FUEGO
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
- Joined
- Nov 13, 2007
- Messages
- 7,750
Yep, I just got a kill a watt too. $20 from amazon. Not sure if this will allow me to save $20 in electricity though, since most things that use 1-4 watts when plugged in but off are going to remain plugged in year round to avoid the hassle factor.
Ultimately, I know our heating/cooling is roughly 2/3 of our energy costs, so all the worry about unplugging things that consume 1 watt does very little to reduce our overall energy consumption. Changing the thermostat by 1 degree for a month during the peak heating/cooling season would roughly equal a dozen of these 1 watt devices plugged up year round.
Everyone doing a little bit only helps a little bit.
On a different note, we only spend around $1200 a year on heating/cooling, so a lot of the items we could do to increase our heating/cooling efficiency may have long payback periods (assuming we keep living here forever) even with the federal and power company credits/rebates. Not sure what would have the shortest payback period. New doors or weatherizing existing ones? New windows? Reflective barrier in attic? Solar attic fans in the eaves? High SEER a/c system? Only paying $1200 a year makes it too easy to "do nothing". Gotta love cheap energy!
The one thing that may have a good payback locally is solar or wind generation. 30% federal credit plus 35% state credit (up to $10,000). Plus I think I can sell my power to some green power initiative for around $0.20 per kWh as long as I don't net meter. I'm sure I have done the math wrong, but the payback period is only 6-7 years from a quick and dirty back of envelope amateur estimation. Plus I could make money sooner if I sell the equipment for a decent salvage value in 5 years after the recapture provisions do not apply and then buy a new system (assuming credits are in place) and do the whole thing over again. Gotta love perverse incentives that entice one to act economically inefficient.
Ultimately, I know our heating/cooling is roughly 2/3 of our energy costs, so all the worry about unplugging things that consume 1 watt does very little to reduce our overall energy consumption. Changing the thermostat by 1 degree for a month during the peak heating/cooling season would roughly equal a dozen of these 1 watt devices plugged up year round.
Everyone doing a little bit only helps a little bit.
On a different note, we only spend around $1200 a year on heating/cooling, so a lot of the items we could do to increase our heating/cooling efficiency may have long payback periods (assuming we keep living here forever) even with the federal and power company credits/rebates. Not sure what would have the shortest payback period. New doors or weatherizing existing ones? New windows? Reflective barrier in attic? Solar attic fans in the eaves? High SEER a/c system? Only paying $1200 a year makes it too easy to "do nothing". Gotta love cheap energy!
The one thing that may have a good payback locally is solar or wind generation. 30% federal credit plus 35% state credit (up to $10,000). Plus I think I can sell my power to some green power initiative for around $0.20 per kWh as long as I don't net meter. I'm sure I have done the math wrong, but the payback period is only 6-7 years from a quick and dirty back of envelope amateur estimation. Plus I could make money sooner if I sell the equipment for a decent salvage value in 5 years after the recapture provisions do not apply and then buy a new system (assuming credits are in place) and do the whole thing over again. Gotta love perverse incentives that entice one to act economically inefficient.