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The Latest

#188 January 2025/Energy

A great energy audit starts with the right expert

Before you begin your journey toward electrification, you need to find out where your home is losing energy. A skilled energy auditor doesn’t just inspect — they diagnose, prioritize and recommend solutions tailored to your home’s unique needs. Selecting the right person can make all the difference. Ask these questions to help determine whether a

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January 1, 2025
2 mins read
#188 January 2025/Climate-Change/Energy

PGW has several programs to save money and increase efficiency, no matter your budget

The dream is to electrify everything, and to do it now. The reality is that Philadelphia Gas Works (PGW) serves 500,000 households, and shifting from one energy source to another is going to take time. So for those of us who can’t yet leave gas behind, PGW has EnergySense, a program designed to help customers

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January 1, 2025
2 mins read
#188 January 2025/Bicycling/Bike Talk/transportation

Philly parents and students are joining a global movement to reimagine the school commute

It’s a Friday morning in October, and there’s a steady stream of cars driving down 43rd Street in West Philly’s Spruce Hill neighborhood. Then, through the traffic, a cavalcade emerges of about 20 parents and children on bicycles — a mix of kids on electric cargo bikes, kids on the front of folding bikes, kids

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January 1, 2025
5 mins read
#188 January 2025/Energy

Here’s what you need to know before you go all-in on electrifying your home

1. Make a plan! Experts say that before homeowners start installing new electric appliances, they should evaluate some fundamentals. First, is their house properly weatherized? And second, is their electrical system properly wired? After all, even an industry professional like Cora Wyent, the senior director of research at electrification nonprofit Rewiring America, can make mistakes.

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January 1, 2025
3 mins read
#188 January 2025/Editor's Notes/Politics

Editor’s Notes: Four More Years

Like a lot of Grid readers, I’m still adjusting to the reality of the 2024 presidential election. There is my conscious perception of reality, based on the facts of the world, and there is my gut-level sense of reality, colored by how I think the world should be. The two are out of whack. Case

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January 1, 2025
2 mins read
#188 January 2025/Energy

Purchasing smaller electric appliances, like a leaf blower or hot plate, is a good way to try out newer technologies, especially on a budget

A few years ago, Cora Wyent, senior director of research at electrification nonprofit Rewiring America, and her partner were weighing the purchase of an induction oven to replace the old gas model in their kitchen. Induction ovens run off electricity and, thanks to some fascinating engineering, boast such perks as cooking elements that not only

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January 1, 2025
2 mins read
#188 January 2025/Art/Community/gardening

Development destroys a treasured pollinator garden and obstructs mural in Belmont

In 2024, to celebrate her 75th birthday, Aminata Calhoun took a trip to Spain for some much-needed rest and relaxation. After a few weeks of soaking in the picturesque Spanish scenery, she returned home to a landscape starkly different from the one she had left. Surrounding the lot at Belmont and Wyalusing avenues that she

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January 1, 2025
5 mins read
#188 January 2025/education/transportation

SEPTA’s funding crisis doesn’t just disrupt service. For Philly students, it disrupts their school day

On most weekdays, Tariem Burroughs takes his first grader to school on the Route 21 bus, so his husband, Nick, gets their son dressed and ready. Nick manages the moods of the six-year-old, sure, but it’s Burroughs who deals with the piece of the morning puzzle that’s both unpredictable and beyond the family’s control: SEPTA.

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January 1, 2025
3 mins read
#188 January 2025/Climate-Change/Energy/Environment

The Electrification Issue

The year is 2050. On every street across the wide expanse of the United States, nearly every vehicle that goes by emits only the quiet whine of an electric motor. A few folks still ride by in antique, gas-powered cars, but in many places such vehicles are greatly outnumbered even by electric bikes. The houses

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January 1, 2025
1 min read
#188 January 2025/Climate-Change/Energy

A coalition of activists and advocates nudges PECO toward purchasing more renewable energy

In 2020, members of POWER Interfaith, a grassroots social justice organization with a mission to “shine a light on broken systems,” organized to push PECO, Pennsylvania’s largest electric and gas utility, to incorporate long-term contracts for renewable energy into its Default Service Program (DSP). The DSP is essentially the company’s “house special,” and about 75%

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January 1, 2025
4 mins read
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