10/10/10 Find a Climate Change Event Near You

Climate Action in the desert

Yes, there are climate activists in Phoenix, Arizona, as the picture on the right proves. The picture is from last year’s 350.org International Day of Climate Action and shows a local bicycle club from…Cairo? Oh. Wrong desert.

Moving on…forget about last year. This year, Phoenix — and several other Arizona cities and towns — will, indeed, be enlisting desert dwellers in the fight against climate change. And, boy, do we need it. Studies suggest that the record heat and drought we’ve been experiencing throughout the Southwest may be the “new normal” — especially if we don’t take action to reduce our CO2 output.

The Sonora desert is actually one of the most biologically diverse deserts in the world — largely because we used to receive quite a bit of rain in an average year. But the diversity of life we love here is threatened by a lack of moisture and an average temperature increase.

This Sunday — 10-10-10 — is a chance to learn about what can be done to reduce global warming. And an opportunity to show that we’re serious about taking these steps, now!

If you live in Arizona, check out the maps below to see what’s going on in your area. If you live outside of the state, you can get to the original international map, here.


View Actions at 350.org

Community Power | An Experiment in Utility-Owned Solar and Wind Distributed Generation

The Community Power Project


UPDATE: 2:20 PM MT, 3/3/10: The ACC has put off a vote on the project described below, until the next open meeting — March 31-April 1.

A first-of-a-kind plan by Arizona’s largest utility (APS), to create a “community power project” in Flagstaff is before the Arizona Corporation Commission today.

Coconino County Supervisor Carl Taylor spoke in favor of the program, saying that it was a perfect fit for the county’s plan for sustainable, clean energy. Flagstaff Mayor Sara Pressler has also been an early and enthusiastic backer of the plan.

Solar and Wind

Under the plan being considered, APS will pay for, and own, rooftop PV arrays on roughly two-hundred homes in the Flagstaff area, rooftop solar water heating systems for fifty homes and “a handful” of small scale wind turbines. The customers will lock-in a rate for their electricity for twenty years. All of the homes in the program are on a single feeder system and will have smart meters so that the effects of the system can be tracked.

While mostly supporting the pilot program, some solar companies with their own financing programs spoke at today’s hearing, raising concerns about potential problems in the future having to compete with a giant utility.

Commission chair Kris Mayes told them she understood their concerns, but felt that since the program will only serve 200 homes, it should not have a large effect on competing companies. “If this [program] were for 10,000 homes, I would certainly agree with you,” Mayes told one speaker.