"By embracing a wide range of cost-effective energy efficiency strategies, the leading states are demonstrating that efficiency is their 'first fuel' to meet energy demands while growing their economies," Maggie Eldridge, ACEEE research associate and the report's lead author, said in a news release. The third annual rankings are based on six policy areas: utility-sector and public benefits programs and policies, transportation polices, building energy codes, combined heat and power, state government initiatives and appliance efficiency standards.
Also included in the report is the list of states that showed strong improvement between 2008 and 2009, including Maine, Colorado, Delaware, South Dakota and Tennessee. Speaking about why the recession hasn't slowed states' efforts, ACEEE Executive Director Steven Nadel said: "Energy efficiency is the only resource that can actually reduce energy consumption while growing the economy – making efficiency the ‘first fuel’ states can use to balance their energy portfolios." (Read more)
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