Energy

Houston Goes Green

Cities across the country are going green. Businesses that value the triple bottom line are leading the charge. Green Business Challenges, like the Westchester Green Business Challenge in Westchester County, New York are becoming widespread and mainstream. Stamford Connecticut and Houston, Texas, as well as Charleston, South Carolina are also great examples of communities that value people, planet, profit and the benefits of going green.

Check out the Green Business Challenge Initiative on GreenTowns and join with other Green Business Challenge communities that are moving towards sustainability. If your community does not currently have a Green Business Challenge in the works and you would like to help get one started, please contact our GreenTowns Advisors and they will guide you!

 
Together, we will make a difference.
Daphne
Director, GreenTowns

Courtesy: http://www.njcleanenergy.com

One of the best ways to protect our natural resources is to conserve energy by living and working in energy-efficient buildings.

Home Energy Audits, also known as Home Energy Assessments, can be performed on any building and point out opportunities to save energy. Audits come in a variey of forms, including both “do-it-yourself” and professional audits.

Home Energy Audits typically include the following:

  • A blower-door test which pinpoints critical drafts and air leaks. If leaks are found, measures must be taken to seal them.
  • A duct test to assess air leaks within the ductwork system. Significant leaks must be sealed.
  • Hot water-saving measures including low-flow showerheads and faucet aerators can be installed.
  • Installation of energy-efficient compact fluorescent light bulbs is suggested, where the use makes sense.
  • Checking insulation in attics and providing additiona insulation where needed.

Check out this video and the GreenTowns Home Energy Audit Initiative.

HERE’S WHAT YOU CAN DO RIGHT NOW:

Check out the ENERGY STAR Home Energy Yardstick

Check out the U.S. Department of Energy, Do-It-Yourself Home Energy Assessments

Check out the Do-It-Yourself Home Energy Audit e-book

Check out the ENERGY STAR for Homes Partner Locator

 

Do you have a question about energy? Ask a GreenTowns Energy Advisor.

Together, we will make a difference.
Daphne
Director, GreenTowns

Courtesy: http://www.credoaction.com

The EPA has just proposed a new rule regarding limits on carbon pollution. This historic carbon pollution rule, or Carbon Pollution Standard is weak and ignores many guilty sources.

The EPA does consider public opinion when making polcy decisions. Make your voice heard and submit your comments regarding carbon pollution on the CREDO action website.

 
Together, we will make a difference.
Daphne
Director, GreenTowns

 

Mobilize the Earth Video Released by the Earth Day Network:

Watch it now.

 

HERE’S WHAT YOU CAN DO RIGHT NOW!

  • Do you know a local green hero? Share their story with the GreenTowns network.
  • How Green is Your Town? Find out now!
  • Know of a great initiative? Share it with your community.
  • Questions about sustainability? Ask one of our GreenTowns Advisors:

Energy   Food   Water  Transportation  Land & Conservation  Building Recycling  Connections

WASHINGTON – League of Conservation Voters President Gene Karpinski issued the following statement on President Obama’s stop today in Cushing, Oklahoma to discuss expediting the southern segment of the Keystone XL pipeline:

“Today’s ill-advised event in Cushing stands in stark contrast to many of President Obama’s laudatory efforts to reduce our dangerous dependence on oil. Instead of expediting the southern segment of the risky Keystone XL pipeline and promoting dirty energy, the Obama administration should continue its important work to cut unnecessary subsidies for Big Oil, increase fuel efficiency for cars and double down on clean energy. Rather than rushing efforts to transport toxic oil across America’s heartland, we should focus on putting America back in control of our energy future – creating new clean energy jobs, reducing our dependence on oil and curbing harmful global warming pollution.”

__________________________________________________________

HERE’S WHAT YOU CAN DO RIGHT NOW!

Send a comment to the White House:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/submit-questions-and-comments

Please also help spread the word.

If you are on Facebook, click here to post the petition to your Wall.

If you have a Twitter account, click here to automatically tweet:
Send a message to @BarackObama lead on climate, don’t cheerlead for #KeystoneXL: http://bit.ly/GFtTIC

One Block Off the Grid

Check out One Block Off the Grid and see how much it costs on average, to “go solar” in your neighborhood. The site also has information about how much you could save every month, and what you could save over time.

Questions about solar and if it is right for you? Visit our GreenTowns Energy page and get answers from our team of energy advisors.

Do you know a local green hero?
Share their story with the GreenTowns network.
 
How Green is Your Town?
 
Questions about sustainability?
Ask one of our GreenTowns Advisors:

Credit: Hemera Collection/Thinkstock

EarthTalk® E – The Environmental Magazine

Dear EarthTalk: I read that car makers had agreed to up fuel economy standards to an average of about 55 miles per gallon by the year 2025, and that specifics were due to be hammered out by the end of 2011. Did this happen and where do things stand now?  

          – Scott Ellis, Norwalk, CA

After years of wrangling on the issue, auto companies, regulators and policymakers have finally come to terms on increased Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards for vehicles plying American roads. According to the plan as formulated by the Obama administration, automakers will double the average, unadjusted fuel-economy rating of their car and light truck vehicle fleets to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025 from today’s standard of 27 miles per gallon. Automakers which don’t meet the standards will be penalized $5.50 per 0.1 miles per gallon they fall below, multiplied by their total production for the U.S. market. Congress is likely to sign the new rules, which will start taking effect for the 2017 model year, into law this summer.

According to the White House, the higher standards will likely lead to price increases of some $2,000 per vehicle to cover the costs of more expensive technology, but drivers should save an average of $6,600 in gas over the life of a vehicle. Environmental advocacy groups allied as the Go60mpg Coalition report that the new rules will create almost half a million new jobs while cutting domestic oil consumption by 1.5 million barrels or more a day by 2030.

“The standards are going to lead to large investments and a rebirth of the U.S. auto industry [as] global leaders in innovation,” says Roland Hwang, director of the Transportation program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, one of the six environmental groups (along with Environment America, the National Wildlife Federation, the Safe Climate Campaign, the Sierra Club and the Union of Concerned Scientists) behind Go60mpg. Hwang figures the new rules will generate $300 billion in extra revenue to the U.S. auto industry, not to mention lining consumers’ pocketbooks with an estimated $200 billion in fuel savings. “This is a big deal [and] something that will keep the U.S. auto industry on the forefront of manufacturing innovation.”

In addition to the new CAFE standards for cars and light trucks, the White House is calling for a
20 percent cut in greenhouse gas emissions from large trucks and buses by 2018. The fuel economy bump inherent in these new truck rules will translate to some $73,000 in fuel savings for truckers over the lifetime of a new 18-wheeler and some 530 million barrels of oil saved for all large trucks and buses made between 2014 and 2018.

Critics point out that no one can be sure how much new technology will add to the cost of vehicles, let alone how fluctuations in gas prices, consumer tastes and the overall economy could impact what types of cars people want to drive. While the new rules represent a gamble in regard to these variables, enough Americans see the benefits of more fuel efficient vehicles outweighing the trade-offs. Of course, environmentally conscious consumers can already buy more fuel efficient vehicles—Priuses, Volts and Leafs are already all over American roads. And if Congress goes along with its intent to pass the new rules, greener cars will be standard and the U.S will be on the forefront of automotive innovation once again.

CONTACTS: Go60mpg Coalition, www.go60mpg.org.

EarthTalk® is written and edited by Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss and is a registered trademark of E – The Environmental Magazine ( www.emagazine.com). Send questions to: earthtalk@emagazine.com. Subscribe: www.emagazine.com/subscribe. Free Trial Issue: www.emagazine.com/trial.

Do you know a local green hero?
Share their story with the GreenTowns network.
 
How Green is Your Town?
 
Questions about sustainability?
Ask one of our GreenTowns Advisors:

The Colorado River: Running Dry

by Daphne Dixon on February 5, 2012

in Energy, GreenTowns Categories, Lifestyle, Water

Photo courtesy: Peter McBride

Photographer Peter McBride traveled along the Colorado River from its source high in the Rocky Mountains to its historic mouth at the Sea of Cortez. In this Yale Environment 360 video, he follows the natural course of the Colorado by raft, on foot, and overhead in a small plane, telling the story of a river whose water is siphoned off at every turn, leaving it high and dry 80 miles from the sea.


Watch the video, “Chasing Water”
In the video, McBride, a Colorado native, documents how increasing water demands have transformed the river that is the lifeblood for an arid Southwest.

 

ABOUT THE VIDEO
This e360 video was produced and written byPete McBride, a Colorado-based photographer and writer. His work has been honored by Pictures of the Year International, The Society of Professional Journalists, and the Society of Publication Designers. He was the recipient of a Knight Fellowship for Professional Journalists at Stanford University. His photography of the Colorado River is featured in the book, The Colorado River: Flowing Through Conflict.

The Tipping Point

February 3, 2012 Building

What is that magical combination of elements that turns a community into a “green” and sustainable community? Well, like all things organic, it starts out with a seed, that nourished, over time, grows, blossoms, and reseeds. In communities, sustainability starts with people who have a real passion about making a difference. Naturally, people  come to [...]

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Together, we will make a difference.

February 1, 2012 Advisors

GreenTowns is a shared platform of 15,000 individual town networks, where communities around the country, can share their green projects and efforts, not only on a designated town page, but also within a network of 15,000 towns. Find your town now! If green efforts are shared on one platform, so that we can learn from each other, share resources, and initiatives, then [...]

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