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Conserve Now

Web sites can help compute home energy savings

Power Pointers

By Emery Jeffreys

Save hundreds of dollars per year on their energy bills by using online tools.

Homeowners can't cut the price of energy services charged by Florida utility companies. Energy consumers can do the next best thing -- cut energy consumption which helps realize long term savings.

"For every degree you set the thermostat above 78 degrees, you can cut your energy bill from 7-10 percent," said C.J. Drake of Progress Energy. "During heating season you can reduce energy cost by 7-10 percent for every degree the thermostat is set below 70 degrees."

There are dozens of online tools to help figure out how much power a home is consuming or wasting — if you dare to know how much money you are losing every month. The amount can pile up month after month and year after year.

One of the best online resources was developed by researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).

The Home Energy Saver (HES) website brings advanced building simulation software to the Web to help consumers identify methods that will save them the most energy and money. By visiting the site, you can quickly determine how much money you would save by installing insulation in your attic, and where you would find the best products and a good contractor to do the job.

The HES site is divided into two sections, "Energy Adviser" and "Making It Happen." Energy Advisor computes a home's total energy use based on information that you enter. Once you supply your ZIP code, Energy Advisor shows the energy use, bills, or energy-related carbon dioxide emissions for your area's typical house, and a comparable energy-efficient house.

By answering a few basic questions about your home, including its floor area, the number of people, type of heating and air conditioning equipment, and fuel prices, to get a custom-tailored energy bill breakdown. The more information entered, the more these recommendations become tailored to the house.

Energy Adviser also provides a customized set of energy-saving improvements for your house. These improvements cover all of your home's major energy-using systems: space heating and cooling, water heating, lighting, major appliances, and a host of "miscellaneous" appliances that are an important factor in energy bills.

"Making It Happen" provides time-saving links to hundreds of Internet sites with practical, detailed information about energy-efficient homes, products, service providers, utility programs, and on-line reading materials. An Answer Desk provides answers to frequently asked questions about home energy use in terms that the average homeowner can understand.

"It would take a user months to learn how to use each program separately." says Evan Mills, Home Energy Saver project leader and a researcher in Berkeley Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies Division (EETD). The site offers a rich array of consumer decision-support information. And since it is Web-based, there is no software to install."

Accuracy of online tools

How precise are these tools? Your mileage may vary. Some may have a margin of error. The real value for consumers is the physical survey that is required to collect the information and input it into the calculator.

The value of investments

Despite soaring energy costs, a majority of Americans still hesitate at the cash register when it comes to investing dollars to improve home energy efficiency.

Rising home energy costs typically don't lead homeowners to make significant investments in energy-efficient improvements, unless costs remain high for several years. For many homeowners deciding whether to invest in more energy-efficient windows or upgrade a heating system the biggest question is what it will do for the resale value of their home.

3 big tips

  1. Audit your home
  2. First, figure out where your money is going. To chart your own energy consumption, log onto Home Energy Saver, which is sponsored by the U.S. Dept. of Energy. Type in your ZIP code and give a description of your home and the Web site will be able to calculate how much energy you use and where you can save.

  3. Shopping tools
  4. It's the major appliances in your home that can cause big dents in your utility bill. Grab the rebates. See if you'll get rebates for buying energy star appliances. Find out at energystar.gov.

    But if you want other energy-saving tips, like the fact you'll save more electricity with an ink-jet printer rather than a laser printer . . . check out the National Resources Defense Council Web site.

    And to figure out just how much air conditioning you need, you can use a calculator at consumerreports.org.

  5. Make minor adjustments
  6. Heating water accounts for a big part of most people's electric bill. To save hot water, take five-minute showers instead of baths. Do only full loads when using the clothes washer or dishwasher. You could save up to $63 a year by switching to cold water in your laundry. Detergents formulated for cold water get clothes just as clean.

    And when it comes to cooking appliances — size matters. Try to use your microwave oven as much as you can.

Big investments, long-term payoffs

arrow Add wall insulation. It is expensive, but the walls are the largest outside surface area of the home.

arrow Upgrade windows. In Florida it makes the most sense only if you plan to upgrade your windows for other reasons — aesthetics or noise-insulating value.

arrow Consider a furnace or heat pump upgrade. If your furnace is older than 10 to 15 years or your boiler is older than 20 years, a new heating or cooling system may be more efficient.

arrow When a major appliance dies, look for the federal Energy Star rating in choosing a replacement. Resources

arrow Try a do-it-yourself home-energy audit. Many local utility companies offer them online.

arrow "Visit "A Consumer's Guide to Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy" offers saving tips


Web Tools
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The federal government developed one of the earliest Internet-based tool for calculating energy use in residential buildings at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and introduced it in 1996. By entering a ZIP code, the Home Energy Saver lets consumers find out what the average power bill in their neighborhood is and how long it would take to recoup investments in high-efficiency appliances. Home Energy Saver.

Customers of energy provider Entergy can use a Home Energy Calculator, Appliance Calculator and Lighting Calculator to determine how much power a home is pulling off the grid and the cost. By answering 16 questions about the structure of a home, types of windows, heating sources and the number of occupants, the calculator will generate an approximate annual heating bill. Check out the Home Energy Calculator.

Entergy also lets customers estimate the energy used by each household appliance, from clock radios to ceiling fans. A blow dryer used for just a handful of minutes each day tacks on around $11.83 a year to energy bills. Each 100 watt light bulb used for six hours a day will add $23.65 a year to a power bill. Appliance calculator. Light calculator.

Consumers interested in alternative energy upgrades for their home such as solar power can use their ZIP code to determine the cost of adding solar technology to their home and the state and federal tax credits available in a particular location. Check out the solar site.

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More Tips

Easy no- or low-cost fixes

With $40 in supplies and a little effort, you can earn noticeable savings in your home energy bill with these tips:

arrow Check with your utility for free products or rebates (Progress Energy and Florida Power and Light) that can help make your home more energy-efficient.

Moderate investments of time or money

arrow Check your furnace filter. If it's reusable, run it through the dishwasher to clean it. If it's disposable, buy a new one. Check it every month.

arrow Check for air leaks inside the house by holding a lit incense stick near doors, windows, baseboards, outlets and other fixtures -- anywhere outside air might enter.

arrow Use weather-stripping and door sweeps.

arrow Install outlet seals. The foamy inserts fit snugly inside the faceplates of light switches and outlets. In Florida they keep conditioned air in and heat out.

arrow Insulate pipes around the water heater. Wrap hot- and cold-water pipes with insulation. If the water heater feels warm, insulate it with a wrap.

arrow Seal ducts. Do it yourself for about $50 or hire someone and pay more. Apply mastic, a brush-on sealer, to duct seams to seal in heat or conditioned air.

arrow Add insulation. But if you already have adequate insulation, adding more probably isn't a good investment.

arrow Get a programmable thermostat. These can shave heating and cooling bills.

arrow Consider storm windows or insulated drapes or blinds.

arrow Download Progress Energy's Power Pointers.


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