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The Heat is On
With rising heating costs and alternative energy in its infancy, consumers struggle to find solutions to warm their homes AND minimize their carbon footprint.
Story and photo by Jessica A. Knoblauch
The arrival of snow and icy winds brings increased energy needs for the homeowner and apartment-renter. Unfortunately, increased energy use also means a need to burn more fossil fuels, which can emit harmful greenhouse gases.
Heating a home is an understandable necessity, but letting heat escape is just plain wasteful. Unfortunately, heating the great outdoors is something that almost everyone does. The amount of energy wasted from poorly insulated windows and doors is about as much energy as the U.S. gets from the Alaskan pipeline each year, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.
Luckily, making energy efficient improvements is becoming easier. Taking steps to reduce the wasted energy can save consumers as much as 10 percent in energy costs per year.
Green Juice
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| A modern wind turbine in California. |
Though consumers can reduce a significant amount of their energy usage with efficiency improvements, they still need some energy to keep their homes running.
Green power is one way to go for those willing to spend a bit more per month to encourage clean, renewable sources of energy. Green power is electricity supplied in whole or in part by renewable sources such as wind, solar, geothermal, hydro, landfill gas and various forms of biomass.
“The market for green power started when the California electricity market deregulated back in the 1990s,” said Pam Mendelson, senior program specialist in energy efficiency and renewable energy at the U.S. Department of Energy. Before deregulation, customers who wanted green power basically had to put up their own solar panels. After deregulation, “that’s when the market really began,”
Mendelson said.
More than 50 percent of U.S. retail customers now can choose green power, according to federal officials. How to do that depends on each state’s deregulation policies. If retail electricity competition is allowed, customers can purchase green power from an alternative electricity supplier. “Because there’s competition, electric companies often try to entice customers with a green power option,” Mendelson said.
Even if a state doesn’t allow utilities to compete, consumers have two other options. More than 600 regulated utilities in 30 states offer a “green pricing” program, according to federal officials. That’s an optional utility service that allows customers to support renewable energy by paying a premium on their electric bill to cover the costs of acquiring renewable energy sources.
The Lansing Board of Water and Light, an electrical utility in Michigan, offers green pricing through its GreenWise Electric Power program. Recently, the gas utility signed a 21-year agreement to buy electricity generated from gas at a nearby landfill and provide renewable energy to thousands of customers in the coming years.
“The landfill gas will be available for the next 60 years, and it’s right next door,” said Mark Nixon, communications director for the Board. “It makes perfect sense.”
Another option for the eco-conscious consumer is to purchase renewable energy certificates, which give customers a way to support renewable energy projects even if their utility doesn’t offer green pricing. When customers buy certificates, that money goes toward building renewable generation projects such as wind farms.
“Wind turbines may have zero fuel costs, but they still cost a lot to build,” said Mendelson. “By purchasing these certificates, you’re making the statement that renewable energy is important to you.”
Find out what green power options are available in your area at: eere.energy.gov/greenpower ´´
Jessica A. Knoblauch is a first-year master’s student in the environmental journalism program at MSU. This is her fourth appearance in EJ. Contact her at knoblau7@msu.edu.
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