Energy costs are steadily rising, increasingly burdening the lower and middle classes in the United States, and the risk of climate change and its effects on our food and water systems can be found in the newspapers every week. For the average person, domestic and international energy debates and crises seem too big to tackle. What can individual residents do to combat climate change on the micro-level, and also reduce their own energy cost burden?Master of City and Regional Plannin
Protests during the 2021 Climate Conference in Glasgow exemplified our dilemma. The establishment pe...
Buildings are known to consume a large proportion of the final energy demand (approximately 37%) in ...
Policy initiatives in the UK, such as the Green Deal, have sought and failed to achieve the mass upt...
Energy costs are steadily rising, increasingly burdening the lower and middle classes in the United ...
Large scale energy efficiency and electrification of the US residential sector are needed to meet th...
Combating the negative effects of climate change requires finding ways to increase energy production...
To tackle climate change, one of the basic decarbonization strategies is to decarbonize end-use appl...
Buildings represent 38.9% of U.S. primary energy use and 38% of all CO2 emissions in the U.S. Though...
In the United States, buildings are responsible for 40.36 Quads (40.36 x 10¹⁵ BTU) of total primary ...
Examines the market potential of energy efficiency retrofits in buildings, including market size, en...
[Excerpt] Making American homes and buildings more energy efficient presents an unprecedented opport...
Policy makers and program designers in the U.S. and abroad are deeply concerned with the question of...
The residential buildings sector is responsible for about 20% of total US energy use. In order to ac...
After more than 40 years of effort, energy efficiency program administrators and associated contract...
U.S.housing accounted for over 22 percent of the country’s total primary energy consumption in 2009,...
Protests during the 2021 Climate Conference in Glasgow exemplified our dilemma. The establishment pe...
Buildings are known to consume a large proportion of the final energy demand (approximately 37%) in ...
Policy initiatives in the UK, such as the Green Deal, have sought and failed to achieve the mass upt...
Energy costs are steadily rising, increasingly burdening the lower and middle classes in the United ...
Large scale energy efficiency and electrification of the US residential sector are needed to meet th...
Combating the negative effects of climate change requires finding ways to increase energy production...
To tackle climate change, one of the basic decarbonization strategies is to decarbonize end-use appl...
Buildings represent 38.9% of U.S. primary energy use and 38% of all CO2 emissions in the U.S. Though...
In the United States, buildings are responsible for 40.36 Quads (40.36 x 10¹⁵ BTU) of total primary ...
Examines the market potential of energy efficiency retrofits in buildings, including market size, en...
[Excerpt] Making American homes and buildings more energy efficient presents an unprecedented opport...
Policy makers and program designers in the U.S. and abroad are deeply concerned with the question of...
The residential buildings sector is responsible for about 20% of total US energy use. In order to ac...
After more than 40 years of effort, energy efficiency program administrators and associated contract...
U.S.housing accounted for over 22 percent of the country’s total primary energy consumption in 2009,...
Protests during the 2021 Climate Conference in Glasgow exemplified our dilemma. The establishment pe...
Buildings are known to consume a large proportion of the final energy demand (approximately 37%) in ...
Policy initiatives in the UK, such as the Green Deal, have sought and failed to achieve the mass upt...