Life as a Spectator Sport

A proud member of the reality-based community


Saturday, February 03, 2007

Two things I never thought would happen . . .

The mainstream media actually ran a segment on global warming without qualifiers such as some scientists believe that so-called greenhouse gases might be causing global warming, which in turn might cause adverse climate change.

NBC's Saturday Today show featured a guest who spoke knowledgeably about some of the causes of global warming. I'm baffled, though, at how twitterpated everyone was over the power used by cell phone and PDA chargers, when no one mentioned a much more significant waster of electricity, the millions of always-on televisions and computer monitors. Even the LCD tv's use some electricity when they are allegedly turned off, in the little circuit that waits for a signal from the remote. Miniscule by itself, significant in quantity. And the older tv's with their picture tube filament heaters (which eliminates the warm-up time of the much older tv's) use as much electricity when they are supposedly turned off as a typical night light.

But it was a hopeful sign, nonetheless, to see the subject discussed at all. In my normal suspicious fashion, I imagine someone higher up (higher up in network management, I wonder, or even higher than that?) saying, "All right, guys, it's okay to talk about global warming now." Is it a bit too coincidental that all the major networks are jumping on the bandwagon at once?

The other thing I never thought I'd see is that Clarence allowed me to turn the thermostat down on the heat pump. I showed him last month's electric bill, which is not as bad as this month's is going to be, and he agreed finally that we would have to use less electricity. His television is also going off at night--completely off, since I plugged it into an outlet strip which I turn off when I go to bed. Before now, he would run the tv 24 hours a day.

Getting rid of the clothes dryer, and putting a timer and an insulating jacket on the hot water heater, have reduced our electric bill to about half of what it was during a similar cold period last year. Think of what the nation as a whole could save if everyone did just a few similar things.

There is a website somewhere that shows the savings for a typical household if a few easy steps are taken: substitute compact fluorescent light bulbs for the incandescants throughout the house, turn down the thermostat on the hot water heater, turn lights off when a room is empty, etc. I'm too tired right now to search for it, but I'll post it when I find it.
posted by Liz @ 7:55 PM     |


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