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“Ask Green Irene” Membership,
gives you access to our
vast green knowledge base
and our green research team.
Things you Can Do.
o
Every use of energy has an effect on our land, water, and air.
And every one of us can do simple things to reduce the impact
of our energy use on the environment.

Incentives-Policies for Renewables & Efficiency


The Safe Way To Getting Healthy and Staying Healthy

 The Safe Way To Getting Healthy and Staying Healthy

 70 compiled top tips to getting healthy and staying that way.

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This is a list of Simple Energy Saving Tips to Save the Earth.


Space Heaters:
All 1500 watt electric space heaters- no matter how they look or how big
they are- put ou
t exactly the same amount of heat.
Energy Facts

A space heater costs less to run than your furnace. Cost up to 20 cents an
hour to run; if furnace ran for an hour, it could cost up to $1.85. Of course,
you'd also be heating up the whole house, as opposed to one room.

Simple Ways to Save Energy
Put on a sweater before turning up the heat.
Don't leave your heater on if you don't need it. (Leaving the house for a
long period of time.)

Thermostat:
Is your thermostat accurate? Chances are that the temperature sensor is being
affected by cold air coming through the opening where the thermostat is
mounted.

Keeping control of your thermostat is one of the simplest ways you can save a
great deal of energy-and money- all year round.

Energy Facts
During the winter, you can save as much as 2% - 3% of the energy your
furnace uses simply by lowering your thermostat.
In summer, the process is reversed. You save 3% - 5% of the energy used by
your air conditioner for every degree you raise the thermostat setting.

● Plug the hole in the wall behind the thermostat with a piece of fiberglass
insulation.

Heating Ducts:
Leaking ducts can reduce the efficiency of your heating system by up to 20%.
Ducts are a critical part of making your home energy efficient. If they're leaking air
- which they almost always do - or if they're losing heating because they're
uninsulated, they're contributing as much to global warming as they are to keeping
you warm.

Energy Facts
You can save up to 10% of your heating or cooling costs by insulating and tightening
up ducts.
Even if the air is not actually escaping from an uninsulated duct, you lose a lot of
heat through its thin metal walls.
When the first air that comes out of the vent after you turn on the heater is chilly
for a long time, you know your ducts are uninsulated and you're wasting energy.

Tune Up your Heating System:
The cost of heating and cooling homes can make up more than half of a utility bill.
The American Council for Energy Efficient Economy put sit this way: "The single most
important thing people can do to save energy in their homes is to make sure their
furnaces are running efficiently."

Energy Facts:
Heating and cooling systems in the United States together emit over a half
billion tons of carbon dioxide into the air each year, adding to global warming.
They also generate about 24% of the nation's sulfur dioxide and 12% of the
nitrogen oxide, the chief ingredients in acid rain.
The California Energy Commission estimates that 31% of a typical household's
annual energy use goes to heat.

Simple Ways to Save Energy:
Get a Furnace Tune-Up:
This means testing it for combustion efficiency and pollutants.
Clean or replace dirty filters. Clean intake screens, condenser coils, supply
registers, and return grills.
Keep your furnace lubricated and properly adjusted including calibrating the
thermostat.
Gas furnaces should be tuned every two years, oil furnaces should be tuned
up annually.
Call a heating contractor for details and estimates.

Heating Tips:
During heating season, change or clean your air filters once a month. Your heater
uses more energy when the filter is full of dust.

If you have a Hot Water/Steam System:
Put a reflector behind your radiator (you can buy or make it by taping aluminum
foil on cardboard). This saves energy and cash by t
hrowing back heat you'd normally
lose through the wall.

Lighting:
Lighting accounts for 10% of all electricity consumed in the United States. Over half
of that electricity is used in business and manufacturing.
According to the World Resource Institute, the production of energy for lighting
accounts for 10% of all emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas.
For 5% to 10% of your residential energy bill goes to paying for lighting.


Energy Facts:
"Energy-Saving" incandescent bulbs usually save energy simply because they put
out less light than their regular counterparts. Check out the "lumens" rating on the
package for the amount of light emitted.
Opening curtains during the day will save lighting energy. Direct sunlight is 100
times brighter than the light from a strong reading lamp.

Simple Ways to Save Energy:
When you leave the room, turn off the light.
Use only as much wattage as you need.
Dust the bulbs.
Use fewer bulbs in multi-bulb fixtures.

Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs:
If every American household replaced just one incandescent bulb with a compact
fluorescent, it would
reduce electricity demand by more than 5 gigawatts - the
average output of five nuclear power plants.

Energy Facts:
Compact fluorescents screw into regular incandescent bulb sockets and give off
the same light... for a quarter of the energy. They also last 10,000 hours, about
10 times as long as incandescents.
For every incandescent bulb you replace with a compact fluorescent, you'll save
the equivalent of about 500 pounds of coal over the life of the bulb, and you'll
reduce carbon dioxide by up to
1,300
pounds a year.

When buying compact fluorescent lamps, look for the Energy Star label.

Outdoor Lights:
Outdoor lighting accounts for about 10% of all lighting in homes.

● Solar Lighting. Use outdoor solar lighting when possible. Make sure
replacement bulbs and batteries are available.

Cooking:
Microwaves use around 66% less energy than conventional ovens. They're
most efficient for small portions or defrosting; for large items like turkeys,
microwaving is less efficient.
Pressure cookers are considerably more energy-efficient than regular ovens.
Believe it or not: Every time you open your oven door during cooking, you
lose between 25˚ and 75˚.

Simple Ways to Save Energy
Check the reflectors under you stovetop burners. The cleaner they are, the
better they'll reflect heat. If you need new ones, buy good-quality models.
Check the seal on your oven door to see if there are cracks or tears in it.
Even a small tear or gap is room enough for a lot of heat to escape. It pays
to keep the seal clean to get better heat retention.
If you use glass or ceramic baking dishes, you can lower the baking
temperature 25˚, since these materials retain heat better than others.
Do not preheat oven longer than necessary. Ten minutes should be sufficient.
Preheating is not necessary when broiling.
Make sure stovetop electric coils are working properly. A worn-out element
is a real power drain.
Put a lid on it! Lids help keep heat in and speed up cooking time.

Insulate:
If just 10,000 natural gas customers insulated their attics, 50 million fewer
pounds of carbon dioxide would be released into the air each year. If their
homes were heated electrically, it would be 140 million pounds.

If there's one bit of energy advice you've heard constantly, it's "insulate
your home."

What is Insulation?
Insulation works by trapping small pockets of air as buffers between warm and
cold zones inside and outside your house.
Insulation can be made of a number of different materials- cellulose (shredded
newspaper), fiberglass, or rigid plastic foams of various sorts.
Insulation is measured by its "R value"- its resistance to heat flow. If you double
the R-value, you cut heat loss in half.
Attic insulation-the most important-can save energy, and money, for both
heating and air conditioning.
Install proper ventilation in your attic and crawl space. This prevents moisture
from becoming "trapped" in the insulation.
Insulate your walls to acheive best insulation results.

Caulking & Weatherstripping:
The gaps you can find around the windows and doors of the average American
house add up to the equivalent of a hole in the wall that measures 10 inches by
10 inches.

There are cracks all over your house. Your doors and windows don't quite meet
their frames; there are tiny spaces where the walls almost join the floor; there
are open areas around your electrical and plumbing outlets. And these little
gaps eat energy. But you have two ways to fight back: caulking and
weatherstripping.

Energy Facts
Caulking and weatherstripping an electrically heated home can keep some
1,000 pounds of CO2 out of the air. So if 1,000 of these homes were weatherized,
over a million pounds of CO2 would be saved.
Believe it or not, stopping air infiltration can reduce your home's heating and
cooling bills by up to 40%.

Enjoy the life you deserve

Windows
An uninsulated drape can cut a third of the heat loss through a window.
An insulated drape can reduce it by half.

Drapes, window shades, and blinds can be an effective way to keep your home
comfortable and environmentally sound.

Energy Facts
Drapes save energy effectively only if they fit tightly against the window and
the floor. Usually this means a valance at the top, side guides, and weight
ed hem.
Or try adding in edge seals such as Velcro or magnetic stripes.
If you install a window covering on a window that faces north, you could save
up to 5% of your home heating and cooling cost. In summer, savings increase
significantly if you put the same covering on south - and west- facing windows.

Simple Ways to Save Energy
Use your drapes. Open them on sunny winter days to let warmth in; close
them on winter nights to help retain heat; close them on hot summer days to
help keep the sun out.
Add an insulating lining to your draperies. Installing insulated window coverings
that create a sealed air gap between the window and the living space can reduce
heat loss through the window by 25% to 50%.
Install white blinds on south - and west-facing windows to keep the sun from
broiling your house in the summer. Better yet, put them outside the house to keep
the wall and window shaded.



Information provided by The Earth●Works Group.

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Independent Eco Consultant for Sacramento, CA

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15 Great Reasons
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I welcome you to contact me for more information about a Green Home Makeover, Green Office Makeover or hosting a GO GREEN Workshop. I also have some "green" fundraising products for your favorite non-profit organization. Rely on me to help you and your family along the path to a healthier, greener life.

Contact me to discuss becoming an Eco-Consultant in your community or sign up thru this link if we have already spoken about Green Irene.

If you have trouble reaching me through the contact information above, you can call Green Irene HQ at (888) 212-4733 ext. 1.

 

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