20 Things you can do to Conserve Energy 
20 Things you can do to Conserve Energy
Whenever you save
energy, you not only save money, you also reduce the demand for such
fossil fuels as coal, oil, and natural gas. Less burning of fossil
fuels also means lower emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2), the primary
contributor to global warming, and other pollutants.
You do not
have to do without to achieve these savings. There is now an energy
efficient alternative for almost every kind of appliance or light
fixture. That means that consumers have a real choice and the power to
change their energy use on a revolutionary scale.
The average
American produces about 40,000 pounds of CO2 emissions per year.
Together, we use nearly a million dollars worth of energy every minute,
night and day, every day of the year. By exercising even a few of the
following steps, you can cut your annual emissions by thousands of
pounds and your energy bills by a significant amount!
Home appliances
1.
Turn your refrigerator down. Refrigerators account for about 20% of
Household electricity use. Use a thermometer to set your refrigerator
temperature as close to 37 degrees and your freezer as close to 3
degrees as possible. Make sure that its energy saver switch is turned
on. Also, check the gaskets around your refrigerator/freezer doors to
make sure they are clean and sealed tightly.
2. Set your clothes
washer to the warm or cold water setting, not hot. Switching from hot
to warm for two loads per week can save nearly 500 pounds of CO2 per
year if you have an electric water heater, or 150 pounds for a gas
heater.
3. Make sure your dishwasher is full when you run it and
use the energy saving setting, if available, to allow the dishes to air
dry. You can also turn off the drying cycle manually. Not using heat in
the drying cycle can save 20 percent of your dishwasher's total
electricity use.
4. Turn down your water heater thermostat.
Thermostats are often set to 140 degrees F when 120 is usually fine.
Each 10 degree reduction saves 600 pounds of CO2 per year for an
electric water heater, or 440 pounds for a gas heater. If every
household turned its water heater thermostat down 20 degrees, we could
prevent more than 45 million tons of annual CO2 emissions - the same
amount emitted by the entire nations of Kuwait or Libya.
5.
Select the most energy-efficient models when you replace your old
appliances. Look for the Energy Star Label - your assurance that the
product saves energy and prevents pollution. Buy the product that is
sized to your typical needs - not the biggest one available. Front
loading washing machines will usually cut hot water use by 60 to 70%
compared to typical machines. Replacing a typical 1973 refrigerator
with a new energy-efficient model, saves 1.4 tons of CO2 per year.
Investing in a solar water heater can save 4.9 tons of CO2 annually.
Home Heating and Cooling
6.
Be careful not to overheat or overcool rooms. In the winter, set your
thermostat at 68 degrees in daytime, and 55 degrees at night. In the
summer, keep it at 78. Lowering your thermostat just two degrees during
winter saves 6 percent of heating-related CO2 emissions. That's a
reduction of 420 pounds of CO2 per year for a typical home.
7.
Clean or replace air filters as recommended. Energy is lost when air
conditioners and hot-air furnaces have to work harder to draw air
through dirty filters. Cleaning a dirty air conditioner filter can save
5 percent of the energy used. That could save 175 pounds of CO2 per
year.
Small investments that pay off
8. Buy
energy-efficient compact fluorescent bulbs for your most-used lights.
Although they cost more initially, they save money in the long run by
using only 1/4 the energy of an ordinary incandescent bulb and lasting
8-12 times longer. They provide an equivalent amount of bright,
attractive light. Only 10% of the energy consumed by a normal light
bulb generates light. The rest just makes the bulb hot. If every
American household replaced one of its standard light bulbs with an
energy efficient compact fluorescent bulb, we would save the same
amount of energy as a large nuclear power plant produces in one year.
In a typical home, one compact fluorescent bulb can save 260 pounds of
CO2 per year.
9. Wrap your water heater in an insulating jacket,
which costs just $10 to $20. It can save 1100 lbs. of CO2 per year for
an electric water heater, or 220 pounds for a gas heater.
10.
Use less hot water by installing low-flow shower heads. They cost just
$10 to $20 each, deliver an invigorating shower, and save 300 pounds of
CO2 per year for electrically heated water, or 80 pounds for gas-heated
water.
11. Weatherize your home or apartment, using caulk and
weather stripping to plug air leaks around doors and windows. Caulking
costs less than $1 per window, and weather stripping is under $10 per
door. These steps can save up to 1100 pounds of CO2 per year for a
typical home. Ask your utility company for a home energy audit to find
out where your home is poorly insulated or energy inefficient. This
service may be provided free or at low cost. Make sure it includes a
check of your furnace and air conditioning.
Getting around
12.
Whenever possible, walk, bike, car pool, or use mass transit. Every
gallon of gasoline you save avoids 22 pounds of CO2 emissions. If your
car gets 25 miles per gallon, for example, and you reduce your annual
driving from 12,000 to 10,000 miles, you'll save 1800 pounds of CO2.
13.
When you next buy a car, choose one that gets good mileage. If your new
car gets 40 miles per gallon instead of 25, and you drive 10,000 miles
per year, you'll reduce your annual CO2 emissions by 3,300 pounds.
Reduce, reuse, recycle
14.
Reduce the amount of waste you produce by buying minimally packaged
goods, choosing reusable products over disposable ones, and recycling.
For every pound of waste you eliminate or recycle, you save energy and
reduce emissions of CO2 by at least 1 pound. Cutting down your garbage
by half of one large trash bag per week saves at least 1100 pounds of
CO2 per year. Making products with recycled materials, instead of from
scratch with raw materials, uses 30 to 55% less for paper products, 33%
less for glass, and a whopping 90% less for aluminum.
15. If
your car has an air conditioner, make sure its coolant is recovered and
recycled whenever you have it serviced. In the United States, leakage
from auto air conditioners is the largest single source of emissions of
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which damage the ozone layer as well as add
to global warming. The CFCs from one auto air conditioner can add the
equivalent of 4800 pounds of CO2 emissions per year.
Home Improvements.
When
you plan major home improvements, consider some of these energy saving
investments. They save money in the long run, and their CO2 savings can
often be measured in tons per year.
16. Insulate your walls and
ceilings. This can save 20 to 30 percent of home heating bills and
reduce CO2 emissions by 140 to 2100 pounds per year. If you live in a
colder climate, consider superinsulating. That can save 5.5 tons of CO2
per year for gas-heated homes, 8.8 tons per year for oil heat, or 23
tons per year for electric heat. (If you have electric heat, you might
also consider switching to more efficient gas or oil.)
17.
Modernize your windows. Replacing all your ordinary windows with argon
filled, double-glazed windows saves 2.4 tons of CO2 per year for homes
with gas heat, 3.9 tons of oil heat, and 9.8 tons for electric heat.
18.
Plant shade trees and paint your house a light color if you live in a
warm climate, or a dark color if you live in a cold climate. Reductions
in energy use resulting from shade trees and appropriate painting can
save up to 2.4 tons of CO2 emissions per year. (Each tree also directly
absorbs about 25 pounds of CO2 from the air annually.)
Business and community
19.
Work with your employer to implement these and other energy-efficiency
and waste-reduction measures in your office or workplace. Form or join
local citizens' groups and work with local government officials to see
that these measures are taken in schools and public buildings.
20.
Keep track of the environmental voting records of candidates for
office. Stay abreast of environmental issues on both local and national
levels, and write or call your elected officials to express your
concerns about energy efficiency and global warming.
Source: http://www.ecomall.com/greenshopping/20things.htm
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