
Conservation Update — December 1996
U.S. Department of Energy The EnergyPubs Disk is produced by NREL and the DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy's Technical Information Program. It is a compilation of general interest publications produced during fiscal year 1995 on renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies. Files are in an ASCII format that is compatible with any word processing software. Users are encouraged to pull information from these files for use in their own publications. The catalogue and disk are free in limited quantities and can be obtained through the document distribution service at (303) 275-4363 (phone), (303) 275-4053 (fax), or evanss@tcplink.nrel.gov (email). Contact: Anne Jones, (303) 275-3678.
Arizona The Energy Office has provided financial support and donated PV panels to Camp Cooper Environmental Education Center in Tucson, which was also used by SEI for the hands-on portion of its photovoltaic workshop. More than 100 people, including many international visitors, have attended the week-long workshops offered by SEI in Arizona. Contact: Jim Arwood, (602) 280-1402
Teachers Receive $10,000 for Energy Education The Energy Education Mini-Grant Program is announced at the beginning of each school year, and awards are made by December 1. The next grant cycle is scheduled for September, 1997. Contact: Jim Arwood, (602) 280-1402
Iowa Contact: Dave Evans, (515) 281-6150
Iowa's 1996 Energy Leadership Award Recipients
The awards were presented on October 15 during the annual "Iowa's Pursuit of Energy Efficiency" conference in Des Moines. Contact: Patti Cale, (515) 281-8665
Kansas Contact: Mike Dorcey, (913) 532-4996
Kentucky Contact: Greg Guess, (502) 564-7192
Louisiana The plan uses a five-star rating system with five stars being the most efficient. A house upgraded to a four-star home, one having more efficient heating and cooling with little fugitive air loss, can reap annual savings of $302.60 and 20.9 million BTUs. These savings can be applied to an Energy Efficient Mortgage (EEM) where lenders are allowed to stretch a buyer's debt-to-income ratio in order to qualify for more financing. This program will enable people to buy more home for their money while conserving energy, protecting the environment, and saving money. Contact: A. Dane Cross, (504) 342-1399
Mississippi Fordice has commended the state's energy efficiency in economic development activities and recognized the state's energy director, Chester Smith, for promoting use of Mississippi energy resources, among them a multi-million dollar project tapping the state's lignite reserves. In a recent news release, Fordice said, "We are really in exciting times, particularly with the transition taking place in the electric power industry. We are witnessing competition in an industry that has been a regulated monopoly." Contact: Dot Lambert, (601) 359-6600
The 1996 NASEO Annual Meeting The agenda addressed a variety of topics, including utility deregulation, alternative fuels, energy supplies, and other state and federal issues. During the meeting, NASEO members elected a new board of directors, and Chester B. Smith, Director of the Energy Division of the Mississippi Department of Economic and Community Development, was elected Chairman. Contact: Rebecca Myers, (601) 359-6600
North Carolina The Division received $100,000 from US DOE to initiate a far-reaching program that coordinates energy efficiency efforts among community action agencies, housing authorities, and the Energy Division, including about 168 housing authorities in the state, 31 community action agencies, and numerous local government and industry representatives. The proposed partnerships will not affect performance contracting. The Rebuild America demonstration project will emphasize energy audits, long-term tracking, and analyses of actual energy savings obtained from work performed. The Division's Energy Training and Technology Center will provide the partnerships with training and technical assistance. Training is expected to begin with a series of workshops and seminars at different sites-including public housing and community action designated sites-throughout the state. The Training and Technology Center also will provide basic training on energy audits and analysis, air infiltration reduction techniques, heating and boiler systems analysis, and analyses of cost savings benefits derived from energy efficiency renovations. Contact: Rick Benton, (919) 733-1902
Oregon But future funding for low-income weatherization is in jeopardy, according to the report. Funds have come mainly from the federal government. In 1996, funding for its major weatherization program was cut by nearly one half. As Congress continues its federal budget cutting efforts, weatherization funds could decline even more, or be cut entirely. The state's energy suppliers, particularly the electric utilities, also fund weatherization. But as they move toward a more competitive market, utilities have little incentive to fund low-income weatherization. The issue of future funding for low-income weatherization is being deliberated regionwide. In January, Governor John Kitzhaber and the governors of Washington, Idaho, and Montana named a committee to look at how restructuring the electric utility industry would affect the region. One of the concerns is how to ensure utility funding for low-income weatherization. The committee's draft report calls for a 10-year commitment by the region's electric utilities to fund weatherization for low-income households through a 0.4 percent assessment on utility sales. Regionwide, that represents roughly $30 million a year, based on 1995 figures. The committee will present its final recommendations to the governors in December. In Oregon, legislation concerning electric utility restructuring may be taken up in the next legislative session. Funding for low-income weatherization may be one of the issues it considers. In its report, the Energy Office makes the following recommendations: Develop long-term funding that ideally speeds up the number of homes that are weatherized each year but that, at a minimum, is adequate to maintain the current pace. Continue to weatherize homes to a level that makes heating significantly more affordable. The cost of weatherizing a low-income home is averaging about $3,000. Weatherize homes no matter what the heat source. Unweatherized homes pose a burden to low-income households whether they heat with electricity, gas, oil, or wood. Set annual goals for the number of homes to be weatherized and report progress to the funders. For a copy of the report, call the Oregon Office of Energy: 1-800-221-8035 (toll-free in Oregon) or (503) 378-4040 (Salem/out-of-state). Contact: Steve Sautter, (503) 378-8278
South Carolina The Energy Office will use Rebuild America grant funds over a two-year period to expand its Energy Bank Partnership program into local government and commercial sectors in eight communities throughout the state. The Energy Bank Partnership is an on-going program that provides comprehensive energy efficiency assistance to state agencies and public school districts. The program involves energy needs analysis and planning, and project selection, implementation, financing, and measurement. With the new funding, the Energy Office will partner with local governments, Enterprise Communities, housing authorities, non-profit community service providers, and a variety of business and professional organizations to market and implement energy efficiency throughout the state. Grant funds will be used to conduct energy audits and engineering analyses of targeted facilities and to verify, monitor, and report energy savings. Additionally, funds will be used to train community-based individuals to conduct energy audits, determine and implement energy savings measures, as well as verify, monitor, and report. Wherever possible, the Energy Office will assist Rebuild American clients in obtaining project financing from pre-qualified private lenders, energy service companies, and other resources. Projects eligible for financing will typically have payback periods of eight years or less. The Motor Challenge grant will be used to partner with utilities, trade associations, industry representatives, and existing industrial technologies programs to promote awareness of the economic benefits of energy-efficient drives and motors, provide energy-efficient drives and motors workshops for industry technicians, and provide follow-up technical assistance to industrial consumers. The major focus of this program will be in the pulp and paper industry and in the state's 450 rural and small municipal water and wastewater operations. Project partners will include electric utilities, the Southeastern Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry (TAPPI), and the South Carolina Rural Water Association. Other partners will include the Southeastern Environmental Resources Alliance, the University of South Carolina, Clemson University, the South Carolina Department of Commerce, and the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control Office of Waste Minimization. Potential motor-related savings to South Carolina industries are enormous. Industries in the state spend over $700 million annually to power electric motor systems. Studies show that in many situations, energy cost savings of more than 40 percent can be achieved by using a systems approach to electric motor management. Contact: Rene Daggerhart, (803) 737-8030
Wisconsin Contact: Jim Amp, (608) 2668020
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