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Fact of the Month

Quote/Unquote:

"We have a mighty task before us. The Earth needs our assistance."
- Laurens van der Post

About BC SEA

By 2030, the world's energy needs are expected to be 50 per cent greater than today. At the same time, scientists are calling for a 25 per cent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 to avoid serious changes in the Earth's climate system. Reconciling these demands while simultaneously adapting to the impacts of climate change is one of the fundamental challenges of the 21st century. - I.I.S.D.

Our Vision
Our Mission
What is Sustainable Energy?
Board of Directors
Honourary Directors
Coordinator
Achievements
Goals for 2007/8
Long-Term Goals

History
Past Meetings
Forming a Local Chapter
Funding & Sponsors
Affiliations
Consitution, Bylaws and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Credits
Contact Us

BCSEA is helping British Columbia become a world leader in the use of sustainable energy.

We are a non-profit association of citizens, professionals and practitioners, committed to promoting the understanding, development, and adoption of sustainable energy and energy conservation and efficiency in British Columbia.

Our Vision: A future in which all of BC’s energy comes from clean, renewable, efficient sources.

Our Mission: To facilitate the transition to a sustainable energy future through education, advocacy and tangible community projects.

Our Purposes:

  • To help British Columbia become a world leader in the generation and use of sustainable energy;
  • To promote the understanding and use of sustainable energy to the people of British Columbia, for electricity, transportation, industry, and all other uses;
  • To provide a forum through which members can meet, share ideas, and develop joint initiatives, supported by up-to-date information and technical research;
  • To establish and support local chapters in regions across BC, so that members can organize in their local communities, initiating projects and policies that help us make this essential transition;
  • To speak with a strong collective voice to municipal, provincial and federal governments and other agencies on issues concerning the development of clean, renewable, efficient energy in BC, and the reduction of British Columbia’s greenhouse gas emissions and other pollutants;
  • To provide a one-stop resource for information on B.C.’s sustainable energy industry and initiatives.

What is Sustainable Energy?

Sustainability is a condition of existence which enables the present generation of humans and other species to enjoy social well-being, a vibrant economy and a healthy environment, and to experience fulfillment, beauty and joy, without compromising the ability of future generations of humans and other species to enjoy the same.

Sustainable energy is any source or application of energy which meets the energy needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations of humans and other species to enjoy social wellbeing, a vibrant economy, and a healthy environment.

This includes energy from the following:

Biodiesel
Biomass
GeoExchange (geothermal, groundsource heating and cooling, heat pumps)
Green Buildings
Groundsource
Green Transport
Green Hydrogen
Landfill Gas and Biogas

Micro and Small Hydro
Ocean Energy (tidal, ocean current and wave)
Passive Solar
Solar Cooking
Smart Transport
Solar Photovoltaic
Solar Thermal (solar heat and hot water)
Wind

Some of these energy sources, in particular biomass, hydro and tidal, can have a variety of environmental and other impacts that may make them unsustainable depending on the local circumstances.

In order to encourage the transition towards a sustainable energy economy, several energy management policies need also to be implemented:

  • Energy conservation, and improved efficiency of use;
  • Safe, reliable and appropriately sited transmission;
  • Sustainably managed energy storage;
  • Transport demand management (TDM), as well as transit, LRT, ride- and car-sharing, cycling and walking;
  • Smart growth and smart urban infill, for future housing settlements.

Sustainable energy excludes energy from fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas, & coalbed methane), garbage incineration, nuclear fission, nuclear fusion and large hydroelectric dams.

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Board of Directors

BCSEA is governed by a Board of Directors, elected by its membership on an annual basis.

Visit our Directors page

Guy Dauncey - President, Victoria
Tom Hackney - Vice-President & Treasurer, Victoria
Scott Sinclair - Vice-President, Vancouver
Jay Armstrong, Vancouver
Colleen Brown, Vancouver
Romilly Cavanaugh, Vancouver
Naomi Devine, Victoria
Eric Doherty, Vancouver
Gunther Honold, Victoria
Chris Mott, Vancouver
Daphne Nederhorst, Vancouver
Graig Pearen, Prince George
Kevin Pegg, Victoria
Angela Reid, Kelowna
John Stonier, Vancouver
Mary Sturgeon, Vancouver

Honorary Directors

Amory Lovins, CEO Research, Rocky Mountain Institute, Colorado
Bill Eggertson, Exec Director, Canadian Association for Renewable Energies
Briony Penn, Author and broadcaster, Salt Spring Island
Deb Abbey, Founder of Real Assets
Eric Smiley, Project Leader, Photovoltaics, BCIT Technology Centre
Joe van Belleghem, Co-founder Canada Green Building Council
Simon Whitfield, Triathlon Olympic Gold Medallist, Victoria
Professor William E. Rees, Community & Regional Planning, UBC

Our Coordinator

We currently employ the services of a part-time coordinator and a rely on a small group of contractors for other professional services.

Peter Ronald, our provincial coordinator, has extensive campaign and project management experience gained in the private, public and NGO sectors over the past two decades. Peter co-founded the Environment News Service, the world's first independent environmental newswire, in 1989. In the early 1990s he coordinated the BC Wild Campaign Centre, a key asset in the successful effort to dramatically expand BC's network of protected wilderness areas. He worked in government for several years providing research, analysis and strategic planning. He returned to full-time conservation work with the Georgia Strait Alliance campaigning to protect the ocean's biodiversity. He was a founding director and active campaigner with the GSX Concerned Citizens Coalition, successfully turning back BC Hydro's natural gas strategy for Vancouver Island. In his local community of Victoria, he serves on the board and executive of the Fairfield Community Association.

You can reach Peter directly through our contact page or by phone at (250) 744-2720.

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Achievements

During its first four years of activity, the BC Sustainable Energy Association has:

  • Established our website www.bcsea.org and associated electronic communication channels, attracting over 100,000 unique visits and more than a million total page views. The site contains detailed educational content, including technology specific information, facilitating web-accessible content for the public to learn about and engage with these issues and technologies.

  • Launched SolarBC, a solar hot water acceleration project, which facilitated the installation of solar domestic hot water systems by attracting government and other funding. The project worked with the solar hot water industry to refine industry standards, train and certify installers. See www.solarbc.org

  • Formed the 100,000 Solar Roofs Initiative and Task Team, a partnership of provincial and municipal governments, utilities and energy companies, working together to plan for the rapid deployment of solar thermal and photovoltaic systems in British Columbia.

  • Developed the Climate Change Game & Showdown, a successful middle school education project, which has now been presented to over 5,000 students in the school classrooms across Greater Vancouver and Nelson. This program will expand this year to Vancouver Island.

  • Organized the 2005 Wind Summit in Vancouver, with European and Californian presenters and attended by over 50 key stakeholders, to familiarize industry and government decision-makers with the policies that are successfully animating wind and other clean energy technologies in these regions.

  • Organized the 2006 Solar Summit in Vancouver attended by expert international presenters and many key stakeholders and decision-makers, to familiarize them with "solar roof" initiatives around the world. The Summit included Community Action, Plumbing Inspector's Training and Solar Hot Water Homeowners workshops in Vancouver and Victoria, and a Solar Systems Tour.

  • Produced Sustainable Energy Policies for BC, a 32-page detailed document that outlines the policies that can accelerate the take-up of sustainable technologies in BC.

  • Submitted Sustainable Energy Solutions for BC to the Premier's Alternative Energy and Power Task Force, showing how BC could produce 84,000 GWh of green energy within 30 years from a firm commitment to embrace sustainable energy technologies, generating over 400,000 jobs.

  • Met with senior staff at BC Hydro, Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources, Ministry of Environment and with representatives of federal and provincial political parties, municipal councillors and staff, to present policies and program suggestions designed to accelerate the deployment of sustainable energy technologies in BC.

  • Provided detailed expert evidence at various BCUC reviews of BC Hydro plans, addressing policies and practices that will promote sustainable energy technologies and greater energy efficiency.

  • Participated in two United Nations Climate Change Conferences, in Montreal and in Nairobi, Kenya, contributing constructively in the international dialogue planning response to climate change.

  • Established positive relations with over 50 governmental, non-governmental, business, and educational organizations, with a view to advancing the sustainable energy technologies in BC.

  • Published ten issues of our quarterly newsletter, The Joule, read by our members and the public via our website, and delivered monthly updates to our members via our email Watt's Happening.

  • Launched and convened three Energy Solutions Teleworkshops featuring international experts on specific renewable energy technologies and topics participated in by over 150 people.

  • Delivered over 50 public presentations on sustainable energy technologies and climate change in Victoria, Duncan, Nanaimo, Qualicum, Parksville, Courtenay, Campbell River, Cortes Island, Nelson, Prince George, Dawson Creek, Kelowna, Kamloops, Abbotsford and Vancouver.

  • Hosted educational fieldtrips including visits to:

    • Brentwood College ocean thermal energy facility used to heat their Arts Building;

    • Solar PV and microhydro installations on Salt Spring Island;

    • An off-the-grid self-sufficient home on Wise Island, near
    • Galiano Island;

    • Solar Hot Water and Net Metered Solar PV Installations in Vancouver;

    • A Wastewater Treatment Facility in Prince George;

    • Eco-Sense, a solar grid-intertie, net-metered, passive solar heated, cob home in Victoria.

  • Organized educational booth displays with volunteer staff at: Vancouver Folk Music Festival (2006 & 2007); Vancouver Home and Garden Show (2006); Prince George Home Show (2006); Victoria Spring Home Show (2006), EPIC (2007) and many other events in communities across BC.

  • Gained extensive media exposure via news releases, news conferences, numerous print articles (newspapers and magazines) and radio and television interviews, including regular guest appearances on CBC Radio.

  • Developed an internal organizational and financial system that is able to meet the challenge of multiple activities, almost all of which are carried out by volunteers.

Here is a summary of some of the accomplishments of our eight regional chapters:

  • The South Peace Chapter has organized and participated in forums on climate change, wind energy and coal.

  • The Kamloops Chapter meets regularly with speakers and films, invented the Climate Change Game for use in schools to familiarize students with the science of climate change and the sustainable energy technologies, and organized that city's first Energy Fair, a successful clean energy trade show.

  • The Central Interior Chapter holds regular meetings with speakers, organized a tour of Prince George's Lansdowne Road wastewater treatment facility and biomass generation project, held a Biodiesel Workshop, and participated in public events educating the public about sustainable energy.

  • The Okanagan Chapter has held regular monthly meetings with speakers, hosted David Suzuki on his recent cross-Canada tour, and participated in the Mayor's Environmental Expo in Kelowna, bringing demonstrations and explanations of sustainable energy to a diverse audience.

  • The Vancouver Chapter has held regular monthly meetings with speakers, organized a public symposium called Climate Change: The Greatest Show on Earth, participated in numerous shows and exhibits promoting sustainable energy.

  • The Victoria Chapter meets monthly, organized two events under the banner Sustainable Energy Now! attracting more than 2,000 visitors, arranged public viewings of educational videos about global energy issues, and organized a well-attended town hall-style Energy Forum with Victoria MP, David Anderson, and other speakers.

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Primary Goals for 2007/8

Our goals for this year include:

Build strong relationships with the major energy players in BC;
Build our membership to 1,000 members;
Strengthen our 7 existing Chapters, and launch 1 new one;
Strengthen our organizational and financial base;
Deliver on our Climate Change Game program goals;
Plan the next phase of SolarBC - 100,000 Solar Roofs;
Continue to publish The Joule and Watt's Happening, and to build our website;
Maintain a vibrant, positive, solutions-oriented attitude in all that we do.

Other Long-term Goals

  • Maintain coordinator, support staff and project leaders as needed.
  • Raise the finances to pay for our activities and projects.
  • Work with our members, and with the Independent Power Producers of BC, the Community Energy Association, SmartGrowth BC, BEST, the Sierra Club and other partners to develop policies, standards and regulations that will advance the progress of sustainable energy in BC.
  • Work with our members and others to persuade the BC government, BC Hydro, the BC Utilities Commission, BC Transit, BC Ferries, Via Rail, CN, local and regional governments, and other agencies to implement policies and standards which will encourage the use of sustainable energy, instead of fossil fuels.
  • Develop a strong media presence for sustainable energy in BC
  • Develop a marketing campaign to encourage the increased use of sustainable energy
  • Produce a web-based directory of members
  • Facilitate contact and networking between our members
  • Establish an Internet-based Sustainable Energy Ideas Bank, where members can float new proposals
  • Research and publish up-to-date cost and payback charts for solar hot water, PV, ground source heat, passive solar design, heat recovery technologies, biodiesel, and energy efficiency retrofit options
  • Work with other organizations to contribute to the development of the policies and practices and initiatives regarding smart growth, sustainable transport, community energy planning, green buildings, and climate change solutions
  • Organize a provincial Conference on Sustainable Energy
  • Develop schools materials and presentations on sustainable energy

Our History

  • Fall 2003 - Preparatory work for the founding of BCSEA
  • Dec 10, 2003 - First meeting
  • January 5th 2004 - BCSEA formally incorporated as a non-for-profit society
  • June 2004 - - BCSEA's Public Launch, and Press Conference. 100 members
  • July 2004 - Launched Sustainable Energy Directory. 150 members
  • August 2004 - First meeting of Vancouver Chapter
  • August 2004 - First meeting of Kamloops Chapter
  • October 2004 - First meeting of Victoria Chapter
  • Fall 2004 - Strategic planning sessions
  • February 2005 - First meeting of Central Interior Chapter
  • Spring 2005 - Published Sustainable Energy Policies for British Columbia
  • April 2005 - First BCSEA Annual General Meeting in Victoria
  • May 2005 - Cosponsored Nanaimo Renewable Energy Forum
  • June 2005 - Sustainable Energy Now! event at Royal BC Museum
  • June 2005 - Hosted BC Wind Summit in Vancouver
  • July 2005 - 500th member
  • September 2005 - Launched SolarBC Solar Hot Water Acceleration Project
  • November 2005 - Awarded 2005 Solar Advocate of the Year by the Canadian Solar Industries Association (CanSIA)
  • November 2005 - Sustainable Energy Now! II event at University Canada West
  • November 2005 - Released Sustainable Energy Solutions for BC
  • December 2005 - Attended UN Conference of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol in Montreal
  • March 2006 - Cosponsored Maximizing Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Conference in Vancouver
  • March 2006 - Hosted the BC Solar Summit 2006 in Vancouver and Victoria
  • April 2006 - Delivered Climate Change Special Issue of TIME Magazine to every federal Member of Parliament
  • April 2006 - Nominated for a 2006 VIATeC Technology Awards in the "Community Involvement" category
  • May 2006 - Hosted Elizabeth May speaking on Alberta's Tar Sands in Victoria and Vancouver
  • June 2006 - Sponsored Victoria and Vancouver premieres of Al Gore's film An Inconvenient Truth
  • June 2006 - Second BCSEA Annual General Meeting in Vancouver
  • July 2006 - Made many new friends with a booth at the Vancouver Folk Music Festival in Jericho Beach Park
  • July 2006 - Held 50th meeting of BCSEA Board of Directors
  • September 2006 - Hosted Vancouver and Victoria Climate Action Tour 2006 events
  • October 2006 - Exhibited our wares to great acclaim at the Vancouver Home & Interior Design Show
  • October 2006 - Participated in and assisted the annual conference of the Independent Power Producers of BC
  • December 2006 - Comox Valley group becomes a regular Chapter
  • January 2007 - Received Vancity Financial Capacity grant
  • April 2007 - Convened first Sustainable Energy Teleworkshop
  • June 2007 - Third BCSEA Annual General Meeting held in Victoria
  • July 2007 - West Kootenay group becomes a regular Chapter
  • September 2007 - Okanagan Chapter becomes a full Chapter

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Past Meetings

Forming a Local Chapter

As the BC Sustainable Energy Association, we are committed to serving the whole of BC. To this end, we encourage members to form local Chapters wherever you live. For a current list of chapters, see our chapters section.

As soon as there are 10 members in your area, you are invited to form a Chapter, following BCSEA’s vision, goals and definitions – but please contact us first, in case someone else is also planning to start one. We will then send you a Letter of Agreement, authorizing you to form a Chapter of the BCSEA.

Chapters will be encouraged to support BCSEA’s campaigns, and to undertake your own local activities, such as:

  • Holding monthly meetings with speakers
  • Organizing a local Sustainable Energy Tour
  • Putting on a biodiesel or electric vehicle demonstration
  • Building a touring sustainable energy display
  • Building a zero-energy home
  • Installing a small wind turbine
  • Creating a local Green Energy Directory
  • Creating a local Green Building & Architecture Directory
  • Forming a car-share cooperative

As a Chapter, we hope that you will keep in close touch with us, so that we can support you, and share your activities with our membership. A monthly report, however brief, would be welcome.

A Chapter does not need to become incorporated, and can exist without a formal legal structure. We ask that you operate in a clear, open manner, hold open elections for your Steering Committee, elect a chair, treasurer, secretary, and members at large, and keep a proper record of your minutes and accounts, as if you were a registered non-profit society.

Chapters will be encouraged to send a non-voting representative to the BCSEA Board meetings, and will be sent the Agendas and Minutes of our regular Steering Committee meetings, to encourage participation.

See our Chapters Section for more information

Funding & Sponsors

BCSEA's funding comes primarily from annual membership fees and from donations from individuals, businesses, non-profits, municipalities and other government agencies. Click here to join or financially support our work.

We also are supported by capacity and project grants provided by various sponsors, acknowledged here. We thank our funders, patrons and members for their generous support!

Click here to become a member of the BCSEA. Please support our work to help us achieve these important goals!

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Affiliations

The BC Sustainable Energy Association is an active member of the following alliances, associations and networks:

  • Organizing For Change

Consitution, Bylaws and Guidelines

Constitution & Bylaws of the British Columbia Sustainable Energy Association
Certificate of Incorporation Number S-47054
(as revised at the Annual General Meeting, Saturday, 23 June 2007)

1. The name of the society is British Columbia Sustainable Energy Association.

2. The purposes of the society are:

  • To help British Columbia become a world leader in the use of sustainable energy.
  • To promote the use of sustainable energy to the people of British Columbia.
  • To provide a forum through which members can meet, share ideas, and develop joint initiatives, supported by up-to-date information and technical research.
  • To speak with a strong collective voice to municipal, provincial and federal governments and other agencies on issues concerning the development of clean, renewable, efficient energy in BC, and the reduction of British Columbia's greenhouse gas emissions.
  • To provide one-stop shopping for information on British Columbia's sustainable energy resources.

The bylaws of the society are available for download and printing or for online reading:

Bylaws of the BC Sustainable Energy Association (PDF 127kb)

BCSEA Consolidated Guidelines (PDF 203kb)

You will find our definition of sustainable energy here...

Privacy Policy

The BCSEA is committed to providing our online visitors with a web site that respects their privacy. For more detailed information, please see BCSEA's full privacy policy here.

Credits

BCSEA's office space, Internet services, server hardware, software and wetware generously donated by Kevin Pegg and EA Energy Alternatives Ltd.

Website by Dave Shishkoff. Home page and web maintenance by Erin Carson. Contact Erin if you have any website-related comments or questions.

Landscape paintings extracted from larger works by Steven Armstrong, with thanks.

Contact Us

BC Sustainable Energy Association
5 - 4217 Glanford Avenue
Victoria, BC V8Z 4B9 Canada
Tel: 250-744-2720

Email Form

www.bcsea.org


Last Updated: September 20, 2007


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