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Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumBill McKibben: Power to the People: Solar for Everyone
http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/271-38/30914-power-to-the-people-solar-for-everyoneMark and Sara Borkowski live with their two young daughters in a century-old, fifteen-hundred-square-foot house in Rutland, Vermont. Mark drives a school bus, and Sara works as a special-ed teacher; the cost of heating and cooling their house through the year consumes a large fraction of their combined income. Last summer, however, persuaded by Green Mountain Power, the main electric utility in Vermont, the Borkowskis decided to give their home an energy makeover. In the course of several days, coördinated teams of contractors stuffed the house with new insulation, put in a heat pump for the hot water, and installed two air-source heat pumps to warm the home. They also switched all the light bulbs to L.E.D.s and put a small solar array on the slate roof of the garage.
The Borkowskis paid for the improvements, but the utility financed the charges through their electric bill, which fell the very first month. Before the makeover, from October of 2013 to January of 2014, the Borkowskis used thirty-four hundred and eleven kilowatt-hours of electricity and three hundred and twenty-five gallons of fuel oil. From October of 2014 to January of 2015, they used twenty-eight hundred and fifty-six kilowatt-hours of electricity and no oil at all. President Obama has announced that by 2025 he wants the United States to reduce its total carbon footprint by up to twenty-eight per cent of 2005 levels. The Borkowskis reduced the footprint of their house by eighty-eight per cent in a matter of days, and at no net cost.
Ive travelled the world writing about and organizing against climate change, but, standing in the Borkowskis kitchen and looking at their electric bill, I felt a fairly rare emotion: hope. The numbers reveal a sudden new truththat innovative, energy-saving and energy-producing technology is now cheap enough for everyday use. The Borkowskis house is not an Aspen earth shelter made of adobe and old tires, built by a former software executive who converted to planetary consciousness at Burning Man. Its an utterly plain house, with Frozen bedspreads and One Direction posters, inhabited by a working-class family of four, two rabbits, and a parakeet named Oliver. It sits in a less than picturesque neighborhood, in a town made famous in recent years for its heroin problem. Its significance lies in its ordinariness. The federal Energy Secretary, Ernest Moniz, has visited, along with the entire Vermont congressional delegation. If you can make a house like this affordably green, you should be able to do it anywhere.
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Bill McKibben: Power to the People: Solar for Everyone (Original Post)
eridani
Jun 2015
OP
djean111
(14,255 posts)1. Oh, that is wonderful. Here is hoping it catches on all over the country, although the problem
of utilities wanting just as much money no matter what is always there.
I am a bit surprised that the nuclear aficionados have not been heard from lately, or have been as vociferous. I sometimes wonder if they are not just busily working on a plan to air-drop hundreds of thousands of cute little back-yard reactors all over the country, with badly-translated instructions taped to them, and a coupon to send in for your very own radioactive fuel, sort of like an ant farm.
Duppers
(28,127 posts)2. Wow! Recommended.