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Amidst Soaring Energy Prices, Blackout Threats...

Alliance to Save Energy Offers Consumers Tips To Cut Energy Bills, Pollution As Earth Day 2001, Tax Time Dawn In April

Washington, DC, March 19, 2001 — Amidst a backdrop of soaring energy prices and electricity reliability problems as Earth Day 2001 dawns April 22, consumers are also dealing with income tax returns and home improvements to get ready for summer. The Alliance to Save Energy offers consumers tips on how to "earn" money by investing in energy-efficiency improvements in their homes and simultaneously reduce pollution and greenhouse gas emissions with little effort.

  • If you are taking advantage of lower interest rates to refinance your home, consider wrapping into the package energy-efficiency home improvements that would reduce your monthly energy bills. Interest would be tax deductibles, and your actions would also increase the nation’s energy supply
  • Earn 50 percent installing insulation and weather stripping to cut your heating and air conditioning costs, advises Andrew Tobias, personal finance editor, in PARADE magazine article, "How To Invest In Uncertain Times." (See North American Insulation Manufacturers Association new consumer web site www.simplyinsulate.org to test your IQ – insulation quotient).
  • When shopping for heating and cooling equipment, appliances, computers and office equipment, windows, lighting fixtures, and consumer electronics, select products bearing the ENERGY STAR label (symbol for energy efficiency) to cut related annual energy expenditures by 30 percent – <www.energystar.gov>
  • Join the Alliance’s "4 for the Planet" Earth Day challenge. Just replace your four most used 100-watt incandescent bulbs with four comparable 23-watt compact fluorescent bulbs to save $82 over three years. If all U.S. households did the same, we’d save as much energy as is consumed by 7 million cars in one year
  • To see what energy upgrades would have the greatest payoff, log onto the interactive Home Energy Checkup on the Alliance to Save Energy’s web site – <www.ase.org/checkup/home>
  • Tired of coming home to a stuffy house in summer? A programmable thermostat will automatically coordinate your home temperature with your daily and weekend patterns to increase comfort and monetary savings
  • Plug energy "leaks" with appropriate insulation, weather stripping, caulking, and low-e or spectrally selective windows, glass doors, and skylights. Also, plug surprising energy leaks: Did you know that your idle (turned off) electronics and appliances - TVs, VCRs, cable boxes, CD players, cassette decks, and microwaves - continue to consume electricity when switched off to keep display clocks lit and memory chips and remote controls working—costing consumers $3 billion annually? When replacing items, look for the ENERGY STAR label.
  • Activate "sleep" features on computers and office equipment that power down when the equipment is on but not in use for a while. Turn off equipment during long periods of non-use to cut costs and improve longevity.
  • Check out horizontal axis (front-loading) washers which use less water and energy yet get clothes as clean as conventional units as well as some of the newer efficient top loading models, dryers with moisture sensors, high-efficiency refrigerators, and motion-detectors on exterior security lights and room lighting.
  • To avoid sticker shock at the pump this spring and summer as prices are expected to go up again, select fuel-efficient cars and the most fuel efficient SUVs – and urge manufactures to use fuel-efficient technologies for SUVs. Consider new hybrid cars.
  • Consider safer, more efficient ENERGY STAR torchiere lamps over popular halogen torchiere lamps which can CAUSE FIRES, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. While relatively inexpensive to purchase, they are expensive to operate.
  • To obtain a free Alliance to Save Energy consumer booklet with more tips call the Consumer Information Center at 1-888-878-3256 and ask for Power$mart: Easy Tips to Save Money and the Planet. Preview an animated version on the Alliance’s web site - <www.ase.org/earthday>.
  • Check out the Alliance Earth Day section of its web site <www.ase.org/earthday> for other fun, informative web features that demonstrate how energy efficiency cuts energy bills, increases home comfort, and decreases pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. There are 27 hands-on, multidisciplinary lesson plans for educators – many of which can also be used in homes – and Appliance Olympics race of various efficient versus inefficient appliances.

Funding partners for the consumer home energy campaign include the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), New York Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), and the North American Insulation Manufacturers Association (NAIMA).


About ASE

The Alliance to Save Energy is a coalition of prominent business, government, environmental, and consumer leaders who promote the efficient and clean use of energy worldwide to benefit consumers, the environment, economy, and national security.


About NAIMA

NAIMA is the association for North American manufacturers of fiber glass, rock wool, and slag wool insulation products. Its role is to promote energy efficiency and environmental preservation through the use of fiber glass, rock wool, and slag wool insulation, and to encourage the safe production and use of these materials.