The Farm Energy Working Group (FEWG), facilitated by the Center for Energy & Environmental Education (CEEE) at the University of Northern Iowa and supported by a grant from the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture at Iowa State University, has introduced a new web site that provides a wealth of energy saving information.

December 5, 2012

2 Min Read
Resource Helps Farmers Reduce Energy Use
<p> A new Web site will serve as a &quot;one-stop shop&quot; with resources to help farmers identify potential energy reduction strategies for their farms.</p>

A new resource to help reduce on-farm energy consumption has been developed for small- to mid-sized farm operations.

The Farm Energy Working Group (FEWG), facilitated by the Center for Energy & Environmental Education (CEEE) at the University of Northern Iowa and supported by a grant from the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture at Iowa State University, has introduced a new web site that provides a wealth of energy saving information.

The site serves as a one-stop shop resource to help farmers identify potential energy reduction for their farms, learn how other farmers have achieved energy savings, and find resources for farm audits, utility rebates and funding opportunities.

The site was developed at farmers’ request of the working group when it was formed four years ago, according to FEWG coordinator Carole Yates.

“The resources on our web site are comprehensive and based on information farmers told us they wanted in one place,” she explains. “One of my favorite resources is the farmer success videos – four short videos of Iowa farmers telling what they’re doing to reduce fossil fuel use and replace it with energy efficiency and renewable energy.”

The resource also includes Farmer Success Stories in a printable format about farmers’ use of wind energy, solar hot water and solar electric, a corn-burning boiler, wood-burning boiler to heat an insulated greenhouse and a passive solar vegetable storage space. The working group has supported small demonstration grants for several years and information from those projects is also available. 

Links are provided to a list of Iowa energy auditors from the Rural Energy for America program, as well as links to farm auditors from both utility companies and private companies. 

Farmers can find resources for energy efficiency and reneweable energy grants and loans, as well as federal and state tax credits. Learn more at the Farm Energy Working Group Web site at http://www.uni.edu/ceee/energy/farm-energy-working-group.

 

 

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