Small changes make a
big difference.
 

Mission of the York Energy Efficiency Committee

Our mission is to respond to the global warming crisis by promoting energy efficiency, alternative energy, and environmental initiatives throughout the town of York, Maine.
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To contact YEEC, please email contact info at yorkgoesgreen dot org

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[Source: The US Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE)]

CO2 Now

Current CO2 Level in the Atmosphere

Best Green Blogs


April 9 conference: taking action on climate change

Notice of the following event was forwarded by YEEC member Dorothy Healy:

Exploring Faith & Sustainability in an Age of Climate Change

For people of faith who care about protecting life on the planet

Explore the growing ethical challenges posed by climate change & how we respond Learn how faith traditions act . . . → Read More: April 9 conference: taking action on climate change

Worm Composting class in York on March 1

Permaculture trainer Mary Gilbertson will be leading a Worm Composting/Vermiculture class at York High School next Tuesday, March 1, from 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm.

From the York Adult Ed listing:

Keeping worms is a great way to turn those kitchen scraps into “organic gold” and keep them out of the waste stream . . . → Read More: Worm Composting class in York on March 1

Food Manifesto

Author and NY Times columnist Mark Bittman suggests a strategy for our country to reduce CO2 emissions, save money, conserve the environment, and most of all, improve people’s health.

For decades, Americans believed that we had the world’s healthiest and safest diet. We worried little about this diet’s effect on the environment or on the lives of the animals (or even the workers) it relies upon. Nor did we worry about its ability to endure — that is, its sustainability.

That didn’t mean all was well. And we’ve come to recognize that our diet is unhealthful and unsafe. Many food production workers labor in difficult, even deplorable, conditions, and animals are produced as if they were widgets. It would be hard to devise a more wasteful, damaging, unsustainable system.

Here are some ideas — frequently discussed, but sadly not yet implemented — that would make the growing, preparation and consumption of food healthier, saner, more productive, less damaging and more enduring. In no particular order:

  • End government subsidies to processed food. We grow more corn for livestock and cars than for humans, and it’s subsidized by more than $3 billion annually; most of it is processed beyond recognition. The story is similar for other crops, including soy: 98 percent of soybean meal becomes livestock feed, while most soybean oil is used in processed foods. Meanwhile, the marketers of the junk food made from these crops receive tax write-offs for the costs of promoting their wares. Total agricultural subsidies in 2009 were around $16 billion, which would pay for a great many of the ideas that follow.
  • Reinvest in research geared toward leading a global movement in sustainable agriculture, combining technology and tradition to create a new and meaningful Green Revolution.
  • Begin subsidies to those who produce and sell actual food for direct consumption. Small farmers and their employees need to make living wages. Markets — from super- to farmers’ — should be supported when they open in so-called food deserts and when they focus on real food rather than junk food. And, of course, we should immediately increase subsidies for school lunches so we can feed our youth more real food.
  • Break up the U.S. Department of Agriculture and empower the Food and Drug Administration. Currently, the U.S.D.A. counts among its missions both expanding markets for agricultural products (like corn and soy!) and providing nutrition education. These goals are at odds with each other; you can’t sell garbage while telling people not to eat it, and we need an agency devoted to encouraging sane eating. Meanwhile, the F.D.A. must be given expanded powers to ensure the safety of our food supply. (Food-related deaths are far more common than those resulting from terrorism, yet the F.D.A.’s budget is about one-fifteenth that of Homeland Security.)
  • Outlaw concentrated animal feeding operations and encourage the development of sustainable animal husbandry. The concentrated system degrades the environment, directly and indirectly, while torturing animals and producing tainted meat, poultry, eggs, and, more recently, fish. Sustainable methods of producing meat for consumption exist. At the same time, we must educate and encourage Americans to eat differently. It’s difficult to find a principled nutrition and health expert who doesn’t believe that a largely plant-based diet is the way to promote health and attack chronic diseases, which are now bigger killers, worldwide, than communicable ones. Furthermore, plant-based diets ease environmental stress, including global warming.

    Continue reading Food Manifesto

Serious changes to Maine environmental laws proposed

At the end of January 2011, Governor LePage released a set of proposals that, if enacted, would have far-ranging effects on the Maine environment and the health of Mainers.

According to the Natural Resources Council of Maine (NRCM):

The LePage proposal seeks to: Gut laws that restrict the use of toxic chemicals such as . . . → Read More: Serious changes to Maine environmental laws proposed

Regional Energy Meeting, PACE on track for May

Greetings Everyone!

Hope everyone is staying warm this cold, cold winter – and like the rest of you, I am looking forward to warmer days ahead.

Lots of interesting things happening on the Energy front.  Here’s a brief run-down:

1. Our next meeting will not be at the usual time/place.  Instead we will be . . . → Read More: Regional Energy Meeting, PACE on track for May

Oil and the end of globalization

Economist Jeff Rubin makes a strong case for the inevitable return of $140 per barrel oil before long due to the decline in easy-to-find conventional oil and the increasing consumption by China, India, and other developing nations. And he makes a strong case that the root cause of the recent economic meltdown had more . . . → Read More: Oil and the end of globalization

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