EARTH HOUR GREAT SUCCESS – MILLIONS TURN OFF LIGHTS, WHILE ONE VILLAGE TURNS THEM ON

Environmental Panorama
International
April of 2008


Millions globally signalled a new awareness of climate change by turning off their lights for an hour last Saturday night. World landmarks – the Sydney Opera House, San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, Rome's Colosseum and Bangkok's Wat Arun Rajawarahrahm Pagoda disappeared into the night sky.

People liberated from television screens and other electronic distractions congregated in parks, at community festivities or often, simply appreciated a more star-spangled sky. At a host of Earth Hour concerts, like the one featuring Nelly Furtado in Toronto, it was the acoustic, not the electric, guitar taking centre stage.

Officially, 26 major cities on six continents participated with major municipal and community initiatives in WWF's Earth Hour, with energy savings and avoided emissions still being toted up. Some 370 cities and towns signed up to support the event, but around the world millions of others informally voted with their switch fingers for more concerted action on climate change.

One community, however, did it differently. Visoqo Village in Fiji celebrated Earth Hour by turning their light switches on . . . for the first time. In the previous week, residents had busied themselves unpacking solar panels and installing them to provide the village's first and wholly renewable energy based electricity supply.

Supplying electricity to Visoqo is a pilot project in finding sustainable development solutions for some of the poorest areas in Macuata Province on Vanua Levu, Fiji's second largest island. Much of the initiative and support for the project comes from the Macuata Soqosoqo ni Vakamarama (Macuata Women’s Association)
"We are not a fossil fuel producing nation," said Sereana Cokanasiga, fundraiser for the association . "The burden of keeping up with fuel costs is usually expressed unfortunately in unsustainable natural resource exploitation, a contributing factor to poverty.
”What the Macuata Soqosoqo ni Vakamarama is trying to emphasize is that we need to encourage and invest more in renewable energy, it is non polluting and is far more beneficial to rural communities in the long run.”

“We also thought that the launch of the solar project in Visoqo this week should tie in to Earth Hour as part of our small contribution to the global effort for Climate Change Awareness. An effective way to reduce carbon emissions is to promote renewable energy, which is essentially what this project is about and what our association supports.”

WWF launched Earth Hour in one city – Sydney, Australia – in 2007. The city really got behind it. This year Sydneysiders again got behind Earth Hour, but this time they had company. An awful lot of company.

"Earth Hour is WWF’s global event started to encourage businesses, communities and individuals to take the simple steps needed to cut their emissions on an ongoing basis," said Andy Ridley, the man who came up with the idea and now the International Director of WWF’s Earth Hour.

"It is about simple changes that will collectively make a difference – from businesses turning off their lights when their offices are empty, to households turning off appliances rather than leaving them on standby.

"By Earth Hour 2009, on March 28 we expect more people will have incorporated simple energy efficient solutions into their homes and workplace. It’s important we keep the momentum going for a greener and sustainable future."

+ More

Cars should plug-in to a new future: WWF

02 Apr 2008 - Gland, Switzerland / Brussels, Belgium: Dramatically expanded use of plug-in electric and hybrid vehicles would be a way to a transport future that doesn't risk climate catastrophe, a major new WWF analysis has found.

Such a move would also reduce the risk of conflict over less oil more and more concentrated in relatively unstable areas of the world.

Plugged In: The End of the Oil Age considers the future of a transport sector now 95 per cent dependent on liquid hydrocarbon fuels and examines the impacts and practicalities of electric, coal-to-liquid, gas-to-liquid, natural gas and hydrogen powered transport for the future

It finds that vehicles running solely or partly on grid-connected electricity are more efficient and less greenhouse gas intensive than all alternatives, even with most power now being generated using fossil fuels.
The report also finds that cleaner power generation and more use of renewable fuels in power generation will make it certain that the comparative efficiency and pollution advantages of plug-in transport will improve into the future, while the future of liquid fuels is one of increasing resort to dirtier sources that will take more energy to turn into fuels.

“We should all be relying more on walking and biking, on buses and trains, to get to where we need to go. But cars will inevitably remain a major part of the transport equation," said James Leape, Director General of WWF International.

"The cars of the future must be much more efficient -- smaller, lighter, more aerodynamic -- and they should, increasingly, be powered by electricity,”

As oil becomes more difficult to access, techniques to create liquid fuels from coal are now being vigorously pursued in the US, China, India, Australia and South Africa.

“Coal-to-liquid fuels are costly, energy intensive and extremely polluting, and have previously only been used on any significant scale in countries facing a state of emergency,” said report author Dr Gary Kendall.

Other alternatives to traditional oil extraction include exploitation of oil sands, which generates three times the emissions of petroleum processing and causes devastation to the local environment. Natural gas suffers from similar looming supply uncertainties to oil and makes its greatest beneficial climate impact by displacing coal in heat and power generation.

The report also finds that the electric vehicles can be three times more efficient than hydrogen-fuelled vehicles. More importantly perhaps, electric vehicles can be widely introduced using existing technologies and distribution infrastructure.

“Automotive transport is ripe for transformation,” said Dr Kendall. “We need to accelerate the commercialisation of vehicles with diversified primary energy sources, high efficiency and compatibility with a sustainable, renewable energy future. The electrification of automotive transport offers a promising way to achieve this objective.”

To do so, the report recommends dismantling market barriers to superior technologies and removing a host of hidden and overt subsidies to liquid fuel use. Vehicles should be subject to similar energy labelling and efficiency improvement requirements as other energy-consuming appliances. Liquid-based measures of fuel economy (e.g. litres per 100km or miles per gallon) and CO2 emissions targets should be replaced with technology-neutral indicators of energy consumed per kilometre.

“We cannot depend upon today’s dominant transport solution providers to drive the shift away from liquid hydrocarbon fuels,” Dr Kendall said. “Other business sectors – such as power utilities for instance – will come to the fore in recognizing the business opportunities of grid-connected transport.

“But ultimately, leadership on moving to the best transport fuel mix will need to come from governments."
Contacts on this story listed on media release

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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