Net-Zero Energy Homes in Wyoming

Net-Zero Energy Homes in Wyoming

The next frontier?

On an unseasonably warm day last October, Richard Fox pulled up to the construction site of his future home near Pavillion, Wyoming, in an old Toyota pickup.

Doing More with Less

Doing More with Less

How energy efficiency and conservation can decrease UW’s utility bills

Keeping the lights and heat on at the University of Wyoming is a challenge.

Downsized

Downsized

Saving Energy by Living Small

Before Macy Miller moved into her 232-square-foot tiny home in Boise, Idaho

Community Solar

Community Solar

Community solar—sometimes referred to as a solar garden or virtual net metering—is when several households, businesses, or other entities invest together in a solar installation and share the electricity it produces.

Net Metering

Net Metering

Net metering lets customers tie small-scale renewable energy systems such as solar panels into the grid to offset their energy bills.

Turbines on the Horizon

Turbines on the Horizon

How the western grid could unleash Wyoming wind energy, for better or worse

California and Wyoming make strange bedfellows, but when it comes to sharing electricity, the two states have been flirting.

Wyoming’s Wind Tax

Wyoming’s Wind Tax

Wyoming’s strong, predictable, consistent winds are a world-class resource. Ranchers and farmers have harnessed the wind to pump water since Wyoming was first settled, and small-scale commercial wind projects started in the 1970s.

Energy Transition

Energy Transition

Our world needs more energy and less CO2

The world needs more energy. More than 1.4 billion people live without access to electricity.

Hydro-powered center-pivot on a ranch in Colorado.

Small-Scale Hydropower

Wyoming’s streams and irrigation ditches are an untapped clean energy source

“If we disconnected that 14-inch pipe and pointed it upward, the water would blast nearly 600 feet into the air,” says Les Hook

Amphibious Citizen Scientists

Amphibious Citizen Scientists

Wildlife managers turn to volunteers for help collecting hard-to-get data

I swished my dipnet through water and vegetation at the edge of the beaver pond, creating swirls of mud that obscured the bottom.

US Forest Service Photo Library - 2013 Routt/Med Bow National Forest Late September Aerials

Editor’s Note

Coal powers America. Or at least it has for the last sixty years. For most of the last century, anywhere from 45 to 55 percent of US electricity came from coal.

Photo of a huge bucket crane in a Wyoming coal mine. By Joe Riis/USFS

Carbon Capture

Wyoming could lead the world toward a cleaner energy future

By Emilene Ostlind

This December, five international research teams will converge at the outskirts of Gillette, Wyoming, to compete for a $7.5 million Carbon XPRIZE.

Energy in the West

Energy in the West

Over the last quarter century, the western states’ energy portfolio has shifted. Coal used to produce far and away the largest share of electricity, but recent advances in hydraulic fracturing and demand for low-carbon fuel have bumped natural gas to first place.

Scenarios Planning

Scenarios Planning

An oil major considers possible futures to prepare for a changing world

Royal Dutch Shell’s primary business is the discovery, extraction, refinement, transportation, marketing, and selling of oil.

The Clean Power Plan

The Clean Power Plan

When Congress failed to enact legislation to address climate change, President Obama vowed to take action himself. “No challenge poses a greater threat to our children, our planet, and future generations,” he said.