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Energy plan funded

Tim Burgess

Tim Burgess

UGA administrators are allocating $395,000 to fund a series of steps recommended by a special energy conservation committee to reduce energy usage and cut energy costs on campus.

The money, which will come from existing funding sources in the current fiscal year budget, will be used to conduct energy audits on campus buildings and install equipment to reduce waste; to install equipment to better monitor and control utility usage in buildings; and to investigate use of renewable fuels in campus vehicles and the central steam plant.

Money also will be provided to permanently fund the position of energy engineer in the physical plant. One of the energy engineer’s chief duties is developing and overseeing a campus education/information program on energy conservation.

The energy-saving measures were recommended in a report submitted in June by the Energy Conservation Executive Committee, a group formed earlier in the year by Provost Arnett C. Mace Jr.
and Hank Huckaby, who was senior vice president for finance and administration until his retirement.

Mace and Tim Burgess-Huckaby’s successor-recently sent the committee a letter pledging to make available $395,000 to implement immediately most of the recommendations and provide for continued funding in next year’s budget.

Mace and Burgess said the funds will be made available by transferring or redirecting money in current budgetary accounts or by taking advantage of cost savings in existing major repair and maintenance projects as they are completed. Provisions will be made to continue funding for these initiatives in the next fiscal year.

Tom Adams, chair of the Energy Conservation Executive Committee and director of outreach services for the Faculty of Engineering, said the funding reflects the commitment of UGA faculty, staff and administration to energy conservation efforts.

“We’re of course very grateful for this funding, and we’ve also been delighted and very encouraged by the entire university’s attitude toward energy conservation and the wish to focus on renewable energy,” Adams said. “We have a lot of work to do, but we’re excited and optimistic about the prospects for positive results.”

The $395,000 will be allocated as follows:

Adams said university administrators have charged the committee to seek outside funding for the conservation program and contacts have been made with the U.S. Department of Energy, the Tennessee Valley Authority and other possible funding sources. For example, UGA will likely be able to get a solar hot water heating project to demonstrate the potential for energy savings that would be at least partially funded with DOE and other grant funding.

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