| Tips
on Saving Energy Dollars in Your Home
(NewsUSA)
- A typical U.S. family spends more than $1,600 a year on home utility
bills, yet making some simple changes around the home can save money
and make heating and cooling systems more efficient, according to World
Energy Solutions, a publicly traded energy services company based in
St. Petersburg, Fla.
By evaluating facilities and
equipment, World Energy Solutions (symbol: WEGY) helps businesses lower
their utility consumption and maintenance costs and extend the life of
their equipment.
"Many of the energy-saving
strategies we use for our commercial customers can also be applied to
the home," says Benjamin Croxton, chief executive officer of World
Energy Solutions. "There are many common-sense, low-cost and no-cost
ways to lower your home energy use as well as many new technologies
that can be applied to your home's energy-consuming systems."
Here are some tips from the American
Council for an Energy Efficient Economy on things homeowners can do to
make their homes more energy efficient:
* Turn down the temperature of your
water heater to the warm setting.
* Use energy-saving settings on
refrigerators, dishwashers, washing machines and clothes dryers.
* Use compact fluorescent bulbs,
which can save three-quarters of the electricity used by incandescents.
First to be replaced should be any 60-watt to 100-watt bulbs that are
used several hours a day.
* Have your heating and cooling
systems serviced in the fall and spring. Duct sealing can also improve
the energy efficiency and overall performance of your furnace or
central air conditioner.
* Clean or replace furnace, air
conditioner and heat-pump filters.
* Assess your heating and cooling
systems to determine if you should replace or retrofit them to make
them work more efficiently to provide the same comfort, or better, with
less energy.
"If your home's central
air-conditioning system is over 10 years old, a new state-of-the-art
system can save you 30 percent or more of your home's air-conditioning
expense," says George Walker, air-conditioning expert with World Energy
Solutions.
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