Penny
here, there could save billions in energy
By Diane Hirth
Democrat Capital Bureau
Use a fluorescent bulb in
your torchier lamp instead of an incandescent light bulb and
save $24 a year.
Install a ceiling fan
with an energy-efficient motor and pocket $13 a year.
Replace the standard
cable, satellite and digital TV converter box with a less
energy-guzzling model and retrieve $12 per year per box.
Convert traffic lights
and emergency EXIT signs to energy-saving LED (light-emitting
diode) technology and save $29 per signal and $15 per EXIT.
The amounts sound modest,
but in the long run, they could add up to billions of dollars
of savings for Floridians, according to a coalition of public
interest, energy conservation and watchdog groups.
If the state adopted
these and other proposed energy-efficiency standards, Florida
consumers and taxpayers could save $3 billion between 2005 and
2030, according to a report released Monday by the Florida
Public Interest Research Group, the Florida Public Interest
Foundation and the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy. State
government alone would save about $800,000 a year by
implementing
just two of these standards, the report said.
"As the old adage
goes, a million here and a million there pretty soon adds
up," said Dominic Calabro, president of Florida TaxWatch.
"We think this will help both customers and taxpayers
alike."
The group is calling for
Gov. Jeb Bush to establish energy-efficiency standards for the
10 products listed in the report. The report is based on the
products mentioned above, plus energy-efficient versions of
commercial clothes washers, refrigerators and freezers, large
packaged commercial air conditioners, low-voltage dry-style
distribution transformers and external power supplies - which
are all on the market today. California has adopted six
of the
standards, and other states are looking at them.
Bush could implement the
standards by rule through the Department of Community Affairs
or by advocating changes in the state's building code, said
Jim Presswood, state attorney for the Southern Alliance for
Clean Energy. "That's the route we recommend," he
said of the DCA rules.
"We will be
forwarding these thoughtful recommendations to the (Florida)
Department of Environmental Protection for their review. The
governor remains committed to energy conservation, while
exploring renewable energy resources, alternative fuel and
expanding the energy portfolio of the state," Bush
spokesperson Alia Faraj said.
Faraj said state
government, with Bush's encouragement, has made numerous
efforts to decrease energy consumption, including an overall
agencies' goal of 5-percent energy reduction per year and the
purchase of hybrid gas-electric cars by several agencies.
Plenty of benefits
Advocates at the news
conference said Florida in the past was a leader in promoting
energy-efficiency standards for home washers, dryers and
refrigerators, later adopted at the national level during the
era of Ronald Reagan and the first President Bush.
"It's been a great
Republican tradition to adopt energy-efficiency
standards," said Holly Binns, the clean-air-and-water
advocate for the Florida Public Interest Research Group.
Binns also noted:
"Gov. Bush said in August of 2001, 'the cheapest, easiest
and fastest kilowatt we can generate is the one that we save
through efficiencies.'"
These basic energy-saving
steps also could create thousands of jobs, while significantly
aiding Florida's environment, one advocate said.
"If you wind up
saving the $3 billion we're talking about from not using it in
terms of energy, that money is still in the economy,"
said Dr. Tim Lynch, director of Florida State University's
Center for Economic Analysis and Forecasting. "You wind
up purchasing something else that stimulates more goods and
services being consumed." He estimated the redirected
savings could generate more than 41,500 jobs over a 30-year
period.
Florida also would be
polluting less and potentially building fewer power plants if
the standards were adopted, Presswood said.
Imagine removing 500,000
cars from the state's roads. Or avoiding building three large
power plants in Florida.
By 2020, that is the
potential annual equivalent effect of these proposed new
energy standards, the report said.
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