Results for air conditioning

Keeping Cool and Avoiding the Cost of Air Conditioning

Starting Now
SCOTT THOMSEN / Friday, July 31, 2009 01:00 PM

Seattle’s summertime fun melted under record heat this week, forcing many who are unaccustomed to temperatures in the upper 90s, let alone an all-time-high 103 degrees, to seek relief.

The first thought is typically to seek air conditioning. My father and my mother in-law both called to see if I needed one after they saw national news reports about the Seattle heat wave.

While thankful for their concern, I politely declined. Part of that decision was recognizing that Seattle gets about two weeks of hot weather each year. I can survive two weeks of heat. The other part was understanding how to help keep the house cool without relying on air conditioning, so I could keep my electricity use and bills lower.

And thanks to THIS SPACE, I’m here to share those tips with you.

Portable room air conditioners – the little boxes that look like R2D2 from Star Wars – generally use between 900 and 1,400 watts.  That means they cost about 8 cents an hour to run at the lowest-in-the-country rates offered by my employer, Seattle City Light.  Use them for 12 hours a day for a month and that will add up to about $34 per month. Central air conditioning uses much more electricity.  A unit that uses 3,500 watts will cost about $100 per month at 12 hours per day.

If you can keep the house cool enough to get by with a window fan, you can significantly reduce your costs. A window fan costs about $1.40 a month to run for the same amount of time.

How then, do you beat the heat without the A/C?

For starters, try to avoid building a box of hot air inside your house. Eat cool meals like sandwiches, salads and fruit instead of cooking with the stove. If you really want a hot meal, grill outside. And wait until evening to run the washing machine, dryer or dishwasher.

Next, use shading and ventilation.

Keep interior shades closed on the windows with direct sunlight. Exterior shades offer even more relief. I installed one on the west side of my house to cover the sliding glass door and have another for the picture window.

Open windows and doors to create cross ventilation then turn on a fan or two. You don’t want to spin hot air around inside your home. You want to move it outside and replace it with cooler air, even if cooler means 80 degrees.

Another idea is to take advantage of the insulation provided by the ground. If you’ve got a basement like I do, you learn fast that it’s typically the coolest room in the house during the summer. Spend more time there when it’s hot outside.

If you’ve got air conditioning, don’t sweat it. I understand the comfort of a climate controlled room and excessive temperatures can create health problems, including heat stress and heat exhaustion.

But even if you turn to air conditioning for some extra relief, these tips will help you conserve electricity because your A/C unit won’t have to work as hard to bring the temperature down.

So this week’s ONE THING you can do to conserve electricity and keep a little more money in your bank account is to try to keep cool without the air conditioning, or at least use the A/C a little less.



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TAGS: HOME, air conditioning, energyrgy efficiency

Green Book Review - "Seven Wonders for a Cool Planet"

EcoConsumer
TOM WATSON / Thursday, June 12, 2008 12:22 PM

Recycling works for books, too.

"Seven Wonders for a Cool Planet", a new book by Eric Sorensen and the staff at the Seattle-based Sightline Institute, updates a 1999 book by John Ryan of Sightline (then known as Northwest Environment Watch).

With plenty of timely new stats and a 21st-Century sense of urgency about global warming, this book feels fresh and relevant. It's a quick read - just over 100 pages - but for such a slight book, it's deceptively deep and inspiring. More...

TAGS: LIVE, books

Recycle Your Energy

Starting Now
SCOTT THOMSEN / Monday, April 28, 2008 03:00 PM

A planet-friendly trend appears to be taking off around some new thinking in how we use energy.

There are many activities from manufacturing steel to storing data on computer servers that require significant electricity or other power and generate heat as a byproduct. Until recently, much of that heat was considered a problem to get rid of. Data centers use air conditioning to cool server rooms and the furnaces of a steel plant are vented after melting the metal. Now, some organizations are recognizing how that heat can be put to additional use. More...

TAGS: HOME, energy, energy efficiency

Revved-up? Re-User

Garden of Weedin'
MONYA NOELKE / Monday, December 10, 2007 04:16 PM

Castle in Molyvos, Greece 

There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed. ~Mohandas K. Gandhi

A couple of weeks in Greece slowed me wa-a-a-y down. We Americans just live too fast, too wastefully and make life too complex it seems to me now. More...

TAGS: HOME, gardening, green remodeling, hardware stores

Renewable Energy

ECOMETRO EDITORS / Thursday, September 27, 2007 03:58 PM

It may feel like we don’t see the sun much in the Pacific NW, but Washington is a surprisingly good zone for solar power. Solar electric panels or solar water heaters are both viable options with state and federal incentives. If you still haven’t visited carboncounter.org to see how much CO2your energy usage creates, take a moment to calculate it now. If you think sunny days are wonderful now, imagine if the rays were also generating power for your home. More...

TAGS: HOME, energy, renewable energy, solar, wind
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