Showing posts with label Home Energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Energy. Show all posts

Friday, April 2, 2010

How to Make your Home Energy Efficient

How to Make your Home Energy Efficient

Most individuals have innate drive on conserving energy. Turning the lights of when they are not in use is the most common example of conserving energy. And this practice is fervently done by many. It is like an unwritten rule that every one abides. Truly, energy conservation can spell so many advantages on consumers.
Energy conservation is a practice of reducing the amount of energy used while yielding a similar end use. This is an advantageous practice that results to personal security, financial gain, national security, human comfort and environmental care.

If you are a consumer, you are likely to develop plans to save energy. The primary reason is for you to reduce energy expenses and promote environmental value. Industrial as well as commercial energy consumers want to maximize their profit. Hence, they resort to different tactics that will likewise push their end to utmost advantage without sacrificing the efficiency of the business.

On a bigger scale, energy conservation is a factor of energy policy. Based on supply and demand, there will arise a need to increase the supply of energy when there are many consumers who use the same. Moreover, when there is a big percentage of consumers, the energy will be distributed among them. Supply of energy will be lessened if the demand for it soars. This is where energy conservation becomes a big deal.

Moreover, it is necessary to practice energy conservation when the same can be done. Further, it is also advisable to encourage energy conservation among consumers so as not to exhaust energy supply. In the present time, the government is finding ways to find a cheaper and more environmentally responsive energy source that can be utilized as a viable alternative to the present energy sources.

The residential sector, which include private residences, apartments, dormitories, single-family homes and the like, also need to practice energy conservation/ n fact, one of the most efficient places to start energy conservation is right at your very home.

The amount of energy used by homes across the globe varies according to its location. On the average, approximately one-half of the energy used by the residential sector in the United States is expended on space conditioning.

According to statistics, home energy consumption averages 44 percent on space conditioning, 13 percent on water heating, 12 percent on lighting, 8 percent on refrigeration, 6 percent on home electronics, 5 percent on laundry appliances, 4 percent on kitchen appliances, and 8 percent on other uses.

Imagine the savings that you will get when you practice home energy conservation at all times. Perhaps, you may not realize it now. Nonetheless, in the long run and when you get to compute your usual energy bills to the energy bill you have when you strictly follow home energy conservation, you will regret the fact that you just have recently practiced it. Your frustration will just pile up if you compute the saving that you are entitled to get in the previous decades when you have done the same conservation thing. You could have bought your dream car by now. Or maybe, you could have owned a luxurious resort.

Moreover, don’t let your sad plight linger for the longest time. Put an end to your agony. In addition, put an end to your energy wasteful lifestyle. The best way to do o is to make a home energy checklist for action.

Here are some of the things that you can incorporate in your checklist:

1.  Insulate your home

2.  Change leaky windows

3.  Seal leaks that you know of and search for some possible leaks.

4.  Assess your heating and cooling system regularly.

5.  Have your heating and cooling systems tuned up in the fall and spring.

6.  Replace inefficient and old appliances.

7.  Install a clock thermostat.

8.  Plan an energy audit for your home.

9.  Separate your utility bills and target greater energy conservation on the biggest bill.

10.  Purchase a water-heater blanket, faucet aerators, low-flow showerheads, and compact fluorescents, as needed.

11.  Start using energy-saving settings on clothes dryers, washing machines, dishwashers, and refrigerators.

12.  Clean or change air-conditioner, furnace, and heat-pump filters.

With this home energy saving checklist, your home will be energy efficient. Aside from that you will also get immense savings.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

The Reality Behind Home Energy Consumption

The Reality Behind Home Energy Consumption

“Expensive” is just one of the words that people today use to describe electricity bills. It seems that every day, the cost of electricity keeps getting higher and higher. Because of this, we all tend to look towards alternative energy sources.

However, as governments will tell you, the search for alternative energy sources does not come cheaply. Sometimes, the cost of developing one type of alternative energy source is just not feasible enough to be explored by the government.

There is also the problem of transition from conventional energy sources to the alternative energy sources. Many people are suspicious of any new methods and would prefer to stick with their conventional electricity.

However, these people are gradually being persuaded to the alternative side mainly because of the high cost of home energy consumption. New energy technology, of course, takes some time to perfect. In the meantime, there are a lot of things you can do to minimize your home energy consumption.

The energy of information administration of the US department of energy has recently concluded a survey on the home energy consumption of US households during the year 2001. Through this data, we can at least gain an insight of which appliances are costing us.

At the top of the list, of course, is climate control. Would you believe that American households consume 355.7 billion kWh just to keep themselves cool or hot? That’s 31.2 percent of the total home energy consumption! Do you really need to consume so much energy just to feel hot or cold?

When you use the air-conditioning system or the furnace, maybe you shouldn’t turn the thermostat up so high. It’s not like you are living in the equator or the North Pole, for crying out loud. And when you go out of the house, you do not really need to keep your air-conditioning on, do you?

Think of how much you will be able to eliminate from your home energy consumption by just turning these appliances off when you are not using them.

Next, we come to the kitchen. Kitchen appliances count for 26.7 percent of home energy consumption. Of course, you can’t really turn off your refrigerator when you are not home, could you? Don’t panic, however, there are a lot of alternatives in order to help you reduce your electricity bill.

Did you know that leaving the refrigerator door open increases your home energy consumption? It’s true! When you open your refrigerator door, heat rushes inside the refrigerator. This means that the fridge has to consume more electricity in order to maintain its internal temperature. If you leave the door open, you are wasting electricity!

Water heating cost US households 104.1 billion kWh in electricity. Now let me ask you: is it really necessary that you use hot water when you take a bath? After all, millions of people all over the world take cold showers everyday.

Hot baths are a luxury. If people treated them as such, then they wouldn’t have any problem saving on their home energy consumption. If you do not agree with this, you have to understand that there are alternatives to using electricity to heat your water.

As a matter of fact, there are solar heaters out there which not only save electricity by using solar power to heat your water, but these can also be connected to power small appliances. If everyone just invested in these ideas, people would be able to lessen their home energy consumption considerably.

Now, we come to lighting. Did you know that lighting counts for 8.8 percent of home energy consumption? Now, people would agree that you need light in order to see your way around the house. However, there’s just one question: do you really need to have the lights on 24 hours? When you think about it, the sun still exists, doesn’t it? Why do some people pull down their window shades and then turn on the lights? Doesn’t that seem like a very futile gesture?

So, as you may have observed, there are a lot of easy ways by which we can cut back our home energy consumption. Just by exerting a little effort, we can save a lot of our money. Did you realize how much energy our homes consume just because of wastefulness?