Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Vermont Community Energy Mobilization Project


Efficiency Vermont is seeking applications from town energy committees, municipalities, regional planning commissions, and other entities to implement the Vermont Community Energy Mobilization Project (VCEM) Project in 2010. The VCEM project is based on the premise that local energy committees and other local community groups offer great promise for helping Vermont increase energy efficiency in residential buildings.

VCEM is an intensive four-month community-based effort designed to achieve quantifiable reductions in home energy use, stimulate an increase in the number of comprehensive energy retrofits, and increase awareness and understanding by Vermonters of home energy savings opportunities and resources. VCEM relies on community volunteers to conduct “home energy visits” to install energy saving products, conduct walk-through home energy assessments, and confer with property owners about energy saving opportunities in their homes.

Efficiency Vermont has established a statewide goal under the VCEM Project of achieving 100 comprehensive energy efficiency retrofits through the Home Performance with ENERGY STAR® program in 2010.


For more information please visit: www.efficiencyvermont.com/homeperformance.

The Rutland Regional Planning Commission will work with any interested communities to form a consortium .

Applications are due by November 23rd, 2009.

Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant Funding

On October 19, the Department of Energy released its funding announcement for the competitive grant section of the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant (ECGB) Program. The funding is broken into two sections: Topic 1, the Retrofit Ramp-Up Program and Topic 2, the General Innovation Fund.

The Retrofit Ramp-Up Program provides up to $390 million for eight to 20 project awards funded at $5 to $75 million each. Both eligible and non-eligible counties (under the EECBG funding formula) are eligible to apply. According to grant guidance, DOE is specifically targeting these funds for high-impact awards that will enable large-scale programs of ongoing energy efficiency retrofits on residential, commercial, industrial and public buildings in geographically focused areas.
The General Innovation Fund provides up to $63.68 million for projects of $1 -$5 million for 15-60 awards. The General Innovation Fund is limited to local governments that were not eligible to receive direct EECBG funding allocations through the EECBG formula grants. No recipient cost share is required for General Innovation Fund awards.

DOE highlights the following activities as eligible activities for funding:
Building Energy Audits
Financial Incentive Programs for Energy Efficiency Improvements
Energy Efficiency Retrofits
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Programs for Buildings and Facilities
Development and Implementation of Transportation Programs to Conserve Energy
Building Codes and Enforcement
Energy Distribution Technologies for Energy Efficiency
Material Conservation Programs including source reduction, recycling and recycled content procurement programs
Reduction and Capture of Methane and Greenhouse Gases
Replacement of Traffic Signals and Street Lighting with Energy Efficient Technologies

Applications for both programs are due December 14, 2009.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Recovery Through Retrofit

Recovery Through Retrofit is a blueprint that will create good green jobs - jobs that can't be outsourced, and jobs that will be the cornerstones of a 21st-Century economy," said Vice President Biden."And, thanks to the Recovery Act's unprecedented investments in energy efficiency, we are making it easier for American families to retrofit their homes - helping them save money while reducing carbon emissions and creating a healthier environment for our families."

"This report builds on the foundation laid in the Recovery Act to expand green job and business opportunities for the middle class while ensuring that the energy efficiency market will thrive for years to come," said Nancy Sutley, Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality."An aggressive program to retrofit American homes and businesses will create more work, more savings, and better health for middle class Americans."

Existing techniques and technologies in energy efficiency retrofitting can reduce energy use by up to 40 percent per home and lower total associated greenhouse gas emissions by up to 160 million metric tons annually. Retrofitting existing homes also has the potential to cut home energy bills by $21 billion annually. Yet, despite the real energy cost savings and environmental benefits associated with improving home energy efficiency, a series of barriers have prevented a self-sustaining retrofit market from forming. These barriers include a lack of access to information, financing and skilled workers.

The recommendations and actions in this Report have been carefully designed to help overcome these barriers and to leverage Recovery Act funding to help ensure that the energy efficiency market will thrive long after the Recovery Act money is fully spent.


Some recommendations in the report include:
*Provide American Homeowners with Straightforward and Reliable Home Energy Retrofit Information: Consumers need consistent, accessible, and trusted information that provides a reliable benchmark of energy efficiency and sound estimates of the costs and benefits of home energy retrofits.


*Reduce High Upfront Costs, Making Energy Retrofits More Accessible: Access to retrofit financing should be more transparent, more accessible, repayable over a longer time period, and more consumer-friendly.


*Establish National Workforce Certifications and Training Standards: A uniform set of national standards to qualify energy efficiency and retrofit workers and industry training providers will establish the foundation of consumer confidence that work will be completed correctly and produce the expected energy savings and benefits. Such standards should incorporate healthy and environmentally friendly housing principles, as outlined in the report titled, the Surgeon General's Call to Action To Promote Healthy Homes (2009). Proper certification and training standards will ensure that retrofitted homes are healthy homes. Consistent high-level national standards will spur the utilization of qualified training providers that offer career-track programs for people of all skill levels, promote and expand green jobs opportunities and facilitate the mobilization of a national home retrofit workforce.

Read the full report and recommendations.


"This initiative will not only result in considerable cost savings for homeowners on their energy bills, but also put resources in the hands of green sector small businesses who will in turn create good-paying jobs in communities across the country," said SBA Administrator Mills.


EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, who was unable to attend this event due to travel added, "This is the Recovery Act at work. Communities will benefit from good jobs, families will benefit from lower energy bills, and we will all benefit from reduced air pollution and a growing green economy. Our Energy Star program can help families cut up to 30% off their energy bills -- saving the average household more than $700 a year through efficiency investments.

The Department of Energy today also announced $454 million under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act for energy efficiency efforts nationwide. The Department is now accepting applications for a new $390 million "Retrofit Ramp-Up" program that will deploy innovative approaches to energy efficiency building retrofits. These Recovery Act funds will help create new partnerships to deliver energy bill savings to entire neighborhoods and towns. Bringing energy retrofits to whole neighborhoods at a time will simplify the process for homeowners and significantly reduce costs. When applied on a national scale, the program could save billions of dollars annually in utility bills for households and businesses and create thousands of jobs across the country. In addition, the Energy Department announced $64 million in energy efficiency funding for cities, counties, and Indian tribes.


"The Retrofit Ramp-Up initiative is designed to slice through the barriers identified in this report - inconvenience, lack of information, and lack of financing - and to make energy efficiency easy and accessible to all," said Secretary Chu. " We can literally bring energy efficiency to the doorsteps of the American people."


Separately, the Department of Energy will accept state proposals to use State Energy Grant or Energy Efficiency Conservation Block Grant funds for Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) pilots. This is an innovative model which allows communities to provide financing to homeowners to install renewable energy systems and retrofit buildings that can be paid off over time on their property tax bills. Today, the White House is announcing a "Policy Framework for PACE Financing Programs" developed through an interagency process to ensure that effective homeowner and lender safeguards are included in PACE programs.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Renewable Energy Conference

The 8th Annual Vermont Renewable Energy Conference & Expo, 2009 will take place on Wednesday, October 28th at the Sheraton Burlington Hotel and Conference Center.

This year the annual conference is expanding to include a 1/2 day public expo opening Wednesday, October 28th at 12:00pm.


Event Hightlights

* Workshop Sessions-Solar, Biofuel, Wind, Geothermal, Biomass and Hydro
* Exhibits-Visit with the state's leading renewable energy companies!
* Public Expo opens Wednesday, October 28 at 12:00 pm
* Networking Reception-Wednesday, October 28th at 5:00 pm

Please visit the website at www.REVermont.org for program updates.
Register online: http://www.revermont.org/conference.html