Now’s the Time for an Energy Audit
By Shawn Dell Joyce
With stocks plummeting, home heating prices soaring and money tight, many people look toward winter with fear and trepidation. One of the best ways to alleviate this fear is to take positive action like having a home energy audit.
Almost half of our energy use goes into heating and cooling our homes. We are already paying an average of 20 percent higher home heating costs, so any way you can reduce your costs will pay for it. A professional home energy audit costs $100 to $300, but through the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), homeowners can get this service for free.
If you take out the loan and make the improvements, the money you save on your electric bill easily covers the loan payment, often with plenty left over. If you plan to go solar, or incorporate some form of renewable energy into your home, the same program will pay for half the installed cost. www.getenergysmart.org
Having a trained eye look at your home is invaluable. My auditor spotted right away that my furnace was operating at 80 percent efficiency despite just being serviced. He also found some leaky and uninsulated ductwork.
The blower door is a tool that auditors use to test your home’s envelope. They install a powerful fan that fits exactly into an open outer door. The air is sucked out of your house causing negative air pressure. The auditor walks around with a hand held smoke machine and points out the major gaps and leaks, usually around doors and window frames. If added together, all these gaps and leaks can equal a huge hole in your wall.
Here are a few ways my home energy audit saved us money and reduced our energy use:
–Just by caulking all the gaps and leaks, we could cut almost $1,000 from our annual heating and cooling bills. Even if we hired a contractor to do this and had to pay $4,500 for caulking, we would make that investment back in under 5 years. You can’t get a rate of return that good on the stock market right now.
–One of the most obvious leaks in any home is an uninsulated attic and basement. We were losing much of our heat right though the roof of our house. A modest investment of about $1,500 added six more inches of insulation in our attic and made a considerable difference in how warm the house feels, and how much energy we use to heat it. We reinsulated many of our outside walls at the same time, and were able to cut our home heating costs dramatically last year.
–If you have an uninsulated basement, insulating exposed crawl spaces, ceilings and walls could save you as much as $800 annually, depending on the size of your house. Again, if you paid someone to do it, you would make a return on your investment in under five years.
–Switching out your incandescent light bulbs for compact fluorescent or LED lights can save you an immediate 20 percent reduction on your electric bill. The more bulbs you replace, the greater your savings.
–About 14 percent of our home energy use is spent on keeping water hot at all times. Buying an on-demand water heater will save you the cost of that new water heater in about 2 to 3 years.
–Appliances and cooking can account for 33 percent of our home energy use. If you replace older appliances with Energy Star Rated appliances, you can save about $100 per year, per appliance on average. These savings help to offset the cost of the new appliance over the years.
–Replacing windows can be expensive, making the payback period much longer. In my case, we would save $30 to $50 annually with a payback period of 10 years. We opted instead to invest in window inserts to use during the winter. An immediate action you can take is to cover every window with clear plastic window sheeting from your local hardware store. It curbs heat transfer, and will save energy.
Sign up for the Ten Percent Challenge and have a home energy audit. Tell me what you did to reduce your energy usage by 10 percent or more, and I’ll write about you. Next week, we’ll hear from some local businesses that had energy audits and reduced their energy bills by more than 10 percent.