
Natural gas is known as one of the ‘cleaner burning’ fossil fuels. Burning natural gas produces less sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon dioxide, and particulate matter when compared to coal and oil combustion. However, methane (the main component in natural gas) is a potent greenhouse gas, contributing to global warming. So how are the natural gas companies using sustainable practices to optimize energy output while minimizing environmental impact? By harnessing and recycling landfill gases, Georgia Natural Gas is reducing the amount of methane landfills emit into the atmosphere and reusing it in your home. In this article, Georgia Natural Gas explains their “Green and Blue” program initiatives, and we welcome your feedback about their efforts.
Over the years, customers of Georgia Natural Gas® (GNG) have associated the Georgia-based natural gas provider with its trademark blue on billboards and advertisements. But today, many are also beginning to associate the company with another color: green for sustainability.
“For years we’ve been extolling the virtues of clean-burning natural gas as the very best energy choice for homes, businesses, and the environment, says Maurice Baker, GNG’s manager of community relations. “Well, now it seems like everyone is listening — and that’s a good thing for the world we all live in.”
In 2009 the company was the first and only natural gas marketer in Georgia to obtain recycled natural gas from a landfill, helping to conserve Georgia’s precious natural resources. Specially designed equipment at the Live Oak Landfill in DeKalb County collects methane gas and makes it ready for consumer use. The gas is then injected into the existing natural gas distribution system and is delivered to homes and businesses.
“GNG customers are making a difference without noticing one, says Baker. “Simply by being GNG customers, they are supporting the landfill initiative.”
“Turning landfill waste material into a clean-burning resource helps preserve our natural resources,” says Mike Braswell, president and CEO of GNG. “Natural gas is already one of the cleanest, most plentiful energy sources. It burns cleaner – emitting fewer carbon emissions than other fossil fuels. And now, and with the availability of recycled natural gas, natural gas is more compatible than ever with the country’s energy goals.”
Even before GNG’s recycled natural gas initiative, the company’s employees were already volunteering for programs that promote sustainability.
In 2003 employees from every department of the company joined forces one Saturday to help weatherize the home of a low-income senior in Atlanta. “Often seniors live in older homes that have not been updated with insulation and energy-saving appliances. By assisting them with their weatherization needs, we are making a positive, lasting impact on the seniors and communities that need it the most,” says Baker. The company’s employee volunteers have been hands-on with volunteer weatherization projects ever since, completing their most recent project just last month.
Recognizing a need in the community, the company funded the weatherization of more than 300 homes beginning in 2007, partnering with four Atlanta-based nonprofit organizations to complete the work during 2008. Nearly 100 percent of the consumers whose homes were weatherized reduced overall energy usage. In some months, energy consumption went down 50 percent compared with the same months prior to weatherization.
Weatherization is important, Baker says, but the company’s sustainability efforts go beyond that. “We knew that it was time to make some changes in our Midtown offices,” Baker explains. A group of concerned employees formed a sustainability committee and developed a program they dubbed Green & Blue. As a result, the employees have implemented single-stream recycling, placed paper recycling bins at most desks, worked with building management to install low-flow faucets in the office facilities, and more. Each quarter, guest speakers from local universities and government offices have joined the committee to discuss new trends and offer their insight.
Key among the improvements the Green & Blue committee put into practice was working with the Clean Air Campaign and the Midtown Alliance to implement a groundbreaking telecommuting policy at GNG. The policy enables qualifying employees to work from home to help reduce carbon emissions in the environment.
The telecommuting program has benefited employees like Stephen Taylor, a GNG accountant who lives in Bremen, Georgia. “I’m able to do much of my work from home now, without the commute into Atlanta. And that’s one less car spewing carbon emissions into the atmosphere.” The program has been so successful that the company was awarded the Clean Air Campaign’s Pace Award in 2009 for employees’ collective telecommuting efforts.
Across the country and indeed the globe, sustainability will be a major topic of interest for the foreseeable future. “I’ve admired what other cities and states have accomplished with the help and support of the corporate community. And I’m proud that Georgia Natural Gas is at the forefront — working for a more sustainable future in Georgia,” says Baker.
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