10/19 – 81 Global Companies Pledge Support of Paris Climate Action

Monday, October 19th 2015 

From Reuters:

Limerick-r“A total of 81 companies, including Alcoa Inc, General Electric Co and Procter & Gamble, have backed a U.S.-sponsored pledge supporting action to combat climate change.

The White House said that 68 additional companies had signed the pledge, joining 13 earlier corporations to support “a strong outcome” for upcoming United Nations climate negotiations in Paris and take steps to reduce their impact on the environment.

President Barack Obama is pursuing private sector support ahead of the U.N. conference and more corporations are expected to sign the pledge before it begins on Nov. 30, senior adviser to the president Brian Deese told a call with reporters.

The pledge’s signatories announced on Monday span the spectrum of major American corporations, and also include Bank of America, Best Buy, Coca-Cola, General Motors, Google and WalMart Stores Inc.

The White House said it also expects a consortium of major investors to announce on Monday $1.2 billion in investment capital for companies and projects that can “produce impactful and profitable solutions to climate change.” The initial group of investors includes the University of California, TIAA-Cref and the Alaska Permanent Fund, according to the White House.”

Read more at Reuters…

10/16 – U.S. Exports its Greenhouse-gas Emissions — as Coal

Friday, October 16th 2015

Much has been made about the decline in American coal consumption, largely the result of price competition from natural gas. While this progress is laudable, unused coal isn’t just sitting in the ground. It’s being mined and shipped to the coasts via rail, then exported via ship to international markets, contributing even more to the environmental impacts of this energy source.

From the Washington PostCapture

A few feet below this prairie town lies one of North America’s biggest coal deposits, a 100-foot-thick slab of brittle black rock spanning an area the size of Rhode Island — nearly all of it owned by the U.S. taxpayer.Just a dozen nearby mines, scattered across a valley known as the Powder River Basin, contain enough coal to meet the country’s electricity needs for decades. But burning all of it would release more than 450 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere — more than all greenhouse-gas emissions from all sources since 2000.

The Obama administration is seeking to curb the United States’ appetite for the basin’s coal, which scientists say must remain mostly in the ground to prevent a disastrous warming of the planet. Yet each year, nearly half a billion tons of this U.S.-owned fuel are hauled from the region’s vast strip mines and millions of tons are shipped overseas for other countries to burn. Government and industry reports predict a surge in exports of Powder River coal over the next decade, at a time when climate experts are warning of an urgent need to reduce coal burning to prevent global temperatures from soaring.

Read more at WashingtonPost.com

10/13 – Clean Power Plan Reignites Pennsylvania’s Nuclear Discussion

Tuesday, October 13th 2015

A recent editorial in the Pittsburg Post-Gazette illustrates the recent buzz about maintaining or perhaps even growing Pennsylvania’s nuclear fleet.

800px-Sequoyah_Nuclear_Power_PlantPennsylvania’s nuclear power plants produce 93 percent of the state’s emission‐free electricity, meaning they are our largest single source of clean electrical energy. They are also the only emissions-free source that can produce large amounts of electricity reliably around the clock.

In 2013, the state’s nuclear power plants prevented 63 million metric tons of carbon-dioxide emissions. This is the amount of emissions that would have poured into our atmosphere if the power generated by nuclear energy had instead been generated by the mix of other sources now producing electricity in Pennsylvania. It also is equivalent to what would be released in a year by some 12 million passenger cars — more than twice as many as are registered in the commonwealth.

Beyond their environmental benefits, nuclear-power plants deliver tremendous economic benefits to Pennsylvania. According to a recently released report from the Brattle Group, Pennsylvania’s five nuclear power plants contribute $2.36 billion to the state gross domestic product and directly account for 15,600 full-time jobs.

Nuclear power also is reliable and available around the clock, and it now represents almost 35 percent of Pennsylvania’s electricity generation.”

Join us on October 23rd as Secretary Quigley from the Department of Environmental Protection and  Kathy Robertson, Senior Environmental and Fuels Policy Manager at
Exelon Corporation, discuss impacts of the Clean Power plan in the Commonwealth.

10/6 – PA’s Tiny Anthracite Coal Industry Finds Niche – Pizza Ovens!

Wednesday, October 6th 2015

Good read on the once might Anthracite industry!

From PowerSource:

20150923ppAnthracitePOWERSOURCE“Everything except the eggplant at Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza in Cranberry is cooked by coal. The restaurant ceiling is lightly charred with coal dust. Sometimes even the tables have a thin layer of Pennsylvania anthracite on them. 

In the morning, when the oven that has been burning since February 2011 is packed with its daily 300 pounds of shiny, hard coal, you can smell it in the parking lot.

Every day, Marcelino Ibarra reinvigorates the oven with eight more bags of the coal mined in eastern Pennsylvania and nowhere else in the U.S.

Anthracite burns hot — between 800 degrees and 900 degrees Fahrenheit. It can cook a pizza in five minutes and must never be allowed to extinguish because of the cost and time of reigniting. On Thanksgiving and Christmas, the two days when the pizza restaurant is closed, Mr. Ibarra still comes in to feed the oven.

A dozen bags of Blaschak Coal are wedged next to the oven, representing a tiny but expanding market segment for the company from Mahanoy City in Schuylkill County.

Pizza won’t save anthracite coal. “You can’t hang your hat on that,” said Greg Driscoll, Blaschak’s president. 

But it’s a growing slice of the company’s business and any growth in coal demand these days is a big deal.

Having weathered a century-long decline in demand, the tiny anthracite industry has diversified into a recently stable and, even more recently, growing segment of the coal business.

Of all the coal types, anthracite has the most carbon and the least sulfur and ash, so it burns hotter and cleaner and continues to be a residential heating option. It is also used in steel making. Those two markets make up the majority of Blaschak’s business.”

Read more at PowerSource

9/23 – LEED Certification, Energy Efficiency Increase Property Values

Wednesday, September 23rd 2015

From Energy Manager Today:

apartmentThe value of apartments is higher if they are designed with efficiency and sustainability in mind, according to National Real Estate Investor. Earlier this year, Fannie Mae lent $10.2 million to Station House, a 50-unit apartment community in Maplewood, N.J. The apartments had won a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification from the U.S. Green Building Council. The interest rate on the loan is lower than the normal 10 basis points, which will save $101,000 in interest payments over the life of the loan. The loan was the first under Fannie Mae’s Multifamily Green Building Certification Pricing Break program.

Green building is seeing dramatic growth, according to the USGBC. This year it is estimated that 40% to 48% of new nonresidential construction will be green, equating to a $120-145 billion opportunity.And 62% of firms building new single-family homes report that they are doing more than 15% of their projects green. By 2018, that will increase to 84%. Strong market demand is driving growth, in large part because of a significant cost savings for businesses and tax payers. Property owners benefit from low rental vacancy rates from LEED-certified buildings and from increased property values, the USGBC says.

In 2014, the DOE reported in its Energy Efficiency & Financial Performance study that buyers pay 10 percent to 31 percent more for LEED-certified properties.

Large buildings are far more likely than small buildings to qualify as green, at 62% and 5% respectively, according to a study by CBRE Group and Maastricht University. The 2015 Green Building Adoption Index found that 62.1% of office buildings in the US greater than 500,000 square feet hold either an EPA ENERGY STAR label, US Green Building Council full-building LEED certification or both. In contrast, only 4.5% of all US office buildings less than 100,000 square feet qualified as green.

Read more at EnergyManagerToday.com 

9/18 – SEI Elects 2015-2016 Board of Directors

The Smart Energy Initiative’s Board met on Wednesday, September 16th for its first meeting of the 2015-2016 program year. The following was elected as the Board of Directors. Welcome to our new members!

Alan Slobojan – Manufacturing Alliance of Chester and Delaware Counties
Alex Dews – Delaware Valley Green Building Council
Bill Lauer – Delaware Valley Industrial Resource Center
Bill Ronayne (Chair) – Brandywine Valley Heating and Air Conditioning
Bob Keares – Keare’s Electrical Contracting
Ed Piscopo – PECO, an Exelon Company
James Robinson – DES America, LLC
Jay Carlis – Community Energy
Jen Robinson – ICF International
Jon Costanza – SunPower Builders
Kirk Williard – Chester County Intermediate Unit
Lou Nazirides – Keare’s Electrical Contracting
Pat Bokovitz – Chester County Department of Community Development
Paul Spiegel (Vice Chair) – Practical Energy Solutions
Phil Eastman (Immediate Past Chair) – PECO, an Exelon Company
Rob Graff – Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission
Steve Krug (Programming Chair) – Krug Architects

9/11 – DEP Announces Local Listening Sessions for Clean Power Plan

PADEPThe Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) announced more than a dozen listening sessions and a 2-month comment period on the federal Clean Power Plan to hear from Pennsylvanians about the plan to cut carbon pollution. Fourteen listening sessions in locations across the state will take place between September and November. 

There are two Southeastern Pennsylvania on Wednesday, September 30th:

Philadelphia County
September 30, 2015
1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
University of Pennsylvania
Kleinman Center
Fisher Fine Arts Building, Room 401
220 South 34th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104

Delaware County
September 30, 2015
6:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
Marcus Hook Community Center
7 West Delaware Avenue
Marcus Hook, PA 19061

Click here to read more and see the state-wide schedule.

9/10 – Job Alert: Policy Associate at Keystone Energy Efficiency Alliance

SEI is pleased to post job openings from member companies and partners, as a means of effectively reaching qualified, local candidates in the smart energy industry. Additionally, SEI staff can review applications on you company’s behalf. If you’d liked to post a Job Alert, send descriptions and application instructions to Will Williams.

TKEEAhe Keystone Energy Efficiency Alliance (KEEA) is a business association dedicated to promoting the energy efficiency and advanced energy industries in Pennsylvania. KEEA advocates on behalf of energy efficiency and advanced energy professionals on the local, state, and federal levels. By representing the interests of the advanced energy industry in Pennsylvania, KEEA is growing the market for energy efficiency and helping the Keystone State secure a prosperous, sustainable tomorrow.

KEEA has an ambitious energy policy agenda to modernize utilities and energy markets in Pennsylvania. We have shown tremendous entrepreneurial growth over the last several years and now seek additional team members to help us take the next steps.

Position Summary

The Keystone Energy Efficiency Alliance (KEEA) is soliciting applications for a full-time Policy Associate.

Responsibilities

The Policy Associate will work with and support the Senor Policy Associate in all aspects of KEEA’s policy initiatives.  The Policy Associate will perform policy writing, conduct research and analysis, assist with internal and external communications, engage businesses (both KEEA members and non-members), participate in coalitions with external partner groups, and engage in direct advocacy.

Reports to

Senior Policy Associate.

Project Focus

KEEA has been advancing and defending state and federal energy policy through the tactics mentioned above.  The Policy Associate will focus on 1-2 priority campaigns in KEEA’s policy portfolio, to be determined.

Work products will include assisting in drafting testimony; preparing comments for submission to state decision makers; developing strategy documents to influence decision makers; organizing lobby days, business roundtables, and district meetings with legislators; producing sign-on letters and media pieces; and conducting research to guide KEEA’s policy agenda into the future.

Other Responsibilities

Miscellaneous tasks.

Qualifications

Relevant educational and/or professional experience in advocacy, research, utilities, government, energy efficiency business, energy policy, public policy, or law.

The ideal candidate will have many of the personal and professional skills to be successful in this role, including:

  • Persuasive written and oral communication skills.
  • Strong technical research and quantitative analysis skills in energy and economics.
  • Expertise in MS Word, PowerPoint, Excel.
  • Demonstrated ability to work independently, as well as, on teams.
  • Familiarity with utility regulation, rate-making, industrial energy efficiency, energy efficiency programs and technology, utility and advanced energy business models, and energy and climate change policy.
  • Experience in, or knowledge of, Pennsylvania-specific energy efficiency and energy policy issues, including Act 129, utility regulation, and environmental policy.
  • Experience in, or knowledge of the EPA Clean Power Plan, New York’s Reforming the Energy Vision, and other leading national initiatives.
  • Ability to foster and grow relationships with key partners and businesses.
  • Creative problem solving abilities, including in the development and execution of marketing programs and advocacy strategy.
  • Vision and a tireless work ethic. You are inspired and driven by being part of a hard-working team.
  • Demonstrated ability in generating revenue for your work.

Workplace Policy

KEEA is committed to workplace diversity and inclusion and hires on merit.

Compensation

Salary commensurate with experience. Competitive benefit package. Employment is at-will. Successful candidate is expected to remain in the organization for one year at minimum, with potential for longer-term employment and growth, pending funding.

To Apply

Please send your complete application (resume, cover letter, two relevant writing samples) to Matt Elliott, Senior Policy Associate at melliott@keealliance.org, and include Policy Associate in the subject line. No phone calls please. Please reference where you learned of this opportunity. Thank you.

9/8 – PGW Proposes Rate Hike to Meet Infrastructure Needs

Tuesday, September 8th 2015

From StateImpact PA:

StateImpactPhiladelphia Gas Works says it can cut in half the time it takes to replace its leaky pipes if it raises the customer infrastructure surcharge by 2.5 percent. For the average resident who uses natural gas to heat their home, that would mean an increase of $1.65 to $1.70 each month.

Philadelphia has struggled to replace about 1500 miles of mains — the pipes that run beneath city streets — some of which were installed more than a century ago. These cast iron and bare steel pipes include about one-quarter of the city’s gas pipes and the leaks can be deadly. In 2011, an explosion in Allentown killed 5 people, including a newborn. Leaks also pose environmental hazards because methane is a powerful greenhouse gas, and contributes to climate change at a faster rate than CO2.

infrastructure_pgw_01-300x168

via: stateimpact.npr.org

PGW has been replacing its older cast iron and bare steel pipe with the more state-of-the-art plastic pipe, but the cost is high and the pace has been slow. It takes an estimated $1 million to fix each mile of pipe. Current plans have PGW replacing all those lines within the next 88 years. But with the increase in a surcharge, known as the Distribution System Improvement Charge (DISC), the utility says it can replace those pipes within 45 years.

PGW reported 7,600 leaks in 2014, up from 6,200 in 2013. The number of hazardous leaks, meaning they could threaten life and property, rose to 3,448 last year from 3,122 in 2013.

The proposal to increase the surcharge comes several months after the Public Utility Commission, which has oversight of the utility’s rates, set out seven alternatives for paying for a pipe-replacement program. One of those recommendations included increasing the surcharge.

The PUC’s recommendation of raising the current cap of 5% of a consumer’s bill to 7.5% predicted an influx of $11 million and a reduction of the time needed to replace all the leaking pipes to 51.5 years.

Hiking the cap to 12% — which the PUC said would add $4.42 a month to the average customer’s bill — would generate up to $31 million and cut the total replacement time to 36.8 years, the PUC said in a 93-page report.

Read more at StateImpact PA

9/3 – Quinnipiac Poll: Pennsylvania Voters Support Clean Power Plan

Thursday, September 3rd 2015

From StateImpact PA:

StateImpactPennsylvania voters are heavily in favor of new federal efforts to cut carbon emissions from coal-burning power plants, but are split on whether the initiative will be too expensive, according to an opinion poll published on Monday.

The Quinnipiac University poll of 1,085 voters found 67 percent support the requirements that owners of coal-burning power plants reduce pollution, while only 28 percent oppose the EPA’s Clean Power Plan.

An even bigger majority – 72-24 percent – said they believe the initiative is necessary to clean the air, but voters were split 44-44 on whether the initiative will be too expensive.

Read more at StateImpact PA…