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Old
Lyme Conservation Trust, Inc. |
Board member, award-winning author and NPR commentator Richard Conniff has collected some information about global warming:
Letter
to Board of Selectmen
Board of Selectmen Dear
Board of Selectmen: I
wanted to take a quick opportunity to draw your attention to a pivotal
new program that is available to Old Lyme, the SmartPower 20% by 2010
campaign. We
now have an opportunity to help create cleaner air, a healthier
community and true energy independence by supporting clean energy --
electricity from wind, sun, water and other non-polluting, renewable
sources. Old
Lyme can do its part by joining the SmartPower 20% by 2010 Clean Energy
Campaign. Once the town makes a commitment to use clean energy for 20%
of its electricity demand by 2010, it can qualify for a free solar
energy system from the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund. The
final step would be to achieve a minimum number of residential signups
for clean energy. Specifically, for every 100 local customers who sign
up for the CTCleanEnergyOptionsSM program that is now offered by CL&P we
would automatically get a FREE PV panel placed on town property. My
household has already signed up. For
more information on these programs, please visit: Let's make Old Lyme a Clean Energy Community! Thank you very much.
NPR Commentary by Dick Conniff If a tree falls in a forest, what about its offset? You
can listen in on Dick's commentary from "All Things Considered" at this
web site: Friday, February 23, 2007 TEXT OF COMMENTARY KAI RYSSDAL: Michael Dell, the once and future CEO of the computer company he founded in his college dorm room, turns 42 years old today. He announced last month he's coming back to the executive suite. Dell lost its crown as the world's top PC maker while he was retired. He said he wants to get back to number one again — but be environmentally aware while he does it. The company's going to ask consumers to donate two bucks every time they buy a notebook, six when they buy a desktop, toward planting trees to offset the energy PCs consume. That gave commentator Richard Conniff some pause. RICHARD CONNIFF: There's something kind of silly about the idea of Michael Dell selling power-hog computers and thinking he's going to get some feel-good global warming P.R. by planting a few seedlings. And it's not just Dell, either. The Rolling Stones used the same ploy in 2003 when they announced that their entire tour would be "carbon neutral." The plan was to plant one tree for every 60 concertgoers, to offset the greenhouse gas emissions produced by getting them, their equipment and the fans to and from the stadium. Golly, those must have been the hardest working trees in rock 'n' roll. It makes you wonder how many trees it would take to offset the Mercedes-Benz SUV the Rolling Stones were promoting as part of their 2006 tour. And — this just in — the U.S. Energy Information Administration has the answer. It says one large sugar maple tree can pull 450 pounds of carbon dioxide per year from the atmosphere. And all it would take to offset the emissions from every car in America is preserving 31 such trees per car. Unfortunately, another U.S. government report says sugar maples are vanishing because of global warming. Don't get me wrong, I'm all for planting trees. But these schemes are ripe for voodoo accounting. I mean, how do you calculate how much a tree needs to grow to offset the energy you burned by leaving your computer on last night? And what if your tree goes poof in a forest fire? You start to understand why even environmentalists call these schemes "a morning-after pill for fossil fuel excess." If you want to fix global warming, the first step is to cut fossil-fuel use. And when you can't cut any more, then pay somebody else to cut their fossil fuel use. For instance, replace the inefficient old furnace in a local school building. Or reward workers for using public transit instead of the parking lot. The only way those trees Michael Dell is planting will still be around for our grandchildren to enjoy is if we deal with the real problem now. RYSSDAL: Richard Conniff's latest book is called "The Ape in the Corner Office." END P.S. If this leaves you wondering what you can do, here are two quick, painless ideas: 1. Putting one of those swirly compact fluorescent bulbs in place of a frequently used incandescent bulb will avoid about 100 pounds of greenhouse gas emissions annually, and cut $30 from your electric bill. 2. On your computer, click on the START button, then on SETTINGS, then on CONTROL PANEL, and then on POWER OPTIONS. In POWER OPTIONS, set the times for powering down as low as you think you can reasonably stand. Right now, I have mine set at 10 minutes for TURN OFF MONITOR, 30 minutes for TURN OFF HARD DISKS, 30 minutes for SYSTEM STANDBY, and one hour for SYSTEM HIBERNATES
What
you can do
CL&P - To switch to clean sources of electricity, go to the CL&P
web site and print out the sign-up form to send in with your bill.
Connecticut Clean Energy Fund
- For good information on clean energy opportunities in
CT.
Connecticut
Innovations -
To find out how to make Old Lyme a Connecticut Clean
Energy Community (Essex is the
only area town to have signed up so far).
Energystar.gov
- To find out about Energy Star products.
Environmental
Defense
- For the best information on using compact fluorescent lamps to
replace your incandescent bulbs.
The Pew Center on
Global Climate Change
- For good general information on global warming.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA
- This is also a good site, for calculators to figure
out your own carbon footprint.
Clean
Air Cool Planet -
For a good guide if you want to understand the
complexities of buying offsets.
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Family membership is $50/year |
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