Don Jordan seeks seat on NLI board |
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April 18, 2011 | ||
My involvement in home
design and construction for over 30 years gives
me familiarity with all aspects of residential
energy use and conservation. Our homes require
more energy than any other single thing in our
lives - around 39% of our total energy use is in
the home. We can reduce this energy use without
sacrificing our quality of life. We can give up
drafty homes and high utility bills...
the costs for the improvements are an
investment, both for us as homeowners and for
the utility companies I have been fascinated with
electrical generation since years ago when I
worked for the Corps of Engineers as a Park
Ranger at and around hydropower projects in During late summer, we are
using nearly all the power that can be generated
from the seasonally low river flows. That is the
bottle neck that limits hydropower in the near
future.
Our population continues to
rise and electrical use will further increase
with electric cars and other worthwhile uses of
electricity ... we will need more generation
capability each summer. Within 20 years we could
be looking at serious shortages.
Where can we get more
electricity?
Solar and wind are currently not
economical, but their prices are coming down ...
and fossil fuel-generated power costs are going
up. At some point solar and wind will compete
directly with coal and natural gas, but neither
will be as cheap as existing hydropower. I suppose we could put more
dams on the Snake, Selway, Rogue and a few other
rivers - but I hope a crisis does not push us to
that.
We could also build nuclear generators
and deal with those issues ... not a first
choice for most of us. None of these options is
cheap or will produce cheap electricity - but
improving energy conservation in our homes can
be cheap, and does not require new generators.
Let’s do what we can to save energy while we
figure the best way to generate more. Northern Lights has an energy efficiency incentive program - but I think the program can be better promoted - and they can do more. Northern Lights is motivated to do more - they understand there is a looming shortage and there will be many discussions of how to deal with future energy needs. I think I can be a
worthwhile contributor to those discussions. I
have a good idea of what will work for
residential energy conservation and can help
promote it. I have lived in Boundary
and I have been an active
member of the Boundary County Airport Board for
20 years, a number of years as chairman. I am an
active member of the Kootenai Valley Rifle and
Pistol Club and have helped coach the Junior
Rifle Club for years. I routinely volunteer for
worthwhile civic projects and have been quick to
lend a hand, hammer or blueprints - and
occasionally even offer an opinion ... ! I feel that the person is
more important than the credential - but I did
receive a Bachelor of Science degree from I look forward to the opportunity to help Northern Lights (OUR member owned cooperative) prepare for the electrical demands of the future. If you’d like to know more about me, I invited you to the Earth Day Fair this Saturday, when I’ll be giving a presentation on energy efficient home design. I’d love to have the opportunity to chat with you and answer any questions you may have.
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