Gore as an environmental leader

I question as to why Al Gore does not "put his money where his mouth is" and create an alternative energy source, i.e. solar or wind power, for his estate in TN. What a great example he would set. What wonderful publicity.

I am a big Gore fan and was recently embarassed by the media coverage of his "carbon footprint". He has the chance to affect positive change and leadership here. Why doesn't he??


Well, Excuuuuse me!

As I said I am/was a big Gore fan and if I am "misinformed" then so are the thousands and thousands of voters who are laughing at the seemingly contradictory Gore and his supporters.

Better get the word out to all of us imbicilies!


We are doing it, join in!

GoreFan's picture

Help out by spreading the truth that Gore uses less than the average in his area... that smaller places use more... that his house includes domestic living quarters, two offices, a separate house for guests, and special security measures. All this and it is STILL less than the average in his area. It isn't hard to find answers here, or at many other places on the web. Check out my blog for some debunking of the GORE WAR perpetuated by the media. http://www.algore.org/blog/gorefan so that you won't be speechless or embarrassed again. :)

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Gimme More, Gimme Gore!


He in fact does and you are misinformed

He does put his money where his mouth is, both by paying for green power (plus $432/month) and offsets (throught The CarbonNeutral Company) and installing solar panels on his house and making his businesses, the movie, the book carbon neutral. Don't believe that's cheap.

For a dual-use house of 10,000 sq feet in that climate region 191,000 kwh is very good, and since all of that amount of energy is generated by TVA from green sources his carbon footprint after his electricity use is zero.
He pays offsets for his travel (no he doesn't have a private jet) and gas usesage.

As for the solar panels, it's not his fault.

Town Official Defends Al Gore's Energy Inefficient House

Last Edited: Tuesday, 20 Mar 2007, 7:08 PM EDT
Created: Tuesday, 20 Mar 2007, 4:38 PM EDT
03/20/2007 --
Zoning rules in Al Gore's upscale Tennessee neighborhood have prevented the former vice president and environmental activist from installing solar panels on his roof.

Gore bought his multimillion dollar home in 2002 in Belle Meade, an exclusive city encircled by metropolitan Nashville, and he has embarked on an ambitious renovation. But his contractors ran into a legal barrier last summer when they sought to apply for a permit to install solar panels on the roof.

Terry Franklin, Belle Meade's building officer, said the town only allows power generating equipment to be placed on the ground level. "Solar panels are generators," Franklin said.

"We told them they couldn't do it," he said. "They wanted to try anyway, but we convinced them it was something the board wouldn't allow."

A conservative group that disputes the findings about global warming criticized Gore last month, complaining that his home uses too much electricity.

Belle Meade, the nation's fifth-richest town according to the 2000 Census, developed the zoning rules because many of its homes have backup electric generators. The area has several tall trees and residents have discouraged Nashville Electric Service crews from pruning those near power lines. Power outages from falling branches have forced several residents to purchase backup generators.

Gore's contractors had argued that silent solar panels should not be equated with noisy gas- or diesel-powered generators, but they ultimately agreed not to press the issue while the city considered changes to the code.

New rules on April 1 will allow homeowners to install solar panels on their roofs. But there's a caveat: "Solar panels may be installed upon the roof of a building so long as they are not visible from the street or from any adjoining property," according to the ordinance.

Gore's roof does have flat areas where the panels could be placed, Franklin said.

The builders at Gore's home plan to make the application for solar panels once the new ordinance goes into effect.

"We just sort of had to wait until they caught up with things," said Steve Rick, Gore's architect. "I didn't think it was worth fighting because we knew the change was coming."

Gore, who starred in the documentary film "An Inconvenient Truth" about global warming, has been mentioned as a possible presidential candidate in 2008 although he repeatedly has said he has no plans to join the race.


Is Gore Going To Run?

The pundits are saying to watch Gore closely. If he looks like he's losing weight between now and early autumn...he's going to jump in. I certainly hope they are correct.


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