Community Snapshot: West Tisbury
This page will characterize the energy situation within the town,
in a manner akin to the prototype page created
for the town of Barnstable. It will be developed in conjunction
with town officials and staff, drawing upon data and information
collected from a variety of sources. It is expected to address the
following subjects:
- Energy Supply & Use
- Electricity
- Fuels
- Costs
- Efficiency
- Emissions and other adverse impacts
- Decision-Makers
- Town officials and agencies
- Representatives to county authorities
- Policies
- Local
- County
- State
- Federal
- International
- Renewable Resources
- Wind energy
- Solar energy
- Bioenergy
- Ocean energy
- Cleaner & Green Projects
- Municipal renewable, cleaner fuel, and efficiency initiatives
- Other renewable, cleaner fuel, and efficiency initiatives
within the town's borders
Click on Feedback if you would like to
ask questions or offer assistance.
|
|
Visit
CIGoGreen
- the
Cape & Islands Go Green Guide!
Green Pages
Sustainable Energy Calendar
Energy Action Plans
Forums
|
|
|
|
Current Fact

Dirty
Roof
Conventional
asphalt shingles are
the cheapest roofing material around but, as is usually the case,
there is a cost: They are manufactured using petroleum by-products
and, once they reach the end of their useful life, they must be
landfilled as construction debris or “downcycled”
as road materials or in other low-value uses. Credit: Houston
Advanced Research Center
More
Facts
|
Current
Vision

Green
Roof
Thatching
represents an attractive and sustainable roofing solution. This
thatched roof, gracing a barn in Yarmouthport, transforms an invasive
wetland plant (Phragmites sp.) into a useful, biodegradable shelter.
More
Visions
|
|
| The
Clearinghouse provides a central location for the collection,
classification, and distribution of data, information, and tools
addressing energy supply and use in the Cape & Islands region,
both now and in the future. |
 |
This
website is being developed through the Cape & Islands Renewable
Energy Collaborative (CIREC). Its framework was created under
a community planning grant award from the Massachusetts Technology
Collaborative (MTC).
|
 |
Project
management and content development: Chris Powicki, Principal,
Water Energy & Ecology Information Services
Web design and development: Kathleen
Tyger Wright
Graphic design: Elizabeth Hooper
Grant administration: Megan Amsler,
Executive Director, Cape & Islands Self-Reliance
Corp.
|
|