It’s Easy to Be Green
Energy Saving Tips for the Home
- Use a programmable thermostat. Lower your thermostat in the winter and raise it in the summer.
- Upgrade insulation in attics and crawlspaces, basements and walls.
- Replace furnace filters monthly.
- Install a whole house fan to draw hot air out of your home.
- Change your incandescent light bulbs to compact fluorescent bulbs.
- Seal cracks and holes around windows and doors. Sealing air leaks is the quickest and cheapest energy improvement you can make!
- Use task lighting when possible instead of brightly lighting an entire room.
- Purchase items that can be recycled.
- Use reusable grocery bags.
- Turn out the lights in rooms you are not using.
- Take shorter, cooler showers. Install low flow shower heads.
- Plant tall trees near east & west facing windows to create shade from the sun.
- Close heating and cooling vents in rooms you don’t use.
- Turn off TVs, stereos and other electronic appliances when you are not using them.
- Cool hot foods before placing them in the refrigerator.
- Wash full loads of laundry only.
- Clean the lint screen of your dryer after every cycle (this will help your dryer run more efficiently).
- Use dimmers on your lighting.
- Lower the temperature of your water heater.
- Install ceiling fans.
- Get a home composter.
- Inflate tires properly. This reduces gas consumption and your tires last longer.
- Pay bills online; view bills online. This reduces paper usage and saves postage.
- Run your dishwasher when it is full.
- Donate old electronics.
- Use both sides of paper.
- Clean with cloth. Don’t use disposal paper towels.
- Buy rechargeable batteries.
- Reduce clothes dryer use. The dryer uses more energy than any other household appliance with the exception of the refrigerator. Use the moisture-sensor setting, which turns the dryer off as soon as the clothes are dry.
- Plant native plants. Native plants require less water to grow because they have adapted to the environment. They also require no herbicides or pesticides.
- Plant a garden. No fuel is needed to transport the harvest. (Store bought produce travel an average of 1,500 miles).
- Keep reusable bags in your car. You will always have them available when needed.
- Never let the water run. Turn off the faucet when brushing your teeth.
- Ride your bike, walk or carpool whenever possible.
- Reduce junkmail. Contact the Direct Marketing Association, (it costs $1) at dmachoice.org/mps to remove your name from mailing lists. To stop credit card and insurance offers go to optoutprescreen.com. ProQuo offers a free service to remove your name and address from being bought and sold in marketing lists. They also offer a list of common catalogs that you can choose to cancel or keep. Contact them at secure.proquo.com.