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Environmental Action: Saving Electricity at Home
Do we
need to save electricity?
Current usage:
While the population of the United States has expanded 89 percent over the past
50 years, the amount of electricity use has grown 1,315 percent. Per-capita
average consumption of electricity in 2000 was more than seven times as high as
it was fifty years ago. The Energy Information Administration's Annual Energy
Outlook 2001 report predicts that the US's near-term energy future will include
greater consumption, productions, and imports.
Where
does all this electricity come from?
In the United
States, coal has been and continues to be the source of most electricity,
accounting for over half of all electricity generated by the electric power
sector in 2000. Natural gas and petroleum's combined usage stood at 19 percent
in 2000, with nuclear power accounting for 20 percent of total electricity
generation. Renewable energy resources (primarily derived from hydroelectric
power) contributed 8 percent.
Is this
a problem?
Yes. The United
States was self-sufficient in energy until the late 1950s when energy
consumption began to outpace domestic production. From 1970 to 2000, U.S. energy
consumption grew 45 percent while production rose only 13 percent. The Nation
imported more energy to fill the gap: in 2000 US petroleum imports reached an
annual record level of 11 million barrels per day. Heavy reliance on fossil fuel
energy imports has economic, political, as well as environmental implications.
The Annual Energy Outlook 2001 report projects U.S. energy-related carbon
dioxide emissions to exceed 2 billion metric tons of carbon in 2020, 33% more
than in 2000.
Are we
currently wasting electricity?
Yes, we are
wasting electricity in our homes by using inefficient light sources. Lighting
represents as much as 25% of our home's electrical use. We are lighting our
homes inefficiently by continuing to use incandescent light bulbs (the same
technology invented by Thomas Edison over 100 years ago!). More than 90 percent
of the energy produced by incandescent lights is heat, not light.
How can
we save electricity?
Replace
incandescent light bulbs with compact fluorescent lights or
LED light bulbs.
A new 13-watt compact fluorescent light bulb produces as much light - as many
lumens - as a traditional 60-watt incandescent bulb using only one-quarter of
the electrical energy! Fluorescents now have a screw base that fits a normal
light bulb socket and produce a wide assortment of color light that match the
warm glow of incandescent. Fluorescents last 10 to 15 times longer than
incandescent bulbs - 10,000 hours or more.
What
about halogen lights?
Standard halogens
are modern versions of Edison's incandescent bulb, and they last longer - 2,250
to 3,500 hours. Yet, most people use much more wasteful high-wattage halogen
tubes in their homes. Freestanding torchiere lamps use either a 300- or a
500-watt halogen tube that wastes energy by creating four times more heat than
the average incandescent bulb. A 500-watt halogen reaches temperatures of over
1,200 degrees - creating a serious fire hazard. New, energy-efficient torchieres
use compact fluorescent bulbs and provide 25% more light than popular halogen
torchieres and use one-fourth the energy. The new compact fluorescent torchieres
are also far safer than the halogen torchieres because they do not operate at
the same high temperatures.
Will my
compact fluorescent bulbs make a difference?
Yes. Residential
use of electricity is greater than either commercial or industrial use. A single
20-watt compact fluorescent lamp used at home in place of a 75-watt incandescent
will save about 550 kilowatt-hours over its lifetime. If your electricity is
produced in a coal-fired power plant (like 20 percent of California's
electricity is), that savings represents nearly 500 pounds of coal not burned,
which means that 1,300 pounds of carbon dioxide and 20 pounds of sulfur dioxide
will not get into the atmosphere.
Get 100 homes to
switch to electricity saving compact fluorescent bulbs and Save 55,000
kilowatt-hours of electricity
Prevent 132,000
pounds of carbon and sulfur dioxide pollution
Where
do I get it and how much does it cost?
Compact
fluorescent bulbs can be found right here atwww.allgreenthings.com or your locally owned hardware store.
The price of a 75-watt equivalent fluorescent bulb can range from $5.00 - $9.00,
depending on the brand. A new generation of compact fluorescent bulbs now meets
the stringent criteria for long-life and energy savings set by the federal
government's ENERGY STAR® program. Check for the Energy Star® label to help you
select a bulb brand. Retailers of Energy Star products often offer promotions,
discounts, and rebates on these items.
Remember that,
while these lights are more expensive than incandescent bulbs, they will last
over ten times as long (10,000 hours vs. 750 hours)! The purchase is cost
effective: With the compact fluorescent bulb you will save a total of $20.50
over three years (through electricity cost savings and bulb replacement
savings). If you replace 25 percent of the lights in high-use areas with
fluorescents, you can save about 50 percent of your lighting energy bill.
(Source:
GreenSangha.org)
What
else can I do to save electricity?
• Simply turn
off lights when you don't need them or use the following inexpensive lighting
controls: automatic timers, photo sensors, motion detectors or occupancy
sensors, and dimmers.
• Turn down
your thermostat. For every degree you lower your heat in the 60-degree to
70-degree range, you'll save up to 5% on heating costs. Set the thermostat back
to 55 degrees or off at night or when leaving home for an extended time saving
5-20 percent of your heating costs.
• Eliminate
wasted energy. Unplug spare refrigerators. Turn off kitchen and bath-ventilating
fans after they've done their job.
• Keep your
fireplace damper closed unless a fire is burning to prevent up to 8% of your
furnace-heated air from going up the chimney.
• Insulate
your water-heater.
• Reduce hot
water temperature. Set your water heater to the "normal" setting or 120º, if
possible.
• Shorten
showers since they account for 2/3 of your water heating costs. Cutting your
showers in half will reduce your water heating costs by 33 percent.
• Use
low-flow showerheads to reduce hot water usage.
• Use
appliances efficiently. Do only full loads when using your dishwasher and
clothes washer. Use the cold water setting on your clothes washer since it
reduces your washer's energy use by 75%.
• Be sure to
clean your clothes dryer's lint trap. Use the moisture-sensing automatic drying
setting on your dryer.
• Put your
computer and monitor to sleep when not using.
• Unplug
electronics when not in use to prevent leaking energy. The best way to minimize
these losses of electricity is to purchase Energy Star® products.
(Source:
GreenSangha.org)
Excerpted and
reworked from the following websites: California Energy Commission
(www.energy.ca.gov)US Dept of Energy's Energy Information Administration
(www.eia.doe.gov) |