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When the lights go down in the city, the planet wins

People around the world, including in the suburbs and in Chicago, will be asked if they are willing to live in the dark for one hour in order to shed light on the problem of global warming.

Judging by the list of local organizations already signed on to participate, belief in the human contribution to global warming is more than twice what it was just one year ago. Nearly 60 suburban communities, schools and businesses will switch off all nonessential electricity from 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 tonight. They'll be joined by iconic skylines and monuments from 80 nations stretching the globe from Albania to Zambia at exactly the same time. All told, the event, in only its third year, is expected to include about 1 billion participants in about 1,200 cities.

Locally, participating groups are getting involved for various reasons.

Benedictine University in Lisle will reverse the Biblical phrase, "Let there be light" for one hour as part of its three-year Go Green Initiative. Beyond that, Assistant Professor Jean-Marie Kauth said the university and its students have a religious obligation to be stewards of the planet. Benedictines have held that as a religious tenet for 400 years, she said. And, after all, even the Vatican has solar panels these days.

Benedictine will darken most of the outdoor lighting in parking lots, the library and the student center. Students are being asked to switch off dorm lights as well. Instead, a bonfire will light up the campus as students celebrate with music and a gathering.

University staff are asking people to use common sense in celebrating Earth Hour.

"For instance, we don't want people driving to campus to come celebrate with us," Kauth said. "That would be really counterproductive from an environmental aspect."

Indeed, the specific environmental impacts of Earth Hour will be measured by many participants in different ways. For instance, last year ComEd reported a 7 percent drop in power usage throughout northern Illinois during Earth Hour compared to the same hour the preceding week. That's the equivalent of saving about 72,000 gallons of gasoline.

This year, expect that total to be even more.

Jones Lang LaSalle manages or leases 1.4 billion square feet of office space around the globe. More than 60 million square feet of that office space is in the Chicagoland area, including the Aon Center and Boeing Building in Chicago, the East West Corporate Center in Naperville, the Woodfield Financial Centre in Schaumburg and the Waubonsee Corporate Center in Sugar Grove. But last year, barely half of the Chicago area properties they managed participated in Earth Hour. This year, spokeswoman Brooke Houghton said she expects 100 percent participation. That means cutting 40 tons of greenhouse gases those buildings would have otherwise spewed into the atmosphere, and reaping the financial rewards of a lower energy bill.

The number of Jones Lang LaSalle employees committing to observe Earth Hour at their own home has also more than doubled. Board games, star gazing, flashlight scavenger hunts and candlelit dinners are all popular plans with employees for the evening of Earth Hour, Houghton said.

"This year, it's definitely about practice what your preach," she said.

Ultimately, the World Wildlife Federation, which organizes Earth Hour, hopes this year's event will spark a very long-term impact at the end of this year. In December, world leaders are set to meet at the United Nations Climate Change Conference to potentially sign a new treaty for environmental standards. The wildlife federation believes every light switched off during Earth Hour is a symbolic vote for a unified, corrective global action on climate change.

Earth Hour participants

Many area municipalities, businesses, schools and churches are taking part in Earth Hour, including:

• Village of Algonquin

• City of Aurora

• Village of Bartlett

• City of Batavia

• Chippewa Middle School, Des Plaines

• Transwestern, Des Plaines

• Cumberland Elementary, Des Plaines

• East Main District 63, Des Plaines

• Elgin Public Museum of Natural History

• North Cook County Soil and Water Conservation District, Elgin

• Unitarian Universalist Society of Geneva • Village of Gurnee

• Keeneyville Elementary District 20, Hanover Park

• Village of Hanover Park

• Village of Hoffman Estates

• Benedictine University, Lisle

• Lisle Executive Center

• Schafer School, Lombard

• Manor Hill School, Lombard

• Pleasant Lane School, Lombard

• Village of Lombard

• Indian Grove School, Mount Prospect

• Lions Park Elementary, Mount Prospect

• Lincoln Middle School, Mount Prospect

• Boulevard Cafe, Mount Prospect

• Euclid School, Mount Prospect

• Village of Mount Prospect

• Mundelein High School

• Welsh Elementary School, Naperville

• City of Naperville

• Green Earth Institute, Naperville

• Butler District 53, Oak Brook

• MB Financial Bank, Oak Brook

• Oak Brook Park District

• Drake Oak Brook Plaza

• Lakeview Nature Center, Oakbrook Terrace

• Whole Foods Market, Palatine

• Monson Jewelers, Palatine

• Kimball Hill Elementary School, Rolling Meadows

• Village of Roselle

• Manulife Financial, Schaumburg

• Woodfield Financial Center, Schaumburg

• Schaumburg Elementary District 54

• Transwestern, Schaumburg

• One Century Centre, Schaumburg

• Two Century Centre, Schaumburg

• Phi Theta Kappa, South Elgin

• South Elgin Parks and Recreation Department

• ELITeXPO Cargo Systems, Inc., South Elgin

• Village of South Elgin

• City of St. Charles

• Villa Park Elementary District 45

• Jefferson Middle School, Villa Park

• North Elementary School, Villa Park

• Schafer School, Villa Park

• Wheaton Park District

The Hyatt Regency O'Hare in Rosemont celebrated Earth Hour last year by turning off most of its lights around the hotel and lighting candles. Restaurant greeter Kris Soule of Chicago, right, helps patrons navigate in the lobby. Mark Welsh/Daily Herald file photo
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