Solutions & sustainability - August 7
by staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
NICE, the student-run Northwest Institute for Community Energy established this past spring with a $10,000 private grant, spent the summer canvassing a 38-block area of Southeast Portland to raise awareness and support for developer MidTech Energy’s $7 million to $9 million project. Plans call for a solar-powered geothermal pump at the Sunnyside Environmental School that would connect to a network of underground pipes to heat and cool as many as 500 homes. On Friday, NICE held the Sunnyside community energy festival at Sunnyside Park, drawing state and local leaders and environmental activists as well as neighbors and students. The event was a culmination of the students’ efforts to survey residents about their home energy use and support for the project in order to attract an investor to fund a feasibility study. “From here on out it’s in the neighborhood’s hands,” Nathan Jones, an Oregon State University student who served as a NICE coordinator, said after the festival. “There’ve been a lot of great neighbors who say they want to take it on. And it was our goal to institute involvement.”
The three people riding from Arvada to Greenwood Village in Scarborough's BMW station wagon concluded they had become committed carpoolers, rather than random employees thrown together by $4 gas. One month into their experiment, and the three road warriors have gladly given up their American birthright to drive to the office alone. "You find out it's easy. You don't have to give up too much freedom," McCall said on a recent workday as the BMW sped past Belleview Avenue at 6:42 a.m. "I used to feel guilty as the only person in the car. If gas went down to $2 a gallon, I'd still carpool." ...
However, according to this man, they might be better off taking some tips from the Middle Ages. Peter Breuer has cut his gas bill from £20 to £5 a month by heating his house with a Hungarian stove based on a 14th century design. The 80-year-old grandfather says it is so effective at warming up his house that he has been able to switch off his central heating... |
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