Visit the town
at www.greenpeace.org.uk/efficiencity
Greenpeace has launched an interactive virtual city
showcasing how towns and cities across the
UK are fighting climate change and
enjoying a cleaner and more secure energy future - without relying on new coal
or nuclear power stations.
The new online town, called
EfficienCity, uses interactive case studies and animation to demonstrate how the
UK could slash its greenhouse gas
emissions, cut electricity bills and beef up the security of its energy supply.
The town is powered by "decentralised energy", a clean and efficient energy
system that provides heating, cooling and electricity to the
community.
Greenpeace is asking visitors to
the virtual town to "reclaim the power" from central government and instead
engage with their local councils, encouraging them to implement their own local
energy schemes based on efficiency, renewables and combined heat and
power.
Through interacting with virtual
football stadiums, supermarkets, hospitals and breweries based on real world
examples, visitors can see how their own communities can join the fight against
climate change by generating their own energy.
Greenpeace has developed the
project in response to the official energy policy of the UK
government, which currently favours large, centralised power generation and
nuclear reactors as the solution to keeping the lights on and tackling climate
change.
Developed in collaboration with
Biro Creative - founded by former staffers of the Adbusters Media Foundation -
the project shows how the solutions to climate change can be applied to every
British town.
Videos, animations, slideshows and
sounds guide the user through a brilliantly realised low carbon system,
explaining how renewable technologies - from wave and tidal power to micro-hydro
and anaerobic digestion - work. The town also shows how electricity, heat and
cooling can all be part of a local energy network.
Greenpeace energy advisor Darren
Shirley said: "With EfficienCity we're trying to
demonstrate virtually how the real solutions to climate change can work in
practise. We're hoping that visitors to the city will see that these
technologies aren't science fiction - they're already available today.
"There's absolutely no reason why
this kind of integrated, low carbon system couldn't work in every town in
Britain. That's why we want people to
get active, contact their local politicians and demand real
change."
Nicholas Klassen of Biro Creative
said: "To combine real world feel with
technical precision, we started with a visual style based on "information
graphics" and filled it out with colour, dynamism and the ordinary touches of
everyday life.
"The site is designed to allow
users to dig in on their own terms. Some will graze through the site and be
happy with a surface-level engagement. Others will drill down to every layer to
absorb every detail."
For more
contact Greenpeace on 0207 865 8255
www.greenpeace.org.uk/efficiencity
For more information on decentralised energy visit www.greenpeace.org.uk/efficiencity/about
NOTES TO
EDITORS
EfficienCity
features:
- Zero emissions housing, based on
BedZED in Surrey
- A hospital with its own CHP plant,
based on the Royal
Southampton Hospital
- A football stadium with its own
wind turbine, based on Manchester City stadium
- A brewery with its own biomass
(spent grain) CHP plant, based on Scottish & Newcastle Royal Brewery in
Manchester
- A leisure centre using
photovoltaic cells and fuel cell CHP, based on Woking Leisure
Centre
- A high street with solar power,
based on Woking city centre.