
Sustaindinavia Part 1: Copenhagen's Integrated Approach to Energy
Series: Energy Priorities
From: Denis Du Bois
Length: 00:29:00
What many North American cities would like to achieve, Copenhagen has been perfecting for a century -- Generating carbon-neutral electricity, eliminating 97 percent of the garbage that would have gone into landfills, and supplying reliable, low-cost heat to entire cities.
Scandinavia is known for modern design. It's also home to excellent examples of transit-oriented communities, clean energy, and revitalized neighborhoods. Energy Priorities looks into how they achieve sustainability, while honoring their rich history. This edition of Energy Priorities is the first in a series about sustainability ideas from Scandinavia, titled "Sustaindinavia."
Copenhagen is a veteran of combined heat and power production. Its experience converting trash to energy began in 1903, and it learned the energy security of district heat during World War I and again in WW II. In this program, Denis Du Bois takes listeners on an audio tour of a power plant that supplies electricity to the city, and heats it, by burning its garbage.The oil embargoes of the 1970s convinced Denmark to become free of fossil fuels. Copenhagen intends to be a carbon neutral city by 2025. As a member of the EU, Denmark has broader goals to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions by 60% to 80% by 2050.
These forces converge to drive innovation in how Copenhagen plans its new communities to be energy efficient, powered and heated by waste-to-energy plants and other renewable energy sources. Denis talks with city planners and energy company managers about how they are developing historic neighborhoods as low-energy districts.
Host Denis Du Bois founded Energy Priorities Magazine on Earth Day 2004, and is the host of the "Energy Priorities" public radio program distributed by NPR. Denis has authored over 450 cleantech articles for a variety of publications, including the New York Times, and he has been interviewed on the subject by news outlets including FORTUNE and MSNBC. In the past seven years, he has organized MIT Enterprise Forums on renewable energy, the smart grid, biofuels, and green buildings.
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Piece Description
What many North American cities would like to achieve, Copenhagen has been perfecting for a century -- Generating carbon-neutral electricity, eliminating 97 percent of the garbage that would have gone into landfills, and supplying reliable, low-cost heat to entire cities.
Scandinavia is known for modern design. It's also home to excellent examples of transit-oriented communities, clean energy, and revitalized neighborhoods. Energy Priorities looks into how they achieve sustainability, while honoring their rich history. This edition of Energy Priorities is the first in a series about sustainability ideas from Scandinavia, titled "Sustaindinavia."
Copenhagen is a veteran of combined heat and power production. Its experience converting trash to energy began in 1903, and it learned the energy security of district heat during World War I and again in WW II. In this program, Denis Du Bois takes listeners on an audio tour of a power plant that supplies electricity to the city, and heats it, by burning its garbage.The oil embargoes of the 1970s convinced Denmark to become free of fossil fuels. Copenhagen intends to be a carbon neutral city by 2025. As a member of the EU, Denmark has broader goals to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions by 60% to 80% by 2050.
These forces converge to drive innovation in how Copenhagen plans its new communities to be energy efficient, powered and heated by waste-to-energy plants and other renewable energy sources. Denis talks with city planners and energy company managers about how they are developing historic neighborhoods as low-energy districts.
Host Denis Du Bois founded Energy Priorities Magazine on Earth Day 2004, and is the host of the "Energy Priorities" public radio program distributed by NPR. Denis has authored over 450 cleantech articles for a variety of publications, including the New York Times, and he has been interviewed on the subject by news outlets including FORTUNE and MSNBC. In the past seven years, he has organized MIT Enterprise Forums on renewable energy, the smart grid, biofuels, and green buildings.
Transcript
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Timing and Cues
Piece Audio Version
A Segment - Billboard
00:00 MUSIC, IC: (narrator) "Energy Priorities..."
00:59 MUSIC OUT to silence, OC: ..."in this installment of Energy Priorities"
B Segment
01:00 MUSIC, IC: (host) "Scandinavia is known for modern design..."
15:00 BREAK/MUSIC under program national funding recognition
15:15 break music continues for another :15, no voice
15:29 MUSIC OUT, 1 second silent for CUTAWAY
C Segment
15:30 MUSIC, IC: (host) "You’re listening to Energy Priorities"
28:35 MUSIC, SOC: (host) "I'm Denis Du Bois"
29:00 MUSIC OUT
Single file Version
Same, including music out to silence for break & cutaway, but in one file.
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Intro and Outro
INTRO:When Copenhagen ran out of places to put the garbage, they stopped worrying and started converting it into energy. Energy Priorities explores the city that's becoming carbon neutral, energy independent, and fossil-fuel-free.
OUTRO:The "Sustaindinavia" series continues in January (2011) with insights from Sweden.
Musical Works
| Title | Artist | Album | Label | Year | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I'VE GOT MY LOVE TO KEEP ME WARM | LES BROWN | Single. | Columbia | 1846 | 01:00 |
| ONLY SO MUCH OIL IN THE GROUND | TOWER OF POWER | URBAN RENEWAL. | Warner Bros | 1974 | 02:00 |
| Theme | Alexander Blu & Chris Keister | Single. | Creative Commons License | 2006 | 00:30 |
Additional Credits
Short audio clip from the opening of the 1984 movie "Sex Lies & Videotape,"Miramax (Sony Pictures), included.







