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Coming To Your Neighborhood E-mail
Sunday, 01 April 2007

As gasoline prices approach $3 per gallon, our attention is forcibly turned toward energy conservation, a direction that ought to be natural in April, the month of Earth Day. Rather than just cursing the petroleum companies, each of us as individuals has an opportunity and even an obligation to explore ways we can incorporate alternative energies in our lifestyle. Conservation is the simplest and least difficult step. Before committing to ethanol fuel or solar power, the first question simply is to ask "how can I use less energy?" Turning off the unnecessary light and eliminating the extra trip to the store are the beginning of a voyage into energy independence. The most radical ride may be in a solar electric vehicle.

Florida well deserves its nickname as the "Sunshine State" and many opportunities exist to incorporate solar power into our lives. The efficiency and effectiveness of solar hot water and solar pool heating systems is well-documented. During new construction, a relatively minimal investment will produce long-term returns. Florida lawmakers have recognized the viability of such investments and the importance of encouraging them by instituting rebates and grants that directly subsidize homeowners. Homeowners willing to invest in photovoltaics — direct generation of electricity from sunlight — may receive rebates up to $20,000 for a single residential installation. Commercial properties can qualify for up to $100,000 per installation. Deregulation of energy systems also has produced "Net Metering," which requires utility companies to credit solar energy producers with the value of any surplus electricity they return to the grid. It literally is possible to make your electric meter run backward.

An even more radical step is to directly counter gasoline usage with electric vehicles. Not just for golf and games, and not just for some vague time in the future, electric cars have immediate potential as low-speed local-use vehicles. Improving battery technology and solar systems can be combined in vehicles that never have to visit a gasoline station.

Changes in federal and state law now allow a properly equipped, low-speed vehicle — meaning it has appropriate safety equipment — to operate on neighborhood streets, those posted at 35 mph or less. A whole new class of vehicles called Neighborhood Electric Vehicles is being introduced to the market with this new regulation. Such vehicles operate at speeds up to 25 mph, faster than golf carts, which have a top speed of 15 mph. The difference is critical. At 25 mph such vehicles become useful for short trips and are ideal for use in residential communities for short trips and local commuting.

Many local residents are demanding traffic-calming measures in their neighborhoods. Officials at city and county levels should pay attention to neighborhood electric vehicles as yet another alternative to more stop signs and speed humps. The presence of dozens, maybe even hundreds, of vehicles that never go more than 25 mph would help calm neighborhood traffic — and quiet it as well. Electric vehicles not only do not emit exhaust fumes, the only noise is the sound of their tires on the pavement.

 
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