NY to spend over $200 million to install CFL bulbs in private households ... @ $150/ household .... in a situation where many live tightly packed together in large buildings??
Would love to see a breakdown of the per household cost.... and compare that with Jamaica's unit cost of delivery.
I can see Kern as a consultant on this project.
Bright idea for a greener Gotham
by amy zimmer / metro new york
APR 18, 2008
MANHATTAN. More than 5 percent of the city’s population is housed in the New York City Housing Authority’s 2,600 buildings, so NYCHA’s efforts to go green is no small feat. In fact, they could serve a model for a larger citywide effort if Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s long-term sustainability agenda gets re-energized.
Maintenance crews have installed 147,000 compact fluorescent bulbs in 58 Brooklyn developments — for an estimated utility-cost savings of $2.1 million a year.
The authority plans to begin installing CFLs this month in Long Island City’s Queensbridge Houses.
“We are the largest landlord in New York City,” said NYCHA rep Heidi Morales. “If we can prove that making these upgrades and modernizations will bring down energy costs and reduce our CO2 output, the expectation is that other landlords will follow.”
Bloomberg’s PlaNYC envisioned adopting a similar — but vastly more ambitious — CFL program for private residential properties.
Its “direct install program,” would send teams out across the city, offering free replacements of incandescent bulbs for 180,000 apartments a year.
The city estimates it would cost $150 per apartment, for labor and the bulbs, and after eight years would reduce electricity consumption by 1.5 percent. Though the program would cost $216 million, the payback is expected within a few months.
The money, however, would have to come from the state Public Service Authority, and Albany hasn’t seemed eager to enact PlaNYC’s tenets, as the congestion pricing defeat showed.
Waste not, want not
If all homes in the city replaced 75 percent of their bulbs with CFLs, the energy savings would be enough to run all the subways and light all the stations.
Would love to see a breakdown of the per household cost.... and compare that with Jamaica's unit cost of delivery.
I can see Kern as a consultant on this project.
Bright idea for a greener Gotham
by amy zimmer / metro new york
APR 18, 2008
MANHATTAN. More than 5 percent of the city’s population is housed in the New York City Housing Authority’s 2,600 buildings, so NYCHA’s efforts to go green is no small feat. In fact, they could serve a model for a larger citywide effort if Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s long-term sustainability agenda gets re-energized.
Maintenance crews have installed 147,000 compact fluorescent bulbs in 58 Brooklyn developments — for an estimated utility-cost savings of $2.1 million a year.
The authority plans to begin installing CFLs this month in Long Island City’s Queensbridge Houses.
“We are the largest landlord in New York City,” said NYCHA rep Heidi Morales. “If we can prove that making these upgrades and modernizations will bring down energy costs and reduce our CO2 output, the expectation is that other landlords will follow.”
Bloomberg’s PlaNYC envisioned adopting a similar — but vastly more ambitious — CFL program for private residential properties.
Its “direct install program,” would send teams out across the city, offering free replacements of incandescent bulbs for 180,000 apartments a year.
The city estimates it would cost $150 per apartment, for labor and the bulbs, and after eight years would reduce electricity consumption by 1.5 percent. Though the program would cost $216 million, the payback is expected within a few months.
The money, however, would have to come from the state Public Service Authority, and Albany hasn’t seemed eager to enact PlaNYC’s tenets, as the congestion pricing defeat showed.
Waste not, want not
If all homes in the city replaced 75 percent of their bulbs with CFLs, the energy savings would be enough to run all the subways and light all the stations.
Comment