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1/08/18

Managing Water Resources in Resilient Communities



Innovative Solutions for Your Home Neighborhood and Business
Urban Flooding many small towns across the country lose drinking water because of aging pipes, in addition, asphalt and concrete prevent rainwater from soaking into the ground. The solution to inadequate storm water and drinking water management: green infrastructure like rain gardens and bios wales. 
Aging Pipes and Outdated Systems Waste 14 percent of Daily Water Consumption


Water Losses from aging infrastructure and faulty metering lead to lost revenue for utilities and higher rates for water users. Also, increasing demand, maintenance and energy costs are responsible for a 90% increase in utility rates. This trend can be countered by best management practices BMP that include state-of-the-art audits, leak detection monitoring, targeted repairs and upgrades, pressure management, and better metering technologies.
Cost-effective Solutions for Homes Neighborhoods and Business
Your Home may be affected by water or sewage backup, basement seepage and flooding in your yard. A Full Service Strategy comprises yard landscaping to manage storm water and increase property values.
Coordinated Improvements are carried out by experts in landscaping, paving, plumbing, sewer and foundation repairs, waterproofing, gutters and downspouts.
Your Neighborhood flooding often affects multiple properties in a community, necessitating the participation of neighboring properties to improve local water management via risk mapping and low-cost flood reduction and mitigation.  Solutions include: downspout disconnection and drywells, rain gardens and tree planting on parkways. Affordable improvements also address cracked or blocked sewer pipes and flooding from nearby creeks and ditches.


Benefits often include inclusion of storm water management into downtown improvement plans that lead to transportation amenities and economic revitalization, creation of pocket parks and wetlands to store and infiltrate storm water, restoration of tree canopies and river corridors, emergency planning and flood warning systems.




 
Water Management Solutions
Economic Development Entrepreneurs


 

1/04/18

Power Purchase Agreements



A Power Purchase Agreement PPA is a legal contract between an electricity generator and a power purchaser. Contractual terms may last anywhere between 5 and 20 years, during which time the power purchaser buys energy, and sometimes also capacity and services, from the electricity generator. Such agreements play a key role in the financing of independently owned electricity generating assets. The seller is typically an independent power producer - IPP.
PPAs Facilitate the Financing of Distributed Generation Assets
Distributed Generation occurs on a property site with energy is sold to the building occupants; here, commercial PPAs enable businesses and governments to purchase electricity directly from the generator rather than from the utility. The parties involved include:
The Seller is the entity that owns the project. In most cases, the seller is organized as a special purpose entity whose main purpose is to facilitate project financing, and
The Buyer is typically a utility or building occupants under the distributed generation scenario.
Regulations PPAs are typically subject to regulation at the state and federal level to varying degrees depending on the extent to which electricity sales are regulated where the project is sited.
Financing PPAs are the central document in the development of independent electricity generating assets; it defines project terms and credit quality and is key to obtaining non-recourse project financing.
ESCo is an energy and water service/savings company that provides design, implementation and financing of energy/water saving projects, retrofitting, conservation, infrastructure outsourcing, power generation and supply, as well as risk management.
Operations and Metering maintenance and operation of a generation project is the responsibility of the seller, including regular inspection and repair. Liquidated damages apply if the seller fails to meet these circumstances. The seller is also responsible for installing and maintaining a meter to determine the quantity of output sold.
Pricing electricity rates are agreed upon as the basis for a PPA. Prices may be flat, escalate over time, or negotiated. In a regulated environment, the Regulator will regulate the price. A PPA will often specify how much energy the supplier is expected to produce each year; any excess energy produced will have a negative impact on the sales rate of electricity that the buyer will be purchasing.
Billing and Payments PPAs describe how invoices are prepared and the time period of response. The buyer also has the authority to audit those records produced by the supplier.
Performance the buyer will require the seller to guarantee that the project meets certain performance standards. Performance guarantees let the buyer plan accordingly when developing new facilities or when trying to meet demand schedules, which also encourages the seller to maintain adequate records.

Power Purchase Agreements and Distributed Generation Projects