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4. Acting faithfully to restore the earth.

Berea Mennonite Farms Three Acres

Friday, November 4th, 2011

“Before we dug up the church yard and planted potatoes, I don’t think people even knew we were here,” John Wierwille, pastor of Berea Mennonite Fellowship chuckled. “Now we’re growing, and the farm is no small part of that.”

Berea Mennonite Church is one of at least four 100 Shades of Green congregations with community gardens—though in this case, farm is a better term.

The small urban church has three acres under cultivation and grows over 70 different organic vegetables on the east edge of Atlanta. Now in its second year, the church sells its food at local farmers’ markets and also provides a first fruits tithe to the community, distributed through a free clinic.

Children at Oakleaf Farm

Wierwille, who pastors the congregation and also serves as its MCCN liaison, sees the farm as an integral part of the church’s ministry. “Our relationship with the land is just as important as our relationship with brothers and sisters and enemies and strangers,” he says. For Wierwille, salvation is not primarily individual. “It happens when we work together, risk together, celebrate the harvest together,” he says.

The farm gives the congregation that opportunity, as nearly every member is involved, even the toddlers. Meanwhile, curious neighbors drop in to get food or offer advice on wringing food from Georgia clay.

- Jennifer Halteman Schrock

All He’s Saying is Give Wisdom a Chance

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

Reprinted from EMU’s Crossroad magazine with permission

by Andrew Jenner, June 9, 2011

Hugh Stoll ’89 bought this 1920s-era hydroelectric dam on the Rocky River near Pittsboro, North Carolina, in 2005 and has been restoring it ever since. Stoll is also one of the partners in the company that owns and manages the solar installation at EMU.

AFTER CLAMBERING DOWN a rickety iron ladder and inching across a slippery concrete ledge, Hugh Stoll ’89 arrives at the business end of his latest brainchild: a new hydroelectric turbine for his dam on the Rocky River in Pittsboro, North Carolina.

Unscrewing a metal cover to show off the guts of his new contraption – conceived and built entirely from scratch, save for a blade design borrowed from the University of Idaho – Hugh talks hydropower at a mile a minute: “thrust bearings” and “butterfly valves” and “friction loss” and other terms and concepts sailing over the layman’s head.

Hugh goes back up the ladder into the powerhouse, still holding forth rapid-fire on the intricacies of his operation, as he opens up the new turbine control panel. He jumps from “synchronous generation” to “positive load,” then describes the use of a “dynamometer” to create a “torque curve” that has some relation to the coiled thicket of black, yellow, red and blue wires snaking this way and that inside the control panel he engineered.

In the background, his trusty old 1909 GE generator – the dam’s real workhorse, to be supplemented by the new turbine – hums along gently. When the Rocky River’s up and running fast, Hugh’s dam sends enough electricity into the grid to power 90 to 100 homes.

Hugh, who lives in Harrisonburg, Virginia, takes periodic work trips to the dam, a few days here, a few days there, fixing this, replacing that, tinkering with more ambitious projects like the new turbines. There’s no shortage of things to do.
The dam, built in 1922, was “highly neglected” when he and his brother, Craig, bought it in 2005. Ever since, he’s been trying to get things back to shipshape. He claims he’s not an expert; he’s learned as he’s gone along, seeking out mentors, figuring out who can help him when he’s stumped.

“You piddle around with stuff and find out what works,” says Hugh. “It’s just really simple. There’s not a whole lot to it.”
And Hugh loves simplicity. He relates a parable from personal experience:

Some years ago, he chaperoned a group of students from Eastern Mennonite High School visiting the “solar decathlon” on the National Mall in Washington DC, a showcase of the most advanced and innovative solar-powered houses in the world. Impressive, yes, but the approach felt wrong. The houses’ complicated electrical systems would cost tens of thousands of dollars to build and require an engineering degree to really understand – far, far too complicated an arrangement for Hugh’s liking. While the houses at the decathlon were perhaps sustainable in some narrow sense, they were kind of missing the broader point.
“[We] should talk about wisdom, not sustainability,” he declares, tugging at his long beard, cut in a style evocative of the Amish men in his ancestry.

Vaguely resembling a flying saucer, the 1909 General Electric generator behind Hugh Stoll makes much of the dam’s electricity. During periodic work trips from his home in Harrisonburg, Hugh has been building two supplemental turbines from scratch.

Wisdom is an expansive concept, he continues. Simplicity is part of wisdom. Average everyday people should be able to understand wise things. Seeking others’ talents, as he’s tried to do when troubleshooting at the dam, is part of wisdom. And living sustainably is an inevitable side effect of living wisely. Wise people don’t poison their own wells, he says. Wise people take care of what they have.

Pragmatism figures into all of this, too. The ecological effects of damming rivers makes hydropower a controversial source of renewable energy, Hugh acknowledges, but perfect can’t be the enemy of good.

“Our culture has an insatiable appetite for electricity, and you have to get it from somewhere,” he says.

After graduating from EMC with a degree in Biblical studies and theology, Hugh and his wife, Kathy Hilty Stoll ’89, moved to Tacoma, Washington, where Kathy earned a degree in occupational therapy. Hugh worked as an electrician in Tacoma, and then in Arizona, the couple’s next stop after Kathy earned her degree.

In 1996, by then with two children in tow, the Stolls moved to eastern Washington, near the town of Kettle Falls. Hugh became a stay-at-home dad at first, while he built the family a simple, no-frills straw bale house within eyeshot of Canada. Good insulation, careful design and a wood-burning Russian stove were plenty to keep the house comfortable.

In Washington, Hugh’s love of whitewater kayaking first connected him with hydroelectricity. He got to know a man who owned a dam on one of Hugh’s favorite rivers, and before long, he began helping his new friend with electrical projects there.

When Hugh’s father, Dan (electrical service supervisor at EMU for 12 years) died suddenly of a heart attack in 2002, the Stolls – then with four kids – sold the house in Washington and moved back to Harrisonburg. After the move, Hugh kept his eye on hydropower industry journals, saw an ad for the dam in Pittsboro, and soon enough, had bought a hydropower plant of his own.
Hugh’s foray into hydroelectricity has gotten him interested in other forms of renewable energy.

Last year, he built a large solar panel array in the back yard of his family’s home just north of town. He’s now a partner with Secure Futures, the solar energy company that owns and manages EMU’s recent solar installation on the library roof. And lately he’s begun dabbling in wind power. Hugh and Craig are fixing up a 100-year-old wind turbine for fun, and he’s toying with the idea of launching some sort of wind energy development.

And one more thing – Hugh’s been dreaming lately about building another house. He’s been doodling plans, considering sites, thinking about design. Or even better, he’s dreaming about a group of houses, connecting with other like-minded, people interested in building and living together. Living simply. Living sustainably. Living wisely.

EMU’s Crossroads magazine: a sustainability focus

Monday, July 11th, 2011

Spring 2011, Vol. 91, No. 3

The EMU Crossroads magazine, published three times a year, most recently focused  on sustainability.   Multiple articles profile alumni with unique methods of “going green.”  It is both inspiring and informative, and worth checking out. Visit http://emu.edu/now/crossroads/ to view the magazine online.

New Solar Collectors Save Energy at Bethel College

Friday, June 10th, 2011

by Melanie Zuercher

NORTH NEWTON, KAN. – Bethel College’s latest venture in energy-saving technology will make a small step toward a greener planet – but may have a much more profound impact on at least one student’s future.

Bethel maintenance and technology staff, under the management of Les Goerzen, director of facilities and technology, continue to use their own expertise, willingness to research and ability to improvise to find small, affordable ways to cut energy usage.

The latest, launched at the beginning of this month, was installation of solar collectors on the roof of Voth residence hall. (more…)

Mennonite Central Committee uses Worms, Composting to Help Bengali Farmers

Friday, April 15th, 2011

By Linda Espenshade

BOGRA, Bangladesh — The cornstalks growing in Anzu Rani and Biren
Mahato’s rented field are vibrant green. The leaves intermingle and
the strong stalks fill the field.

“The corn looks great,” said Mokhlesur Rahman, administrator of
Mennonite Central Committee’s (MCC) Research and Extension Activity
Partners in Bogra. “I’ve hardly seen corn that good in Bangladesh.”

Rahman is especially pleased with the results because the Mahato
family is benefiting from an MCC project that shows farmers how to
produce their own compost, which increases soil health and crop yield.
Farmers don’t need to buy as much chemical fertilizer when they use
compost, so they save on production costs even as they earn more on
their crops. (more…)

EMU a Winner in Climate Action Competition

Friday, April 15th, 2011

HARRISONBURG, Va. – Eastern Mennonite University has been honored as a winner of the National Wildlife Federation’s annual competition “Chill Out: Climate Action on Campus.” This award program recognizes U.S. schools that are designing and implementing creative approaches that advance sustainability on campuses. EMU is one of six winning schools that were chosen from a national pool of entries.

EMU’s winning entry gives an overview of sustainability efforts at EMU and
highlights the installation of a solar array on Hartzler Library roof in
fall 2010. The two-minute video was produced by EMU’s marketing and
communications media specialists Lindsey Kolb and Jon Styer, both
graduates of EMU’s Visual and Communication Arts program. It can be viewed
at http://emu.edu/video/green.
(more…)

Congregation Finds Battery Solution

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Berkey Avenue Mennonite Fellowship, Goshen, Ind., has had a “battery bucket” in its foyer for about a year now and encouraged members to recycle batteries rather than throw them in the trash.

Recycling batteries sounds simple, but proved complicated when Berkey’s Creation Care Committee learned that the local hazardous waste disposal would no longer accept alkaline batteries. While companies can make money recycling lithium ion and button batteries, alkaline batteries are not cost effective to recycle. This meant almost 90% of the batteries collected were just going in the landfill.  See the solution Berkey chose… (more…)

Solar Fans Track EMU’s Array Performance

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Since November 15, 2010, Eastern Mennonite University (EMU) is home to the largest solar deployment in Virginia. The 328 high-efficiency photovoltaic panels on EMU’s library roof in Harrisonburg, Va., have the capacity to generate 104.3 kilowatts of electricity. This is enough energy to power the equivalent of nine homes.

Solar fans can watch the photovoltaic panels perform live by visiting the tracking page provided by Southern Energy Management, the company that owns and services the panels. The page graphs the panel’s hourly output, shows how many kilowatts have been generated to date and counts carbon offsets, trees saved and barrels of oil not used.

At this writing, the panels have generated 27,619 kilowatt hours to date. In the past month, they’ve saved almost five barrels of oil, five trees and offset 6,862 pounds of carbon dioxide. A sunny yellow graph shows that the array began producing power between 7 and 8 a.m. this morning. Power spiked around 11 a.m., but now at 12:30 p.m., Harrisonburg seems to have hit a cloudy spell. Ohhhh, this is addictive!

Mennonite Credit Union Adds Solar Panels, Creation Care Loans

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Creation care loans are a new feature now available to the 17,600 members of the Waterloo County community that Mennonite Savings and Credit Union (MSCU) serves. Loans with favorable terms are available to members who want to install solar panels, geothermal heating systems or energy efficiency upgrades.  The credit union offers the loans in partnership with Mennonite Central Committee’s Initiative for Solar Energy (MISE).
Meanwhile, Mennonite Savings and Credit Union is also working with Vigor Clean Tech, a Waterloo based company and MSCU member, to install a 7.1 kW (kilowatt) solar rooftop system in their Waterloo branch. The amount of energy being produced will be on display in the branch and online for members and visitors to view. The branch will also start an energy monitoring program to see what consumption reductions are possible. Darren Kropf, Creation Care Coordinator at Mennonite Central Committee Ontario, says, “MSCU’s adoption of solar energy will visually remind its members to make decisions to care for creation everyday. Congratulations for demonstrating strong leadership in environmental stewardship!” (more…)

Hillcrest Mennonite Goes Solar

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Hillcrest's solar panels

As far as we know, Hillcrest Mennonite Church, New Hamburg, Ont., is the first of MCCN’s 100 Shades of Green congregations to go solar. The church dedicated the project fall of 2010; the panels arrived in January 2011 and the system was connected to the grid on February 17.

The solar system that Hillcrest installed is a ground mounted tracking unit, meaning that it can follow the sun throughout the day. It is pictured at left. The array is rated at 9.87 kW and will produce enough power in a year (about 18000 kWh) to provide for two average urban homes.

Rob Yost, the congregation’s green facilitator, says that the congregation should be able to pay off the system in just under ten years.

“We realize that we all must become aware of and responsible for the pollution created by our lifestyle,” Yost says. “We are hoping that this will help Ontario get rid of its coal-fired generation plants, and the associated smog created by them, by 2014, which is the current target. We are also trying to reduce our carbon foot print to help minimize the effects of global warming.”

At the dedication held last fall, the congregation acknowledged that every project has negative impacts. Because they had to take down three trees to make room for the panels, they distributed pine seedlings to attendees to offset the trees that were sacrificed.

Hillcrest Solar Panels

 

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