A green future may take green
Dec 30 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Christopher D. Kirkpatrick The
Charlotte Observer, N.C.
The green movement is coming to your home next year.
Once maligned as pie-in-the-sky, green energy programs are now embraced by
Duke Energy Corp. as money makers.
The profit motive inspired CEO Jim Rogers to come up with save-a-watt, a
program that would allow it to make money conserving electricity.
The N.C. Utilities Commission plans to hear arguments early next year about
the proposal, which would help customers weatherize homes and buy energy
efficient appliances and low-energy light bulbs, among other green efforts.
Duke would charge ratepayers, who could end up paying 4 percent extra or
saving up to 6 percent, depending on the electricity they save. The utility
wants an initial charge of about $15 a year on the average Carolinas bill to
get the program started.
James McLawhorn, chief of the N.C. state office that looks out for electric
utility customers, said there's more support for green programs only mused
about a few years ago. That's because global warming and an outcry against
new coal-fired power plants have inspired the average utility customer to
join the debate, he said. Burning coal emits carbon dioxide, blamed for
global warming.
"We were talking about (conservation) 15 years ago. But it just fell by the
wayside," McLawhorn said. "Now, there's a renewed focus on helping utilities
realize profits from this."
Not just in your home, but corporations are also going green. The green
building movement, increasingly a niche real estate market in the region and
country, will be even more the rage next year.
Bank of America Corp. and Wachovia Corp. are erecting mammoth energy
efficiency structures in uptown and experimenting with other conservation
measures, such as paperless meetings. And Freightliner LLC plans to move
part of its Portland, Ore., headquarters next year into IntelliCenter-Charlotte,
a new 150,000-square-foot green office building in Fort Mill, S.C.
And some large-scale power users, such as BMW Manufacturing Co. in
Spartanburg, S.C., want to use the sun and other clean energy sources to
power plants and save money.
Duke's Rogers, who is working with BMW on a joint solar energy project at
the Spartanburg plant, said he wants Duke to usher in a new green energy era
based on supply and demand.
"These bankers, they talk about how they want to be green -- I want to make
money helping them do it," he said after a Charlotte Chamber luncheon about
the region's economic outlook.
Duke also plans to have a final list early next year of energy companies
that would supply it power from renewable sources, such as the wind, sun and
animal waste. Rogers called for bids earlier this year as part of a promise
he made to a group of environmentalists. A state law passed months later now
requires Duke to get 12.5 percent of its electricity from renewable sources
and conservation by 2021. |