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Seven easy actions you can do today to save the environment and gas

Posted by on Monday, October 20, 2008 in Energy, GHG, News, Transportation.

[Originally published by Vanderbilt News Service in MyVU]

Want to save gasoline, lower your power bills and help save the environment? New Vanderbilt research identifies seven simple actions individuals can start today that have the potential to dramatically reduce energy use and carbon emissions.

Individuals generate up to 40 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. Vanderbilt environmental law professor and director of the Climate Change Research Network, Michael Vandenbergh, along with CCRN associate directors Jack Barkenbus and Jonathan Gilligan found that following these seven “low-hanging fruit” actions have the potential to achieve large reductions at less than half the cost of the leading current federal legislation and could generate roughly 150 million tons in emissions reductions and billions of dollars in net social savings.

“Put another way, these savings are the equivalent of removing 26 million automobiles form the road or eliminating the need for 54 large power plants,” said Vandenbergh.

The researchers identified almost three dozen actions that are easy to do and relatively inexpensive. But they highlight seven in their study that could have the biggest impact. The top actions include:

Reduce idling

Research finds up to 8 percent of gas is wasted while idling. Shutting the engine off while sitting in a carpool lane or parking lot will reduce fuel consumption, reduce wear-and-tear on the engine, improve fuel economy, improve the performance of the catalytic converter and reduce emissions.

Inflate tires

The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that vehicle gas mileage improves an average of 3.3 percent with regularly inflated tires. A two-car family could save about $120 per year by keeping tires at the proper inflation.

Change air filter in car

Replacing a dirty air filter can improve gas mileage, lengthen engine life and result in substantial CO2 emissions savings. Gas savings alone from changing an air filter every 15,000 miles equals about $240 per year. The study shows that if an additional one-fourth of all vehicles have their filters changed on an annual basis, 19 to 27 million tons of CO2 will be saved.

Reduce electricity “leakage”

Standby power, which is the power electronics use when they’re not in use but still plugged in, costs the average household $48 to $67 per year. Some large-screen TVs can use as much power in standby mode as a refrigerator.

Adjust thermostat

Heat and cooling is the largest component of household CO2 emissions, so small changes can produce big results. Research suggests changing your air conditioning and heat by two degrees to reduce emissions.

Drop water temperature

Reducing CO2 emissions associated with hot water heating is one of the easiest actions to accomplish because most water heaters are automatically set 20 degrees hotter than people need. CO2 emissions vary between electric and natural gas water heaters, but a rule of thumb is that a setback of 20 degrees Fahrenheit could reduce CO2 emissions as much as 1,466 pounds per year and save the homeowner about $20 to $40 a year.

Use compact fluorescent light bulbs

Household lighting is responsible for up to 160 million tons of CO2 emissions per year. Incandescent light bulbs (IL) convert only 5 percent of their input power to visible light and they have a much shorter lifespan than compact fluorescent bulbs (CFL). Thus, replacing ILs with CFLs has the potential to reduce CO2 emissions by roughly 50 to 120 million tons per year and save consumers money.

To see the full list of options to lower your carbon emissions and read the full study, titled Individual Carbon Emissions: The Low-Hanging Fruit, go to http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1161143. To learn more about Vanderbilt’s multi-disciplinary Climate Change Research Network and other Vanderbilt University news go to www.vanderbilt.edu/news.

Media Contact: Amy Wolf, (615) 322-NEWS

[Media Note: Vanderbilt has a 24/7 broadcast facility with a dedicated fiber optic line for live or taped TV interviews and a radio ISDN line. A high resolution picture of Mike Vandenbergh is available on www.vanderbilt.edu/news.]

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