Tag: emissions

  • New methods find methane emissions underestimated | Globalnews.ca

    جدید ٹکنالوجی کا استعمال کرتے ہوئے نئی تحقیق سے پتہ چلتا ہے کہ سسکیچیوان میں بھاری تیل کی سہولیات ایک طاقتور کی مقدار سے تقریبا چار گنا جاری کر رہی ہیں۔ گرین ہاؤس گیس اس سے کہ وہ حکومت کو رپورٹ کریں۔

    جرنل انوائرمینٹل سائنس اینڈ ٹیکنالوجی میں شائع ہونے والی یہ تحقیق پیمائش کے نئے طریقوں کا علمبردار کرتی ہے۔ میتھین کا اخراج اوٹاوا میں کارلٹن یونیورسٹی میں انجینئرنگ کے پروفیسر، مصنف میتھیو جانسن نے کہا کہ یہ سوال موجودہ صنعت کی مشق ہے۔

    مزید پڑھ:

    وینی پیگ نامیاتی فضلہ جمع کرنے کی خدمت کو اپنانے میں سست ہے۔

    اگلا پڑھیں:

    سورج کا کچھ حصہ آزاد ہو کر ایک عجیب بھنور بناتا ہے، سائنسدانوں کو حیران کر دیتے ہیں۔

    جانسن نے کہا، \”ان میں سے بہت ساری (رپورٹ) تخمینوں پر کی جاتی ہیں۔ \”واضح طور پر، وہ بہت درست نہیں ہیں۔\”

    میتھین ایک ایسی گیس ہے جو تیل کی پیداوار کے ضمنی پیداوار کے طور پر خارج ہوتی ہے جسے اکثر کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ سے 25 گنا زیادہ طاقتور گرین ہاؤس گیس قرار دیا جاتا ہے۔ صنعت اور حکومت ان اخراج کو تین چوتھائی تک کم کرنے کی کوشش کر رہے ہیں، لیکن ان کی پیمائش کرنا مشکل ہو گیا ہے۔

    کہانی اشتہار کے نیچے جاری ہے۔

    جانسن نے کہا، \”یہ سخت پیمائشیں ہیں۔

    صنعت عام طور پر اس تخمینے پر انحصار کرتی ہے کہ تیل کے ہر بیرل کے لیے کتنی میتھین سطح پر آتی ہے، پھر اس پیمائش کو تیل کی پیداوار سے ضرب لگاتی ہے۔ حالیہ برسوں میں، اوور فلائنگ ہوائی جہاز سے براہ راست پیمائش کا استعمال کرتے ہوئے متعدد مطالعات نے اس طریقہ کار پر شکوک پیدا کیے ہیں۔

    متعلقہ ویڈیوز


    \"ویڈیو


    نیوزی لینڈ کاشتکاروں کو بھیڑوں اور گایوں سے خارج ہونے والی میتھین پر ٹیکس لگاتا ہے۔


    جانسن نے کہا کہ تیل سے وابستہ میتھین کی مقدار انتہائی متغیر ہے، جو اس تناسب پر مبنی حسابات کو ناقابل اعتبار بناتی ہے۔

    جانسن اور ان کے ساتھیوں نے ساسکیچیوان میں 962 بھاری تیل کی تنصیبات سے میتھین کے اخراج کی پیمائش کرنے کے لیے جدید ترین ہوا سے چلنے والی ٹیکنالوجی کے ساتھ ساتھ زمین پر مبنی سینسر کا استعمال کیا جو کہ نام نہاد CHOPS ٹیکنالوجی کا استعمال کرتی ہے، جو کہ تیل کو سطح پر لانے میں مدد کے لیے ریت کا استعمال کرتی ہے۔

    انہوں نے پایا کہ ان سائٹس نے سرکاری انوینٹریوں کی اطلاع کے مقابلے میں 3.9 گنا زیادہ میتھین چھوڑا ہے۔ یہ تقریباً 2,700 کلوگرام فی گھنٹہ انڈسٹری کی رپورٹ کے مقابلے میں 10,000 کلوگرام فی گھنٹہ سے زیادہ ہے۔

    کہانی اشتہار کے نیچے جاری ہے۔

    جانسن نے کہا، \”وہ میتھین، اپنے طور پر، سسکیچیوان کی پوری انوینٹری میں ایک اہم شراکت ہوگی۔\”

    مزید پڑھ:

    رپورٹوں سے پتہ چلتا ہے کہ کینیڈا میں میتھین کا اخراج سرکاری اندازوں سے کہیں زیادہ ہے۔

    اگلا پڑھیں:

    خصوصی: جیمز اسمتھ کری نیشن کے قتل سے پہلے بیوہ کی 911 کال پر تشدد کا انکشاف

    جانسن نے کہا کہ میتھین کی صنعت ماحول میں کتنی مقدار میں خارج ہوتی ہے اس کا درست ہینڈل حاصل کرنا چند وجوہات کی بناء پر اہم ہے۔

    سب سے پہلے، صنعت اور وفاقی حکومت نے 2030 تک ان اخراج کو 75 فیصد تک کم کرنے پر اتفاق کیا ہے۔ اس ہدف کو حاصل کرنے کے لیے ضابطے اس سال متوقع ہیں اور ایک درست نقطہ آغاز کی پیمائش بہت اہم ہوگی۔

    دوسرا، جانسن نے کہا کہ اخراج کا ایک قابل اعتماد، اچھی طرح سے تجزیہ کرنا مستقبل میں صنعت کے لیے اہم ہوگا۔

    میتھین کے اخراج کو کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ کے اخراج کی طرح ٹیکسوں کا سامنا نہیں کرنا پڑتا، لیکن یہ بدل رہا ہے۔ ریاستہائے متحدہ اپنے افراط زر میں کمی کے قانون کے تحت جاری کردہ میتھین کی قیمت لگانے پر تبادلہ خیال کر رہا ہے۔

    جانسن نے کہا کہ اچھی معلومات یہ جاننے کے لیے کلیدی ہوں گی کہ کون سے کنویں منافع بخش رہیں گے کیونکہ اس طرح کی قیمتوں کے نظام پھیلتے ہیں۔

    مزید پڑھ:

    موسمیاتی تبدیلی ہیٹ ویوز کو زیادہ گرم اور بار بار بناتی ہے۔ یہ ہے کیسے

    اگلا پڑھیں:

    گوگل اے آئی چیٹ بوٹ بارڈ غلط جواب دیتا ہے، حصص میں کمی بھیجی جاتی ہے۔

    \”اگر آپ میتھین کی قیمت کا تصور کرتے ہیں … ان میں سے بہت سے کنویں غیر اقتصادی ہوں گے۔\”

    کہانی اشتہار کے نیچے جاری ہے۔

    تاہم، جانسن کے حسابات بتاتے ہیں کہ میتھین کو کم کرنے کی لاگت اتنی کم ہے کہ میتھین کی قیمت ادا نہ کرنے کی ادائیگی کی مدت صرف دو سال ہو سکتی ہے۔ اور اگر پیدا ہونے والے تیل کی قیمت کو شامل کیا جائے تو بہت سے کنوؤں کے لیے واپسی کی مدت نو ماہ تک گر جاتی ہے۔

    جانسن نے کہا کہ میتھین کو جلانے سے بھی مدد ملے گی۔

    \”صرف بنیادی دہن کی تخفیف ٹیکنالوجی کو انسٹال کرنا کنویں کے لیے ڈیل توڑنے والا نہیں ہے، اور آپ میتھین میں کافی حد تک کمی حاصل کر سکتے ہیں۔\”

    کینیڈین پریس کی یہ رپورٹ پہلی بار 21 فروری 2023 کو شائع ہوئی تھی۔

    قارئین کے لیے نوٹ: یہ ایک درست کہانی ہے۔ پچھلے ورژن نے کہا کہ البرٹا کو تحقیق میں شامل کیا گیا تھا۔


    \"ویڈیو


    ارونگ آئل ریفائنری کھانے کے فضلے سے قابل تجدید قدرتی گیس استعمال کرنے کے لیے


    &کاپی 2023 کینیڈین پریس





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  • Engineered wood grows stronger while trapping carbon dioxide: New method could lower both emissions and building construction costs

    رائس یونیورسٹی کے سائنسدانوں نے لکڑی کو انجنیئر کرنے کا ایک طریقہ تلاش کیا ہے تاکہ کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ کو ایک ممکنہ طور پر قابل توسیع، توانائی کے قابل عمل کے ذریعے پھنسایا جا سکے جو کہ مواد کو تعمیر میں استعمال کے لیے بھی مضبوط بناتا ہے۔

    سٹیل یا سیمنٹ جیسے ساختی مواد ڈالر اور کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ کے اخراج دونوں میں زیادہ قیمت پر آتے ہیں۔ عمارت کی تعمیر اور استعمال کے اخراجات کا تخمینہ 40% اخراج ہے۔ موجودہ مواد کے لیے پائیدار متبادل تیار کرنے سے موسمیاتی تبدیلیوں کو کم کرنے اور کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ کے اخراج کو کم کرنے میں مدد مل سکتی ہے۔

    میں شائع ہونے والی ایک تحقیق کے مطابق، دونوں مسائل کو ایک ساتھ حل کرنے کے لیے کام کرتے ہوئے، مادی سائنسدان محمد رحمان اور ساتھیوں نے لکڑی میں کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ کو پھنسانے والے کرسٹل لائن غیر محفوظ مواد کے مالیکیولز کو شامل کرنے کا ایک طریقہ تلاش کیا۔ سیل رپورٹس فزیکل سائنس۔

    رحمان نے کہا، \”لکڑی ایک پائیدار، قابل تجدید ساختی مواد ہے جسے ہم پہلے ہی بڑے پیمانے پر استعمال کر رہے ہیں۔\” \”ہماری انجینئرڈ لکڑی نے عام، غیر علاج شدہ لکڑی سے زیادہ طاقت کا مظاہرہ کیا۔\”

    اس کارنامے کو حاصل کرنے کے لیے، سیلولوز ریشوں کا جال جو لکڑی کو اپنی طاقت دیتا ہے، سب سے پہلے اس عمل کے ذریعے صاف کیا جاتا ہے جسے ڈیلینیفیکیشن کہا جاتا ہے۔

    \”لکڑی تین ضروری اجزاء سے بنی ہے: سیلولوز، ہیمی سیلولوز اور لگنن،\” رحمان نے کہا۔ \”لگنن وہ ہے جو لکڑی کو اس کا رنگ دیتا ہے، اس لیے جب آپ لگنن کو نکالتے ہیں تو لکڑی بے رنگ ہو جاتی ہے۔ لگنن کو ہٹانا کافی آسان عمل ہے جس میں دو قدموں پر مشتمل کیمیکل ٹریٹمنٹ شامل ہے جس میں ماحول کے لیے سومی مادوں کا استعمال کیا جاتا ہے۔ لگنن کو ہٹانے کے بعد، ہم بلیچ کا استعمال کرتے ہیں۔ یا ہیمی سیلولوز کو ہٹانے کے لیے ہائیڈروجن پیرو آکسائیڈ۔\”

    اس کے بعد، خوش نما لکڑی کو ایک محلول میں بھگو دیا جاتا ہے جس میں دھاتی نامیاتی فریم ورک کے مائکرو پارٹیکلز، یا MOF، جسے Calgary Framework 20 (CALF-20) کہا جاتا ہے۔ MOFs اونچی سطح کے علاقے کے شربت والے مواد ہیں جو کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ کے مالیکیولز کو اپنے سوراخوں میں جذب کرنے کی صلاحیت کے لیے استعمال ہوتے ہیں۔ \”ایم او ایف کے ذرات آسانی سے سیلولوز چینلز میں فٹ ہو جاتے ہیں اور سطح کے سازگار تعامل کے ذریعے ان سے منسلک ہو جاتے ہیں،\” سومیا برتا رائے، ایک رائس ریسرچ سائنس دان اور مطالعہ کے لیڈ مصنف نے کہا۔

    MOFs کئی نوزائیدہ کاربن کیپچر ٹیکنالوجیز میں شامل ہیں جو انسانی آب و ہوا کی تبدیلی سے نمٹنے کے لیے تیار کی گئی ہیں۔ رحمٰن نے کہا، \”ابھی، کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ-ساربینٹ مواد کو تعینات کرنے کے لیے کوئی بایوڈیگریڈیبل، پائیدار سبسٹریٹ نہیں ہے۔\” \”ہماری ایم او ایف سے بڑھی ہوئی لکڑی مختلف کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ ایپلی کیشنز میں سوربینٹ کی تعیناتی کے لیے موافقت پذیر سپورٹ پلیٹ فارم ہے۔\”

    \”موجودہ MOFs میں سے بہت سے مختلف ماحولیاتی حالات میں بہت مستحکم نہیں ہیں،\” رائے نے کہا۔ \”کچھ نمی کے لئے بہت حساس ہیں، اور آپ اسے ساختی مواد میں نہیں چاہتے ہیں۔\”

    رائے نے کہا کہ CALF-20، تاہم، یونیورسٹی آف کیلگری کے پروفیسر جارج شمیزو اور معاونین نے تیار کیا ہے، مختلف ماحولیاتی حالات میں کارکردگی کی سطح اور استعداد دونوں کے لحاظ سے نمایاں ہے۔

    رحمان نے کہا کہ ساختی مواد جیسے دھاتیں یا سیمنٹ کی تیاری صنعتی کاربن کے اخراج کا ایک اہم ذریعہ ہے۔ \”ہمارا عمل استعمال شدہ مادوں اور ضمنی مصنوعات کی پروسیسنگ دونوں کے لحاظ سے آسان اور \’ہریانہ\’ ہے۔

    انہوں نے مزید کہا کہ \”اگلا مرحلہ اس مواد کی توسیع پذیری اور تجارتی قابل عملیت کو سمجھنے کے لیے ضبطی کے عمل کے ساتھ ساتھ ایک تفصیلی معاشی تجزیہ کا تعین کرنا ہوگا۔\”

    رحمان رائس کے جارج آر براؤن سکول آف انجینئرنگ میں میٹریل سائنس اور نینو انجینئرنگ میں اسسٹنٹ ریسرچ پروفیسر ہیں۔ رائے رائس میں میٹریل سائنس اور نینو انجینیئرنگ کے ریسرچ سائنسدان ہیں۔

    شیل ٹیکنالوجیز (R66830) اور UES-ایئر فورس ریسرچ لیبارٹری (G10000097) نے تحقیق کی حمایت کی۔



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  • Big-box stores could help slash emissions and save millions by putting solar panels on roofs. Why aren\’t more of them doing it? | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    As the US attempts to wean itself off its heavy reliance on fossil fuels and shift to cleaner energy sources, many experts are eyeing a promising solution: your neighborhood big-box stores and shopping malls.

    The rooftops and parking lot space available at retail giants like Walmart, Target and Costco is massive. And these largely empty spaces are being touted as untapped potential for solar power that could help the US reduce its dependency on foreign energy, slash planet-warming emissions and save companies millions of dollars in the process.

    At the IKEA store in Baltimore, installing solar panels on the roof and over the store’s parking lot cut the amount of energy it needed to purchase by 84%, slashing its costs by 57% from September to December of 2020, according to the company. (The panels also provide some beneficial shade to keep customers’ cars cool on hot, sunny days.)

    As of February 2021, IKEA had 54 solar arrays installed across 90% of its US locations.

    Big-box stores and shopping centers have enough roof space to produce half of their annual electricity needs from solar, according to a report from nonprofit Environment America and research firm Frontier Group.

    Leveraging the full rooftop solar potential of these superstores would generate enough electricity to power nearly 8 million average homes, the report concluded, and would cut the same amount of planet-warming emissions as pulling 11.3 million gas-powered cars off the road.

    The average Walmart store, for example, has 180,000 square feet of rooftop, according to the report. That’s roughly the size of three football fields and enough space to support solar energy that could power the equivalent of 200 homes, the report said.

    “Every rooftop in America that isn’t producing solar energy is a rooftop wasted as we work to break our dependence on fossil fuels and the geopolitical conflicts that come with them,” Johanna Neumann, senior director for Environment America’s campaign for 100% Renewable, told CNN. “Now is the time to lean into local renewable energy production, and there’s no better place than the roofs of America’s big-box superstores.”

    \"MAP

    Advocates involved in clean energy worker-training programs tell CNN that a solar revolution in big-box retail would also be a significant windfall for local communities, spurring economic growth while tackling the climate crisis, which has inflicted disproportionate harm on marginalized communities.

    Yet only a fraction of big-box stores in the US have solar on their rooftops or solar canopies in parking lots, the report’s authors told CNN.

    CNN reached out to five of the top US retailers — Walmart, Kroger, Home Depot, Costco and Target — to ask: Why not invest in more rooftop solar?

    Many renewable energy experts point to solar as a relatively simple solution to cut down on costs and help rein in fossil fuel emissions, but the companies point to several roadblocks — regulations, labor costs and structural integrity of the rooftops themselves — that are preventing more widespread adoption.

    The need for these kinds of clean energy initiatives is becoming “unquestionably urgent” as the climate crisis accelerates, said Edwin Cowen, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University.

    “We are behind the eight ball, to put it mildly,” Cowen told CNN. “I would have loved to see policy help incentivize rooftop solar 15 years ago instead of five years ago in the commercial space. There’s still a tremendous amount of work to do.”

    Neumann said Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, possesses by far the largest solar potential. Walmart has around 5,000 stores in the US and more than 783 million square feet of rooftop space — an area larger than Manhattan — and more than 8,974 gigawatt hours of annual rooftop solar potential, according to the report.

    It’s enough electricity to power more than 842,000 homes, the report said.

    Walmart spokesperson Mariel Messier told CNN the company is involved in renewable energy projects around the world, but many of them are not rooftop solar installations. The company has reported having completed on- and off-site wind and solar projects or had others under development with a capacity to produce more than 2.3 gigawatts of renewable energy.

    Neumann said Environment America has met with Walmart a few times, urging the retailer to commit to installing solar panels on roofs and in parking lots. The company has said it’s aiming to source 100% of its energy through renewable projects by 2035.

    “Of all the retailers in America, Walmart stands to make the biggest impact if they put rooftop solar on all of their stores,” Neumann told CNN. “And for us, this report just underscores just how much of an impact they could make if they make that decision.”

    According to Environment America, Walmart had installed almost 194 megawatts of solar capacity on its US facilities as of the end of the 2021 fiscal year and additional capacity in off-site solar farms. The company’s installations in California were expected to provide between 20% to 30% of each location’s electricity needs.

    \"Solar

    Target ranked No. 1 for on-site solar capacity in 2019, according to industry trade group Solar Energy Industries Association’s most recent report. It currently has 542 locations with rooftop solar — around a quarter of the company’s stores — a Target spokesperson told CNN. Rooftop solar generates enough energy to meet 15% to 40% of Target properties’ energy needs, the spokesperson said.

    Richard Galanti, the chief financial officer at Costco, said the company has 121 stores with rooftop solar around the world, 95 of which are in the US.

    Walmart, Target and Costco did not share with CNN what their biggest barriers are to adding rooftop or parking lot solar panels to more stores.

    Approximate number of households companies could power with rooftop solar

  • Walmart — 842,700
  • Target — 259,900
  • Home Depot — 256,600
  • Kroger — 192,500
  • Costco — 87,500
  • Source: Environment America, Frontier Group report, “Solar on Superstores”

“My suspicion is that they want an even stronger business case for deviating from business-as-usual,” Neumann said. “Historically, all those roofs have done is cover their stores, and rethinking how [they] use their buildings and thinking of them as energy generators, not just protection from rain, requires a small change in their business model.”

Home Depot, which has around 2,300 stores, currently has 75 completed rooftop solar projects, 12 in construction and more than 30 planned for future development, said Craig D’Arcy, the company’s director of energy management. Solar power generates around half of these stores’ energy needs on average, he said.

Aging rooftops at stores are a “huge impediment” to solar installation, D’Arcy added. If a roof needs to be replaced in the next 15 to 20 years or sooner, it doesn’t make financial sense for Home Depot to add solar systems today, he said.

“We have a goal of implementing solar rooftop where the economics are attractive,” D’Arcy told CNN.

CNN also reached out to Kroger, which owns about 2,800 stores across the US. Kristal Howard, a Kroger spokesperson, said the company currently has 15 properties — stores, distribution centers and manufacturing plants — with solar installations. One of the “multiple factors affecting the viability of a solar installation” was the stores’ ability to support a solar installation on the roofs, Howard said.

\"A

Cowen, the engineering professor at Cornell, said solar is already attractive, but that labor costs, incentives and the different layers of regulation likely pose some financial challenges in solar installations.

“For them, this means usually hiring a local site firm that can do that installation that also knows local policy,” Cowen said. “It’s just another layer of complexity that I think is beginning to make sense because the costs have come down enough, but it needs kind of reopening that door of getting into an existing building.”

Rep. Sean Casten of Illinois, who co-chairs the power sector task force in the House, said the US has “failed to provide the incentives to people who have the expertise to go in and build these things.” The reason both retail companies and the power sector have not made much progress on solar is because “our system is so disjointed” and has a complex regulation structure, Casten said.

“Why aren’t we doing something that makes economic sense? The answer is this horribly disjointed federal policy where we massively subsidize fossil energy extraction, and we penalize clean energy production,” Casten told CNN. “For a long, long time, if you wanted to build a solar panel on the rooftop of Walmart, your biggest enemy was going to be your local utility because they didn’t want to lose the load.

“We could have done this decades ago,” Casten added. “And had we done it, we would not be in this dire position with the climate, but we’d also have a lot more money in our pocket.”

For Charles Callaway, director of organizing at the nonprofit group WE ACT for Environmental Justice, strengthening the rooftop solar capacity in big box retail stores is a no-brainer, especially if companies allow the local community to reap benefits either through installation jobs or sharing the electricity produced later.

Either way, it would put a massive dent in curbing the climate crisis and help usher in an equitable transition away from fossil fuels — and it’s doable, Callaway told CNN.

\"Solar

The New York City resident led a worker training program that helped train more than 100 local community members, mostly people of color, to become solar installers. He also formed a solar workers cooperative to ensure many of the participants of the training program get jobs in a tough market.

In the last two years, Callaway said his group has not only installed solar panels on roofs of affordable housing units, but also equipment capable of producing 2 megawatts of solar energy on shopping malls up in upstate New York. He emphasized that hiring locally would be most beneficial since local installers know the community and local regulations best.

“One of my huge concerns is social equity,” Cowen said. “Access to renewable energy is a fairly privileged position these days, and we’ve got to figure out ways to make that not true.”

Jasmine Graham, WE ACT’s energy justice policy manager, said the potential of building rooftop solar on big box superstores is encouraging, only “if these projects use local labor, if they are paying prevailing wages, and if this solar is being used in a manner such as community solar, which would allow [utility] bill discounts for folks that live in the same utility zone.”

Pressure is mounting for global leaders to act urgently on the climate crisis after a UN report in late February warned the window for action is rapidly closing.

Neumann believes the US can meet its energy demand with renewables. All it takes, she said, is the political will to make that switch, and the inclusion of the local community so no one gets left behind in the transition.

“The sooner we make that transition, the sooner we’ll have cleaner air, the sooner we’ll have a more protected environment and better health and the sooner we’ll have a more livable future for our kids,” Neumann said. “And even if that requires investment, it is an investment worth making.”



Source link

  • Big-box stores could help slash emissions and save millions by putting solar panels on roofs. Why aren\’t more of them doing it? | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    As the US attempts to wean itself off its heavy reliance on fossil fuels and shift to cleaner energy sources, many experts are eyeing a promising solution: your neighborhood big-box stores and shopping malls.

    The rooftops and parking lot space available at retail giants like Walmart, Target and Costco is massive. And these largely empty spaces are being touted as untapped potential for solar power that could help the US reduce its dependency on foreign energy, slash planet-warming emissions and save companies millions of dollars in the process.

    At the IKEA store in Baltimore, installing solar panels on the roof and over the store’s parking lot cut the amount of energy it needed to purchase by 84%, slashing its costs by 57% from September to December of 2020, according to the company. (The panels also provide some beneficial shade to keep customers’ cars cool on hot, sunny days.)

    As of February 2021, IKEA had 54 solar arrays installed across 90% of its US locations.

    Big-box stores and shopping centers have enough roof space to produce half of their annual electricity needs from solar, according to a report from nonprofit Environment America and research firm Frontier Group.

    Leveraging the full rooftop solar potential of these superstores would generate enough electricity to power nearly 8 million average homes, the report concluded, and would cut the same amount of planet-warming emissions as pulling 11.3 million gas-powered cars off the road.

    The average Walmart store, for example, has 180,000 square feet of rooftop, according to the report. That’s roughly the size of three football fields and enough space to support solar energy that could power the equivalent of 200 homes, the report said.

    “Every rooftop in America that isn’t producing solar energy is a rooftop wasted as we work to break our dependence on fossil fuels and the geopolitical conflicts that come with them,” Johanna Neumann, senior director for Environment America’s campaign for 100% Renewable, told CNN. “Now is the time to lean into local renewable energy production, and there’s no better place than the roofs of America’s big-box superstores.”

    \"MAP

    Advocates involved in clean energy worker-training programs tell CNN that a solar revolution in big-box retail would also be a significant windfall for local communities, spurring economic growth while tackling the climate crisis, which has inflicted disproportionate harm on marginalized communities.

    Yet only a fraction of big-box stores in the US have solar on their rooftops or solar canopies in parking lots, the report’s authors told CNN.

    CNN reached out to five of the top US retailers — Walmart, Kroger, Home Depot, Costco and Target — to ask: Why not invest in more rooftop solar?

    Many renewable energy experts point to solar as a relatively simple solution to cut down on costs and help rein in fossil fuel emissions, but the companies point to several roadblocks — regulations, labor costs and structural integrity of the rooftops themselves — that are preventing more widespread adoption.

    The need for these kinds of clean energy initiatives is becoming “unquestionably urgent” as the climate crisis accelerates, said Edwin Cowen, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University.

    “We are behind the eight ball, to put it mildly,” Cowen told CNN. “I would have loved to see policy help incentivize rooftop solar 15 years ago instead of five years ago in the commercial space. There’s still a tremendous amount of work to do.”

    Neumann said Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, possesses by far the largest solar potential. Walmart has around 5,000 stores in the US and more than 783 million square feet of rooftop space — an area larger than Manhattan — and more than 8,974 gigawatt hours of annual rooftop solar potential, according to the report.

    It’s enough electricity to power more than 842,000 homes, the report said.

    Walmart spokesperson Mariel Messier told CNN the company is involved in renewable energy projects around the world, but many of them are not rooftop solar installations. The company has reported having completed on- and off-site wind and solar projects or had others under development with a capacity to produce more than 2.3 gigawatts of renewable energy.

    Neumann said Environment America has met with Walmart a few times, urging the retailer to commit to installing solar panels on roofs and in parking lots. The company has said it’s aiming to source 100% of its energy through renewable projects by 2035.

    “Of all the retailers in America, Walmart stands to make the biggest impact if they put rooftop solar on all of their stores,” Neumann told CNN. “And for us, this report just underscores just how much of an impact they could make if they make that decision.”

    According to Environment America, Walmart had installed almost 194 megawatts of solar capacity on its US facilities as of the end of the 2021 fiscal year and additional capacity in off-site solar farms. The company’s installations in California were expected to provide between 20% to 30% of each location’s electricity needs.

    \"Solar

    Target ranked No. 1 for on-site solar capacity in 2019, according to industry trade group Solar Energy Industries Association’s most recent report. It currently has 542 locations with rooftop solar — around a quarter of the company’s stores — a Target spokesperson told CNN. Rooftop solar generates enough energy to meet 15% to 40% of Target properties’ energy needs, the spokesperson said.

    Richard Galanti, the chief financial officer at Costco, said the company has 121 stores with rooftop solar around the world, 95 of which are in the US.

    Walmart, Target and Costco did not share with CNN what their biggest barriers are to adding rooftop or parking lot solar panels to more stores.

    Approximate number of households companies could power with rooftop solar

  • Walmart — 842,700
  • Target — 259,900
  • Home Depot — 256,600
  • Kroger — 192,500
  • Costco — 87,500
  • Source: Environment America, Frontier Group report, “Solar on Superstores”
  • “My suspicion is that they want an even stronger business case for deviating from business-as-usual,” Neumann said. “Historically, all those roofs have done is cover their stores, and rethinking how [they] use their buildings and thinking of them as energy generators, not just protection from rain, requires a small change in their business model.”

    Home Depot, which has around 2,300 stores, currently has 75 completed rooftop solar projects, 12 in construction and more than 30 planned for future development, said Craig D’Arcy, the company’s director of energy management. Solar power generates around half of these stores’ energy needs on average, he said.

    Aging rooftops at stores are a “huge impediment” to solar installation, D’Arcy added. If a roof needs to be replaced in the next 15 to 20 years or sooner, it doesn’t make financial sense for Home Depot to add solar systems today, he said.

    “We have a goal of implementing solar rooftop where the economics are attractive,” D’Arcy told CNN.

    CNN also reached out to Kroger, which owns about 2,800 stores across the US. Kristal Howard, a Kroger spokesperson, said the company currently has 15 properties — stores, distribution centers and manufacturing plants — with solar installations. One of the “multiple factors affecting the viability of a solar installation” was the stores’ ability to support a solar installation on the roofs, Howard said.

    \"A

    Cowen, the engineering professor at Cornell, said solar is already attractive, but that labor costs, incentives and the different layers of regulation likely pose some financial challenges in solar installations.

    “For them, this means usually hiring a local site firm that can do that installation that also knows local policy,” Cowen said. “It’s just another layer of complexity that I think is beginning to make sense because the costs have come down enough, but it needs kind of reopening that door of getting into an existing building.”

    Rep. Sean Casten of Illinois, who co-chairs the power sector task force in the House, said the US has “failed to provide the incentives to people who have the expertise to go in and build these things.” The reason both retail companies and the power sector have not made much progress on solar is because “our system is so disjointed” and has a complex regulation structure, Casten said.

    “Why aren’t we doing something that makes economic sense? The answer is this horribly disjointed federal policy where we massively subsidize fossil energy extraction, and we penalize clean energy production,” Casten told CNN. “For a long, long time, if you wanted to build a solar panel on the rooftop of Walmart, your biggest enemy was going to be your local utility because they didn’t want to lose the load.

    “We could have done this decades ago,” Casten added. “And had we done it, we would not be in this dire position with the climate, but we’d also have a lot more money in our pocket.”

    For Charles Callaway, director of organizing at the nonprofit group WE ACT for Environmental Justice, strengthening the rooftop solar capacity in big box retail stores is a no-brainer, especially if companies allow the local community to reap benefits either through installation jobs or sharing the electricity produced later.

    Either way, it would put a massive dent in curbing the climate crisis and help usher in an equitable transition away from fossil fuels — and it’s doable, Callaway told CNN.

    \"Solar

    The New York City resident led a worker training program that helped train more than 100 local community members, mostly people of color, to become solar installers. He also formed a solar workers cooperative to ensure many of the participants of the training program get jobs in a tough market.

    In the last two years, Callaway said his group has not only installed solar panels on roofs of affordable housing units, but also equipment capable of producing 2 megawatts of solar energy on shopping malls up in upstate New York. He emphasized that hiring locally would be most beneficial since local installers know the community and local regulations best.

    “One of my huge concerns is social equity,” Cowen said. “Access to renewable energy is a fairly privileged position these days, and we’ve got to figure out ways to make that not true.”

    Jasmine Graham, WE ACT’s energy justice policy manager, said the potential of building rooftop solar on big box superstores is encouraging, only “if these projects use local labor, if they are paying prevailing wages, and if this solar is being used in a manner such as community solar, which would allow [utility] bill discounts for folks that live in the same utility zone.”

    Pressure is mounting for global leaders to act urgently on the climate crisis after a UN report in late February warned the window for action is rapidly closing.

    Neumann believes the US can meet its energy demand with renewables. All it takes, she said, is the political will to make that switch, and the inclusion of the local community so no one gets left behind in the transition.

    “The sooner we make that transition, the sooner we’ll have cleaner air, the sooner we’ll have a more protected environment and better health and the sooner we’ll have a more livable future for our kids,” Neumann said. “And even if that requires investment, it is an investment worth making.”



    Source link

  • Big-box stores could help slash emissions and save millions by putting solar panels on roofs. Why aren\’t more of them doing it? | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    As the US attempts to wean itself off its heavy reliance on fossil fuels and shift to cleaner energy sources, many experts are eyeing a promising solution: your neighborhood big-box stores and shopping malls.

    The rooftops and parking lot space available at retail giants like Walmart, Target and Costco is massive. And these largely empty spaces are being touted as untapped potential for solar power that could help the US reduce its dependency on foreign energy, slash planet-warming emissions and save companies millions of dollars in the process.

    At the IKEA store in Baltimore, installing solar panels on the roof and over the store’s parking lot cut the amount of energy it needed to purchase by 84%, slashing its costs by 57% from September to December of 2020, according to the company. (The panels also provide some beneficial shade to keep customers’ cars cool on hot, sunny days.)

    As of February 2021, IKEA had 54 solar arrays installed across 90% of its US locations.

    Big-box stores and shopping centers have enough roof space to produce half of their annual electricity needs from solar, according to a report from nonprofit Environment America and research firm Frontier Group.

    Leveraging the full rooftop solar potential of these superstores would generate enough electricity to power nearly 8 million average homes, the report concluded, and would cut the same amount of planet-warming emissions as pulling 11.3 million gas-powered cars off the road.

    The average Walmart store, for example, has 180,000 square feet of rooftop, according to the report. That’s roughly the size of three football fields and enough space to support solar energy that could power the equivalent of 200 homes, the report said.

    “Every rooftop in America that isn’t producing solar energy is a rooftop wasted as we work to break our dependence on fossil fuels and the geopolitical conflicts that come with them,” Johanna Neumann, senior director for Environment America’s campaign for 100% Renewable, told CNN. “Now is the time to lean into local renewable energy production, and there’s no better place than the roofs of America’s big-box superstores.”

    \"MAP

    Advocates involved in clean energy worker-training programs tell CNN that a solar revolution in big-box retail would also be a significant windfall for local communities, spurring economic growth while tackling the climate crisis, which has inflicted disproportionate harm on marginalized communities.

    Yet only a fraction of big-box stores in the US have solar on their rooftops or solar canopies in parking lots, the report’s authors told CNN.

    CNN reached out to five of the top US retailers — Walmart, Kroger, Home Depot, Costco and Target — to ask: Why not invest in more rooftop solar?

    Many renewable energy experts point to solar as a relatively simple solution to cut down on costs and help rein in fossil fuel emissions, but the companies point to several roadblocks — regulations, labor costs and structural integrity of the rooftops themselves — that are preventing more widespread adoption.

    The need for these kinds of clean energy initiatives is becoming “unquestionably urgent” as the climate crisis accelerates, said Edwin Cowen, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University.

    “We are behind the eight ball, to put it mildly,” Cowen told CNN. “I would have loved to see policy help incentivize rooftop solar 15 years ago instead of five years ago in the commercial space. There’s still a tremendous amount of work to do.”

    Neumann said Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, possesses by far the largest solar potential. Walmart has around 5,000 stores in the US and more than 783 million square feet of rooftop space — an area larger than Manhattan — and more than 8,974 gigawatt hours of annual rooftop solar potential, according to the report.

    It’s enough electricity to power more than 842,000 homes, the report said.

    Walmart spokesperson Mariel Messier told CNN the company is involved in renewable energy projects around the world, but many of them are not rooftop solar installations. The company has reported having completed on- and off-site wind and solar projects or had others under development with a capacity to produce more than 2.3 gigawatts of renewable energy.

    Neumann said Environment America has met with Walmart a few times, urging the retailer to commit to installing solar panels on roofs and in parking lots. The company has said it’s aiming to source 100% of its energy through renewable projects by 2035.

    “Of all the retailers in America, Walmart stands to make the biggest impact if they put rooftop solar on all of their stores,” Neumann told CNN. “And for us, this report just underscores just how much of an impact they could make if they make that decision.”

    According to Environment America, Walmart had installed almost 194 megawatts of solar capacity on its US facilities as of the end of the 2021 fiscal year and additional capacity in off-site solar farms. The company’s installations in California were expected to provide between 20% to 30% of each location’s electricity needs.

    \"Solar

    Target ranked No. 1 for on-site solar capacity in 2019, according to industry trade group Solar Energy Industries Association’s most recent report. It currently has 542 locations with rooftop solar — around a quarter of the company’s stores — a Target spokesperson told CNN. Rooftop solar generates enough energy to meet 15% to 40% of Target properties’ energy needs, the spokesperson said.

    Richard Galanti, the chief financial officer at Costco, said the company has 121 stores with rooftop solar around the world, 95 of which are in the US.

    Walmart, Target and Costco did not share with CNN what their biggest barriers are to adding rooftop or parking lot solar panels to more stores.

    Approximate number of households companies could power with rooftop solar

  • Walmart — 842,700
  • Target — 259,900
  • Home Depot — 256,600
  • Kroger — 192,500
  • Costco — 87,500
  • Source: Environment America, Frontier Group report, “Solar on Superstores”
  • “My suspicion is that they want an even stronger business case for deviating from business-as-usual,” Neumann said. “Historically, all those roofs have done is cover their stores, and rethinking how [they] use their buildings and thinking of them as energy generators, not just protection from rain, requires a small change in their business model.”

    Home Depot, which has around 2,300 stores, currently has 75 completed rooftop solar projects, 12 in construction and more than 30 planned for future development, said Craig D’Arcy, the company’s director of energy management. Solar power generates around half of these stores’ energy needs on average, he said.

    Aging rooftops at stores are a “huge impediment” to solar installation, D’Arcy added. If a roof needs to be replaced in the next 15 to 20 years or sooner, it doesn’t make financial sense for Home Depot to add solar systems today, he said.

    “We have a goal of implementing solar rooftop where the economics are attractive,” D’Arcy told CNN.

    CNN also reached out to Kroger, which owns about 2,800 stores across the US. Kristal Howard, a Kroger spokesperson, said the company currently has 15 properties — stores, distribution centers and manufacturing plants — with solar installations. One of the “multiple factors affecting the viability of a solar installation” was the stores’ ability to support a solar installation on the roofs, Howard said.

    \"A

    Cowen, the engineering professor at Cornell, said solar is already attractive, but that labor costs, incentives and the different layers of regulation likely pose some financial challenges in solar installations.

    “For them, this means usually hiring a local site firm that can do that installation that also knows local policy,” Cowen said. “It’s just another layer of complexity that I think is beginning to make sense because the costs have come down enough, but it needs kind of reopening that door of getting into an existing building.”

    Rep. Sean Casten of Illinois, who co-chairs the power sector task force in the House, said the US has “failed to provide the incentives to people who have the expertise to go in and build these things.” The reason both retail companies and the power sector have not made much progress on solar is because “our system is so disjointed” and has a complex regulation structure, Casten said.

    “Why aren’t we doing something that makes economic sense? The answer is this horribly disjointed federal policy where we massively subsidize fossil energy extraction, and we penalize clean energy production,” Casten told CNN. “For a long, long time, if you wanted to build a solar panel on the rooftop of Walmart, your biggest enemy was going to be your local utility because they didn’t want to lose the load.

    “We could have done this decades ago,” Casten added. “And had we done it, we would not be in this dire position with the climate, but we’d also have a lot more money in our pocket.”

    For Charles Callaway, director of organizing at the nonprofit group WE ACT for Environmental Justice, strengthening the rooftop solar capacity in big box retail stores is a no-brainer, especially if companies allow the local community to reap benefits either through installation jobs or sharing the electricity produced later.

    Either way, it would put a massive dent in curbing the climate crisis and help usher in an equitable transition away from fossil fuels — and it’s doable, Callaway told CNN.

    \"Solar

    The New York City resident led a worker training program that helped train more than 100 local community members, mostly people of color, to become solar installers. He also formed a solar workers cooperative to ensure many of the participants of the training program get jobs in a tough market.

    In the last two years, Callaway said his group has not only installed solar panels on roofs of affordable housing units, but also equipment capable of producing 2 megawatts of solar energy on shopping malls up in upstate New York. He emphasized that hiring locally would be most beneficial since local installers know the community and local regulations best.

    “One of my huge concerns is social equity,” Cowen said. “Access to renewable energy is a fairly privileged position these days, and we’ve got to figure out ways to make that not true.”

    Jasmine Graham, WE ACT’s energy justice policy manager, said the potential of building rooftop solar on big box superstores is encouraging, only “if these projects use local labor, if they are paying prevailing wages, and if this solar is being used in a manner such as community solar, which would allow [utility] bill discounts for folks that live in the same utility zone.”

    Pressure is mounting for global leaders to act urgently on the climate crisis after a UN report in late February warned the window for action is rapidly closing.

    Neumann believes the US can meet its energy demand with renewables. All it takes, she said, is the political will to make that switch, and the inclusion of the local community so no one gets left behind in the transition.

    “The sooner we make that transition, the sooner we’ll have cleaner air, the sooner we’ll have a more protected environment and better health and the sooner we’ll have a more livable future for our kids,” Neumann said. “And even if that requires investment, it is an investment worth making.”



    Source link

  • Big-box stores could help slash emissions and save millions by putting solar panels on roofs. Why aren\’t more of them doing it? | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    As the US attempts to wean itself off its heavy reliance on fossil fuels and shift to cleaner energy sources, many experts are eyeing a promising solution: your neighborhood big-box stores and shopping malls.

    The rooftops and parking lot space available at retail giants like Walmart, Target and Costco is massive. And these largely empty spaces are being touted as untapped potential for solar power that could help the US reduce its dependency on foreign energy, slash planet-warming emissions and save companies millions of dollars in the process.

    At the IKEA store in Baltimore, installing solar panels on the roof and over the store’s parking lot cut the amount of energy it needed to purchase by 84%, slashing its costs by 57% from September to December of 2020, according to the company. (The panels also provide some beneficial shade to keep customers’ cars cool on hot, sunny days.)

    As of February 2021, IKEA had 54 solar arrays installed across 90% of its US locations.

    Big-box stores and shopping centers have enough roof space to produce half of their annual electricity needs from solar, according to a report from nonprofit Environment America and research firm Frontier Group.

    Leveraging the full rooftop solar potential of these superstores would generate enough electricity to power nearly 8 million average homes, the report concluded, and would cut the same amount of planet-warming emissions as pulling 11.3 million gas-powered cars off the road.

    The average Walmart store, for example, has 180,000 square feet of rooftop, according to the report. That’s roughly the size of three football fields and enough space to support solar energy that could power the equivalent of 200 homes, the report said.

    “Every rooftop in America that isn’t producing solar energy is a rooftop wasted as we work to break our dependence on fossil fuels and the geopolitical conflicts that come with them,” Johanna Neumann, senior director for Environment America’s campaign for 100% Renewable, told CNN. “Now is the time to lean into local renewable energy production, and there’s no better place than the roofs of America’s big-box superstores.”

    \"MAP

    Advocates involved in clean energy worker-training programs tell CNN that a solar revolution in big-box retail would also be a significant windfall for local communities, spurring economic growth while tackling the climate crisis, which has inflicted disproportionate harm on marginalized communities.

    Yet only a fraction of big-box stores in the US have solar on their rooftops or solar canopies in parking lots, the report’s authors told CNN.

    CNN reached out to five of the top US retailers — Walmart, Kroger, Home Depot, Costco and Target — to ask: Why not invest in more rooftop solar?

    Many renewable energy experts point to solar as a relatively simple solution to cut down on costs and help rein in fossil fuel emissions, but the companies point to several roadblocks — regulations, labor costs and structural integrity of the rooftops themselves — that are preventing more widespread adoption.

    The need for these kinds of clean energy initiatives is becoming “unquestionably urgent” as the climate crisis accelerates, said Edwin Cowen, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University.

    “We are behind the eight ball, to put it mildly,” Cowen told CNN. “I would have loved to see policy help incentivize rooftop solar 15 years ago instead of five years ago in the commercial space. There’s still a tremendous amount of work to do.”

    Neumann said Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, possesses by far the largest solar potential. Walmart has around 5,000 stores in the US and more than 783 million square feet of rooftop space — an area larger than Manhattan — and more than 8,974 gigawatt hours of annual rooftop solar potential, according to the report.

    It’s enough electricity to power more than 842,000 homes, the report said.

    Walmart spokesperson Mariel Messier told CNN the company is involved in renewable energy projects around the world, but many of them are not rooftop solar installations. The company has reported having completed on- and off-site wind and solar projects or had others under development with a capacity to produce more than 2.3 gigawatts of renewable energy.

    Neumann said Environment America has met with Walmart a few times, urging the retailer to commit to installing solar panels on roofs and in parking lots. The company has said it’s aiming to source 100% of its energy through renewable projects by 2035.

    “Of all the retailers in America, Walmart stands to make the biggest impact if they put rooftop solar on all of their stores,” Neumann told CNN. “And for us, this report just underscores just how much of an impact they could make if they make that decision.”

    According to Environment America, Walmart had installed almost 194 megawatts of solar capacity on its US facilities as of the end of the 2021 fiscal year and additional capacity in off-site solar farms. The company’s installations in California were expected to provide between 20% to 30% of each location’s electricity needs.

    \"Solar

    Target ranked No. 1 for on-site solar capacity in 2019, according to industry trade group Solar Energy Industries Association’s most recent report. It currently has 542 locations with rooftop solar — around a quarter of the company’s stores — a Target spokesperson told CNN. Rooftop solar generates enough energy to meet 15% to 40% of Target properties’ energy needs, the spokesperson said.

    Richard Galanti, the chief financial officer at Costco, said the company has 121 stores with rooftop solar around the world, 95 of which are in the US.

    Walmart, Target and Costco did not share with CNN what their biggest barriers are to adding rooftop or parking lot solar panels to more stores.

    Approximate number of households companies could power with rooftop solar

  • Walmart — 842,700
  • Target — 259,900
  • Home Depot — 256,600
  • Kroger — 192,500
  • Costco — 87,500
  • Source: Environment America, Frontier Group report, “Solar on Superstores”
  • “My suspicion is that they want an even stronger business case for deviating from business-as-usual,” Neumann said. “Historically, all those roofs have done is cover their stores, and rethinking how [they] use their buildings and thinking of them as energy generators, not just protection from rain, requires a small change in their business model.”

    Home Depot, which has around 2,300 stores, currently has 75 completed rooftop solar projects, 12 in construction and more than 30 planned for future development, said Craig D’Arcy, the company’s director of energy management. Solar power generates around half of these stores’ energy needs on average, he said.

    Aging rooftops at stores are a “huge impediment” to solar installation, D’Arcy added. If a roof needs to be replaced in the next 15 to 20 years or sooner, it doesn’t make financial sense for Home Depot to add solar systems today, he said.

    “We have a goal of implementing solar rooftop where the economics are attractive,” D’Arcy told CNN.

    CNN also reached out to Kroger, which owns about 2,800 stores across the US. Kristal Howard, a Kroger spokesperson, said the company currently has 15 properties — stores, distribution centers and manufacturing plants — with solar installations. One of the “multiple factors affecting the viability of a solar installation” was the stores’ ability to support a solar installation on the roofs, Howard said.

    \"A

    Cowen, the engineering professor at Cornell, said solar is already attractive, but that labor costs, incentives and the different layers of regulation likely pose some financial challenges in solar installations.

    “For them, this means usually hiring a local site firm that can do that installation that also knows local policy,” Cowen said. “It’s just another layer of complexity that I think is beginning to make sense because the costs have come down enough, but it needs kind of reopening that door of getting into an existing building.”

    Rep. Sean Casten of Illinois, who co-chairs the power sector task force in the House, said the US has “failed to provide the incentives to people who have the expertise to go in and build these things.” The reason both retail companies and the power sector have not made much progress on solar is because “our system is so disjointed” and has a complex regulation structure, Casten said.

    “Why aren’t we doing something that makes economic sense? The answer is this horribly disjointed federal policy where we massively subsidize fossil energy extraction, and we penalize clean energy production,” Casten told CNN. “For a long, long time, if you wanted to build a solar panel on the rooftop of Walmart, your biggest enemy was going to be your local utility because they didn’t want to lose the load.

    “We could have done this decades ago,” Casten added. “And had we done it, we would not be in this dire position with the climate, but we’d also have a lot more money in our pocket.”

    For Charles Callaway, director of organizing at the nonprofit group WE ACT for Environmental Justice, strengthening the rooftop solar capacity in big box retail stores is a no-brainer, especially if companies allow the local community to reap benefits either through installation jobs or sharing the electricity produced later.

    Either way, it would put a massive dent in curbing the climate crisis and help usher in an equitable transition away from fossil fuels — and it’s doable, Callaway told CNN.

    \"Solar

    The New York City resident led a worker training program that helped train more than 100 local community members, mostly people of color, to become solar installers. He also formed a solar workers cooperative to ensure many of the participants of the training program get jobs in a tough market.

    In the last two years, Callaway said his group has not only installed solar panels on roofs of affordable housing units, but also equipment capable of producing 2 megawatts of solar energy on shopping malls up in upstate New York. He emphasized that hiring locally would be most beneficial since local installers know the community and local regulations best.

    “One of my huge concerns is social equity,” Cowen said. “Access to renewable energy is a fairly privileged position these days, and we’ve got to figure out ways to make that not true.”

    Jasmine Graham, WE ACT’s energy justice policy manager, said the potential of building rooftop solar on big box superstores is encouraging, only “if these projects use local labor, if they are paying prevailing wages, and if this solar is being used in a manner such as community solar, which would allow [utility] bill discounts for folks that live in the same utility zone.”

    Pressure is mounting for global leaders to act urgently on the climate crisis after a UN report in late February warned the window for action is rapidly closing.

    Neumann believes the US can meet its energy demand with renewables. All it takes, she said, is the political will to make that switch, and the inclusion of the local community so no one gets left behind in the transition.

    “The sooner we make that transition, the sooner we’ll have cleaner air, the sooner we’ll have a more protected environment and better health and the sooner we’ll have a more livable future for our kids,” Neumann said. “And even if that requires investment, it is an investment worth making.”



    Source link

  • Big-box stores could help slash emissions and save millions by putting solar panels on roofs. Why aren\’t more of them doing it? | CNN



    CNN
     — 

    As the US attempts to wean itself off its heavy reliance on fossil fuels and shift to cleaner energy sources, many experts are eyeing a promising solution: your neighborhood big-box stores and shopping malls.

    The rooftops and parking lot space available at retail giants like Walmart, Target and Costco is massive. And these largely empty spaces are being touted as untapped potential for solar power that could help the US reduce its dependency on foreign energy, slash planet-warming emissions and save companies millions of dollars in the process.

    At the IKEA store in Baltimore, installing solar panels on the roof and over the store’s parking lot cut the amount of energy it needed to purchase by 84%, slashing its costs by 57% from September to December of 2020, according to the company. (The panels also provide some beneficial shade to keep customers’ cars cool on hot, sunny days.)

    As of February 2021, IKEA had 54 solar arrays installed across 90% of its US locations.

    Big-box stores and shopping centers have enough roof space to produce half of their annual electricity needs from solar, according to a report from nonprofit Environment America and research firm Frontier Group.

    Leveraging the full rooftop solar potential of these superstores would generate enough electricity to power nearly 8 million average homes, the report concluded, and would cut the same amount of planet-warming emissions as pulling 11.3 million gas-powered cars off the road.

    The average Walmart store, for example, has 180,000 square feet of rooftop, according to the report. That’s roughly the size of three football fields and enough space to support solar energy that could power the equivalent of 200 homes, the report said.

    “Every rooftop in America that isn’t producing solar energy is a rooftop wasted as we work to break our dependence on fossil fuels and the geopolitical conflicts that come with them,” Johanna Neumann, senior director for Environment America’s campaign for 100% Renewable, told CNN. “Now is the time to lean into local renewable energy production, and there’s no better place than the roofs of America’s big-box superstores.”

    \"MAP

    Advocates involved in clean energy worker-training programs tell CNN that a solar revolution in big-box retail would also be a significant windfall for local communities, spurring economic growth while tackling the climate crisis, which has inflicted disproportionate harm on marginalized communities.

    Yet only a fraction of big-box stores in the US have solar on their rooftops or solar canopies in parking lots, the report’s authors told CNN.

    CNN reached out to five of the top US retailers — Walmart, Kroger, Home Depot, Costco and Target — to ask: Why not invest in more rooftop solar?

    Many renewable energy experts point to solar as a relatively simple solution to cut down on costs and help rein in fossil fuel emissions, but the companies point to several roadblocks — regulations, labor costs and structural integrity of the rooftops themselves — that are preventing more widespread adoption.

    The need for these kinds of clean energy initiatives is becoming “unquestionably urgent” as the climate crisis accelerates, said Edwin Cowen, professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University.

    “We are behind the eight ball, to put it mildly,” Cowen told CNN. “I would have loved to see policy help incentivize rooftop solar 15 years ago instead of five years ago in the commercial space. There’s still a tremendous amount of work to do.”

    Neumann said Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, possesses by far the largest solar potential. Walmart has around 5,000 stores in the US and more than 783 million square feet of rooftop space — an area larger than Manhattan — and more than 8,974 gigawatt hours of annual rooftop solar potential, according to the report.

    It’s enough electricity to power more than 842,000 homes, the report said.

    Walmart spokesperson Mariel Messier told CNN the company is involved in renewable energy projects around the world, but many of them are not rooftop solar installations. The company has reported having completed on- and off-site wind and solar projects or had others under development with a capacity to produce more than 2.3 gigawatts of renewable energy.

    Neumann said Environment America has met with Walmart a few times, urging the retailer to commit to installing solar panels on roofs and in parking lots. The company has said it’s aiming to source 100% of its energy through renewable projects by 2035.

    “Of all the retailers in America, Walmart stands to make the biggest impact if they put rooftop solar on all of their stores,” Neumann told CNN. “And for us, this report just underscores just how much of an impact they could make if they make that decision.”

    According to Environment America, Walmart had installed almost 194 megawatts of solar capacity on its US facilities as of the end of the 2021 fiscal year and additional capacity in off-site solar farms. The company’s installations in California were expected to provide between 20% to 30% of each location’s electricity needs.

    \"Solar

    Target ranked No. 1 for on-site solar capacity in 2019, according to industry trade group Solar Energy Industries Association’s most recent report. It currently has 542 locations with rooftop solar — around a quarter of the company’s stores — a Target spokesperson told CNN. Rooftop solar generates enough energy to meet 15% to 40% of Target properties’ energy needs, the spokesperson said.

    Richard Galanti, the chief financial officer at Costco, said the company has 121 stores with rooftop solar around the world, 95 of which are in the US.

    Walmart, Target and Costco did not share with CNN what their biggest barriers are to adding rooftop or parking lot solar panels to more stores.

    Approximate number of households companies could power with rooftop solar

  • Walmart — 842,700
  • Target — 259,900
  • Home Depot — 256,600
  • Kroger — 192,500
  • Costco — 87,500
  • Source: Environment America, Frontier Group report, “Solar on Superstores”
  • “My suspicion is that they want an even stronger business case for deviating from business-as-usual,” Neumann said. “Historically, all those roofs have done is cover their stores, and rethinking how [they] use their buildings and thinking of them as energy generators, not just protection from rain, requires a small change in their business model.”

    Home Depot, which has around 2,300 stores, currently has 75 completed rooftop solar projects, 12 in construction and more than 30 planned for future development, said Craig D’Arcy, the company’s director of energy management. Solar power generates around half of these stores’ energy needs on average, he said.

    Aging rooftops at stores are a “huge impediment” to solar installation, D’Arcy added. If a roof needs to be replaced in the next 15 to 20 years or sooner, it doesn’t make financial sense for Home Depot to add solar systems today, he said.

    “We have a goal of implementing solar rooftop where the economics are attractive,” D’Arcy told CNN.

    CNN also reached out to Kroger, which owns about 2,800 stores across the US. Kristal Howard, a Kroger spokesperson, said the company currently has 15 properties — stores, distribution centers and manufacturing plants — with solar installations. One of the “multiple factors affecting the viability of a solar installation” was the stores’ ability to support a solar installation on the roofs, Howard said.

    \"A

    Cowen, the engineering professor at Cornell, said solar is already attractive, but that labor costs, incentives and the different layers of regulation likely pose some financial challenges in solar installations.

    “For them, this means usually hiring a local site firm that can do that installation that also knows local policy,” Cowen said. “It’s just another layer of complexity that I think is beginning to make sense because the costs have come down enough, but it needs kind of reopening that door of getting into an existing building.”

    Rep. Sean Casten of Illinois, who co-chairs the power sector task force in the House, said the US has “failed to provide the incentives to people who have the expertise to go in and build these things.” The reason both retail companies and the power sector have not made much progress on solar is because “our system is so disjointed” and has a complex regulation structure, Casten said.

    “Why aren’t we doing something that makes economic sense? The answer is this horribly disjointed federal policy where we massively subsidize fossil energy extraction, and we penalize clean energy production,” Casten told CNN. “For a long, long time, if you wanted to build a solar panel on the rooftop of Walmart, your biggest enemy was going to be your local utility because they didn’t want to lose the load.

    “We could have done this decades ago,” Casten added. “And had we done it, we would not be in this dire position with the climate, but we’d also have a lot more money in our pocket.”

    For Charles Callaway, director of organizing at the nonprofit group WE ACT for Environmental Justice, strengthening the rooftop solar capacity in big box retail stores is a no-brainer, especially if companies allow the local community to reap benefits either through installation jobs or sharing the electricity produced later.

    Either way, it would put a massive dent in curbing the climate crisis and help usher in an equitable transition away from fossil fuels — and it’s doable, Callaway told CNN.

    \"Solar

    The New York City resident led a worker training program that helped train more than 100 local community members, mostly people of color, to become solar installers. He also formed a solar workers cooperative to ensure many of the participants of the training program get jobs in a tough market.

    In the last two years, Callaway said his group has not only installed solar panels on roofs of affordable housing units, but also equipment capable of producing 2 megawatts of solar energy on shopping malls up in upstate New York. He emphasized that hiring locally would be most beneficial since local installers know the community and local regulations best.

    “One of my huge concerns is social equity,” Cowen said. “Access to renewable energy is a fairly privileged position these days, and we’ve got to figure out ways to make that not true.”

    Jasmine Graham, WE ACT’s energy justice policy manager, said the potential of building rooftop solar on big box superstores is encouraging, only “if these projects use local labor, if they are paying prevailing wages, and if this solar is being used in a manner such as community solar, which would allow [utility] bill discounts for folks that live in the same utility zone.”

    Pressure is mounting for global leaders to act urgently on the climate crisis after a UN report in late February warned the window for action is rapidly closing.

    Neumann believes the US can meet its energy demand with renewables. All it takes, she said, is the political will to make that switch, and the inclusion of the local community so no one gets left behind in the transition.

    “The sooner we make that transition, the sooner we’ll have cleaner air, the sooner we’ll have a more protected environment and better health and the sooner we’ll have a more livable future for our kids,” Neumann said. “And even if that requires investment, it is an investment worth making.”



    Source link

  • Global elite produce almost half greenhouse emissions, UN says

    معاشرے میں سب سے زیادہ آلودگی پھیلانے والے 10 فیصد لوگ سالانہ کے تقریباً نصف کے ذمہ دار ہیں۔ گرین ہاؤس گیسوں کے اخراج اقوام متحدہ کی حمایت یافتہ رپورٹ میں یہ نتیجہ اخذ کیا گیا ہے کہ موسمیاتی تبدیلی کے پیچھے اشرافیہ کے گروپ کو نشانہ بنانے والی پالیسیوں کے لیے ایک \”مضبوط ترغیب\” پیدا کرنا ہے۔

    وسیع تحقیق، پیرس میں مقیم ایک گروپ کی طرف سے کی قیادت میں ماہر اقتصادیات تھامس پیکیٹی موسمیاتی تبدیلیوں کے غیر مساوی اثرات کا جائزہ لیا اور یہ بھی پایا کہ 1990 اور 2019 کے درمیان آلودگی میں مجموعی طور پر تقریباً ایک چوتھائی اضافے کے لیے عالمی سطح پر سب سے اوپر 1 فیصد اخراج ذمہ دار تھے۔

    کے محققین نے کہا کہ ممالک کے اندر \”کاربن کی عدم مساوات\” اب ممالک کے درمیان کی نسبت زیادہ تھی۔ عالمی عدم مساوات لیب۔

    \”ملک کے اندر کاربن کی عدم مساوات اب عالمی اخراج کی عدم مساوات کا بڑا حصہ بناتی ہے، جو کہ کل کا تقریباً دو تہائی ہے، جو کہ 1990 کے مقابلے میں تقریباً مکمل الٹ ہے،\” اس نے نتیجہ اخذ کیا۔

    رپورٹ میں کہا گیا ہے کہ مثال کے طور پر، چین میں سب سے اوپر 10 فیصد خارج کرنے والے بالواسطہ یا بالواسطہ طور پر فی شخص تقریباً 38 ٹن کاربن ڈائی آکسائیڈ کے مساوی (CO2e) کے لیے ذمہ دار تھے، جو کہ بہت سے اعلیٰ آمدنی والے ممالک میں سب سے زیادہ اخراج کرنے والوں کے اخراج سے زیادہ ہے۔

    ایک ہی وقت میں، چینی آبادی کے نچلے حصے میں 50 فیصد کا کاربن فوٹ پرنٹ 3t CO2e سے کم تھا۔ اس کا مطلب یہ ہوا کہ چینی آبادی کا غریب نصف حصہ اپنے کل کاربن کے اخراج کا صرف 17 فیصد پیدا کرتا ہے، جب کہ سب سے زیادہ اخراج کرنے والے ان میں سے تقریباً نصف کے ذمہ دار تھے۔

    \"اخراج

    رپورٹ میں کہا گیا ہے کہ اخراج کے ارتکاز نے \”پالیسیوں کے لیے ایک مضبوط ترغیب\” پیدا کی ہے جو سب سے زیادہ آلودگی پھیلانے والے افراد کو نشانہ بناتی ہے، جیسے کہ دولت کے ٹیکس، رپورٹ میں، جس کی حمایت اقوام متحدہ کے ترقیاتی پروگرام نے کی تھی۔

    \”تمام افراد اخراج میں حصہ ڈالتے ہیں، لیکن ایک ہی طرح سے نہیں۔ . . ایکوٹی کی واضح تشویش کے علاوہ، کارکردگی کا سوال داؤ پر لگتا ہے،\” رپورٹ میں کہا گیا۔

    کی بڑھتی ہوئی عجلت کے باوجود موسمیاتی تبدیلی سے نمٹنے اور شدید موسمی واقعات کی ترتیب جس نے پچھلے سال ممالک کو تباہ کیا، عالمی گرین ہاؤس گیسوں کا اخراج ضدی طور پر زیادہ رہا۔

    \"کاربن

    اکتوبر میں، اقوام متحدہ کے سرکردہ ماحولیاتی
    ادارے نے کہا کہ قومی اخراج میں کمی کے وعدوں نے دنیا کو 2100 تک 2.4C اور 2.6C کے درمیان حد درجہ حرارت کے راستے پر ڈال دیا ہے۔ پیرس معاہدہ تقریباً 200 دستخط کرنے والے ممالک کو پابند کرتا ہے کہ وہ گرمی کو 1.5C تک محدود کرنے کی کوشش کریں۔

    اس دوران عالمی افراط زر اور زندگی کے بڑھتے ہوئے بحران نے برطانیہ اور امریکہ سمیت کئی جگہوں پر ممالک کے اندر بڑھتی ہوئی عدم مساوات کے مسئلے کو ذہن کے سامنے رکھا ہے۔

    رپورٹ میں بتایا گیا کہ سب صحارا افریقہ واحد خطہ تھا جہاں فی کس اوسط اخراج اس وقت \”1.5C ہدف کو پورا کرتا ہے\”۔

    اس نے کہا کہ عالمی آبادی کے ایک چھوٹے سے حصے میں اخراج کے ارتکاز کا یہ مطلب بھی ہے کہ عالمی غربت کا خاتمہ اخراج میں تیزی سے کمی کے ساتھ مطابقت نہیں رکھتا۔

    رپورٹ میں اندازہ لگایا گیا ہے کہ نام نہاد \”کاربن بجٹ\”، یا اخراج کی حد، جو ہر ایک کو $5.50 یومیہ غربت کی لکیر سے اوپر لانے کے لیے درکار ہے، تقریباً 10 فیصد لوگوں کے اخراج کے ایک تہائی کے برابر تھی۔

    دی عالمی بینک 2020 کی ایک رپورٹ میں کہا گیا ہے کہ اس نے اندازہ لگایا ہے کہ 2030 تک موسمیاتی تبدیلیوں سے 132 ملین افراد انتہائی غربت میں دھکیل جائیں گے۔

    کی تازہ ترین رپورٹ میں افراد کے اخراج پر غور کیا گیا اور اشیا اور خدمات سے ہونے والی آلودگی کو ان لوگوں کے کاربن فوٹ پرنٹس میں شامل کیا گیا جو ان کا استعمال کرتے ہیں۔

    محققین نے کہا کہ سب سے زیادہ کمزوروں کو نقصان پہنچائے بغیر تیزی سے تبدیلی لانے کے لیے، قومی اور بین الاقوامی ٹیکس نظاموں کی \”گہری تبدیلی\” کی ضرورت تھی۔

    رپورٹ میں کہا گیا ہے کہ مثال کے طور پر، دنیا کے امیر ترین افراد پر عالمی سطح پر \”1.5 فیصد\” ویلتھ ٹیکس اربوں ڈالر اکٹھا کر سکتا ہے تاکہ سب سے زیادہ کمزور گروہوں کو گرین انرجی کی طرف منتقل کرنے میں مدد ملے، جس کا تخمینہ 175 بلین ڈالر سالانہ ہے اگر امریکہ اور یورپ میں لاگو کیا جائے، رپورٹ میں کہا گیا ہے۔

    انہوں نے کہا کہ جیواشم ایندھن کی سبسڈی کو ہٹانے سے \”زیادہ سماجی طور پر ہدف بنائے گئے موافقت پذیر اقدامات کے لیے خاطر خواہ وسائل بھی حاصل کیے جاسکتے ہیں\”، حالانکہ اس طرح کی تبدیلیوں کو سماجی اصلاحات اور مدد کے ساتھ جوڑنا ضروری ہے تاکہ غریب ترین افراد کو ایندھن کی قیمتوں میں ممکنہ اضافے سے بچایا جا سکے۔

    محققین نے کہا کہ ایسے اقدامات کی راہ میں رکاوٹ ممالک کے اندر اور ان کے درمیان اخراج کی غیر مساوی تقسیم کے بارے میں قابل اعتماد ڈیٹا کی کمی تھی۔ انہوں نے کہا کہ پالیسی سازوں کو موثر اور ٹارگٹڈ پالیسیاں تیار کرنے کے لیے ایسے ڈیٹا کو بہتر طور پر جمع کرنے اور سمجھنے میں سرمایہ کاری کرنی چاہیے۔

    گرمی کے اثرات بھی ناہموار ہیں، کم اور درمیانی آمدنی والے ممالک اکثر زیادہ بے نقاب ہوتے ہیں اور سیلاب اور آگ جیسی آفات سے نمٹنے کے لیے کم قابل ہوتے ہیں، ان امیر ممالک کے مقابلے میں جو موسمیاتی تبدیلی کی زیادہ تاریخی ذمہ داری اٹھاتے ہیں۔

    موسمیاتی دارالحکومت

    \"\"

    جہاں موسمیاتی تبدیلی کاروبار، بازار اور سیاست سے ملتی ہے۔ FT کی کوریج کو یہاں دریافت کریں۔.

    کیا آپ FT کے ماحولیاتی پائیداری کے وعدوں کے بارے میں متجسس ہیں؟ ہمارے سائنس پر مبنی اہداف کے بارے میں یہاں مزید معلومات حاصل کریں۔

    اس مضمون کے جواب میں خط:

    اشرافیہ کو اخراج میں کمی کے لیے قائل کرنا، یہی کلید ہے۔ / رچرڈ کرو، Penzance، Cornwall، UK سے



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