| | |
| Author | Message |
|---|
P. Gordon Kennedy Four Star Member


Age : 20 Joined : 13 Jan 2008 Posts : 473 Location : Crystal Falls, Michigan
 | Subject: Saving Energy Sun Jun 29, 2008 8:50 pm | |
| | In these times, it is very important for all of us to conserve energy resources. Here's a little food for thought. If you run a 100 watt incandescant bulb four hours a day every day and your electricity costs $0.10 per kilowatt hour, you'll spend $14.40 a year on electricity just to light that one bulb! And if your incandescant bulbs last about 750 hours and cost $0.60 each, you'll need two per year, bringing tha total anual coat of running the light to $15.60 and that's just one light, think how many lights are in the average home! Now, if you were to get rid of the incandescant bulb and replace it with a compact fluorescent bulb, you would reduce the light's electricity consumption by 74% while still getting the same amount of light. The electricity to light the compact fluorescent bulb wuuld cost only $3.74 per year and if the bulb lasted about 15,000 hours and costed $5.00, it would last about 10 years, costing only $0.50 a year for bulb replacement. The grand total cost per year with the compact fluorescent light would be only $4.24 or about 27% the cost of the incandescant bulb. Buying more efficient light bulbs is by no means the only way to save energy. Another way we could save termendous amounts of energy is to drive less. According to The World Almanac, the average American vehicle gets about 17 miles per gallon and the average American driver drives 15,000 miles a year, consuming 882.4 gallons of fuel. At a price of $4.00 a gallon, that's $3,529.60 a year! If the average American reduced their driving by 10% per year, they'd save over 88 gallons of fuel anually and more than $350. And if they reduced their driving by a third, they'd save more than 294 gallons of fuel and $1,176 a year. If the average vehicle got 30 miles per gallon, instead of 17, the amount of fuel needed by the average driver would decline by 382.4 gallons a year without any reduction in driving. We all need to do our part and if we all save a little, in total we will save a lot. |
|  | | Pam Five Star Member


Age : 42 Joined : 02 Feb 2008 Posts : 1213 Location : Nova Scotia, Canada
 | |  | | zadaconnaway Five Star Member


Age : 60 Joined : 16 Jan 2008 Posts : 1659 Location : Washington, USA
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 2:22 am | |
| Two years ago I drove 200+ miles a week. Today, I go maybe 50 miles every other week. (not counting the trip for hay) I have really cut back on my driving! Of course, I am no longer in the work force, either. Am I making up for someone else? In all seriousness, you are right Gordon. Every little bit does help when you add them up. _________________ Zada Connaway Mother's Journals: parts 1, 2 and 3 ISBN # 1-4241-6969-0
http://www.zadaconnaway.com/ |
|  | | Abe F. March Five Star Member


Age : 69 Joined : 26 Jan 2008 Posts : 1059 Location : Germany
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 9:23 am | |
| My recent trip got me a bit upset. Actually, a lot upset.
There is this pantry door off the kitchen where the light comes on when the door is opened. Problem is: the door is always standing open, and yes, the light is on most of the time. After spending much time closing the pantry door, going into my grandchildren's bedrooms and turning off the lights, I finally decided that grandfather must do what grandfather's are supposed to do. After my little lecture on saving energy, my instructions were observed for approximately 2 hours. Then a recap of previous instructions became necessary. Progress was made, however I fear that there will be some backsliding since I left. There are so many things that stare us in the face everyday and most are blind to them. Simply turning off lights when not needed can save countless millions around the world. And, it begins with us. I have sent an email reminder about the lights. I don't intend to let it go. _________________ "To Beirut and Back" http://www.freewebs.com/abemarch |
|  | | zadaconnaway Five Star Member


Age : 60 Joined : 16 Jan 2008 Posts : 1659 Location : Washington, USA
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 11:04 am | |
| Good for you Abe! Grandfathers do carry a lot of weight. If not with their own children, with the grandchildren. I hope your follow up emails help. _________________ Zada Connaway Mother's Journals: parts 1, 2 and 3 ISBN # 1-4241-6969-0
http://www.zadaconnaway.com/ |
|  | | Pam Five Star Member


Age : 42 Joined : 02 Feb 2008 Posts : 1213 Location : Nova Scotia, Canada
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 12:03 pm | |
| Abe, you'll be remembered for your persistence about the lights, and that's what counts. Drying laundry on a line is another area to save a ton of energy; I know sometimes it's not convenient to hang things on the line, and you have to be organized to have a system that works. It helps that I work from home most of the time so that I can keep things moving regularly. Line drying instead of using a dryer just makes sense (and cents too). I have heard where some neighbourhood have actually banned clothes lines because of how they look, like it ruins the neighbourhood somehow. I am quite happy to be somewhere that everyone else has a line; it also gives me a chance to chat with my neighbours frequently because we're all doing it. Except today, because it's drizzling and wet. Humph.  _________________ Pam Robertson  http://andthebandplayedonmylawn.blogspot.com |
|  | | Carol Troestler Four Star Member


Joined : 08 Jun 2008 Posts : 221 Location : Wisconsin
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 1:44 pm | |
| I'll skip the line drying and yes here in our little neighborhood it is frowned on. I had six kids and a dryer was my companion for a number of years!
Abe, when my children were growing up in the seventies and eighties, for a period of time one child would be charge of energy for a month and anything saved from the previous month went to that person.
However, my oldest son always wanted to put all the lights on when his father came home, since with the airlines he would be gone for days at a time, but sometimes his father would complain about this welcome waste of energy.
I love to go places and am not a homebody. But we're trying to make fewer trips out in the car. Even our small SUV gets over 20 miles to the gallon, and our other car gets about 27 when we go the speed limit!
Our houses are efficient, with out northern cabin made up of energy efficient thick styrofoam panels, with windows placed appropriately for additional solar heat.
I really do like light outside at night. It makes a neighborhood so much friendlier.
Carol |
|  | | P. Gordon Kennedy Four Star Member


Age : 20 Joined : 13 Jan 2008 Posts : 473 Location : Crystal Falls, Michigan
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 2:14 pm | |
| | Another way to save energy, unplug chargers and electronics when not in use, especially if you don't plan on using them for a considerable amount of time, as these devices draw power even when turned off. If we all turned off the lights when no one's in the room and turned off the TV when on one's watching (there isn't anything worth watching on 90% of the time) and unplugged unused chargers and electronics, we'd save a whole lot of energy. Now if we combined that with everyone switching to compact flourescent bulbs and everyone driving 10%-30% less, we could dramatically cut our energy consumption. |
|  | | Carol Troestler Four Star Member


Joined : 08 Jun 2008 Posts : 221 Location : Wisconsin
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 2:20 pm | |
| I could certainly do something about the chargers. I realize right now the computer charger, phone chargers, and even my husband's mechanical screw driver are plugged in charging nothing and wasting energy!!
Carol |
|  | | P. Gordon Kennedy Four Star Member


Age : 20 Joined : 13 Jan 2008 Posts : 473 Location : Crystal Falls, Michigan
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 2:21 pm | |
| | You could plug all the chargers into a power strip with a switch, that way you could easily turn them on and off. |
|  | | Abe F. March Five Star Member


Age : 69 Joined : 26 Jan 2008 Posts : 1059 Location : Germany
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 2:27 pm | |
| Pam, where I live there are very few who own a dryer. Those who do generally have a good reason. Certainly a dryer is a convenience but it is not a necessity. We don't own one. There was a time when I would have adjusted my lifestyle to suit the neighborhood but those days are gone. Keeping up with the Joneses has placed many familes in needless debt. I've just read an interesting article where it is now considered fashionable to drive a fuel-efficient car. Fashionable or not, it makes sense to be frugal. Waste in all forms is still waste. Concerning outside lights at night. There are lights available that absorb solar power during the day and then glow at night. Burning outside night lights for security reasons are valid. Buring for beauty sake, in my view, is wasteful. _________________ "To Beirut and Back" http://www.freewebs.com/abemarch |
|  | | P. Gordon Kennedy Four Star Member


Age : 20 Joined : 13 Jan 2008 Posts : 473 Location : Crystal Falls, Michigan
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 2:54 pm | |
| | Abe F. March wrote: | Pam, where I live there are very few who own a dryer. Those who do generally have a good reason. Certainly a dryer is a convenience but it is not a necessity. We don't own one. There was a time when I would have adjusted my lifestyle to suit the neighborhood but those days are gone. Keeping up with the Joneses has placed many familes in needless debt. I've just read an interesting article where it is now considered fashionable to drive a fuel-efficient car. Fashionable or not, it makes sense to be frugal. Waste in all forms is still waste. Concerning outside lights at night. There are lights available that absorb solar power during the day and then glow at night. Burning outside night lights for security reasons are valid. Buring for beauty sake, in my view, is wasteful. |
People spend way too much money (and energy) keeping up appearences. Some people seem to think that they need to have as much or more than their neighbor, no matter how deep into debt they have to go to get it. This "keeping up with the Joneses" seems very childish to me. |
|  | | Pam Five Star Member


Age : 42 Joined : 02 Feb 2008 Posts : 1213 Location : Nova Scotia, Canada
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 3:43 pm | |
| Fashionalbe to drive a fuel efficient car--that's funny, and since it works, well that is a good thing too. I'd be hesitant to give up my dryer entirely Abe -- drying clothes in the dead of winter and hanging them in the house takes a long time, although I do actually dry quite a bit of it on two drying racks that are in the same room as our wood stove. Last week there was a fellow on the news talking about how messed up the robins seem to be. The theory is that there is so much streetlight at night that it is actually throwing the birds natural rhythm off. As a result, in urban areas the little sweeties are chirping until 2 and 3 in the morning and then they start again just before sunrise, at about 5. I think maybe their late night song is more along the lines of "hey you idiot humans, turn the lights off! We're trying to get the young chicks settled down over here!!"  _________________ Pam Robertson  http://andthebandplayedonmylawn.blogspot.com |
|  | | Carol Troestler Four Star Member


Joined : 08 Jun 2008 Posts : 221 Location : Wisconsin
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 5:24 pm | |
| I got up in the night and heard birds chirping, and realized I had left the porch door open. Okay, not so many outside lights on. We really need dryers here. Our clothes would all freeze solid in the winter. There are many solar panels along the highways for lights.
In Wisconsin we have a 100 year old private river management company, not government run, which has done a great job with hydroelectric energy along the whole Wisconsin River system. Of course, since the floods there have been many questions about over-managing the river where more natural flood plains are needed. We live above a hydroelectric dam and the river here is kept at a constant level so there is always water for energy, but that meant all the water that should have stayed here went down and is now flooding the Mississippi.
Carol |
|  | | Abe F. March Five Star Member


Age : 69 Joined : 26 Jan 2008 Posts : 1059 Location : Germany
 | Subject: Re: Saving Energy Mon Jun 30, 2008 5:48 pm | |
| Like anyone else, I love that warm feeling of clothes coming out of a hot dryer especially in winter. I also like the softness and fragrance of the clothes from those clothes softners. Having to place clothes drying racks in my cozy room with the woodstove is an inconvenience, however since the drying cycle is enhanced by the hot oven, it drys overnight. A side benefit is that the wet clothes provides needed moisture in the room.
Yes, I've become old-fashioned. The things I'm doing now was a natural process when I was young. For those much younger, I'm sure the things I'm discussing must sound terribly inconvenient, and some of them are. But in keeping with conservation, I mention these things only as ideas. Practicing conservation also saves money and that is also important - at least to some of us. It is not how much one earns but how much one keeps from what they earn that is important. I've met many wealthy people and most of them were extremely frugal. I've met many poor people and most of them were spendthrifts. Gorden can work out the math on that. _________________ "To Beirut and Back" http://www.freewebs.com/abemarch |
|  | | |
| Page 1 of 2 | Goto page : 1, 2  |
| | Permissions of this forum: | You cannot reply to topics in this forum
| |
| |
| |