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What do we want Kentucky Utilities to do? (and alternatives to coal energy)

  1. Refuse to use coal extracted through Mountaintop Removal mining,
  2. Take the necessary steps to achieve a goal of 20% low-impact renewable energy by 2020, and
  3. Install the best available pollution control technology (as required by the Clean Air Act) on all power plants and coal burning facilities.

What YOU Can Do

  • Send a letter in with your next KU Bill stating that you are willing to pay an extra $2-5 per month to feed renewable energy into the power grid.
  • Write a letter to KU’s Executives. Let them know that you want the money you pay on your monthly bill to go toward the development and production of renewable energies.
  • Fill out the form on KU's website expressing your concerns or call or go down to KU and express your concerns with them directly.
  • Reduce the amount of energy you use in your own daily life by turning off lights when you leave a room, using energy-efficient light bulbs, and turning the A/C or heat down.
  • Share this knowledge with your friends and family.
  • Educate yourself on the environmental, health, and economic hazards of coal mining and burning, as well as on our energy alternatives:

www.cleantheair.org

www.catf.us

www.ohvec.org/issues/mountaintop_removal

www.eere.energy.gov

www.eia.doe.gov

  • Take a petition home for your friends and family to sign.
  • Get involved in the fight against the environmental hazards of your own community!

This Fact Sheet is brought to you by the Lexington Environmental Action Project for Local Environmental Action.

LEAP into a Sustainable Future!

LEAP is a radical, local, environmental action group in Lexington, KY. We advocate community ACTION as a form of social change. To contact us, you may email us at:

Dave Cooper: davecooper928@yahoo.com


What are our energy alternatives?

HYDRO POWER is produced when the energy from flowing water is converted into electricity. The most common type of hydro plant is a dam on a river that releases water through a turbine to activate an electric generator. Hydro plants can produce hundreds of megawatts of electricity.1

How can Lexington use it? Hydro plants can be damaging to the environment if they are too large. They can kill migrating fish and hurt water quality, but luckily there are environmentally-friendly turbines that resolve these issues by only diverting some of the water from streams and by not blocking the entire stream flow. KU could transform small dams that currently exist across Kentucky into small hydro plants, and assist landowners in setting up small hydro systems to provide power for their homes, farms, and businesses.

SOLAR ENERGY is produced when sunlight is converted into electricity. In a solar electric system, sunlight is collected and focused with mirrors to create a heat source that runs an electric generator. One solar panel can generate 4 – 50 kilowatts of power.[1]

How can Lexington use it? Residents could ask KU to begin using solar power to generate some of their electricity. KU could even install a solar system to charge a whole power plant, and assist individual residents and businesses in Lexington with solar panel installation and maintenance. New legislation was passed recently that allows Kentuckians who have solar panels to feed any excess energy they receive from the sun back into the power grid, lowering their electricity costs. Residents could lower their bills by using solar energy, and KU could encourage this practice.

WIND ENERGY is produced by using the energy of moving air to power an electric generator. Wind turbines can generate power anywhere the wind blows; some turbines can double as communication towers.2 Just one turbine can produce hundreds of kilowatts of electricity.

How can Lexington use it? Large wind farms are dangerous in Kentucky’s mountains because they kill many birds and they are hazardous to install on cliff sides. However, small scale wind power is safe for this region. One single turbine can power a residential area, a large farm, or a shopping mall. KU could install small wind farms and assist individual customers in setting up small wind energy systems for their homes, farms, and businesses.

There are several ways in which Kentucky Utilities could encourage the use of all 3 renewable energies described above. They could offer their customers the option of buying 100 kWh blocks of green energy each month for about $2.75 each. Not only would this allow customers the option of encouraging alternative energies, it would also invite folks to think about where their energy originates. Finally, KU could support the expansion of recent legislation that allows residents with solar panels to feed power back into the grid (it's called "net metering"). This law needs to let small scale wind and hydro systems feed energy into the main power grid, as well. We need our public utilities to support practices that are good for our communities!


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