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Making Energy Cents — From the Home to the Globe

June 24th, 2008 · 17 Comments

Energy has become an ever-more central part of my life – personal, intellectual, and professional. This ranges from working with the Energize America team (and leading revamped EA2020 for 2007 and legislative action), to serving on the Board of The Energy Consensus (a non-profit working to change the discussion of energy in DC), being trained by The Climate Project and giving lectures, writing letters to the editor and OPEDs on energy/environmental issues, advising organizations as to energy options, to efforts to foster local initiatives re renewables and energy efficiency patterned on San Francisco’s Vote Solar to spending a few minutes at the end of the day (especially before weekends) turning off lights and computers in many offices at the end of the work day, to trying to change the energy patterns in my home.

RE the home … a question from a Congressional staffer helped me realize something about the implications of these efforts …

Energize America bumpersticker

RE the last (and, perhaps, the first) – the home – these efforts have been building over the years. For example, since 1998, I have had a programmable thermostat to reduce automatically heating loads at night and when no one is in the house. The water heater is turned down and all major appliances unplugged during travel. All `major’ appliance replacements have moved from `standard’ to Energy Star products. Virtually all the light bulbs were once incandescent and are now compact fluorescent or LEDs. Last summer, we replaced our 1988 SEER 6 AC unit and 1990 60% efficient gas furnace with a fossil fuel system combining a SEER18+ HVAC unit and a 85+% efficient gas furnace and a (very) smart programmable furnace that helps create the most efficent heating system.

Do-it-yourself (DIY — though, actually, Do-It-Myself) leak sealing and insulation began several months ago with new direction via a home energy audit. (While I have read/consulted over 30 books re home energy issues in the past six months [excellent one: Home Energy Diet] and am far from `ignorant’, the home energy audit was quite useful. Most homeowners and businesses could profit from one. Thus, consider a home energy audit (or at least do the online Home Energy Audit) to gain knowledge about your home’s energy performance and help prioritize your efficiency investments. And, don’t forget that the (atrocious) Energy Bill did include [limited] tax incentives for making these investments.) And, many weekend and evening hours were spent working through crevices trying to cut down on those leaks …

But, all of these had been going on without any clear personal understanding of the fiscal implications for my household. I did them because they were`right’ to do; that somehow they would end up saving money and (at the same time) would be helping to cut overall societal energy use and reduce pollution loads going into the future.

Also, because of all my other energy-related activities, this has been serving as a form of education, helping to provide a perspective on policy implications of various options. (The difficulties of my efforts to `learn’ and get things done – when being so impassioned about the subject – has highlighted the value of creating incentives for `top down’ energy efficiency efforts through, for example, changes in building code and utility profit decoupling, rather than relying on `education’ as a path toward changing the nation’s energy picture.)

But, again, the fiscal implications issue. I recently sent the following note to some people interested in energy issues …

The simplest ideas can sometimes take hold and make a real difference … According to the calculation below, a CFL going home with every child from school could mean $2.3 billion in energy savings … Wow …

And, how much would the education associated with those CFLs lead to in increased efficiency and conservation? What would be the multiplier effect?

———
A Bright Idea | Sarah Rich (WorldChanging)
Triggers for Innovation – New Models for Change and Social Entrepreneurship see all posts in this category An 8th grade science teacher in Long Island has a simple idea for making a big dent in energy consumption. Kenny Luna wants to give one compact fluorescent light bulb to every child in the U.S., grades preK-12. To do this, he and his students are asking Oprah for help. On the class blog, Mr. Luna has invited people far and wide to join the effort, and posted instructions for sending a personal email to Oprah suggesting that she help make this happen. According to their calculations, if 50 million kids put a CFL in a lamp at home, we’d achieve $2.3 billion in energy savings. Seems like a wish worth granting.

—-

Personal note: 90% of my non-dimmer lights in my home are CFL and all of my lights that are on regularly for extended periods are CFLs …

The question back from that Congressional staffer:

“CFLs – what’s the impact on your personal budget?”

And, my response …

I do not fully know … But … An example …

My kitchen has 7 lights in it. Most days these are on for 5+ hours. Previously, they had 100 watt bulbs, or a total of 3500 watts per evening for about 21 cents. They all CFL, at a cost of 35 dollars. The CFL are 23 watts or 161 watts total. Evening is about .8 kwh or about 4.8 cents. Let us say this is 300 days / year. My annual savings is about 45 dollars or an annual savings rate of almost double my original investment.

To be honest, impact on household finances – perhaps minimal. But, my total savings through CFLs might total over 200 dollars / year when my total investment in buying CFLs over the past 3 years might not top $200.

To be honest, this is the first time that I have tried to calculate this … I like the result …

But, that calculation was about the financial return. What about my carbon footprint? Well, each KwH, on average, across the United States generates 1.5 lbs of CO2. Just from my lighting choices in the kitchen, the CO2 load was reduced by something like 1200 pounds per year. (And, recently, I changed the lighting such that the kitchen lights are no longer used for general lighting — reducing the 161 watts to 28 watts when we are not actually in the kitchen, itself, preparing food.)

Let us go back to that idea of a single CFL … A single 100 watt-equivalent CFL lightbulb might cost $5-7 at a local hardware store. (And, you can typically buy packs of 60 watt bulbs at Home Depot / Lowe’s / Walmart which lowers this to perhaps $2 per bulb.) What I have begun to do is when invited to friends, I bring a bottle of wine (or food or the baby gift or …) in one hand and a CFL in the other. Each year, the energy savings for that one bulb would likely total easily over $8 per year. And, not unimportantly, contribute to reducing demands on the electrical grid and reduce greenhouse emissions (and other pollution).

Amory Lovins (Rocky Mountain Institute) emphasizes that “negawatts” (saving energy) is cheaper than producing new energy. The CFL calculation is an excellent example of that. On a larger, economic scale, Amory has another great line:

Q: How is climate protection like the Hubble Space Telescope?
A: Both got messed up by a sign error!

He is emphasizing that turning toward an economic path that does not rely on fossil fuels would actually be profitable as opposed to hurting the economy (a source — warning — large pdf file). Again, those CFLs are emblemmatic of a much larger opportunity.

Thus, from the personal to the policy back to the personal. We can all affect change at all of these levels. And, together, perhaps we can help to create an environment of change that will change tomorrow’s environment (fiscal, societal, environmental (e.g., global warming)) for the better.

Energy Smart

NOTES:

* This is a 2007 revamping of my first first Daily Kos diary at Daily Kos in February 2006.
* RE Lighting, my discussions include: Forge the CFL? Raleigh going all LED; Incandescent Light Bulbs: To Ban or Not to Ban, That is NOW the QuestionWalmart: Lighting a revolution for energy efficiency use?; Excessiveness Defined? One Boston Christmas Lights Display; and, Christmas Lights: Melting away a White Christmas.
* Answer the Call to turn us (US and the world) away from a catastrophic path on Global Warming.
* And … Imagine Life Differently Imagine it Better … And Seek to create that better life

Tags: CFL · eco-friendly · electricity · Energize America · Energy · energy efficiency · environmental · Global Warming · green · Uncategorized

17 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Heed the Call! The morning after and beyond … // Nov 5, 2008 at 11:32 am

    […] within one’s home, considering putting your home on a diet (it doesn’t take much to save money through energy efficiency) and taking steps to make your automobile operate more efficiently. Consider that […]

  • 2 Christmas Lights … scrooge or savior? (Revisited 2) … // Nov 20, 2008 at 11:21 pm

    […] See Making Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe for a discussion of how I discovered that my CFLs were providing me a 200% Return on Investment […]

  • 3 OH NO!!!! Americans using less electricity!!!! // Nov 25, 2008 at 11:06 am

    […] Energy Efficiency. The #1 near-term answer, across the entire economy, to our energy and environmental challenges is reducing inefficiences […]

  • 4 Energy HOME: Crackling Hot … // Mar 1, 2009 at 10:12 am

    […] day, I strive to Make Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe. Whether programming the thermostat to low temperatures overnight to providing comments on national […]

  • 5 A sign of progress: LED bulbs hitting the stores // Mar 15, 2009 at 10:10 pm

    […] day, I strive to Make Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe. Whether programming the thermostat to low temperatures overnight to providing comments on national […]

  • 6 Will Writes, Will Whines // Apr 2, 2009 at 7:30 am

    […] Making Energy Cents — From the Home to the Globe […]

  • 7 Paying attention to “friends” // Apr 14, 2009 at 1:49 pm

    […] fear Jimmy Carter and ’sitting in the dark’. Claire uses that scare language. In fact, Energy Smart approaches won’t leave people sitting in the dark, but will actually help provide lighting that costs […]

  • 8 “No Christmas in July …” // Jul 19, 2009 at 9:32 pm

    […] See Making Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe for a discussion of how I discovered that my CFLs were providing me a 200% Return on Investment […]

  • 9 Gathering the Lynch Mob // Sep 3, 2009 at 3:10 pm

    […] you might not need to look farther than your own home and your own life. You can take steps to Make Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe. ReCharge America provides material for a “Home Energy Saving Tune Up Kit” as well as […]

  • 10 Christmas Lights — LEDs or CFLs? Is There a “Right” Lighting Solution? | CleanTechies Blog - CleanTechies.com // Dec 14, 2009 at 4:03 pm

    […] … some notes See Making Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe for a discussion of how I discovered that my CFLs were providing me a 200% Return on Investment […]

  • 11 Imagine Life Differently: New Year’s Resolution (revisted / reinforced / restated) // Jan 2, 2010 at 9:13 am

    […] my life, From the Home to the Globe, I am striving to do my part to affect this change. Whether putting insulation in my roof, […]

  • 12 What will you do on Earth Day? President Obama wants to know … // Apr 14, 2010 at 4:41 am

    […] detail how the CFLs might cost more to buy but that they cost far less to own. In my community, the extra cost in buying that CFL is paid back in a few months — and the savings go on for years. Over the following weeks/months, I heard back from five […]

  • 13 The 21st Century MLk … if we’re lucky // Jan 17, 2011 at 2:29 pm

    […] you might not need to look farther than your own home and your own life. You can take steps to Make Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe. ReCharge America provides material for a “Home Energy Saving Tune Up Kit” as well as […]

  • 14 Energy HOME: Common-Sense Solutions to Common Problems // Sep 15, 2011 at 11:31 am

    […] day, I strive to Make Energy CENTS from the Home to the Globe. Whether programming the thermostat to low temperatures overnight to providing comments on national […]

  • 15 Where’s the front-page correction? WashPost Fails Math, Fails Ethics, Fails Readers // Mar 10, 2012 at 10:25 am

    […] A comment reminded me of something … lighting issues have long been ‘close’ to my heart. Here is a version of the very first blog post “A Siegel” ever did looking at the benefits of replacing incandescents with CFLs in my most used lights: the kitchen. Making Energy Cents — From the Home to the Globe. […]

  • 16 Listen to the Hummingbird: Ashamnu - we have transgressed with climate silence // Sep 13, 2013 at 8:26 am

    […] I (and my family) recycle … I (and my family) walk and bike often where others are jumping in their cars … I engage with others to educate about climate issues and energy smart practices/opportunities … I have changed my career to work solely on clean energy / climate mitigation related opportunities … […]

  • 17 Ashamnu: we have transgressed on climate change // Oct 12, 2016 at 10:09 am

    […] I (and my family) recycle … I (and my family) walk and bike often where others are jumping in their cars … I engage with others to educate about climate issues and energy smart practices/opportunities … I have changed my career to work solely on clean energy / climate mitigation related opportunities … […]

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