Energy Efficiency Starts at Home
TV blasting, air conditioner humming - that's no time to start the dishwasher, do laundry, or bake a cake.
TV blasting, air conditioner humming - that's no time to start the dishwasher, do laundry, or bake a cake.
Studies show how consumers
can save energy by running their appliances at the optimal time of the day - or
have smart monitors do it for them. The "smart" home of the near
future will communicate with the electricity grid to know when power is cheap,
tell appliances when to turn on or off, and even alert when renewable energy
resources are available to offset peak demand.
The idea is that eventually
our appliances and homes are going to be able to 'talk' to the grid.
The goal is
to reach 50% energy savings for new construction and 40% savings for building
retrofits.
Cooling Efficiently in All Climates
Nothing runs up the energy bill like air conditioning. Air conditioning currently accounts for 15% of all electricity use in theUnited States , and can be as much
as 70% of use during hot summer days.
Nothing runs up the energy bill like air conditioning. Air conditioning currently accounts for 15% of all electricity use in the
Researchers
borrowed ancient cooling ideas and combined them with outside-the-box thinking
to come up with a radically new kind of air conditioning. The system first
dehumidifies the air, and then sends it through an evaporative cooler to
produce cool, dry air in any climate. The keys are paper membranes that
separate the air from the water and the liquid desiccant, and a re-routing
mechanism that uses a thermal cycle to refresh the desiccant and vent moisture
away. The technology has the chance to lower air-conditioning energy bills by
40% to 80%, because it uses water rather than electricity to perform most of
the process.
More
Efficient Buildings
Forty percent of the nation's energy is used in buildings - from hospitals to factories, restaurants to office complexes.
Forty percent of the nation's energy is used in buildings - from hospitals to factories, restaurants to office complexes.
Our nation's
architects and engineers are looking to find ways to reduce by 50% the energy
intensity of large hospitals, schools, and retail buildings.
Schools Finding Big Energy Savings
New schools and those going through a renovation can demonstrate an average energy savings of 30%. Among cost-saving measures, the blueprints called for pretreatment of humid air rather than over cooling the entire airflow; aligning the new schools on an east-west axis, with large, efficient, south-facing windows; and smart monitors to assure that only the lights that are needed are turned on.
New schools and those going through a renovation can demonstrate an average energy savings of 30%. Among cost-saving measures, the blueprints called for pretreatment of humid air rather than over cooling the entire airflow; aligning the new schools on an east-west axis, with large, efficient, south-facing windows; and smart monitors to assure that only the lights that are needed are turned on.
The potential
savings are monumental, amounting to some $75,000 per year, per school. In the United States
there are about 100,000 public schools. This year, $14 billion will be spent
constructing about 750 new schools and renovating others. If all the new and
renovated schools followed green-school designs, the savings would be more than
$50 million the first year, compounded each succeeding year. And the average
school is built to endure 50 to 100 years.
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