NEEP’s Executive Director responds to President Obama’s call for collective action
Published 10-27-09
Submitted by Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships
Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships (NEEP) applauds President Obama's call for Americans to "act collectively" to pilot the global economy as the clean energy leader. Choosing the Northeast to deliver his speech, the President highlights the region's role as a national leader in advancing energy efficiency and clean energy technologies.
At such a crucial point in our country's history as now, when businesses, consumers and governments alike are searching for ways to reduce energy consumption, energy efficiency has distinguished itself as the cheapest, easiest way to achieve the government's goals of reducing our carbon emissions and dependence on fossil fuels.
Leading the nation, Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states have committed to energy efficiency as a top priority solution to economic, environmental and energy challenges. In most cases state policies call for ratepayer-funded efficiency investments to at least offset projected growth in gas and electric energy consumption, peak electric demand, and the associated carbon emissions. As states ramp up their ratepayer-funded efficiency programs to $2.0 billion per year (for starters), the recent influx of federal Recovery Act funding has moved the potential for expanded efficiency initiatives to an unprecedented level. Strategic collaboration and coordination of new and existing efficiency programs will help make the most of these resources to meet aggressive energy efficiency goals. Fortunately, the Northeast/Mid-Altantic region is a model for energy efficiency success including strategic regional coordination facilitated by organizations such as Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships (NEEP).
Leading examples of regional collaboration and coordination in the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic region include:
All of these regional projecs facilitate learning and knowledge transfer that help make the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic region a model for energy efficiency as a first priority energy resource. It also encourages and supports the technology and business innovation that President Obama called for in his talk at MIT. Through such regional collaboration, we can answer the President's call to act collectively to win the global competition in clean energy and energy efficiency technology.
Sue Coakley, Executive Director
As a principal founder of NEEP, Sue Coakley has served as Executive Director and a member of the Board of Directors since 1996. The focus of her work at NEEP is the development of regional strategies to increase energy efficiency in homes, buildings and industry.
ABOUT NEEP
Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships (NEEP) is a regional nonprofit organization founded in 1996 whose mission is to promote the efficient use of energy in homes, buildings and industry in the Northeast U.S. through regionally coordinated programs and policies that increase the use of energy efficient products, services and practices, and that help achieve a cleaner environment and a more reliable and affordable energy system. For more information, visit www.neep.org.
For the industry, communities, businesses, and policy makers in the Northeast & Mid-Atlantic regions, NEEP is a non-profit organization that transforms the way we use and think about energy. We work in the region to remove the greatest barriers to the advancement of energy efficiency and make visible its impacts on the region, economy, the planet. We focus on areas where energy efficiency can have the most immediate and largest impact: reducing energy in buildings, speeding the adoption of smart products, and advancing knowledge and best practices. Our unique approach brings together all stakeholders through education, advocacy, and collaboration - three powerful ingredients essential to true market transformation.
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