Sunday, December 27, 2015

Now’s Our Moment: Faith Communities Critical to Climate Solutions

Astounding the world, 196 nations seized the moment on Saturday, December 12, 2015 voting “yes” to an historic, first-ever Paris Climate Agreement.   As Ms. Christiana Figueres, the UN climate chief, tweeted: “I used to say: we must, we can, we will. Today we can say we did.” President Obama thinks the Agreement our "best chance" of stopping global warming.

Humanities’ urgent task is keeping global average temperatures below 2° C (3.6°F) above pre-industrial levels. [The Agreement will pursue under 1.5°C (2.7°F).] Though the Agreement has insufficiencies, US Secretary of State John Kerry wisely reminded participants that the nations came to Paris not to “build a ceiling that contains all that we ever hope to do; we came to Paris to build a floor on which we can and must – all of us together – continue to build.”  The Paris Climate Agreement lays the foundation; continuing to build a livable CO2 ceiling requires everyone.  (Read the Agreement at: http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2015/cop21/eng/l09r01.pdf.)

Ms. Christiana Figueres, Executive Secretary, UNFCCC; H.E. Mr. Laurent Fabius, President of COP21. Note the green leaf gavel.

196 nations, 97% of scientists, numerous faith groups, environmentalists and others agree on the urgency of ending GHG emissions. For the world’s faith groups, tending and caring for the earth has special resonance as sacred texts and stories cede such responsibility to us. Tending creation, the stranger, and one another are correlated; Earth care and climate justice are intertwined issues.  Pope Francis reminds us that Earth is our “common home.”

Now is the time for faith communities to seize post-COP21 momentum. Now is the time to initiate ending our contribution to anthropogenic CO2 pollution, taking care of our “common home” by  doing our part to keep  global temperature below 1.5°C (2.7°F).  Government leaders believe faith community participation is critical to solving global warming.

Consider; religious buildings in the US use 2% of energy consumed by all commercial properties. 30%-40% of the 2% is energy waste.  Congregations that commit to energy efficiencies can substantially cut waste resulting in saving utility costs by 25-30%. Imagine this: If US congregations cut energy use and costs by 25% the savings would amount to about $500 million while removing 5 million tons of CO2 emissions. Individual congregations can save approximately $8,000-$17,000 a year through energy efficiencies. Visit: www.creationjustice.org.

The following two tools could support congregations ending religious buildings CO2 contributions.
  • The Paris Pledge: Interfaith Power and Light invites individuals and congregations to accept the Paris Pledge to “reduce carbon pollution 50% by 2030 and to become carbon neutral by 2050.”4500 individuals and congregations have already pledged. Visit: www.parispledge.org.
  • The EPA Portfolio Manager: Portfolio Manager is a free online tool providing a way to benchmark and track property energy use. Using it helps decrease energy waste by increasing energy efficiencies with little to no increased spending. 2500 congregations currently use Portfolio Manager; 57 have gained Energy Star rating. Visit: https://www.energystar.gov/buildings/owners_and_managers/congregations 
To keep global average temperature growth below COP21 goals, Bill McKibben says we need to “decisively pick up the pace. In fact, pace is now the key word for climate…” 196 nations successfully met their historical moment; now is our moment to act on behalf of our “common home”. Faith groups can pick up the pace by boldly executing real climate solutions with the measurable, easiest, fastest, and cheapest - energy efficiency.

“Long Live the Planet. Long live Humanity. Long live life itself.”

Rev. Dr. Jean Wright, ABC/USA
Member, FACS

Monday, November 30, 2015

I’m dreaming of a green Christmas!

I’m always dreaming of a white Christmas, but what about a green Christmas? Here are a few ideas for making your Christmas celebrations a little more eco-friendly!

  • The wrapping! Making Christmas gifts festive and fun to unwrap is part of the fun of giving the gifts. But then again, we know that wrapping paper accounts for millions of tons of trash every Christmas. None of us wants to be a Grinch, so how can we green up the wrappings?
    Try a reusable gift bag instead of wrapping paper
    • Why not try recycled paper? And follow your mom and grandma’s lead – reuse that wrapping paper!
    • Use tissue paper; (I use the tissue paper that’s stuck into dry cleaned clothes), fabric, or even the comics.
    • Reuse gift bags; (I have some bags that have been through at least 5 seasons). 
  • The tree! OK, it’s the age-old debate – should we use a fresh tree? Artificial? Tree in a pot to be planted later? A few thoughts and then make your own decision: 
    • Artificial trees –most are made of non-recyclable, non-biodegradable metal and PVC. When thrown away, they sit in the landfill for many generations to come. Since my family keeps their artificial trees for decades (my mother has had her artificial tree for nearly 50 years), I’m not losing sleep over this. A more troublesome issue with artificial trees is most are produced overseas and shipped to the U.S.; think fossil fuels and pollution in production and shipping. 
    • Real trees – Most experts agree that this is the more eco-friendly option. Over 30 million Christmas trees are sold in the U.S. each year, and 93% of those trees are recycled into mulch (Earth911). Additionally, Earth911 reports that a single farmed tree absorbs more than 1 ton of CO2 in its lifetime! The cons? Since Christmas trees are an agricultural product, we can expect application of pesticides, fertilizers, and herbicides, unless they’re grown organically. Additionally, if you don’t live in an area where conifers grow naturally, add the costs of tree transport into your eco-footprint calculation. If you do get a real tree, be sure to say NO to the plastic mesh wrapping!
    • Real LIVE trees – the most eco-friendly option. Buy a live, potted tree, which you can keep in your house for about 1- 1 ½ weeks and then plant outdoors after the holidays.
  • The cards! I come from a proud line of Christmas card senders and Christmas letter writers. So how can we green up this annual tradition?
    • Send cards and letters online. Friend and family can read about your adventures in the past year, and then save, print, or delete!
    • Try one of the eco-friendly card companies, using soy inks and recycled paper. One of my favorites is Minted
      If physical cards are a must, try eco-friendly version!
    • Buy and send cards that support a green organization, such as the cards made by the National Wildlife Federation or World Wildlife Fund.
  • The gifts! There are actually fun green gifts that don’t lead to a forced smile and insincere “thank you!” Check these out:
    • For the animal lovers in your family! Through many organizations, you can symbolically “adopt” an animal, and receive a plush toy, certificate of adoption, and a poster or photograph. Young children get a toy; wildlife organizations get badly needed financial support. Some of the programs I’ve enjoyed in the past are sponsored by the National Zoo, the National Wildlife Fund, Adopt a Lemur from Duke University’s Lemur Center, Sea Turtle Conservancy’s adoption program, and World Wildlife Fund.
    • Do you have a bike? By giving bikes to not just the kids, but also the adults in the family, you’ll be encouraging the option of green transportation for local trips (plus you might lose a few of those Christmas cookie pounds!) 
      A bike makes an amazing gift!
    • How about a new set of non-Teflon coated cookware? Have you wanted to upgrade your cooking utensils and get away from plastic that can release toxins when heated? Trade up for pots and pans that AREN’T coated in Teflon, reduce your family’s exposure to many harmful chemicals.
    • Got an avid gardener in the family? Christmas is the perfect time to set someone up for a successful butterfly or vegetable garden in 2016 – garden tools, seeds, composting equipment, even rain barrels are gifts that your family can enjoy throughout the year. Birdfeeders and bird baths are a nice addition to any garden. If you really want to go all out, how about beekeeping equipment?
    • Lifelong learning! Gifts certificates for classes are a waste-free gift that can be enjoyed throughout the year. Be it cooking, archery, knitting, photography, or sailing classes – you know they’ll love it!
    • How about a gift that lets the receiver enjoy the great outdoors? Camping equipment was my birthday gift last year! Not into camping? Think “roughing it” is a black and white TV? Then how about binoculars or a field guide for an aspiring bird or butterfly watcher, or a camera for the budding nature photographer?
    • Got someone in the family that enjoys camping or vacations in cabins? Virginia State Parks offer gift certificates that can be used for camping, cabins, parking, and picnic shelter rentals. Outside of VA? You can always give an annual pass for national parks and federal recreational lands. 
    • How about non-toxic soaps and shampoos from eco-friendly companies? Many manufacturers now make these products, but some of my favorites are The Body Shop, Aveda, and the Parsonage.

We hope this list gives you a little food for thought as you head into Christian and other faith-based gift-giving and celebrative seasons. Here’s wishing you a blessed and GREEN Christmas!


Desiree Di Mauro, PhD
Blog: www.greenmomster.org
Chair, Creation Care Committee
Emanuel Lutheran Church, Vienna, VA

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

We Must Be the Climate Leaders We Need

The global climate talks in Paris at the end of this month may be our last, best hope to avert the worst consequences of climate change.
 We must urge our leaders to conclude a strong, binding global climate agreement. The US must show leadership by drastically cutting our carbon pollution and aiding people and environments already damaged by climate change.

Pope Francis asks, in his encyclical letter “Laudato si’” What kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us, to children who are now growing up? He called for all of us to hear both the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor. Peter Morales, President of the UUA, and Bill Schultz, President of the UU Service Committee, wrote: The crisis of climate change is the gravest threat facing our world today.

More than 10,000 African American clergy last week called for climate change abatement as a human rights and social justice obligation: “we view climate change as a moral issue and one of the greatest public health challenges of our time. Breathing dirty, carbon-polluted air that causes climate change contributes to thousands of asthma attacks, hospital visits, and premature deaths every year. Black and low income communities are often hit the hardest.” But agreements by politicians and national governments will not be sufficient. The Black ministers recognize that we must all act: “We affirm the natural world as God’s handiwork and dedicate ourselves to its preservation, enhancement and faithful use by humankind.“

Faith communities can demonstrate moral leadership on climate change by publicly committing as congregations and as individuals to reduce our energy use -- and then, to act on those commitments.

Take the Paris Pledge to strive for a 50% carbon emission reduction by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2050. Through the Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions website, personal outreach and interfaith meetings, FACS will help congregations and congregants share their successes and challenges in reducing energy waste. Caring for creation is a responsibility of each of us – as individuals, as congregations, as states and countries. None can shirk.

The EPA estimates that the average building wastes 30% of its energy. If America’s 370,000 congregations cut energy use just 20%, it would save nearly $630 million per year that could be applied to missions and other priorities, and prevent more than 2.6 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year.

Repairing our damaged planet, calls forth our best selves. Pope Francis’ encyclical concludes: May our struggles and our concern for planet never take away the joy of our hope. We must all be the leaders that we need to preserve our quality of life for our children.

May it be so.

Eric Goplerud, Executive Director
Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

FACS Questions Candidates for Fairfax County Chair


Candidates for chairman of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors appeared at a forum on October 20 at Madison High School in Vienna.

We thought we’d attend to ask some specific, climate change-related questions. The answers received were revealing.

The candidates for chairman on Election Day, Tuesday, November 3, are:

  • Republican: Arthur Purves
  • Independent Green Party: Glenda Gail Parker
  • Democrat: Sharon Bulova, the current Chair

Our two questions were:
1) For over a year, members of Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions (FACS) have met with the Board of Supervisors to talk about how counties and cities are using energy dashboard software to reduce energy waste in county-owned buildings. The President of the United States and the Governor of Virginia have made energy efficiency a priority. Yet despite the advantages of reducing energy waste – by reducing pollution and saving taxpayer money – the board has not taken this issue seriously. If elected, would you?


2) Do you believe that human activity is the primary cause of climate change?


GOP Candidate Arthur Purves


The moderator addressed the questions first to Arthur Purvis. Ignoring the query about energy waste and saving taxpayer money, he swung hard at the second.
GOP Candidate Arthur Purves


“There hasn’t been any change in the climate for 50 to 100 years,” Purvis thundered. He then launched into an attack on the “job-killing” federal cap-and-trade bill of 2009 that would have set an overall limit of carbon pollution, which would be ratcheted down annually, but allow for credits to be bought and sold by industries to meet their goal. Cap-and trade systems are used by the European Union, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (comprised of Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont), and last month China announced it will start the world's largest carbon trading system by 2017. But Purves is against all of this nonsense because climate change doesn’t exist.

Green Party Candidate Glenda Gail Parker

Parker next addressed the two questions. Host of Channel 10’s weekly “Green TV” show, Parker’s answers were that she wants to see more solar, wind, energy efficiency and rail transportation in Fairfax County.


Green Party Candidate Glenda Gail Parker

I was impressed that she seemed to understand the magnitude of the crisis we are facing. But it was when she addressed other questions that I understood why she is sometimes called Gail “for Rail” Parker. Funding for the schools? More rail. Health care? More rail. Sequestration budget cuts by Congress? More rail. Gun control? That threw her off the, um, rail for a moment while she declared herself a firm proponent of the Second Amendment. But it wasn’t long before she was back on track: affordable housing? More rail. I like rail but I began to wonder if her father had been a conductor. I stood in the back of the room. People were rolling their eyes and giggling. Oh well.

Democratic Candidate Sharon Bulova

Bulova seemed unable to say “climate change” when members of the FACS Community Council began meeting with her over a year ago. Now, running for her second term as chair of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors, she is able to say those words.
Democratic Candidate Sharon Bulova


But when we have asked her to embrace the issue of energy efficiency in Fairfax County-owned buildings to save taxpayer money and reduce fossil fuel pollution, we have repeatedly gotten a pat on the head. When FACS showed her examples of how other jurisdictions and organizations use energy dashboard software to lower costs by reducing energy waste and greenhouse gases and serve as a role-model for the community, we heard nice words. When her environmental and energy manager produced a budget estimate for an energy dashboard to display the cost of utilities in 205 County-owned buildings for $14.8 million, and over $3.5 million in annual maintenance, we were shocked! Cost projections given to FACS by three different vendors were from $60,100 - $120,000 for one-time installation and $30,000 - $55,000 for annual maintenance. These numbers included not only the 205 County-owned buildings but all Fairfax County Public Schools buildings, as well.

This week, Bulova and her staff informed FACS that a public energy dashboard will be part of the new Public Safety Building, to be completed in 2017. Additionally, Bulova has committed to an energy display for all County-owned buildings on the Fairfax County government website. Due to personnel changes the project is 25% complete; a new hire will carry-on the project now projected to be completed Spring 2016.

Decision Time Approaches

So, if you care about reducing fossil fuel pollution and saving taxpayer money, who do you vote for on November 3? Is it Republican Arthur Purvis, who doesn’t believe climate change is real? Green Party Candidate Glenda Gail Parker who sees more rail as the solution to every problem (except guns)? Or Sharon Bulova, the current chair, who has listened and promised. The answer is obvious. Bulova is the one. But FACS will watch to see that promises are kept.

Scott Peterson is a member of the Community Council of Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Fairfax

Monday, October 12, 2015

Global Warming Bottom Lines

An increasing groundswell of voices is speaking one message: “Global warming climate disruption causes must be addressed, now.” Consider the following.


Pope Francis’ climate encyclical “Laudato Si” (Praise Be) is a galvanizing call for faith-based climate response and activism. With a moral call-to-action undergirded by the ethical imperative and guiding tenet of all major faiths, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”, Francis entreats faith practitioners and communities to integral action for the common good within all spheres of influence – family, congregation, work, civic and governmental institutions. 

Faith groups are partnering together, rallying and marching, imploring leaders attending the International Paris Climate Convention, Nov. 30-Dec. 11, 2015, to agree on actions keeping global warming below 3-4 degrees C. FACS encourages congregations to join in solutions by signing the Paris Pledge, committing to: 1) reducing C02 footprint 50% by 2030 and 2) becoming carbon neutral by 2050. For more: www.parispledge.org

Political will for addressing climate disruption threat is coalescing. A 2015 New York Times/Stanford University poll found that nearly half of Republicans nationwide support government action to curb global warming. Overall, 83% of respondents said “yes” to the question of whether climate change presents a very or somewhat serious threat. 64% of Virginians believe global warming is happening; in DC and Maryland, it is 81% and 68% respectively. 

Growing numbers are advocating climate policies. A recent national survey by Yale Project/George Mason Center for Climate Change Communication found 77% support funding renewable energy sources research; 74% support regulating Carbon Dioxide as a pollutant; 63% support setting strict limits on existing coal-fired power plants; 61% support requiring utilities to produce 20% of electricity from renewable sources. FACS offers a voluntary carbon tax program; monies donated provide funds to low-income groups for energy efficiency. For info:  daveparsons@mindspring.com


The following bottom lines may answer “Why?” and “Why now?” 

  • Bottom Line: Scientific data confirm  human caused global warming; the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced in March 2015 that for the first time global atmospheric CO2 surpassed 400 parts per million (PPM), a rise of 120 PPM since the industrial age. 50% of that rise has occurred since 1980. 
  • Bottom Line: Earth is at risk. Those 400 parts per million are like a CO2 blanket. Prior to the Industrial Revolution the blanket layer was about 15 ft.; now, it is 22. The higher the carbon-blanket the greater increase in global warming, climate disruption and extreme weather events. 
  • Bottom Line: Climate science denialism as a political and fossil-fuel corporate strategy is faltering. The Senate, on January 21, 2015,  voted 98-1 on Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s one-line, non-binding amendment stating: "it is the sense of the Senate that climate change is real and not a hoax." 
  • Bottom Line: Elon Musk is developing batteries to store energy, a game-changer; there are more employees in the solar industry (174,000) than in coal mining (123,000).
  • Bottom Line: Virginia must become a player in the emergent green economy. In the US, the market for solar energy grew by 34% in 2014. Global forecast for 2015 solar energy growth is 30%. Goldman Sachs is pledging $40 billion in renewables investment by 2021; Citibank, $100 billion by 2025.
  • Bottom Line: For about $80, a poor rural family in Africa can have electricity via a single laptop sized solar panel enabling recharging a cell phone and powering 4 LED lights. Worldwide, 1.5 billion people live without electricity; how long before this cheap technology leapfrogs to them? Investment and jobs will follow.
  •  Bottom Line: 30% of energy use is wasted; increasing energy efficiencies reduces energy waste and CO2 pollution.  This is the fastest, cheapest, no-brainer solution; utility budgets shrink. Energy efficiency is a cornerstone of Virginia’s response to the EPA Clean Power Plant Rules.  
  • Bottom Line: Public health is at risk. Richmond, VA, has the “distinction” of being an US Asthma Capital. Virginia needs elected officials and utilities acting to move Virginia from the top to the bottom in asthma cases and from the bottom tier to the top tier in both energy efficiency and renewable energies. A win-win for health and the economy.

With Virginia congregations and communities awakening to the global warming risks, with growing political will and policy solutions emerging, Virginians have an important opportunity to reduce the state’s carbon emissions.  


To do so, the majority of elected and appointed officials must support the EPA Clean Power Plant Rules. For improved public health, the economy, and Virginia natural resources, officials need to enact required, not voluntary, Renewable Portfolio and Energy Efficiency Resource Standards. 

Faith-based non-partisan political will for cutting carbon pollution is growing in Fairfax County. FACS calls upon the County and Schools to reduce energy waste through an energy dashboard, energy efficiencies and renewables.

  • Bottom Line: Using energy dashboard and energy efficiencies can save millions of dollars in County government and school budgets. Take George Mason University; GMU, by using an energy dashboard and other energy efficiencies, has greatly reduced wasted energy, utilities costs and carbon footprint. www.energydashboard.gmu.edu
  • Bottom Line: November 3 elections are fast approaching; ask your local candidates their stand on reducing energy waste, increasing energy efficiency and renewable energies. Will your State Delegate’s approve the VA EPA Clean Power Plant Rules? Ask; allow answers to inform your vote.
  • Bottom Line: Increasing energy efficiencies and transitioning to renewable energies will facilitate becoming carbon neutral by 2050-2100 thus insuring a smaller CO2 blanket and assuring a livable, sustainable earth.
  • Bottom Line: As people of faith we are called to be stewards of the earth in both “word and deed”- speech holistically enlivened by action.

FACS, partnering with others, seeks “bold action against climate change” by asking County and School government for a measurable reduction in CO2 pollution.

Rev. Dr. G. Jean Wright, ABC/USA
Member, Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions
http://www.faithforclimate.org

Monday, September 28, 2015

Responding to Pope Francis’ Call

“We are faced not with two separate crises, one environmental and the other social, but rather with one complex crisis which is both social and environmental. Strategies for a solution demand an integrated approach to combating poverty, restoring dignity to the excluded, and at the same time protecting nature.” Pope Francis, Laudato Si, Chapter 4, paragraph 139

September 24, 2015.  I live in northern Virginia, just outside of Washington, DC, which can sometimes be both a blessing and a curse.  Yesterday, when Pope Francis addressed Congress, it was a huge blessing!  My wife and I joined a number of our friends from Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions, an interfaith group in Fairfax County, VA, and the National Capital Presbytery Earth Care Network, a group of 10 churches in the National Capital Presbytery dedicated to earth care, to hear what the pontiff had to say on the National Mall.  Oh sure, we could have watched it at home on TV, but being there in-person among an incredibly diverse crowd of people who are passionate about the environment was electrifying!  After much speechifying and good music, we got to see and hear His Holiness on a jumbo-tron.  Pope Francis did for Congress and the American people what pastors from before Jesus’ time have always tried to do – discern God’s Word for our time and place.  The crowd on the grass all around us cheered wildly, as if we were in the chamber.  But as my pastor once said to our congregation:  “What are you going to do after the cheering stops?”

That brings me to the second event that I attended that day.  It was an interfaith gathering at the National Cathedral entitled, Coming Together in Faith on Climate.  It included faith leaders from about a dozen different faith traditions from Jewish to Muslim to Episcopalian, Catholic, Evangelical Christian, and AME.   It even included a sitting US Senator, Sheldon Whitehorse of RI.  Imam Ebrahim Rasool summed the prevailing sentiment best telling us that the current ecological/social crisis was so threatening to our world that we needed to put aside our religious differences, as Pope Francis had said earlier in the day, and work together to address the situation.  The imam reminded us that this is a moral issue with deep theological roots in all of the major world religions, be they Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, or Hindu.  These faith leaders then called on all people of faith everywhere to adopt this five-point strategy “to lead by example.”

1.     Engage:  Engage our Congregations and Communities for Climate SolutionsBeginning today, we’re asking every person of faith to go to their house of worship as soon as possible, and speak from their heart to their clergy or spiritual leaders.  We’re asking the same of clergy and spiritual leaders – to speak personally, from your heart, to your congregation.  Tell them you agree with Pope Francis and a wide array of multi-faith leaders that we have a moral obligation to take action today on climate change and build a sustainable future for our children.  Tell them you will lead by example to build support for climate solutions by engaging and inspiring others and take actions that will help restore a healthy atmosphere, and you hope that will lead by example too.  And make sure to take this personal pledge:  www.blessedtomorrow.org/join
2.     Energize:  Form or Join a Clean Energy Group in our Faith Communities.  Thousands of congregations already have active climate- and environment-oriented groups leading the way in switching to clean, renewable energy.  But we need thousands more.  At the site below, you’ll find links to the amazing organizations that are doing wonderful work helping congregations and individuals energize, so you can (a) maximize energy efficiency; (b) switch to clean, renewable energy for your community of faith, your home, and your neighborhood; and (c) so you can energize your people to push for needed political action.  www.interfaithpowerandlight.org
3.     Divest/Invest: Clean up our Personal and Congregational Investments.  Denominations, universities, and seminaries are divesting from fossil fuels, and investing in clean, renewable energy.  Now, it’s possible for us as individuals to do so as well – transferring our personal savings, IRA’s, and other investments into companies that are part of the solution instead of part of the problem.  Make your personal pledge at www.idivestinvest.org
4.     Vote: Make Climate One of our Top Three Issues When (Not If) We Vote.  We’re asking you to demand needed action from every candidate and elected leader in every election.  We’ll provide you with resources to help you learn which candidates are supporting climate change solutions, and which are ignoring or opposing them.  www.faithinpubliclife.org
5.     EducateStay Informed and Educate Others.  Through your social media and in-person networks, you can become a trusted source of information and inspiration for others.  To stay informed and keep learning, sign up for Common Good News for regular updates: www.convergenceus.org/common-good-news.html

I hope you cheered the Pope’s words, but now that the cheering has died down, what are you going to do about it?

David Kepley
Ruling Elder and Deacon
Providence Presbyterian Church
Fairfax, VA

Kepley.david@gmail.com

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Biblical Authority and the Care of Creation

As a sinner and lover of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, guided by prayer, Scripture and the Holy Spirit I have come to the belief and assurance of the Christian moral responsibility to be lovers, advocates and stewards of God’s good Creation the earth. As a member of the United Methodist Church I am influenced by the Wesleyan Quadrilateral to guide my core beliefs and these are the authority of Scripture (the earth is the Lord’s), church tradition of the love of creation,  the application of reason and lastly the experience of believers of God’s grace working in and through all of creation. I’d like to share some thoughts on the authority of Scripture in coming to my understanding of what it means to be an advocate for all of creation.

Biblical authority is not a tool to justify the status quo and benefit the powerful but according to Walter Brueggermann the “Bible is inherently the live word of God that addresses us concerning the character and will of the gospel-giving God, empowering us to an alternative life in the world.” (Brueggermann, 2000)  In the book of Colossians Verses 1:15-20 St. Paul provides a vison of this “alternative life” in which all things are reconciled to God “[Christ] himself is before all things, and in him all things hold together … and through him God was pleased to reconcile to [God-self] all things, whether on earth or in heaven, by making peace through the blood of his cross.” When I read this scripture I am compelled by God to ask myself  “is the way I am living, are the choices that I am making and the actions that I’m taking that which does no harm and in-fact does good for all of God’s people and the creation?” Are we doing that which builds an alternative world which seeks to reconcile all things by seeking the well-being of humankind on a thriving earth? Scriptural authority of God’s reconciling love for all provides a strong foundation for the care of creation, even when it is inconvenient for my life. For God’s grace is calling forth each person to seek justice and love mercy as we grow in relationship with God, each other and all of creation.


Brueggemann, Walter. "Biblical Authority: A Personal Reflection." Covenant Network. 3 Nov. 2000. http://covnetpres.org/2000/11/biblical-authority-a-personal-reflection/. 1 Aug. 2015. 

Monday, March 16, 2015

What Gets Measured Gets Improved


If you want to lose weight, you need to know how much you weigh. If you want to run a race, you need to know how far to go. In order to measure anything, you start with a number.

It’s no different with reducing energy use in our county buildings. 

Energy efficiency is an immediate way we can address climate change and save taxpayers money. An energy dashboard can motivate behavioral changes to reduce carbon pollution that is trapping heat like a blanket around the earth and endangering our future. We believe there is a moral and spiritual responsibility to act now.

But when Fairfax County staff told the Supervisors it would cost a whopping $14.8 million to set up an energy dashboard to display the cost of utilities in 205 County-owned buildings, and over $3.5 million in annual maintenance, I was shocked.

It’s clear that county staff has not been in contact with other cities or counties or states or colleges that use money-saving energy dashboards and energy-saving programs. If they had, they would have learned that one of the most popular ways of measuring energy use is by getting the data directly from the utility.

Here’s how three nearby leaders do it:  

Build Smart DC – “The goal of Build Smart DC is clear: Create a transformational environment that drives unprecedented energy savings.” 

Arlington County -- “Buildings contribute a large part of the County’s overall energy use, but offer substantial opportunities for reductions, and therefore emissions reductions, without compromising essential services.” 

George Mason University – 40 energy improvement measures saved $2.5 million. Those savings were used to take additional steps that saved another $2.5 million. GMU has also cut carbon pollution by 20,505 metric tons.

So How Much Does an Energy Dashboard Really Cost? 

A fraction of the estimates that County provided. Here are the range of projections given to FACS by by three different vendors: 
  • 60,100 - $120,000 for one-time installation
  • 30,000 - $55,000 for annual maintenance.
And - get this! - these numbers include not only the 205 County buildings in theCounty's estimate but also Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPA) buildings. That's 450 buildings in all!

Two vendors, Wegowise and Energy Cap, project costs at under 1% of Fairfax County's numbers. The most expensive of the projects FACS obtained is $175,000. Energy Cap, already a Fairfax County vendor, could potentially be the least expensive at around $33,100 for both installation AND annual maintenance.

While these numbers are projections, the difference between them and Fairfax County estimates must be addressed. 

How Much Can Taxpayers Save? 

Budget savings that result from energy dashboards and a solid efficiency program can, in a few short years, add up to a 20% savings. Fairfax County’s FY2016 utilities cost estimate is $13.5 million. That could be a cool $2.7 million of taxpayer money saved.

I’ve asked the three vendors to submit proposals to the county. In a recent meeting with one Supervisor, we were told the county is required by law to evaluate unsolicited proposals.

Fairfax County government has the potential to become a leader in energy efficiency. But it takes vision and commitment.

It’s time to step up.
Eric Goplerud

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

My Mother's Advice

http://www.faithforclimate.org/

When I was a boy, my mother told me not to speak when I was angry. That advice stuck with me. That's why it's taken me a while to write about what happened in early February at the meeting of the Fairfax County Environmental Committee.

A work commitment prevented me from attending that day. But several FACS members who did attend told me what happened.

The conference room at the County Government Center was filled to capacity as Jose Comayagua Jr. of the facilities management department led Chairman Sharon Bulova and the other Supervisors through a PowerPoint presentation.

The conclusion: an energy dashboard – which Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions has been promoting for months with Supervisors and staff as tool to increase energy efficiency and save taxpayer money – would cost an astonishing $14.8 million to set up and $3.5 million annually to operate.

“It’s really not that useful,” declared County Executive Ed Long, who was sitting nearby.

Every expert I have talked to since then has shaken their head and chuckled at the County’s cost estimate.

Energy Efficiency Isn’t Sexy

It’s not like building Tysons Corner or extending the Silver Line. It’s not like maintaining the quality of our schools or building more affordable housing. Energy efficiency is asking that we do more with less. Increasing energy efficiency is recognized as the most effective way to quickly reduce the CO2 emissions that are causing the heat trapping blanket around the earth that is disrupting our climate and endangering our grandchildren.

Did you know Virginia is ranked 35th of all states in energy efficiency? Despite what Fairfax County say, the County is far behind behind Arlington County, the District of Columbia, and Montgomery County, Maryland in commitment and measurable progress.

Accountability

County officials say they are already doing so much. But do you know what they are doing to address climate disruption? We’ve been studying it for months, and we don’t either.

That’s what an energy dashboard is all about. It’s a baseline of measurement; a means to determine what buildings are efficient and which ones are not. It’s a window into County operations that will provide accountability. But it appears Fairfax County is not interested in accountability to voters.

When Supervisor Linda Q.Smyth of Providence District asked if, rather than adding the cost to the County’s tight budget, alternate means of financing have been examined, Mr. Comayagua replied, “We’ll look into it.”After the meeting, FACS member Scott Peterson asked Mr. Long why alternate financing had not been examined, when FACS had provided three alternative financing mechanisms? Long said we should send another memo.

It’s About Commitment

Instead, I contacted two energy management software companies that have successfully mounted publicly-facing energy consumption websites for Washington DC, Los Angeles, Boston,and New Orleans, as well Fortune 500 companies. Within a few short years, investments in a dashboard was paid off and significant savings piled up.

How Much for Fairfax County?

For all 450 County and Fairfax county public school buildings, the higher of the two cost estimates was $125,000 plus $55,000 annually for maintenance.

You read that correctly. In my next post, I’ll provide more details.

My mother was right. It’s a bad idea to speak when you are angry. But my mother was also a very determined woman who seldom took no for an answer. That’s something I learned from her, too.
Eric Goplerud
Executive Director, Faith Alliance for Climate Solutions