Island Energy

Entries tagged as ‘Energy Reduction’

Could our schools do more to save energy and hence money?

January 12, 2009 · Leave a Comment

This district in the US has saved $600,000 that is a lot of money.

OHOES — The Cohoes City School District has saved more than $600,000 with an energy-conservation program and expects to save nearly $3 million by 2015. Five buildings in the district were recently awarded the federal government’s Energy Star label which is presented to the most energy-efficient school buildings in the country, officials said Thursday.

The district was also named an Energy Star Leader for its overall energy savings.

“We are very pleased to receive this recognition,” said Superintendent Robert Libby. “Our energy conservation efforts are saving taxpayer dollars and allowing the district to focus its financial resources on its core mission, student education. During difficult budget times like these, it is critically important that we be able to do just that.”

Since the district started participating with the Energy Education’s energy-conservation program in 2004, it has cut energy consumption by about 30 percent, officials said.

The schools have saved $616,397 and the environmental impact on just electricity savings is equal to taking 332 cars off the road or planting 39,339 trees.

The schools that received the Energy Star label included the Cohoes High School, Cohoes Middle School, Harmony Hill School, Van Schaick Grade School, and Page Avenue School.

School buildings must rate in the top 25 percent nationwide for energy efficiency to receive the label, officials said.

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How to install cheap window insulation

January 11, 2009 · 1 Comment

insulation

You don’t need to buy new windows – you can use inexpensive film and do the job your self – here is a great step by step guide for how to do this.

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Obama going big on Insulation

December 31, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Little PEI is in the vanguard – here is a snip from the New York Times that talks about a major initiative in this area for the Obama administration. What if we pushed harder here? There is about $200 million in heating costs to work on – this is really a tax on Islanders. Imagine the difference if we could reduce this by 20% – $40 million more in Islanders hands – that’s $1,000 a household in savings!

Correct those flaws, and heating and cooling costs are typically cut by 20 percent to 30 percent, a saving of more than $1,000 annually in some households. In addition, carbon dioxide emissions and the strain on the national electric and gas systems are reduced.

About 140,000 houses will be weatherized with public help this year, a total that President-elect Barack Obama has promised to raise to one million, to reduce energy consumption and cut energy costs for households and taxpayers, who often absorb those costs for the poor. This would represent a historic shift in emphasis for the federal and state governments, reducing poor people’s energy bills instead of helping to pay them.

Weatherizing a million homes annually would also create about 78,000 jobs for a year, according to the federal Energy Department’s weatherization project director, Gil Sperling.

The current 140,000 annual total creates about 8,000 jobs, Mr. Sperling said.

Although that is a tiny fraction of the five million green-collar jobs that Mr. Obama promised in the campaign, “it’s a decent number of jobs per dollar spent,” said Harry J. Holzer, an economist at Georgetown University and at the Urban Institute, a nonprofit group in Washington. “The work is productive, and the jobs are at a mix of skill levels.”

Congress added $250 million to the weatherization budget for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1. Energy experts say that money could be effectively spent in low-income households and in households that have no need of public assistance.

In the forgotten corners of tens of millions of American attics and basements, near the old Trivial Pursuit games and out-of-season clothes, are flaws that waste vast amounts of energy. Buildings often resemble colanders. Leaking ducts bleed heated air into areas outside living space. Cold-air returns suck in dust and mold from attics, or gas and oil fumes from garden equipment stored in basements. Long-neglected air filters clog, forcing furnaces or air-conditioners to work harder.

Mr. Obama’s choice for energy secretary, Steven Chu, told a group in Washington in June that an extra $1,000 could make a new house energy efficient “but the American consumer would rather have a granite countertop.”

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Progress on the insulation front on PEI

December 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

More than 1,200 P.E.I. households have taken advantage of government-subsidized home energy audits this year.

Mike Proud, manager of the Office of Energy Efficiency, told CBC News Monday that the rising price of fuel created a lot of demand for the audits over the summer and into the fall.

“It’s mostly insulation work. We hoped that that would be the case because we know that that’s the best investment to make,” said Proud.

“We’ve seen a lot of people doing the basement insulation, the attic insulation, even some doing exterior wall insulation.”

Proud believes when the price of furnace oil began to fall in July some homeowners may have postponed their plans to install alternative heating systems like pellet stoves, and decided on less-expensive upgrades.

“The whole popularity of the wood stove/pellet stove type of thing, you know, while it’s still there, it certainly hasn’t overtaken us like it did last year,” he said.

Since the beginning of the fiscal year, April 1, to the end of November, the office has loaned $1.2 million from a budget of $2 million.

Source CBC

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The Squeeze – How Energy Costs are hurting us

September 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

In 2004, we spent about $312 million on energy on PEI. This included Gas ($150 million), Diesel ($69 Million) Heating Oil (87 Million) and Electricity ($6.6 Million). The Tax estimate for the province for the 2004 year was $524 million.

Energy costs were 60% of the Island Tax base.

In 2008 – We will spend about $570 million on Energy. 109% of the Tax base in 2004 and an 83% increase in total costs for us Islanders. This is now about 91% of the 2008 estimated tax base.

In effect we spend as much now on energy as on income taxes. The estimate of the total amount of Federal Funding for PEI for 2008 is $556 Million. So we pay more in energy than we get from the Feds!

At least with our taxes, most of the money spent remains on PEI. But with our spending on energy most of this money leaves the province. We are being impoverished by this process.

This is why our first step has to be to reduce our individual spending on energy.

Here is the current breakdown of what we have to deal with:

What the figures show me is that the easiest area to work on right now and the best area to reduce the pain in all our pocket books is heating. Heating of our homes and heating of all public buildings. Working here also gives those who are the most vulnerable the most immediate relief.

The average home on PEI uses 3,500 litres of heating oil a year. That is $3,815 a house at current prices.

With work we can hope to reduce this systemically and permantly by abut 40% – That’s $1,526 back in your pocket.

If we could save 40% on all heating oil (include Schools, Manors etc) that would bring $72,000,000 back into circulation and keep this money on PEI. For remember, all but a fraction of our dollars that we spend on heating oil leaves PEI.

In this context then, the money that you and I spend on insulation etc is not like buying a TV. It is like buying a tax free Bond. It is like you buying an RRSP – it pays you back tax free.As oil prices rise, so does your return.

Of course the opposite is true. If we do nothing, we will soon be paying more in energy costs than in taxes. This money will leave the Island and we will be soon unable to pay for what we need to live.

At first many will have to choose between eating, heating and working. Then we will have to cut all spending – our schools are very vulnerable, healthcare, roads – all will have to be cut back.

As I looked at the numbers for even 2008, it is clear to me that even if oil prices stay the same, that we are on the slippery slope. With the reality of Peak Oil – we have to act now.

Heating first for both homes and government itself. Then we have to look at our driving habits.

I will post shortly on how others are making large reductions here.

Then we have to look at alternative sources that we can control on PEI

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Uk to Spend 1 Billion Pounds on Energy Saving – The Trend Builds

September 11, 2008 · 2 Comments

It is looking as if Energy Saving is an idea whose time has come. Prime Minister Brown just announces that Energy saving will be a major priority for the UK

The Prime Minister has announced a £1 billion energy package that could help households across the UK save more than £300 a year on their energy bills.

Watch the press conference (Windows Media)

Speaking at a Downing Street press conference, Mr Brown said the Government will legislate to channel £910 million from energy companies into energy-saving initiatives such as providing loft insulation and cavity wall insulation free of charge to elderly and low-income households and at a 50 percent discount to others.

Cash will also be pumped into a new Community Energy Saving Programme that will provide up to 90,000 homes with targetted advice on improving their energy efficiency and reducing their bills.

The Prime Minister said he did not expect energy companies to pass these costs back to consumers through future prices. Business Secretary John Hutton added that the Government “will not hesitate to intervene” should an Ofgem review suggest that cinsumers were getting a raw deal.

Mr Brown said the Home Energy Saving Programme would help drive “lasting change” in UK energy efficiency and consumption. Environment Secretary Hilary Benn, also at the press conference, said that each household could save £100 through loft installation and £150 through cavity wall installation in just 12 months.

Other Government plans to help people with their fuel bills include negotiating lower tariffs with energy companies for up to 600,000 homes, increasing cold weather payments from £8.50 to £25 per week in severe conditions and providing cash on top of Winter Fuel payments to the over-60s and over-80s of £50 and £100 respectively.

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Higher Oil costs – What if you are a landlord? How do you stay in Business?

September 4, 2008 · 1 Comment

PEI landlords are going broke with higher energy costs – they have gone to IRAC to ask for a significant increase of between 7% – 30%.

Landlords on P.E.I. have asked the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission to let them increase rents next year from seven to 30 per cent.

The requests came in the form of written submissions to IRAC. Twila Whalen, director of residential rental property, told CBC News Tuesday this has been a busy year for submissions. Most years there are no more than five, but this year more than 30 have been received, 18 from landlords and 13 from or on behalf of tenants.

Landlords say they need the increase to cover the cost of heating oil. Whalen said some tenants are worried they’ll be hit with a big increase all at once.

“Some of the tenants were actually requesting that if there’s going to be a large rent increase that it would be divided between two years or three years, not make it all at once,” said Whalen.

“That would be understandable, being that their increase in income would never cover anything, for example, like a 10 or 20 per cent increase.”

IRAC will decide by the end of the month how much rents can go up as of Jan. 1. The increase last year was capped at one per cent.

We are caught by a dilemma here. There are 11,000 renters on PEI. Many are the most vulnerable. But no one is a landlord as a charity. Costs have gone up by a lot. I spoke to a landlord the other day who simply does not know how he can continue – he is seriously thinking of not having tenants.

So how do we balance out the needs of the providers of appartments and those that have to have a home?

I humbly suggest that we have to see both at the same time – it can no longer be tenant versus landlord – but we have to find out how to meet the needs of both.

No reasonable return for landlords means no apartments. No apartments means that we have lots of homeless. Apartments that are too expensive means that we have lots of homeless.

Surely, to prevent homelessness, we have to help landlords AND tenants reduce their use of energy and later to make the shift from oil to local energy sources.

In my own case – I too am a landlord – I will be adding more insulation to the attic of my rental. This should reduce the costs – but I get no help in this. All the investment comes out of my pocket. I have installed a pellet stove and I have set up the water heating to be in the control of my tenant. I will supply the pellets and while I still supply oil heat from my own hose, I have asked him to use the pellet stove as much as possible. I will install a more flexible thermostat.

It’s not ideal. Ideal would be to have my tenant responsible for all his energy use. But like most landlords – that is technically not possible. At some point don’t we all have to be responsible? My landlord friend was livid last winter to see windows wide open in some of his units. The full burden cannot be only on the landlord. There has to be a partnership I think.

I think that this is a strategic issue that is grounded in PEI having a civic society. I fear that if we leave this alone, we risk having a lot of homeless people.

We have to have a layer of housing that is affordable. Until now rentals have been this layer. Few renters and landlord on their own are going to be able to come up with a process that will satisfy both parties.

I think a mediator and a plan for support is called for.

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How Solar Water Heating Works

September 1, 2008 · 1 Comment

Here is Rick installing my one panel solar water heating system 2 years ago. The small panel on the left produces the power to drive the system.

Glycol is the exchange medium that is pumped from the panel on the roof to the heat exchanger in my basement.

The small cube on the right is the heat exchanger. Heated Glycol comes down from the roof in insulated pipes and heats via an exchange water from our well that is then stored in the water heater on the right. The main water heater draws on this hot/warm source. On a good summer day the water is so hot from the solar heater that no extra power is required. On a modest day it means that the water heater draws warm water rather than cold water fromt he well.

When we first put this in – we and the ‘guys’ knew much less. We connected the solar source directly to our oil furnace. But the furnace would constantly be heating its own water jacket without drawing on the solar heated source.

Now the new norm is to isolate the furnace completely.

When you do this be careful about how the systems connect so that you maximize the value of the solar heat.

Oh and my economics? I used to use an entire tank of oil from May to September. About $1,000 now. My investment in a one panel system is just over $4,000. I am expecting an ROI of somewhere between 12% – 20% depending on the weather for there will be some electrical costs.

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Solar Water Heating for Apartment Buildings – The Economics for Landlords

September 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

This is a 3 unit apartment building in Charlottetown, PEI. There are 11,000 apartments on PEI out of a total of 54,000 households. I have been wondering what can landlords do to reduce their exposure to oil costs.

I called my friend Wes, the owner to find out how he had made the business case for adding solar water heating to his building.

Wes sees the math like this:

Each unit uses about 1,750 litres of oil a year. At current prices this is about $2,000 a unit. About 25% of the cost/use ($500) is in water heating. The potential for Solar in normal years on PEI is about 60% or $300 a unit. So Wes’s target is about $900 a year in savings.

The cost of the installation was $5,000. So his pay back 5.6 years. His after tax ROI is 18%!

I am finding that in this time of low interest rates and uncertainty about the safety of the “market” that investing in my own energy savings is a good use of my capital. Even in a poor summer like this one with much less sunshine Wes might at worst get 7% or 8% – still way better than in the market. Over time of course the returns get very attractive – for as oil prices rise, the return gets better.

This is only a small operation. I wonder what the potential is for the larger operators on PEI? With 11,000 units out there – there is lots to play for.

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Here is the help you can get from the Government of PEI

September 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The main thrust of PEI’s approach at this moment is to reduce demand and consumption. This is something that we can all do and that has an immediate impact on us as individuals and as a province with no oil of our own.

The Government of PEI offers a number of ways to help you reduce your energy use.

Prince Edward Island EcoEnergy Audit Assistance Program and the Prince Edward Island Energy Efficiency Loan and Grant Program were announced in March of this year. Under these programs the province pays half the cost of a home energy audit for households earning more than $30,000 and the full cost of audits for households earning less than $30,000.

Beginning August 1, four new or amended programs for existing homes will be available through the Office of Energy Efficiency. The programs are budgeted at $1 million, with money coming from the Trust Fund for Clean Air and Climate Change. An energy audit will be required to be eligible for all of the programs.The number of auditors has been increased from 5-10 recently as there had been a long backlog – hopefully the wait will be much less now.

The new programs include:

  • Low Income Loan Relief – Low income clients who wish to take advantage of the Prince Edward Island Energy Efficiency Loans Program, will now be eligible for up to 50 per cent loan relief. Up to $15,000 in income – 50 per cent of loan will be written off; between $15,000 and $30,000 in income – 25 per cent of loan will be written off. The program provides loans for home improvement measures recommended in an ecoEnergy Energy Efficiency Evaluation Report.
  • Renewable Heating – Renewable heating systems (wood, wood-pellet, solar, etc.) will be eligible under the Prince Edward Island Energy Efficiency Loan Program, to a maximum of $10,000, as long as the client makes efficiency improvements to the home as well.
  • High-Efficiency Oil-fired Heating Systems – An additional subsidy of $300 will be available for Energy Star Certified oil fired heating systems installed in combination with an indirect water heater or an outdoor temperature reset control. This will be supplemented by an additional $1,200 already available in other incentives and grants.

A successful program from last year will be returning:

  • Home Energy Low-income Program (HELP) – Reinstatement of this program will provide low-income homeowners with free assistance in completing comprehensive air-sealing, installation of energy saving devices and free furnace cleaning. Homeowners who have previously utilized this program will be eligible for the enhanced HELP program. The 2008-09 program is particularly focused on controlling air leakages – the major cause of home energy loss.

Information on these programs is available on the Office of Energy Efficiency web page at www.gov.pe.ca/oee.

Or Call the Office at 902 620 3792

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High ROI – Low Flow Showerheads & Programmable Thermostats

September 1, 2008 · 2 Comments

The two best things that you can do this week to save money and get a great return immediately are to install a Low Flow Shower Head and a Programmable Thermostat. You can save up to $600 a year)

If you are a family of 4 and you all shower for 10 minutes a day – this little $10 item will save you $250 in 12 months. Of course if you have daughters – you may save more. $250 is quarter of a tank of oil.

Even a modest 10-minute shower can use up to 190 litres (42 gallons) of hot water with a conventional showerhead. A low-flow showerhead can reduce this by half or even more, without sacrificing the “feel” of the shower. There are a wide variety of low-flow showerheads available, including hand-held and designer models.

They work by restricting the flow and forcing the water through very small apertures, these showerheads aerate and increase the velocity of the water, creating a very fine but “wet” feeling spray pattern. While a conventional showerhead uses 15 -19 litres (3-4 gallons) or more per minute, the low-flow type uses approximately 8 – 9 litres (about 2) gallons per minute, with some models using even less. Many are equipped with a push-button shutoff valve which allows the user to interrupt the flow of water while soaping up, saving even more.

Low Flow Shower Head with Shutoff Valve

Replacing a conventional showerhead with a low-flow model is usually a very quick and simple job. With a variety of adapters readily available, they can be fitted to most standard shower arms, including the swivel type.

Based on PEI’s averages, you can save about $350 a year with the use of a programmable Thermostat like this.

Simple Steps to Energy Savings with Programmable Thermostats (Source EnergyStar)

Achieve significant energy and money savings that are possible through the proper use of your programmable thermostat. Learn how to:

Choose the right programmable thermostat — There are three types of programmable thermostats designed to best fit your daily schedule. Learn more about the energy saving features that each model offers.

Have your thermostat properly installed — Here’s what you need to know about proper and safe installation of your programmable thermostat, as well as when you should call a certified HVAC contractor to handle the installation for you.

Properly set and use your thermostat — Follow these guidelines to achieve savings.

Save with your manual thermostat — If you choose to keep your manual thermostat, here are recommendations to help you save, too.

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Insulation – How to save the most money for the least cost

September 1, 2008 · 1 Comment

Last week I met with Mike Proud of the PEI Office for Energy Efficiency to get the facts behind the idea that it is not the toys (my purchases of wood stoves, pellet stoves, solar etc) that really save you money but stopping the leaks and insulating your home. This is what I found out – I feel such a fool for not starting here.

The Big Picture - Assume an average house on PEI – 1,200 square feet – If you insulate your basement and your attic and block the main leaks you can save up 40% of your oil bill. The average oil consumption on PEI is 3,500 litres. So about $1,200 at current prices. That is a lot of money for anybody.

The details – Your basement and your attic are the key areas. Mike Advises R50 in the attic for older houses and R60-80 for new houses. I discovered that I might have R12 at best. In October I am adding the rest that I should have had all along. I will post the details with pictures and commentary when the work is done.

Here is our basement under the Granny Flat. Robin did all of this herself with the aid of a neighbour’s son. I can’t recall where I was then! Styrofoam on the wall and fibreglas in the edge. It took her less than a day.

Air Leaks – An important part of the situation. 30% of the loss of heat in your house. Our electrical wall sockets are an important area of loss. We are using the child proofing plugs right now but are thinking of going further and removing the plugs and insulating behind them. We also have new windows but this is a huge expense. You can use plastic film. Our doors also did not fit as snugly as they should and we also use insulating door tape that sticks onto the jam.

The PEI Government can help you:

Beginning August 1, four new or amended programs for existing homes will be available through the Office of Energy Efficiency. The programs are budgeted at $1 million, with money coming from the Trust Fund for Clean Air and Climate Change. An energy audit will be required to be eligible for all of the programs. The new programs include:

Low Income Loan Relief – Low income clients who wish to take advantage of the Prince Edward Island Energy Efficiency Loans Program, will now be eligible for up to 50 per cent loan relief. Up to $15,000 in income – 50 per cent of loan will be written off; between $15,000 and $30,000 in income – 25 per cent of loan will be written off. The program provides loans for home improvement measures recommended in an ecoEnergy Energy Efficiency Evaluation Report.

Renewable Heating – Renewable heating systems (wood, wood-pellet, solar, etc.) will be eligible under the Prince Edward Island Energy Efficiency Loan Program, to a maximum of $10,000, as long as the client makes efficiency improvements to the home as well.

High-Efficiency Oil-fired Heating Systems – An additional subsidy of $300 will be available for Energy Star Certified oil fired heating systems installed in combination with an indirect water heater or an outdoor temperature reset control. This will be supplemented by an additional $1,200 already available in other incentives and grants.

A successful program from last year will be returning:

Home Energy Low-income Program (HELP) – Reinstatement of this program will provide low-income homeowners with free assistance in completing comprehensive air-sealing, installation of energy saving devices and free furnace cleaning. Homeowners who have previously utilized this program will be eligible for the enhanced HELP program. The 2008-09 program is particularly focused on controlling air leakages – the major cause of home energy loss.

These programs are in addition to the Prince Edward Island EcoEnergy Audit Assistance Program and the Prince Edward Island Energy Efficiency Loan and Grant Program that were announced in March of this year. Under these programs the province pays half the cost of a home energy audit for households earning more than $30,000 and the full cost of audits for households earning less than $30,000.

Information on these programs is available on the Office of Energy Efficiency web page at www.gov.pe.ca/oee.

Mike tells me that it is easier to call him and his office at 902 620-3690 or 1-877-734-6336

Here is a great check list if you want to get a handle on what your opportunity to save will be: The pdf is here: air-leakage-checklist-aug-26-2008-1

If you want to do this work your self, Here are some good tips on how to do the work from the Federal Government

Here is the Kit that you can get from the PEI Government:

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What is my biggest lesson in the last 5 years? Insulation!!!

August 26, 2008 · 1 Comment

I tend to be too early in most things – yes I paid a fortune for a DVD player when there were also no DVD’s. It has been the same for saving on my oil bill. But while being silly – I am not stupid in that I do learn from my being too early. Here is what I have done (bought and installed every toy out there – wood boiler, wood stoves, pellet stoves, solar water heater, new windows) and now I will tell you what I have learned.

What I missed from the outset was that the best bang for my buck would come not from new sources of heat but from losing less heat. I sort of got that when we replaced at huge cost most of our windows. This was a 5 year project and of course it does help. BUT it is very very expensive.

What I missed is that we should have R50 in the roof. Very simple and compared to windows – very cheap. The contractor comes for a quote this Saturday. We only have R12 now. I will tell you more after he has given me the lowdown. If you have a new house it is best to have R60-80 installed.

The big lesson in all of this is to find the best way to cut consumption. The experts say that we can cut up to 35% of our use of heat by really insulating well. Here is a neat short video made by our own Sara Fraser (no slouch in her own life either as this interview with her will show you as she demos her own solar water heater) of the CBC that tells us more about the opportunity and how inexpensive this can be. Here is the  CMHC site that has a lot of information on insulation.

So I have done all of this in reverse. I should have started with simple insulation.

By the way (Link to my own story here) Then link will tell give you a lot of detail on my high efficiency wood stove that heats my entire house.  It shows you a lot about the workings and the installation of the pellet stove that we put into our Granny Flat and talks about pellet fuel – all pellets I have found are not the same.

The solar heating is something that I want to give a post too – after 2 years we are just getting this right. I will also post soon on my biggest single failure – my wood boiler. Also later the issue of wood itself – what I am learning abut storing it, using it and selecting it.

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Welcome

August 23, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Welcome to this blog where I hope that we can help each other find ways of cutting our energy costs and ultimately creating a local alternative.

I think that finding ways to reduce my costs and to find alternatives are no longer just idealistic dreams. For I think that we are now on the slope for much higher oil prices. Yes they may go down for a while. But I believe that the trend is up and up a lot. Even this coming winter will see an oil tank costing over $1,000. In the past I would have had 4 fills from September to April. Who can afford that!

Over the last 5 years I have done a lot to reduce my dependence on oil. But I found it very hard to get good advice and I have made every mistake possible. I wished that I could find a site on the web where I could trust that I was getting the best advice possible. I also wished that I could speak to or at least exchange emails with others who knew more than me or who were testing systems, processes and equipment.

So this is my purpose on this blog. To create a space where a growing community of people can connect with each other, exchange ideas and build a body of trusted knowledge so that many of us can cut their energy costs and in the end reduce our dependency on power sources that we cannot control.

I will do a lot of the legwork – starting with sharing what worked and did not for me. I will introduce you to others that know more than me who can become a resource for your questions. I will use video to show you in detail what others are doing. I invite you too to tell me your stories and to send me pictures and video of what you are doing. I will tell the story also of what the PEI government and the local communities are doing. I hope to share stories of what other communities are doing as well.

So that there is no barrier to ideas and to connections, I am also starting a Ning Community Site where it will be possible for anyone who is interested to join the community as an equal participant. Here you can post directly, join forums, post videos and pictures.

I have a particular interest in my home PEI – but of course all of us face the same problem and my bet is that this community might surprise us by being much broader.

I close my welcome with my aha about all of this. Why does doing this work so excite me?

It excites me because I think that we may be once again at the beginning of an old Island story. PEI was founded by tenant farmers. Men and women who cleared 100 acres with an ax and a horse. But they were tenants who paid rent to landlords that did not even live on the Island. All that was created was by their sweat and blood. But they had no control – for they were tenants. In the 1800’s a movement began to buy off the landlords. After a long struggle in the 1860’s, they were successful and the Golden Age of PEI began. A time when most families were free of the control of others.

Where we are now reminds me of this struggle.

We too have given up much of what is important to us to decision makers and to processes that we cannot influence. You and I cannot control the price of oil or its supply. Nor can our government . Nor can the government of Canada. Oil is the foundation of our current way of life. Not only do we heat our houses, drive our cars but oil is also how we grow and buy our food. Oil is at the heart of everything. But now it will get very expensive and we may not even get it sometimes when there will be disruptions.

So what do we do? We can complain. We can blame. We can become impoverished.

Or we can act ourselves. We can be like our ancestors who decided that their lives would no longer be controlled by outsiders. We can work together to reduce our dependency and to create a local alternative. We can take charge of our destiny and we can give our children a future.

What would we have to do?

I think that we can cut our energy use in half. I think that we should aim to create 50% of our own energy locally on PEI?If we did this, we would in effect become independent. We would become a true HAVE province. Not because we were lucky and found oil but because we were brave and smart and we found a better way of living.

I am nearly 60. I want to die knowing that we are well on our way to breaking free. Wouldn’t you?

I don’t think we can do this on our own as isolated individuals. If we start to work with each other, we  will be able to learn more and to do more.

This is my dream.

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