Alliance to Save Energy Offers Energy Tips To Combat Heating Oil, Energy Price Increases

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Date: 
January 27, 2000

With skyrocketing heating oil costs and other energy price increases, the "physical fitness" of your home can make the difference between high energy bills or comfortable savings this winter.

"An energy-efficient home is a strong defense against winter winds, rain, sleet, snow, and chill while also protecting the environment by cutting wasteful energy use. It’s time to put your home on an energy diet to benefit your pocketbook and the planet," urges David M. Nemtzow, president of the Alliance to Save Energy.

This is particularly timely, notes Nemtzow, with the approach of the month-long celebration of Earth Day 2000, the 30th anniversary of Earth Day (April 22) which will focus totally on energy and its impact on the environment and involve half a billion people around the globe.

The Alliance to Save Energy offers tips to cut your energy bills, increase home comfort, and decrease pollution and greenhouse gas emissions simultaneously.

  • Make sure your furnace receives a professional "tune-up" each year. Clean or replace air filters once a month and help your unit run more efficiently.
  • If you are replacing your heating or air conditioning systems, major appliances, electronics, or windows, look for the Energy Star label for the most energy-efficient models. Households that replace existing equipment with Energy Star products can cut annual energy bills by 30 percent. (www.energystar.gov)
  • Tired of awakening to a chilly bedroom every winter morning? A programmable thermostat will automatically coordinate your home temperature with your daily and weekend patterns to increase comfort and monetary savings.
  • Make sure your attic and/or ceiling are well insulated—as well as the rest of your home. Seal joints in attic air ducts and make sure they are well insulated too. If the appropriate insulation were used in all U.S. homes, the North American Insulation Manufacturers Association estimates that the energy saved would be equivalent to a 46-day supply of gasoline for the entire United States! (see www.naima.org for detailed insulation information.)
  • Don’t like coming home to a dark house on those short winter days? Instead of leaving lights on, put timers on a few of the lights in your home, or install motion detectors on exterior floodlights to improve your home security. After you get inside, the sensor will "remember" to turn the lights off.
  • Thinking of upgrading the quality of those old rattling windows? Ask your supplier for energy-efficient windows with double panes and low-emissivity coatings so you can star gaze in comfort this winter. (For specifics to meet your climate and needs visit www.efficientwindows.org.) • Let nature do its work and allow the sun to help heat your home by keeping blinds of sun-exposed windows open in the daytime and closed at night.
  • Plan ahead for spring. Consider landscaping around the home. Planting evergreen trees on the north side of a home can block winter winds.
  • Think "warm" thoughts – steaming apple cider, hot chocolate, and how you’ll be sweltering again next summer and dealing with big air conditioning bills if you don’t plug the air leaks in your home.