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Make your home (and/or home office) energy efficient

In addition to forcing many people to get creative with their home workspace, the pandemic has also changed energy consumption patterns in the U.S. in ways that likely impact your bottom line. Specifically, some of the energy that used to be consumed in an office setting has been shifted home—including to yours if you or someone in your house now works or attends school from home.

Before the pandemic, the average home used 876 kilowatt hours of electricity each month. The usage pattern would look like this: it would spike as we woke up and got ready for work, then drop off during the day when no one was home, and peak again at night.

But now the rules have changed.

In 2020, residential electricity use rose later in the morning and stayed 16% higher than it was before the pandemic (commercial use dropped a similar amount). With so many of us working from home on a permanent basis, this pattern is likely to largely continue—so it’s literally worth it to find ways to save energy.

In good news, it’s Energy Efficiency Day and the TDS Green Associate Resource Group has you covered:

  1. Measure first. It’s hard to reduce your energy usage when you don’t know how much you’re using. Some libraries allow you to check out an electricity monitor for free (we spotted programs in Maine, Denver, Colorado, Oregon, and Wisconsin, but there are probably many others). You can also DIY it with home monitors like Sense or the Lenovo Wi-Fi Smart Plug.
  2. Slay energy vampires. Many devices—including pretty much every one that has a brick wall plug—continually drain energy. Get some smart plugs that turn the device off when you’re not using them. Another idea: Group devices you don’t use often onto the same power strip, so you can easily turn them off at once. Fun fact: The electricity to run a laptop costs about 20 cents a day (or $64.80 per year) so use power-saving modes and/or be sure to shut down at the end of your workday.
  3. Chill your clothes. Most of the energy consumption from doing laundry comes from heating the water. If you wash on cold, you save. Relative to drying, it costs about 45 cents to dry a load of laundry so consider hanging clothes to dry. If that’s not an option, make sure your dryer’s lint screen is clean and, rather than using fabric softener, use some wool dryer balls. Not only will you save on the softener, the agitation will help your dryer do its job more efficiently.
  4. Be smart about heating and cooling. Your heating and cooling system accounts for about half of your home’s energy consumption. Look for air leaks by inspecting where all building materials meet—door and window frames, weather stripping, attic hatches, fireplace dampers, vents, etc. You could hire someone to come in and do an energy audit, but a DIY method is to light an incense stick and pass it around edges of common leak sites. Where the smoke wavers, or is sucked out or in of a room, there’s a draft so take action to plug them.
  5. Light your way into savings. LED lights are popular for a reason—they don’t put off heat and they use a fraction of the energy incandescent use. By switching five of your home’s most frequently used bulbs with ENERGY STAR® certified LEDs, you could save $75 annually on energy costs.
  6. Leverage local rebates. Many states offer incentives for switching to energy efficient appliances, or discounts on energy-saving products. Take a peek at your provider’s website or contact them to see if they have any offerings.

About Missy Kellor

Missy works on the Corporate Communications team and reports stories to TDS employees and customers. This is right up her alley because she’s an extrovert and also a big fan of research (really, she’ll look up just about anything that strikes her interest). Missy is a native of Madison, Wis. with an undergraduate in Anthropology and a master’s degree in Life Sciences Journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her interest in the Internet as a mass media shaped her work towards a PhD in Journalism and Mass Communications. She’s also worked as an editorial assistant, copywriter, and production artist. In her off hours, Missy is a crafter, Pinterest addict, reader, wife, and mom of two kids.
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