Here are some low-stress steps to take around the house to
reduce your carbon footprint, create a healthier home, and lower your monthly
bills to boot
It seems everybody knows you can help the planet—and save
yourself some cash—with big changes: adding spray-foam insulation to open
walls, say, or installing a tankless water heater. But there are lots of
simpler, lower-cost ways to improve your eco-scorecard, too. Here are some
low-stress steps to take around the house to reduce your carbon footprint,
create a healthier home, and lower your monthly bills to boot.
WORKSHOP
1. Unplug your power
tools. Figure out which cordless tools (like drill/drivers) get the most
use, then unplug the chargers on all the rest. Most cordless tools have nickel
cadmium (NiCad) batteries, which will hold some charge for up to a year. They
lose 15 to 20 percent of their juice each month, but only take a couple
of hours to power up again. Newer tools with lithium ion batteries lose just 2
to 5 percent of their charge each month, so they'll be ready to go even if you
haven't charged them in ages.
2. Spread sawdust on
your floor. Take the superfine shavings captured by your dust collection
system, wet them down, then push them around with a stiff broom to sweep your
concrete garage or workshop floor. The mix is as good as a power-guzzling shop
vac at picking up dust but doesn't swirl it into the air.
3. Up the wattage on
lights. Where you still use incandescent bulbs (with dimmers or three-ways)
on multiple fixtures in a room, try consolidating. One 100-watt incandescent
emits more light than two 60-watt bulbs combined but requires 17 percent less
power. The 100-watter also uses the same energy as four 25-watt bulbs, but
pumps out twice as much light. Just be sure your bulbs don't exceed the maximum
wattage recommendation for each fixture.
4. Eat your leftover take-out. Then save
the plastic containers it came in—which can't be recycled in most municipal
waste systems—and use them to organize your nails, screws, and leftover paints.
Not only does their tight seal help preserve solvents, but the see-through
containers stack neatly and display contents clearly. For added strength,
double up the thin ones.
5. Save used paint
thinner. After cleaning oil-based finishes from brushes and tools, allow
the dirty solvent to sit overnight. The sludge will settle to the bottom of the
jar, leaving a layer of clear thinner on top. Carefully decant the clear
thinner into a clean jar, and reseal it for future use. Be sure to dispose of
the leftover sludge at a hazardous-waste-disposal site—never down a sink drain
or into a street gutter.
6. Mix it up in the
garage. Combine all those cans of leftover white paint that inevitably
collect after you decorate the house and use them to paint the garage or
workshop. (Make sure only to mix latex with latex and oils with oils.) You'll
keep the stuff out of the trash, and by adding the semi-glosses to the flats
and eggshells, you'll end up with a sheen that's easy to clean.
7. Turn things on
their heads. Store paint cans upside down so the solvents—which separate
and rise to the top—get trapped under the bottom of the can. Not only will
paint last longer, but solvents won't be able to slowly seep out through the
lid this way.
8. Take charge of
your charges. Invest in an inexpensive battery tester, then set up a
"battery center" where you can store new cells, check used ones for
power, and set aside those that have burned out and have to be recycled. A
designated collection spot will deter you from throwing bad batteries in the
garbage. Once or twice a year, you just take the pile to your town's recycling
center.
KITCHEN
9. Take
your fridge's temperature. Stick an appliance thermometer in a glass of
water in the center of your refrigerator, or between frozen goods in the
freezer, overnight. Your fridge temp should be between 37 and 40 degrees F (no
more, to keep bacteria at bay); your freezer between 0 and 5 degrees. If either
compartment is too cold, adjust the setting, since keeping them just 10 degrees
colder than necessary can boost your energy consumption by up to 25 percent.
10. Freeze your
assets. Slip a dollar bill between the rubber gasket on your freezer and
fridge doors and the frame, then close the door and tug on the buck. Notice any
resistance? If not, the seal's not tight enough and cold air is probably
leaking out, making your fridge work harder to stay cool. Try this on all four
sides of the door. If necessary, call the manufacturer's service department to
find out how to replace the gasket.
11. Throw a dinner
party. And clear out that second fridge or freezer in the garage or
basement. Then banish the appliance to the recycling center. Getting rid of
either one can save you more than $200 a year, especially if it's an old,
inefficient model.
12. Invite your
biggest buddy over. Ask him to help you move your fridge out of direct
sunlight or away from the range. The heat from either will force a refrigerator
compressor to gobble up more energy than necessary. A fridge uses up to 2.5
percent more power for each degree the surrounding temperature is above 70
degrees. So moving it out of a 90-degree spot can save you as much as $70 a
year. If you can't move it, at least block any sunny window with curtains and
put as big a buffer as you can between it and the range.
13. Use the
dishwasher. Doing a full load in your machine is far more efficient than
washing the same number of dishes by hand. This is especially true if you have
an Energy Star dishwasher, which requires an average of 4 gallons of water per
load, compared with the 24 gallons it takes to do them in the sink. Using one
will save you 5,000 gallons of water, $40 in utility costs, and 230 hours of
your time each year.
BATHROOM
14. Turn your toilet
tank blue. Or green or red. Pour food coloring into the water in the tank,
wait two hours, then check to to see if any color has seeped into the bowl. If
it has, your tank's flapper is leaking, either from mineral buildup or worn
parts. After you flush the dye away so it doesn't stain, head to the hardware
store for a replacement flapper assembly (then go to thisoldhouse.com for
instructions on how to install it). Toilet leaks waste up to a gallon of water
per minute. That's more than 43,000 gallons a month.
15. Run the shower.
Place a 1-gallon bucket under the running water, then see how long it takes for
it to fill up. If it's less than 20 seconds, replace the showerhead with one
that sprays 1.5 gallons per minute. That could save as much as 14,600 gallons
of water a year—especially if you limit your showers to 10 minutes. It will
also save you $22 on your annual water bill, and $150 per year on water
heating.
16. Go from scalding
to just hot. Turn your water heater's temperature setting down from the
standard 140 degrees F to 120 degrees. Not only will this save you some bucks,
it'll also slow down mineral buildup and corrosion, prolonging the life of your
tank. Since a new water heater costs about $900 installed, each additional year
of use saves you money as well.
17. End the
water torture. One drip per second from a leaky faucet or pipe can waste up
to 5 gallons of water a day—and 1,800 gallons a year. While you won't notice
much of an increase on your water bill (around $3 annually), if an overlooked
leak soaks through your kitchen floor, you could wind up with a $1,000 repair
job—money that could have been saved by simply replacing a 50-cent washer.
ENTRIES
18. Wipe your feet.
Equip your exterior doors with a series of mats—or one long
"walk-off" mat—so everyone enters with clean shoes. As long as
there's room for five steps on the mats, you'll drastically reduce the amount
of grime tracked in. That means fewer pathogens that cause disease and less
chemical cleanup. It will also mean improved indoor air quality, since dirt
embedded in a carpet can become airborne when it's tromped on or agitated by a
vacuum.
BASEMENT/LAUNDRY
19. Reach behind your
clothes washer. Turn down the hot water tap for the washing machine so less
goes into the warm-water cycle. Perspiration and most other dirt dislodge best
at body temperature, so you don't need water that's warmer than 100 degrees.
Since most washers simply open both the hot and cold taps to make
"warm" water, it may take longer to fill the machine. But you'll save
about $40 annually on your water-heating bill.
20. Spend more time
in the basement. Make sure furnace filters in forced-air systems are clean.
Dirty furnace filters restrict airflow and increase energy use. Cleaning them,
or swapping them out each month during the winter, can save you up to 5 percent
on your heating costs. Also schedule an annual checkup before the heat comes on
to see that the furnace is properly calibrated.
LIVING AREAS
21.
Listen to your mother. And put on a sweater. That way you can turn down
your thermostat this winter. Adjust it by just one degree for eight hours a
day, and you could save 1 percent on your monthly heating bills. Do it for 24
hours and save 3 percent. Try setting the temp at 70 degrees during the day and
62 at night during winter (and 78 or higher come summer). Heating and
air-conditioning account for nearly half the energy used in our homes, so every
little bit less you use makes a dent.
22. Worship the sun.
Or at least use it to your advantage. Open blinds or drapes to let in natural
solar heat on cold days, then close them once the sun sets, and you can reduce
your heating bills by 10 percent. You can also cut your cooling costs by up to
33 percent in the summer by blocking out sunlight with exterior blinds,
shutters, or awnings. To keep rooms bright, paint or paper with light or
reflective colors.
Written by Jeanne Huber