Energy efficiency
February-03-2012
City of Lynch gets Energy Audit!
Yesterday, two Lynch city buildings got a thorough energy audit to kick-start an energy efficiency project to continue into summer. Conducting the energy audit on the Lynch City Hall and Water Treatment Plant were Josh Bills and Hope Broeker of MACED (Mountain Association for Community Economic Development) with assistance from Gregory Copley from UK's Center for Applied Energy Research. There to learn and welcome them to the area, were Harlan County KFTC members Stanley Sturgill and Carl Shoupe.
Josh, Hope and Greg spent a good amount of time asking questions about the buildings energy usage, making notes, and taking pictures of all the appliances and units of the buildings that use electricity. All while Carl and Stanley reminisced about days when the Lynch coal tipple near the water plant (once the largest in the world) was in full swing.
Stay tuned for more updates on this project as KFTC, MACED, the city of Lynch, and state agencies work to get Lynch city buildings energy efficiency upgrades in the coming months! And see more pictures of yesterday's audit of the Lynch Water Plant below and on Flickr.
February-01-2012
I Love Mountains: The Pinwheel edition!
This year at I Love Mountains day we are using homemade pinwheels to share our message of calling for an end to mountaintop removal and transitioning to a clean energy economy. We are asking everyone coming to I Love Mountains day to bring one pinwheel.
Then we will deliver each of our pinwheels to Governor Beshear at I Love Mountains. With 1,2000 of us estimated to attend, each pinwheel will represent 50 people living with cancer that has been linked to the pollution from mountaintop removal mining. Click here to learn about the study that came out in July that found that 60,000 people living in Central Appalachia have cancer because of mountaintop removal. So, 1,200 pinwheels x 50 = 60,000.
But the pinwheels are also a beautiful way to visually demonstrate the hope that we all have for transitioning to a new, clean energy economy that can bring good jobs and cleaner air and water to our state! What better way to share our message and help the Governor understand what is at stake!
Will you join us by making and bringing a homemade pinwheel with you at I Love Mountains day? We hope you will! Here is a link to some super simple instructions! And if you do, leave us a comment here to let us know how it goes! But also don't worry if you can't make a pinwheel, we will have a few extras to share that day!
November-01-2011
November 7th: Kentucky Sustainable Energy Alliance Meeting
Join us:
Monday, November 7th, 2011
10 am to 4 pm
Northside Library Branch
1733 Russell Cave Road
Lexington, KY
The Kentucky Sustainable Energy Alliance, of which KFTC is a founding member, will host its fall meeting on November 7th. The agenda will include:
-Preview of the 2012 legislative session: Perspectives from key KySEA members including a green energy business and an affordable housing provider, as well as opportunities to plug into KySEA's legislative work
-Overview of the Clean Energy Opportunity Act
-Two exciting presentations on reports related to clean energy by Metropolitan Housing Coalition and Kentucky Environmental Foundation.
Bring a brown bag lunch. We hope you will join us.
Contact nancy@kftc.org to RSVP or for more information.
October-21-2011
KFTC Members Display Geothermal and Solar - It's possible in Kentucky!
KFTC members Tim Darst and Angela Lincoln have been working towards energy sustainability for quite some time. They care about it for many reasons – because of their faith, their commitment to social justice and their concern about global climate change and mountaintop removal coal mining.
Ten years ago, they began efforts to reduce their home electricity usage through lifestyle changes and energy efficiency measures. They built awnings to block excess sunlight, put lower-watt bulbs in their lamps and began using sunlight to dry their clothes, among other things.
“We looked into electricity in Kentucky and found out that more than 90% comes from coal – the dirtiest of all the fossil fuels,” Tim said. “We wanted to make some changes in our life and we started with electricity because it made the most sense.”
These efforts yielded a 70% reduction in home electricity use over time, he told a crowd of 25 at a KFTC gathering that he, Angela and neighbors Rus Funk and Amy Mudd co-hosted on October 18th. Once their usage was down, Tim and Angela invested in solar panels to provide most of their remaining electricity use.
The crowd saw Tim and Angela’s solar panel array and then toured Rus and Amy’s home geo-thermal heating and cooling system. Geo-thermal systems run water through pipes deep into the ground to keep it a steady temperature and then use a highly efficient indoor machine to heat or cool the water, which in turn heats or cools the air to the desired temperature.
Amy, Kiernan and Rus, in the process of having an addition put onto their home, explored the possibility of going to geo-thermal as a way of attempting to reduce their carbon footprint. They said that the installation process was messy and loud, with lots of dust coming from the drilling process, but they feel like it was well worth it.
"We knew that Tim and Angela had gone solar and liked the idea, but knew that there was no way we could have afforded that option. geo-thermal was something we could work in the budget of our addition, and we'd get the money returned to us in savings much more quickly then we could have via solar."
Ron Neal, of Louisville-based Allgeier Air (pictured, right) – the company that installed Rus and Amy’s system - told the crowd that residential and commercial use of geothermal heating and cooling is really taking off in Kentucky.
“With a 7-to-10-year average payback, geothermal is catching on quickly. A few years ago, we saw a steady 1-2% increase in our installations every year. In 2009, our business increased 20%. In 2010, 30% and 2011, 40%.”
He went on to describe the success that 50 Kentucky schools have been using geothermal systems. One school built a new building 4 times the size of the previous one. With efficiency measures and a geothermal system, energy bills in the bigger building are just ¼ of the school’s previous bill costs.
KFTC member Jane Walsh brought her two kids to tour the homes. “We were inspired,” Jane said. Her daughter, Mae Alice Harrell is a reporter for the Bloom Elementary "Bloom Report," a weekly program of her school's media club. She filmed the event to help educate her schoolmates about how families can use less energy.
The party raised both friends and funds for KFTC - thirteen new members signed up! And, the event motivated many people present to lobby their legislators in order to make these clean energy systems more affordable for Kentuckians.
“I love the idea of solar panel and geothermal technology. I would love to save money on my utilities and minimize my carbon footprint, but these projects are expensive for the average middle income household,” said participant and property manager Debbie Rosenstein. “This is why it is so important for us to contact our legislators regarding the Clean Energy Opportunity Act. Clean energy needs to be an affordable alternative for everyone.”
If you are interested in telling your legislator that you want affordable, clean energy solutions in Kentucky, contact nancy@kftc.org.
October-11-2011
Renewed Energy
Re-posted from the Louisville Eccentric Observer.
Activists point to higher bills, job creation in urging legislators to support clean energy
By Anne Marshall
Earlier this month, the Kentucky Public Service Commission’s public hearing unfolded much like a game of dominoes. Held at Louisville’s Johnson Traditional Middle School, members of the scant crowd leaned into the microphone, one after another, their pleas all generally falling into line: Don’t raise our bills, protect low-income families who can’t afford ever-blooming energy costs, and get serious about alternative energy.
Clean energy advocates hope the combination of rising rates, along with the potential for job creation, will steer legislators towards passing the Clean Energy Opportunity Act, a bill that’s gone nowhere in the past two legislative sessions. It mandates that a portion of Kentucky’s energy come from renewable sources, rather than solely from coal. An admittedly uphill battle in a mountaintop removal state.
“I think it will look nearly impossible until the day before it passes,” says Wallace McMullen, conservation chair with Louisville’s chapter of the Sierra Club.
The Sept. 6 hearing was part of a series as the Public Service Commission decides whether LG&E and Kentucky Utilities should be allowed to tack on an environmental surcharge to bills. That could raise residential electric bills in Louisville by up to 19 percent over the next four years. (The Sierra Club and Metropolitan Housing Coalition will go before the Public Service Commission in November as interveners in the surcharge case. The Sierra Club questions the analysis behind the fee. The Housing Coalition is concerned with how the higher bills may inevitably hit the poor the hardest.)
The charge would eventually drop off once the utilities have covered the estimated $2.5 billion needed to improve existing coal-fired power plants not meeting Environmental Protection Agency guidelines. One such upgrade would include the addition of “scrubbers” that will catch emissions before they escape into the air. Joan Lindop, with the Greater Louisville Sierra Club, likens this to billions on Band-Aids.
“If they scrub more emissions out, that’s more that’s going into a coal ash pile,” she says. “We’re really not wanting to encourage them to spend that money on old plants when it could be used for renewables.”
And so for the third year, advocates are gearing up to push legislation they say would spark production and demand of solar, wind, hydroelectric and geothermal power.
In 2010, the Clean Energy Opportunity Act (HB 239) was assigned to the state House of Representatives’ Natural Resources and Environment Committee, headed by global-warming denier Rep. Jim Gooch, D-Providence. It did not get a hearing. In 2011, the bill was strategically rerouted outside of Gooch’s committee and into the Tourism Development and Energy Committee led by Rep. Leslie Combs, D-Pikeville. That resulted in measured progress: A discussion hearing. No vote.
This year’s proposed legislation will look much like the one from last year, with two critical pieces. The first includes a renewable and efficiency portfolio standard, a policy already adopted by 29 other states. It would require utilities to generate 12.5 percent of retail sales from renewable energy by 2021, with at least 1 percent from solar.
This is a rather conservative standard when compared to several other states demanding that well over 20 percent of energy eventually be derived from renewable sources.
The other proposed policy calls for a “feed-in tariff,” which works as a contract, establishing a fixed premium price for energy produced in Kentucky, be it from large-scale operations or individual homeowners.
Mike Hynes, president of the Housing Partnership Inc., a developer of affordable housing in Louisville, wrote a letter to the Public Service Commission in support of this idea. Hynes recently installed solar panels on one of the Housing Partnership’s properties, but was careful to only invest in panels that would generate 75 percent of their energy needs.
If Hynes outfitted the building with enough panels to exceed 100 percent of their desired energy, LG&E would give him a credit to go toward future bills, rather than pay him for that energy.
“Basically, that builds up in perpetuity. In my mind, that creates an incentive not to produce enough electricity as one could for their household,” he says. “With a rebate program, that’s an incentive to create systems that are larger than what you can use."
Several regional utility companies including Duke Energy, Georgia Power and Florida Power and Light have tariff programs that pay per kilowatt-hour, then turn around and put that energy back into the grid.
Tom FitzGerald, with the Kentucky Resources Council, says the timing is right for renewables.
“The unit cost of solar and wind is coming down,” says FitzGerald, adding that while coal may appear to be the cheapest source of fuel, that’s not including environmental costs and restrictions.
“Over the course of time, you start having to fold in extra costs because externalities have to be accounted for.”
Rep. Mary Lou Marzian, D-Louisville, will sponsor the renewable energy bill again this year. She says supporters are tailoring their arguments for the legislation in light of another sore subject — jobs.
“When you’re looking at business and manufacturing folks coming to Kentucky, they want constancy in the market,” she says. “Coal is cheap now, but it’s going up.”
The Kentucky Sustainable Energy Alliance reports that neighboring states with clean energy standards are experiencing a boom in manufacturing and construction employment. For example, after Ohio passed legislation in 2008, about 1,500 solar-related jobs were created.
While no one expects the Clean Energy Opportunity Act to garner much attention until election hoopla ceases, advocates believe this year the support just might be there. They point to this week’s Governor’s Conference on Energy and the Environment in Lexington, where various panels discussed the issue.
“What we have to consider is coal is always going to be No. 1 for the foreseeable 15 to 20 years,” Marzian says. “But if we don’t start looking at different tools … we’re going to be left holding the bag.”
October-04-2011
KFTC Members Stand Up For Clean Energy During the Governor's Energy Conference
On Monday and Tuesday of last week, September 26th and 27th, at least 10 KFTC members promoted the need for increased investment in clean energy solutions at the Kentucky Governor's Conference on Energy and the Environment.
After hearing a speaker state that Kentucky doesn't have the resources necessary to generate electricity from renewable energy, member Tona Barkely stood up and asked, "Why do I keep hearing this mantra - that Kentucky doesn't have what we need to generate clean energy? It simply isn't true and I don't know why it continues to be repeated." Several audience members cheered.
Conference participants also had the chance to hear EPA's Region 4 director, Gwendolyn Keyes Fleming, tout the values of clean energy during her speech as well.
"We all recognize the need for clean energy and fuel, green housing, sustainable infrastructures, weaving public health protections into our decisions proactively. And, we have a constitutional rights – our laws don’t say “clean water for some and not for others,” she said.
She went on to say that listening to the solutions brought forth by the people who are most affected by the problems of old energy and most underserved is a main focus of the EPAs agenda in the coming year. Fleming named KFTC as an important partner in creating these solutions and talked about how much she learned on the tour of Eastern Kentucky KFTC hosted for EPA officials just a couple of months ago.
Taking the conference as a whole, there were signs that the statewide discussion about clean energy solutions is advancing. Compared to the last few years, a comparatively wide variety of sessions on clean energy solutions were offered. Break-out sessions explored distributed energy options in Kentucky, the Kentucky Home Performance home efficiency program and statewide recycling efforts. A representative from East Kentucky Power Cooperative was one of several speakers who promoted the notion that Kentucky has great opportunities for small-scale solar generation and he gave examples of such in the EKPC service territory.
Further, former Governor Bill Ritter of Colorado was invited to speak on a plenary session about the advances his state saw in job creation and renewable energy production during his tenure. He credited the success to the implementation of statewide energy policies that encouraged such growth.
While dismissive of Kentucky's ability to generate energy from renewable sources, State Energy Secretary Len Peters and Kentucky Chamber of Commerce President Dave Adkisson, both said that energy efficiency contains a lot of promise and seems to be the most likely common ground amongst many interests. "There's a quiet revolution going on in conservation," Adkisson said.
The Clean Energy Opportunity Act, sponsored last year by Rep. Mary Lou Marzian and supported by KFTC through the Kentucky Sustainable Energy Alliance, would increase the amount of energy that utilities offset through energy efficiency programs every year.Look for more information about the conference in the upcoming issue of KFTC's Balancing The Scales.
September-21-2011
September-16-2011
Green Jobs in the Bluegrass Are Growing
A recent report on green jobs in Kentucky indicates that green employment in the state is expected to grow at a more rapid pace than the workforce as a whole, with anticipated growth of 6.8% over the next two years.
KFTC advocates for state energy policies that would build on Kentucky's clean energy job momentum through the Kentucky Sustainable Energy Alliance. Read more about how energy policy can increase job growth in Kentucky here.
Excerpts from the report's executive summary:
"The survey indicates that approximately 4.6% of Kentucky’s workforce are performing green jobs. A majority (78%) of the green jobs in Kentucky are full time positions while approximately 9.4% of the organizations in Kentucky include green jobs of some type.
The majority of green jobs in Kentucky are in the Recycling and Waste Reduction core category, followed by Energy Efficiency, then Pollution Reduction and Cleanup. However, the Energy Efficiency and Recycling and Waste Reduction categories appear positioned for the most employment growth in the green core areas in the next two years.
While the state’s green workforce is poised for growth, approximately 9% of employers anticipate difficulty in finding qualified candidates to fill positions in the Energy Efficiency, while an estimated 6% are anticipating similar challenges in finding qualified candidates... [in other green work areas.]
Certifications can have an impact on an employer’s interest in hiring candidates for green jobs. In making hiring decisions over the next two years, 15% of employers indicated a favorable response to hiring a job candidate with a certification in Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), and 10% of employers cited Build-It Green Certification as increasing the likelihood that they would hire a candidate. On the other hand, a modest 7% of employers stated that they would only hire “already trained” employees for green positions.
The dominant modes of preparing green employees include, in order of employer preference, on-the-job training (79%), in-house classroom (39%), and online training (30%)."
The report was authored by ICF International and the Kentucky Office of Employment and Training. To get involved in advocating for green jobs, contact nancy@kftc.org.
September-05-2011
Kentucky Home Performance Program Offers Kentuckians Improved Home Efficiency
KY Home Performance is a statewide
program that offers Kentucky homeowners to invest in the comfort and
energy efficiency of their homes. By
enrolling in the program, homeowners can choose from a cash rebate of up
to $2000 or a 3.99 percent loan of up to $20,000 for the energy-saving work recommended
by program experts.
What do they mean by ‘Performance’?
We measure a car’s performance by miles per gallon or MPG. Likewise, a
home that stays comfortable using minimal energy is considered a high-performing
home. KY Home Performance helps improve home efficiency and comfort in a
variety of ways, with a formula for improvement specific to each home.
How does a homeowner get started?
Kentucky homeowners can log onto KYHomePerformance.org
and use a free self-assessment program called Home Energy Compass to see whether their home would benefit from the program. Or to
get started right away, skip the diagnostic tool and use the website to
select a KY Home Performance certified evaluator. Schedule a home
evaluation with the auditor to get a whole house energy evaluation. The evaluation will cost money up front, $150 of which is reimbursable from the program.
What does a KY Home Performance certified evaluator do?
KY Home Performance certified home energy evaluators will review the
home in detail and find out precisely how the home is losing energy and
money. This is a ”whole-house” approach that does not look at just one
system or component in isolation, but assesses all of them as part of an
integrated system. With KY Home Performance on-line software,
evaluators can show how cost-effective improvements will raise the
home’s comfort, air quality, and energy performance.
What happens next?
Once the KY Home Performance evaluation is complete, homeowners will be
provided a list of cost-effective improvements. A minimum set of these
must be made in order to qualify for the program financial incentives.
Home energy improvements above this minimum standard are optional. All
work will be performed by a KY Home Performance-approved installer
chosen from the website. Homeowners can apply for either a cash rebate
of up to $2000 or a low-interest rate loan of up to $20,000 for ten
years at 3.99 percent to finance all KHP-approved work.
Ky Home Performance Quality Assurance
Once the energy improvements have been made, the homeowner will get a
post-installation inspection to insure that the intended energy benefits
were successful and meet Ky Home Performance standards for the loan or
rebate. Ky Home Performance seeks to raise home energy efficiency by a
minimum of 20 percent.
Interested? Want to learn more? Log on to KyHomePerformance.org and get started today!
August-19-2011
Shelby County Gathering Celebrates KFTC's 30th Birthday
Sixteen people gathered on Tuesday night in Shelbyville to get to know one another and to celebrate KFTC's 30th anniversary (some are shown, left). Several existing Shelby County members turned out for the gathering as well as a handful of folks new to KFTC.
Participants expressed enthusiasm about meeting one another and feeling less alone locally right from the start.
After introducing herself, member Averie King said, "It's so refreshing to meet people that share these ideas because I did not think many of them existed in Kentucky let alone Shelby County."
Member Jerry Scrogham added, "I have driven into Jefferson County for chapter meetings, but for as long as I have lived here, I have never thought of the idea that we could gather here (in Shelby County) and have this going on."
Shelby County member Carlen Pippin (shown above, far right), along with two others present, discussed efforts to improve the democracy and transparency in the Shelby County Electric Co-op. The Shelby County co-op is part of the East Kentucky Power Cooperative, the reformation of which has been a part of KFTC's statewide work for more than two years. Jefferson County member Beth Bissmeyer gave a broad overview of KFTC as well.
Everyone was interested in the topics discussed and several people signed up to get involved in the electric co-op reform work. Several at the table immediately connected that making the co-op more transparent would also open the doors to increasing demand for efficiency and renewable energy from EKPC. Carlen Pippin, who has just become a New Power Leader, plans to form a New Power cluster of the people who signed up to engage more deeply in the co-op reform work.
After the gathering was over, two families committed to coming to KFTC's 30th birthday bash in Irvine on August 27th. Other folks discussed printing a local voter guide and forming a chapter at some point in the future as action steps to follow up to the meeting.
As the gathering came to a close, Bill Young, a teacher who has run twice for local offices in Shelby County, identified strongly with KFTC's vision and action around democracy-building and civic engagement.
"I cannot even believe it. Me and my friends were talking the other day about forming an organization just like KFTC. and THIS IS IT!I can't believe I never knew you all existed. I feel like i have come home," Bill said.
To learn more about this event or sustainable energy solutions, contact Nancy Reinhart at nancy@kftc.org.

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