Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Annual Keep Cool Program - Government Rebate for Energy Savings Appliances



Clean Air Foundation, Toronto Hydro and The Home Depot Canada Launch the
Fourth Annual Keep Cool Program
TORONTO, May 27 /CNW/ – Two massive structures made from recycled air
conditioners and old-fashioned human, green power were assembled today in the
middle of Yonge-Dundas Square to officially launch Keep Cool 2008 – a joint
program of the Clean Air Foundation and Toronto Hydro-Electric System Limited
(“Toronto Hydro”) in partnership with The Home Depot Canada designed to reduce
electricity consumption.
Keep Cool is a conservation and demand management campaign that
encourages Torontonians to permanently retire and recycle their old,
inefficient room air conditioners and adopt cleaner more efficient cooling
alternatives. Over the past four years, Keep Cool has successfully retired
more than 18,000 units in Toronto. In 2007 alone, 6,000 old, inefficient room
air conditioners were retired. This represents a reduction of 4.5 megawatts of
peak demand energy – enough electricity to power almost 3,000 homes.
At the launch, The Honourable Gerry Phillips, Minister of Energy,
remarked on the overall impact of this and other conservation programs. “These
structures are a symbol of the conservation efforts Torontonians have made
since the Province committed to building a conservation culture in 2005 – they
also demonstrate that small actions like recycling old air conditioners can
add up to bigger picture savings of electricity and money.”
Beginning May 31st, Toronto-area residents can recycle their old room air
conditioners at any Toronto The Home Depot location and receive a $25 gift
card from the store for each returned unit, up to a maximum of five gift
cards. The program runs for three consecutive weekends ending June 15th.
“Participating in Keep Cool is another simple way to reduce the strain on
the City’s electricity grid this summer,” said David O’Brien, President and
Chief Executive Officer of Toronto Hydro Corporation. “Every year, we’ve
surpassed our collection goals for the program – and once again, we’re
confident that Torontonians will help us retire 5,000 more old units.”
“Our goal is to make it as easy as possible for people to take measurable
actions to improve air quality,” said Ersilia Serafini, Executive Director of
the Clean Air Foundation. “We’re giving Torontonians the opportunity to turn
their old room air conditioners into cash and reduce their environmental
footprint. It’s a win-win situation!”
Aside from carbon dioxide, rust and erosion from old room air
conditioning units emit harmful refrigerants (CFCs and HCFCs) and nitrogen
oxide directly into your home and the air you breathe. Keep Cool participants
will save more than the environment by retiring their old units. Older room or
window air conditioners use 30 to 70 per cent more energy than newer ENERGY
STAR models. Switching to a newer room air conditioning model could cut
cooling expenses in half.


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