 |
Activity: Save a Watt |
Energy-Saving Tips:
- Bundle up on cold winter days
instead of turning the heat way up.
- Close doors and windows when
your heater or air conditioning is running.
- Wash only full loads of clothes
and dishes. Take shorter showers.
- Turn off lights, TVs, computers,
and other small appliances when not in use.
- Set heating at 68° or lower
by day and 55° by night.
- Set cooling at 78° or higher
when you’re home, 85° when you’re away.
- When shopping for new lightbulbs,
appliances, and electronics, look for the ENERGY STAR®
label.
- Install low-flow showerheads
and faucet aerators to reduce hot water use.
|
Background
Need a raise in your allowance? Here’s a great way to get
one, and it won’t cost your parents anything extra: Just get
them to agree to pay you the difference if you can reduce your family’s
energy use. This activity will take three months to complete.
Ask your family to commit to saving energy for three months. (Some
energy-saving tips are listed on the right; your local energy utility
can provide others.)
Keep your energy bills for those three months, and compare your
energy use to what your family used during the same months of the
prior year. Some utilities provide last year’s usage on your
current bill for you to compare. If the information is not on the
bill, ask your parents for last year’s energy bills or call
your energy company and ask for the information.
Create a graph to illustrate the difference between how much electricty
you used during the three-month period in the prior year and the
current year.
| This Year |
Kilowatt Hours
Used |
Price per Kilowatt Hour (or Therm) |
| Month 1 |
|
|
| Month 2 |
|
| Month 3 |
|
| Last Year |
Kilowatt Hours
Used |
Price per Kilowatt Hour (or Therm) |
| Month 1 |
|
|
| Month 2 |
|
| Month 3 |
|
If energy rates increased since the prior year, your bill may
be higher, but energy saved will still show up in fewer kWh
used. Multiply the number of kWh you saved by the current
cost per kWh, and ask your parents to pass the dollar
savings
on to you!
Note: If this year’s energy-saving efforts did not reduce
your energy usage compared to the prior year, try to identify factors
that may have caused more or less energy use during each of the
months you are studying (such as hotter or colder weather, extra
overnight guests, vacations, adding appliances or landscaping, and
changing work or school schedules.)
More Activities
 |
|
Breaker,
Breaker!
In this educational game you will learn what happens when
you overload your home’s circuits. |
Use these links to visit another section of
the site.
|