The good news is that individual states in the US are implementing innovative programmes, and saving businesses and residents millions of dollars.
Savitz says one small Massachusetts community helped families save over "$10 million in electric and gas bills by providing personalised information, with neighbourhood benchmarks and advice about how they can use less energy".
In another state, and another magazine (Yes!, probably a lot like NZ's Good Magazine), Erin McCoy reports that Kentucky is saving power, cutting carbon emissions, and creating jobs by facilitating a win-win-win situation among home owners, contractors, and the planet. A programme called How$mart provides home energy audits, works with contractors to perform the recommended work, and then checks the work to make sure it has been done properly. The average How$mart home has cut energy usage by 20 per cent.
Translating the two articles above to a Wanganui context, this could mean $8.5 million in savings per year (homes only, not business or industry).
NZ average household electricity use: 10,000 kWh/year (Waitakere.govt.nz, 2008)
20 per cent of 10,000 kWh = 2000 kWh
2,000 kWh X $0.25/kWh = $500
$500 X 17,000 homes in Wanganui = $8.5 million
In my opinion, the coolest thing about taking this perspective is that this money already exists in our community, and we don't have to "attract new dollars" as council seemingly continues trying to do. Instead, we would be retaining dollars now sent to power companies in Auckland, Christchurch or Wellington.
The other cool thing is that investments in energy savings today pay themselves back at faster rates in the future as power prices rise. In other words, the faster rates rise, the faster energy-efficient investments pay for themselves through savings. For example, under "normal usage" a compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulb now pays for itself in about six months (200 per cent return on investment). As electricity becomes dearer, the payback period for CFLs gets shorter.
And what is even cooler, Consumer magazine reports that the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority has introduced minimum performance standards for CFLs (05 Feb, 2013). "All general-purpose CFLs must pass requirements for energy performance, light quality, bulb durability, mercury levels and their impact upon the country's electricity networks."
Now the bad news - not so cool - comes from an article I read in the Herald on Sunday, March 10, in Nelson's Cafe in Stratford. The headline: Power price rises unlikely to ease: Government warned users must pay for new electricity plants.
Given my observations on governments' ability/inability to embrace sustainability (shared in last week's column), and my experience with innovative power programmes overseas, I would argue that a simple strategy of eco-thrifty education/incentives/management would render this headline unnecessary because saving power is cheaper than producing power.
Take the 34 million kWh potentially saved in Wanganui per year, and add Feilding, Marton, Bulls, Turakina, etc and the amount saved is more than the output of a new electricity plant, and at a fraction of the cost. Does that make sense?
The power firms themselves were pushing this type of strategy 25 years ago in Massachusetts, US, and reaping the financial benefits of not building costly new plants. But here we are 25 years later in "clean, green New Zealand" and the main strategy appears to be building costly new plants. Does that make sense?
At this rate, New Zealand may replace the US in the Forbes headline at the top of this piece: "The worldwide Leader in Wasting Energy." Unlike our All Blacks, Black Ferns, and the recent Black Sox world championship victory in Auckland, I suggest this is one category we may not want to win.
See the side bar for dates, times and venues of Project HEAT (Home Energy Awareness Training), to learn about low-cost and high performance ways to save power in your home.