Mitch wonders:
Couldn't you carpool in a Prius?  

And the rest would observe - 

Of course not - The driver would not be able to hear their cell phone 
conversation when their passengers are also yakking on their own cell phones... 
 (But then, the passengers could be required to text... )

Jeff Schimpff
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Madison, WI
608-267-7853
"Bus, Bike, Carpool to Work for Clean Air for Kids"

"Pedestrians and cyclists are the indicator species of a healthier community"

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mitchell Nussbaum
Sent: Friday, March 26, 2010 11:46 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bikies] Article in Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Couldn't you carpool in a Prius?  
----- Original Message -----
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, March 26, 2010 11:15:37 AM
Subject: [Bikies] Article in Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hello all:

I thought that people on this listserve would appreciate this quote:

"People who want to be green would rather do things that are very visible, so 
they drive a Prius rather than carpool," she said.

Al Matano

Plugged In
At home, at work or on the road, energy writer Thomas Content keeps you current 
as you adapt to changes in the world of energy, climate change and efforts to 
build a greener economy.

Efficiency first: the cost-effective way to go green

By Thomas Content of the Journal Sentinel March 25, 2010

Energy efficiency is almost too invisible for people who want to show the world 
they're going green.

That was the message Kathy Kuntz of the state Focus on Energy program sent 
Thursday at the second day of the Green Energy Summit in Milwaukee.

"People who want to be green would rather do things that are very visible, so 
they drive a Prius rather than carpool," she said.

The same is true with home energy choices. Putting solar panels on the roof is 
something people can see, but there's more bang for the buck in going green 
through extensive energy efficiency upgrades in a house, she said.

She showed pictures of wind turbines and solar panels followed by pictures of 
projects completed with Focus on Energy assistance that boosted energy 
efficiency to reduce energy costs and carbon emissions.

"Now if this was a room of building scientist, this picture of a perfectly 
insulated rim joist (see above)would make them leap with joy, but none of you 
are going to show that picture in your basement to guests," she said.

To help drive more interest in energy efficiency, Focus on Energy is revising 
the criteria for how it awards incentives for renewable energy projects - 
providing more money to homeowners and businesses that have already taken steps 
to reduce energy waste, she said.

"We want to bring renewables and energy efficiency together to try to get some 
of that enthusiasm about green translated into action on behalf of customers," 
she said.

Energy efficiency is considered the cheapest option to reduce carbon emissions 
because it's so much cheaper than building new power generation of any kind.

"I tell customers that every dollar invested in energy efficiency buy you five 
dollars on the renewable energy side," Kuntz said. "That's shifting a little 
bit as prices start to change, but it's still a much better investment to 
invest in efficiency first."

(c) 2010, Journal Sentinel Inc. All rights reserved.

http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/business/89127977.html


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