Save Money On Utilities
1. Get an energy
audit. A home energy audit is the first step to assess how much
energy your home consumes, and to evaluate what measures you can take to make your home more energy efficient. An
audit will show you problems that may, when corrected, save you significant amounts of money over time. During the
audit, you can pinpoint where your house is losing energy. Audits also determine the efficiency of your home's
heating and cooling systems. An audit may also show you ways to conserve hot water and electricity. Check with your
local electric, gas and/or oil company to see if they offer a free or low-cost energy audit for your
home. Get an estimate of how much you could save
here.
2. Replace
lightbulbs. The new compact flourescent bulbs (CPL's) use almost
75% less energy than conventional incandescents, providing 100 watts of illumination for only 32 watts of power.
What's more, they last so much longer. And unlike incandescent bulbs that just go out, CPL's give you a warning of
their impending demise so that you can replace them before there's a blackout.
3. Lower the
thermostat. Lowering your thermostat by about 10% for eight hours
a day can shave 10% off your heating bill. If piling on extra layers of clothing doesn't appeal to you, close off
most of the house and use portable electric space heaters in the rooms you are using. Turn down the thermostat at
night and sleep better in a cool room. Best of all, install a programmable thermostat and let it automatically
adjust your home's temperature according to your lifestyle.
4. Lower the
temperature on your water heater. Dropping the temperature on your
water heater from a scalding 140 degrees to a plenty-hot 120 degrees can save you nearly $50/year. To save another
10%, wrap the tank in an insulating blanket (not recommended for gas heaters and those with automatic vent
dampers). And avoid using the hot water heater when doing the laundry by washing in cold
water.
5.
Insulate Adequate attic ceiling
insulation is the mainstay of a cheap-to-heat house. Most
homes built prior to 1990 have inadequate attic ceiling insulation. Take a ruler up to your attic, and if the
insulation measures 6 inches thick or less, you are under-insulated. Insulating to at least 12 inches thick
could lower your heating and cooling costs a whopping 25% in a single year. It might be a bit costly but can be
offset as of 2006 by the new federal tax credit of up to $500 for making your home more energy
efficient. Find out more here.
6. Ditch the
electric gadgets. In addition to being expensive, they take up too
much space and most of them are hardly time savers. Yes, you can keep your electric hair dryer, iron, blender or
food processor, coffee pot and hand mixer; but get rid of the electric can opener, knife, blanket, rice
cooker, juicer, espresso maker, shoe polishers, coffee grinders, crepe makers, tea kettles and fry pans
among others. Simpler really is better and you'll save a few dollars of energy to boot.
7. Dry clothes
outdoors (weather permitting). A clothes dryer is one of the most
energy-draining appliances in the home. It can add as much as $0.40 to $1.00 to your gas or electric bill for every
hour that it runs. Think about drying your clothes on a clothes line --indoors or outdoors. On nice days, dry
clothes outside even when it's cold. On rainy days, dry them in the garage, basement, or any room that isn't being
used like that formal living room that mostly collects dust. As Americans we are so spoiled. We have more clothes
dryers in the USA than in the rest of the world combined. If you must use your dryer, keep the filter cleaned, make
sure the vent isn't obstructed, don't overload the dryer, don't underload the dryer, and don't overdry the laundry.
All this will at least help you get the most from your money.
8.
Water. There are numerous ways to save on your water bill. Here
are only a few:
Limit the time to 5 minutes, but take a shower instead of a
bath.
Turn off the water when you brush your teeth or
shave.
Only wash full loads of both laundry and dishes.
Install low-flow showerheads and low-flow
toilets.
Fix leaky faucets as soon as possible.
And if you really want to get stingy, keep a bucket around
to capture all that water that goes down the drain just to get to the hot water. That's gallons and gallons that
could be used for watering plants, washing dishes, mopping the floor, or washing the car. You could even store all
the water you save in a large, clean, plastic garbage can.
Outside, never water your lawn or garden in the heat of the
day; water early morning before the sun comes up or in the evening when the sun is going down and it has
cooled off.
If you have an automatic sprinkler system, set it to water
everything at night, but make sure you turn it off when it rains.
9. Cable
networking. If you have more than one computer in the home and are
hooked up to cable modem or DSL, consider a wireless network to link all of your computers to the Internet instead
of having multiple cable or DSL instlalations. This could save a bundle.
10.
Telephone/cell phone. First, shop around for the best deal.
Second, stay away from all the bells and whistles and just stick with the basic plan. Some people have opted to
disconnect their land-line phone and use only a cell phone for all their calls. Since wireless carriers offer
free long-distance, call waiting, call forwarding, caller ID, voicemail and more, it can do the same job as a
regular phone but for less since taxes and fees that can be fully 1/3 of your land-line phone bill are
significantly less. And if you are tech savvy, perhaps one of the new VOIP services is right for
you.
|