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N.Y. Utility Chief Urges
Governments to Promote 'Green' Development
Contact:
Steve Shoenholz
914-390-8165
steve.shoenholz@nypa.gov
October 19, 2006
PHILADELPHIA—New York Power Authority (NYPA)
President and Chief Executive Officer Timothy S. Carey called
Thursday night for governments to help spur investment in “green”
buildings that save energy and water, protect the environment and
improve the health of occupants.
“It’s critical that governments at all levels
promote the development of green buildings and the growth of markets
for sustainable products,” Carey said at the Philadelphia Urban
Sustainability Forum at the Academy of Natural Sciences.
He credited the “pragmatic environmentalism” of New
York Gov. George E. Pataki with creating a climate that encourages
sustainable development and other environmental initiatives. Among
other actions, Carey said New York under Pataki’s leadership has
approved $50 million in tax credits for developers of green
buildings.
“We also need local building codes that require
developers to meet strict standards for sustainable design,” Carey
said. “Existing codes are too often keyed to the lowest common
denominator.”
Carey was recently named to the Board of Directors
of the U.S. Green Building Council, which sets nationally recognized
standards for green buildings under a program known as LEED, for
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design.
“Those occupying these buildings enjoy improved
productivity and health and lower utility bills, not to mention a
clear conscience, as even the building materials themselves are
recycled,” said Carey, who noted the “enormous potential for
quality, economically sound investment in green buildings.”
He urged governments “to set an example, as New
York City has done by requiring that most non-residential new
construction and major alterations financed by the city achieve LEED
certification and sizable energy cost savings.”
As president and CEO of the Battery Park City
Authority in Lower Manhattan, Carey directed construction of the
nation’s first green residential high-rise building, the Solaire,
which earned LEED Gold certification in 2004. He is now leading an
effort by the Power Authority, the largest state-owned electric
utility in the country, to win certification for its administrative
building in White Plains, N.Y., under the LEED program for existing
buildings.
NYPA, which had previously completed a $3.4 million
energy efficiency project in the building, is currently implementing
measures to save energy and water, improve indoor air quality and
require the use of environmentally friendly cleaning products.
Statewide, Carey said, the Power Authority has
invested more than $1 billion in energy efficiency projects at
schools and other public facilities. Completed projects save
taxpayers almost $100 million a year, reduce annual oil use by more
than 1.8 million barrels and cut yearly greenhouse-gas emissions by
nearly 760,000 tons.
In other efforts to reduce use of oil and improve
the environment, Carey said NYPA has installed 25 solar photovoltaic
projects and 14 fuel cells at various locations in New York State.
He said the Authority intends to provide almost five megawatts of
fuel cell capacity at the new World Trade Center complex in Lower
Manhattan, creating one of the world’s largest fuel cell
installations.
Carey said the Power Authority is also involved in
programs to encourage private-sector development of one or more
clean-coal power plants in New York State; use hydroelectric power
to produce hydrogen, in an emission-free process, as a fuel for
transportation; and demonstrate a concept plug-in hybrid-electric
vehicle, DaimlerChrysler’s Sprinter van.
About NYPA:
■ NYPA uses no tax money or
state credit. It finances its operations through the sale of
bonds and revenues earned in large part through sales of
electricity. ■ NYPA is a leader in promoting
energy-efficiency, new energy technologies and electric
transportation initiatives. ■ It is the
nation’s largest state-owned electric utility, with 18 generating
facilities in various parts of the state and more than 1,400
circuit-miles of transmission lines.
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