5 Ways to
Reduce Home Energy Consumption
If you have been
receiving high electric bill month after month, then be
alarmed. You might be using your appliances more what your
require them.
Normally, a regular American
household would consume between $1500 and $2000 on electric
bills alone. If you happen to fall between these figures, then
you can consider yourself as a regular homeowner that uses
electricity that is not really needed. Why? One reason: You
don’t need to spend as much as $2000 a year for energy. And you
don’t even have to spend more than that either. You see, a
regular household that spends at this amount often wastes power
and of course money. And with an increased electric rate, the
bills will go even higher.
Want to do some
changes?
Then, here are the things you
should know. The 5 ways to cut down your home energy
consumption:
1. The thermostat
control
When you want your room to be
super cool because you are sweating from the inside, you simple
don’t turn the thermostat super low. Remember this: the
thermostat will not run as quickly as you want. It will run on
the same level all throughout until it reaches the temperature
you set. So whether you gradually switch your thermostat low or
instantly set it on its lowest, you will receive the same
result. The main difference is, you only spend more energy when
you think you can get your room to cool quickly if you set your
thermostat low.
Think of it this way: You are
driving at 5mph when you suddenly shift to 5th gear. What you
will get? More pressure on the pedal with lesser speed gained.
In other words, you waste so much gas but do not instant
speed.
Also, to further cut down your
electric bill, you can set the thermostat several degrees lower
when you are out or when you sleep.
2. Several small consumptions add
up
Your iPod charger, cellphone
charger, and other chargers that are plugged 24/7 can cost you
additional digits on your electric bill. This also goes to your
night-lights that are switched on all day, all night. Also,
your digital clocks and pots that are plugged since brought to
the house consume high home energy. The computer monitor that
is left on the whole day adds up to your electric bill. All
these contribute to the cost you pay for your electric bill.
Imagine this: these things that you think do not contribute so
much adds 5% on your electric bill.
3. The cool way
You don’t need a warm water to
wash your clothes. Oh, you think that warm water kills germs on
your clothes. Well, you don’t need them. Settle for cold water.
You can save as much as 90% on your washing machine’s electric
consumption of you don’t use water heater.
4. Sealing the
leaks
Leaks can come from doors, sills,
windows, cracks on the walls, and joints. And making sure that
these leaks are given proper attention would yield to saving in
the long run. Make sure that your doors are closed properly. If
there are spaces, seal them. This goes with all the doors from
garage doors, exterior doors, operable windows, to door of the
attic. Use sealants such as weather strippers. Windows should
also be free from leaks. Cover them with plastic coating so
that the heat will be contained inside your home. Cracks on the
walls should also be sealed. Regular sealants will instantly do
the jobs. The reason for doing this is that you need to keep
the heat contained inside your home so that the heating system
would not need to do extra work due to heat loss from these
leaks.
5. Keep them small
If you are dinning alone and
would want to warm up left over straight from your fridge, do
not use large pots or ovens. Instead, settle for small pots and
microwave. Small pots require less heat while microware has use
lesser power than oven. Small burner instead of large burner is
more ideal in preparing meals for two reason: one, it consumes
less electricity, and two, it your air conditioning would not
work double time cooling down the room. According to the
American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, you can save
from 30 to 40% on energy cost if you follow these
ways.
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