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Showing posts with label Insulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Insulation. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Here Are Some Measures You Can Take to Reduce Your Home’s Energy Bill

Now that we’re approaching winter, what can you do to reduce your heating bill?

Dollar for dollar, your best expenditure is not on more efficient heating, it is on better insulation so your furnace doesn’t run as much.

My very favorite form of insulation is blowing cellulose into exterior walls.  Even if your exterior walls are insulated, the chances are that the insulation has settled over time.  The older the house, the more it has settled.  When I owned a 1945 bungalow back in 2002, I hired About Saving Heat (Dennis Brachfield, 303-378-2348) to blow insulation into its exterior walls. Their website is www.AboutSavingHeat.com. I’m sure I saved on natural gas, but what struck me was the feeling of warmth that resulted from that simple and cost-effective move. 
 
That’s when I realized that it’s not just about air flow, it’s what I think of as “radiational cooling.” In other words, when walls are cold because they are poorly insulated, they radiate that coldness, just as a hot surface would radiate heat. It’s not something you feel as much as you experience. After the insulation was blown in, that bungalow simply felt warmer.
 
Imagine two rooms, each with air temperature of 70°. The room with cold walls will not feel as warm as the room with well-insulated walls. 
 
Regarding air flow, I’m surprised that most new home builders continue to stuff fiberglass insulation into the rim and band joists of homes without encapsulating that fiberglass in plastic.  I’ve found only one builder, Meritage, that uses closed-cell foam, which is even better than encapsulating the fiberglass in that critical part of a home’s “envelope.”
 
The rim and band joist is the top of your concrete foundation, on which your floor joists rest. Go to your basement and look for it. Do you see uncovered fiberglass insulation? It’s doing nothing to keep out cold air. I hired GB3Energy (Bill Lucas, 970-846-4766) to perform this and other weatherization tasks on my current home. Their website, www.gb3energy.com, features a video tour of my home made when it was on the Golden Tour of Solar & Sustainable Homes in 2012. Starting 3½ minutes into that video, Bill takes over and describes this and other weatherization improvements he made on my home.
 
Your best first step is to have Bill or Dennis or another approved vendor perform an energy audit, which includes a “blower door” test on your home. Xcel will rebate 60%, up to $200, of the cost for that audit, from which you’ll know exactly where any outside air is entering your home and therefore where you could benefit from caulking, sealing and other measures.
 
If you order any weatherization improvements as a result of the energy audio, you will earn a 10% federal tax credit up to $500 on each individual improvement, as well as on Energy Star appliances, but that tax credit expires on December 31st, so this fall is the perfect time to consider such improvements. For specifics on federal tax rebates for all kinds of sustainability improvements, visit www.EnergyStar.gov.
 
Xcel also offers rebates, including 100% on the first $800 you spend on wall insulation if you’ve had an energy audit. I suggest calling Bill or Dennis for a free consultation. Tell them I sent you!


Published Oct. 27, 2016, in the YourHub section of the Denver Post and in four Jefferson County weekly newspapers.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Colorado Becomes First State to Install a Solar PV System Under DOE’s Weatherization Program



The Weatherization Assistance Program (WAP) was created by the Department of Energy (DOE) in 1976 during OPEC’s oil embargo to help low-income Americans save on their energy costs. Over its 40-year history, the WAP has become increasingly sophisticated in the types of weatherization it will fund, starting out with caulking and weather stripping, then adding insulation, and, most recently, installing solar photovoltaic (PV) systems to reduce energy costs for financially stressed homeowners. Colorado is the first state to take advantage of this expansion of WAP, completing its first 2-kW installation Aug. 15 on a home in Colorado Springs. A second system is being installed this month.
 
Overseen statewide by the Colorado Energy Office, the program is administered by eight weatherization agencies serving different parts of Colorado. The agency serving Denver and Jefferson County is the Energy Resource Center.
 
According to Joseph Pereira of the Colorado Energy Office, “The impact of this project is threefold. It addresses energy burden by reducing both home heating and electric costs; it enhances opportunities for distributed generation; and it demonstrates the viability of rooftop solar offerings for low-income households. We appreciate the Department of Energy's receptiveness to this innovation in the program and the forward-thinking efforts of our partners at Energy Resource Center as we explore the best use of solar to assist those in need."
 
In addition to rooftop solar panels, that first home in Colorado Springs received insulation, storm windows, low-flow shower heads, LED bulbs and an Energy Star refrigerator. Those improvements will save the homeowner an estimated $600 per year in energy costs.
 
Although there are income limits (for example, $48,500 for a family of four) a homeowner also qualifies if he or she is on SSI, SNAP, or LEAP, or if he/she receives help from any of four other assistance programs.
 
For more metro area info, visit Energy Resource Center’s website at www.erc-co.org or call (720) 236-1321. Email address is DENinfo@erc-co.org.


Published Oct. 13, 2016, in the YourHub section of the Denver Post