All posts by mataliandy

Liveblog from Bernie Sanders Climate Conference in Montpelier Today.

Cross Posted from GreenEnergyTimes.org

NOTE: All is paraphrased….

Intro: Phil Fiermonte, Sanders outreach coordinator

Over 100 high school and college students here today.

Bernie is leading the fight in Washington – only member in Dem Caucus on both energy and environmental committees. He and Barbara Boxer introduced climate change legislation.

Bernie Sanders:

[thank yous to those who helped organize the event]

One of the privileges of being on these committees is that we get to sit down with some of the leading scientists in the entire world. The major point in the last year: Their projections about global warming were wrong. What they said was too conservative. The damages they now see and the speed is far more severe than they had previously thought. If we got you nervous before, you should be a lot more nervous today. No one can make predictions with 100% accurate, but it we don’t get our act together, by the end of this century, the temp of earth will be 8 degrees f higher than today. That’s only 85 years. In the lifetimes of students today, the temperature of the Earth can go up by 8 degrees. I hope you all understand what that means and the catastrophe.

CIA and DOD have this as one of the largest challenges. It means in our country that great cities like NO, NYC, Boston, etc. will be under water.

What it means is that extreme weather disturbances (scientists will tell you “we can’t tell you this storm was caused by warming, but we can tell you that the likelihood of more of these is increasing. We’ll see more of these with more severity, more frequently.

If you saw the pictures of Sandy. We just spend 60 Billion dollars just to help NY and NJ rebuild. Billions were spent after Irene. Think of the implications of that if we have more severe and more frequent disturbances.

Think about drought – in the US and all over the world. Think not only of the farmers, but also of the food. Think what it does to food supply.

If you have droughts and floods leading to catastrophic changes – what do you think happens politically? War and political turmoil. Who’s going to get the water? We talk about the Middle East struggle – don’t underestimate the role of water in that.

What about VT?

Spring of 2012 exceeded previous record high by a full degree. Not only warmest on record for US – NWS declared 2012 was the warmest year on record in Burlington.

There used to be a lake road to Platsburg when the lake froze in winter. Can’t do that now. Ski areas are

Sugar maple season starts earlier, passes more quickly. Plant hardiness zones have been revised. Invasive pests moving northward, bringing threatening major damage to our forests. In VT we would see a 4 degree increase by 2050, 9 – 10 degree f increase by end of century. Would mean VT climate = Georgia by 2080. That would devastate sugar maples, ski industry, create droughts, more invasive pests, electrical infrastructure.

World War I was a terrible war, many many lives lost. After the war, people didn’t want to think about war or guns. Then Hitler came to power, and few voices were saying we need to do something. Because we did not respond, Hitler’s power grew, and WWII led to 50 million lives lost.

97% of peer reviewed science – absolutely positive. There really are not differences of opinion. But tens and tens of millions of dollars from coal companies, setting up phony organizations to confuse the issue, like the tobacco companies did 50 year ago. Now you have Citizens United, and the Koch brothers are not shy about putting their own people in office. They’ve made science political. You have a lot of smart people rejecting the scientific community due to $$ and because it has become part of the Republican party ideology.

Very pleased in our state there’s a divestment movement going on – and it’s happening all over the country. Students are getting schools to divest.

The very good news is we know how to significantly cut back on carbon emissions. Transform from fossil fuels to efficiency and sustainable energy. You save people money on fuel bills. When you weatherize a home, fuel bill drops 30, 40, 50%. We create jobs, we cut back on greenhouse gas emissions. Part of the legislation Boxer and I introduced puts billions into efficiency to cut back on  fossil fuel use.

Moving away from carbon based fuel into wind, solar, geothermal, biomass. PV prices going down significantly. Problem if you are middle class, it still costs you upfront money.

How do we get the family those solar panels and that weatherization?

Waaaaay more after the jump…

We are also looking at wind, biomass, geothermal. Major investments in new technology – can we electrify transportation system? Can we rebuild our rail system? Can we plan our cities and towns into the future so people don’t have to travel long distances to work? The answer is yes.

When we are leading in new technologies, we can lead the world. We can do the right thing. If we stand up and say “we are dealing with a problem of enormous planetary emergency,” we will make the difference.

We already have the technology – today. Off top of my head: got someone into old building in Rutland. Has been rebuilt to affordable housing, using 80% less fuel than before. We can do that all over the state and country. Military has been very good in terms of efficiency and renewables. Lost too many troops delivering fuel to outposts. Mirrors concentrate sunlight on oil, oil drives generator.  If outpost uses solar, saves on number of troops put in danger. There is also solar thermal. In Mojave desert solar thermal generator coming online: 200,000 homes.

In our state, we can be a leader. Town committees are the way to go. We can show the country what sensible energy policy is all about.

Global warming not only real, but terribly real. Planetary crisis of our time. The planet will be a less hospitable way to live. It is a moral responsibility to the next generations. What I fear that 70 years from now, people will look back and say “why didn’t you do something?”

UVM: John Erickson, Amy Sidell, Leslie Ann Gereaux

Climate change science and impacts.

Climate Change Science helps us understand our past, what’s happening now, and the future.

Present Science:

One of the first lessons is that climate, weather, and climate change refer to different things. Climate is long term patterns. Weather is what you experience on a day to day basis. Climate science involves exploring long term trends. Paleo-climatologists use ice cores and other fossil records to understand what the planet looked like and the patterns of climate over that time. 12k years ago, entered holocene era, climate remained stable for 10k years, allowing emergence of human civilization. Now entering the anthropocene – now warmer than the last 4k years. Before anthropocene, humans survived based on solar energy and the natural processes that capture and convert it.

Fossil fuels changed all that. These fuels produce vast amounts of energy. 25k of human labor in one barrel of oil. With so much avail energy, it seemed like there was no end to growth. Unfortunately, the release of CO2 from these fuels, hidden behind this growth. Unprecedented economic and population growth.

Today, GHGs are rising, not waning. The ability of our soil, forests and oceans to absorb CO2 is decreasing.  In 1950, 320 ppm, today: 396 ppm. Average rate of increase 2 ppm/year. My children can expect 450 to 950 ppm.  We see these numbers in our back yards, when inches of rain exceed inches of snow and spring arrives earlier than the last.

These changes are occurring in our back yards.

Winter – No secret that winters in New England more mild less snowy. When I was a kid we sledded off our front porch stairs. Ski resorts depend on low temps and high snow fall. Now adapting with more snow making, draining more water, using more energy.  16 fewer days of snow cover per year. Ice cover reduction – one month less ice cover.

Spring – blooming lilacs sign of spring – bio-indicators of climate change. Now blooming 4 – 8 days earlier. Significant impact on bird behavior. More than 150 species of birds moved north by 35 miles, nesting and mating earlier (22 days earlier than 1960s). Did bird research: find as many bird species as possible. Was inspiring to see so much diversity. 50 years from now, young ornithologists won’t be able to experience what I did.

Summer – more intense heat every year, 4 days per decade extension of

Can grow peaches, nectarines, rice. Losing VT wildlife and tree species. Many moving north in latitude and higher in elevation. Lyme disease increasing – pulled first tick off last night. Blue green algae blooms in Lake Champlain block swimming by end of summer.

Fall – Leaf color, will change. Cold loving trees moving north. Less colorful southern trees moving in. Maples moving north due to need for cold – 90 to 120 days to enter dormancy. UVM’s maple research show changes already. Data are undeniable. VT is entering time of ecological flux. Casting long shadows, fall comes up. Think of my family’s woodlot – what will it look like in the future?



VT State Climatologist


At UVM, one tool is modeling: what we’ve learned from the models:

– Beyond q of what ecosystems will look like in VT, how will we withstand these changes> What will it cost to adapt? The number may seem relatively small, but the ave of days exceeding 90 degrees f has already doubled. Snow cover is key ingredient to economy in state. Only 4 resorts will remain profitable as things warm by end of century. Okemo got more summer revenue than winter revenue.  Farms need to adapt what to grow, when to plant, new research, training, equipment. Our first task is to mitigate our emissions. What will we be adapting to if we don’t?

– Long term economic impact: current cost of action vs future costs of inaction. 2012 study found climate change already contributing to deaths of 400k people per year costing 1.2 trillion dollars per year. As extreme weather events continue, natural resources depleted. Loss of 5% of GDP per year. Nation depends on health of these water resources. Intensity and frequency of heat waves will continue. Now over 125 days of temps over 100 degrees. I fear the repercussions of this changing economic system.

– What next? I can stand up here and tell you this is just a phase and that the 14 million dollar storms last year in US are just a fluke, But that’s not the reality. We are now stuck with accepting that climate IS changing, and we must adapt. The 2007 projections predicted 2 degree C rise by 2,100. In order for that to be true, must switch to carbon free economy. The other was 4 degrees C.

I’m asked: “how can you study this without getting depressed?” I used to be unable to, but now I view it as a call to action. The combined actions of all of us will allow us to keep up.

Bernie:

Seeing so many committed young people up here on stage makes us feel much better about the future.

Next Up: What does climate mean for VT?

Mike Winslow, staff scientist Lake Champlain Committee

Chuck Ross, Ag Secretary

John Erickson, UVM prof.

Sue Minter, Dep sec trans.

Mike Winslow

3 – 4 years ago went to the lake in mid heat wave. We found that instead of refreshing swim, there was an algae bloom that could produce toxins. These early blooms are driven by temperature. They are not limited to lake Champlain.

Not just the algae, there are changes in fish – cold water fisheries, trout, etc. Small mouth bass will increase.

IPCC suite of factors:

1 – 4 week earlier peak stream flow

Increased precipitation and increased extreme events. Most pollution delivered to our water bodies comes from these heavy storms. Flowing over farm fields, roads, parking lots, etc.

Our water treatment facilities designed for certain size storms – the size we used to get. The facilities can’t handle these large storms, so more pollution is released into the water. Storm water facilities also designed for certain size storms. Need to design bigger facilities. How we respond to the storms – channelizing and dredging rivers are ecological events the ecosystem can’t recover from quickly.

Last time the lake froze over was 1997. August water temperature on Champlain is 3 – 7 degrees warmer.

Algae blooms, shift from cold to warm water fish, more intense storms delivering more pollution, overrun waste water treatment.

Chuck Ross

Climate is a critical issue. Climate change is man-induced. We cannot put these inputs into the system and not expect an impact and have change. We are seeing that today. That ecological system will have to feed over 9 billion people by 2050 – without climate change, that’s a challenge. With climate change, it gets scary. We are inviting social chaos, before we run into the looming ecological chaos.

As in many things agriculture is part of the problem. We represent 14% of global greenhouse gases. We have a contribution to make to this – and an opportunity to address it. Some impacts:

Growing areas are moving northward. When your growing area moves think what happens to your investments. The drought led to high grain prices, causing huge problems in profitability for VT farmers. Ag is a bright spot in our economy, but the drought is affecting the balance of payments. These effects are dramatic – when a vegetable farmer lost 7 of 9 acres: soil stripped to bedrock, not just the food washed away. When farm that grows 12′ corn, but only 3″ remain above the deposited mud, there’s something wrong. Maple, fastest growing economic sector: shorter, earlier season. Forestry coming under stress. As pests migrate to places they haven’t been. Logging season will be shorter. Invasive species moving into state. Number of significant invasives threatening our forest and maple industries, already on our borders.

How do we deal with them?

Ag energy: cow power, solar on farms, wind in the right places, biomass energy. We’re leader of biodigesters nationally. Converting methane to co2 is 20 – 30% reduction in GHGs. We need efficiency at the farms to drop impact of demand. Biofuels to run farms being produced on our farms. We are not alone in this in VT. We have a chance to use ag as restorative activity to build soil, capture carbon, and reforest. Increase water retention. Reduce temperatures on micro basis, fix carbon into soil.

Tools like smart phones, combined with “those kinds of minds” (referring to students who presented) are the reason we have hope.



Sue Minter Deputy Sec of AOT


Irene recovery officer for a year. Impact of extreme weather on our infrastructure. Was appointed Jan 2011. That year was an incredible story of climate change in VT. No hard frost that winter. Jan, snow started (late). Feb snow picked up – 24 of 28 days. March greatest number of potholes in state. Freeze, thaw, pop. More frequent mud seasons.

April, highest precipitation ever in April. Super-saturated ground. Then flood 3′ above flood stage for 6 weeks. Late May flash flooding never seen before. THEN Irene hit. Irene sent mud into Long Island Sound (photo).

500 miles of road damaged. 200 miles of railroad damaged. 34 bridges on state highway washed away. Towns lost hundreds of roads and almost 1000 culverts. 13 communities entirely stranded. Needed to reconnect 13 communities in 24 hours. Got national guard from multiple states. 20,000 acres of farmland lost. 7,000 VTers registered with FEMA for aid. Mobilizing volunteers for this spring to help those still without homes.

The story of our response gives me hope. We’ve learned so many lessons from Irene. LEssons in how VTers come together – in adversity, there is opportunity. Lessons in how to be VT strong. We are very resilient people, but we need to become resilient for the future. We want to adapt to the fact that the climate is changes. Irene brought state gov together in very different ways. We continue to work collaboratively across agencies. Road agencies working with river scientists. Evaluating what we did well and what we did not do well. We’ve learned about how to allow rivers to flood. Joint trainings on incident command systems.

Communities build on riversides – need to be thinking differently. Have conversations with your communities. Not only adaptation , but also mitigation. Climate change is real, here, and transportation = half of state GHGs. Investing in reducing transportation’s impact. We need to do it together. I know we can do it together. We are VT strong.

John Erickson, UVM Dean

Economics of climate change. Have been in field since 1992. Same year, we had project funded by Rockefeller Foundation on the topic. Paper in journal “Science,” by William Norhaus, claimed economic impact “no big deal.” This has been very influential on policy makers.

Assumes only agriculture impacted. Assumes seamless adaptation. Also assumes rapid discounting of future (so long term benefits of cutting climate impacts = smaller than they are).

Impacts:

– growing disconnect between economics from real world. Deep ecological understanding of our natural world isn’t understood. Most economists put impact at few percentage points. Since in US Ag is only 3% of GDP. So if 50% of ag is wiped out, it’ll only be 1.5% of GDP, no big deal. (audience: what about the food?)

Seamless adaptation:

Assumes a clairvoyant farmer. If temps change, seasons lengthen or shorten, etc. farmers instantly adapts. What if it takes humans a little longer to adapt? Models taking that into account show impact 3 – 5x the projections of the economic models just with this ONE change: 20 – 30% change in GDP.

Discounting the future:

We put less value on the future in these models. The tradeoffs in these models say future isn’t worth as much as the present. That’s about 95% of the debate. Norhaus did a survey of colleagues: All economists were on the “discount the future” side. All of the ecologists said, “we’re not worried about the averages, we’re worried about the tails – the small probability of catastrophes. Economists should look at the ways to prevent the catastrophes, instead of thinking about adapting to “average” changes.

Q&A:

Q:

Scudder Parker

As the economics work gets done, don’t we have to look at the way we have built our economies on the rapid exploitation of our natural resources, don’t we have to look at changing it?

A:

Bernie: general assumption is we want a lot of economic growth. Turns out that economic growth doesn’t create jobs and income. Between 2009 and 2011 – 100% of all NEW income, despite some economic growth went to the top 1%. It doesn’t filter down to ordinary people. The more important point: can we continue to destroy the environment without paying a horrible price. Radical transformations of our society – cowboy capitalism is not the solution to all our problems. Focus on the really important issues: health care as a right, create a sense of community where satisfaction in life isn’t equivalent to buying more stuff.

John: Paintings by Katherine Montstream, Burlington artist.

VT Last May passed a law to looking at health of economy with genuine progress indicator. First state to pass such a law. MD has been using such a measure for 3 years – we’re working with them.

You get what you measure. GPI adjusts for income distribution and reflects the costs of our economy. In contrast GDP says super-storm is a good thing for the economy, because you have to rebuild.  Oil spill is great, because you have to clean up. Air pollution’s health care costs are good for economy. Divorce is excellent: why have 1 household when you can have 2?

Q:

Individual assistance under FEMA designed to replace what was damaged. Public Assistance – we were limited to replacing exactly what had been damaged. Doesn’t look to the future.

Bernie:

New FEMA guy is aware, and better than last one. We will replace the kind of culvert that was damaged, but not put in bigger culvert to prevent future damage.

Sue: ANR has permitting program that requires towns to build larger culverts to replace damaged culverts. Bernie is hel;ing us with the conversation with FEMA re: reimbursement post Irene. Working to understand our fluvial flood and erosion zones. Making progress, but it’s a very important q.

Q:

Andrea Stander: Impact of midwest drought in VT kicking up grain prices, also going to have 9 billion people to feed. 600k people in VT, 6000 farms, but only half of them re providing sufficient income for the people who live on those farms. What can we do to support our small scale farming infrastructure that will feed Vermonters even when other parts of country can’t provide that food.

A:

Chuck: This week, press conference allow CSAs at state buildings for state employees in state buildings. Supporting small farmers in the area. The CSA model – he price they get from difrect purchase instead of sending to market through 3rd party is huge help in surviving.

Farm to Plate and Farm to School: building ag literacy, understand where your food comes from, know which end of a chicken an egg comes from.

Initiating farm to institution program – using Fletcher-Allen as a model. Creating economic food hubs.

Always have been ag exporting state, we need to continue to sell to those markets for value-added dollars.

Bernie: brought resources to schools so students can grow for themselves.

Q:

Whey does the US spend so much money on military and how can we change it?

A:

Bernie: short answer: political revolution to change priorioties. US spending almost as much as the entire rest of the world on military. In Europe, low cost ed, free health care, lower mil expenses – those are our NATO allies. Our response is not to cut our own military, but to tell them to spend more on their military.

Paul Ryan’s republican budget would make devastating cuts, not a nickel on military spending.

Q:

Likelihood of carbon tax passing in DC?

A:

Bernie: I have introduced legislation which includes a carbon tax. $20/ton of Carbon or mathane equivalent. Transforms energy system, efficiency, renewables, protects those affected by higher energy costs. SOME people (George Shultz = one), as people in places like Oklahoma, Alabama, and more are telling their congresspeople that they can’t ignore climate.

We’ve introduced this legislation to be gold standard. We know it won’t pass, but it’s the model of how to address the crisis, and it’s a goal post. We have to gain more cosponsors and more activism all over America to create political will to respond to that crisis.

Q:

NH is about to enact 15 cent/gallon carbon tax on gasoline. Can VT do that?

A:

DOn’t think gs tax is the best path. We need more efficiency. Have made progress on cafe standards. Move to electrification and rail rather than automobiles.

Q:

One Earth, One Voice

Seeing some military brass saying the right things.

A:

When you have DOD and CIA worrying about this as a primary issue, we need to come together.

[LUNCH Break]

Bernie:

Introducing Bill McKibben

I have enjoyed his great books. We’re proud of his work as a writer and his work as a teacher. What he has done is combine capability of great writer and teacher to be a great communicator and great organizer. That does not happen every day.  He’s chair of 350.org. He is recognized not only as one of the national leaders in fight against global climate change, but one of the international leaders. I was very proud Bill was at my side when Barbara Boxer and I introduced our legislation.

Bill McKibben

I ask myself what would make 500 Vermonters come inside on the prettiest winter day=y?

One of the things I’ve been able to do over the last 5 years is to meet a lot of politicians. Senator Sanders is different.

I am sure Bernie will be in the absolute lead making sure Keystone XL doesn’t happen when politicians get together to try to sneak it through.

I’m not going to bother to talk about all the climate stuff the students have presented, already.

By the time last summer was over, the Arctic had essentially melted. We’ve broken one of the major physical features of the planet. This is what’s happening now. This is what happens when you raise the temperature 1 degree. If we don’t get a handle on it now, it will be 4 or 5 degrees. The real news I want to bring you today is to introduce you to your brothers and sisters around the world participating in this fight. Vermont is not alone in this fight.

7 years ago, we walked the length of VT. On the 5th day, when we got to Burlington and Bernie met us, there were 1000 people walking. Which you all know, for VT, is a LOT of people. The hard part of that day was picking up the Free Press and reading that this was the largest demonstration in the US on climate change.  We had assumed that reason, alone, would lead to the changes we need. It didn’t happen because reason is not what decides these things alone. The part of the movement we didn’t have was the movement part. We started 350.org in response, 5 years ago, with 7 students from Middlebury.  Each student took a continent, and we went to work. We asked people to do something wherever they were to raise the alarm. No one had tried something like this. We got the first sense that it might work about 36 hours early. We were sitting around a little office, and our Ethiopia person called. She, like most of the world, she was 17 years old, running Ethiopia for us. She was in tears, “the Govt took away our permit,s o we’re going early before they can stop us” We so wanted to do this with the rest of the world, but we have 15k young people out on the street in Addis Abbaba.

Afghanistan – US troops spelled 350 with sand bags.

There had been people claiming that poor people worried about their next wouldn’t care and would never join. Well, most of the people we worked with were poor, black, brown, Asian, young, because that’s what most people are.

People who didn’t look like people thought environmentalists look like – but their hearts are exactly in the same place They’re thinking about the future. Even Abu Dhabi, with oil sheiks sent a photo of themselves in front of the largest solar array in the world.

It’s been beautiful, fun, powerful work.  Dominican Republic had so many people in their demo, they needed satellite to take a photo. During 2011 protest of keystone XL, Hurricane Irene hit. 2 days later, VTers showed up on a bus with stories of the epic trek to find enough bridges to get out of the state. But as important as it is to fight defensively, as wonderful as it was when VT became 1st state to ban fracking last year, defense is not enough. We also have to play offense. VT energy independence day second edition is coming up. It means going after the fossil fuel industry directly. Glad to see these students from places where young people are taking the lead.

Got a call the day after Rolling Stone piece, giot 10x more likes on Facebook than Justin Bieber in same issue.

All you need is 3 numbers:

– 2 degrees is most we can survive. We can’t go past it.

– 565 Gigatons of carbon is the most we can burn and stay below those 2 degrees (15 yrs at current rate)

– Fossil fuels: 2,795 gigatons in fossil fuel reserves.

We know how the story ends unless we change the script dramatically.

Did a divestment tour – snce all they care about is money, we hve to take some away. 256 active divestment fights in US, right now. Largest student activism fight in decades. If you went to a college, and they send you letters and things, you might want to help out here: tell them to divest.

If you’re 20 right now, this is your life. It’s all your life will be by the time you’re my age. Staggering from one hurricane to a wildfire, to the next, to the next. Humanity will be nothing more than emergency response.

I said the next generation shouldn’t shouler all the burden. It’s not the best thing for a 22 year old to get arrested. But after a certain point, what are they going to do to you?

We asked – if you’re going to get arrested, wear a necktie or a dress. There’s nothing radical about this. Radicals work at oil companies. if you’re willing to change the chemical makeup of the atmosphere, you’re a radical. If you’re hoping your kids can live in a world kind of like the one you grew up in, you’re to a certain extent a conservative.

The enemy we’re fighting is physics, which is kind of a tough opponent.

Q&A

Q:

Cam Towne

Thrilled this is happening in our school I;m very concerned about the rate at which oil and gas leases are being given out in the US on Federal lands. Major focus for management of federal lands: oil, shale, tar sands in the US. I don’t think keystone is the biggest issue we have. We’re being impacted in VT seriously by climate change. We need to look at fed govt. Interior, just handed over to Sally Jewell, from the oil industry.

A:

I was happy when Obama was re-elected. Amy Klein said – this time, no honeymoons. The fed has been better than the Bush Administration, but then I’ve drunk more beer than my 14 year old neice – this is not a huge accomplishment.

It doesnt work, mathematically. I have to stop myself from being a jerk. If only you’d listened to me 25 years ago – there were things you could have done that white houses like to do. But we’re not there anymore. The arctic has melted, we can’t do the easy things again.

There are coal mines the size of Keystone we need to keep inthe ground in Australia.

We’ve stopped the production of new coal plants in the US. It’s like getting rid of new cigarette smoking in the US and exporting them to China. It’ morally wrong to do it with cigarettes, but unbelievably stupid to do it with carbon, cuz it all mixes together in the atmosphere.

Q:

I understand the protests at one level, but they seem to be taking us from the discussion of how we have to change our lives.

A:

My writing is about local economies, local food, energy, finance. Given my druthers I’d like to stay home and work on this stuff. I had an email from my wife last year “You do realize you’ve spent more time in jail than at home.”

We have to get this under control at a global level, or the change will be so large that the best local economies can’t cope with it.

Among the biggest victims of Irene were the best small farms in the state.

Just wrote a new book – a bit of a diary of the last 2 years, and a bit of my neighbor the apiarist. I spent time thinking of how that different kind of economy will take place.

When the arctic melted last summer – Jim Hansen said the only way to describe where we are right now is “in a planetary emergency.”

Q:

Wednesday: Group divestment from TD Bank in Montpelier. Thurs: Moncton, nat gas pipeline that VT gas is trying to build in Addison County VT gas is trying to feed fracked gas through VT. Also a fight against wind.

A:

Bill: We’re working on lots of them, but since it came up, I am against a moratorium on wind in our state.

Someone was handing out pamphlets about my carbon footprint – and it’s true, I travel a lot. It used to be VT was a refuge for me, but it doesn’t feel like it any more. The study that came out in September funded by 20 poorest countries in the world 100 million humans will die by 2030. Most of those people get the suffering from it, but haven’t been doing the burning.

Bernie: Divestment can play a very important role in transforming our energy system. Thank you for getting involved in that issue.  Bill has laid out what we are fighting for – the future of our planet, and our grandchildren. I think wind is part of our energy future, and I support wind. All sustainable energies. Wheat bill just told you: we’re fighting to save tens of millions of lives. I am in favor of moving as aggressively into production.

Q:

VT Working landscape – wind solar, etc present opportunity to embrace what that landscape can look like.

Q:

We can’t win this. Change your thinking – think about struggle to succeed. That success won’t be like what it ever was before. We will have lost something. It’s up to us to portray to people how much we will lose and never have back again.

A:

There are not very many people who ever get to say “I am doing the most important thing I can do right now.” But when I look out at the students working on divestment, people working to put solar panels up, etc. They are doing the most important thing they can be doing.

If we let the temp go up 4 – 5 degrees, people will be paying for it as long into the future as it’s possible to imagine. If we do what we need to stop this, people in the future will look back at us the way they look back on those who stopped fascism. It’s time to go to work.

[break for workshops]

Sustainable Energy  Solutions

We have heard from the #1 advocate in Congress, Bernie Sander; and the #1 activist in the world, Bill McKibben.

If you haven’t heard enough to gt involved right now, you’re in the wrong workshop. We are here to say the solution starts now.

Sometimes, we are of necessity trying to stop bad things from happening (keystone). There is a bill S30 to make it more difficult to build renewables in VT, at the wrong time. There’s info on the VPRIG table.

We’ve decided to break into 4 subgroups for discussions:

Local ideas, state level activities, federal opportunities.

Local:

Johanna Miller: Coordinate VT Energy Climate Action Network.

Want to encourage those NOT on a town energy committee to start or join one in your community. Waterbury LEAP ambitious goal of doubling solar in town. Redoubling this year. That’s just one example of what communities are doing. Inspiring and essential.

Heating efficiency bill in leg doesn’t have enough people pushing policy makers to pass it, and not enough political will.

State: Heating Efficiency VT Energy Investment Corp:

George ?

Operate in VT, DC, Midwest, etc. Have been in House Nat Resources committee. We’ve been via Eff VT on electric efficiency. Our growth turned negative due to our efficiency success. We now need to move to heating eficiency. Heating is 2nd only to transport in the state for climate footprint. We are not getting the same results from heat efficiency as we did for electric efficiency. Legislation has had lots of positive rhetoric, but not there yet on passing legislation. Need to push that forward.  Lots of talk, not enough action.

State: Energy Action Network

Lee ?

Last couple of years chair of energy action network to study how to make VT 80% renewable across all sectors by 2030. Inform the state comprehensive energy plan 90% by 2050. Been analyzing transportation, biofuels, solar etc. and how they all fit together. In closing, I wanted to share my favorite global warming cartoon:

Federal:

Sanders proposals and other things we can do.

http://www.sanders.senate.gov/…

http://www.sanders.senate.gov/…

The bills propose a carbon tax. A portion goes into a dividend back to taxpayers, and a portion goes to renewable energy projects – research, development, implementation.

Federal Policy Breakout Group’s Ideas:

Top 3:

* – Federal carbon regulation through bill or through clean air act section 111. EPA has the authority to regulate green house gases.  NRDC came up with proposal for regulating greenhouse gases for all power production.

* – Federal money for heating efficiency.

*- Encourage fuel efficient transportation, Public transit, Comprehensive transportation plan.

– Frame as health care savings and other cost savings, rather than moral need.

– Advanced energy research to keep tech moving forward.

– Reallocating subsidies from fossil fuels to renewables.

– Interest free loans

– Find ways to use CO2.

– Capping the grid – to build a new power plant, must take an old one offline.

– Lobby your existing politicians.

– Biochar.

– Look at results of Jimmy Carter’s programs.

– Lowering interstate speed limit.

– Peace Corps-like “Earth corps” to implement and assist in projects.

– More enforcement: rewards for “dropping a dime” on polluters.

– DOD largest consumer of energy in the country.

– Lots of land and buildings, reduce use through efficiency.

– Federal commitment to saying that wild lands should remain free from development, fossil fuels and other development.

– Urban/community planning for local sustainable communities.

Group Updates:

Local:

– Home energy challenge

– Start or join town energy committees & vermontivate

– March 21, 10:30 AM Energy independence day event at state house (vprig.org)

Renewables and transportation:

– All the TVs in the country while turned off = enough power to require 5 nuclear plants.

– Education,

– building efficiency

– local renewables – make $$ avail

– Heating efficiency

– legislators willing to talk, but not walk on the issue. Contact your legislators.

– require “MPG” sticker equivalent for homes

Federal:

– Support Sanders’ legislation

– Carbon reduction either via legislation or via EPA & Clean Air Act.

– Transportation policy, public transit

– Promote federal and heating efficiency.

Adaptations for Nat Resources

VT got a lot of things right in the past. Lots to build on. Think smaller. Think about community level things, interacting with env. on community level. We know a certain amount of travel has to be done, but how do we make it possible to do less.

– Better planning out communities

– Genuine progress indicator: measure the right things so you can accomplish the right things. Think about what is good for the people. The economy is not a thing on its own. it’s a product of us. Local community involvement is important. If everyone shows up and volunteers and speaks up, it will make a difference.

– Resilience: strong communities enable you to deal with adversity.

What would it take to make it so our money supports small and local rather than large and distant (like tax code). Also overpopulation.

Infrastructure Resiliency

Roads, bridges, power lines, drinking water, storm water, waste water systems. What have we felt in our own communities in which climate change has played out on our infrastructure.

Considered on our personal level, community level, state, federal. Solution ideas:

– How do we plan for tomorrow. Much or what we rely on is dependent on past history. We look at past data, for example, we look at past flooding and frequency, rather than the actual severity of this one.

Stafford Act – look at it, see how we can use the act to respond so we’re replacing based on future impacts, not on past. Right now it takes 3 flood events before FEMA will agree that a structure is undersized.

Incentives – Get smart planning on the ground. Use existing resources and dollars more wisely to make solutions that make a difference. How can we incentivise state revolving fund so it build in resilience.

Raise awareness of the threats and their risks. Get to all audiences – municipalities, legislators, general public. How can we rely on that information to make more informed decisions. Public service announcements. Recognize the natural infrastructure’s role (flood plains to contain water, etc.).

NManage storm water – if more frequent extreme events, how to handle it? Sometimes, when too much comes into your waste water facilities, raw sewage is pushed out.

Low impact development to allow clean rain water to soak into the ground and not become a liability.

Education incentives for watershed stewardship for all our watersheds.

Preparedness is important, these events will happen in the future.

Interconnection of our infrastructure is key.

Can we redirect DOD dollars toward sound public works projects?

Bernie Sanders

I get my energy to return to Washington from You. When we htink about what’s going on in our country When you turn on the TV it can get depressing. If you are sitting in the Senate it can get really depressing If you went through 20 hours of budget committee meetings, it gets really, really depressing. But if you look at history, just think 20 years ago, it would be unthinkable to have an African American president. Just think of the struggle in this state over Civil Unions The whole country was looking at the state on civil unions not gay marriage. History has its arcs. Sometimes we get depressed because on economic issues the power of money, but things change. This is a fight we can win, as well.

What Bill MCKibben told us today:

Positive stuff – people of all colors, religions, ages all over the world are standing up with the same message that we need ot cut emissions.

In some countries, they’re fighting for the physical survival of the country. The people who have the money and the power can make things look different than they are. But we need to know the way things are – all these people, not alone.

What we’re talking about is what’s happening to human beings. When there are droughts people do not have enough to eat. When there are floods and mass migrations, there are wars. Bill is talking about the lives of hundreds of millions of people and the kinds of lives our children and grandchildren will be living.

I have always believed congress and the feds are the last people to know what is going on. Change happens when millions and millions say “enough is enough, we need change.” I believe this small state and our communities can lead in changing the direction of this country on global warming.

When we do the right thing, the word spreads. We have an impact all around the country. When the US does something, the word travels around the world. That is why it is so important we have strong climate change legislation.

The fight we’re fighting is the most important – the survival of the planet. This small state can be a leader.  

My Take on the Obama-Romney Debate

[Updated to add supporting data]

The last 24+ hours have seen a non-stop flurry of “OMG! Romney won the debate!” hand-wringing from the left. But Romney did NOT win the debate. He may have won the beauty contest portion, but that’s not the part that mattered.

Obama’s debate performance was exactly what was needed for the important goal of winning the election, even if it didn’t give those on the left the sense of satisfaction we might have felt if we’d been able to bash Mitt by proxy.

The right-wing’s machine had spent the entire week setting the stage for the “angry black man” attack strategy (thus the 8 year old video “surfaced” by Drudge of Obama speaking passionately to [gasp!] black people prior to the debate).

Obama completely killed their post-debate dog-whistle plans by being calm, professional, and honest. And in the process, he dramatically increased his approval rating AND his lead among independents. Romney gained only among republicans, who were going to vote for him, anyway.

Romney led 48 percent to 42 among independents in a Pew Research survey from April, which showed Obama ahead by 4 points nationally. Pew’s latest poll shows Obama overtaking Romney 44 percent to 42 among independents and opening up a 7-point lead nationally.

So in the only important measure – gaining among those who will swing the election – Obama won hands down, while also screwing up the pre-prepped ad campaigns from the opposing team. It was a two-fer.

Folks can stop wringing their hands, now.

When you just can’t stop digging

As Jack noted earlier – the Rutland County GOP “apologized” this afternoon.

Here’s a reminder of what they were “apologizing” for:

And:

Here’s the problem:

They haven’t apologized for posting a clearly racist post.

Instead, they did a whole heap of blame-shifting, by implying that the problem wasn’t the post and its content, but instead the problem is whiny democrats making them take it down.

And they said they’d change their editorial policy.

Um … no. Sorry, folks, but what you need is some serious education regarding the evils of racism and a 180 degree change of attitude toward people whose skin includes varying amounts of melanin.

Oh, and Rob Towle’s resignation might not be a bad choice, either – at least if you want to send the signal that you’re serious about racism being unacceptable in your ranks.

Shumlin Safe After Encounter with Bears

Governor Shumlin had a close encounter with bear-kind Wednesday AM when trying to rescue his birdfeeders after shooing bears away. The bears apparently didn’t go far enough away, and when the Governor went out to try to grab the feeders he was charged at and chased by the foursome.

From the AP’s writeup:

Shumlin tells the Valley News editorial board that Vermont “almost lost the governor.” He says he was within “three feet of getting ‘arrrh.'”

We’re glad you’re safe, Governor.

Here’s some information from the government of Ontario about what to do in a bear encounter. It’s oriented toward encounters in the wild, but can be helpful at home, too. Though, of course, at home, you have the option to go inside and lock the door.

[corrected the date – thanks norsehorse]

In the mean time, a Vermont Department of Fish & Wildlife press release warned people to take in bird feeders due to bears on March 22. If you still have your feeders out, please take note:

3-22-2012

Remove Bird Feeders to Avoid Tempting Bears

VERMONT FISH and WILDLIFE

Press Release

For Immediate Release: March 22, 2012

Media Contact: Col. David LeCours, 802-241-3700

Remove Bird Feeders to Avoid Tempting Bears

WAITSFIELD, VT – The Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department says it is receiving reports of black bears emerging from their winter dens and looking for food. As a result, the department is urging people to take down their bird feeders to prevent the bears from getting into trouble.

“We are receiving reports of bears getting into bird feeders,” said Fish and Wildlife’s Col. David LeCours. “People can help now by removing any food sources that may tempt the bears. That includes taking down bird feeders and not feeding birds until December 1.”

“Also, don’t leave pet food outside, wash down your barbecues after using them, and secure your garbage containers,” he added. “And above all, never purposely leave food out for bears. Feeding bears may seem kind, but it is almost a sure death sentence for them.”

“Help keep bears wild,” said LeCours. “We care about these bears as much as anyone. Having to destroy one that has become a threat to human safety is not a pleasant experience, and we know that moving them to another location doesn’t change their behavior. They continue to seek food near people because they have learned that it works.”

Vermont law prohibits a person from killing a bear that has been attracted to any artificial bait or food such as bird seed. The fine for doing so can be as high as $1,000.

Bears often eat seeds in the wild, so a birdfeeder chock full of high-energy seed is a concentrated source of what a bear considers natural food. And they are smart. Once bears learn to obtain food around people’s homes, they will be back for more.

To learn about black bears, go to the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department’s website (www.vtfishandwildlife.com) and look in the Library section for the Black Bear Factsheet.

In Memory of Julie Waters: A Clean, Well Lighted Place

In the past, I’ve seen Edward Hopper’s Painting “Nighthawks” (below) recommended as an appropriate cover illustration for Hemingway’s “A Clean, Well-Lighted Place”:

… more below the fold …

Hemingway’s story is a conversation between a pair of waiters, one young, confident, and in a hurry; the other old and world-weary. The snippet below picks up mid-conversation with the young waiter:

“And what do you lack?”

“Everything but work.”



“You have everything I have.”

“No. I have never had confidence and I am not young.”

“Come on. Stop talking nonsense and lock up.”

“I am of those who like to stay late at the cafe,” the older waiter said. “With all those who do not want to go to bed. With all those who need a light for the night.”

“I want to go home and into bed.”

“We are of two different kinds,” the older waiter said. He was now dressed to go home. “It is not only a question of youth and confidence although those things are very beautiful. Each night I am reluctant to close up because there may be some one who needs the cafe.”

Sometimes, people just need a refuge – a place that provides some security against a cold world, a place like Hemingway’s “Clean Well-Lighted Place,” the corner cafe in Hopper’s “Nighthawks,” or even a shelter in which to sleep.

As many of you know, GMD front-pager Julie Waters passed away this week from complications of myasthenia gravis. Julie’s favorite cause locally was the Greater Falls Warming Shelter for the homeless in Bellows Falls, Vermont. The shelter’s mission: “to provide a safe, warm overnight shelter during the winter months for those in need.”

The shelter lost its permit to operate this past fall due, in large part, to funding issues, and Julie has been one of the many people active in the community attempting to raise funds to save people from the cold of a Vermont winter by restoring the shelter. While we barely had winter by VT standards this year, our version of “barely winter” remains dangerously cold for anyone without a place to go. Temperatures in the teens and single-digits are unkind to humans.

Here’s Julie playing at one fundraiser for the shelter:

Her wife Cyndi has suggested donations to the shelter in lieu of flowers.

Coincidentally, as of a few days ago, the Immanuel Epicsopal Church in Bellows Falls issued a fundraising challenge for the shelter. They’re offering $6000 in matching funds for up to $6000 in donations.

Wouldn’t a donation to restore the shelter be a wonderful way to say thank you to Julie for all she offered us during her time here?

If you would like to donate in Julie’s name, you can make a donation from the Southeastern Vermont Community Action (the shelter’s sponsor).



If you pay by PayPal:

On the second page in the process, click the “Add special instructions for the Recipient” link, and enter:

The Greater Falls Warming Shelter in memory of Julie Waters.

This will ensure the funds go toward the shelter.

Or, use the ChipIn “widget”:

Goodbye Julie, we’ll miss you. You made a difference.

B-Town Redistricting: Progs Join Forces with Repubs. Again. Really.

The Progressive Party in Burlington wants to move two neighborhoods into different districts – not because there is any need to move them, but because two Progressive candidates want to run for a seat in one district. To restate: the proposal is to move two neighborhoods so two Progressives won’t have to run against each another for one seat.

Ok, they don’t say it exactly like that, but from all appearances, that’s what they’re trying to accomplish. There are many ways to accomplish redistricting without moving whole neighborhoods. As a matter of fact, there are ways that do so while adhering more closely to state law (more on that below).

The basic “strategy” appears to be to attempt to get two Progressives into the State House by redrawing districts to bump two of the most progressive Democrats out of the State House.

Um . . .

More below the fold.

:: First: The Obvious Problem

There’s a difference between good strategy and bad strategy. A strategy that injures your allies while strengthening your opponents should probably be set aside if there are other options. The Progressive Party in Vermont has a bizarre history of playing redistricting Russian roulette . . . and losing.

If the Progressives’ goal is to make the legislature more progressive, then why do they keep teaming up with Republicans to make it easier for Republicans to win? Why don’t they team up with Democrats on redistricting to make it harder for Republicans to win? I know, the hypothesis is that making it harder for Democrats makes it easier for Progressives, but that hasn’t really worked out very well, thus far. When a hypothesis is tested and fails, it’s usually because the hypothesis is wrong and it’s time to find a new one.

The people of our state are clearly worse off with “conservative” policies, and better off with more progressive policies. Yes, from the perspective of the Progressive Party, we’re not as much better off with Democrats as we would be with Progressives. But why a total crap-shoot? Why play enabler for “worse off,” when there’s a “better off” solution? There are real people who get hurt by those “worse off” policies. It doesn’t seem like the risk is worthwhile.

:: Second: The Statutory Problem

The Vermont Redistricting Law [17 VSA 1906b(c)] requires the Board of Civil Authority to use the following considerations:

(1) preservation of existing political subdivision lines;

(2) recognition and maintenance of patterns of geography, social interaction, trade, political ties and common interests;

(3) use of compact and contiguous territory;

(4) incumbencies.

The proposed redistricting appears to largely ignore (1) and (4).

:: Third: The Transparency Problem

The group appointed to the subcommittee by Mayor Kiss has kind of forgotten to ask a good chunk of the people affected by the proposed new districts whether they want to move.

Committee member Emma Mulvaney-Stanak, a city councilor, posted a request for feedback in the Front Porch Forum email list-serve for the Roosevelt Park neighborhood (one of the two getting bumped). She did NOT post the request in the forum for Lakeview Terrace residents. Word has it that folks in the Lakeview Terrace neighborhood are not supportive of the proposed change.

In addition, by listing only the “pros” of the proposed move, the resulting feedback may be slanted toward the outcome she’s hoping for:

. . . we have an opportunity to keep the district line the same in the I.A.A. neighborhood or try a different option. The working committee for the city council, for which I serve on, has considered an alternative which would pull the I.A.A. neighborhood back into the Old North End and into the 3-3 District (currently represents most of the Old North End). And would put the streets along North Ave on the western side of the Old North End into the 3-3 District. This would include Crowley Streets, Lakeview Street, Front St and some of the small streets around Battery Park. It seems more logical to include a part of the O.N.E. that are physically connected by a road (North Ave) and are also already somewhat use to being connected to the New North End because some streets are in 3-2 already over there (Ward St for example) and also by city wards (Ward 7 covers Lakeview). Plus students on that side of the O.N.E. already use the middle school in the N.N.E. versus the students in the eastern side (I.A.A. neighborhood) who go to Edmunds.

:: Fourth: The “Representativeness” Problem

Seven of the fifteen members of the Board of Civil Authority are Democrats. But the subcommittee has only 1 Democrat (Ed Adrian) out of its 5 members. The other subcommittee members are: Bob Kiss (Prog), Emma Mulvaney-Stanak (Prog), Karen Paul (Independent), Paul Decelles (Republican).

So from a committee that’s 1/2 Democrats, Kiss created a subcommittee that’s 2/5 Prog, 1/5 independent, 1/5 republican, and 1/5 democrat.

The lone Democrat has made several proposals, all of which have been voted down, including one that adheres more closely to the law than any of the others, thus far.

:: Fifth: The Pissing Off Your Legislators Problem

In response to all this, 7 Burlington State Representatives have registered their displeasure. Two key quotes:

“The maps in the plan that you have presented to us substantially alter the districts of Chittenden 3-1, Chittenden 3-2, and Chittenden 3-3 in a manner that we cannot support.

We understand the difficulty of the task before you, and realize that tough decisions have to be made, However, we cannot support the maps as presented. We urge you to please reconsider Councilor Adrian’s proposal (Democratic Plan C).”

Signatories are: Bill Aswad, Chittenden 3-1; Jean O’Sullivan, Chittenden 3-2; Jason Lorber, Chittenden 3-3; Jill Krowinski, Chittenden 3-3; Kesha Ram, Chittenden 3-14; Johannah Donovan, Chittenden 3-5; and Suzi Wizowaty, Chittenden 3-1.

:: Summary

All-in-all, it appears that redistricting in Burlington has been handled badly. Here’s hoping a sensible solution, with better communication emerges soon, though with Kiss at the helm of the subcommittee…  

Anti-Healthcare Activist Puts Her Bigotry On Display

There are two serious problems with this image posted by Darcie Johnston of Vermonters for Health Care Freedom on her facebook page.

Here’s the despicable image:

And here’s what’s wrong with it:

1) It implies that people in different states are fundamentally different. This is untrue – humans are humans. There are people with varied beliefs everywhere you go. There is no such thing as a blue or red state – all states are purple. This is a method of dividing people, instead of uniting them (I guess she mustn’t like being part of the UNITED States).

and

2) It furthers the derogatory dog whistles of bigots who believe the following, and who want you to believe these things, too:

(A) People who join the armed forces are automatically better than others.

(B) People who join the armed forces are more patriotic than other people.

(D) People who join the armed forces are never gay.

(E) People who are gay are automatically lesser than others.

(F) People who live in states that tend to vote republican join the armed services, and people who live in states that don’t vote republican never join the armed services.

(G) People who live in states that vote democratic are unserious, immoral, partiers who don’t care about their country.

It’s nice to see that at least one person called her on this sad display bigotry.

It’s sad she is so ignorant of the proud military heritage of Vermont. This is not to say that militarism is automatically good or bad, but the state’s participation shows that military participation and respect for people in all their diverse beauty are not mutually exclusive.

She also denigrates the memories of all the Vermonters who have died in the ongoing wars in the Middle East. Perhaps she is unaware that Vermont has the highest per-capita casualty rate in the country?

It’s not surprising to see her comment about how she wishes she lived in another state. Clearly, she doesn’t know or care about the state in which she lives.

But I guess we could have guessed that by the fact that she is fighting to prevent Vermonters from getting equal, affordable access to quality medical care.

Japan: Worse just got Even Worse

——–

UPDATE:

According to NYT reporter Hiroko Tabuchi some workers remains at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, and reports otherwise were a translation error.

——-

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told a news conference just under an hour ago that all personnel have been evacuated from Fukushima Daiichi 1 – 4 nuclear plants due to excessive radiation levels.

The fire in reactor 4 was confirmed as being in the spent fuel pool, and though the fire was suppressed earlier, it resumed later in the day. A proposed plan to air-drop water/cooling materials on it had to be scrapped due to the likely deadly risk to the helicopter crew.

The Secretary also mentioned that reactor cores 1 and 3 have been breached, and there appears to be steam coming from the breach in reactor core 3.

Northeast Sustainable Energy Association Building Energy Confrence 2011, Pt 2

I’m back in Boston, blogging away. Pardon the paraphrasing and staccato text, humans are notoriously bad at speaking slowly, and I’m notoriously bad at typing that fast.

All typos, misspellings and incoherence is mine and mine alone.

See below the fold for text from today (so far). More to come!

Women of Green

New US construction uses 1/2 of all resources in this country. Resource consumption in us new construction has increases 80% in the last 30 yrs.

Only a small fraction of our toxic chemicals are captured, resulting in millions of tons of toxic chemicals.

Hyper focusing on single issues leads to false and misleading stats, such as energy use index, vs total energy (sunk energy)

When you pull one string of nature, you find it connected to everything else. In a sustainable world., we are all connected and the solutions must be connectd as well. We need ecosystem designs that utilze and sustain our environment, We have changed our future and we must now act as additional chance agents to cope with those changes and mitigate the effects.

Rachel Carson, HJane Jacobs, Donna Meadows – original women of green. These women counsel respect for the past, humility in the present and hope for the future. Without hope for the future, what is the point?

Kate Goldstsein

My voice, clear and true, and often unfiltered has gotten me in troubl over and over again.  I learned it was OK to talk out of turn. I learned how not to talk for 45 minutes at a atime.  By Jr. yr I’d finished my physics curriculum and thought that’s what I wanted to do. Then one day, I was sitting at the grenhouse across from physics department at Brown, I walked across the stret to talk to a physics prof to tell him I wanted to work there. Worked there from age 16 to 21.

I flooundered when I entered college, asked for help, then explored 17 diffrent classes to find what worked for me. Tried engineering : hey this is like physics, but with all the stuff I don’t like.  I found the environmental dpartmetn and found that I could have a lot of fun doing the things I liked to do there. Then I went to NESEEA, got a look at solar panels, loved the idea, and asked to be hired. Next week I was putting up solar panels. Applied to PHD programs, went to TX, didn’t really fit. Went to conference at MIT Fraunhoffer Sustainable Energy, came back here and tried to work for Fraunhoffer, and had no chance of getting into MIT. So I

PHD thesis involving: Using IR to determine R-value of home w/o the

NSEA is the only place where it I feel no matter how many hours I work, it fels like an even trade. Every day I look around in awe, just likeI did at 12 yrs old.

Jacquelyn Henke

I am a woman of green today because of zood – the need to preserve, educated and repopulate. It became my mission to become a zoo architect, and joined groups to help animals survive in the wild.

I learned about our living style and its impact on the animals locations.

My grad school work brought me to sustainablity and real estate.

You have to kbnow your environmental story. In New England, my car is a Jeep 2001 vehicle kept on the road. Mostly use public transit.

Most opportunities hav come from volunteering. Find a mentor, to hlp you reach your goals. Then be a mentor.

Be your own advocate.

Know your audience – just because your idea is green and saving a planet, doesn;’t mean pople will support you. Need to know my audience and their motivations. Tailor to ach. Sometimes fuzzy, business, preachy, fight.

Stay Current

Need to know qs to ask to sparate greenwash from green fact.

My own case gets strongr w/discussion.

Volunteer

Allows me to give back, but every org has led to good pro experiences through networking.

Find your passion

W/o passion you won’t be happy. Reinvent your self without losing your self.

If not me, who, if not now, when?

If I don’t do it, who else can. If it doesn’t get done when will it.

Sheryl Sandberg: Why we have too few women leaders at www.TED.com.

When people try to dismiss me as a “tree hugger” I say, well you can call me that, but I am a woman who takes responsibility for my role on the planet, and isn’t it a shame you don’t do the same thing.

Bomee Jung

Greening affordable housing. Started in a windowless room. It was an exciting time to work in a tech startup, but the products I was producing didn’t have any real connection.  I then spnt a yr in China, and realized my understanding of environment (trees, wild lands) was very narrow.

Came home and started GreenHome NYC, uses peer learning model to connect people to info. Free monthly forums, 2x annual green buildings tour, send volunteerst o speak w/coop and condo boards.

Came to boston to MIT City Planning program.

Went to work for Enterprise non-profit affordable housing organization. Bring low income folks out of poverty with healthy affordable housing.

Green Communitis initiative.

Outcomes: using criteria = under 2k investment gave nearly 5k savings to invest in things that didn’t have monetary benefit. 1/2 NYC bilding stock is older than 1945.

Run a weatherization program. Do th work, measure the outcome. We pay for 2 yrs utility bill monitoriing. Use a comprehensive approach, and measure all the way through the process – including teaching superintendents to run buildings well.

Goal 50% green buildings in our portfolio by (date?)

Lessons learned by being a software engineer:

Transparency improves quality lowers costs, and speeds innovation.

Release early, release often: iterative development gets you valuable feedback. More peer review brings better results.

“What ought to b, can be – with the will to make it so.”

Charlotte Matthews

VP sustainability for Related Real Estate, 15 bil buildings.

Family moved to Hong Kong. I feared that my saved trees from childhood would be killed by

Worked to prevent oil drilling.

Maj in env. science w/focus on architecture: ready for a job that doesn’t exist.

I’m the only sustainability expert in the country. I didn’t have the expertise to be innovative. I then joined a green building.

Why consult on Green Buildings when you can build them? Want a job? YES! Green building is now taking off.

Developers Bank of AMERICA TOWER REJECTS LEED. But I get called in, they go LEED.

Housekeeping starts throuwing away our mugs. My job now includes dumpster diving. you can’t be proud.

How about using CFLs for construction lighting.

Went to work on building Snowmass village in CO. Used that as a

We have 1 project, need to cut costs, or get laid off. We save lots and lots by using CFLs.

NYC is greening its codes. I represented Related’s chair on the committee. We can do that, we already have. Green wins!

Tomorrow is a big open space of endless possibility.

——-

Bernice Radle

Buffalo NY.

Began as a guitar playre environmental science major. Want to make old buildings energy efficient. Moved to Buffalo because of old crappy buildings. Join a band, asked where to find a job. Joined Horizon real estate firm, convinced them to let me retrofit their old crappy buildings. Turns into a 16 building 350 units project. It’s the biggest private sector project in Buffalo. They named a DAY after our real estate company!

Then I went to college, and started learning about buildings. Urban planning dosn’t teach you building stuff. I’m meeting these mentors and geeks, piecing together how buildins work. Which was good, cuz we were about to start retrofitting.

While doing the retrofit, I helped create a tenant car sharing program, too.

Air sealing, spray foaming roof. I got invited to NESA, didn’t really want to go, cuz I wanted to go to a music festival, but I decided to anyway and boy am I glad. Got NYSERDA scholarship.

Then spoke at NYSAFA as only affordable housing retrofit.

Dollars during the production process, saving 36% savings.

Left Horizon, started doing audits. Horizon called me to do their utility assessment.

Do I go to Columbia? Do I stay w/Buffalo nergy? What do I do. THank you to NESEA and my mentors.  They’re the reason I’m here today (I man I did the work, but…) they’re the reason I’m here today.

Pat Sapinsley

Work for Good Energies. I was an architect, but now work for VC fund.

We do good stuff. You need us.

We invest in solar, wind, and efficiency products.

Electrochromic glass, tints based on user need (harvest heat in winter, reject in summer.)

LEDs: DOE SSO web site – use the ones they recommend.

Wireless, batteryless lighting controls. One co uses the elect from your fingr on th switch for power to send signal.

Smart grid.

Tell refrigerator to not be on during peak el;ec use.

Building managment system controls that retrofi.

HVAC, make ice overnight, run coolant through the ice during day in peak electric use time, so the daytime use is reduced.

12 yrs w/my children – they redirected me in an env. direction I wouldn’t have gone in w/o my kids.

The diversion got me into all sorts of things – community service, parks organization (save the elm trees), park over rail yards, bike path. I got more env. learning and started to teach, which led to research for 12 yrs at home on my computer. You don’t do that if you’re servicing clients everyday and working on their stupid kitchen and bath renovations. The kids gave me the opportunity to change careers (at a very advanced age). This computer is a university in a box.

Don’t listen to that stupid little voice that says you can’t do that, you’re a mommy.

77 yr old came into office looking for investment. I said we were reluctant to fund someone so old. He said, “My father just died at over 100 yrs old after publishing his second book, I figure I have a 30 yr career ahead of me.”

Q&A

Q: Best panel I’ve seen yet. Would you speak more about mentorship, how did you seek that out, what qualities did you look for in a mentor, what stumbling blocks did you encounter?

A: Go drink with your mentors! The conversations late at night, about super geeky stuff very helpful.  

We have a lot of mentors. We’re making a lot of decisions right now – everyone I’ve met here has given me some advice – really good advice.

I look at people who have the qualities I want to have, and sit down and ask.

Mentoring: You’re not a successful mentor until you notice your mentee knows more than you do. It’s a proud moment.

Q: NO need to apologize for an all woman panel. I’d love to see an all-male panel talk about the challenges they face in this realm.

A: For students: NESEA is one of the most nurturing organizations. Find the NESEA person who is expert in your field, and let them know your interest, and they will b as excited as you are.

A: Most of my mentors were men. Green men are kind of like women in the best ways that women are. I’ve really benefited from that.

If you’re a female programmer, you’re sure to be the only girl in the room at a gathering. I feel like I’m too old to have this kind of internal conflict about all this, but I do.

Women as mentors have to give to each other all the time. Find other colleagues – be giving to them as well, no matter how much or little experience you have.

Q2: At building science conference what’s with architect basing. I went knowing no one, and every one knew me at the end.

Q: This panel is not about singling out women because they’re women. It’s because bst weatherization tech I ever knew was a woman. The best architect I ever met was a woman. … because they listen the first time.

Q: My career path resonates w/yours (1st speaker). Could you go back to your career?

A; Green round table sustainable performance institute. I was architect for 12 years, and dysfunction in the industry prompted me to work from the outside to fix the dysfunction I saw – policy, education, hand-holding – touching parts of the system that need change.

Was doing clinical field work for Ethiopian and Russian refugees in Israel, and went to pick up Ethiopian family – the Russians wanted to kill the new Ethiopian arrivals. Turns out to be a cultural disconnect, why not have a half for the Ethiopian folks to use a bath house to support their cultural aversion to using bathroom in the place where they live and eat.

Q: Mothers talk about work live balance.

A: It’s a myth. There’s no such thing as work life balance.  don’t think thre was really any balance. I think life was really rich and full. Balance … no. No balance,.

A: I am an over-breeder. I have 4 kids, I carry that with me, although they’re strident activists. There’s no balance, my husband is the one who manages. Every 4 months he has a 24 hr meltdown and is then good to go. I suspend my bitchiness for those 24 hrs and let him rant at me. Gender issues, in traditional architectural practice, wanted to work ny 80 hrs w/part of those hours at home.  The men in my office at that time, were not spending time with their kids.

I will be intentionally supportive of family issues if I start a business. No better time than when on maternity leave to start a business. The most important thing is the support system. Do what makes you most satisfied as a parent or a worker.

My husband has never said don’t do it, he has said you’re nuts. He has never said you’re supposed to be doing something ls – and that’s anincredible blessing.

I’ve only ben doing this for 1.5 yrs, so I’m sure there’s a breakdown impending somewhere. I really appreciate my company’s attitude for family friendliness. It applies also to the men in the company. I think we all need to do more to create family friendly companies. It’s really hard when you’re in a position and are trying to create space for a family while you’re working it.

Supportive partner wholeheartedly agree. We’re perfectionists, and now I have to be grateful for what is done, get used to clothes on the floor. GHive up the control freak thing.

Q: How did you feel about your own parents work life balance

A: My mother was so far ahead of her time (minority leader, ran for lt gov.) it never occured to me that I should do anything other than this. Grateful to role models from the 60s.

A: My mom is a doctor. Decided to give up training and keeping current, stay home, teach us what love was. She then went and relearned and became current, opened her own practice. I learned about boldness and fearlessness from my mom. It will ebb and flow.

A: Other perspective – I love my mother. She was a stay at home mom. We didn’t think she liked having children. She made me as independent as I am. She would hand me the phone when it was on hold. Eventually the kids grew up, she got a divorce, had to start over at age 65. All 3 of the children decided that the woman of the house is going to work, because if you’re satisfied in your life, you’ll be a more present parent.

A: Quality instead of quantity. You have to do it, because I have to do it, and we have to do it, so do it. I haven’t started my family yet (there’s still time). It’s not going to be just me and the cats, thank god, cuz that’s a scary thought. You just learn, there are different stories and ways to cope. Along with the college funds, jsut start a therapy fuind, and you’ll be alls et.

A: My parents just don’t care, which has made me fully independent. Let them do what they want (well not just what they want), because it will make them independent and strong.

A: The level of dysfunction in my family has given me the skills to do what I need in my life. All of my family was small business owners and entrepreneur. My assumption was that that’s the baseline, so when I had a job at a desk, it was just weird.

Oh the walking on eggshells thing makes you a good listener.

A: I just have to say one of my most memorable fights with my husband was “You’re talking to me like I’m a contractor.” And I said “I am no, I’d NEVER talk to a contractor this way!”

———–

Taking Stock: Where are we now in New England

Navigating Policy and Programs for Energy Efficiency

Tina Halfpenny

Mass Save has been redesigned.

National Grid, international elctricity and gas company.

– provides nat gas to 3.5 mil customers, MA, RI, much of NY state, and NH. 1.1 milon long island, $134 mil in gas efficiency programs, $367 mil in elec efficiency.

MA Green Communiies Act of 2008

Changed efficiency in MA, required admins to develop state wide 3 yr plan providing all available cost effective efficiency for MA

Required ounsel be set up

– DOER, residential customers LI weatherisazion, fuel assistance networked, env community, C&I users,

Program is designed to drive deeper and broader savings. Market was already mature in terms of achieving low hanging fruit.

Performance lighting rather than just lightbulbs. WHole system building efficiency, rather than just attic insulation. Manaement systems addd to buildings.

The key to comprehensive savings is much more costly up front.

Utilities committed to achieving 2.5% (elect) or 1.1% (gas) their revenues through efficiency by 2012. Savings must be validated through evaluation and verification efforts.

2.6 Mwh goal, costing 1.3 bil dollars

5.7mm btu gas, costing $355m gas funds

Gas/electric program integration and seamless delivery across program. Makes for much more consistent and predictable.

Funded by System benefit charges (util bill), forward market capacity, RGGI funds, seeking others.

NY State:

Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard

Goal of 15×15.

BROAD STAKEHOLDER engagement, DPS staff, electric and gas utilities, NYSERDA and consumer reps. Funded by systems benefit charge.

– Objectives:

– Moderate expected increases in bills

– enhanced system reliability

– moderate increases in wholesale prices

– and others.

Turned this into 3 yr plan for NY.

3.5M MWh savings in 3 yrs, cost of $955

4.3 MMbtu, cost of 390M

Administrators are behind in savings target to date, combined goals set for 2011.

Learned (in many cases the hard way), so proactively working on 2012 – 2015 plans.

Program design, program implementation, program monitoring and evaluation (back to program design)

Lessons Learned

New programs require more time, resources, infrastructure

Mature progs require better intelligence, or they can result in higher cost for the savings gained

multiple program admins have high potential for broader mkt penetration

multiple program admins requires tremendous coordination.

Blair Hamilton – VEIC co-Founder

“What Would Blair Do?” is a question many ask themselves as other states implement programs.

VT Policies: Gains, Frustrations and Vision

Efficiency utility, now operating under a franchise-like regulatory appointment. Was previously a contractor w/a program administration.

Feed-in Tariff – has been more than well-received. Further enhancements expected.

Revitalized alignment of interest on energy issues between administration and legislature. SHould be able to move some policy that has languished for a while.

VT was the 4th state whose legislature passed PACE enabling laws. (some roadblocks, will come back to that).

Building labeling and disclosure law: realtors are resistant – they are reading it correctly, that it’s not in their best interest, which is making it difficult to come down to a deal.

Heating and Process Fuel Efficiency: we need to be comprehensive, not have different programs with different administrators for the different energy sources in a building. We have a 10 – 1 resource problem: funds into electric efficiency (5% of rate revenue goes into electric efficiency, we’ve been over 2% a year in efficiency). 80% oil heat, 20% propane heat. That’s where our CO2 is coming from. We now have a mandate for Efficiency VT

50 mil fund for elect efficiency, 5 mil for oil & propane savings (sourced from RGGI and forward capacity funds). Looks like tax on heating fuels will be only/best source for revenues for this.

It’s becoming increasingly difficult to think what’s to be done in terms of meeting climate goals, when making our decisions based on current economics, which has us on a path of 1/4 of the pace we need to be on to meet climate goals. Policy guidance doesn’t exist to support moving above that line.

Financing:

– Pace V2 (letting go of primary mtg position)

– Pilots using loan loss reserves and guarantees.

– Pre-qualifying all customers for a program for loans.

Expanded Role of Efficiency Utility

– Mandate to regulate unregulated fuels

– 20 yr planning now in hands of Eff VT.

 — goals and budgets for efficiency are based on 20 yr period, revised and assessed every 3 yrs.

– Smart grid

Governor is talking about 3%/yr as achievable goal.

VIsions being put fort for policy driven by climate goals

Seriously asking, “Why not net zero in building sector by 2050?” Tackle that as a goal, work back to the policies that will get us there.

To achieve Zero Carbon by 2050:

Efficiency to get average of 60% reduction in all existing buildings, 20% zero-carbon energy supply onsite; 20% from de-carbonized electric grid. All new construction zero-energy.

(?Name)

Generally speaking, I tried to pit the prior speakers against each other. VEIC provides consulting to RI. When that very gentle, polite Scudder Parker is too polite to National Grid, I feel like whacking him a little bit.

Decoupling (*need more info?) turned battlefield into cooperative effort w/National Grid since last year.

Every economy is shaped by how it obtains and uses energy.

When I used that platitude in Newport, I observed Newport was a center of the energy economy in N. America. In 18th century, you had some wind, lots of wood, occasional water power. But most energy came from muscles – animal muscles and human muscles. Th civil war was a war over they type of energy to use: muscles in the south, mechanization in the north.

How are we obtaining energy now – from what does it come?

How are we using it now?

We’re doing a good job on efficiency side w/least cost approach. We’re among the strong performing states. Provided grant funding to National Grid to let National Grid do efficiency for deliverable fuels. This way customers could get full menu of efficiency services from one place.

Ingredients for success:

Organizational infrastructure that’s coherent.

Strategies that are intermediate term, annually updated (good strategic planning)

Revenue stream

We have these for efficiency.

If you have those 3 things, you are likely to make progress.

I think least-cost procurement ideas tied to system benefit charges, based in defined subsidy: we said we’re shifting from defined subsidy model to economic model where sky is the limit as long as it’s cost is justifiable via savings.

However, renewables model in RI is lacking organizational infrastructure to oversee getting it done, lack strategic planning, lack funding streams.

With regard to the funding streams, we have to do the same on the renewables side as we did on the efficiency side – go from subsidy models to economic models. Engage in better long term thinking, and recognize that it’s not just one revenue stream: seed capital to start projects, funding for customer-sited/customer-used projects, funding for primarily feed-to-grid projects.

We have to be willing to fight National Grid on this one.

I slogged through Grid’s binder o’ bashing, and talked through bit by bit, and they found that maybe what we were asking wasn’t so unreasonable after all.

We show you how not to progress when you look at how we do renewables, and how to progress when you look at what we do for efficiency.

Remember, Every society is shaped by how it obtains and uses energy. In the changing economy, how will we be obtaining and using energy? It’s my job in RI to find the answers to those questions and make it work to the benefit of the constituency.

Q&A

Q: Thoughts about next steps to move to a policy context where we can persue deep energy retrofits? (cost effectiveness is currently hampering those efforts)

A: Using current criteria for investments, which ignore climate change and carbon, to determine cost effectiveness and which assume that the cost of electricity 20 yrs from now will be the same as today. There is another way to look at this (which is the case already in EU countries): Not total resource cost, not cost-effectiveness, but what measures are the least-cost measures to get us to the goal.

Every time we do a new study, it says the cost of energy won’t go up. When we ask about major disruptions in availability/war. The answer is “that won’t happen.” This makes the costs look

A: That’s a ridiculous way to do things (using faked numbers showing same energy cost in future as today). I have to do many things. One of my “unwholesome” pleasures is codes – getting into the codes, like harmonizing building codes w/fire codes.  One of my ideas is that 40 – 50 yrs ago, we put in place housing maintenance and occupancy codes (indoor plumbing, etc.) required to live in a building. These codes are 40 – 50 yrs old, and as long as you can get the lousy furnace to heat to 60 degrees, you’re ok. At some point, we’re going to have to come to grips w/the antiquated nature of the codes applying to existing buildings and structures.

There’s no way to make sense of low-income assistance unless we have floor on acceptable standards for building performance. I’m confronted by the fact of antiquated codes when trying to make fuel affordable for low-income residents.

As long as there is no effective floor, then falling all the way to the bottom will LOOK like the least expensive way to go. But we KNOW that’s not true – it’s much more effective in the long run.

A: Some of the limitations in financing, utility is administrator – it’s frustrating we have these parameters to work under, because if the private sector isn’t delivering these services ()

Innovative products, like Micro CHP is drying up due to lack of infrastructure to support it. Solar thermal isn’t taking off, because of lack of infrastructure.

Carbon reduction isn’t considered in the parameters that dictate the efficiency programs. The parameters we are allowed to consider are very limiting. We are all remiss if we don’t put aggressive focus on changing the codes and standards.

MA is working toward some of this w/the stretch code:

http://www.google.com/search?q…

Q: Do states compare their energy programs? it took NY 1.5 yrs to get started on their 3 yr plan. Would it be better if they met and prevented reinvention of the wheel.

A: Not formally. RGGI is one place where some states are working together. Informal least-cost procurement, renewable energy portfolio standards. NASEO (national assoc of energy officers)

Q: What do we need to do to make these programs fuel blind? Elec vs oil vs propane, renewables vs everything else. How do we take care of the orphan children in our energy programs?

A: In VT, we have 19 different utilities, and one efficiency utility. We keep chipping away, we do the best we can, look at financing to address funding inequities when we don’t have the subsidies. If we were working against a carbon reduction goal, instead of working against individual fuel goals, we would go much further toward the right mix.

A: Someone needs to file an oil efficiency bill in MA. We do have a carbon goal, and we need to revisit benefit cost model, delivery model. We need to look at the codes for now, the next phase, future phases.

Q: Session on zero net energy buildings and houses: It’s pretty easy to build. The problem is can you get a zero net energy occupant? Looking for something other than a monthly mailing with a smiley face…

A: That’s something we’re struggling with w/the home energy report each month. When we audit, we’re seeing something different than what can appear on your bill. Your bill isn’t going to say “cut from 7 large screen TVs to 2”).

How do you control plug load? And people are spending more time at home, working from home, etc.

A: When I designed use of ARRA funds in RI, I was looking at behavioral economics. Is it clear, simple to do, and are my neighbors doing it? If my neighbor is doing it, and I’m as smart as they are, so I can do it too. Which leads people advantageous herd behavior. Decided that required projects in every single municipality, in a way that people could see and think “I can do it, too.” Th circular in the mail makes it look easy but doesn’t make it clear that the neighbor is doing it….

Q: (my comment re: yard signs)

A: We’re underestimating the power of competition and funding (towns competed to become communities).

Q: Your job could be that warming is serious – really serious. So many people don’t want to make any decisions. Need greater education. How about at a certain rate of usage, you hav to pay more?

A: (no A)

Q: Greenest city in Europe on track to be fossil fuel free by 2030. Expecting 50% reduction by 2015.

It’s similar to any city in New England in terms of resources. Biomass CHP heating seems to set it apart. If we’re not talking about that as part of the mix, I think we’re collectively deluding ourselves. Burlington, Montpelier, Brattleboro, Randolph, … have been trying to implment for 3 – 4 yrs. Is there anyone looking at state policy on district heating?

A: No experts on district heating on panel.  We have seen large scale development proposals with innovative district energy components, but it’s not a state policy. These are big developments.

A: NH is struggling with a thermal Renewable Portfolio Standard policy to try to support these.

Note: MA has an Alternative Portfolio Standard, worth looking at.

MA clean energy center is working toward Solar Hot Water.

Q: 100% renewables, how do we keep the power on 24×7? Storage?

A: There are talks

A: In Europe they’ve determined that xmission is more affordable than storage.

Q: As an energy education coordinator, I have ARRA money to visit low-income people whose homes have been weatherized, and bring behavioral social marketing to them to help ensure the behaviors will make the most of this.

A: National Grid compares control group of users with high users in a monthly report group, and telling them how their use compares to their neighbors’ use. It’s getting people to act.

Q: Working on some community mobilization, the research at international level shows behavior change can bring people to make 7% – 10% reduction all by itself. We have giveaways, prizes, fun events, and so on. Turning it back to what we CAN do, makes it more fun – a positive effort instead of a negative focus. We also need a common language of carbon. Carbon didn’t come up as a metric when looking to introduce solar hot water.

A: (not really a question)