I spent last week (June 11, 12) at the Canadian Green Building Council's (CaGBC's) second annual summit, Every Building Can Be Green. It was a fantastic conference with expert speakers from a range of disciplines talking about everything from sustainable community development to building performance simulation. I'd like to briefly summarize on this site, over the next week or so, what I saw as the highlights among the sessions I attended.
The conference opened on Wednesday morning with a sobering keynote from Thomas Homer-Dixon, a well known scholar at the University of Waterloo whose research is focussed on how societies adapt to rapid and complex changes in technology, in economics, and in our environment. Homer-Dixon's keynote started with an overview of the many challenges posed by rapid climate change. In summary, the latest evidence shows that we are in very deep trouble. Unprecedented changes in our climate will rapidly accelerate in the coming years; positive feedbacks which amplify climate change are outweighing negative feedbacks that might dampen it (Arctic sea ice is disappearing 30-50 years faster than even the worst-case climate models have predicted); heat waves and drought will place enormous pressure on global food supplies; and the nonlinearity of the climate system means that the climate could rapidly swing to a new, less hospitable, equilibrium from which it may not be able to return. Recent research suggests that carbon dioxide can stay in the atmosphere for a very long time, and that slowing and stopping climate change requires us to get to zero carbon emissions as quickly as possible. Homer-Dixon summed up the first two thirds of his talk with a cartoon reading simply "We're fucked". It was meant as a joke, and like a lot of good jokes, it was probably funny because it had the ring of truth.
After this depressing beginning, Thomas Homer-Dixon started to slowly bring us back up. He expressed the hope that this crisis will create opportunities for the deep changes in behaviour, in institutions, and in our cultures that are needed. He pointed to coping strategies, such as efficiency, conservation, large-scale development of renewable energy, carbon-capture and sequestration, nuclear energy and, in the longer term, geo-engineering, and atmospheric carbon capture. Although I might quibble with the need for more nuclear energy, what I found particularly interesting in this last phase of his talk was Homer-Dixon's emphasis on the need for new economic models which are not based on relentless, rapacious growth. He pointed out that economic growth has been a useful tool in reducing friction between rich and poor, and that a new economic model will require us to develop a more equitable planet. He further argued that we need to design our technological and social institutions with greater resiliency by loosening couplings, increasing redundancy and diversity, decentralizing, and maximizing flexibility. By moving more to the local, but not too much.
There was a part of me that felt discouraged and disheartened after listening to Thomas Homer-Dixon's talk, but what I came away feeling was the "fierce urgency of now". His address crystallized the urgency of what we are doing, of the absolute need for us to stop overloading the world and to start regenerating it. Every building must be green.
I was in Prince Edward County--a beautiful island just off the shore of the eastern end of Lake Ontario--over Easter weekend and I caught wind of an artisan cheese company based in a LEED platinum building. That piqued two interests of mine--cheese and sustainability--and I decided to make a side trip to check it out.
I'm not a big fan of write-ups of green buildings that read like a laundry list of features (solar panels, wind power, ...) because I think it's the system as a whole, encompassing the building's relationships with the local landscape and community that is most important. It is in the building of these relationships that Fifth Town excels. Fifth Town has designed their operations and facilities to be sustainable from the ground up. Their cheese is aged in underground 'caves' which can be kept at a cool temperature of 7-10 ºC without the aid of mechanical cooling. A cave 'look-in' can be seen in the foreground of the above picture, where passers-by can gaze longingly at shelves full of beautiful rounds of goat cheese. The cheese is made from goat's milk delivered fresh from a network of local family farms within 100 miles of the factory. In order to supply milk to Fifth Town the farms must be [Local Food Plus][] certified, meaning that the farms must be operated under an environmental farm management program, and their goats must be given non-genetically modified feed and treated humanely. The constructed bio-wetlands are nourished by the waste from the cheese-making process, and digest the light whey left over after the milk has been made into cheese and ricotta. To top it off, Fifth Town goes out of its way to educate visitors on their green features, with a number of detailed signs and a lovely 'self guided tour' printed on FSC certified recycled paper. The [Fifth Town artisan cheese company][fifth town] just received LEED platinum certification in March.
Fifth Town has a friendly retail shop for visitors, and I must have sampled a dozen varieties of cheese before leaving with a few favourites to take home to family and friends. Their aged cheese was amazing and the bagel chèvre was soft, creamy and delicious.
[Fifth town]: http://www.fifthtown.ca/ "Fifth Town Artisan Cheese"
[Local Food Plus]: http://www.localfoodplus.ca/ "Local Food Plus"
I've been playing around with [RETScreen][], a renewable energy and energy efficiency analysis tool developed by [NRCan][], and discovered this very cool [Ontario wind atlas][]. The atlas is an online, interactive, detailed map of Ontario overlayed with wind power availability based on the wind speed at up to 100 m above the ground (to be matched to the height of the hub of a given wind turbine). The map can show roads (how good is the access to the location?), parks and reserves, populated areas, important bird areas, existing power lines, etc., to help planners decide where (and where not) to put wind turbines.
It's easy to see that the best places for both wind power and accessibility are along the shores of the Great Lakes. Off-shore wind farms would also have excellent wind resources, but may be more expensive to install. The shores of Hudson and James Bay in northern Ontario also have excellent wind power, but are far removed from the larger population centres and would require high-powered, long-distance transmission lines.
[Ontario wind atlas]: http://www.ontariowindatlas.ca/ "Ontario wind atlas"
[RETScreen]: http://www.retscreen.net "RETScreen Home Page"
[NRCan]: http://www.nrcan.gc.ca "Natural Resources Canada"