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Archive for the ‘Solar Energy’ Category

Solar information kiosk to open at Miller-Golf Links Library Branch today

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

The community is invited to see the new solar educational materials and solar information kiosk that will be unveiled at the Miller-Golf Links Library Branch at 5 p.m. today, Monday, April 23. Following the ribbon-cutting ceremony, there will be a Solar Power 101 presentation. Both events are free and open to the public. RSVP for Solar Power 101 to jmcginnis@pagnet.org or 520-792-1093.

Pima County Public Library and Bruce Plenk, Solar Energy Coordinator for the City of Tucson, worked together to identify and purchase solar-related materials including books, magazine subscriptions, and DVDs. The solar kiosk provides live reporting regarding how much solar energy is being produced in our community. Library patrons now will be able to check out a device called the Kill-A-Watt, which plugs into appliances to indicate their electricity usage and efficiency.

In recognition of the funding support to purchase the solar educational materials obtained by the Office of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, before she stepped down in January, the collection will be named the Gabrielle Giffords Collection. All of these resources will be initially available at the Miller-Golf Links Library Branch, but will be moving to other libraries in the system.

  • WHAT:  Ribbon-cutting ceremony to introduce new solar resources and unveil information kiosk
  • WHEN:  5-6 p.m. Ribbon-cutting; 6-7:30 p.m. Solar Power 101, Monday, April 23
  • WHERE:  Miller-Golf Links Library Branch, 9640 E. Golf Links Road, 85730

 For more information, please visit http://www.library.pima.gov/about/news/?id=3922.

New interactive Eco Kids website makes learning about the natural world fun

Thursday, March 29th, 2012

Pima County, Ariz. (March 29, 2012) – Now there’s an interactive website just for kids that helps them learn about air, water, soil, resource conservation and climate change – and why it’s important for them to learn how to take good care of planet Earth.

The Eco Kids Corner website was developed by Pima County’s Department of Environmental Quality and a student intern from the University of Arizona’s College of Public Health to engage children in learning about the natural world and their role in it. Here’s the link: http://www.cleanair.pima.gov/ .

Not only can they learn fun facts, like how old the Earth is and what air is made of, but they can write poems, guess the answers to science questions, learn why recycling really matters, take a look at the hydrologic cycle and find out about pedology. That’s the study of soil.

The colorful website provides links to other activity-based sites for kids from agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency and the Centers for Disease Control.

The site also provides links to the local zoo, museums, the Sonoran Desert Kids Club and other venues that offer educational programs and materials for children.

The site includes resources for teachers and inspiration for science fair projects, too.

A special program to introduce the website is set for  Saturday, April 7, at 11 a.m. at the Murphy-Wilmot Branch Public Library, 530 N. Wilmot Road, during the library’s monthly Science Saturday event.

Earth Day parade entrants and exhibitors sought for April 21 parade and festival at Reid Park

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

Pima County, Ariz. (March 20, 2012) Celebrate Earth Day at the 18th Annual Tucson Earth Day Festival and Parade Saturday, April 21, 2012. The theme of the 2012 Festival is “It’s in Your Hands.”

The event is from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Reid Park, off Country Club Road north of 22nd Street. The Parade starts at 10 a.m.

Exhibitors and parade entrants are being sought. The registration deadline for both is March 30.

Non-profit organizations, private businesses, government agencies, clubs, families, youth groups and community groups may register to take part in the event and the parade.

Exhibits should provide information on environmental products or issues such as water conservation, water quality, air quality, household hazardous waste, sustainability or other “eco” topics. Exhibitors should provide engaging, hands-on activities for all, with take-away information about how to preserve our wonderful world.

Parade entrants should share friendly messages about eco issues. They can reflect the parade theme “It’s in Your Hands.” Environmentally themed floats must be human-powered or use alternate fuel.

If your auto, bike or motorcycle runs on clean fuels such as biodiesel, compressed natural gas, electricity, ethanol, propane and even waste vegetable oil, show it off and provide information on alternate fuels at an exhibit at the park.

Middle school students will show off their design and construction skills in a competition for the best solar model vehicle. Kits for this competition are available from the Society of Women Engineers at www.swetucson.org/solar.

For more on the event, go to www.tucsonearthday.org, call (520) 206-8814 or e-mail tucsonearthday@yahoo.com. Also, Tucson Earth Day Festival is on Facebook.

 

 

New county website helps you design ‘net-zero’ energy homes and buildings

Monday, March 5th, 2012

Pima County, Ariz. (Mar. 5, 2012) -  A new Pima County web site provides you with the tools to design “Net-Zero” energy homes, apartments, offices and retail buildings that won’t use more energy than they create.

The information can also be used to remodel a structure to save energy costs.

The website, http://www.pima.gov/netzero, has a residential section and a commercial section for apartments, retail and offices with calculators based on the City of Tucson/Pima County Net-Zero Energy Standard.

“We are pleased to have another terrific tool for helping the community reduce energy use. Energy bills are a significant portion of the cost of running a business or owning a home,” said Leslie Ethen, Director of the City of Tucson’s Office of Conservation and Sustainable Development.  “Resources like this and the City’s Green Business Certification program are ways in which we can help businesses and homeowners reduce these costs.”

Working with a few basic facts about the design of the building, such as the shape of the roof, the orientation of the building and number of stories, the website can calculate the building’s “energy budget.”

The website provides a “recipe card,” or set of energy efficiency building elements, to be incorporated in the design.

The website also has a calculator to determine the financial performance of the building.

The site is useful to homeowners, commercial builders and commercial property owners, who can use the information for new construction or for renovation of existing structures, to reduce energy costs.

Net-Zero homes and apartments can save residents money every month, said Rich Franz-Under, Pima County’s Green Building Program Manager.  A typical home owner can save between $40 and $80 a month because of significantly lower utility bills, he said.

Pima County and the City of Tucson are the first governmental jurisdictions in the nation to develop a building standard to achieve Net-Zero energy.

The City of Tucson’s Office of Conservation and Sustainable Development (OCSD) provided the funding for the project through an Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Pima County Development Services, Building Safety and Sustainability made up the principal research group on the web project, with assistance from the University of Arizona College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture and Tucson Water.

Pima County led the development of a regional green-building rating system for homes in 2008. Using that knowledge, the County worked with its collaborators to develop the Net-Zero energy code.

 

Earth Day Festival and Parade seeks entrants, exhibitors

Monday, January 9th, 2012

Pima County, Ariz. (Jan. 9, 2012) – Parade entrants and exhibitors are being sought for the 18th Annual Tucson Earth Day Festival and Parade Saturday, April 21, 2012.

The registration deadline for exhibitors and parade entries is March 30, 2012.

The festival is from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Reid Park, off Country Club Road north of 22nd Street. The Parade starts at 10 a.m.  The theme of the 2012 Festival is “It’s in Your Hands.”

The festival and parade are open to non-profit organizations, private businesses, government agencies, clubs, families, youth groups and community groups.

 Exhibits should provide information on environmental products or issues such as water conservation, water quality, air quality, household hazardous waste, sustainability or other “eco” topics, according to festival spokeswoman Flo Wooters.  She can be reached in Tucson at 206-8814 or tucsonearthday@yahoo.com

Parade entrants should share friendly messages about “eco issues.” They can reflect the parade theme “It’s in Your Hands.” Environmentally themed floats must be human-powered or use alternate fuel.

The  Earth Day Festival will include an Alternate-Fuel Vehicle Exhibit.  It’s open to any vehicle,  bike or motorcycle that runs on clean fuels such as biodiesel, compressed natural gas, electricity, ethanol, propane and or waste vegetable oil.

At the 2012 Festival, middle school students will show off their model solar car race and solar house design skills.

Kits for this competition are available from the Society of Women Engineers at www.swetucson.org/solar.

For more information and to sign up, go to www.tucsonearthday.org,  or e-mail tucsonearthday@yahoo.com. Tucson Earth Day is also on Facebook.

Pima County wins Smart Growth planning grant from Washington, D.C. agency

Thursday, November 17th, 2011

 Pima County, Ariz. (Nov. 17, 2011) – Pima County’s Development Services Department is the winner of one of 15 smart-growth technical assistance planning grants awarded by Smart Growth America, in Washington, D.C.

Pima County is the only Arizona winner.

Pima County Planning Director Arlan M. Colton said the grant will provide the county with all-expenses paid technical assistance over one or two days to begin a “smart growth audit” of the County’s zoning code.

The goal is to reduce barriers to – and create opportunities for – smarter, more efficient and sustainable growth.  Pima County’s zoning code covers county land outside cities and towns.

“Our zoning code was last overhauled in 1985 and has been updated many times since then, but it is still fundamentally based on a sprawl-inducing land-use pattern that was popular in 1952 when zoning was first adopted by the county,” Colton said.

“Smart growth strategies can ultimately help boost the local economy, make more efficient use of land and infrastructure and improve the quality of life,” he added.

Smart Growth America helps with coalition building, policy development and research to help communities find local solutions to help bring smart growth practices to quality-of-life projects, such as providing more sidewalks, building housing near public transportation and creating neighborhoods, while protecting the environment.

The Smart Growth grants are funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Building Blocks for Sustainability Program. It provides targeted assistance to communities tackling development problems.

The winners, chosen from about 90 entrants in 34 states, were selected for their “strong interest in and need for smart growth tools,” Smart Growth officials said.

In its application, Pima County demonstrated “a commitment from local business, community and political leaders to implement smart growth solutions.”

Among the other communities awarded a Smart Growth grant are Derry Township, Penn.; Oklahoma City, Okla.; Tacoma, Wash.; New Orleans, La.; and Greer, S.C.

To read more about Smart Growth America, go to www.smartgrowthamerica.org.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New Nationwide Guide to Green Building Spotlights Pima County’s ‘Beyond Code’ Program

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

Pima County, Ariz. (Nov. 15, 2011) – Pima County’s efforts to “go beyond code” to provide guidelines for Green Building and sustainable projects are included in a new federal guide to “Creating Effective Green Building Programs for Energy Efficient and Sustainable Communities.”

The Going Beyond Code Guide is designed to help state and local governments design and implement successful “beyond code” programs for new commercial and residential buildings.

These guidelines, such as those developed by Pima County, encourage energy efficiency and other sustainable elements in the construction and operation of buildings, without having to mandate them by creating additional building codes.

Rich Franz-Ünder, Pima County’s Green Programs Manager in the county’s Department of Development Services, helped shape the Going Beyond Code policy options noted in the Guide to Green Building.

Pima County is included along with the cities of Scottsdale, Santa Fe, Albuquerque and Longmont, Colo., as an example of best practices to emulate.

The guide to “Creating Effective Green Building Programs for Energy Efficient and Sustainable Communities” describes model green building guidelines from around the United States.

The goal of Green Building, Franz-Ünder said, is to advance energy efficiency by reducing waste and by building water and energy efficiency into the construction of homes and businesses.

The new document is based on the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project’s (SWEEP) “Going Beyond Code” guide, which also includes Pima County. The new guide was prepared by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Building Technologies Program in collaboration with SWEEP.

The guide, which is free, is available online and can be downloaded as a pdf  file at http://www.energycodes.gov/publications/resourceguides/packets/gbc_guide/GoingBeyondCode_LoRes.pdf.

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2011 Green Living Fair Saturday, Nov. 12 at HabiStore 935 W. Grant Road

Monday, October 24th, 2011

Pima County, Ariz. (Oct. 24, 2011) – Learn more about how to go green and save money at the 2011 Green Living Fair on Saturday, Nov. 12 at the HabiStore, 935 W. Grant Road, just east of I-10 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The HabiStore, the site of the fair, sells home improvement supplies to benefit Habitat for Humanity, the nonprofit that builds homes for local, first-time homeowners living in poverty.

Along with the HabiStore, sponsors of the Green Living Fair include Pima County, Mrs. Green’s World and the Pima Association of Governments.

At the 2011 fair, “gurus of green,” experts on “green” building, water conservation, rainwater harvesting, green gardening, landscaping, and solar power will show how to live economically while protecting the environment.

Pima County’s Department of Environmental Quality, Office of Sustainability and Conservation and Regional Wastewater Reclamation Department will join representatives from the Pima Association of Governments to give tips on sustainability.

And they will show visitors to the fair how to conserve energy and save money.

Just in time for the Thanksgiving holiday, a Home Depot employee will demonstrate how to safely deep fry a turkey.

County workers will introduce visitors to the county’s own Grease Monster, who can tell you how grease poured down drains that clog sewer lines can  instead be recycled and turned into biodiesel by local companies.

Also, free books will be given away to those who bring books to donate.

Mrs. Green, who operates the website Mrs. Green’s World and hosts a weekly webcast, will produce a segment on the Green Living Fair that can be heard on Nov. 12 on streaming audio at http://www.mrsgreensworld.com/radio-show/.

The HabiStore, which also sells gently used furnishings along with lighting fixtures, paint brushes and other home improvement supplies, will be open for business during the fair.

Pima County Development Services staff presents at state Planning Association conference

Friday, September 30th, 2011

Pima County, Ariz.  (Sept. 30, 2011) – The Pima County Development Services Department is lending its expertise to the Arizona Planning Association’s annual conference in Tucson this week. On Wednesday, Pima County senior planner Elva Pedrego helped lead a training session, “Board of Adjustment Basics,” aimed at clarifying the role of Boards of Adjustment in the planning and development process. A Board of Adjustment is an appointed body that considers requests for relief from zoning code requirements, such as building setbacks and height, when strict adherence to the requirement cannot be achieved.On Thursday, Betty Stamper, Pima County’s solar power coordinator, presented information on how the public and private sector can work together to expand the use of solar technology and renewable energy in the region.  Stamper, in her presentation, “Take a Walk on the Solar Side” Thursday morning, spoke about the Solar One Stop multimedia center and display at the Public Works Building at 201 N. Stone Ave., as well as the www.SolarOneStopAZ.orgwebsite.  Both help consumers, property owners, developers and engineers get more information about using solar technology in the region.

 On Friday, Pima County Planning Director Arlan Colton is moderating a panel discussion on the Arizona State Land Department’s five-year disposition plan. Arlan is a former member of the State Land Department and remains actively involved in regional planning efforts involving public and private lands, including the Imagine Greater Tucson regional visioning process.

The conference, which ends at noon Friday, brings together hundreds of professionals from throughout Arizona who work in the public and private sectors in land use, planning and development.

Among the topics to be addressed at the 20011 conference, which ends Friday, are habitat conservation, modern streetcar planning, using policy to build healthy communities, micro-climate planning for alternative vehicles and planning for wildlife.

The Arizona Planning Association has 1,100 members. The conference is at the Tucson Westin La Paloma resort.

For information on the conference, call the Planning Association office at (602) 866-7188 or email info@azplanning.org.

To reach the Arizona Planning Association, go to www.azplanning.org.

 

 

 

 

Neal Armstrong: Inspiring future scientists in solar energy conversion

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

University of Arizona's Dr. Neal Armstrong

Pima County, Ariz. (Aug. 23, 2011) – Dr. Neal Armstrong, a professor at the University of Arizona, is working to inspire and train future scientists in solar electric energy conversion.

Armstrong is the director of the UA’s Energy Frontier Research Center, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science.

His center is part of a team of scientists, engineers, and staff located at major universities and research centers in Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, New Jersey, and Washington working on developing new photovoltaic (PV) energy conversion technologies.

The UA center is pursuing shared research advancing the understanding of “interface science” underlying PV technologies.

Armstrong, a longtime UA chemist, says it’s not difficult to get students interested in solar technology.

They’re already engaged, he said. Their research at the UA’s Energy Frontier Research Center is already paying off and appearing in numerous scientific publications. And in several cases, the UA center is filing patent applications.

Armstrong attended a conference in Washington, D.C. in May 2011 with others working at the 46 Energy Frontier Research Centers located around the country in 35 states and in the District of Columbia.

The conference, “Science for our Nation’s Energy Future,” was organized by the U.S. Department of Energy. It brought more than 700 researchers and students together to talk about their scientific research advances in areas that are important for the nation’s critical energy challenges.

As Armstrong looks to the future, he is also looking at the present and the ability for everyone to have the amount of power they need when they need it.

As an example, Armstrong said he sees solar technology one day helping governments lead their communities in establishing renewable energy portfolios, which enable a more secure response to day-to-day needs of their citizens, as well as power needed for emergencies and natural disasters.

Developing more affordable solar technology “so cheap it would be like buying a washer or dryer” would help ensure wider energy security, he said.

Armstrong has praise for Pima County’s sustainability efforts as it incorporates solar technology into its plans.

Already the county has installed solar panels to provide power at a small cattle ranch it owns in the Santa Rita Mountains and it put 896 solar modules on the roof of the county’s health department headquarters on West Ajo Way.

That solar technology will provide 57 percent of the energy needed to operate the health department offices and reduce carbon emissions by about 6,200 tons over 20 years.

In 2010, the county powered up a 1 megawatt solar power plant at its wastewater treatment facility on Sweetwater Road and added another 1 megawatt plant on Walked Road in early 2011

The county aims to provide 15 percent of its energy through renewable sources by 2025, as outlined in its Sustainability Initiative approved by the Board of Supervisors in 2007

Also, Pima County’s Development Services Department, which issues building permits, is making it easier for others to use solar technology.

The department unveiled a tool on its website in early July that makes it quicker to get a permit from the county for a photovoltaic installation.

The solar photovoltaic calculator, a spreadsheet tool, is available at the county’s Development Services website, http://www.dsd.pima.gov/building/ under the heading: “Forms & Calculators.”

Armstrong said Pima County can provide leadership in the global market for solar technology by encouraging the development and production of solar photovoltaic technologies here.

“We need to brand ourselves as a place where, if you’re thinking about installing solar or you want to build new solar technology, this is the place to be,” he said.

Not only does the county need new high-tech jobs, but the sun shines here nearly every day of the year.

“Pima County has the best solar fluence in the world,” he said. (Fluence is the total energy per unit area carried by a pulse of electromagnetic radiation.)

Armstrong said the director of the Department of Energy, Steve Chu, wants the United States to develop large scale dollar-per-watt solar energy by the end of this decade.

That would require a 75 percent cut in the present cost of solar-powered energy.

“That’s a pretty breathtaking challenge for the scientific community,” Armstrong said.

But he said it is an important and inspiring goal for PV energy conversion technologies, to contribute to our nation’s development of economical, terawatt-level solar energy sources for the 21st Century.

For more on the UA’s Energy Frontier Research Center (Center for Interface Science: Solar Electric Materials), go to http://solarinterface.org.

To learn more about Pima County’s commitment to solar technology, go to the Pima County Solar One Stop website:

http://solaronestopaz.org/AboutUs.aspx