ACape & Islands Energy Information Clearinghouse
AA Community Resource Developed Through The Cape & Islands Renewable Energy Collaborative
  CIREnews
The Hummer/Photo Source:Winnepeg Luxury Cars
  Canal Electric Plant/Photo Source: Richard Judge  
Sinking of the Argo Merchant/Photo Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  Solar Flare/Photo Source: National Optical Astronomy Observatory  
Race Point Photovoltaic Installation/Photo Source: Cape Cod Chapter of the American Lighthouse Foundation
 
Woods Hole Research Center Ordway Campus Green Building Showcase/Photo Source: Cape Cod Center for Sustainability
 
Another Windy Day at Barnstable-West Barnstable Elementary School/Photo Source: Charlie Powicki
 
Cape Cod Regional Transit Authority's Propane-Fueled Bus/Photo Source: Cape Cod Regional Transit Authority

C&I REnews Archives

C&I REnews #1 April/May 2004
(Adobe Acrobat Version)
CIREnews Launched - Energy Information Clearinghouse Released - Community
Wind Meeting Held - Land-Based Wind Technology Assessed - PV Education and Outreach Grant Awarded

C&I REnews #2 – Summer 2004
(Adobe Acrobat Version)
Biodiesel Penetrates Local Markets for Transportation Fuels
High-Performance Building Enters the Spotlight
Cleaner & Green Transportation Options Spark Imaginations
Outreach Activities Proceed for Land-Based Wind Projects
Cape & Islands Energy Information Clearinghouse Update— Review & Information Request

CI REnews #3, Fall 2004
(Adobe Acrobat Version)
Clean Energy Curriculum Development Project Gathers Momentum
Investments Planned to Transform Renewables Market and Build Human Capital
Technology Roadmap Defines R&D Priorities for a Sustainable Energy Future
CIREC Participants Receive Grant Award for Public Awareness Initiative
Wind Energy Development Update
Barnstable and Falmouth Share "No Regrets" Climate Action Strategies
Vineyard Energy Project Envisions a Renewable Energy Island
Website Offers Guidance for Buying Cleaner and Green Power
Upcoming Events

Education & Training
Clean Energy Curriculum Development Project Gathers Momentum


Once CCCC’s Applied Technology Center is complete, students will learn in a building created by cleaner and green technologies and sustainable design practices.

Classes are under way again at local schools, providing renewed opportunities for students of all ages to jumpstart careers in the clean energy sector and for communities to build human capital in an industry that could yield hundreds of new jobs in southeastern Massachusetts within the next 5 years.

Under a grant from the National Science Foundation, ape Cod Community College (CCCC) is leading the regional effort to create a highly skilled workforce in clean energy technologies. CCCC’s partners include Cape Cod Tech, Upper Cape Cod Tech, Massachusetts Maritime Academy, Cape & Island Self-Reliance, Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve (WBNERR), and UMass Dartmouth.

At CCCC this fall, Richard Lawrence of Self-Reliance is giving instruction on renewable technologies, and Kevin Galligan of Cape Light Compact (CLC) is teaching about energy efficiency and conservation. At the two tech schools, hands-on learning opportunities are being created by on-site energy management, lighting, solar photovoltaic (PV), solar thermal, and wind monitoring systems.

By spring 2005, an innovative, web-based teaching tool—developed based on technology from HighStreet Networks—will be providing all students with real-time access to operational, meteorological, and other data from clean energy technologies sited in the region.

Market Building
Investments Planned to Transform Renewables Market and Build Human Capital
The Cape Cod Economic Development Council (EDC) is collaborating with local organizations to develop an event series on green buildings in 2005. This series, one of three new areas where the EDC plans to invest Cape & Islands license plate funds, will help accelerate market transformation for renewable and energy-efficient technologies.

In many building applications, present market conditions favor less efficient energy uses, as well as energy supply options with adverse impacts on local environments and communities. Incentive programs encourage site-specific installations of cleaner and green technologies. Broader market penetration may be achieved by promoting life-cycle advantages, turning market actors into allies, and designing policy interventions.

The EDC-cosponsored event series will engage builders, architects, engineers, the construction trades, building and equipment suppliers, advocacy groups, government officials, and other stakeholders in identifying and breaking down barriers to sustainable design and green construction. These events will leverage existing outreach, education, and incentive programs offered in local communities.

Already a major funder of CCCC’s energy education programs, EDC also plans to support curriculum development at Cape Cod Tech and Upper Cape Cod Tech and a conference on the connections between renewables and economic growth in Barnstable County.

Strategic Planning
Technology Roadmap Defines R&D Priorities for a Sustainable Energy Future

A new report introduces collaborative visions of a global energy economy that serves and sustains human society, and it outlines strategies for accelerating the development and adoption of renewable technologies and other advances in energy supply, delivery, and use.

Electricity Technology Roadmap: Meeting the Critical Challenges of the 21st Century was published by EPRI, a nonprofit research center funded by more than 1,000 organizations in 40 countries. Its conclusions are based on 14 “limiting challenge” studies that engaged the industry, government, nonprofit, and R&D sectors in exploring issues expected to pace technological progress and influence the human condition through 2050.

The “Eco-Asset Management” study, directed by Water Energy & Ecology Information Services (WEEinfo), focused on institutional and technical barriers to the valuation of ecological services and to the cost-efficient resolution of resource management issues such as transboundary pollution, climate change, and biodiversity. It defined an R&D strategy to support adoption of ecologically sound, market-based policy frameworks that stimulate investment in renewables, efficiency, environmental protection, and other key areas.

To accelerate progress toward a sustainable energy future, EPRI is coordinating with government and industry stakeholders to mobilize public-private action around the Roadmap’s recommendations.

Public Education
CIREC Participants Receive Grant Award For Public Awareness Initiative

Self-Reliance and WBNERR have received a grant award from Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MTC) to support the next phase of CIREC’s “Transitioning from the Energy Present to the Energy Future in the Cape & Islands Region” project. Phase II work will build on Phase I activities, which led to the creation of the Cape & Islands Energy Information Clearinghouse.

Under the new grant award, CIREC participants will conduct public awareness activities within the context set by the Massachusetts Climate Protection Plan and the 2004-05 Cape Cod Sustainability Indicators Project. The state’s plan supports “no regrets” actions for reducing greenhouse gas emissions in ways compatible with economic growth and other state policies and objectives, while the indicators project encourages planning and action toward regional and local sustainability.

CIREC participants will design communications materials and will offer events and other educational opportunities (1) to build awareness of the “true costs” of energy supply and use options and of local climate change mitigation activities (see next article); (2) to promote green power purchasing and community- and residential-scale installations of wind and solar technologies; and (3) to encourage sustainable thinking and action at the individual and community levels.

Wind Energy Development Update

  • On Land: A couple private sector initiatives to develop local wind resources have been cancelled or put on hold, but the MTC-sponsored installation of a 1.5-MW wind turbine at CCCC is on the fast track following a favorable public review meeting. In addition, under MTC’s Community Wind Collaborative, 13 Cape and Vineyard towns have expressed interest in municipal wind projects, screening studies are complete for six towns, and wind resources are being monitored at three specific sites. Orleans is slightly ahead of the pack: By the end of 2004, a technical and economic feasibility study will be complete for a wind installation to power water facilities and other municipal loads. These findings will inform community decisions going forward.

  • Over the Horizon: To lay the foundation for future wind projects in deepwater environments, MTC is funding research at MIT, WHOI, and UMASS and working with the U.S. Department of Energy and GE Global Research to catalyze creation of a national Offshore Wind Energy Collaborative. Contact: Greg Watson, watson@masstech.org, 508.775.9201

Community Action
Barnstable and Falmouth Share “No Regrets” Climate Action Strategies

Barnstable and Falmouth officials met recently to discuss local initiatives geared toward reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and meeting other town policy objectives. The meeting, “No Regrets Measures for Climate Change Mitigation: Implementing Municipal Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy Projects to Reduce Costs and Greenhouse Gas Emissions,” was held September 27 at WBNERR.

Falmouth and Barnstable are the only two Cape & Islands communities with explicit policy commitments for addressing threats posed by climate change. In 2002, they joined the Cities for Climate ProtectionTM campaign administered by the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI). Since then, the towns have inventoried GHG emissions, established emissions reduction targets and timelines, and begun implementing the systematic efforts required to achieve policy goals.

At the recent meeting, Barnstable officials highlighted the town’s Green Team, which engages all municipal departments and employees in conceptualizing and implementing emissions reduction activities that make economic and environmental sense. Members of the Falmouth Energy Committee reported on the town’s Climate Action Plan. This document, currently undergoing final review, will guide future municipal and community decision-making on the full spectrum of energy-related issues.

During roundtable discussion, attendees focused on the complementary nature of the different approaches taken by the two towns, as well as on opportunities to share experiences and lessons learned with each other and additional local communities. Attendees also explored how to educate local and regional officials and the public about the benefits of joining the ICLEI program and of looking at energy supply and use from a sustainability perspective. Future collaborations are planned to promote emissions reduction as a means for stretching municipal budgets, protecting the environment, promoting economic development, and preserving community character.

Strategic Planning
Vineyard Energy Project Envisions a Renewable Energy Island


This 1.6-kW PV array, which supplies green electrons to a public restroom in Aquinnah, is one of many systems that are helping reduce the Vineyard’s dependence on energy from the mainland

Planning for a sustainable energy future is under way on Martha’s Vineyard, guided by a vision of “energy independence within a generation.”

The Vineyard Energy Project (VEP) is directing strategic planning activities under funding provided by the MTC. Ongoing emphases are to collect and analyze data on the consumption of electricity and fuels and on the use of cleaner and green energy technologies. More than 70 operating or scheduled PV installations have been documented, as have about 50 solar heating systems. Data like these will provide a basis for collaborative efforts to develop creative, integrated strategies for meeting future energy needs in local communities.

The VEP’s goal is to develop an energy planning roadmap that identifies priorities and projects in three primary areas: energy efficiency, renewable energy generation, and energy education. The document, intended to be both visionary and practical, will be designed to compel islanders to join the effort of becoming a “renewable energy island” and of providing a model to other communities on how to make—and implement—sustainable energy choices.

Public Education
Website Offers Guidance for Buying Cleaner and Green Power

New content on the Cape & Islands Energy Information Clearinghouse provides local consumers with practical information and tips for comparing the “true costs” of power supply options and for purchasing cleaner and green power products.

Under the provisions of the Massachusetts Electric Restructuring Act of 1997, local consumers can already elect to purchase power from a competitive supplier. By March 1, 2005, all Massachusetts consumers must choose a supplier. Picking a supplier can be a complex decision.

Suppliers compete primarily on the price or the environmental attributes of their power. In choosing a supplier, consumers have the opportunity to send market signals that may accelerate the transition to cleaner sources of electricity and may encourage investment in renewable energy development.

The website’s new “Tips for Choosing a Power Supplier” page is presented in “Frequently Asked Questions” format. It includes three sections. First, it offers step-by-step guidance to help consumers in evaluating the power they are buying based on the information contained in their current supplier’s energy disclosure label. Next, it characterizes supply options, including “system power” products, cleaner alternatives, and green products. Issues to consider when “going green” are treated in detail. Finally, it identifies the supply options currently available to Cape & Islands consumers, including a variety of green power products. It also presents a framework for comparing products based on price, power source, and emissions characteristics, and it offers a sample “true cost” evaluation of hypothetical options.

Upcoming Events

  • Cape Cod 2020: Kickoff Event for the 2004-05 Sustainability Indicators Project
    October 22, 8:30-10:00 am, Barnstable Superior Courthouse
    This public event will review plans for the 2004-05 project, which is designed to engage the general public and community leaders in envisioning “Cape Cod 2020” and in laying out practical objectives, milestones, and recommendations for sustaining Cape Cod.
    Contact:
    Tana Watt, Cape Cod Commission, 508.362.3828
    RSVP to sustain@cape.com

  • Initiatives for Land-Based Wind Turbines on Cape Cod
    October 27, 2:30-4:30 pm, Eastham Town Hall; October 28, 2:30-4:30 pm, First District Courthouse, Barnstable
    These public forums will provide an update on MTC’s Community Wind Initiative and an opportunity to comment on the suitability map and model bylaw being developed to provide towns with guidance for the siting and review of land-based projects.
    Contact:
    Martha Twombly, Cape Cod Commission
    mtwombly@capecodcommission.org
    , 508.362.3828

  • Community Wind Forums: Wind 101—Learning the Basics
    November 16, 2 pm, Eastham Town Hall; November 16, 7 pm, Cape Cod Community College, Science Bldg., Lecture Hall A; November 17, 7 pm, Upper Cape Cod Technical High School
    These public forums will answer questions and dispel myths about land-based wind energy projects. They feature Sally Wright, an expert from the UMass Renewable Energy Research Laboratory.
    Contacts:
    Megan Amsler, Self-Reliance, meganams@reliance.org, 508.457.7679;
    Joan Muller, WBNERR, joan.muller@state.ma.us, 508.457.0495 x107

  • Municipal Wind Workshop: Financing Options for Land-Based Projects
    November 19, 8:30 am-12:45 pm, Cape & Islands Association of Realtors Conference Center
    This event will provide municipal officials and other attendees with national, state, and local perspectives. Charles Kubert of the Environmental Law and Policy Center will review project ownership models. The MTC’s Jason Gifford will present results from a comparative analysis of the options. The CLC’s Margaret Downey will introduce an approach to improve financing conditions for municipal projects while supplying some green power to local consumers.
    Contacts:

    Megan Amsler, Self-Reliance, meganams@reliance.org, 508.457.7679;
    Joan Muller, WBNERR, joan.muller@state.ma.us, 508.457.0495 x107

C&I REnews #2

Market Building
Biodiesel Penetrates Local Markets for Transportation Fuels

Cape & Islands Self-Reliance’s 2-year campaign to make biodiesel locally available is paying off. Getting this green fuel over the bridge and onto the ferry has eliminated a major barrier to market penetration for transportation and other applications on Cape Cod and Martha’s Vineyard.


Owners of diesel cars, trucks, fleet vehicles, and construction equipment can begin using cleaner fuel by patronizing a biodiesel filling station.
Source: Joelene Ellis

Biodiesel costs more per gallon than conventional diesel fuel, but it is domestically produced, and it offers clear environmental advantages. Individuals, businesses, and communities have begun purchasing biodiesel from Loud Fuel in Falmouth and from Packer Oil in Vineyard Haven, and the Cape Cod National Seashore recently took its first shipment.

Self-Reliance is directing outreach and education activities to promote biodiesel use in transportation, marine, construction, and other applications. Later this year, it will introduce biodiesel to the home heating market through its money-saving oil cooperative.

Green Buildings
High-Performance Building Enters the Spotlight

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) named the Gilman Ordway Campus of the Woods Hole Research Center (WHRC) as one of 2004’s best green projects. WHRC’s redesigned website provides a real-time sense of how this high-performance building captures, uses, stores, cycles, and exhausts energy.

WHRC’s built environment links a renovated summer home with state-of-the-art office and laboratory space. It integrates green design practices, sustainable materials, high-efficiency construction, advanced mechanical systems, and renewable technologies. The AIA Committee on the Environment recognized it as one of the Top 10 best-practice examples of high-performance, sustainable design in North America.

The building’s embedded measurement and monitoring systems generate the comprehensive energy-related data required to fine-tune its performance. On WHRC’s “Building Performance” webpage, they offer unique perspective on the operations of photovoltaic, geothermal, efficiency, and other technologies. For example, real-time net metering data show whether the building is exporting green electrons to, or drawing dirty electrons from, the Cape & Islands power grid.

Public Education
Cleaner & Green Transportation Options Spark Imaginations

A steady downpour did not cloud the visions of students at Barnstable-West Barnstable Elementary School participating in a recent enrichment program focused on cleaner and green transportation options.


A wind-powered Hummer colors one student’s vision of a cleaner and green transportation solution.

The program reviewed present and future vehicle technologies and examined the economic and environmental advantages of fuel efficiency. Students looked at the engines and smelled the exhaust of various vehicles. Hans Keijser of Barnstable’s Structures & Grounds Division introduced the town’s all-electric EV1, on loan from GM. Joan McCarty of Cape Cod Commission described her hybrid Toyota Prius. Richard Lawrence of Self-Reliance talked about his biodiesel Jetta and displayed model solar and fuel cell cars.

After the demonstration, students drew cars they might like to drive—or to invent. Their visions of future transportation options will be displayed on the Cape & Islands Energy Information Clearinghouse. Additional energy visioning exercises, developed with local students and educators, are planned for the 2004-05 school year.

  • Chris Powicki, Water Energy & Ecology Information Services, chrisp@weeinfo.com, 508.362.9599

Renewables Development
Outreach Activities Proceed for Land-Based Wind Project

Members of the Falmouth Energy Committee are organizing a June 22 bus tour to provide residents and officials with a first-hand view of a modern wind turbine in Hull, Massachusetts. Officials and residents from local communities where wind projects are being explored are encouraged to come along for the ride and to see, hear, and learn about Hull’s highly successful wind installation.

The Hull tour is free. It complements public meetings, surveys, and other outreach activities initiated to support a possible wind energy development project being evaluated by the town of Falmouth. Earlier this year, a meteorological tower was installed at the town’s wastewater treatment plant with funding from the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MTC). The tower began reporting wind resource and other data at the beginning of May.

The bus tour, funded by MTC, is part of the ongoing educational campaign on municipal wind projects directed by Self-Reliance and Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve (WBNERR). It will depart from Hyannis at 8:30 a.m. and stop at the Sagamore park-and-ride lot. Reservations are required. Bring a bag lunch or walk to the clam shack near the turbine.

Cape & Islands Energy Information Clearinghouse Update
Review & Information Request

For the Energy Information Clearinghouse (EIC) to become a useful, community-based resource, feedback and contributions from a wide array of stakeholders are essential. Immediate assistance is requested in two areas:

1. Establish a base of facts relating to the adverse local impacts of fossil fuel consumption: Photos of the Hummer, the Canal plant, a foundering oil tanker, and the Earth’s heat engine (the sun) are prominently displayed on the EIC. All are visual indicators of problems and risks imposed on local communities by the fossil-fired “Energy Present.” Please click on the Hummer photo and other images and review the brief content on these pages. Use the Feedback link to provide comments on these indicators and to identify facts, images, and other information resources that will improve public understanding of key energy-related challenges.

2. Update the Calendar page, which lists local energy-related events, lectures, tours, and other activities. Please send notices and links regarding upcoming events for June, July, and August to cirenews@cirenew.info.

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

  CIREnews
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.
CIREC Logo

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.