Browsing the archives for the city centric category.

Austin Energy Proposes Raising City Renewable Use to 35%

city centric, clean energy economy, sport & sustainability

Austin Energy Proposes Raising City Renewable Use to 35%: “Austin Energy’s 2008 carbon reduction plan called for 30 percent of the Texas capitol’s energy to come from renewables through 2020, but the utility has floated a recommendation to increase the target to more than 35 percent.
Under the new plan, Austin Energy also would aim to reduce direct emissions to 20 percent below 2005 levels, [...]“

(Via Environmental Leader.)

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Chicago Energy Efficiency Partners

city centric, civic engagement, clean energy economy

ComEd

  • (From environment Illinois)Under legislation passed in 2007, ComEd has $28.7 million earmarked for energy efficiency programs in 2008, and is scheduled to spend over $170 million on energy efficiency programs through 2010. ComEd is providing discounts on ENERGY STAR® qualified CFLs. Discounted specialty bulbs — including globes, reflectors, candelabras, floodlights, dimmables, and vanity bulbs — will be available this summer at The Home Depot, Costco, and Sam’s Club.
  • (From Greenbiz) ComEd Energy Efficiency Programs Save Customers More than $20M (June 16, 2009) Year one of “Smart Ideas” program ended May 31, 2009.

Peoples Gas

  • Rebates for appliance purchases “When you add value to your home with natural gas appliances, you can save on your overall energy costs. And, through the Peoples Gas energy conservation program, you may also be eligible for cash-back allowances*, designed to help you start saving right away.”
  • Rebates for Upgrades The Chicagoland Natural Gas Savings Program offers rebates and low-interest loans to encourage customers to make energy efficient improvements to their apartment buildings and businesses.
  • Integrys energy efficiency page (parent company).”Energy efficiency can help address climate change. Energy efficiency is a critical, cost-effective way to reduce carbon emissions, helping the environment for the long term. Integrys companies in Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin and other states have energy-efficiency resources and programs in place for customers and are continually developing new ones.”

Smart Energy Design Assistance Center (SEDAC) School of Architecture, College of Fine and Applied Arts Office of Continuing Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. ILLINOIS ENERGY EFFICIENCY PORTFOLIO STANDARD (EEPS)

The State

  • Enactment of Public Act 95-0481 (aka the Rate Settlement Law) set forth new energy efficiency (EE) and demand response (DR) goals for Illinois utilities
  • Keep Warm illinois“The Energy Policy Act of 2005 includes provisions for energy efficiency tax incentives for existing homes. “
  • ARRA Funding: About $50 billion for energy programs, focused primarily on efficiency and renewable energy, including $5 billion to weatherize modest-income homes; $6.4 billion to clean up nuclear weapons production sites; $11 billion toward a so-called “smart electricity grid” to reduce waste; $6 billion to subsidize loans for renewable energy projects; $6.3 billion in state energy efficiency and clean energy grants; $4.5 billion to make federal buildings more energy efficient; and $2 billion in grants for advanced batteries for electric vehicles.
  • DECO (Commerce and Economic Opportunity)CEO provides incentives for the Public Sector, Affordable House New Construction and Gut Rehab, as well as Training and Education. The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) believes that affordable housing must be energy efficient to be truly affordable. DCEO has led this effort through the Illinois Energy Efficient Affordable Housing Program initiated in 1988. Under this Program, grants are provided to Illinois based non-profit and for-profit housing developers to include energy efficient building practices in the rehab or new construction of affordable housing units. Average energy savings range from 50% to 75%.
  • Keep Cool

CEDA Community and Economic Development Association of Cook County

  • Energy ServicesCEDA’s Weatherization Program focuses on making homes safer and more energy-efficient for qualifying low-income residents in the city of Chicago and suburban Cook County. Repairing or replacing older furnaces, installing heat-saving insulation and sealing bypasses to conserve energy are often the means used to keep homes warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer. The Weatherization Program also strives to make homes safer by installing smoke detectors, carbon monoxide detectors and fire extinguishers, as well as repairing gas lines within the home. This service is available to qualifying homeowners and renters who apply at local intake sites. If a rental unit is being weatherized, the landlord must pay for half of the repair costs unless she/he meets certain qualifications
  • ARRAUnder the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, several programs that CEDA currently operates, including Weatherization, Workforce and Economic Development (WED) and Head Start will receive billions of dollars in additional federal funding. For CEDA, this means that exciting, yet challenging opportunities are ahead of us. With the allocation of increased funding of this scale, we are in the planning process of program expansion, assessing new employment and job training opportunities, setting new benchmarks for success and adapting the Administration’s initiative of complete transparency.

Center for Neighborhood Technologies

MEEA: The Midwest Energy Efficiency Alliance

Citizen’s Utility Board

  • Illinois General Assembly created CUB in 1983, it gave the nonprofit, nonpartisan organization a clear mission: to represent the interests of residential utility customers across the state.
  • Get Green

Northern Illinois Energy Project

  • The Homeowners’ Energy Conservation Program encourages homeowners and developers to incorporate energy conservation products and materials in rehabilitation and home improvement projects. The program benefits include: A free home improvement and energy efficiency consultation plan; A comprehensive mortgage package that rolls the cost of home improvements and purchase funds into one single payment plan; Reduced energy costs and monthly utility bills as well as a more valuable home; A free ENERGY STAR® qualified refrigerator from Sears for participants including $2,000 in eligible energy efficient repairs in their rehab projects
  • residential lighting program
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Climate Prosperity Project, Inc. Launched in St. Louis

city centric, civic engagement, clean energy economy

Rockefeller Brothers Fund Commits Initial Funding for Venture to Address Climate Change in Context of Economic Development Opportunities.

ST. LOUIS, June 8 /PRNewswire/ — With environmental, energy and economic challenges threatening the prosperity of metropolitan regions and states, a new, national nonprofit organization has been launched to guide economic development efforts based on a strategy of “Green Savings, Green Opportunity, and Green Talent.”

(Via PRNewswire)

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Energy Efficiency: Good Idea, Not Enough Believers

city centric, civic engagement, clean energy economy, memeshaping
The CEOs of Duke Energy and San Diego Gas & Electric say not enough is done to promote energy efficiency despites a lot of discussion between policy makers and the utility industry.

Lawmakers and utilities have talked a lot about how much they love energy efficiency measures – technologies and programs to encourage consumers to conserve, particularly during peak hours. But deploying them has been slow-moving.

(Via GreenTechGrid)

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NFL Cities & Energy Efficiency Programs

city centric, civic engagement, clean energy economy

$3.2 billion Energy Efficiency Funding

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Not Climate Change, Not Carbon But “Good Business”

city centric, civic engagement, clean energy economy, community futuring, green advertiser

Energy efficiency will save you money. Plain and simple, period.

That was the message of Anthony Malkin, president of Wein & Malkin, the firm that owns the Empire State Building, last week at the annual Energy Efficiency Forum in Washington, DC.

(Vi CoStar Group)

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2009 Mayors’ Climate Protection Award Winners Announced

city centric, clean energy economy, green advertiser

Denver (CO) Mayor John Hickenlooper, and Wilkes-Barre (PA) Mayor Thomas Leighton have been selected to receive the 2009 Mayors’ Climate Protection Awards, a program sponsored by The U.S. Conference of Mayors and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

(Via BizJournals)

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Sears Tower Slated for $350M Sustainability Makeover

city centric, civic engagement, clean energy economy

Sears Tower Slated for $350M Sustainability Makeover: “Sears Tower Slated for $350M Sustainability MakeoverSears Tower, the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere, is about to get a $350-million makeover that is designed to significantly reduce its energy use by up to 80 percent and cut its CO2 emissions. The retrofit project, over the next five years, includes major upgrades to windows, heating and cooling systems, lighting, elevators, restroom [...]“

Building upgrades, designed by Chicago-based Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture (AS+GG),

The energy savings will equal 68-million kilowatt hours annually or 150,000 barrels of oil every year. The majority of the energy savings will be realized in approximately five years, say planners. The sustainability project will also create more than 3,600 jobs.

(Via Environmental Leader.)

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(Random) Top 12 Greenest Cities in the U.S.

city centric, civic engagement

Top 12 Greenest Cities in the U.S.: “

All politics are local. So is the progress in greentech.

Federal and state Renewable Portfolio Standards, federal loans and stimulus packages are vitally important programs.

But progress in greening our cities is going to come from local efforts as much as from on high. We take a quick look at some city-based green initiatives.

San Jose, Calif. considers itself the capital of Silicon Valley, and wants to be the global center of greentech innovation. The city and its Mayor, Chuck Reed, have initiated one of the nation’s most aggressive green initiatives - the Green Vision program with a 15-year goal that includes:

1. Creating 25,000 cleantech jobs

2. Reducing per capita energy use by 50 percent

3. Receiving 100 percent of its electrical power from clean renewable sources

4. Building or retrofitting 50 million square feet of green buildings

5. Diverting 100 percent of waste from landfills

6. Recycling or reusing 100 percent of its wastewater (100 million gallons per day)

7. Ensuring that 100 percent of its public fleet vehicles run on alternative fuels

8. Planting 100,000 new trees

9. Replacing 100 percent of its streetlights with smart, zero emission lighting

San Jose calls itself the capital of Silicon Valley but Palo Alto, Calif. could arguably assume the mantle of its’ heart (against the protestations of Mountain View and Menlo Park). Palo Alto is the home of Stanford University, Packard’s garage (of Hewlett Packard fame), Facebook, and a lot of Venture Capital firms. Steve Jobs of Apple and Sergey Brin of Google call it home.

Palo Alto can also lay claim to be one of the nation’s greenest cities.

In June 2008, Palo Alto adopted mandatory green-building requirements for residential and commercial development — one of the most stringent green building ordinances in the nation.

New buildings and remodels in Palo Alto must meet standards developed by the U.S. Green Building Council or the Build It Green organization. Expect some public pushback since the green requirements can add from $2,000 to $10,000 to the cost of a home and 2 percent to 5 percent to the cost of a commercial project, according to a city report.

Palo Alto also has

  • A climate protection plan addressing CO2 emissions and water
  • A program for less-toxic pest control
  • Proposed stringent ordinances on construction and demolition debris, a major source of landfill material, waste, and toxics.
  • The ‘greenest’ congressional office. Anna Eshoo, a high-powered Congressperson, recently unveiled the very first congressional office in the nation to go maximum green. Eshoo’s office has installed a 1.6 kilowatts photovoltaic system and 100 percent of the electricity used by the office is obtained from renewable sources. The office has made profound green modifications to its’ lighting, water, heating, cooling, materials, waste stream and the transit habits of its’ employees.

Palo Alto has some competition from its neighbor/rival across the Bay - the Republic of Berkeley, Calif.’

Late last year, Berkeley’s city council approved a plan to offer city-backed loans to building owners who install PV systems. The loans, up to $20,000 each, would be paid off as part of the owners’ property-tax bills. This type of program could eliminate the biggest obstacle to solar deployments - the large upfront cost.

If this program succeeds, it could be expanded to finance other energy-efficiency efforts such as installing double-glazed windows or thermal insulation.

How about tiny Greensburg, Kan.? After being decimated by an F-5 tornado that leveled the city and left few homes standing, the survivors launched a plan to resurrect their town as the greenest city in America. All public buildings are to conform to LEED platinum standards.

Now, two years after the disaster, Greensburg’s new homes are almost 50 percent more energy-efficient due to energy-saving windows, improved insulation, efficient heating, etc.

The people of Greensburg are pioneering the greening of a municipality, in one of the reddest states, no less.

Gainesville, Fla. is the first U.S. city with Feed-in-Tariffs.

In the first such program in the country, The Gainesville City Commission has approved a solar feed-in tariff for residential and business customers served by the Gainesville Regional Utilities in Florida. Wrote Ucilia Wang:

‘Under the program, owners of solar energy systems would sell the electricity to the utilities at $0.32 per kilowatt-hour under a 20-year contract. The rate, which is higher than the price for conventional power, will remain for the first two years of the program. … The program is modeled after the successful one in Germany, which has become the largest solar market in the world.’

Other cities with claims on ‘the greenest’ include:

Austin, Texas: Austin Energy, the city’s municipally owned utility, plans to grow the renewables’ portion of Austin’s energy portfolio to 30 percent by 2020 and to build solar power’s share to 100MW by 2020.

Boulder, Colo.: The city has resolved to become a zero-waste community.

Burlington, Vt.: More than one-third of energy used in the city comes from renewable resources, an impressive figure for the frosty Northeast.

Madison, Wis.: A bike-friendly city with an extensive recycling program that claims more than 90 percent participation.

New York City: High-density populations like NYC use fewer resources per capita. New Yorkers use of public transport dwarfs that of any other city.

Portland, Ore.: Portland is bike friendly, has set an urban growth limit to protect 25 million acres of open space, and recycles more than half of the city’s trash.

San Francisco: More than half the city’s residents use public or alternative transportation to get to work.

Please forgive the slightly California-centric selection in this list. Feel free to comment and let us know your choice for greenest city.

(Via Green Light.)

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Bulls name Gar Forman General Manager

city centric

Bulls name Gar Forman General Manager: “The Chicago Bulls have named Gar Forman the team’s General Manager. John Paxson will remain with team as Executive VP of Basketball Operations.”

(Via NBA.com: Bulls News.)

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