Saving Energy for Practical People — Part 1
by Philly ~ July 18th, 2008
Table of contents for Practical Energy Saving
Electricity Costs
Fossil Fuel Costs
Water Consumption
Ok I promised a lot here. trying to organize in my mind how I will put this series together and I don’t know if I have it figured out right … but times a wasting so I will take my best shot. For anyone who feels I am being too simplistic, feel free to comment, but be a little patient with those who need some catch-up information. For anyone who feels I am going over your head, feel free to holler, I’ll explain more. I also, by necessity have to aim this series mainly at fellow Americans because you are the majority of my readership. I’ll add in tidbits that I know based on living in other countries, as well as some interesting things I have learned recently from Australia … who I find has a TV industry who is refreshingly energy conscious … would that the US networks would wake up someday soon.
First of all you are going to have to accept a fact or two. Essentially you have \been lied to for generations by both government and industry. Perhaps not always lied to directly, but certainly brain-washed and misinformed.
The US runs on oil and coal (a lot more coal than many people realize, too). Wyoming and Colorado coal travels all winter long in mile-long purpose built coal trains from California to Arizona to New Orleans to Florida to Chicago and all points in between. The Navajo Indian Nation owns a huge mine and gigantic, haze producing generating station almost on the edge of the Grand Canyon that’s’ feeding the grid from Arizona to northern California (conveniently, as a semi-sovereign nation they don’t have to follow the same environmental rules as the USA … and the air quality shows.)
A few areas of the US are heavily hydro-electrified … much of the Pacific northwest (why Google and others are building huge server plants next to dams in Washington state … cheap power to essentially waste). Parts of the southeast burn hydro power from the network of TC\VA dams. A few nuclear plants are capable of producing more than they consume and an even smaller number of successful wind generation farms and one commercially-viable geothermal plant that I know of are on grid … but all these are a drop in the bucket compared to fossil-generated sources.
And fossil fuel is where the money is. We’ve had essentially 20 years of presidents with with either no energy policy or a big ‘drill we must’ big oil policy. I don’t want this to sound like a conspiracy theory, because it isn’t that intelligent. It is just what we are used to since childhood, and what we are taught in schools,especially colleges funded heavily by energy-based business is what we believe to be the norm.
As a result, the US has been essentially on a free energy ride for the past century-plus. We are only now starting to feel a bit of the gas and diesel costs that others have paid for years, and electric costs are so low that we have developed a hugely wasteful way of building houses and become used to burning energy in our homes as if it were free.
Welcome to the Philippines. Here we have the second highest electricity costs in the world … only Japan trumps us, and the system itself is broken. Much of the infrastructure is antiquated, much of the generation comes from coal (in the most recent request for bids on coal exactly no suppliers responded) and in general I’d say the future doesn’t look bright.
So the first thing I am going to cover regarding electricity costs and ways to save on electricity here in the Philippines is to give you a homework assignment. Find out how much electricity you have consumed in the past year (if you don’t save your bills you utility company will probably provide you a nice little printout that shows consumption and costs for free), figure out what consuming devices you have today that you are going to need in the Philippines and see what you can do to determine what the ones that are ‘keepers’ are costing you today.
I’ll give some hints on this next time and also tell you about an eye-opening series I have been watching on ABC that can teach us all a lot (That’s an ‘A’ for Australia in the ABC, not American).
Related posts:
- Saving Energy for Practical People
- Saving Energy for Practical People — Part 2
- Saving Energy for Practical People — Part 4
- Saving Energy for Practical People — 6
- Saving Energy for Practical People — Part 3
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
July 18th, 2008 at 8:53 am
Some good insights into the real way electro power is generated in the US. Generally speaking we are such guttons and wasters. I am as guilty as the next person but I am making an effort to reduce my energy consumption and use my monthly electric bill (I pay online so it is really an ebill” as a gauge. My Asawa ablely assists me by reminding me to “close the light” (turn it off) whenever I forget. When I make the move to PI I will surely have to downsize my electrical consumption among other things.
When I lived in the Sierra Mountians of Northern California a few years ago, I tasted what having no electric (or brownout) was like when winter storms would knock out power for 1 to 5 days. This was good training for what I will expect to be in my future. Spoiled I am currently, but I hope to change that by embracing life while living in the Philippines.
Best to all,
~marshall
July 19th, 2008 at 9:35 am
@marshallmellow: believe me, I’m a “light closer” too. One of the things Mita an I are just\tifiably proud of is that we have reduced our electric comspumption, month for month at least 10% every month since the first year we lived here. Those sort of savings won’t continue at that rate, but the first 10% is easy (getting rid of the laptop computers and leaving the printers unplugged works wonders).
One advanatage thta isn’t easily dollar-quantifiable but certainly means something for quality of life is to be able to have at least a small amunt of power available through power failures. here, where we live, “bownouts” have not been very frequent, but they do happen and one of these days abig storm will it for certain … I wnat to be able to atleast keep the refirerator running and a fan or two … that’s well within the realm of possibilty, where asa 5 or 8 or 10kw geenrator that will run everything in the g\house and more is not something I am really intereted in.
A freind in just went through Typhoon Frank in compfort, while running his whole house on a 8kw diesel generator. Works great but at 1.2 lters per hour (diesel went up today 2 pesos to 58 plus per liter) it’s more comfort than I feel like paying for.