What鈥檚 Cheaper than Solar, Slashes Carbon Emissions, and Creates Jobs in Kentucky?
Jamie Blair had owned his own business for about seven years when he started to think it was missing a crucial piece. He was installing heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems in and around Paintsville, Ky., but heated air isn鈥檛 much good if it leaks out through poorly sealed doors or underinsulated attics. That was right around the time he discovered How$martKY, a collaborative program designed to encourage better energy efficiency in Kentucky homes.
鈥淭en years ago, you never really thought about it,鈥 Blair explained. 鈥淵ou went in and put the unit in, and you didn鈥檛 care how tight the house was or how well it was insulated.鈥
The Kentucky pilot works with 17 contractors, but Kansas works with hundreds鈥攁ll of them now advocates for energy efficiency.
But all that is beginning to change. In 2011, Blair and his employees joined up with How$mart for hands-on training, learning how to perform energy audits and install higher-efficiency insulation. The homes where this training took place belonged to customers of four local energy cooperatives, which had partnered with How$mart.
鈥淣ow we feel pretty comfortable that we can come in and do a full-service retrofit,鈥 Blair said.
Operated by the Eastern Kentucky-based (MACED), which seeks “economic alternatives” to “to make Appalachian communities better places to live,” How$mart collaborates with homeowners, energy co-ops, and contractors to make local houses more energy-efficient. The houses get better insulation, HVAC, heat pumps, sealing鈥攐r all of the above鈥攁nd the homeowners pay for everything on their utility bills, so there鈥檚 relatively little paperwork. The program not only helps the homeowner save money on every bill, but also creates an economic ripple effect by training contractors and cutting expenses for energy companies.
The potential environmental impact is profound. The pilot program has cut energy usage by an average of 20 percent in How$mart homes. That amounts to an annual projected savings of 552,829 kWh鈥攅quivalent to 390 metric tons of climate-warming carbon dioxide. It鈥檚 more energy than the entire country of Vietnam saved during Earth Hour 2010, when 20 cities and provinces turned off their lights for an hour鈥攁n impressive feat for just 108 Kentucky homes.
The program hasn鈥檛 just cut carbon emissions鈥攊t鈥檚 also spurred small-business growth. Since starting with How$mart, Blair has hired three new people to keep up with the extra work. His company now conducts energy audits with customers whether they鈥檙e with How$mart or not. And in the next few months, he plans to expand his business to include insulation and add on another three men.
Training local professionals
East Kentucky Power Cooperative (EKPC) first approached MACED with what might seem like an unlikely problem for an energy generator: Its customers were using too much power. As a result, EKPC had to purchase power from other providers, which was hurting its bottom line.
As it happened, MACED was already exploring ways of making energy efficiency more appealing to people in Appalachia. That鈥檚 how How$martKY was born.
Midwest Energy saw customer satisfaction among How$mart participants soar to 97 percent.
In two years of cooperation with four energy co-ops powered by EKPC, How$martKY has created five to 10 jobs for local contracting companies and saved customers almost $61,000, according to program coordinator Bill Blair.
The process starts when a homeowner asks his or her energy co-op for an efficiency audit. How$mart or a co-op staffer conducts the audit, though local contractors like Jamie Blair join in to learn the ropes. If the homeowner qualifies for the program, the contractor sets about repairing or replacing anything that is driving up the bill鈥攚hether it鈥檚 insufficient attic insulation or an oversized furnace. Finally, How$mart checks the quality of the contractor鈥檚 work. The contractor is welcome to come along during these inspections, but either way, he鈥檚 responsible for fixing any problems. It鈥檚 a part of the education process, Bill Blair explained鈥攁 way for contractors to learn from their mistakes.
Homeowners pay for their retrofitting in installments on their monthly bill. The average monthly installment comes out to just under $40, but homeowners save about $50 a month on average. In fact, How$mart won鈥檛 take on a project unless it鈥檚 sure the homeowner will save money each and every month.
Blair doesn鈥檛 like to call that financing a loan, perhaps because it makes it sound riskier for co-ops than it is. After all, customers pay back installments at 3 percent interest like any other loan鈥攂ut unlike most loans, customers end up with more money in their pockets and fewer reasons to skip payments.
John Smith, owner of Smith Insulation Inc. in Flemingsburg, Ky., says he鈥檚 had trouble convincing customers that highly efficient spray foam insulation is ultimately a worthwhile investment.
鈥淚鈥檝e always been looking for ways to help the homeowner to be able to afford spray foam insulation by looking for tax credits and rebates,鈥 Smith said, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 how I found MACED.鈥
Experienced contractors like Smith appreciate How$martKY because it offers third-party validation of their work and the chance to spark word-of-mouth interest. But for those contractors seeking more extensive training, How$martKY鈥檚 namesake program in Kansas offers continuing education credits and a set of standards for HVAC size. The Kentucky pilot works with 17 contractors, but Kansas works with hundreds鈥攁ll of them now advocates for energy efficiency.
Green customers are happy customers?
When Barb and Steve Ritchie signed up with How$mart to install a new furnace and insulation in their house in Ewing, Ky., the bill came to nearly $14,000.
It鈥檚 a daunting number. But a Kentucky Home Performance rebate helped, and their monthly bill is lower than it was before.
The results were striking: In 2011, the Ritchies used 28,406 kWh of energy. In 2012, that number dropped to 14,651 kWh. Barb Ritchie estimates they鈥檙e saving $400 a month now that they no longer have gas delivered for heating鈥攏ot to mention the savings on their bill.
鈥淚 just feel like I was very blessed,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is the warmest and coolest our house has ever been.鈥
Ritchie鈥檚 reaction isn鈥檛 unique.
鈥淢ost of the time they鈥檙e not going to say, 鈥業鈥檓 saving a lot of money,鈥欌 Blair explained. 鈥淭hey say, 鈥業鈥檓 actually comfortable in my house.鈥欌
Customer satisfaction is a powerful incentive for utilities to take on programs like How$mart, Blair added. And Mike Volker, director of regulatory and energy services at Midwest Energy, Inc., in Kansas, has the numbers to prove it.
Midwest Energy took its inspiration for the original How$mart program from Pay As You Save, a plan developed by the Vermont-based Energy Efficiency Institute. After making a few tweaks, How$mart Kansas became the first utility in the world to implement the concept comprehensively, starting in 2007 with a four-county pilot.
Since then, Midwest Energy saw customer satisfaction among How$mart participants soar to 97 percent. Compare that to the 85 percent customer-satisfaction rate the company observes overall, and you can see why the program has expanded to 41 counties covering most of western Kansas.
Scaling it up
In Kansas, the original How$mart program now saves more than 1.9 million kWh of electricity and 234,000 therms of gas per year. Over 20 years, the reduction could amount to nearly 50,000 tons of CO2. Midwest Energy has invested $5 million in How$mart, but the program has also disproved the notion that green-friendly projects must be a financial drain.
A 2009 report estimates the U.S. could cut energy consumption 23 percent by 2020 by implementing efficiency measures alone.
In fact, How$mart consistently breaks even and could do even better. Midwest Energy doesn鈥檛 turn a profit on the program because its funding options are designed to be accessible to a wider demographic, including low-income households. But according to Volker, it has the potential to be just as profitable as regular utility service.
That profitability is possible in large part because efficiency measures beat out renewables for cost-efficiency hands-down. A 2009 report from consulting firm McKinsey & Company estimates the U.S. could cut energy consumption 23 percent by 2020 by implementing efficiency measures alone. Another study estimated that while wind power costs $38 per ton of CO2 saved, replacing incandescent lights with LEDs saves $159 per ton.
That means any utility, co-op or not, could find a program like How$mart beneficial, Volker said.
Similar programs have already sprung up in Georgia and South Carolina. And when MACED launched How$martKY, Volker was there to help.
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鈥淒oing energy efficiency is a lot less sexy, shall we say, compared to putting in some shiny black photovoltaics or a wind turbine,鈥 Volker says. 鈥淏ut very few people would disagree with me when I say the most cost-effective kilowatt hour is the one you never use.鈥
MACED and three of its partner co-ops have applied for a tariff with the Kentucky Public Service Commission to transform How$mart from a pilot to a permanent program.
鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping to add four or five new co-ops this year,鈥 Blair said. 鈥淥ur goal really is to see every electric provider in the state pick it up.鈥
For contractors like Jamie Blair and customers like Barb Ritchie, environmental benefits are just an added bonus. Better lives and livelihoods are the everyday results they see 鈥 and that might just be enough to inspire grassroots efforts that help reign in carbon emissions on a nationwide scale.
Erin L. McCoy
is a former news editor and freelance reporter currently working as a public relations manager, book editor, content writer, and entrepreneur.
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