How To Make Your Home Earth-Friendly Green
By following the recommendations below, you can make your home more
eco-friendly and protect our one and only planet of life. By
purchasing some of the additional products listed below, you will incur
additional cost, but in the long run, these products will save you hundreds
of dollars in reduced utility bills. Water and energy conservation
products pay for themselves over time and then you will continue to receive
the benefits of these products with ever on-going savings over several
years.
- Buy CFL bulbs. The most obvious "green" product is a CFL
(compact fluorescent light) bulb. While LED lighting will be the future
of all lighting applications, it is still an expensive technology that
also cannot generate the high lumens that comparable incandescent and
CFL bulbs can produce. CFL bulbs reduce electricity use while
contributing to your reduction of carbon emissions.
- Use low-flow shower heads, hand showers and faucet aerators.
Purchasing a low-flow shower head or hand shower does not mean having to
put up with a weak stream shower product. Technologies now exist that
can increase the feel of water volume without using more water (for
example, Alsons' Fluidics Water-Amplifying Shower Heads). Many faucet
aerators are rated at 2.2 or 2.5 gpm. You should be using a 1.5 gpm
faucet aerator for the kitchen. The bathroom aerator should be no
higher than 1.5 gpm, but could go lower.
- Turn down the temperature on your water heater.
Turning down the temperature on your water heater to 120°F will save on
energy and prevent unnecessary heating of water above the comfortable
temperature of 120°F
- Turn off all unused lights. Even if you
use compact fluorescent light bulbs, wasted energy benefits no one.
Consider installing timers or occupancy sensors to reduce wasted
electricity.
- Use NiMH rechargeable batteries. NiMH batteries
are actually cheaper than alkaline batteries because alkalines can only
be used once and then thrown away. By purchasing only one NiMH battery,
you would have to buy 500 alkaline batteries to get the same life of the
rechargeable NiMH battery. As a bonus, NiMH batteries last longer in
high-drain devices like digital cameras compared to alkaline batteries.
Think of the dollars that could be saved and less landfill trash
produced by purchasing rechargeable NiMH batteries.
- Install a programmable thermostat. Why
waste heating or cooling rooms that are unoccupied when you are asleep
or away from your home? A programmable thermostat can control your
needs based on your schedule.
- Buy ENERGY STAR products. ENERGY STAR
products save you on energy costs compared to other similar items.
Typically, ENERGY STAR products cost more initially, but save money in
the long run (most likely, ENERGY STAR products will more than pay for
themselves). The next time you are looking to buy a new refrigerator,
dishwasher, washer, dryer, windows, home electronics, CFL bulbs, etc.,
look for the blue ENERGY STAR logo.
- Rope caulk windows. A major source of drafts are windows.
Seal up any holes around windows. Several small cracks around windows
can add up to a hole in the wall the size of your fist. You wouldn't
leave that size of a hole in the wall uninsulated in the winter time
would you?
- Buy new energy-efficient windows. If caulking is too big of
a task, consider buying new ENERGY STAR rated windows. The average home
loses more than 25% of its heat through windows.
- Replace or clean filters. Clogged filters in your furnace,
air conditioner and heat pump reduce the efficiency of your appliance
requiring more energy to do the same job.
- Use an insulating water heater blanket. Insulating your
water heater will prevent temperature loss requiring less electricity
and/or gas to maintain the water temperature.
- Open curtains during the day - shut them at night. During
winter, open curtains on the south-facing windows during the day to
allow natural heating of your home by the sunlight. At night, close the
curtains to reduce the cold chill from the windows.
- Insulate your hot water pipes. The further the hot water
travels through the pipes, the more temperature loss occurs. Use pipe
insulators to keep hot water hot.
- Seal up large air leaks. Windows and doors are not your only
concern. Gaps in the basement, attic and fireplaces are potential
problems for drafts.
- Insulate heating/cooling ducts. Heat and air conditioning
can escape out of the ducts. Well maintained heating and cooling ducts
can prevent up to 60% of temperature loss by the time it hits the
registers. Like suggestion #13, the further the heat or air
conditioning must travel uninsulated, the more temperature loss occurs.
- Replace aging, inefficient appliances. Don't wait for an
appliance to quit on you. A newer model will be more efficient. As
mentioned in recommendation #7, always look for the ENERGY STAR logo for
more savings.
- Reduce air conditioning costs. Plant shade trees and shrubs
around your home, especially on the west side. The trees will block the
sunshine during the summer and in the winter, the trees will lose their
leaves to allow that sunshine through to help heat your home.
If you need to save money, spend more money to buy updated
energy-efficient appliances, windows and various other water and energy
conservation products. The additional cost you incur today will save
you hundreds of dollars in the years to come. Implement any number of
these strategies to see your utility bills decline and do your part to help
save the planet.