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Financial Incentives For Energy Efficiency In New Mexico.

The following is a guest post by Nan Fischer, a Certified EcoBroker specializing in green real estate in Taos, NM. Check out her website www.nanfischer.com, and follow her on Twitter for a daily green news feed, www.twitter.com/nan_fischer.

You can dramatically lower the cost of energy upgrades with incentives offered by your utility company, and local, state and federal governments. This article is a summary for New Mexico homes from the Database of State Incentives for Renewables & Efficiency, www.dsireusa.org, which is a state-by-state directory. There you can also find incentives for commercial, industrial and agricultural applications as well as rebates on appliance purchases.

Local Incentives

  • Kit Carson Electric Co-op, Taos – “KCEC customers who install an Electric Thermal Storage (ETS)/Heat Pump system or a stand-alone ETS system qualify for a discounted, Time-Of-Use electric rate for space and water heating usage. Customers are also eligible to receive rebates ranging from $924 up to $3009 depending on the size of the system.”
  • PNM – PNM will purchase RECs (renewable energy credits) from net-metered solar PV customers at $.13/kWh for 12 years for a system up to 10kW. On systems from 10kW to 1W, the REC is $.15/kWh for 20 years. PNM applies these credits towards their obligations to the NM RPS (Renewable Portfolio Standard), “which requires 4% of the total generation capacity to come from solar electricity by 2020, and 0.6% from distributed generation in 2020.”
  • El Paso Electric Company – EPE purchases REC’s (renewable energy credits) from its New Mexico customers who have a small (up to 10kW), net-metered PV system installed. The rate is $0.13 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) for a period of 12 years, and the credits are applied to the NM RPS (Renewable Portfolio Standard).
  • Farmington Electric Utility System – FEUS credits the retail rate of a kWh to residential customers with systems up to 10kW systems of PV, wind, hydro and ‘other (unspecified) non-carbon-based fuels.’

State Incentives – Personal Tax Credits

  • Solar Market Development Tax Credit – solar hot water, solar space heat, solar thermal process heat, PV, solar space cooling. Tax credit of 10% of purchase and installation costs with a $9,000 cap and maximum 10-year carryover. Heating for pools and hot tubs does not qualify. http://www.emnrd.state.nm.us/ECMD/CleanEnergyTaxIncentives/solartaxcredit.htm
  • Sustainable Building Tax Credit – passive solar space heat, solar hot water, solar space heat, PV, wind and daylighting. The credit depends on square footage and certification. The home must be certified as Build Green NM Silver or higher, or LEED-H Silver or higher, or be an Energy Star certified manufactured home. http://www.cleanenergynm.org
  • Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit (Personal) – Tax credit of $.01/kWh for wind and biomass, $.027 (average) for solar thermal electric. The minimum size requirement is 1W. http://www.cleanenergynm.org

Federal Incentives

  • Residential Renewable Energy Tax Credit – 30% for solar hot water, PV, wind, fuel cells, geothermal heat pumps, and other solar electric technologies.
  • - $2000 cap on systems installed before 1.1.09

    - No cap on systems installed after 12.31.2008

    - Expires 12.31.2016

  • Residential Energy Efficiency Tax Credit – 30% with $1500 cap for 2009-2010 installations of water heaters, furnaces, boilers, heat pumps, air conditioners, building insulation, windows, doors, roofs, circulation fans used in a qualifying furnace, biomass, stoves that use qualified biomass fuel. http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=tax_credits.tx_index#7
  • For more information on federal tax credits, see the Energy Star website, http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=tax_credits.tx_index#7, and the USDOE’s Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy website, http://www1.eere.energy.gov/financing/.
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The Environmental Impact Of Discarded Cigarettes.

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Dear EarthTalk: Has anyone ever studied the environmental impact of discarded cigarettes? I’m constantly appalled at the number of drivers I see pitching their butts out their car windows.

It’s true that littered cigarette butts are a public nuisance, and not just for aesthetic reasons. The filters on cigarettes—four fifths of all cigarettes have them—are made of cellulose acetate, a form of plastic that is very slow to degrade in the environment. A typical cigarette butt can take anywhere from 18 months to 10 years to decompose, depending on environmental conditions.

But beyond the plastic, these filters—which are on cigarettes in the first place to absorb contaminants to prevent them from going into the lungs—contain trace amounts of toxins like cadmium, arsenic and lead. Thus when smokers discard their butts improperly—out the car window or off the end of a pier or onto the sidewalk below—they are essentially tossing these substances willy-nilly into the environment.

Studies done by Johns Hopkins University, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and even the tobacco industry itself show that these contaminants can get into soils and waterways, harm or kill living organisms and generally degrade surrounding ecosystems.

cigarettelitter The Environmental Impact Of Discarded Cigarettes.

While individual discarded cigarette butts may be small, they add up to a huge problem. Some 5.5 trillion cigarettes are consumed worldwide each year. The non-profit Keep America Beautiful reports that cigarette butts constitute as much as one-third of all litter nationwide when measured by the number of discarded items, not volume. According to the Ocean Conservancy, a non-profit that advocates for stronger protection of marine ecosystems, cigarette butts are the most commonly littered item found on America’s salt and fresh water beaches according to feedback received by hundreds of thousands of volunteers taking part in the group’s annual Coastal Clean-up event.

While the tobacco industry may have its hands full just trying to stay afloat in the maelstrom of ongoing bad publicity, critics say it should be doing more to prevent cigarette butt litter. “Just as beverage manufacturers contribute to anti-litter campaigns, and have invested in public education on litter issues, so too should the tobacco industry,” says Kathleen Register, founder and executive director of Clean Virginia Waterways, a non-profit that has spearheaded the fight against cigarette butt litter in the mid-Atlantic region of the U.S. She adds that cigarette manufacturers “need to take an active and responsible role in educating smokers about this issue and devote resources to the cleanup of cigarette litter.”

Register suggests a number of strategies including putting anti-litter messages on all cigarette packaging and advertisements, distributing small, free portable ashtrays, and placing and maintaining outdoor ashtrays in areas where smokers congregate. She also suggests putting an extra tax on cigarette sales, with proceeds going toward anti-litter education efforts and to defray the costs of cleaning up butts. “Picking up littered cigarette butts costs schools, businesses and park agencies money,” she says. “By taxing smokers for anti-litter educational efforts, some of the costs of cleaning up cigarette butts will shift onto smokers.” One way or another, Register hopes, smokers will learn that the Earth is not one giant ashtray.

CONTACTS: CDC, www.cdc.gov; Clean Virginia Waterways, www.longwood.edu/cleanva.

SEND YOUR ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTIONS TO: EarthTalk, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; earthtalk@emagazine.com. Read past columns at: www.emagazine.com/earthtalk/archives.php. EarthTalk is now a book! Details and order information at: www.emagazine.com/earthtalkbook.

Photo from Shutterstock

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Quick Green Reads For The Weekend Volume 142.

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It’s moving day! Hopefully everything will go smoothly this weekend as I move in and get settled, and I expect to have internet service again starting on Monday. Wish me luck! To keep you busy, here are a few great articles that caught my eye over the past week…

I’d Like To Buy The World A Non-Carcinogenic, Responsibly Packaged, Healthier Alternative To Coke

It was a chilly and overcast day in Washington DC, when environmental activists from Appalachia got out of their cars and vans and started pounding makeshift cemetery grave stones into the lawn of the Environmental Protection Agency lawn.

Simran Sethi’s “Greening the Green Girl” series launched on Oprah.com

Now that I’m over six months deep into this gardening game ‘m starting to notice a pattern in some of my plants. There is something wrong with their growth. The one commonality between all of these plants is that I did not feed any of them.

Across the country (and globe!), there is a movement spreading to connect the next generation — the wired generation — with nature. Jolted awake by Last Child In The Woods, people are working to create balance in the lives of the next generation and to instill a love of nature that will carry into adulthood.

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Homegrown Vegetables: Get In Touch With Your Food Source.

MikeLieberman Homegrown Vegetables: Get In Touch With Your Food Source.

Not sure when or how, but we’ve become totally out of touch with our food source. How many of us have ever had the pleasure of enjoying some homegrown vegetables? I read the book Plenty and in it they said that our food travels from farm to plate about 1,500 – 2,000 miles. That’s insane and I wanted to do something about it.

This past spring I decided it was time for me to get back in touch with my food source and grow my own vegetables. Some of you might be rolling your eyes and saying, “No shot. I can’t do that. I have no space. I don’t have any experience. It’s too expensive.”

To that I say neither did I. I live in New York City on the 4th floor of an 8 story building. It took a bit of creativity on my end to pull off the ultimate urban vegetable gardens. I now have a fire escape garden and a backyard vegetable garden at my Grandmother’s in Brooklyn.

Up until I started these gardens, I had zero experience in gardening too. I just kind of experimented to see what would happen. You know what happened? I got some fresh homegrown veggies. No degrees. No books read. I just did it.

The whole experience has been great and a lot of fun. If I want a fresh salad, I go to my fire escape to harvest some lettuce and kale. It doesn’t get much fresher than that. It’s a great feeling to eat a big freshly harvested salad that you grew on your own.

Not only is it fresh, but I know exactly where it came from and what’s happened to it before I grew it. Though I didn’t start from seed, I bought the plants from a local gardener at the Farmer’s Market. She is the one who planted the seed and was with the plant from it’s beginning. When you go to a chain the employees have no clue as to what happens to the plants or seeds.

In terms of cost, they are minimal as well. I built self-watering containers using recycled materials that cost less than $5. You could also make hanging planters using soda bottles.

So getting back in touch with your food source and enjoying some homegrown vegetables is definitely possible.

If you are still hesitant, which I’m not sure why you would be, and want to get more involved in knowing where your food comes from I’d recommend joining your local CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) or food co-op.

These will help to put you in touch with the farmers and get whatever questions that you have answered by the source that is taking care of them.

What’s stopping you from growing your own?

Mike Lieberman resides in New York City and provides simple solutions for living in a complex world. Besides his own blogs, he contributes to others across the web. You can find all of his work at CanarsieBK.com and follow him on Twitter @CanarsieBK.

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