BREAZE Newsletter - August 2024
Home Energy Efficiency Workshops
How to stay warm and save on energy bills
Volunteer with BREAZE and help drive the Ballarat Zero Emissions (BZE) 2030 Plan
The BREAZE Inc. City Partnership Program grant is enabling us to run three related project strands: the BZE Awards - cross sector civic awards for those who are actively implementing the BZE Plan; Home Energy Efficiency workshops, empowering householders to improve the thermal envelop of their homes; and Going All Electric, helping householders keen to get off gas. If you have some spare time and would like to help us drive that Ballarat Net Zero Emissions 2030 target please get in touch. You can see a little of what we do in this video.
We’re recruiting! Community Project Coordinator
BREAZE is looking for a Community Project Coordinator - this is a paid contractor position for 1.5 days per week. Applications close August 26.
Have a passion for sustainable living and cutting GHG emissions? Looking for a satisfying part time job where you can work from home? Want to make a difference? If you have a flair for community networking, project/event coordination, marketing and communications, plus competence across diverse media platforms, check out this position with BREAZE.
To see more about what we do click here.
Green Drinks
Smart Living Ballarat
In the news….
Big gas project losing support
Woodside's $30 billion Browse Joint Venture gas project over the northwest coast might not go ahead thanks to concerns raised by the EPA of WA about a series of environmental impacts. The International Energy Agency — to which Australia is a member — has recommended that no new oil or gas projects be developed if the world is to meet net zero emissions by 2050 and limit the average global temperature increase. Read more in ABC News here.
Upcoming BREAZE events….
Green Drinks
This month (15 August @ 6:30pm Bunch of Grapes Hotel, 401 Pleasant St) a local energy expert and certified energy assessor, Dale Boucher, will outline the key steps in making the transition to an all-electric home, getting off gas and helping the planet. Whether you have made little or lots of energy efficiency improvements, there will be something for you to take home from Dale’s presentation.
Smart Living Ballarat
Join us for a tour of the sustainability project, ReCranked, next to Wendouree Neighbourhood House. ReCranked is a Y Ballarat initiative specialising in giving unwanted bikes new riders. They take old, unwanted, unused, broken or forgotten bikes and revamp them into safe and serious modes of transport for those without wheels.
Opinion piece
As we tune in with over a billion spectators, cheer on the Aussies in Paris and find ourselves bleary-eyed with the overnight excitement, I wondered how green are the Games? While there are many impacts associated with the Olympics — such as waste and contaminating substances — I’ll stick to BREAZE’s business of emissions here. The last two summer Olympic games were held in Tokyo, Japan and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. They released more than 2.7 million and 4.5 million tons of carbon emissions into the atmosphere respectively. Transport is a significant source of those emissions — over a third of the carbon budget. For example, the MIT Technology Review stated 160,000 tons of carbon dioxide were emitted for spectators’ and judges’ travel during the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, which was one of the most impactful games along with Rio de Janeiro.
While emissions are still an issue, the good news is that the Olympic committee managed to halve the carbon budget to 1.58 million tons of CO2 in Paris. This was a correction from the original intent of making the games ‘carbon-positive’. Shifting from a post-games to a pre-games assessment is a game-changer in some respects by building transparency in the method and results, and adopting the ARO approach (Avoid, Reduce, Offset). The effect of this resists jumping to compensation (using offsets) without making the first and more complicated step of creating no emissions. Applying this method also brings greater accountability and planning for permanent public assets.
Could the games go greener? Absolutely. An article published in Nature Sustainability in 2021 recommended three steps. The first step would be to greatly downsize the event, which inherently decreases the ecological and material footprint by reducing the size and cost of the new infrastructure required. It would also reduce emissions from transport, which is a big contributor. The second step would be to rotate the Olympics among the same cities. This would reuse the fit-for-purpose infrastructure that is already in place, and the efficiencies of pre-planned routes and facilities would reduce the significant financial costs and social disruption that come with the games. The third step suggested is to enforce strong accountability and transparency standards and use only renewable energy during the event.
Given the carbon impact of personally attending the Paris 2024 Olympics, it is one of the few occasions where we can feel good about being armchair spectators!
Pete Morison (Secretary)