The Anglican Church of Canada is taking steps towards a green revolution it
hopes will sweep across 1,700 parishes nationwide. The Partners in Mission and Eco-justice (PMEJ) of General Synod will launch a
national database this year to provide information on eco-friendly and
energy-efficient Canadian Anglican parishes, including how they became green. It
is hoped that sharing their stories will help other parishes to do the same.
“We want to celebrate and reward parishes [which] have accomplished
reductions in greenhouse gas emissions,” said Ken Gray, former member of General
Synod's eco-justice committee and the Canadian church representative to the
Anglican Communion Environment Network. “We want to acknowledge those parishes
[which] have done energy audits. We’d also like to…track their progress over
time and encourage [them] to take the next step. By publishing the data, we’d
also like to encourage other parishes to take initial steps.” Gray estimates
there are about 100 Anglican parishes that have taken steps to become better
stewards of the environment.
The database is part of the Greening
Anglican Spaces project initiated by PMEJ in response to a 2010 General Synod
resolution on climate justice. That resolution included a call for all Anglican
parishes to make their buildings more energy-efficient and to help members
“lessen their ecological footprint and pursue more sustainable ways of
life.”
To help parishes go green, PMEJ has enlisted the help of Faith
& the Common Good, a national organization that encourages inter-faith
action on social and environmental concerns. FCG pioneered the Greening Sacred
Spaces program in Canada, which provides faith communities with tools and
resources to help them plan the greening of their facilities.
Ted Reeve,
executive director of FCG, said there are about 500 houses of worship that have
participated in the Greening Sacred Spaces program. The FCG’s goal is to
increase this number to 3,000 by 2013. That is equivalent to 10 per cent of
religious buildings in Canada, which Reeve hopes “will have a multiplier effect
on other religious communities to step up and be symbols of change in their
community.”
Reeve said parishes should not be deterred by the initial
cost of having an energy audit, and later, a retrofit. “We have enough case
studies to demonstrate the kind of savings that between three to ten years,
depending on the size of the retrofit, you would have paid it off and then
you’re good for another 30 to 40 years of savings,” he said. (The cost of an energy audit provided by the FCG is $500 for buildings under
600m2/6,500ft2. Additional charges apply for larger or
multiple buildings.)
There are parishes that have devised innovative ways of
raising money, including the issuance of bonds, he said. There are also banks
that provide financing to faith communities for environment-related projects.
There used to be a federal rebate program for energy conservation
projects, but that was scrapped when the Conservative government came to power.
“That’s something we should be pushing our government to do, step up” its
support for environment-friendly initiatives, said Reeve.
Gray and Reeve,
who recently briefed General Synod staff about the database initiative, said
they are also hoping to use a resource from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), which allows houses of worship to track their energy use and its
associated greenhouse gas emissions, and provides suggestions for improvements.
This tool also allows them to receive an energy performance rating, with the
most energy efficient receiving the Energy Star rating.
There are about 370,000 worship facilities in the U.S. and they spend more
than $3 billion annually on energy costs. “Improving the energy efficiency of
America's houses of worship by just 10 percent would save nearly 2 billion
kilowatt-hours each year, preventing more than 1 million tons of greenhouse gas
emissions and representing a cost savings of about $315 million annually,” said
an EPA press statement. (There is not data on the total energy consumption of
houses of worship in Canada.)
Gray acknowledged that the greening of churches would not, on its own, solve
global warming. “We all would like government to set measurable goals and
realistic, binding targets. There’s a refusal at the federal level to do so and
in most provincial jurisdictions,” he said. “Greening Anglican Spaces shares the
desire of many [for the church] to speak with a clear and prophetic voice to
policy makers here in Canada but we know we have to strengthen our position.” He
said that one reason for gathering “tangible data that is accessible and
transparent to all is to strengthen our case with government, in saying, we got
our house in order, at least partially, therefore can you take us a bit more
seriously?”
The secularization of Canada has also meant that “the place
of the church in economic and political discourse is probably quite different
that what it was in the 1970s,”said Gray. “We need to be innovative in our
justice advocacy…”
He added that Canadians, Anglicans included, “are going to have to accept a
new kind of economy that is less-based on fossil fuels…” But, he said, “It’s
hard to get people to pay attention let alone change their way of living.”
World economies, including Canada, have to acknowledge that “its business as
usual economic practice is causing environmental destruction and is continuing
to allow us to live lifestyles which are ecologically and economically
unsustainable,” he said.
Source: Anglican Journal
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