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The Future of Fairfield. Where are we going and what could we achieve? --a personal vision. Reality Check— Some Real-Life Examples. What ‘miracles’ have other communities/large organizations already achieved that we could emulate?.
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The Future of Fairfield Where are we going and what could we achieve? --a personal vision
Reality Check—Some Real-Life Examples What ‘miracles’ have other communities/large organizations already achieved that we could emulate?
"I don't see any difference between a dollar brought in by a new business -- and a dollar that's saved due to energy conservation," Wes Birdsall, Supervisor, Osage Municipal Utilities Example 1:Osage, Iowa community energy program with financing incentives Cost: $250,000 Savings: $1,200,000/Year # Residents: 3600
If Jefferson County Replicated Osage • (Estimates courtesy of Lonnie Gamble) • Cost: $1,120,000 • Savings: $5,400,000 Per Year • # of residents: 16,181 • 20 yr total savings: $107,000,000 • 20 yr savings per resident: $6600
Example 2Navarre Region of Spain • Population ~500,000 • By 2004, 61% of the region's energy generated by renewable sources • By 2010, they are planning to reach 100% • German Goal: 100% by 2025 • US Goal: 25% by 2025
Example 3Shaklee Corp -- Climate-Neutral • First company in USA to achieve climate neutral certification – net zero impact on environment. • Reduced or offset carbon emissions generated not only by its own business but those of tens of thousands of its distributors • Model corporate citizen
What could we achieve here in Fairfield? …What If?
Carbon Emissions • What if • …Fairfield eliminates its entire carbon footprint within 10 years, emitting zero emissions, and stopped having any negative impact on the near and far environment? • …Or better than climate-neutral -- becomes climate nourishing?
Energy • What if • …we used Energy Efficiency, Biomass co-generation, Wind Power, Solar Hot Water, and clever city design to satisfy 100% of our energy needs -- within 10 years? • …our local economy became free from foreign oil dependence and oil price fluctuations? • …our monthly energy bills stabilized or even decreased? • This is true homeland security!
Water • As of 2006, there were 366 impaired waterways in Iowa • What if • …our local lakes, ponds, and streams were completely safe for swimming and recreation – all the time? And within 5 years? • …water coming out of our taps so safe and pure we don’t need bottled water? • …we heated our homes with solar hot water systems -- that can pay for themselves in less than 5-10 years • …we eventually have no water bills for the rest of our lives?
Food, Farming, and Soil • What if • …we stopped trucking our food cross-country? • …used our most abundant Iowa resource to grow our own food – on a year-round basis? • … we re-enliven family farming by actively encouraging regional farmers to make their living by growing fresh food for humans, instead of primarily food for animals? • …we left our soil healthier each year than the previous, stopped depleting the top soil, and didn’t need to depend on increasingly expensive (and toxic) petro-chemicals? • More homeland security
Transportation • What if • …we create a Fairfield in which cars are not needed for most – or even all -- in-city trips? • …we had great pollution-free public transportation, free bicycles all over the city, etc.? • Think of the noise reduction, the cleaner air, the global carbon reduction -- and the increase in community as we spend more time with each other.
Buildings • What if • …all new buildings in Fairfield were highly energy efficient, used renewable energy sources as much as possible, employed daylighting and passive solar strategies, used non-toxic building materials for healthy IAQ, used rainwater wisely, had solar hot water systems, had green roofs -- and were also affordable? • …we did energy audits on all existing structures • …we redesigned the square to reduce the summer’s ‘heat island’ effect and made it so cool people couldn’t stay away
Government • What if • …we extended our city Strategic Plan to create a 10 year Strategic Green Plan to achieve all of this and more? • …our government had a city-level commission or department responsible for • Coordinating all efforts to implement the strategic Green Plan • Researching funding possibilities • Taking best practices from other communities moving in the same direction • …our government committed to buying goods, materials, services, and capital improvements in a manner that reflects our core values of fiscal responsibility, social equity, community and environmental stewardship?
Conclusions • All of the above is real and achievable—and a small sample of what is possible • We can be a model, and teach other communities how to do it—we are good at this! • We can turn the challenges of global warming into opportunities for • economic growth, environmental improvements and social cohesion – a triple bottom line business equation • a bright and secure future for many generations of Fairfielders.