January 2012

EarthTalk®
E – The Environmental Magazine

Companies offering energy audits are generally reputable and legitimate and will help you both save money and reduce your carbon footprint if you follow their advice. Pictured: A home energy auditor inspects a hot water heater.

Dear EarthTalk: There are a number of companies out there now doing “energy audits” for the home, after which they try to sell you attic insulation and other products and services. Is this just a scam or would it be wise for me to look into this?                             – Bill Richards., New York, NY

For the most part, companies offering energy audits are reputable and legitimate and will help you both save money and reduce your carbon footprint if you follow their advice in regard to upgrading things like insulation, windows and appliances. “A home energy assessment, also known as 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,” reports the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). “An assessment will show you problems that may, when corrected, save you significant amounts of money over time.”

“During the assessment, you can pinpoint where your house is losing energy,” adds DOE. “Energy assessments also determine the efficiency of your home’s heating and cooling systems [and] may also show you ways to conserve hot water and electricity.”

You can conduct your own energy audit if you know where to look for air leaks (drafts), water waste and other key areas of a home’s inefficiencies. The DOE’s energysavers.gov website has guidelines to help homeowners conduct their own do-it-yourself home energy assessments. For instance, DOE recommends that homeowners make a list of obvious air leaks, such as through gaps along baseboards or at the edges of flooring and at wall and ceiling junctures. The potential energy savings from reducing drafts in a home can be as high as 30 percent per year, reports DOE. (The DOE website also provides information on other ways to save money and resources through less obvious things such as outdoor landscaping. It also posts guidelines for energy-efficient designing and remodeling.)

You should also check the filters on heating and cooling equipment to see if they need to be changed so as to keep your furnace and air conditioners functioning at maximum efficiency. And if these or other appliances over 15 years old consider replacing them with newer models that meet federal EnergyStar efficiency criteria. Also, swapping out older incandescent bulbs in light fixtures with higher efficiency compact fluorescent or LED bulbs will save money and energy.

A professional energy auditor with dedicated assessment tools and the knowledge of how to use them will in all likelihood carry out a more comprehensive assessment than you can do yourself. “Thorough assessments often use equipment such as blower doors, which measure the extent of leaks in the building envelope, and infrared cameras, which reveal hard-to-detect areas of air infiltration and missing insulation.”

If you are concerned about enlisting a for-profit firm that upsells its own energy efficiency upgrade services based on a “free” energy audit, check with your utility to see whether it offers unbiased, independent energy audit services (which it may do for free or for a nominal cost). The assessor from your utility may be able to recommend window and door replacement companies, heating and cooling specialists and other vendors nearby that do reputable work to make your home is not only energy efficient but warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer.

CONTACTS: DOE Energy Savers, www.energysavers.gov; EnergyStar, www.energystar.gov.

EarthTalk® is written and edited by Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss and is a registered trademark of E – The Environmental Magazine (www.emagazine.com). Send questions to: earthtalk@emagazine.com. Subscribe: www.emagazine.com/subscribe. Free Trial Issue: www.emagazine.com/trial.


Embrace Hydrogen

by Daphne Dixon on January 27, 2012

in Advisors, Energy

Tim Dolan

GreenTowns Energy Advisor

 

Hydrogen….don’t be afraid of it….embrace it. It’s coursing through your veins right now. It’s quite easy to separate from water using any kind of renewable energy supply. It’s efficient, benign and 100 % recyclable. Three gallons of water can be used to provide the same amount of energy (BTUs) as one gallon of gasoline but, you can burn gasoline only once. You can “burn” 3 gallons of water a million times because it turns right back into water. You can’t screw it up. Any device that now runs on fossil fuels can be adapted to run on hydrogen with ZERO carbon or toxic emissions. If we are really trying to reduce our carbon footprint and provide our grandchildren with a world in which they can survive, we have to be able to provide a sustainable alternative. Hydrogen is the only long-term, practical solution available today to achieve that goal.

Seth Leitman

 

So many times I walk down the street and drive by lamps or places where there should be better lighting. You must see it, yellow looking high energy spending lamps in your town, city, county, schools and homes.

Green lighting must and now is happening for the financial and personal well being of our country and this world. The enactment of the new energy efficiency standard heralds green lighting to a new level.

I realize there aren’t many times when people try to connect the dots for things in life. However: Freedom, whether financial or personal is represented by monuments in Washington D.C. and across this great land in Green Towns across America.  The Liberty Bell is a perfect monument of freedom now with Green Lighting.

Yup, These days you’ll find my favorite green lighting company MSi lights nearly everywhere you look.  In Macy’s and stores across America. Now this great green lighting company is bringing it to our national treasures and historic landmarks.

Great choice by the National Park Service. Maybe they won’t quite last another 236 years, but we can bet they’ll still be going strong in another 20!

http://www.greenlivingguy.com/greenliving/worlds-most-famous-bell-now-shines-brightly-thanks-to-new-le.html

Seth Leitman
Eco Consultant, Author, Editor, Producer, Reporter
914-703-0311
Check out my newest book Green Lighting!!

David Popoff                                  GreenTowns Building Advisor

Across the country, there is a push to use re-useable bags. Throughout Europe and other parts of the world, this is standard practice because it saves on resources, reduces litter and saves money.

Many municipalities are adopting ordinances to improve the environment by banning the use of non-biodegradable plastic bags for purchased goods. In Connecticut, for example,  the town of Westport adopted such an Ordinance and started to enforce it March 19th, 2009. Westport became the first municipality in Connecticut to adopt such an ordinance and has joined others such as San Francisco, Los Angeles County, Austin, and Seattle.

Darien, Connecticut along with many other municipalities acros the country, have proposed ordinances in the works. Many of these by-laws are started off by local grassroots organizations such as the Darien Choose To Reuse group.

Using re-useable bags is habit forming and very easy to do. Keep a stash of re-useable bags in the trunk of your car, hanging on a hook by your mudroom door or in the garage. Many local retailers are giving these bags away for free or for a low price of $1 to $2.

Re-useable bags also have many uses. Instead of buying expensive $30-$50 canvas bags, we use our re-useable bags for boating, going to the pool, road trips and ski trips holding anything from shoes, gloves to beach towels and kid’s toys.

If you would like to preview a documentary about the pitfalls of plastic bags check out “Bag It”.

Take action, by adding your community to the National Effort: No Plastic Bags!

 

David Popoff is a Connecticut license real estate agent in lower Fairfield County, CT. He has lived and worked in the area for over 30 years and now reside in Darien since 2004.

Green Affiliations

    • Realtor GREEN designation by the National Association of Realtors.
    • David Popoff is an accredited LEED Accredited Professional (LEED AP) Homes and USGBC member of the Connecticut chapter (CTGBC).
    • Associate member and an accredited Certified Green Professional (CGP) of National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and the local chapter HBRA-Fairfield County, Ct.


"The Big Thirst" written by Charles Fishman

Water is both ordinary and extraordinary. It comes out of your kitchen faucet and can be bought in designer bottles. Water can change into  a variety of forms and is completely essential every day. It’s integral to life.
Why is it then, while water is truly spectacular, that it is taken for granted, polluted, wasted and misused?
Think about the fact that we are drinking the same water that was around  tens of millions of years ago when the neighborhoods were filled with tetrapods. Think of what we have done to our water since then. We are not getting any new water. Shouldn’t we all want to be stewards of this precious resource?
A friend just recommended this book  to me, by Charles Fishman. Take a look. Let me know what you think about it.

 

  • Want to make a difference? Contact your local Waterkeeper.
  • Do you want clean and free public water? Learn more at GLOBALTAP
  • Have a question about water? Ask one of our GreenTowns’ water advisors.
  • What you can do RIGHT NOW: Share or start a water initiative in your community.

No Plastic Bags

by Daphne Dixon on January 11, 2012

in Land & Conservation, Water

Photo courtesy, The Drum, The Toxic Legacy of Plastic Bags

 

Towns and cities across the country have banned plastic bags,

To find out more and to see a list of communities that have passed legislation to ban plastic bags, check out the No Plastic Bags initiative.

 


Photo Courtesy: Theodore Payne Foundation, Eschscholzia californica

Cassy Aoyagi, president of the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wildflowers and Native Plants, works tirelessly to help Californians understand the benefit of landscaping with natives and other drought tolerant plants.  The health, social and environmental benefits of sustainable landscaping are profound, particularly in Los Angeles.  For example, planting with natives: eliminates the need for toxic, asthma-inducing and ocean polluting chemical fertilizers and pesticides, requires less water, preserving a valuable resource and saving Angelenos the publicly-funded cost of importing water and minimizes the fire, flood, slide cycles of Southern California, caused, in part, by invasive plants in our wild spaces. Cassy designed and built a series of demonstration gardens at the La Canada Public Library that provide residents with examples of vibrant, climate- compatible foliage.  Cassy and her team volunteer at the native garden and provide  maintenance workshops at the Library, providing homeowners with the knowledge and experience to improve their health and environmental impact.

View the Theordore Payne Event and Class Calendar

Check out local initiatives in Sun Valley,  California

Join the Theodore Payne Foundation Initiative Support Team

Share the Initiative: Native Plants and the Habitats They Support with Friends