Dec 05

There are 22,000 buildings in New York City. Some, including the City, claim that these buildings account for 80 percent of total carbon emissions (alternative-transportation advocates would probably argue that autos are responsible for more than the unclaimed 20%, but that’s splitting hairs).  The city’s mayor wants to reduce the city’s total emissions by 30 percent by 2030. Sounds like too little too late, but it’s something.

His recent proposal was to conduct energy-audits of all buildings more than 50,000 square feet, determine how to make them more energy efficient, and then for the owners to pay for some of those changes. He was forced to drop the part of the proposal that calls for building owners to make the recommended changes. You could imagine the roar of opposition from building owners, who see no financial benefit in any of this.

“Where’s the economics?” they cried. “We don’t have the money for this.”

The proposal didn’t even require the owners to make all the changes, but only the changes that would save them enough money on their energy bill after five years to make back what they spent. Apparently that’s asking too much.

So now the mayor wants to push for the energy audits, and not require building owners to do what the report recommends. That much seems to be acceptable to building owner organizations. And that’s a heck of a start. For one thing, the audits will recommend what owners and tenants can do to reduce their energy use – new windows, new boilers, insulation, etc.  (Of course there are plenty of building owners opposed to paying for the audit. After all, why do they care about their carbon footprint? Let someone else deal with it.)

While it might not change the behavior of building owners, it might affect the behavior of the tenants. Good information like this is bound to raise consciousness, lead to new behavior and possibly real energy reduction.

(Sadly, the media reporting on this topic, like all the mainstream reporting on any energy-related issue, including the NY Times in this case,  never touches the real impact –  what it means to our future planet. Instead, the focus is on what it means to the city’s economics, the jobs it might create, the political fallout, etc.)

Enough of big picture policy-talk looking down from the Hubble. Let’s get closer to the planet and look at one person: my friend. My friend took the bus from Boston’s Chinatown to New York’s Chinatown for $15 on Thanksgiving weekend. That means he saved on gas money, no wear and tear on the car, no tolls, he got to read, nap, listen to music, meet someone new – and yes, save the world a little pollution. The outcome: he’ll never do it again. Too much hassle, not worth the effort, he thinks he caught a cold from the people, etc. I didn’t get into a debate with him. In fact, I can understand: We’re American. We need convenience, we come first and everything else second. So I didn’t argue.

But after reading about the New York City building energy issue, and then talking to my friend, I thought: these are people somewhat tuned in. These are people who understand the issue, but still don’t feel engaged. What about the billions who are unaware of the issue, and have not even reached the starting point to form a judgment?

Which leaves those of us who care to take this on by ourselves, to continue to raise the alarms louder, until everyone can hear it – even the deaf ones — and then we raise it louder so that they can’t hear anything else, until every sound they hear is the sound of the planet suffocating.

Too  often those are the only sounds I hear.

Oct 18

When you buy a can of soda, a pound of meat, a pair of sneakers, a few gallons of gas, cat food, the newspaper and a stick of butter, you mark the end of a long line of events that occurred before you purchased the item, and the start of a continuum of activities that will occur afterwards.

You have a carbon footprint. We can trace it back from where your steps have come, and we can trace it forward, to where your steps will go.

The trail starts with the extraction of the raw material itself. The trail widens with the processing of the raw material into the end product. Each step in the transition from raw material to end product requires things to move from place to place.

To bring this point home, let’s trace one small purchase on a given day of your life.

The path of Aluminium Foil

  • the mine
  • to the processing plant
  • through the processing plant
  • to the manufacturing plant
  • through the manufacturing process
  • to the warehouse
  • to the retailer
  • to the store
  • to the home to be consumed
  • to the garbage collector
  • to the landfill – or hopefully to the recycling plant to start the process all over again starting at the processing plant instead of the mine.

This is not including the paper material that makes up the packaging, which has its own trail starting with the fall of a tree, which moves to a printing plant that uses colored ink to cover the paper.

We can do this with the fast-food hamburger someone in your family ate this week, which may have involved clear-cutting parts of the Amazon for cattle grazing.

It’s quite simple to disregard – keep out-of-mind– this concept, since we are so far removed from the process. So we ignore it. It takes effort to comprehend the ramifications of every act. Afterall, a bike ride to work is not a political statement, it’s just a bike ride. Buying local fruit, local milk and local clothes is not a protest against national products. Or is it?

Shrinking your carbon footprint requires very active living.

Even the consumption of water contributes to your carbon footprint, since water systems need energy inputs to pump water – whether it’s town water or well water.

Think Global Footprint, Act on Local Footprint

We can’t do it all, we’ll drive ourselves crazy. Our kid wants a Nike sweatshirt with a hood more than the hand-made sweater you saw at the crafts fair Saturday. You don’t have much choice if you want to participate in mainstream America. Some people are able to opt out, head to the hills of Maine and never return. But for those of us who want to live in the system, there’s ample room to improve our footprint without a lot of effort.

Becoming aware of your footprint is the first step. From there you can diminish the direct, obvious products.

  • driving the automobile
  • powering the lawn equipment
  • powering the electrical devices in the home
  • heating and cooling the home
  • using any electrical appliance
  • shutting computers at night
  • shutting lights

If we all did this little bit . . .

It is a mind-boggling amount of lives that consume a mind-boggling amount of products that sustain the ostentatious lives we all live. Today, in America, we each enjoy the luxuries of, say, a royal prince from the ‘30s.

There is no end in sight. There’s no finish line. In fact, it’s inherent in the system to have no finish line. There is no established point where we will say, “Ahhh, we’ve reached maximum speed. Let’s all agree to stay at this pace and enjoy ourselves.” The alarming speed of commerce is bent on getting speedier; the constant increase itself nourishes our economy.  Consume more, produce more; consume faster, produce faster. A steady pace is considered no growth, and the corporate power-structure then jolts the system to increase the pace of spending.

We can slow it down, we can gain control of our own pace, even act thoughtfully.  But it takes work.

Your carbon footprint directly relates to the speed of our consumption and activity. We are far over the speed limit. Collectively, we can slow down, and eventually, catch our breaths, walk a little, maybe even rest. That’s the power of paying attention to your personal footprint.

One small step for humans, one giant step for the earth.

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Sep 28

Michelle Leary, who built her Upstate NY home herself from the trees she took down on her property, pays $30 per month for utilities. She’ll tell you she’s not frugal, citing her satellite television, a computer, and a penchant for long showers. The trick, she said, is that she built an energy-efficient home.

Ask her what makes it energy-efficient, she starts rattling off a long list of things like solar panels, radiant floor heating, air-tight construction, and a domestic hot water system that delivers hot water only on demand, rather than continuously heating a tank full of water.

Leary is one of 25 Capital Region homeowners who will open her home for public viewing on Saturday as part of the Green Buildings Open House. These aren’t a collection of quirky-looking houses hidden in thick forest. The tour includes homes within typical neighborhoods in Latham, Delmar, Glenmont and Guilderland, for example. The homes boast solar hot water systems, wind power and a Plug-in-Hybrid Prius that gets over 100 miles per gallon.

Claire Oesterreich who lives West of the Capital District of NY, took the tour two years ago. Today she lives off the grid. She’ll tell you that for her, it isn’t about national security, or saving the planet. “I just thought it made sense to do after seeing these very average homeowners have a lot of success. These people were not engineers, they were like you and me trying to feel a little more responsible.”

Saturday the homeowners will welcome one-on-one conversations with visitors about their specific approach to using renewable energy. While each has a different story to tell and advice to give – from securing town permits to working with contractors — a common thread runs through nearly all of them: They never intended to pursue renewable energy sources for their home at such a passionate level.  After touring a few homes, doing a little research and taking, say, one small step – like replacing an old dishwasher with a new “green” one – they caught the bug.

More than a financial payback – which imminently occurs – these are homeowners primarily interested in reducing their personal carbon footprint.

Our current dependence on energy is a natural progression of our nation’s development. Moving the system toward sustainable, renewable energy to build a new economy with natural systems can be the next step for humans moving forward. It’s in our hands based on the choices we make as individuals. Those of us who vividly see the connection between the built environment and the natural world understand the responsibility we have to future generations to get this right —  to live better, now.

The tour is part of a larger effort to heighten awareness for the general public of energy usage specifically for a family home. Firsthand observation can make a lasting impact on raising a person’s consciousness. From there action isn’t far. At the very least, visitors leave with a desire to monitor their own home-energy use.  If you monitor your energy, you will invariably manage it.

Case in point for Oesterreich who said that that living off the solar panels has sensitized them to their energy usage at every level.   “You gain a heightened awareness about your energy consumption.”  People in the region should know that their neighbors are taking sensible, reasonable action. On Saturday you will see homes that look like any other suburban residents. But these generate a small energy bill, if any, sometimes feeding energy back into the grid.

The event, which is occurring simultaneously in all six New England States, plus New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware, includes more than 600 homes. This event is also part of a national tour organized by the American Solar Energy Society (http://www.ases.org)

An online search tool provides a list of Open Houses in the Capital Region, for people to plan a visit or design their own tour of several local Green Buildings.

Most homes are open as self-guided tours. A complete list of Green Buildings Open House sites and events is available at www.nesea.org/greenbuildings

For more info, contact Christian Grieco, the volunteer Regional Green Buildings Open House Organizer, states, Christian Grieco by leaving a comment on this post.

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