring the hydro circle, not crying a river and passing the magic wand of water policy determinism.

WET Talk 13: Jeffrey Kightlinger

109 views1 year ago

WET Talk 12: East Bay Shoreline Infrastructure

73 views1 year ago

WET Talk 11: Dr. Jay Lund

85 views2 years ago

WET Talk 10: Diane Bailey & Menlo Spark(s) Green Jobs

13 views2 years ago
All the session videos from Online Wednesday and In Person Thursday.

Eddie Corwin: Project EEager

189 views1 year ago

Peter Drekmeier: A Sustainable Water Supply Future

164 views1 year ago

In Hot Water: The Impacts of Rising Ocean Temperatures

121 views1 year ago

The Chair Interview: Valley Water's John L. Varela

120 views1 year ago

Water Bodies: The Salton Sea and Colorado River

104 views1 year ago

John Tang : State of the State of Water

96 views1 year ago
Great perspectives on Bay Area built environment. Housing, Transit and Equitable Development.

B-a-P23: Dr. Kristina Hill on Groundwater Rise

72 views1 year ago

B-a-P!23_Sean Armstrong

30 views1 year ago
Sustain-a-Palooza! is an informative Celebration of Sustainable Living, spanning healthy food, water and air to heat-pumped homes and electric mobility in a regenerative Bay Area. We attract a big tent audience of engaged consumers and citizens interested in the quality of life and building better communities. After all, no matter what we do for a living, we still need to make dinner, do laundry, and ponder the hundreds of large and small resource allocation choices that impact our common good.