The Cape & Islands Green Pages This section of the website is intended to assist local consumers - residents, homeowners, businesses, and other organizations - in adopting cleaner and green energy supply, delivery, and use technologies and practices. Participants in the Cape & Islands Renewable Energy Collaborative plan to begin work on the "Green Pages" in summer 2006 under a grant from the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative. Once completed, the "Green Pages" will identify organizations and businesses providing services and products relating to sustainable design, high-performance construction, green building, energy efficiency, and renewable energy within local communities. In the interim, visit the "Sustainable Yellow Pages" maintained by the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association. Plans are to incorporate information on the following types of product and service providers: - Designers and installers of solar, wind, and other advanced energy systems
- Architects and builders with expertise in sustainable design, high-performance construction, and green building
- Plumbers, electricians, engineers, and other contractors with cleaner and green experience
- Analysts, planners, educators, and other consultants with cleaner and green expertise
- Businesses selling cleaner and green materials, products, and technologies
- Organizations and agencies working on energy issues
Last updated 07.07.06 | | 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. | |