Simple Tests and Adjustments
Do an Audit: First, assess how much you’re spending each month in heating and cooling. Many electricity providers will provide you with a report that compares your energy usage with similarly sized homes in your area. ENERGY STAR also provides a similar service. Where do you fall? If you’re in the mid to high range, then there’s work to be done!
You can also pay to have an energy audit performed on your house by a professional, taking the guesswork out of where you can improve your home’s efficiency.
Make sure they conduct a blower door test, which depressurizes a home and can reveal the location of many leaks. Without a blower door test, there are ways to find some air leaks yourself, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.
If you don’t think leaks are a big problem, think twice: In California, the average duct system loses 30 percent of its heating or cooling to leaks. To detect them in your home, look to areas where different materials meet, such as between brick and wood siding, between foundation and walls and between the chimney and siding. Some of the main places in your home that you should check include:
* Door and window frames
* Mail chutes
* Electrical and gas service entrances
* Cable TV and phone lines
* Outdoor water faucets
* Where dryer vents pass through walls
* Bricks, siding, stucco and foundation
* Air conditioners
* Vents and fans
You can also try these steps to help detect leaks in your home:
1. Shine a flashlight at night over all potential gaps while a partner observes the house from outside. Large cracks will show up as rays of light. However, this is not an accurate way to detect small cracks.
2. Shut a door or window on a piece of paper. If you can pull the paper out without tearing it, you’re losing energy.
3. Check the attic, walls and floors adjacent to an unheated space, like a garage or basement. The structural elements are usually exposed in these areas, which makes it easy to see what type of insulation you have and to measure its depth or thickness.
4. Inspect exterior walls using an outside electrical outlet. Make sure to turn off the power to the outlet before removing the cover. Then, shine a flashlight into the area, where you should be able to see if there’s insulation in the surrounding walls and, potentially, how thick it is.
If you find air leaks, check out DoItYourself.com’s guide to types of caulking and weatherstripping and where and how they should be applied to the various areas in your home.
Adjusting the thermostat by just two degrees is the equivalent of cutting 2,000 pounds of carbon emissions annually and almost $100 in energy costs. That’s the equivalent of driving a car more than 3,000 miles!
Check Your Thermostat: Set your thermostat between 65-68 degrees when you are home, and wear layers if you’re still cool. If you dread the prospect of rising to a freezing house, investing in a programmable thermostat is a great option. Set it to warm up the house just as you wake.
If the initial cost of a programmable thermostat (about $115) deters you, keep in mind that it will save you $180 every year you use it. That’s $1,800 over 10 years, making the up-front cost feel like pennies.
Other simple steps can include wrapping a water heater with an insulation blanket and replacing heating and cooling filters.
Save Money
Many cities are investigating and testing weatherization programs to help residents save money and increase home values.
The Houston Residential Energy Efficiency Program (REEP) provides about $1,000 to weatherize qualifying homes. Studies show that homeowners received dramatically reduced electricity bills after their homes were weatherized. On average, electricity usage was reduced by 12-18 percent each month.
These techniques weren’t complicated or advanced, either. Basic measures included weatherstripping, window caulking, attic insulation and energy efficient light bulbs. In fact, during the summer months (when electricity bills are higher), homeowners witnessed reductions of up to 20 percent. So far, the city has weatherized more than 7,000 homes.
But you don’t have to live in the Houston area to find huge savings on home weatherization. According to Matt Rogers, senior adviser to Energy Secretary Steven Chu, more than $5 billion was appropriated under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to draw up a weatherization program across the country.
“What we’re doing through the Reinvestment Act is both weatherizing homes, but we’re also demonstrating that this is a high-return investment for homeowners everywhere,” said Rogers. “You’ll put 20 or 30 cents back into [your] pocket every year for every $1 that you invest in energy efficiency.”
You can see how much of this funding was awarded to your state on the Department of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy’s Web site.
http://earth911.com/blog/2009/11/30/winterize-your-home/
Other “Do-It-Yourself” Tips from The Daily Green
1. Create “draft snake” by placing a rolled bath towel under a drafty door.
2. Change furnace filter or install permanent one.
3. Run ceiling fans in reverse, to push warm air down.
4. Drain any hoses or air conditioner pipes.
5. Turn down your water heater.
6. Install storm doors and windows.
7. Give your heating system a tuneup.
8. Turn down your thermostat; get a programmable one.
9. Put up plastic with a window insulation kit.
10. Use an energy monitor.
11. Caulk and weatherstrip.
12. Put on a sweater. Or two.
13. Boost insulation in the attic and walls.
14. Insulate your pipes.
15. Seal the ducts.
16. Take advantage of tax credits (see links above)
17. Choose the right contractor.
18. Go alternative: solar panels, geothermal heating, biomass stoves, small wind turbines
19. Upgrade to an efficient furnace.
http://www.thedailygreen.com/green-homes/latest/winterize-home-tips-energy-461008
Other useful links:
Federal Tax Credits for Consumer Energy Efficiency- http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=tax_credits.tx_index
Online Energy Saver Caluculator-http://hes.lbl.gov/
Tags: economy, energy, save money, winterize
Comments
So many people are not aware of the dangers of your home not meeting the standards of being energy efficient. The money that leaks out of your home though drafty windows and doors can be put to better use. Having an energy audit performed, will educate yourself on the areas that need to be address immediately. Make yourself knowledgeable about your home by taking these simple steps. In the process of the energy audit you will regain control of your finances and make your environment safe for your family.
#Tracy,
I’m the community manager for Microsoft Hohm if you haven’t heard of us check us out http://www.microsoft-hohm.com one of our members Joel Telling is getting an air leak analysis and this will be his first “major” home energy improvement. I wanted to reach out and see if you would be willing to jump in the conversation and provide some tips for him and his the community at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Microsoft-Hohm/95894301860 if you have any questions let me know.
Thanks,
Elliott
#Do you Want to say something?