Nature Canada

Raising A Green Fledgling – Part 6 – Staying Green While Not Turning Blue…

Hello Readers!

This part of the series focuses on a very timely question – how do you stay warm when the weather starts getting colder?

Fall has descended upon Ottawa in the last couple of weeks, prompting my wife and I to dig out sweaters from the depths of our closet and to evict the patio furniture from the backyard. These and other aspects of ‘hunkering down’ for the winter made me think about how we and our green fledgling will stay warm during the next 6-8 months.

So how do I heat my home? Well, we have an oil furnace. Yup, oil. We live in a city where natural gas is widely available to homeowners but our home happened to be newly re-equipped for oil heat when we purchased it. Our furnace is less than 12 months old and has a high efficiency rating. We’ve also sought out and sealed drafts around our 50+ year old house and installed a programmable thermostat to reduce our overall energy consumption/costs for heating & cooling.

This series is all about how well my environmental values withstand the many demands – and conveniences – of modern-day parenthood. While home-heating is not a parenting issue, per se, how it is done absolutely influences one’s environmental footprint. In fact, space heating in the home can contribute to 60% of residential energy consumption according to Natural Resources Canada (NRCan). After a series of posts on the things I think my wife and I are doing “well” to reduce our family’s environmental footprint and connect our daughter to nature, I thought it timely to talk about something we can and should do better over time.

The Gulf of Mexico oil disaster is a poignant reminder of the risks associated with oil & gas extraction, hopefully catching the attention of anyone who heats with oil or gas, drives a vehicle, or purchases petrochemical products. Concurrent events like the Red Sea oil spill (June), China’s Yellow Sea oil spill (July), the Enbridge pipeline rupture in Michigan state (July), Chevron’s bid to explore offshore oil & gas in the arctic Beaufort Sea (Aug) and news of Tar Sands extraction impacts on the Athabasca River (Sept) remind us again and again of these risks.

The fuel and electricity that provides heat and hot water in my home (and possibly yours) come from somewhere, and I want to better understand their origins. That way I can make more responsible choices about how to reduce my family’s environmental footprint by choosing greener, cleaner energy. Everyone should consider try this, particularly since we’re using even more energy (derived from fuel combustion and other sources) in our homes over time… NRCan lists the following changes in energy consumption between 1990 and 2007 across the residential sector*:

Residential

  • Water heating = 6.2% increase
  • Space heating = 14.3% increase
  • Lighting = 17.8% increase
  • Other appliances (e.g., TVs, DVD players, personal computers) = 123.8% increase
  • Space cooling = 166.5% increase

These increases can be attributed to numerous factors and don’t directly reflect changes in fuel and electricity consumption. However, consumption is trending in an opposite direction than one would hope given the risks associated with how and where we get the raw energy sources from in the first place…

So here’s the take-home message for this RAGF installment: How will you keep your family warm this winter? Do you know the origin of the fuel and/or electricity used to heat your home? Do you know the full environmental impacts associated with your home heating method? And if so, have you thought about how to reduce the negative impacts? Is your family interested in green energy alternatives?

For the record, there are a lot of ‘greener’ home heating alternatives available, including things like heat pumps, concentrated solar thermal power, geothermal energy, and energy sourcing alternatives like Bullfrog power. I won’t expand on this topic for now since this discussion could be a post unto itself.

Stay tuned for the next post in the RAGF series. Check back every 2-3 weeks for new installments. And thanks for reading!

*Keep in mind that this is just a SAMPLE of all the sector-specific energy consumption stats available from NRCan – I encourage you to also check out the changes in energy consumption patterns that have occurred across the board.

Photo: A. MacDonald

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