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SOUTHEAST ENERGY EFFICIENCY ALLIANCE. September 22, 2009 Tennessee Green Summit, Nashville, TN. Who is SEEA?.
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SOUTHEAST ENERGY EFFICIENCY ALLIANCE September 22, 2009 Tennessee Green Summit, Nashville, TN
Who is SEEA? The Southeast Energy Efficiency Alliance builds regional partnerships to promote and achieve energy efficiency for a cleaner environment, a more prosperous economy, and a higher quality of life. • Covering 11 southeastern states • 71 million residents
SEEA Participants • State, federal & local governments, electric and natural gas utilities, businesses (energy users and efficiency suppliers), and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) (environment, low income housing, etc.).
Why SEEA? • Electric energy efficiency spending per capita in the Southeast is just one-fifth the national average. • The Southeast region has the lowest levels in the nation for ENERGY STAR market penetration.
Many barriers to efficiency in the Southeast Source: The Power of Efficiency, by WRI, SEEA, & Southface, April 2009 • Lower electricity rates in the Southeast • Significant upfront investments • Misaligned incentives between investment and reward • Regulatory structures • Information gaps
The “National Action Plan for Energy Efficiency” concluded: More than half of expected growth in demand for electricity and natural gas can be avoided over the next 15 years • This can be done by extending energy efficiency “Best Practice” programs to the entire country • Save nearly $20 billion annually on energy bills • Avoid 30,000 MW -- 60 new 500 MW power plants • Avoid more than 400 million tons of CO2 annually • NAPEE Leadership Group included 27 electric and gas utilities, 16 state agencies, and 13 other organizations (+ EPA and DOE) www.epa.gov/eeactionplan Leadership Group. 2006. National Action Plan for Energy Efficiency. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Energy and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Potential Energy Savings Source: Energy Efficiency in Appalachia, March 2009
By 2030 ≈40 new coal-fired electric power plants AND 182 million barrels of oil – about 10% of U.S. production in 2007 or 6.7 million LDVs Energy Efficiency in Appalachia could offset: Source: Energy Efficiency in Appalachia, March 2009 • By 2020 • ≈20 new coal-fired electric power plants AND • 63 million barrels of oil – about 3% of U.S. production in 2007 or 2.6 million light-duty vehicles
Jobs Source: Energy Efficiency in Appalachia, March 2009
Cost of Energy Efficiency Source: The Power of Efficiency, by WRI, SEEA, & Southface, April 2009
Contact Ben Taube/Alex Tapia Southeast Energy Efficiency Alliance Email: ben@seealliance.org alex@seealliance.org Website: www.seealliance.org