Posted in General Information, Tips | Saturday, July 10th, 2010 | Comments Off Trackback
- Get a home energy audit every couple of years with your power company to find ways to cut costs.
- Check with your utility company for rebates whenever you install energy-saving equipment.
- Add more energy-efficient insulation to your attic, with the appropriate R-value, or resistance to heat flow, for your climate and the type of heating in your house..
- Turn down your home thermostat two degrees and save 24 kilowatt hours a month. It might not sound like much, but it adds up.
- Buy a programmable thermostat, especially if your home is vacant most of the day. Set it to turn on a half hour before anyone arrives home.
- Adjust your thermostat to a comfortable temperature and wait. Turning your thermostat up or down dramatically wastes energy and increases your heating costs.
- Lower your hot water thermostat 10 degrees, but no lower than 120 degrees. You’ll still get all the hot water you need and save 25 kilowatt hours a month.
- Fix leaky faucets — one drip a second is 20 kilowatts a month.
- Invest in weather-stripping kits if you’ve got drafty doors.
- Trade your standard candescent bulbs for compact fluorescent bulbs. They are more energy-efficient, last for years instead of months, consume little power and generate little heat.
- Turn off your computer when not in use, or use the energy-saving “sleep” mode.
- Seal energy leaks. Caulk over cracks and small holes around windows and exterior walls. Look carefully around plumbing pipes, telephone wires, dryer vents, sink and bathtub drains and under countertops.
- Participate in your power company’s special energy-saving program. Some programs shut down electric appliances for short bursts of time during peak hours. You hardly notice the difference — except in your bill.
- Buy major appliances that sport the “Energy Star” sticker. That shows the appliance meets or exceeds standards set by the U.S. Department of Energy and the Environmental Protection Agency.
- Consider a front-loading washing machine. They use 50 percent less energy and one-third less water. Plus, they remove far more water in the rinse cycle, and that translates into big savings in dryer time.
- When building a home or replacing a roof, select a roof based more on energy efficiency than on how it looks. Light-colored roofs, such as white, galvanized metal or cement tile, do the best job of reflecting the sun, and cool quickly at night.
- Landscaping with the right mix of trees and shrubs can lower your energy bills by blocking winter winds or the summer sun.