Friday, May 30, 2008

Government to provide help for poor as energy prices increases

The government set out on Friday extra measures to help the poor and boost energy efficiency in the face of rocketing fuel prices.

From energy suppliers sharing data to more help for home insulation and microgeneration and an information campaign the new measures are aimed at those in fuel poverty -- households where more than 10 percent of income goes on energy bills.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

ComEd offers Energy Efficiency Incentives

Commonwealth Edison and Ameren will announce an $84-million, three-year effort to encourage the wise use of electricity among commercial and industrial consumers of electricity in the Chicago-area, the Chicago Tribune reports.

The program includes rebates for commercial and industrial customers who install electricity-saving equipment or lighting, and is expected to help retrofit some older, less-efficient buildings.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

San Diego's Carbon Footprint Rating

The San Diego metropolitan area fared well in a national ranking of urban regions based on “carbon footprints” generated by their residential buildings and highway traffic. The region placed 10th behind well-known environmental leaders such as Seattle, San Francisco and Portland, Ore.

The analysis was published by the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit think tank based in Washington, D.C. The group assessed the nation's 100 largest urban areas based on their per capita carbon emissions in the two categories. It did not include emissions from commercial buildings or industry.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Oil Prices & Energy Efficiency

What should we do?

Countries must resist the temptation to limit the price of gas. And countries such as China, which already caps gasoline prices, should relax those controls and let prices rise. This will encourage conservation and spur the search for alternatives.

Energy efficiency is only part of the reason we're better off than in the 1970s. Our economies are more knowledge-based than industrial-based. The service sector has taken over from manufacturing as the primary economic driver.

As a result, the consumption of oil - and energy in general - is less of a burden on the economy. In the United States, for example, oil consumption sucks up 5.75 per cent of GDP, compared with 7.5 per cent in 1980.