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  • Maybe I'm cheap but...

    Wednesday, Jan 16, 2008 11:08PM / Standard Entry / Members only
    32 comments

    Maybe I'm cheap but it really bugs me to waste money.    Even at my income level, I can rationalize an excuse like "I'm a busy person.  I can afford the extra dollars I have to pay for more electricity just to avoid the hassle of thinking about it, let alone doing something about it."

    The stakes have become a little higher now.  If we all continue to consume more and more energy at a time when there's global warming and an energy crisis looming, well, that's just being irresponsible.

    No one has to get nutty about it.  But I just read an article in the NYTimes, and it's not new news, but for some reason it finally sunk in.

    Putting Energy Hogs in the Home on a Strict Low-Power Diet

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/14/technology/14basics.html?em&ex=1182139200&en=6ef50a693438d1b1&ei=5087%0A

    How much energy are your electronic products consuming? Just by powering down your items or at least putting the system into a deep sleep can save you money and save the environment carbon spewing into the atmosphere.

    Here are a couple of surprising tidbits:

    -In the average home, 40 percent of all electricity used to power home electronics is consumed while the products are turned off. Add that all up, and it equals the annual output of 17 power plants.  (Our local electric company just announced plans to construct another nuclear plant...great, no one does anything to solve the energy problem for the last 30 years and now our best fallback position is nuclear?). 

    -Products that idle in what the industry calls low-power mode, or lopomo, consumed about 10 percent of total electricity in California homes. (I always thought lopomo meant like 1%, but 10% is huge.  I guess it’s just best to totally turn them off).

    -Some of the larger big-screen TVs consume as much energy each year as a new refrigerator.  (There’s a reason for the frig to be operating overnight, but the TV?)

    Whether or not we turn things off entirely or keep them on or do nothing...they're all just habits, habits that were developed, and habits which can change.  As with any bad habit, the question is do I care enough to change it?  Is it just harmful for me or for everyone?

    It’s going to be hard for me to change my computer/electronics habits.  But now I realize it's not a victimless crime.  It’s bad enough that I have a crappy hot water heater consuming excessive wattage—that’s going to have to wait till I have money to replace it.  But this is something I can do today. 

    Maybe I’ll put stickies on everything that say “OOO BABY, BABY, TURN ME OFF.” 

Entry comments (32)

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  • angelinaaahh
    posted on Sunday, Mar 9, 2008 10:56PM [Report]
    I'm glad to see people environmentally conscious! I cringe at the sight of all the plastic bags at supermarkets and started bringing my own. =)
  • itinerantbloke
    Official artist
    posted on Thursday, Mar 6, 2008 11:12AM [Report]
    I think one of the big challenges will be the amount of consumption here in China (India too) as income levels grow and consumption grows with it.  Instilling these kinds of habits from the start rather than trying to introduce them later on.  Unfortunately, much of the electricity here is still being churned out by coal plants.
  • D.Y._Sao
    Official artist
    posted on Sunday, Feb 17, 2008 1:40PM [Report]
    informative u are
  • Jaine
    posted on Thursday, Jan 17, 2008 9:45AM [Report]
    the simple things can make such a difference

    I would like an eco house that was off the grid.  Solar technology is improving all the time, its such a shame money is still put into nuclear plants - if all the money spent on that went into sustainable energy systems, think of the difference it would make.
  • JRS
    posted on Thursday, Jan 17, 2008 5:31AM [Report]
    Hey!  I thought you did a new blog but you dug this one out of the archives!  

    Still...I wanna someday do my own combo of wind and solar energy and just be off the grid.....that'd be awesome!
  • w-bird
    Official artist
    posted on Thursday, Jan 17, 2008 2:40AM [Report]
    I try to save money and energy as much as I can. I have no money, so that part is easy... As for electricity, I guess really I'm just on the computer all the time, and I try to turn it off when I'm done with my work.
  • aglobalthreat
    posted on Wednesday, Aug 15, 2007 2:57AM [Report]
    aw man..and i've been savin for a killer end of the world party too :(
  • Sorica7
    posted on Sunday, Aug 5, 2007 3:41AM [Report]
    good information! thanks!
  • ivy17
    Official artist
    posted on Saturday, Aug 4, 2007 9:20PM [Report]
    that's not being cheap, that's being environmentally aware.

    unfortunately, some of the home appliances here in HK are so energy-wasting. such as our washer/dryer unit, it takes FOUR hours just to wash and dry one tiny load of clothes. it's horrible! i try to air dry as much as i can.
  • D.Y._Sao
    Official artist
    posted on Friday, Aug 3, 2007 4:33PM [Report]
    dude!
    you got like soooo many comments on this thing.  still iffy about getting the rights on GI Joe. wish us luck :)
  • butter
    posted on Thursday, Aug 2, 2007 9:03AM [Report]
    It's a pain to power off and unplug but it's something that's fairly easy to do in the scheme of things.  Being a bit of an energy miser myself, I have been doing this for awhile though I will admit I don't always unplug the things I use most. My co-workers have a tendency to not power down their computers at the end of the day and it makes me a little crazy.  This is the kind of thing that people actually can do something about and if enough do, it might make a difference.  I just posted a blog about what the individual can do about plastic bags.  It's so easy but what will it take to get people to make an effort.  I'd like to think that I'm doing my part.
  • Flagday
    posted on Sunday, Jul 29, 2007 11:38PM
    Like what SSG?
  • sunsetgun
    posted on Sunday, Jul 29, 2007 11:25PM [Report]
    Lucky for me Austin is a very green city, so  there are a lot of incentives for reducing energy consumption.
  • D.Y._Sao
    Official artist
    posted on Tuesday, Jul 10, 2007 1:23PM [Report]
    your word for me are too kind but i will take in (not discredit) everything you say ;)
    for it will be food for my passion.
    thank you
    one love :)
    p.s. i hate wasting money too. i don't call that being cheap. hehe.
  • PNUT
    Official artist
    posted on Sunday, Jul 1, 2007 6:00PM [Report]
    Inconvenient truth was interesting.. it as a step forward in educating people a little deeper...making its mark.. no data is going to be 100%

    For me personally - we try to recycle the use of a product wherever we can..I am actually working on a collection that utitlises fabrics that  are made from either organic...or recycled..as much as we can. Of course i love beautiful materials.. but we are trying to find that balance  and using fashion to help others pay more attention to being a little more self sufficient . In addition we are working on a program that may allow us to use fashion to help empower women and child in lesser developed south asian countries...by having a program  that utilizes  their skills, craftsmanship  and their materials and in return they receive and they can have a slightly better quality of life that helps to keep them off the streets and away from the ones that exploit them.
  • Flagday
    posted on Saturday, Jun 30, 2007 10:25PM
    PNut - they say there are holes in the story presented by An Inconvenient Truth.  But I've seen the most important parts of that documentary verified by more scientific writings and docs.  How about that graph?  The ice is an historical record of nearly a hundreds thousand years.  

    I'm not saying everything we know today is absolutely right....but we've gotta pay attention.  

    You're right PNut.  If we change our consumer habits, demand products that recycle, not waste stuff, it has to help.  It can't hurt.  

    How can you use these principles in your designs?
  • PNUT
    Official artist
    posted on Saturday, Jun 30, 2007 3:04PM [Report]
    self sustainable living.. we all need to look at ever part of the environment.. every small bit helps whether it is saving energy... being more aware of what we eat... recycling what we use..we all still like new things.. so it definately gets tough.. but there are attitudes that we need to break... and renew. did you watch inconvenient truth?
  • elizabethsung
    Official artist
    posted on Tuesday, Jun 26, 2007 7:03AM [Report]
    Hi

    thanks for sharing about "lopomo" Now I have to rethink whether to keep my computer on all day or not. And of course, the hot water dispenser. Hmmm...

    Elizabeth
  • Shuriken
    posted on Tuesday, Jun 26, 2007 2:39AM [Report]
    My mother instilled in me to turn the lights off each time I leave a room. She said it becomes a habit. She was right. :P
  • Flagday
    posted on Sunday, Jun 24, 2007 9:37PM
    UPDATE:  Since installing that computer program which puts my computer to sleep properly, I have saved 2.24 pounds of CO2 from going into the air IN ONE WEEK.  And that doesn't account for when I turn the Computer entirely OFF (no accounting is done that which has to account for way more than the 2.24 pounds sleeping).  It's a big savings.  116 pounds in a year.  I'm motivated to be even more conscious about my electric and petroleum consuming activities.
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