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| Neighbours used to call Alan Pinder a
crank | Energy in the homeInside
Out West explores how our region is leading the way in one of the most important
debates facing mankind - how we should generate and use energy in our homes. As
climate change becomes a bigger issue in many peoples' lives, it's clear that
some of the solutions to the threat of global warming are being formulated right
here. Good Energy Juliet Davenport
from Malmesbury has started an energy company, called Good Energy. It gets
all the electricity it sells from wind machines, solar panels and tidal turbines.
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| Juliet Davenport. Energy from wind sun and sea |
Juliet has been fascinated by climate change ever since she read an
article in a magazine when she was a physics student back in the 1980s:
"The article made it clear that climate change was real and I knew I wanted
to help to do something about it. "Good Energy gets all of its power
from renewable sources - wind farms, dotted along the coast, which is where you
find most of the energy source, solar panels and hydro stations, down on the north
Devon coast and up into Scotland. "If people have solar panels at
their home, or a small wind turbine, they can produce their own energy - which
is both green and clean - and any surplus they generate they can, via us, put
back into the national grid, so others can buy that green energy that they have
generated at home. "It's called micro-generation and the more people
get involved themselves, the more green energy we can produce across the West
and the whole of the UK."
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| Solar panels supply emission free power | Micro-generation
Alan Pinder, a retired author from Thornbury, is one of the first to get
involved with micro-generation. Alan says: "I have been
campaigning for the environment for 30 years now and I have tried to be as self
sufficient as possible, by growing my own fruit and veg, so it was a natural extension
to want to produce our own electricity. "We have solar panels on the
back of the house and a water heater on the front. "It is wonderful.
I can sleep at night knowing I am not adding to global warming." Alan
says 10 years ago people used to call him a crank for being green but now he says
people in Thornbury come to him for advice on how to be more environmentally friendly.
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| Christopher Booker is a critic of green energy. |
But not everyone in the West agrees wind and solar power is the way
forward. Christopher Booker, who co-founded Private Eye and now writes for the
Sunday Telegraph dismisses any plans to rely on the wind and the sun for our energy
supplies. Christopher says, "The wind is lovely - I love
to see it blowing through trees - but if we want to live in a society where we
have Tesco, the BBC and our homes running all the time, then wind power is a total
waste of time. "It doesn't blow all the time, so how can you rely
on it to keep everything running. The only serious option we have is to build
a new round of nuclear power stations. "They don't produce any CO2
and they are there all the time. What more do you want."
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