Policy
Diverse policies influence—or are affected by—energy
supply and use in the Cape & Islands region. These policies
range from local building codes and zoning requirements to global
agreements established through the United Nations and other international
forums.
Market-based economic policies have the greatest impact, giving
fossil fuels and other present-day energy sources a competitive
advantage that can discourage investment in cleaner and green options:
Today's markets fail to fully account for the “true costs”
of energy options. The prices paid by consumers do not reflect adverse
impacts such as resource depletion, air and water quality degradation,
public health risks, national security concerns, and other factors.
Climate change, for example, is a physical manifestation of ecological
disruptions attributable to economic failures: Because no meter
runs as smokestacks, tailpipes, and additional sources emit carbon
dioxide and other greenhouse gases, there is no incentive to control
these emissions. As global population has increased and energy demands
have grown, the volume of heat-trapping gases being released by
fossil fuel combustion and other sources has surpassed the carbon
uptake and storage capabilities of aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.
Atmospheric chemistry is changing, with effects on climate.
Even though the prices of gasoline, heating fuels, and electricity
are increasing, they remain artificially low because they do no
reflect such "true cost" impacts. These economic incongruities
justify government intervention in other policy arenas to create
incentives that promote efficiency and conservation, which temper
electricity and fuel demand, and that encourage renewables development
and green power purchasing, which can displace fossil fuel consumption
directly. (For information on incentives, click here.)
This section will address policy areas such as the following:
Energy & Electricity
- National policy: generally weighted toward fossil fuels
for all energy needs and to fossil/nuclear for electricity
production,
with relatively little emphasis on renewables; generally
weighted toward production, with relatively little emphasis
on efficiency/conservation;
mix of regulated/deregulated markets for electricity
- State policy: deregulated market for electricity supply, Renewable
Portfolio Standard, ratepayer-funded efficiency and renewables
programs, etc.
- Regional/local plans, policies, and regulations relating
to electricity, fuels, efficiency, renewables development,
etc.
Environmental & Public Health
- End-of-pipe, command-and-control approach has created major
improvements in environmental quality and public health
over the past 30 years, and remains critical to sustaining
these
improvements
- Conventional approach can be inefficient, can create perverse
incentives, and can be inadequate in addressing certain
types of challenges
- Emerging market-based approaches begin to internalize
externalized costs, offering advantages under certain
circumstances
- Federal/state air-water policy: NOx, SOx, mercury, CO2, air
toxics, particulates, ozone, haze, water withdrawals, etc.
- Regional/local water plans, policies, regulations,
etc., especially for nutrient loading, air quality,
and mercury contamination
Climate
- Global: UNFCCC, which Bush administration continues to affirm
- International: Kyoto, domestic (e.g., UK), and multilateral
(e.g., EU) trading systems
- US: voluntary federal policy
- State: New England/Maritimes action plan, state action plan,
state cap-and-trade program, state withdrawal from Regional Greenhouse
Gas Initiative
- Local: Barnstable and Falmouth participation in the Cities
for Cliimate Portection - ICLEI
Transportation
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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
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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.
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Visions
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