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Are vampires sucking your electricity?

Standby or vampire power as it is most commonly referred to, wastes $10 Billion of Electricity Annually in the United States alone. The average US household has about 40 electronic devices that constantly draw small amounts of power.

Top 10 Energy Vampires in Your home

  1. Laptop computer chargers
  2. answering and machines
  3. Computer  printer
  4. TVs and cable boxes,
  5. VCRs, DVD players, DVD recorders, digital video recorders,
  6. phone and iPod chargers
  7. hubs and routers,
  8. video camera battery charger
  9. plugged-in electric toys
  10. night lights

Check out the Vampire Power Sucks website for tip on how to reduce vampire power. 

Edit: January 2013 this website is no longer available. If you would like to learn more about Vampire Energy check out the Energy Star site:

Energy Star, Standby Power and Energy Vampires

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Homes with Natural Gas appliances save approximatly $518 annually

According to The American Gas Association households that have natural gas appliances, such as cooking ranges, clothes driers and heaters save about $518 compared to homes that use electric appliances.

Benefits of using natural gas for key appliances includes:

Lower energy bills

Decrease in greenhouse emissions and pollutants (up to 37% less emissions compared to electric appliances)

Safety and Reliability

“The direct use of natural gas provides three times more useful energy to consumers than electricity,” said Dave McCurdy, president and CEO of AGA.

To read more about the benefits and savings of natural gas visit the American Gas Association website

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New Energy Efficiency Standards for Residential Clothes Washers and Dishwashers

The Department of Energy announced yesterday the most recent in a series of common-sense efficiency standards made by the Obama Administration. The newest efficiency standard focuses on residential clothes washers and dishwashers and will save consumers $20 billion in energy and water costs.

These new standards add to previous energy efficiency requirements and will go into effect in 2015 for clothes washers and 2013 for dishwashers.

Approximately 3% of residential energy use and more than 20% of indoor water use can be attributed to clothes washers and dishwashers.

The new standards will reduce the energy consumption for front-loading clothes washers by 15% and will cut water consumption by 35%.Top loading clothes washers will save 33% on energy and 19% on water use.Residential dishwashers will use about 15% less energy and more than 20% less water, directly providing consumers with savings on monthly bills.

Learn more about the energy and cost-saving standards adopted under the Obama Administration on the Department of Energy website

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Researchers are generating power using viruses

This might sound weird but researchers at Berkeley Lab have developed a method to generate power using a virus.

The harmless M13 bacteriophage virus converts mechanical energy into electricity, and is the first generator to produce electricity by harnessing the piezoelectric properties of a biological material.

Testing the generator produced enough current to run a small liquid-crystal display. Image courtesy of Berkley Lab

This new technology will one day make it possible to charge your smartphone as you walk, thanks to a paper-thin generator on the sole of your shoe. Can you imagine all the other great uses for this type of generator.

Learn more about this amazing technology and even watch a video on how it works at the Berkeley Labs website

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