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My Emissions Exchange – Trade your personal energy savings as carbon credits

My Emissions Exchange is a new market place that enables you to sell reductions you make in energy use as credits to people and organizations that are looking to offset their carbon footprint.  The service works by tracking your energy bills and calculating any reduction in energy use that you manage to make.  Savings that you do make can then be sold by My Emissions Exchange on your behalf or you also have the option of donating them to an organization of your choice.

The first thing to do when you sign up to the service is to set your baseline usage over the past 12 months.  You enter your energy data manually on the site but once you do this you must ‘lock it in’, after which it can only be changed by MyEex staff.  You will need to make copies of your energy bills and send them in to be verified.  The process isn’t entirely fluid, but the verification of carbon credits is extremely important.  False claims of carbon savings, e.g. when people tried to get paid for energy savings that would have happened anyway. This is the concept of additionality and is a challenge for all sellers of legitimate carbon credits.

Its also important that 12 months of data is used to create the baseline so that corrections can be made for seasonal variations.  In other words, if you live in a cold climate you can’t claim you have reduced your energy in the summer just because you are using less heating than during the winter.  In order to actually claim that an energy saving has been made, you need to demonstrate that your usage is lower in comparison to the same month from the previous year.

Much like the service EarthAid we recently reviewed, the next step is to go about reducing your energy usage.  The site provides some tips and resources to enable you to do this.  There is enough information to cover all the important basics which are where the most important savings can occur.  They are also categorized and contain estimates of the amount of energy/monetary savings you can expect from them, which can help you prioritize your actions.

If you manage to achieve savings over the comparable month from the previous year, then comes the payoff.  Once MyEEx verifies your savings they will certify and broker the trade.  And how much can users stand to gain?  Tami and Randy Wilson of Harrisburg, Pa received $17.50 for the metric ton of carbon dioxide that they saved, which would seem to compare reasonably favorably to market estimates.  A recent study from the Environmental Protection Agency suggested prices between $13 and $26 indicating there should be demand for carbon credits available on the MyEEx marketplace. Of course, users also stand to benefit from reduced energy bills.

My Emissions Exchange is a for profit company and currently take 20% commission on trades.  Project manager Paul Herrgesell believes the economic incentive is an important one, saying that MyEEx

“is a system that incentivizes you to save energy on a personal level and aligns with your economic interests”

Ensuring that energy savings are accurate and legitimate is a challenge that MyEEx will have to face.  Verifying actual energy bills seems like a reasonable way to do this, but is still potentially vulnerable to some types of fraud.  However, I don’t consider this to be in anyway insurmountable.  There are many industries which have to cope with an inability to extensively audit at such a granular level.  Instead, researching an appropriate quantifier is all that required.  For example, if you can verify that 1 credit in 100 is fraudulent, then the market price for credits on the MyEEx exchange would just be 99% of the price on the worldwide carbon market.

Challenges aside, My Emissions Exchange is a very exciting prospect with the potential to be an industry disruptor.  I’m really looking forward to seeing how the service develops and how the market at large reacts to what this company are doing.

Hands on with Google PowerMeter and AlertMe

Back since Google PowerMeter was first announced I had been excited to try it out.  Initially PowerMeter was only available from Utility providers that had partnered with Google.  Unfortunately the energy provider we use in our California office was not one of these and we started to consider switching just so that we could take PowerMeter for a spin.  Then Google announced that the PowerMeter service would become available to those who use select energy monitoring devices, the first being the TED 5000.  Great, I ordered one of these immediately, but too quickly to even read the small print which says that the TED 5000 will only work with 2-phase power supplies.  Inevitably, when I checked ours I found it is a 3-phase system and thus incompatible.  Of course, all of this only served to increase my anticipation.

So, when UK company AlertMe was announced as the second device partner, I finally got my chance to try out the elusive service.  AlertMe’s energy monitoring gadget is designed to monitor in real-time how much electricity you are using.  The system comes in two parts, the first being the ‘Meter Reader and Transmitter’.  This consists of a clip that attaches around your main electricity line.  Not an electrical connection though, it simply sits outside the wire’s shielding.  The clip is connected to a transmitter which will send the meter readings wirelessly to the second part of the system, the ‘Nano Hub’.  This gadget will receive these meter readings and via an ethernet cable will send your energy data over the web for you to access 24/7 from anywhere.

In addition to allowing you access to Google PowerMeter, AlertMe also provide their own dashboard to view your data, which is very functional.  Below you can see the initial snapshot view of whats going on.  You can see clearly your current electricity draw and a calculation of what it has cost you so far for the day.  Your personal cost per KWHr and currency is fully customizable.  The history feature is also quite detailed, you can view a graph of energy use for anywhere from one day to an entire year.  It can also be downloaded as a spreadsheet (csv).  Data is updated every 5 minutes so you can get a very detailed break down of your energy usage habits.  For example, you can clearly see peaks in the graph when your heating kicks in or when you put the kettle on for your morning cup of coffee. (more…)

EarthAid pays you to reduce energy use

EarthAid Logo EarthAid is a brand new system designed to help you monitor your energy usage and encourage you to reduce it. They provide a database of energy saving tips and users who carry these out successfully will receive points for the energy that they save.  This applies not just to electricity use, but both water and gas as well.  The service ties in with your online account for your utility providers so will track your energy use automatically.  Points can be exchanged for rewards from the partner network that EarthAid has set up.  Usefully, they also provide information on the various tax incentives that are applicable.  For example, if one of the actions you are considering is purchasing a new Energy Star qualified refrigerator they will link to the relevant tax rebates that you are entitled to.

Sign up is free, and the company makes clear that they intend to keep it that way.  The first thing that you need to do is link your energy accounts.  You can select your utility providers from a pre populated drop down menu and enter your login details.  Obviously, your utility provider will need to provide online access to your bills, but from a few trials on their system it seems that the majority of providers do offer this.  If your provider doesn’t allow this, I suggest you contact them because the sooner we can escape the black box of energy billing, the better.  If you successfully link your energy bills then your data will be fed into EarthAid and you can monitor your energy usage, similarly to Google PowerMeter.

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