Man Creates Green Homes through Local Company

Written by admin on . Posted in Green Home News

Man Creates Green Homes

Michael Merck is the president of West Penn Energy Services, a business that transforms business and living spaces into more energy efficient systems.

Green Homes system

Growing up on a Beaver County farm, sustainability and organic living have always come naturally to Michael Merck.

“I didn’t even know that we were organic farmers and sustainable—there was no definition to it,” he said. “That’s the way you lived—and you can’t live on a farm any other way. It was ingrained in me.”

Today, Merck of Regent Square is bringing those core lessons from his childhood into the city homes of Pittsburgh with his own business, West Penn Energy Solutions. Merck offers consultations and contracting to help home and business owners create more energy efficient living spaces, which in turn creates comfort while cutting back on costs.

Merck and his wife, Jennifer, bought a house on the Edgewood side of Regent Square on Savannah Avenue in 2006. When he couldn’t find any companies to make his home an energy efficient one, he immediately started a business that would do exactly that.

“That’s what gave him the idea because he realized, ‘Wow, there really seems to be a need for this,’” she said.

Solar panels are attached to the roof of Merck’s home, giving them a chance to sell back electricity to Duquesne Light on an almost daily basis as the system switches back and forth between the energy from the sun, and the energy provided from the company.

The entire home is completely sealed, equipped with energy star appliances and also uses compact fluorescent light bulbs.

Renovating his own home to bring it up to full energy efficiency was just the beginning of a green energy business that has grown to include more than 50 clients in Pittsburgh.

“He started taking training courses and certification classes to start to build his name and company,” Jennifer said.

West Penn Energy Solutions offers home performance testing, which identifies opportunities for conservation in a building, solar energy installations, home performance contracting and green design and construction. Homes across the country account for 40 percent of carbon emissions nationwide, according to the West Penn website.

Merck said the solutions to creating a more energy efficient home are plentiful.

“The good news is, anyone can look at their electric bill and get a good sense of their usage,” he said. “If you’re considering solar panels, you also should have an energy audit done at the same time because there might be some really low hanging fruit and easy things to do that could reduce your electrical usage by maybe 20 percent. You can spend a couple hundred dollars to save a couple thousand.”

Merck offers a free energy audit for all clients who install solar panels in order to expose the hidden everyday inefficiencies that can be alleviated.

“Often, if people have more than one refrigerator, that second one is about 15 years old and consumes a tremendous amount of energy,” he said. “Also, with light bulbs in the house, if you haven’t updated to 100 percent compact fluorescents, I guess you must be stubborn because it’s so cost effective—it pays for itself in a month.”

Updating insulation also is another project that can cut back on costs. Merck takes a holistic approach to every building, he said.

“Clients also generally experience a quicker payback than what the energy model predicts,” he said.

Merck said he enjoys the new frontier of working in the green energy business, while at the same time, helping people protect the environment.

“You’re investing in yourself,” he said.” Read here about Green Home in Florida

Green home rating will cost $172

Written by admin on . Posted in Green Home News, Green Homes

NEW green star rating audits will cost South Australian householders $172.

green Home power

A solar power plant in California’s Mojave Desert. Ninety thousand people have taken up solar power rebates, says SA Energy Minister Michael O’Brien. Picture: AP Source: AP

This is about $600 less than first feared, a leaked national report says.

The report received exclusively by The Advertiser yesterday showed homeowners would be forced to pay $172 for audits on green home gas emissions and water efficiency before houses were sold or rented.

Under the Federal Government initiative it would become mandatory for the green rating to be disclosed at the sale or rental of every property.

The new cost could have ballooned to $750 under one of five proposals submitted to the Energy Efficiency Building Information Committee.

It is believed the State Government will not be considering that proposal, opting for the cheaper, less intensive version of the green star scheme.

The Real Estate Institute of South Australia has opposed the Green Home gas and water audits associated with the scheme, saying the costs will be passed on to buyers and renters who are already struggling with housing affordability.

State Energy Minister Michael O’Brien, however, has been heralding the new ratings saying they will raise the value of people’s homes while helping to save the environment and slashing household bills.

“There will be no return to cheap power as we have seen in the past few decades,” he said. “In this climate (increasing power, gas and electricity prices), there is an appetite for the consumer to know how efficient their house is.

“The fact that 90,000 people, compared to the target of 9000, took up the solar power rebates as a way of bringing their electricity prices down points to the fact that people are energy savvy now.”

The audits would be conducted by private companies who would give the house a green star rating. “I’m expecting the real estate agents to use the stars as a valuable marketing tool,” Mr O’Brien said.

“They already have it (green stars) set up in the ACT (Australian Capital Territory), and their saying has changed from `location, location, location’ to `location, location, star rating’ ”.

The Federal Government soon will release the report publicly and several discussions will be held next month to debate the merits of using the star ratings. Read here about Green Home in Florida

Carlucci: NY Power Act to Green Homes & Businesses, Save Money, Create Jobs

Written by admin on . Posted in Green Home News, Green Homes

By Kim Tran

NY Power Act to Green Homes

Power Act to Green Homes

Many Orange and Rockland residents are eligible for a free energy audit

Several heat advisories have been issued and with temperatures still rising across Rockland County, air conditioning is being pumped in many households. However, without energy efficient upgrades in homes, residents’ utility bills will worsen.

Senator David Carlucci teamed up with several organizations to help homeowners and businesses save money on energy costs while protecting the environment and creating local jobs through the Power NY Act of 2011.

“The Power NY Act of 2011 will enhance the Green Jobs program by incentivizing homeowners to upgrade their homes without taking any money out of their pocket,” said Carlucci. “This will save families money, create jobs and protect our environment.”

The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) administers the Green Jobs-Green New York (GJGNY) program.

The Legislature passed Power NY this session, which directs NYSERDA to establish an on-bill financing program for energy efficiency upgrades. These upgrades are made possible through the GJGNY program and will make it easier for New Yorkers to finance energy projects. This act is expected to be signed into law by Governor Andrew Cuomo in the upcoming months.

The GJGNY program’s goals are:

  • Promote energy efficiency
  • Reduce energy consumption and costs
  • Provide residents with access to energy audits, installation services and low-cost financing.

“New York residents have some of the highest utility bills in the country,” said Carlucci. “We need to put our heads together and figure out a solution to this problem.”

Carlucci met with Rudy Scott, president of Energy Management Solutions, Kosi Marrero, an associate at Tomorrow’s Workplace and Homeowner Ken Scher in Suffern on Wednesday.

“The money I was going to save on my energy bill went toward the finances to upgrade my home,” said Scher. “The difference I’ve seen is tremendous.”

“The New York Green Jobs bill created a win, win, win opportunity for New Yorkers,” said Scott. “The State lowers its carbon footprint, homeowners can save up to 40 percent of their utility cost with no money out of their pocket and New York gets to create over 50,000 sustainable jobs.”

“You don’t have to take any money out of your pocket,” said Carlucci. “That money you save on your energy bill will go directly toward repaying the money put toward the upgrades.”

Scott added that the largest problem was to “make homeowners aware of the program.”

“We do need to educate homeowners,” said Scher. “This is one of the best kept secrets and they don’t know that they can get a free energy audit.” NYSERDA offers free or low cost energy audits through their Home Performance with Energy star Program.

  • The audit is free to NY residents with incomes less than 200 percent of the median county income
  • A sliding scale is used to determine costs for those between 200-400 percent of the median county income
  • Those with income greater than 400 percent pay the full caust of the audit which ranges from $50-100
  • Small businesses with 100 employees or less as well as any not-for-profit can take advantage of this program
  • GJGNY Small Business and Not-for-Profit Energy Efficiency Financing Program works with lenders statewide to provide eligible companies with access to low-interest financing for energy efficiency projects

A chart from NYSERDA’s website outlines the median incomes in Rockland and Orange counties.

County Median Income 200 % 400 %
Rockland $101,600 $203,200 $406,400
Orange $83,400 $166,800 $333,600

These audits give residents information on where improvements can be made in their home to better energy efficiency, heath and safety.

Scher showed Carlucci the changes in his home and discussed his experience with making energy efficiency upgrades and the savings he saw. Energy Management Solutions audited his home and developed a proposal detailing their recommendations, its costs and energy savings estimates.

“(In the attic) they put foam wall across the entire top along with double insulation,” Scher said. He put his hand on the attic door. “You feel nothing; nothing comes through.

It’s all because of this piece,” Scher opened the attic door revealing six inches of foam attached to the attic side of the door. “They put six inches of foam to stop the cold or hot air from coming in.”

When the attic door opened, a rush of hot air came out, but when closed, not a trace of heat could be felt against the closed door.

“When we first moved in, the first investment we put into the house was that we put all new windows in,” said Schur. “When Energy Solutions came in, they said, ‘It’s great that they put these special windows in, but they never insulated or sealed around them.’ The audit was amazing.”

Carlucci added that many homes are poorly insulated because of their home’s age.

“Over 40 percent of houses in Rockland were built prior to 1970,” he said.

“Currently, GJGNY financing is available to participants in the Home Performance Energy Star Program to finance the installation of the recommended energy efficiency improvements. Loans for residential properties are capped at $13,000. Repayment periods are available for 5, 10 and 15 years.” Read here about Green Home in Florida

PACE green home retrofit program could be revived by Congress

Written by admin on . Posted in Green Home News

PACE Green Home

Solar green home

A program that helped property owners install green home upgrades before it ran into government roadblocks last year may be resuscitated by Congress.

A group of legislators introduced a bill Wednesday to jump-start the Property Assessed Clean Energy program, known as PACE. The program used low-interest government financing to help fund installations of energy-efficient solar panels, insulation, water conservation systems and more.

More than half of the country had approved some version of the program, which was a magnet for stimulus funding. Retrofits were mostly financed with bonds issued by local governments and then applied as a regular surcharge on homeowners’ property taxes, lightening the heavy upfront costs of such improvements.

But the Federal Housing Finance Agency balked at a component of the program that, in a foreclosure, prioritized the PACE lien over an existing mortgage.

The housing authority warned last summer that PACE posed “unusual and difficult” financial risks. The agency directed mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which it regulates, to tighten its underwriting criteria for participants or steer clear entirely.

Homeowners were told that the program could be a violation of their mortgage terms and grounds for foreclosure.

Since then, the program has lain dormant. But the PACE Protection Act from Reps. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.), Dan Lungren (R-Calif.) and Nan Hayworth (R-N.Y.) would compel the housing finance agency to back down and allow PACE to proceed.

“We’ve tried everything to work with them, but they’re just being stubborn,” Thompson said of the agency. “It’s come down to introducing legislation, which is not the route we wanted to go. These guys are just pigheaded.”

The nearly 2,500 PACE projects on the books helped generate income and tax revenues for municipalities — about $60,000 per home, according to a new study from advocacy group PACENow. Owners of retrofitted homes also generally had lower mortgage default rates.

“Not only do you get the lower utility rates and contributing to saving on energy costs, it’s really done wonders to put people to work,” Thompson said. “It’s a huge answer to the question of how we solve this energy problem. Read here about Green Home in Florida

What Is A Net-Zero Energy Efficient, Green Home?

Written by admin on . Posted in Green Home News, Green Homes

Energy Efficient, Green Home.

By Luca Brammer

Energy efficient homebuilders are constantly improving on design and sustainability to offer solutions to consumers that really want the most efficient home on the planet. The balancing act that an green home builder must pull off is not an easy feat: they need to provide a home with the creature comforts we have all come to take for granted and, at the same time, they must also provide a measurably superior alternative in their offerings that the public will appreciate and be able to afford. Value is exceedingly important given our current economic situation in America.

In the past, energy conscious design was exceedingly expensive and, in turn, was not something the average consumer could afford even if they could appreciate the fact that energy saving homes are good for the environment. Now, building homes that are so efficient they can nearly power themselves is not only technologically possible, but consumers can obtain these superior products for the same price range as a standard, site built home. While these homes go by many names, manufacturers refer to affordable, efficient homes as “Net-Zero energy efficient homes.”

Net-Zero energy efficiency aims at supplying the total electrical needs of a household. The goal of the Net-Zero home building process is two-fold: first, to supply the total energy needs of a home and second, to do so at the least possible expense. Some critics of the phrase “Net-Zero energy efficiency” claim they can achieve the same results of a Net-Zero home by merely by adding a large number of solar panels to any home they build. In all fairness, it is true that you can supply all of the electrical needs of a home by adding a lot more solar panels, but this is not nearly as efficient, effective or economical as designing a home and its various components as a system that seeks to reduce energy consumption from as many points of design as possible.

The goal of Net-Zero design should be, then, not to add as many expensive solar panels as required, but to reduce the overall electrical consumption of a home such that the least amount of expensive solar photovoltaic system components need be used.

The reason that many homebuilders are not moving in the direction of improving efficiency is because the research and development costs alone are enormous. However, the builders that do not match pace with efficient designers will, in the future, lose market share to more forward thinking homebuilders.

Owning a green home is possible. In fact, you can buy a custom, factory built home now for the same cost of many standard site built homes that you find in common residential tract neighborhoods. In residential tract neighborhoods, you can add an island in your kitchen, but you can’t move entire walls or add to square footage significantly; you buy exactly what the developer offers in standardized plans. Custom, factory built homes differ in that you have far more control over design and the end product. Perform research online about Net-Zero homes and solar homes and you will come to find that there are a number of viable options available at a wide range of prices.

Luca Brammer is the Director of Business Development for Hallmark-Southwest Corporation. Hallmark-Southwest is a builder of California manufactured homes specializing in energy efficient home design and Net-Zero energy efficiency. Read more about Green Home in Florida

Powered by WP Robot