Earth Hour Day 2013
Earth Hour Day 2013
By Dr. Arvind Kumar
Earth
Hour is a worldwide event that is organized by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and
is held on the last Saturday of March annually, encouraging households and
businesses to turn off their non-essential lights for
one hour to raise awareness about the need to take
action on climate change. Earth Earth Hour started in
2007 in Sydney, Australia when 2.2 million individuals and more than 2,000
businesses turned their lights off for one hour to take a stand against climate
change. Only a year later and Earth Hour had become a global sustainability
movement with more than 50 million people across 35 countries/territories
participating. Global landmarks such as the Sydney Harbour Bridge, CN Tower in
Toronto, Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, and Rome’s Colosseum, all stood
in darkness, as symbols of hope for a cause that grows more urgent by the hour.
According
to figures from Energy Australia, a local utility, mains
electricity consumption for the 2007 event in Sydney was 10.2% lower during the
Hour than would be expected given the time, weather conditions and past four
years' consumption patterns.[citation needed] The Herald Sun equated
this with "taking 48,613 cars off the road for 1 hour." Critics, most
notably Columnist Andrew Bolt, labelled this as "A cut so tiny is trivial -
equal to taking six cars off the road for a year". In context, the six
cars equates to there being six fewer cars on the road at any given point of
time in the day or night. In response to this criticism, the organisers of
Earth Hour counter that "If the greenhouse reduction achieved in the
Sydney CBD during Earth Hour was sustained for a year, it would be equivalent
to taking 48,616 cars off the road for a year." and they also note that
the main goal of Earth Hour is to create awareness around climate change issues
and "to express that individual action on a mass scale can help change our
planet for the better." and not about the specific energy reductions made
during the hour being all that's required.
According
to WWF Thailand, Bangkok decreased electricity usage by 73.34megawatts,
which, over one hour, is equivalent to 41.6 tonnes of carbon dioxide.
The Bangkok Post gave different figures of 165 megawatt-hours
and 102 tonnes of carbon dioxide.
This was noted to be significantly less than a similar campaign initiated by
Bangkok's City Hall the previous year in May, when 530 megawatt-hours were
saved and 143 tonnes of carbon dioxide emission were cut.
In the Philippines it
was noted by the Philippine Electricity Market Corp. that power consumption
dropped by about 78.63 megawatts in Metro Manila, and up to 102.2 megawatts in
Luzon island. The maximum demand drop of around 39 MW was experienced at 8:14
p.m. in Metro Manila and of around 116 MW at 8:34 p.m. in the Luzon grid.
Meanwhile, in Mindanao and in Visayas, rolling blackouts are happening every
day. Ontario used
approximately 900 megawatt-hours less electrical energy during Earth Hour. At
one point, Toronto,
Ontario saw an 8.7% reduction in consumption as compared to a typical March
Saturday night. Ireland, as a whole, had a reduction in electricity use of
about 1.5% for the evening. In the three-hour period between 18:30 and 21:30,
there was a reduction of 50 megawatts, saving 150 megawatt-hours, or approximately
60 tonnes of carbon dioxide. So, please switch off their light on 31st of
March 2012 and pledge to save energy.
#Energy #Toronto #WWF #EarthDay #Ireland #Reduction #ElectricalEnergy #CarbonDioxide #Reduction #Australia
#Energy #Toronto #WWF #EarthDay #Ireland #Reduction #ElectricalEnergy #CarbonDioxide #Reduction #Australia
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