
Energy-Leaking
Appliances Are Never Really 'Off'
YOUR house "leaks" electricity: The cordless drill in the basement. The television
set, computer printer, garage-door opener. Even an electric toothbrush wastes
energy while it sits doing nothing. The leakage from any one appliance is usually
negligible. But lump together all your house's electronic devices and the waste
begins to add up. For example:
. The average American home leaks" an estimated 5 percent of its electricity
or about $50 a year.
. Its a huge energy drain nationally. We use an estimated 5 billion watts annually
- the output of five standard power plants - to power electronics while they're
turned off.
. TVs and VCRs alone cost Americans $1 billion a year in electric bills while
not in use.
The energy used creates so much greenhouse gas, it's as if we put an extra 2
million cars on the road and asked them to drive in circles. Unfortunately,
there's little consumers can do. When you turn off modern appliances, you're
really not turning them off at all. You're putting them on standby. "Vampires,
I call them," says Arthur Rosenfeld, senior adviser to the Office of Energy
Efficiency at the US Energy Department. "What's absolutely flabbergasting (is
that you're probably drawing like 50 watts continuously at 3 in the morning"
for appliances that are off. Of course, there are reasons electronic appliances
stay on standby. Your TV set has to be ready to receive the "on" signal from
the remote control. A dishwasher has internal memory timers. Some of these timers
and sensors can actually save energy. The problem Is that many manufacturers
until recently paid no attention to the energy used during standby mode. Researchers
at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, for example, found a compact audio
system that drew 23 watts when it was on and a whopping 20 watts when it was
off. A receiver for a satellite system which drew 17.5 watts when it was on
continued to use 17 watts when it was off. In some cases, the only reason the
off button is there "is to give you the illusion of control," says Steve Greenberg,
energy management engineer at the Berkeley, Calif., lab. You could unplug your
appliances when not in use. But last month the US Environmental Protection Agency
and the Energy Department launched a more feasible alternative: a voluntary
Energy Star program for TVs and VCRs. Under the agreement, manufacturers get
to display the federal Energy Star label on TVs that consume no more than 3
watts of power and VCR'S that use no more than 4 watts when on standby.
So far 12 major manufacturers from around the world have released some 150 products
based on the new standard. "By the holiday season of this year; there should
be quite a number of qualified products out there," says Stephan Sylvan, manager
of the Energy Star home-electronics program. You can get the list of approved
products by calling Energy Star (888-STARYES) or viewing its Web site,( www.epa.gov/eiw
). Researchers call the program an important first step. "Once industry starts
down this path, they're going to notice that it makes sense for many reasons,"
says Alan Meier, staff scientist at Lawrence, Berkeley. Dr. Meier is pushing
for a more stringent one-watt standard for all electronic devices on standby.
His research suggests that with some thoughtful re-engineering, electronic appliances
can keep all their fancy features, while the nation plugs its energy leaks,
saves money, and cleans up the environment.
FROM Solar Energy International in Carbondale, Colorado
E.I.C
UO
Home
Facilities
Others
Sitemap
Contact Us
UO Printshop