Taking Personal Responsibility in Our
GLOBAL WARMING CHALLENGE
By David
Manning, executive vice president, External Affairs,
National Grid U.S
No
one anticipated the price of oil, gasoline, natural gas,
and electricity would hit today’s level anytime soon—never
mind this summer. Consumers are demanding answers, politicians
are blaming speculators, oil companies want to drill more,
and few understand what is really at play.
The
new reality is not new at all. Supply is tight and demand
is thriving in the world market, particularly in emerging
nations. Three months ago The Tata Group, one of India’s
largest business conglomerates (TATA), announced the marketing
of a $2,500 car in India. GM’s strongest market for
SUV’s and Buicks may well be China.
Our
only defense in this new world is to use less carbon energy.
Kevin Law gets it at LIPA, with an aggressive new program
called “Efficiency Long Island.” Many new efficiency
technologies have entered the market to allow you to control
your thermostat, generate power from your roof, and break
your dependence on fossil fuels.
There
are many new incentives available from utilities which
will still require investment by home owners and small
businesses—and at today’s (and future) energy
prices, the payback time is shortening by the day.
We built
a new high-efficiency combined-cycle power plant at our
Ravenswood station which uses far less fuel and generates
far fewer emissions than its big brother next door; but
in the East River next to the plant, we have invested in
the Verdant Hydropower Turbines which will produce energy
with no fuel cost and no emissions. The project was delayed
when the force of the estuary sheared off some of the turbine
blades. The positive here is the phenomenal force of the
water available to make energy. Verdant is now retooling
and reinstalling.
So while energy companies must look for ways to build more solar, more
wind, geothermal, and biomass, an informed public has to partner with us
so that we can move that energy to the market and change people’s
behavior.
This
is also a competitive issue for Long Island, which has
always been a high-cost environment and a source of innovation
in managing those costs.
At home,
if you have an avocado green or harvest gold refrigerator,
it should be recycled immediately, not sent to the garage
to hold the beer. If you have a small business or a school
and you’ve worked there 20 years and don’t
know your source of heat, chances are your boiler is not
efficient. New technologies have been developed and old
technologies have been made more efficient and at today’s
prices, a new energy audit will probably reveal new economies.
While
Long Island’s Congressional delegation has been pushing,
asking, and demanding on these issues with great effect,
we shouldn’t just look to political leadership to
help make decisions for us. The energy market is not rocket
science, nor will the market self-correct to lower prices.
Demand is too high and there are too many of us out there
willing to pay.
Whether
you’re concerned about global warming (and at least
75% of us feel it’s a very serious issue) or energy
security, the war, or our dependence on fossil fuels, or
if you are just worried about your electric bill in the
summer and your heating bill in the winter, it doesn’t
really matter. It all comes down to the same thing. We
have to figure out how to use less energy, take advantage
of the tools that are there and work together to broaden
the array of options.
Stay
tuned. In future issues, Networking® will share specific
actions you can take to become an active participant in
the Global Warming challenge.
David Manning leads National Grid’s
U.S. External Team, with responsibility for federal
relations and issues. He is also central to the company’s
US and UK teams, handling all issues and functions
external to the company from climate change to communications.