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Articles by Adam Browning

Adam Browning is the executive director of Vote Solar.

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  • It’s that kind of movie

    A friend sent this email -- her review of An Inconvenient Truth -- at 1:18 AM last night.

  • Mr. Plug-in Hybrid goes to Washington

    On Thursday, May 18, the Big Three automakers have scheduled a trip to the White House to discuss their "needs" with President Bush.

    CalCars wants to bring a 100-MPG plug-in hybrid to Washington to meet them.

    I think that's a really good idea.

    If you do too, join me in helping out.

  • The high cost of cheap gas.

    The New York Times is running an interesting article called "The High Cost of Cheap Gas and Vice Versa." The author calculates the current average cost of driving at 15 cents a mile, up from 6.6 cents in 1998, and down from 20.1 cents in 1980 (in 2006 dollars). He also puts up a cost-per-mile calculator, in case your math skills have deteriorated since you last took the SAT.

    My colleague JP Ross tells me that a Toyota Prius in electric-only mode uses .26 kWh to go a mile. If you are filling up with peak electricity rates, say 12 cents kWh, that's 3 cents a mile. Many utilities have nighttime off-peak rates way lower -- at 5 cents kWh, that's around a penny a mile.

    In places where the wind blows at night, you could be filling up as you sleep.

    And if you have solar covering your parking garage, like the City of Tucson, you could be charging while you work.

    You can tell the smart utilities -- they are the ones putting their lobbying power behind plug-in hybrids. It just makes cents.

  • The next big vote on renewable energy

    The next big vote on renewable energy won't take place in Washington. It will take place in Phoenix.

    Some time this summer, the five commissioners on the Arizona Corporation Commission will vote on a proposed rule to significantly expand renewable energy in Arizona -- 15% renewables by 2025, 30% of that from distributed-generation resources like solar. We are talking on the order of up to 1,800 MW of solar: a very big deal. The emissions reductions are roughly equivalent to removing 1 million cars from the road -- not to mention jumpstarting the clean technologies of the future.

    There is a precarious 3-2 majority on the Commission right now, and the usual suspects are gearing up opposition.

    There's a public comment period culminating in a public meeting on May 23. Demonstrating the public mandate for renewable energy is critical. We've set up a petition -- if you live in Arizona, here's your chance to stand up and be counted. Or no complaining later.