Colorado Green Building Post

January 28, 2010

Engaging the Community in Energy Conservation with Zerofootprint

Filed under: Events — Tags: , — uswx @ 8:56 am

Boulder and Boulder County have partnered with Zerofootprint, a Toronto-based organization, that helps cities and individuals track, compare and reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.

Zerofootprint’s ClimateSmart online carbon calculator and other tools can help you determine your own carbon footprint, and understand steps to reduce your score into the future. The tool permits groups and organizations to aggregate their efforts to participate in carbon reduction challenges, so business, schools and cities can compare their efforts to other groups.

You don’t have to be a Boulder resident to use Zerofootprint’s Personal Carbon Manager. They offer a range of tools for individuals and business, including a One Minute Calculator and Calculator Widget. There are also calculators and educational materials for children, youth and schools.

Commerical Retrofit Technology
Zerofootprint also sponsors the ZEROprize and the Re-Skinning Award to stimulate “market-disrupting” improvements in the design and development of retrofitting and re- skinning technologies (They use the term re-skinning as a shorthand for a holistic retrofit). These are the newly evolving technologies and building systems that improve the energy efficiency, sustainability, and livability of older buildings.

Energy management
Zerofootprint also developed a web-based software for large, multi-location organizations who must measure, manage, and report their environmental footprint. VELO facilitates data integration across operations while also automating the measurement, monitoring and modeling of an organization’s carbon emissions.

They have recently announced the TalkingPlug, a smart electrical outlet  that contains energy measurement instruments, on-off relays, appliance identification tags, and wireless networking technology. The TalkingPlug outlet serves as a wireless communication node on a building energy network. These nodes continuously send appliance-specific energy consumption data to a local gateway for data collection and storage. Zerofootprint is currently working with utility companies, appliance manufacturers and technology resellers to bring the product to market.

November 2, 2009

Conservation Contests Aim for Community Engagement

Filed under: Case Studies, Climate Change — Tags: , , , — uswx @ 8:21 am

Some climate action programs are engaging community competition in an effort to expand participation in conservation and carbon reduction goals.

Boulder’s ClimateSmart program has adopted Zerofootprint Boulder as the rallying point for group climate action. The calculator lets participants benchmark their current carbon footprint and set goals for increased carbon reductions for community-wide participation. Zerofootprint Boulder encourages residents to compare achievements to neighbors and other groups; and lets groups to set and track the success of environmental goals. Most importantly, they will be able to track what collective efforts can achieve. The system lets groups and neighborhoods form teams and measures each groups performance toward carbon reduction goals.

 Zerofootprint  Edmonton Challenge is a nine-month contest that lets Edmontonians help improve the world by greening their city. Participants are eligible for six prizes awarded each month.The grand prize is a one-year lease on a Toyota Prius hybrid.

 The ComEd Community Energy Challenge (CEC) is a municipal energy reduction competition hosted by Commonwealth Edison (ComEd). Launched in January of 2009 and continuing through June 2010, the CEC involves 12 communities in the Chicagoland area.

 For this competition each community was posed the challenge of creating an energy efficiency/reduction plan that is implementable within the one year competition. Communities were asked to develop relatively small, focused projects that fit into one of eight project categories ranging from “energy savings” and “greenhouse gas emission reductions” to “using municipal authority to promote energy savings”. Depending on the calculated energy savings from the proposed projects, points are awarded to communities based on a normalized scale. Past sustainable efforts are rewarded as well, allowing additional points to be gained. Here is the City of Elgin’s page.

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