Electricity Price Increases

   / Electricity Price Increases #341  
   / Electricity Price Increases #342  
Around here, EWEB has a unique history...

A typhoid epidemic that struck Eugene in the first decade of the 20th century provided the catalyst that led to the creation of EWEB. When the outbreak was traced to the privately owned water company, outraged citizens sprang into action, voting in 1908 to buy the system and create a municipal, citizen-owned water utility.

The Eugene City Council ordered the construction of a hydroelectric power plant that would power the pumps necessary to ensure adequate water pressure. When the Walterville Hydroelectric Plant on the McKenzie River was completed in February 1911, the City Council transferred control of the utility to a separate citizen board, which met for the first time on March 11, 1911.

The sister city, Springfield has their own utility. SUB.

My parents were on a private utility in the 1980's, but it was taken over by a public group, Emerald Public Utility Company covering a portion of rural Lane County. A couple of other public and non profit companies are around.

The federal government controls most of the regional hydroelectric and flood control dams, and are under the umbrella of Bonneville. Power Administration (BPA), and sells wholesale power to the regional utility companies. In theory we pay the long term amortized capitol costs of the dams as well as general maintenance and power distribution costs. The Columbia River generates A LOT OF POWER. But, there are also other regional dams. A few dams on the McKenzie and Willamette river drainage.

That article talks about the Walterville/Leaburg dam. After a century, the city is now trying to shut the dam down due to a lack of earthquake tolerance for the canal system.

EPUD has a natural gas generation project at the local garbage dump.


Although, apparently they now fear a new recycling plant being planned will reduce the future methane available.
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #343  
I expect they are better now… only know one early adopters person and it was plagued with problems…

My gas cost works out to be about $80 per month… PGE sends me a small solar check every year at true which covers all my electric monthly meter fees, etc.

Having extra insulated walls and triple pane windows pays off…
My heat pump water heater is $12/month.
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #344  
Not an opinion, just some internet facts. A mature tree stores 1 ton of CO2 per year of life. That could be 100 tons of carbon that is rereleased into the atmosphere when it is burned. Is this better or worse than NG, LP or coal. I don't know.

In addition, burning wood produces a lot of PM5 and PM10 (smoke) which is a health hazard.

I can understand why an agency would ban wood burning. Me, I still burn wood so I guess I'm a polluter.
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #345  
I am surrounded by forest and the population density is less the 31 per square mile for the county and I would say closer to <10 per square mile here in the southern end. I pretty sure the trees around here absorb way more than we generate :unsure:
All I know I can not keep with the dead or fallen trees enough to worry about cutting live trees. Except when they are in a bad place.
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #346  
No solid fuel burn bans or prohibitions on installing wood stoves, fireplaces, etc. where you are?
No! Quite the opposite, in fact. I received a tax credit for installing the current pair of wood stoves, due to their ultra-high efficiency.

It’s code here and was expanding to gas fired appliances until a recent pause.
I understand stricter laws are required due to the absolutely staggering population density that is southern California. But at the same time, it's such a shame what folks have done to such a beautiful state. California would be a wonderful place to live, if not for so many of the Californians! :p
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #347  
There are tremendous health benefits to physical activity. I put two years worth of wood into the wood shed this summer. I am 78, and still hand split my own. It took me a couple hours a day for 3 weeks, I ricked it to dry in direct sun all summer, and moved it into the wood shed before it got rained on. I'm fortunate that my health allows that much activity, but it maintains my health. Judging from family members, I will have to rely on the heat pump by the time I am 90, but meanwhile a healthy and active body is worth the price of admission.
I get my exercise dirt biking in the summer and snowmobiling in the winter. I'm 77 and need the rush from more thrilling exercise than splitting wood. I quit chasing girls because I'v gotten too slow to catch them.
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #348  
I get my exercise dirt biking in the summer and snowmobiling in the winter. I'm 77 and need the rush from more thrilling exercise than splitting wood. I quit chasing girls because I'v gotten too slow to catch them.
You need to find slower girls. That's scary.;)
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #349  
Not an opinion, just some internet facts. A mature tree stores 1 ton of CO2 per year of life. That could be 100 tons of carbon that is rereleased into the atmosphere when it is burned. Is this better or worse than NG, LP or coal. I don't know.

In addition, burning wood produces a lot of PM5 and PM10 (smoke) which is a health hazard.

I can understand why an agency would ban wood burning. Me, I still burn wood so I guess I'm a polluter.
Thinning an overly dense forest to produce fuelwood, biomass and lumber reduces wildfire severity. Severe wildfires release far more pollutants than burning fuelwood or biomass.
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #350  
Not an opinion, just some internet facts. A mature tree stores 1 ton of CO2 per year of life. That could be 100 tons of carbon that is rereleased into the atmosphere when it is burned. Is this better or worse than NG, LP or coal. I don't know.

In addition, burning wood produces a lot of PM5 and PM10 (smoke) which is a health hazard.

I can understand why an agency would ban wood burning. Me, I still burn wood so I guess I'm a polluter.

We have a number of clean burning wood stove requirements. I don't know the overall impact, but it does reduce the visible smoke a lot, and I believe also reduces any harmful particulate matter.

The carbon cycle is very different from fossil fuels.

For the fossil fuels, the carbon has been sequestered for millions of years. Put it in the air, and does anybody want to wait a few million years to get it buried again?

For the tree, perhaps sequestered for a few dozen years, or a century or two. I'm not cutting any living trees at the moment. Most of my cutting is something that has fallen to the ground in one manner or another. If left on the ground, that wood will rot, and over a few years, or perhaps even decades all the carbon will be released by the bacteria, fungi, and various borers that feed on it.

But with the carbon cycle, if I cut something down, then it regrows, then over a period of time that carbon is sequestered again. Or, perhaps if I simply thin a few trees, then the growth of the neighboring trees will make up for the lost trees.
 

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