Monday, January 25, 2010

San Mateo schools move ahead with major solar

San Mateo high schools are going solar in a big way:

Plans to build a $31.5 million solar project at six campuses in the San Mateo Union High School District were approved Thursday, giving officials the go-ahead to seek state approval to begin construction.

In September, the board selected a four-school placement option — with panels installed at Aragon, Hillsdale, Mills and Burlingame high schools — presented by Mark Quattrocchi, principal for Quattrocchi Kwok Architects.

The aggressive construction timeline calls for construction to begin this summer, with some panels going live in January 2011. Construction at Capuchino would start the latest, in 2011, due to its current construction schedule.

Aside from curbing rising electric costs, the district also plans to bank on rebates available over the first five years the panels are working, totaling over $10 million in savings.

Rafael @www.ClimateAtBay.net

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Butterflies hit by climate change


Climate change is putting pressure on butterflies (among other species).
More bad news for butterflies arrived this week from Arthur Shapiro, a professor of evolution and ecology at the University of California, Davis. Drawing on his unique 35-year database of twice-a-month observations at 10 sites at various elevations – from sea level to tree line – in north-central California, "we found many lowland species are being hit hard by the combination of warmer temperatures and habitat loss," said the butterfly expert.

The 10 survey sites lie along Interstate 80 and range from low-lying Suisun Marsh on San Francisco Bay to 9,103-foot-high Castle Peak near Donner Summit.

Rafael @www.ClimateAtBay.net

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Re-use the Bay Bridge: Alternatives to Demolition

I love this story. Grad students at Berkeley's College of Environmental Design came up with some great ideas for the old span of the Bay Bridge -- which will be knocked down in about four years. It's a great example of infusing imagination into recycling and re-use. Why not leave it there and transform it into housing and parks? Farmers' markets. Bike trails. Oh what could've been. What's Caltrans' take?

"It's such a fascinating thing to contemplate," conceded Bart Ney, Caltrans' spokesman on all things Bay Bridge. "But honestly, I don't believe anyone gave it much thought" in the original decision-making process.

No kidding. And I bet these students are a lot cheaper than the consultants hired for the bridge project.

Saturday, January 09, 2010

Saving money on water, utilities: Cupertino

Cupertino is looking to save money but taking steps to reduce resource waste. The dollars can be significant.

Lower utility bills are among Cupertino's goals in 2010. In upcoming weeks, city leaders are set to look at reducing the city's utility costs by 15 percent annually. The city currently spends about $1.2 million on gas, electricity and water each year, according to city staff.

The push to cut back comes following a recent energy audit revealing that the city spends about 76 percent of its utility funds on landscaping and to power buildings.

The audit, conducted by Siemens, looked at seven city-operated facilities including city hall, Quinlan Community Center, Cupertino Sports Center and Monta Vista Recreation Center.

According to the audit, 43 percent of city utility funds is spent on water for domestic landscaping, 33 percent is spent on electricity and 19 percent is spent on streetlights.

The city spends about $539,000 annually for water, with 95 percent of that amount used for irrigating city parks, landscaping and medians.
The savings opportunity in water alone are significant. With some drought-tolerant natives the city could have attractive - if a bit different - landscaping at a fraction of the cost.

Rafael @www.climateatbay.net

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

AB 118 - Aiming to Suspend AB 32 Work

Yikes - On Monday the Natural Resources Committee of the Assembly will discuss AB 118, which would suspend the work being done to achieve the goals of AB 32... and *requires* that cities do the same. If you disagree - send letters now!

Members of the Committee

A quote from the bill:

This bill would suspend the act until the state unemployment rate is 5.5% or lower for four consecutive calendar quarters. The bill would require the resuspension of the act whenever the state unemployment rate rises above 5.5% for four consecutive calendar quarters. The bill would prohibit the state board, and specified other state agencies, from proposing, promulgating, or adopting any regulation pursuant to the act during a period of suspension and would require that any such regulation adopted prior to January 1, 2011, be inoperative until the suspension is lifted. The bill would request local agencies to refrain from adopting rules, regulations, and policies that derive authority or responsibility from the act and to revise or repeal those rules, regulations, or policies adopted prior to January 1, 2011, until the suspension is lifted.
Since the state hasn't had 5.5% for four quarters in 30 years, the bill effectively kills AB32.

Full Text of bill

Tuesday, January 05, 2010

San Leandro adopts Climate Action Plan

San Leandro adopted a climate action plan last month continuing the progress being made by cities in the region. A point of contention however was the proposed requirement to implement efficiency measures in homes like weatherstripping when they are sold. This time of measure is a potentially powerful way to address improving the energy performance of existing homes - important because existing buildings account for about 40% of the consumption of energy.

The Oakland Tribune has an article focused on the point-of-sale element.

The city is moving forward with a plan to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent from 2005 emissions levels by a target date of 2020.

The effort, called the Climate Action Plan, states that "global warming is unequivocal and primarily human induced." It lists several threats posed by that warming and presents a blueprint for action.
...
The council voted unanimously to approve the plan, but with revisions that replaced the point-of-sale requirements with recommended standards designed to facilitate reductions in energy use.
The challenge here is that on the one hand the new homeowner will benefit from such measures with increased comfort and reduced cost and the point of sale is the most straightforward point at which to implement such a requirement. On the other hand there are two possible issues: it may create additional fees and secondly it may add time to the sale (which no one wants, especially real estate agents). These latter issues are solvable if the cost of efficiency were assumable into the loan (in which cases the services would be quick to catch up to the opportunity and quick service would be valued).