Let's Fast-Track VA & MD Offshore Wind Energy

In Norfolk last week, the Obama administration announced a plan for rapid development of offshore wind energy, including high priority Wind Energy Areas off the coast of Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey. The Department of the Interior (DOI) said it could begin leasing these areas for wind energy projects as early as the end of this year. Opening these areas to wind energy development will be a great step in our transition to clean, renewable energy and should happen as soon as possible!

The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE), the agency within the DOI that oversees the development of energy resources on the Outer Continental Shelf, has opened a public comment period on the Wind Energy Areas, which lasts until Friday, March 11. Please show your support for wind energy off the coast of Virginia and Maryland by signing our petition. We’ll deliver it to BOEMRE by the end of the comment period.

Virginia Residents: Take action here

Maryland Residents: Take action here Continue reading

Great day for renewables in Virginia: Onward & upward!

On the heels of Secretary Salazar’s offshore wind energy announcement yesterday in Norfolk, both chambers of the Virginia General Assembly passed the Voluntary Solar Resource Fund Bill (HB 2191 and SB 975), which aims to set up a revolving loan fund for residential solar energy projects. The loan program will promote economic development and the production of clean, renewable energy at no cost to the state.

Solar Panels on a roof

This bill is a win-win-win for all major parties involved: the citizens of Virginia who will receive the loans, the commonwealth’s solar energy industry, and utilities with an interest in distributed solar power.

“Renewable energy has had two major boosts today: first the announcement that Virginia could begin leasing offshore wind sites by the end of this year, and also from the passing of the Voluntary Solar Resource Fund bill in the Virginia General Assembly,” said Chelsea Harnish, Virginia Policy Coordinator for the Chesapeake Climate Action Network. Continue reading

Community Forum in Williamsport, MD this Thursday!

This past Monday, I took a road trip to Williamsport, MD where CCAN and our coalition partners are hosting a community forum about the R. Paul Smith coal-fired power plant located just blocks away from the center of town. I checked out the location for the forum, the cozy and welcoming public library, and after meeting with our hosts, I decided to check out the plant itself.

I drove just a few blocks from the main road and immediately saw an ungainly structure looming above the town cemetery. With the sun setting, it was an ominous sight.

This plant just got a water pollution permit approved by the Maryland Department of the Environment that does little to address the heavy metals in coal waste; even though it sits directly on the canal that residents and tourists enjoy rollerblading, fishing, biking, and walking near. This is why we’re hosting the forum. We want to provide the residents of Williamsport with information about the plant and the potential impacts it has on the surrounding environment.

Whether you live in Williamsport, downwind, upstream, are just plain interested, we hope you can make it out! And never fear; we’ll have light refreshments. RSVP here!

Snowzilla signals warming

In the face of what some meteorologists are calling the worst storm to EVER hit the U.S., some people might be tempted to question the reality of global warming. First in line: our friend Bill Reilly at FOX News.

Here’s what Al Gore had to say about the matter:

Last week on his show Bill O’Reilly asked, “Why has southern New York turned into the tundra?” and then said he had a call into me. I appreciate the question.

As it turns out, the scientific community has been addressing this particular question for some time now and they say that increased heavy snowfalls are completely consistent with what they have been predicting as a consequence of man-made global warming:

“In fact, scientists have been warning for at least two decades that global warming could make snowstorms more severe. Snow has two simple ingredients: cold and moisture. Warmer air collects moisture like a sponge until it hits a patch of cold air. When temperatures dip below freezing, a lot of moisture creates a lot of snow.”

“A rise in global temperature can create all sorts of havoc, ranging from hotter dry spells to colder winters, along with increasingly violent storms, flooding, forest fires and loss of endangered species.”

Sorry to disappoint you, Bill. Check the science. Snowzilla = Climate change.

It's Easy Being Green: Green on the Screen

This is a cross-post from the Center for American Progress.

The 2011 awards season is officially upon us. Environmental films aren’t traditionally thought of as number-one stunners when competing against movies such as “Inception” and “127 Hours,” but since last year’s Oscar for Best Documentary went to “The Cove,” a film exploring the annual slaughtering of dolphins in Taiji, Japan, a new trend may have started in which environmental films are more welcome in the spotlight.

Below is a list of four green films to keep your eyes on this season.

The Last Mountain

“The Last Mountain.” A standout among the too few environmental documentaries premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, documentary filmmaker Bill Haney’s “The Last Mountain” takes a look at coal mining in Coal River Valley, West Virginia, and the “battle over protecting our health and environment from the destructive power of Big Coal.” The film brings to light questions of Big Coal’s apparent stronghold over the democratic process and what that means for our future.

Massey Energy, the third-largest coal company in the United States and the single-most destructive coal mining company in history, has literally blown the Coal River Valley to pieces with the force of “explosive power the size of a Hiroshima bomb each week.” Haney’s film follows those people fighting “a fight for our future.” He captures their attempt to stop the destruction of the last-standing mountain in the region and their efforts to promote clean energy alternatives for powering the valley. Simply developing a wind farm on the mountain could provide power for the whole region, keep the mountain intact, and create jobs for the surrounding communities