Bottom Line Ministries
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full report here.
Executive Summary
Whether large or small, urban, rural, or suburban, most congregations
use energy for lighting, heating, or cooling in order to conduct
the variety of program ministries and worship events that are an
integral part of church mission. Almost every congregation across
the country is powered and heated at least in part by coal, oil,
or natural gas. The fossil fuels used by congregations have been
rising in price and impacting church budgets. Their use also adversely
effects human and environmental health.
Burning fossil fuels such as oil, coal, and natural gas to power
places of worship is increasingly costly to congregational finances,
congregants' health, and God's creation. By utilizing energy efficiency
and clean energy technologies, congregations can cut utility costs
by 25-30 percent, saving $8,000 to $17,000 per year. This shift
can make significant contributions to a cleaner environment. If
each of the nation's congregation buildings cut its energy use
and costs 25 percent, they would save nearly $500 million to spend
on other priorities while preventing more than five million tons
of carbon emissions.
This report addresses:
- The costs and savings by state for congregations that invest
in clean energy and energy efficiency
- Ways that judicatories can pool resources to invest in clean
energy and encourage energy efficiency
- The Christian call and moral obligation to protect God's creation
and address global warming and pollution through proper energy
stewardship
- Resources needed to take the next steps toward saving money
to spend on church mission while caring for creation
Download the
full report here.
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