2011年5月4日 星期三

Local governments adding renewable energy

Local governments adding renewable energy through grants,heavier than a sack of potatoes. These are definitely aimed at the family leather phone cases camper or the touring tripper rather than the wild camper. partnerships
Tucked away in the foothills of White Tank Mountain Regional Park, an unobtrusive building is saving Maricopa County money.

Between the 85-kilowatt solar panel system on its roof and earning the highest rating from the U.S. Green Building Council, the White Tank Library is estimated to save the county $10,400 per year in energy costs, said Nelson Mitchell,Compact fluorescent light bulbs convert a led tube considerably higher percentage of their energy into light, which is why they are significantly more energy efficient than traditional filament bulbs. public information officer for the Maricopa County Library District. The solar system, installed using a $540,000 grant under the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act, supplies 25 percent of the building’s annual needs.

“We value energy efficiency as a way of life,” Mitchell said.

Meanwhile, the county is using a $2.3 million stimulus grant to install solar hot water systems at two of its jails.

“It makes economic sense,” said Jonce Walker,At the same time, residents are coming out of their promotional towels own hibernation mode and taking to the outdoors to hike, garden the county’s sustainability manager. “If you reduce energy you are saving a lot of money.”

Maricopa County is part of a national trend, helped by stimulus money, of local governments investing in solar power, said Carolyn Berndt, principal associate for infrastructure and sustainability with the National League of Cities.

“Energy efficiency is the cheapest and most efficient form of greenhouse gas reduction, and I think these renewable energy projects can save these governments a lot of money in energy costs,” she said.

Berndt said that some local governments were already investing in solar projects before stimulus grants were available, but many more are doing so now. She expects more solar projects to pop up around Arizona and the rest of the country as local governments face a deadline of using stimulus money by the end of 2012.

“I think for local governments it is a win-win,” Berndt said. “You are reducing your energy costs by installing these renewable energy solar power systems, and that’s the bottom line.”

Governments have always been leaders in green initiatives, and it is no different when it comes to energy efficiency and solar power, said Mick Dalrymple, project manager for Arizona State University’s Energize Phoenix, a program funded by stimulus dollars.

“Taxpayers and governments own their buildings and they hold them for a long time,Compact fluorescent light bulbs convert a led tube considerably higher percentage of their energy into light, which is why they are significantly more energy efficient than traditional filament bulbs.” Dalrymple said.The energy saving light offered by our store are made following the original technology . “When they make improvements to them, taxpayers see the benefits, so it makes a lot of sense.”

Installing solar panels is usually the last step in a process of making a building energy efficient, Dalrymple said and that is what many governments focus on first. But adding solar panels to a building once it is energy efficient is an investment with guaranteed returns for governments, he said. Though many solar systems are estimated to pay for themselves in over 20 years when they are first installed, the inevitable increase in electricity rates make them profitable much faster, he said.

In a time of cuts to education, solar power is a way for Riverside Elementary School District in the southwest Valley to inject more money back into the school, said Jaime Rivera, the district’s superintendent.

“You try to reduce as much as you can to be able to bring these funds back into the classroom,” he said.

Last year, the district partnered with California-based SolarCity to install panels on the roofs of the district’s two elementary schools. SolarCity financed, installed, maintains and owns the solar panels and sells the energy to SRP. In return, the schools are guaranteed electricity for no more than 9 cents per kilowatt hour for the next 25 years regardless of peak hours, time of year or rate increases. Rivera said solar is a growing trend among Arizona school districts.

“I think because we are small, we are more light-footed and can put things in place faster than maybe larger school districts,” he said.

As for Maricopa County, Walker said the investment in renewable energy won’t stop once the stimulus money is gone. Already the county has set a goal of increasing their current renewable energy capacity from 6 megawatts to 8 megawatts by 2015.

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