|
|
| |
|
Western Business Coalition for New Energy Technologies 26 August 2003
Incorporating News from the Arizona, Colorado and Utah Coalitions for New Energy Technologies
In This Edition: Welcome to New Coalition Members
Arizona: Sun Systems Colorado: Air Strata Marketing Colorado: BRICOR Water Conservation Colorado: Energy Inc.
Regional News
Regional: Draft WAPA Rate Adjustments Issued Arizona: Arizona Wind Energy Resource Map Elicits Interest in State’s Wind Potential Arizona: Renewable Energy Policy Project Analyzes Experience with Renewable Portfolio Arizona: “Renewable Resources Must Fill Energy Gap” Colorado: Rocky Mountain Energy Council Meeting Colorado: Denver Post Editorial: “Let public shape energy policy” Colorado: “Policy Group Praises Bush Energy Plan, Rebukes Critics” Colorado: Experts Highlight Alternatives to Dwindling Natural Gas Supplies/High Prices Colorado: Colorado labs may lose funds, jobs Colorado: Facts and Logic: Two Views on Wind and Renewable Energy Colorado: “Saving energy, budgets”: Program helps pay for capital projects Colorado: Seminar Gives Energy Industry Opportunity to Teach Colorado: Carbon Disclosure Project Looks at Businesses and Climate Change Colorado: ARPA Eyes Bond Issue for Wind Turbines Colorado: PureVision Technology Receives Second NSF Award Colorado: CORE Receives Grant for Innovative, Affordable Housing Colorado: Vail Plans New Wind Farm at Ski Resort New Mexico: Arizona and Northeast Energy Crises Energize New Mexico’s Governor New Mexico: Update from New Mexico Energy Office New Mexico: New Mexico Wind Energy Center New Mexico: NREL Power Technologies Data Book Updated New Mexico: Global Warming Symposium, 20 September, Santa Fe New Mexico: NMSEA Solar Fiesta, 20-21 September, Albuquerque New Mexico: N.M. Environmental Health Conference, 20-22 October, Albuquerque New Mexico: Border Energy Forum, 23-24 October, Austin, Texas New Mexico: PRC: Into the Fray New Mexico: Businessman Perls makes a run for PRC District 3 seat New Mexico: Job Announcement – SWEEP New Mexico Representative Utah: Utah Wind Power Campaign Wins National Award Utah: San Juan County Commissioner Decries Lack of Wind Farms in Utah Utah: “Misconceptions about solar heating” Utah: “Utah should cash in on year-round wind power”
National News
Upcoming Events
Arizona UPEX 2003, Scottsdale, 7-11 October Colorado Building-Integrated Photovoltaics Course, Denver, 9 September Colorado Rocky Mountain Sustainable Living Fair, Fort Collins, 13-14 September Colorado Sustainable Resources 2003, Boulder, 29 September – 4 October Colorado 2003 Engineers Without Borders USA Conference, Boulder, 4-5 October Colorado Montreux Energy's Hydrogen Infrastructure Roundtable, Denver, 8-12 October Illinois Green Power Marketing Conference, Chicago, 3-5 November New Mexico Natural Building Colloquium 2003, Kingston, 5-11 October Utah Utah Wind & Solar Energy Conference, Salt Lake City, 1 October
Welcome to New Coalition Members
Phoenix
Sun Systems, Inc. is a vertically integrated solar water heating company. It is the largest solar sales and service company in the United States, servicing over 40,000 solar owners in Arizona. With a fleet of radio-dispatched trucks, Sun Systems has more state-certified solar technicians on staff than any other company in the Southwest. Many of the company’s services include complete repair of any make of solar heating system, solar pool heating and automatic safety pool covers, seasonal preventative maintenance tune-ups on all solar systems and pool covers. It also offers upgrades to existing solar systems, removal, and re-installation of solar collectors.
Air Strata MarketingAurora
Air Strata Marketing manufactures StratoJet air destratifiers, an energy conservation product that meets the need for energy reduction in the government, institutional, commercial and industrial building market. The company’s products balance floor/ceiling temperature, thereby significantly reduce energy consumption and energy cost while improving personal comfort for employees and customers. Benefits of StratoJets include energy savings from 15% to over 50%; short payback periods and a relatively inexpensive alternative to retrofit existing buildings to reduce heat stratification.
BRICOR Water ConservationColorado Springs
BRICOR is dedicated to providing products that work in saving water and energy. With a patented Vacuum Flow Restriction Technology, BRICOR products simply perform better while only consuming 40% or what is considered a low flow device. BRICOR helps hotels, colleges, homeowners and recreation centers save millions of gallons of water every year. BRICOR doesn’t use a rubber restrictor that can be removed and the simple design involves no moving parts. Typically, the company’s customers will see a return on investment in less than one year.
Boulder
Energy Inc. is the regional dealer for Solarwall. The Solarwall® Fresh Air Heating and Cooling System was developed in Canada and engineered in conjunction with the U.S Department of Energy and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Solarwall can reduce heating and cooling costs by over 40%, based on: energy used, the amount of sun and southern wall or roof area. It can heat outside air over 50 degrees, substantially reducing heating costs. As a fresh air exchanger, it reduces cooling costs and increases health. Solarwall is inexpensive, easy to install and maintenance free. Every building that requires heat should use it.
[For complete member lists of the Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah Coalitions for New Energy Technologies, visit the respective state sites at www.newenergytechnologies.org]
Regional News
Draft WAPA Rate Adjustments Issued —Potential Large Impact on Wind and Utility-scale Renewable Energy Generation Facilities
The Western Area Power Administration (WAPA) has issued its draft 2004 Rate Adjustments for transmission and ancillary services. Comments from advocates of renewable energy technologies are important to this process and are due by 11 September 2003.
For more information, visit: http://www.wapa.gov/rm/Rates/Tran%20rate%20adj.htm or contact Craig Cox.
Arizona Wind Energy Resource Map Elicits Interest in State’s Wind Potential
Mike Fimea writes in the Arizona Business Gazette of 14 August about the Southwest Renewable Energy Conference held in Flagstaff earlier this month, where a new high-resolution map of Arizona’s wind energy resource was unveiled. Fimea’s article, entitled “Arizona looking at possibilities,” describes efforts by Tucson Electric Power to learn more about how to leverage Arizona’s wind resource. It also describes how the Rosebud Sioux Tribe in South Dakota overcame technical and policy barriers to begin developing its considerable wind potential.
Read Fimea’s full article from the Arizona Business Gazette.
Renewable Energy Policy Project Analyzes Experience with Renewable Portfolio Standards —Arizona’s EPS Examined in Detail
The Renewable Energy Policy Project (REPP) has begun an initiative to analyze the experience of states with Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) implementation. REPP reports that “to the extent that the data is available, REPP will track and report the cost of renewables to determine whether costs have declined under RPS policies. REPP will also look at the evaluations conducted by states.”
REPP’s three-page assessment of Arizona’s RPS (Environmental Portfolio Standard) is available on its RPS page.
“Renewable Resources Must Fill Energy Gap”
In an op-ed in the 18 August Arizona Republic, Amanda Ormond of the Tempe-based Ormond Group writes:
“Fortunately, we have a home-grown solution for the natural gas crunch...The cost of renewable technologies has come down by 80 to 90 percent over the last two decades. But renewable energy projects need markets. But, although Arizona utilities are beginning to develop renewable energy resources, less than one percent of Arizona's electricity supply currently comes from solar, landfill gas and other clean sources.”
“To begin to truly tap into the benefits of Arizona’s renewable energy resources, including an easing of natural gas prices, the federal government must enact a national standard that requires utilities to sell a growing amount of electricity from renewable sources. This would ensure a stable and competitive market for renewable energy development, and the mass production levels that would make the technologies even cheaper.”
Rocky Mountain Energy Council Meeting
A public meeting of the Rocky Mountain Energy Council is being held on 26 August from 8 a.m. to noon at the Sheraton Hotel, 360 Union Blvd. in Lakewood.
Among participating organizations will be renewable and non-renewable energy producers, environmental organizations, federal and state agencies that deal with permitting, environmental protection, energy policy and other key stakeholders from around the region.
Formation of the Council has been proposed by the White House Task Force on Energy Project Streamlining, which was created by the White House Council on Environmental Quality. Its primary mission is to explore ways to expedite permitting of energy projects — both traditional and renewable — on State and Federal public lands in Utah, Wyoming, Colorado and Montana.
The meeting is open to the public, but will be limited to about 200 people on a first-come, first-served basis. The purpose is to gather input from stakeholders, including the public, industry, local organizations and tribal governments. The contact for more information is Annette West at 202-586-3464.
Minutes of the meeting will be published by 26 September.
Denver Post Editorial: “Let public shape energy policy”
In a 13 July editorial, “Let public shape energy policy,” the Denver Post writes:
“The Bush administration is deciding the fate of our public lands in secret meetings. If the administration wants to toss aside environmental protections or otherwise rewrite rules governing natural gas development on federal lands, it should let the American public in on the decisions.”
“America needs to develop its energy supplies, including the vast natural gas resources in the Rocky Mountains. By some estimates, there are 137 trillion cubic feet of natural gas - a seven-year supply for the nation - in just Colorado and Wyoming. However, the development should be done in an environmentally sensitive way.”
“Last week, the first meeting of the newly created Rocky Mountain Energy Council, held at the Denver Federal Center in Lakewood, was closed to the public. The secrecy is both indefensible and worrisome.”
[…]
“The meetings of the Rocky Mountain Energy Council should be public - and the plans that result from those meetings must balance energy development with environmental concerns.”
“Policy Group Praises Bush Energy Plan, Rebukes Critics”
Judith Kohler of the Associated Press reports on 9 July that “[a] new report from the University of Colorado calls on Westerners to stop demonizing the energy industry and start conserving as the nation increasingly turns to the region for its fuels…The report, which also praises the government's energy plan, was issued Tuesday by the Center of the American West, a university policy center that addresses key Western issues.”
Experts Highlight Alternatives to Dwindling Natural Gas Supplies/High Prices —Advanced Renewables and Conservation Technologies Offer Real Solutions
“North American production of natural gas is flat or declining, despite misleading claims that the Rocky Mountains are a ‘Persian Gulf’ of natural gas,” a panel of energy experts said on 25 August. Speaking at the Colorado School of Mines after a field hearing by House Speaker Dennis Hastert’s Task Force on Affordable Natural Gas, the panel concluded that the “laws of supply and demand will continue to push gas prices up.” Panelists included energy consultant and natural gas specialist Steve Andrews, Rick Gilliam, Senior Energy Policy Advisor at Western Resource Advocates, and Mark Ruzzin of the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project.
The panelists said that impacts on gas and electric bills could be minimized if the state’s power generators improved energy efficiency and developed more renewable energy projects. Andrews noted that “the simple fact is that gas demand is rising rapidly in the United States and production is stable or declining, and there are limits to increasing gas imports in the near future due to limited infrastructure such as liquid natural gas facilities. So gas markets are expected to remain tight and prices will stay high for a number of years.”
According to Rick Gilliam, Senior Energy Policy Advisor for Western Resource Advocates (WRA), renewables and increased efficiency have driven customers’ bills down. “We now have hard data showing a direct relationship between more renewables and lower power bills. Xcel calculates that the wind farm planned near Lamar will save consumers $4.6 million in a single year. Five of these farms would save us 3 - 4 million MCF (or MMBTU) of gas annually. There is no reason why Coloradans should pay more for a shaky gas supply when there are other options.”
“Gas companies operate comprehensive energy conservation programs in at least nine states, but not in Colorado,” said Mark Ruzzin, of the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project (SWEEP). “In fact, Xcel Energy operates well-funded, effective gas conservation programs in Minnesota, including rebates for consumers and businesses that purchase energy-efficient products or weatherize their homes or commercial buildings. Xcel should be able transfer this know-how to Colorado relatively quickly. And expanding electricity conservation programs in the state will also reduce gas use since gas is the fuel type “on the margin” for electricity production much of the time,” Ruzzin added.
“Clearly, rising power bills are not inevitable for Coloradans,” Andrews concluded. “Accelerating energy efficiency efforts and renewable energy investments can take the edge off the so-called ‘gas crisis’ —without the need for new fossil-fuels plants or a drilling frenzy that short-cuts necessary environmental protections.”
Colorado labs may lose funds, jobs Udall warns budget cuts will hurt energy research
Gargi Chakrabarty writes in the 21 August Rocky Mountain News that “[f]ederal dollars could dry up for many Colorado energy research and development centers next year, leading to hundreds of job cuts…Some of the possible cuts in 2004 include a nearly 2 percent, or $6 million, funding loss for the Golden-based National Renewable Energy Laboratory.”
“But NREL spokesman George Douglas downplayed the concerns, noting it was too early to speculate on the final outcome of the proposed cuts. He said even though two programs are facing dollar losses, others could be bringing in more money. NREL, which sponsors dozens of programs, is funded by the federal energy appropriation bill.”
Chakrabarty’s full article is available on the Rocky Mountain News website.
—Two Views on Wind and Renewable Energy
In a “pro and con” pair of articles in the 23 August Rocky Mountain News, Pete Morton, an economist with the Wilderness Society, squares off against Howard Hayden, professor emeritus in physics and author of “The Solar Fraud.”
Pro
“The recent spike in natural gas prices provides an important message for energy consumers: The time has come to diversify our energy supply and develop our renewable energy resources. Increased competition in the energy marketplace, lower and more stable prices and a cleaner environment are some of the many reasons to end our over-reliance on natural gas by investing in renewable energy.” […] “In Texas, state utilities must produce 2,000 megawatts of power from renewable sources. Just three years after then-Gov. George W. Bush signed Texas' renewable energy standard into law, the state's wind industry has created 2,500 new jobs, $2.5 million in landowner royalty income and $11.6 million in property tax payments to local school districts…It's time Colorado followed Texas' example and pumped some renewable energy into our state's economy. We could use those jobs. We could use those revenues. And, most importantly, we could use a break on our energy bills.”
Con
“There is nothing new about using wind, nothing new about the notion of connecting a generator to a wind turbine to produce electricity. In fact, a wind turbine at Grandpa's Knob in Vermont in 1938 was producing electricity until it blew apart.” […] “The best solution for wind turbines may well be the one that is often required of transmission lines: bury them.”
—Program helps pay for capital projects
In the 13 July Denver Post, reporter Steve Raabe reports that “[c] ash-strapped state and local governments are discovering a pain-free way to conduct building improvements with the aim of saving energy…Energy-performance contracting, formerly obscure but increasingly popular, allows building owners to launch renovations with no upfront payments…The idea is to build now, pay later.”
“Energy conservation is the key. Costs of improvements that increase energy efficiency are financed on the promise of future reductions in utility bills.”
To read the full story, including a list of projects and energy savings, visit the Denver Post.
Seminar Gives Energy Industry Opportunity to Teach
Cathy Proctor writes in the 4 August Denver Business Journal about an energy education seminar conducted last month in Colorado by the National Energy Education Development (NEED) agency, a nonprofit organization based in Manassas, Va.
“For the nearly 50 teachers from around the country, the natural gas drilling rig at the corner of a Weld County farmer's pasture -- a rig plunging pipe more than 7,000 feet underground -- was the first time they'd seen the source of natural gas…And teaching teachers about energy, so they can carry that information to the classroom and the next generation of consumers, is the goal of NEED, based in Manassas, Va.”
Proctor reports that the five-day seminar in Denver was “one of several that NEED runs around the country every year. The seminars teach the sources of energy, from wind to solar to geo-thermal to oil, natural gas and nuclear, as well as the issues facing the industries.”
Full story available on Denver Business Journal website.
Carbon Disclosure Project Looks at Businesses and Climate Change
In the 29 July
Energy Pulse, Cameron Burns of the Rocky Mountain Institute writes
“Businesses that emit a lot of carbon dioxide and other climate-changing
compounds (like NOx, CFCs, and methane) are coming under a great deal of
scrutiny. Mainstream institutional investment organizations are starting to
warn their clients-and the emitters themselves-about the financial risks of
turning potential profits into costly pollution. About two years ago, a group of thirty-five large institutional investors, representing more than $4.5 trillion, created the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), an effort "to assess and provide hard data on a company's exposure to climate change through impacts of both extreme weather events and regulation of greenhouse gas emissions."
"The Carbon Disclosure Report [conducted in 2002] reveals that the financial impact of climate change extends well beyond the obvious, emissions-intensive sectors such as oil and gas and electric utilities," states a project press release. "Companies in the financial services, transportation, semiconductor, telecommunications and electronic equipment sectors, among others, will also be significantly affected. Further, industry sectors vary widely in their degree of risk exposure and the levels to which companies, in response, develop their risk management capabilities. Those at greatest risk were not necessarily those with the strongest risk management architecture."
Burns continues, “[t]he report also explained that firms that are quick to reduce greenhouse gas emissions "stand to gain competitive advantage, in terms of both cost and market risk management." One example cited is British Petroleum, which has, according to the CDP, cut carbon dioxide emissions at the company's plants by ten million metric tons, saving BP an estimated $650 million in ten-year net present value.”
ARPA Eyes Bond Issue for Wind Turbines
Virgil Cochran reports in the 28 July Lamar Daily News that the Arkansas River Power Authority (ARPA) is considering issuing revenue bonds to finance two 1.5 megawatt wind turbines it plans to buy from G.E. Wind.
Cochran writes that “ARPA had originally planned to pursue a loan through the Rural Utilities Service, an agency of the federal government, but upward shifts in interest rates RUS charges may make it more financially lucrative for ARPA to obtain financing through a tax-free bond issue.”
Read Cochran’s entire story on the Lamar Daily News website
PureVision Technology Receives Second NSF Award
Coalition Member PureVision Technology, Inc. of Fort Lupton has announced a recent grant award from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to evaluate a new method of producing clean fiber from biomass and waste materials. The new approach being pursued by PureVision seeks to convert waste agricultural residues such as wheat straw into usable pulp and paper products. The wheat straw recovery project is the second PureVision Technology proposal funded by NSF through the 2003 Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) program.
The six-month project, entitled "Wheat Straw to Purified Cellulose Fiber utilizing Novel Reactive Fractionation Process" is directed by Dr. Dick Wingerson, PureVision's chief scientist. The PureVision project is being undertaken with the assistance of three other research organizations: the Western Research Institute (WRI) of Laramie, Wyoming; the University of Washington (UW) and Engineered Fibers Technology LLC (EFT) of Shelton, Conn.
The wheat straw recovery project is the second PureVision proposal funded by NSF this year. The first NSF award to PureVision announced in June is to undertake advanced research into producing bio-products from biomass and waste materials. The new approach being pursued by PureVision seeks to reduce the cost of converting biomass materials into sugars from which many usable products can be produced including ethanol.
During the last ten years PureVision has been developing waste recovery processes that use enzymes to convert biomass into useful resources.
CORE Receives Grant for Innovative, Affordable Housing
Coalition member Community Office for Resource Efficiency (CORE) reports that Home Depot has just awarded CORE a grant of $25,000 for a Next Generation Home Project. This grant will support the design, construction and monitoring of two affordable Nex Gen Homes.
CORE reports that “[t]hese homes will create a new standard for energy efficient and "green design" for affordable housing.”
Vail Plans New Wind Farm at Ski Resort
Matt Renoux and Demetria Gallegos of 9News report in the __ July Denver Post that coalition member Vail ski resort plans to build its own wind farm---one of the first at a U.S. ski resort.
Renoux and Gallegos report that “Vail has been buying wind power from Holy Cross Energy since 1997.” Jen Brown, Vail Mountain's communications manager, said that "Now, with these turbines, we are looking to actually generate wind power."
The plan includes building either four or five 100-kilowatt towers at about 11,000 feet. They would power three of the resort's 34 ski lifts. Any leftover energy would be fed back into the local power grid.
To read the full article, visit the Denver Post website
Arizona and Northeast Energy Crises Energize New Mexico’s Governor
Shea Andersen reports in the 23 August Albuquerque Tribune that Gov. Bill Richardson has gathered a task force, charged with looking at everything from the state's electricity delivery system to its gasoline supply chain to the ways the state can increase its usage of renewable energy.
As with the Phoenix gasoline crisis and the northeastern blackout, Richardson said that "It could happen [in New Mexic], so we want to be prepared.”
Andersen reports that the Energy Task Force will have a “sweeping mandate: to make sure blackouts and gas shortages couldn't happen here, prep us if they do and find out how we can avoid either situation.”
Andersen also reported that the recent situations in Arizona and in the northeast have prompted Richardson to throw his full support behind a renewable energy policy passed by the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission this year, requiring utility companies to diversify their power sources, making renewable energy like wind at least 10 percent of their portfolios by 2011.
“He's doing that by directing state agencies to intervene in a lawsuit filed against the PRC's rule by El Paso Corporation, a utility with a presence in New Mexico, against the rule. The lawsuit is pending,” Andersen writes.
Read Andersen’s full story in the Tribune.
Update from New Mexico Energy Office
Christopher Wentz, Director of the State of New Mexico’s Energy Conservation and Management Division, provides a comprehensive overview of recent accomplishments and activities in this recent message:
New Mexico Wind Energy Center
The Public Service Company of New Mexico--FPL Energy's New Mexico Wind Energy Center, a 204 MW wind farm in eastern New Mexico, came online in July. Testing of all equipment is continuing, but for all intents and purposes, the facility is operational. The N.M. Public Regulation Commission has approved PNM's 1.8 cent green tariff through which PNM will market the energy from the Center.
NREL Power Technologies Data Book Updated
In 2002, the National; Renewable Energy Lab's Energy Analysis Office developed the first version of the Power Technologies Data Book for the U.S. Department of Energy. The analysis group has now posted the updated 2003 edition of the data book at http://www.nrel.gov/analysis/power_databook/. This report compiles - in one central document - a comprehensive set of data about power technologies from diverse sources. It features more than 200 pages of energy-related data and complete technology profiles for renewable energy and distributed power technologies. Please contact Jørn Aabakken with any questions.
Global Warming Symposium
The N.M. Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) will be sponsoring a Global Warming Symposium from 3-6 p.m. on Saturday, September 20, at the Inn at Loretto in Santa Fe. The Energy Conservation and Management Division of the NM Energy, minerals and Natural Resources Department (ECMD-EMNRD) is co-sponsoring this event. Please contact Brian Johnson (505-476-3313) of this office for additional information about the cost and agenda.
NMSEA Solar Fiesta
The annual N.M. Solar Energy Association's Solar Fiesta will be held Saturday and Sunday, September 20-21, at Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque. Always a great, first-rate slate of renewable energy exhibits and workshops to fill your plate. ECMD-EMNRD is also co-sponsoring this event. Go to www.nmsea.org for more info.
N.M. Environmental Health Conference
The annual N.M. Environmental Health Conference will be held October 20-22 at the Sheraton Old Town in Albuquerque. Tracks on Energy Efficiency/Renewable Energy/Pollution Prevention are included. Go to www.nmehc.org for more info.
Border Energy Forum
The annual Border Energy Forum will be held October 23-24 in Austin, TX. Tracks on Energy Efficiency/Renewable Energy are included. Go to www.glo.state.tx.us/energy/border for more info.
Hydrogen Technology Partnership: The Hydrogen Technology Partnership (HyTeP) met on 13 August with a discussion on moving the state toward a hydrogen economy.
Geothermal Energy Working Group: The NM Geothermal Energy Working Group met on 20 August in Santa Fe.
Alternative Fuels Working Group: The NM Alternative Fuels Working Group also met on 20 August.
For information on any of these working groups or events, contact Chris Wentz, 505-476-3312
Dan Shingler of the Albuquerque Tribune writes on 4 August that “[t]he Public Regulation Commission's recent foibles have frazzled the nerves of members and foes alike, but will they lead to the utility watchdog's undoing?”
“Now the PRC, the elected body whose main job is to regulate the state's telephone, gas and electric utilities, has a year and a half to improve its image, or legislators might try to curtail its power.”
Shingler’s complete article is available on the Tribune’s website.
Businessman Perls makes a run for PRC District 3 seat
In the New Mexico Business Weekly of 28 July, Dennis Domrzalski reports on the plans of Rio Rancho businessman and former legislator Bob Perls to run for election to the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission.
Domrzalski writes that “[s]ince the Regulation Commission began operating in 1998, the five-member body has been criticized as being too powerful. Some state legislators have complained that the commission has tried to set state energy policy, a job they say is the sole purview of the Legislature. Perls disagrees, and thinks the Commission should be more aggressive in setting energy policy. And so Perls, 45, who for 22 years has run his small medical supplies firm Monitech, Inc., is running for the PRC's District 3 seat.
“The commission must be more aggressive in setting policy in regards to renewable energy, health care and the telecommunications industry, Perls says. The state needs more renewable energy, a single-payer health care plan and high-speed Internet connections in rural New Mexico, he adds.”
Domrzalski’s entire article, which includes further details on Perls’ strong views on renewable energy policies in New Mexico, is available on the Business Weekly’s website.
Job Announcement – SWEEP New Mexico Representative
Coalition member Southwest Energy Efficiency Project (SWEEP) is seeking a part-time representative in New Mexico (Santa Fe or Albuquerque). The responsibilities for this position include:
The New Mexico representative will work closely with other SWEEP staff in developing policy positions and in preparing materials for use in these efforts. Given the time commitment and funding level (see below), this individual will be a contractor to rather than an employee of SWEEP.
Qualifications: Applicants should have experience working on energy efficiency issues and strong communications skills. Experience working on legislative campaigns is a plus, as is experience working for non-profit organizations. Last but not least, a personal commitment to a cleaner environment and more sustainable future is a must.
Compensation and time commitment: Proposed compensation is $1,000 per month on a contractual basis (i.e., without benefits or tax withholding). The proposed initial contract term is one year, with an expectation that the contract will be renewed if both parties so desire. It is anticipated that the New Mexico representative will work about 40 hours per month on average for SWEEP over the course of the year, with more time devoted to this work in some months (e.g., when the legislature is in session) and less time during others.
Application deadline: Sept. 1, 2003. Start date: Oct. 1, 2003 or thereabouts.
To apply, send brief cover letter and resume (no phone calls, please) to: New Mexico Representative Opening SWEEP 2260 Baseline Rd. Suite 212 Boulder, CO 80302
SWEEP is a public interest organization focused on promoting greater energy efficiency and conservation in six states-Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming.
SWEEP is an equal opportunity employer and is committed to a policy of nondiscrimination with regard to race, sex, color, age, religion, creed, class, sexual orientation, national origin, and disability.
Utah Wind Power Campaign Wins National Award —Awards for Innovation at Interstate Renewable Energy Council Meeting
The Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC) announced on 22 June the winners of its 2003 Innovation and Special Recognition Awards. The announcement was made at IREC’s Annual Meeting, a joint meeting with the Department of Energy’s Million Solar Roofs Initiative. Winners of the Innovation Award were the Sustainable Natural Alternative Power (SNAP) in the Pacific Northwest, the Chicago Solar Partnership, and the Utah Wind Power Campaign.
Partners in the Utah Wind Power Campaign include Western Resource Advocates, the Utah Clean Energy Alliance, State of Utah Energy Office and PacifiCorp/Utah Power. IREC notes that the Utah Wind Power Campaign is a cutting-edge, community-based grassroots marketing strategy that creates a clean energy ethic to drive market demand for clean energy from the ground up.
“Working in partnership with electricity providers, the Utah Energy Office and the Utah Clean Energy Alliance, the Utah Wind Power Campaign adds credibility to renewable energy options offered by electricity providers and uses grassroots organizing techniques to cost-effectively reach a broader set of potential customers. While the campaign performs outreach to residential customers through community events, its primary focus is to encourage renewable energy purchases by governmental agencies, municipalities, businesses, and non-profit organizations. These groups’ resources are then leveraged to further broadcast the clean energy ethic.”
From IREC press release via NCPV Hotline
San Juan County Commissioner Decries Lack of Wind Farms in Utah
In the 21 August issue of the Salt Lake Tribune, San Juan County Commissioner Ty Lewis writes:
“Misconceptions about solar heating”
Ashley Patterson writes in the 10 August Salt Lake Tribune that “the public, I believe, is mostly uninformed about alternative energy in general, particularly in a city setting where everyone is tied to the utility grid and simply uses power as they need it without much thought to its source.” Referring to a previously published article in the Tribune, Patterson writes that “while the Tribune article helped educate people in this community about solar power, I feel that two crucial pieces of information misled your readers: First, the article claimed that in order to go off the grid in the city and maintain the same lifestyle, it would cost about $50,000 to purchase and install a solar system. Last year, I purchased and installed a solar system for my home for $15,000. I also received $2,000 back from the state, so the entire tab was $13,000.”
“Utah should cash in on year-round wind power”
Edwin R. Stafford, Christine Watson and Cathy L. Hartman write in the 27 July Daily Herald, “As natural gas shortages send energy prices skyrocketing, renewable energy development is becoming increasingly urgent for the nation.”
“What's holding Utah back? A new study examining more than 25,000 property transactions near existing wind farms…finds no evidence that property values decrease as a result of being within view of commercial wind turbines. This is good news for landowners as it shows Americans accepting windmills as simply part of modern life.”
[…]
U.S. Senate Passes Compromise Federal Energy Bill
Reuters, 31 July: “The Republican-controlled Senate late on Thursday dusted off and passed a Democrat-written energy bill that originally cleared the chamber last year, breaking an impasse over the first major overhaul of U.S. energy policy in a decade…The passage revived hopes of Congress finalizing legislation this year to encourage more domestic oil and gas drilling, boost ethanol use and promote energy conservation.”
Senator Pete Domenici: “Domenici to Use Last Year's Energy Bill as Vehicle for this Year's Energy Provisions; Plans to Write-in Production, Research, Diversity Provisions”
Senate Energy Chairman Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.) tonight announced plans to write this year’s energy provisions into last year’s energy bill during an autumn conference on the bill. Domenici tonight celebrated the passage of H.R. 6, which is the text of last year’s senate-passed energy bill, as a victory for Senate Republicans anxious to begin work on rewriting the bill in conference.
He announced plans to write into the conference report the production, diversity and research provisions contained in S. 14, the Energy Policy Act of 2003, which was crafted by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee under Domenici’s leadership.
—Press release from Senator Pete Domenici (R-N.M.), 31 July 2003
Geothermal Energy Association: “Geothermal Industry Applauds Senate Energy Bill”
“We applaud the United States Senate for reaching a compromise and passing vital national energy legislation," said Karl Gawell, executive director of the Geothermal Energy Association. "Senators Domenici (R-N.M.) and Bingaman (D-N.M.) showed outstanding leadership in steering this legislation, which contains provisions vital to the growth of the geothermal power industry, through the sometimes treacherous waters of the U.S. Senate."
"The U.S. faces future shortages of affordable electricity, and the incentives in this bill will help clean, renewable power fill a significant part of that gap," GEA's executive director asserted. Of particular importance to the geothermal industry are the tax provisions that expand the Production Tax Credit (PTC) to new geothermal power plants. This tax credit has been widely credited with fueling the dramatic expansion of the wind industry over the past decade. Under the Senate's legislation, the PTC would be expanded to apply to new geothermal plants as well.
From Geothermal Energy Association press release of 31 July 2003
American Wind Energy
Association:
“U.S. Senate Makes History, Again, by Passing National Renewables Portfolio
Standard”
The bill's RPS provision requires 10% of the nation’s electricity to come from new renewable energy sources by 2020. Currently, approximately 2% of the nation’s electricity needs are generated by non-hydro renewable energy sources. In addition, the bill includes a three-year extension of the wind energy production tax credit (PTC) and a provision establishing a Small Turbine Investment Credit (STIC) for homes and farms installing small wind generators.
The Senate bill will now be sent to a joint House-Senate conference committee where differences between it and the House-passed energy bill passed earlier this year will be resolved. The House bill has no RPS provision or small turbine credit, but does also include a three-year PTC extension.
"We congratulate the Senate on moving forward with this legislation," commented AWEA Legislative Director Jaime Steve, "and urge the energy bill conferees to approve all three of these measures. Doing so would mean that Congress is serious about the goal of promoting clean, renewable energy development.
From American Wind Energy Association press release
Alliance to Save Energy: “Going ‘Back to the Future’ on Energy Bill, Senate Still Falls Short on Energy Efficiency”
“With the nation facing a natural gas crisis and transportation consuming over 60 percent of the oil used in the U.S., the American people deserve better energy policy than the reincarnated 2002 Senate bill.
“While that measure does contain valuable provisions to advance energy efficiency – including consumer and business tax incentives for energy-efficient homes, appliances, and vehicles and new efficiency standards for certain appliances and federal facilities – Congress is still evading the most-needed components of a national energy policy built on efficiency. Most critical is a strategy to address our nation’s growing oil dependence.
“Even if the President ultimately signs an energy bill this year, Congress’s work won’t be done. It still must increase fuel efficiency for cars and light trucks, institute a public benefits fund to advance efficiency in the electricity sector, and extend federal government energy efficiency programs beyond buildings.”
From Alliance to Save Energy press release of 1 August 2003
Resources on Northeastern Blackout
The Northeastern power blackout of 14-15 August demonstrated the frailty and vulnerability of our nation’s electric power grid, and has prompted new activism on electricity issues by policymakers and regulators at all levels of government. Here are a few links to blackout-related resources:
Updated News Roundup on Blackout: http://story.news.yahoo.com/fc?cid=34&tmpl=fc&in=US&cat=Northeast_Blackout
U.S. Department of Energy’s new website of the Office of Electric Transmission and Distribution (OETD).
Western Governors’ Association: “Questions and Answers on the Implications of the Easter Power Outage for the West” http://www.westgov.org/wga/initiatives/energy/q&a.pdf
Rocky Mountain Institute: Eastern Power Outage
Unfortunate but Entirely Predictable
Segue Consulting (via Interstate Renewable Energy Council): Solar Energy – A Strategic Response to Power Outages http://irecusa.org/articles/static/1/binaries/PressreleaseAug15.doc
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy: Blackout Highlights the Need for Energy Efficiency http://www.aceee.org/press/0308blackout.htm
Nebraska Conducts Deliberative Polls™ on Energy Issues —NPPD Customers Make Informed Judgments on Energy Generation Choices
The Nebraska Public Power District held a one-day “Deliberative Poll™” in Grand Island on 9 August at which its customers’ “informed opinions” were gathered as part of the utility’s resource planning process.
“Nebraska’s public power system is built upon listening to customers-our owners,” said NPPD President and CEO Bill Fehrman. “NPPD characteristically seeks input from its wholesale and retail customers through monthly board meetings, quarterly customer meetings, and periodic opinion surveys.”
“The deliberative polling process takes listening to customers a step further by presenting customers with objective information, letting them ask questions of independent opinion leaders and then documenting their comments for consideration in NPPD’s resource planning process,” he said.
The daylong workshop, covering potential energy sources for the utility, such as wind, biomass and coal, featured expert panelists from the Nebraska Power Review Board, Center for Energy and Economic Development, state government and others.
“In developing an energy supply strategy, NPPD plans for its customers’ future energy needs while balancing the cost of constructing new facilities with customer satisfaction,” added Fehrman. “The opinions of our customers are important to us, and we will factor them into our business decisions-ultimately seeking to keep rates as low as possible for them.”
The deliberative polling process is funded, in part, by a $55,000 grant from the Western Area Power Administration.
See related story, below
A new report issued by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory describes how Deliberative Polls™ conducted by eight Texas utilities between 1996 and 1998 led to the 1,000 MW of new renewable energy projects that have been installed since then.
Between 1996 and 1998, eight Texas electric utilities polled their customers to determine what energy options they preferred to meet future electric requirements. The Deliberative Polls™ combined telephone surveys with town meetings where customers learned more about energy choices and discussed energy issues with each other and with panels of experts. After deliberating, they responded to the initial survey again, this time on the basis of their informed opinions.
This report, authored by R.L. Lehr, W. Guild, D.L. Thomas and B.G. Swezey, provides responses to selected questions about participants’ environmental values and about renewable energy and energy efficiency for the eight utilities. It shows which participants had the biggest change of opinion and suggests why they changed their minds. The polls showed that customers were concerned about the environment, and that they preferred renewable energy and energy efficiency resource options more than the fossil fuel alternatives. Customers changed their opinions substantially based on the information they gained during the town meetings. The authors report that the results were unanticipated by either the utilities or their regulators—both entities changed their level of interest in and commitment to renewables and efficiency as a result of what they heard from customers.
View report: Listening to Customers: How Deliberative Polling Helped Build 1,000 MW of New Renewable Energy Projects in Texas [PDF, 829 KB]
Governor Pataki Announces Cooperation on Clean Air Initiative —Leaders of Northeast States Will Participate in Regional Strategy to Curb Emissions
On 24 July, New York Governor George E. Pataki (R) announced that he has received commitments from the Governors of nine northeast states to join New York State in a regional strategy to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. The initiative proposed by the Governor would involve developing a market-based emissions trading system to require power generators to reduce emissions.
"By taking bold steps to control pollution and investing in the development of alternative and more efficient energy initiatives, New York State has led the nation in improving air quality," Governor Pataki said. "I thank the leaders of northeast states who have joined New York in this historic initiative to build on those efforts by working together to develop an effective regional strategy to further reduce harmful emissions."
To date, the governors of Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire, Delaware, Maine, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island have sent letters expressing their interest in working with New York to develop a cap and trade program for carbon dioxide emissions from power plants. Maryland has indicated that they may participate in the discussions at a later date.
From press release by Governor George Pataki
Comments Sought on Climate Change Papers
The Pew Center on Global Climate Change reports that
The following papers are available for review and comment:
A Long-Term Target: Framing the Climate EffortJonathan Pershing and Fernando Tudela
Climate Commitments: Assessing the OptionsDaniel Bodansky
Equity and Climate: In Principle and PracticeJohn Ashton and Xueman Wang
Addressing Cost: The Political Economy of Climate ChangeJoseph E. Aldy, Richard Baron, and Laurence Tubiana
Development and Climate: Engaging Developing CountriesThomas C. Heller and P.R. Shukla
Trade and Climate: Potential Conflicts and SynergiesSteve Charnovitz
New Report Discusses Importance of Climate Policy to Future U.S. Energy Picture
Absent a mandatory carbon cap, U.S. carbon dioxide emissions are likely to rise across a wide range of possible energy futures, according to a new report released on 10 July by the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, U.S. Energy Scenarios for the 21st Century. The report, written by Irving Mintzer, J. Amber Leonard, and Peter Schwartz of Global Business Network, discusses three divergent paths for U.S. energy supply and use from 2000 through 2035, and the effect of climate policy on the three scenarios.
“This report suggests that technology research and development efforts coupled with voluntary measures cannot reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and it highlights the need for a mandatory climate change policy to address carbon emissions - regardless of how the future unfolds,” said Eileen Claussen, President of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change. The Pew Center scenarios explore what might happen to U.S. energy supply and use in the future. They are not predictions, but they cover a wide range of possible energy futures. The scenarios are “Awash in Oil and Gas,” driven by cheap and abundant oil and gas; “Turbulent World,” in which energy supply disruptions and threats to energy facilities lead to aggressive energy policy measures; and “Technology Triumphs,” in which state policies, technological breakthroughs, private investment, and consumer interest push and pull climate-friendly technologies into the marketplace.
The question of how U.S. energy supply and use – which account for over 80 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions – will evolve over the next several decades is critical to developing sound U.S. climate policy. To answer this question, the Pew Center convened two workshops with members of its Business Environmental Leadership Council and experts from the academic and NGO sectors to envision possible future energy scenarios and to draw policy-relevant conclusions from them. The scenarios, and their conclusions, are all available on the Pew Center’s website.
White House Calls for Increased Federal Energy Efficiency
On 24 June, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) released a memorandum from Marcus Peacock, Associate Director of Natural Resource Programs, regarding “Improved Energy Efficiency and Conservation.”
In the memo, Peacock notes that “[i]mproved energy efficiency and conservation at federal facilities is an important component of this Administration’s commitment to the economical use of pubic dollars and protection of the environment. Historically low natural gas inventories, high prices for natural gas, and an increasing demand for electricity produced from natural gas may lead to increased costs for electricity this summer. Therefore, it is particularly important that federal agencies take appropriate measures to improve their energy efficiency and conservation.”
“…I urge you to redouble efforts to reduce energy consumption. Among the tools available to do this are Energy Savings Performance contracts (ESPCs) and Utility Energy Savings Contracts (UESCs). These alternative financing mechanisms enable your agency to obtain new capital equipment, reduce energy costs, improve indoor environments, and reduce pollution without increasing budgetary outlays…”
What Has the U.S. Government Spent on R&D for Various Energy Technologies? —Congressional Research Service Report Says 80 Percent of Funds Spent on Nuclear and Fossil Fuels in Post-WWII Era
A recently updated report from the Congressional Research Service (CRS, a division of the Library of Congress) by Fred Sissine, entitled “Energy Efficiency: Budget, Oil Conservation, and Electricity Conservation Issues,” notes that:
New Directory Available for Businesses Involved in Efficiency and Renewables
Erik Pratt of Minnesota’s Energy Alley reports
that “[w]e have a new website with a directory of businesses and organizations
in energy efficiency and renewable energy. I would like to encourage you to
enter Colorado organizations in the directory.” Pratt notes that the directory is new, but that when it gets a critical mass of companies, it will be a powerful searching tool.
Visit http://www.mn-ei.org/ea/listing/editchoice.html to enter your company in this new directory.
Hull Wind of Hull, Massachusetts, reports that its website at www.hullwind.org now has a section on community ownership for renewable energy.
Hull Wind notes that “[a]s we watch the utility industry swing away from market solutions, the interest in local control is rising. Renewable energy can serve this demand. We have also seen the first wind turbine in Hull become a starting point for other communities discussing wind developments in their own towns.” This new web page, according to Hull Wind, “addresses the first round of questions frequently asked about wind turbines on a community scale.”
Electricity Begins Flowing Through 'Renewable Highway'
T&D World of 9 July 2003 reports that “[e]lectricity has begun flowing through a major transmission line that is to be an important segment of the "Texas renewable highway," a system of power lines designed to bring electricity from West Texas wind plants to other parts of the state.”
“The 145-mile-long line, known as the Morgan Creek to Comanche Switch Project, is believed to be the longest 345,000-V transmission line built in Texas in the past 25 years.”
The project will provide a number of services including:
To review the full story, visit the T&D World article.
Public Power Systems Begin to Embrace Renewable Energy —“The Energy Grows Greener”
In its July-August 2003 cover story, Public Power magazine, the official publication of the American Public Power Association, reports on growing public power interest in renewable energy technologies.
In the article by Jim Paterson entitled “The Energy Grows Greener,” Glenn Cannon, the 2003-04 chairman of the American Public Power Association whose utility, Waverly Light and Power in Iowa, is a leader in renewable technology, says “Renewables have arrived and public power utilities are right in the center of it.”
Cannon added that “[t]he power industry needs to take renewable power sources seriously and public power utilities are in a good position to be in the forefront of that effort…Public power is sitting right on the front edge of a significant change in which utilities can become environmental leaders.”
Paterson noted that Cannon also pointed out that there are practical reasons why renewables are getting more attention industry-wide: “A really good wind site now can generate energy as cheaply as natural gas.”
A related story, “Champions of Green,” profiles some of the nation’s leading public power green power programs, including Salt River Project’s program.
FERC Sets New Rules for Connecting Generators to the Grid
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) set new standards for connecting electrical generators to the power grid in late July. Although the new standards apply to generators larger than 20 megawatts in capacity, FERC also proposed expedited grid-connection procedures for smaller generators, which would include small- to medium-sized wind projects, solar power systems, microturbines, fuel cells, and other small generators. Both rules include standard "interconnection" procedures and standard agreements to be signed by the utility and the generator.
A top issue for the owners of large generators is who must pay the cost of any upgrades needed for the utility's system to accommodate the power being fed into it by the generator. The FERC rule says the generator owner will pay for any upgrades in the high-voltage transmission system, but the utility will pay the owner back over the following five years. The generator owner, however, must pay the full cost of any upgrades to the low-voltage distribution system. The rule will take effect in late September.
For generators of 20 megawatt or less in capacity, FERC divides them into three categories. For connecting a generator of 2 megawatts or less in capacity to a distribution system, using pre-certified equipment, FERC proposes "super-expedited" procedures that avoid any costly studies. Generators between 2 and 10 megawatts in capacity connected to a distribution system face more complicated procedures, but would often be able to avoid costly studies as well. Systems larger than 10 megawatts in capacity or connected to the high-voltage transmission system would likely require impact studies as part of the process. Comments on the proposed rule are due by early September. Links to fact sheets on both of the FERC orders, as well as links to the orders themselves, are available on the FERC website.
From EERE Network News, 6 August 2003
FedEx and Brown Are Going Green —“And by buying cleaner and more efficient trucks in bulk, they'll make them cheaper for everybody else”
Charles Haddad and Christine Tierney report in the 11 August issue of Business Week that “UPS and its big rival FedEx (FDX) Corp. are beginning to swap out the old diesels from their combined armada of 100,000-plus delivery vehicles. In their place, they're testing a variety of cleaner technologies, including diesel-electric hybrids and hydrogen fuel cells. In part, they're doing this to satisfy Washington's push to cut emissions, given that trucks produce more than 30% of urban smog…The biggest motivation is cost savings, though. The delivery giants are finding that green machines, while pricey to buy, are cheaper to maintain and operate. Hybrid electric vehicles, for example, can cut fuel costs by half, while lowering emissions by 90%.”
Platts Energy Award Nominations
Nominations for the Platts 2003 Global Energy Awards are being accepted for the following categories.
Comments Sought on Department of Energy's Draft Strategic Plan
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has released a draft strategic plan dated 6 August that is currently open for public comment. In a written statement on the plan, Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham says that this plan “charts the course for the next 25 years - focusing our capabilities to meet today's needs and provide innovative solutions to tomorrow's challenges.”
The DOE’s draft strategic plan and related information can be viewed at http://strategicplan.doe.gov/. Public comment is due by 11 September.
ACRE Suit Settled
The Action Committee for Rural Electrification (ACRE) of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA), and the American Council on Renewable Energy (American Renewables or ACORE) announced on 13 August that they have resolved their ongoing dispute over the "ACRE" name. The parties have agreed to end the suit with the entry of a Consent Judgment and Permanent Injunction, and the American Council has agreed not to use "ACRE" as its acronym. The American Council has changed its full name to "American Council On Renewable Energy" and its short name to "ACORE."
[From joint press release by NRECA and ACORE]
Upcoming Events
UPEX 2003: Building the future: Business and State Strategies for Solar Energy Scottsdale, 7-11 October 2003
“Join us in the Valley of the Sun for UPEx 2003. We are assembling a broad group of companies, government agencies, associations and individuals with solar interest and experience beyond the immediate solar community. Some of the themes running throughout the conference will be:
Power For Critical Resources and Energy Security Home Builders: Building PV into New Homes Broader Renewable Mandates and the Role of PV Structuring State Solar Programs: RPSs, buy-downs and other options Off-Grid: Providing Power Where There Is No Grid Creative Business Partnership Models Utility-Scale Solar Sustainable Zero Energy Buildings Student Programs: University, High School Level and below Tours Hosted by Salt River Project
For more details on this event, visit http://www.solarelectricpower.org/upex/default.cfm.
Building-Integrated Photovoltaics Course Denver, 9 September 2003
“ImaginIt, Inc. would like to invite you to attend a unique one-day Blueprint for Building-Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV) in Commercial Projects course on Tuesday, September 9, 2003, from 7:30 am to 5 pm at The Denver Center for the Performing Arts in Denver, Colorado. The course is taught by Dr. Patrina Eiffert, an expert in BIPV, and Dr. Ed Cannon, a licensed professional engineer.”
For more information, visit www.imaginit.cc.
Rocky Mountain Sustainable Living Fair Fort Collins, 13-14 September 2003
“The Rocky Mountain Sustainable Living Association (RMSLA), a newly formed non-profit organization, is proud to present the 4th Annual Rocky Mountain Sustainable Living Fair. This event will be held at the Lincoln Center in Fort Collins, Colorado on Saturday, September 13 from 10am to 6pm and Sunday, September 14 from 10am to 5pm. The RMSLA also presented the 2002 Fair, under the fiscal sponsorship of Village Earth, a non-profit organization, which has sponsored the fair for the last two years.”
“The Sustainable Living Fair is designed to educate people of all ages and backgrounds about sustainable living practices, solar and wind energy, natural building techniques, biodiesel fuel, hydrogen fuel cells, organic agriculture, socially responsible investing, natural health, water conservation, fair trade, sustainable agriculture & forestry, environmental responsibility, alternative vehicles and more. The Rocky Mountain Sustainable Living Fair also features keynote speakers, national exhibitors, workshops, hands-on demonstrations, vendors, local music, Kidz Zone, and a beer garden.”
For more information, visit www.sustainablelivingfair.org.
Boulder, 29 September – 4 October 2003
“An International Forum Connecting People with Hands-On Solutions to World Poverty”
Pre-Conference Seminars (29 September – 1 October) Conference (1-4 October)
“Sustainable Resources 2003 will provide a new platform of exchange where poverty issues faced by the developing world can be addressed globally and solved locally. The overall technical program of the conference is designed around the Millennium Development Goals selected by the United Nations on September 18, 2000.”
“Workshops will focus on generating cooperative partnerships that can more effectively accomplish each organization's goals. Exhibition space will be available for participants to showcase their projects, services, or products. One of the goals of the forum is to establish a collaborative marketplace where participants can match their skills and needs to work more effectively for sustainable development. A summary report will be prepared.”
Visit the conference website at www.sustainableresources.org for more details on this event.
2003 Engineers Without Borders USA National Conference Boulder, 4-5 October 2003
The Fall 2003 EWB-USA National Conference will take place on 4 and 5 October in Boulder in conjunction with Sustainable Resources 2003 (29 September – 4 October 2003). The conference is open to current EWB members, prospective members, and non-EWB members.
“Participants from existing and prospective EWB-USA chapters and individuals will be able to interact, exchange notes, and learn from each other. Various field case studies (past and current projects) will be presented. Seminars on how to start a chapter, manage a chapter (logistics, marketing, fund raising, etc.), and how to seek and run projects will also be given by industry representatives.”
For more information, visit the conference website at www.ewb-usa.org/Fall03Conference.htm.
Montreux Energy's Hydrogen Infrastructure Investment Roundtable Denver, 8-12 October 2003
“Montreux Energy and HydrogenWorks are delighted to present two very timely events in Denver in October:”
1) The second annual Hydrogen Infrastructure Investment Roundtable, to be held October 8-10, 2003 at the Brown Palace Hotel in Denver, Colorado. This meeting will be sponsored by Honda, with supporting companies to include BP, ChevronTexaco, ConocoPhillips, Ford, and FuelCell Energy.
The Roundtable will review hydrogen infrastructure investment opportunities - and risks - in a practical, five to ten-year investment horizon. Short presentations on hydrogen production, storage, distribution, consumer acceptance, and safety will be followed by very interactive and dynamic discussions of the next steps ahead. An outstanding and diverse group of international industry and financial leaders will be joining us again this year. For details visit Montreux Energy: www.MontreuxEnergy.com
2) The 2003 Hydrogen Education Tour will held October 11-12 at the Colorado Convention Center. Over 5,000 visitors are expected. The Tour will be comprised of living, interactive walk-through exhibits that showcase the fundamentals, evolution and future of hydrogen and fuel cells. The Tour will feature many hydrogen exhibits and will include the Ford Model U. The Tour will be sponsored by Ford and supported by BP. Please visit: www.Hydrogen.com.
“Roundtable seating is strictly limited to 100 executives. Participants’ Roundtable fees will entitle admission to the Networking and Hydrogen Education Tour events.”
Chicago, Illinois
Green Power Marketing Conference Chicago, 3-5 November 2003
The Eighth National Green Power Marketing Conference will be held 3-5 November in Chicago, Illinois at the Hyatt Regency Chicago. Organizers report that a call for papers and sponsors will be forthcoming. For more information, visit http://www.eere.energy.gov/greenpower/conference/.
New Mexico
Natural Building Colloquium 2003 Kingston, 5-11 October 2003
“For Builders, Designers, Architects, Owner/Builders, Educators and anyone with a concern for our earth and the desire to create a sustainable built environment.”
“The Natural Building Colloquium is a gathering for those who share a concern for our earth, through creating sustainable shelter and empowering people to live within their personal and planetary means. You are invited to seven days of hands-on workshops, presentations and discussions exploring the renaissance of traditional natural building techniques and modern innovations.
Topics Include: · Straw-bale construction · Cob building and sculpting · Adobe · Natural plasters · Healthy home materials · Organic architecture · Solar design · Earthbag construction · Natural waste-water systems · Rain water harvesting systems · Timber framing · Bamboo · Papercrete · Permaculture · Photovoltaic systems · And more!
The cost for the complete program (including meals) is $350 before 1 September and $100 for Presenters. After 1 September, the fee is $450. For more information on this event, visit http://www.strawbalecentral.com/NBC2003/NBC2003.html.
Utah
Utah Wind & Solar Energy Conference Salt Lake City, 1 October 2003
“The Utah Energy Office and the U.S. Department of Energy present an exciting lineup of nationally recognized speakers addressing the progress of wind energy development in the United States and Utah, and ways to become involved in this trend. In addition, we will address solar energy and its applications, tour a successful solar residential site, and the Foot Creek Wind Farm in Wyoming.”
Registration fee is $25 and includes a continental breakfast, lunch and conference materials. Register online at www.wind.utah.gov or contact Janeen Bennion, 801-581-6348. Sponsorship and exhibiting opportunities are available, and information is on these opportunities is also available by contacting Janeen.
E-mail notification of this newsletter’s availability on www.newenergytechnologies.org is circulated to members of the Western Business Coalition for New Energy Technologies and other interested parties. Please let me know if you would like to be added to or removed from the distribution list.
Additional member-only updates are provided to coalition members as events warrant. If your business or non-profit organization is interested in coalition membership, please contact me for more information.
The website of the Western Business Coalition for New Energy Technologies at www.newenergytechnologies.org provides full information on our coalition’s activities, as well as copies of previous newsletters, links to coalition members and other sites of interest, a calendar of events and other features designed to be useful to the region’s clean-energy business community.
Please continue to keep in touch on any matters related to energy issues and let me know if I can provide any help or information to you.
Craig Cox Executive Director Western Business Coalition for New Energy Technologies 303-679-9331
The Western Business Coalition for New Energy Technologies brings together businesses and non-profit groups to encourage environmentally responsible economic growth through the efficient use of the West’s abundant and clean sources of energy.
| ||
|
About
Us | Members |
News |
Events |
Links
© 2002 Utah Coalition for New Energy
Technologies |