Published on: Tuesday, November 21, 2017 News

Takoma Park is one of 10 Finalists in National Competition for Energy Savings

Georgetown University Energy Prize recognizes top performing communities for increasing energy efficiency, reducing municipal and household energy budgets 

WASHINGTON, D.C. (November 21, 2017) – Takoma Park, Maryland, is among 10 cities and counties that have advanced to the final round of the Georgetown University Energy Prize (GUEP), a national competition to rethink the way America’s small- to medium-sized towns, cities, and counties use energy. Takoma Park has already saved almost 101 billion BTUs of energy, and reduced carbon emissions by 5,364 metric tons.

Today, the Energy Prize announced the 10 communities who have advanced to the final round of the competition. Takoma Park is among the highest performing communities in the nationwide, multi-year competition based on total energy savings per household. In December, a panel of judges representing academia and industry will evaluate each community’s approach to innovative, replicable, scalable energy efficiency programs and will select a winning community based on a combination of energy performance scores and the advancement of new best practices over the course of the two-year energy-saving period.  The final stage of the Energy Prize will be led by Uwe Brandes, faculty director of the master’s program in Urban and Regional Planning at Georgetown.

“Takoma Park is at the forefront of a nationwide competition to bring together communities with a shared goal of reducing energy consumption,” said Energy Prize executive director Uwe Brandes. “Our ten finalists have achieved impressive energy savings and reduced municipal and household energy budgets. They serve as models for other communities across our country and have offered innovative energy-saving strategies that can be replicated and scaled.”

“Takoma Park has worked hard during the competition to engage residents across our community and our city government to develop and implement projects that any community in the country can adapt and replicate,” said Mayor Kate Stewart. “I am extremely proud of the real results we have achieved, and even more excited by what we can learn from other communities to accomplish greater reductions in energy use city-wide in the coming years”

Since 2014, 50 cities and counties across the U.S. have worked to reduce their energy consumption. At the end of 2016, these communities had collectively saved 11.5 trillion BTUs of energy, reducing their carbon emissions by an estimated 2.76 million metric tons—the equivalent of taking one car off the road for every 30 minutes of the competition—and saving nearly $100 million from municipal and household energy budgets.

To reduce their energy consumption, the communities:

  • implemented bold new local policies on energy-transparency, energy-savings, and clean energy technology;
  • conducted deep data-mining of their energy use and community infrastructure;
  • focused on increasing energy efficiency in neighborhoods with high energy use in all income brackets;
  • created novel financing mechanisms to enable their residents to invest in new energy upgrades; and
  • used radically unique approaches to support behavior change, including gamification and the latest methods in social science research to help their communities rethink how they use energy.

“This is a national effort, so participants were encouraged to find solutions that were likely to yield continuing improvements within their own communities and also inspire replication in other communities,” said Brandes, who prior to joining Georgetown was Senior Vice President of the Urban Land Institute. “Takoma Park should be commended for their tremendous efforts and creative contributions to reduce energy consumption and innovate new best practices.”

The following 10 communities have been selected to advance to the final phase of the Georgetown University Energy Prize:

  1. Chula Vista, CA
  2. Walla Walla, WA
  3. Takoma Park, MD
  4. Fargo, ND
  5. Fort Collins, CO
  6. Berkeley, CA
  7. Oberlin, OH
  8. Bellingham, WA
  9. Montpelier, VT
  10. Bellevue, WA

In December, the Energy Prize Judging Panel will review final reports about each community’s energy-saving plan, performance, and future prospects. The final reports, submitted by the communities in November, will be scored in weighted categories, including innovation; potential for replication; likely future performance; equitable access, community and stakeholder engagement; education; and overall quality and success.

The Energy Prize Judging Panel will select a winning community  based on the combination of these scores and the results of the two-year energy-saving period.

The winning community will be recognized in December and provided with a prize package that includes support toward $5 million in financing for an energy efficiency dream project, as well as workshops and education opportunities for the winning community.

About Georgetown University Energy Prize

The Georgetown University Energy Prize aims to rethink America’s energy use by harnessing the ingenuity and community spirit of towns and cities all across America. From 2013 – 2017, the Prize has challenged small- to medium-sized towns, cities, and counties to rethink their energy use, and implement creative strategies to increase efficiency. Throughout the competition, local governments, residents, utilities, and other community leaders worked together to demonstrate success in sustainably reducing energy consumption. For more information, visit www.guep.org.

For more information contact:

Jeremy Dickey, Media Specialist

301.891.7236

JeremyD@takomaparkmd.gov