Energy efficiency is a very broad term referring to the many different ways we can get the same amount of work (light, heat, motion, etc.) done with less energy. It covers efficient cars, energy saving lights, improved industrial practices, better building insulation and a host of other technologies. Since saving energy and saving money often amount to the same thing, energy efficiency is highly profitable.
Better with less
Energy
efficiency often has multiple positive effects. For example, an
efficient clothes washing machine or dishwasher also uses less water.
Efficiency also usually provides a higher level of comfort. For
example, a well insulated house will feel warmer in the winter, cooler
in the summer and be healthier to live in. An efficient refrigerator
will make less noise, have no frost inside, no condensation outside and
will likely last longer. Efficient lighting will offer you more light
where you need it. Efficiency is thus really: 'better with less'.
Efficiency
has an enormous potential. There are very simple steps you can take,
like putting additional insulation in your roof, using super-insulating
glazing or buying a high efficiency washing machine when the old one
wears out. All of these examples will save both money and energy. But
the biggest savings will not be found in such incremental steps. The
real gains come from rethinking the whole concept, e.g. "the whole
house", "the whole car" or even "the whole transport system".
When you do this, surprisingly often energy needs can be cut back by 4
to 10 times of what is needed today.
Take the example of a
house. By properly insulating the whole outer shell (from roof to
basement), which requires an additional investment, the demand for heat
will be so low that you can install a smaller and cheaper heating
system - offsetting the cost of the extra insulation. The result is a
house that only needs one-third of the energy without being any more
expensive to build. By insulating even further and installing a
high-efficiency ventilation system, heating is reduced to one-tenth. It
sounds amazing, but thousands of these super-efficient houses have been
successfully built in Europe over the last 10 years. This is no dream
for the future, but part of everyday life for those thousands of
families.
As another example, imagine you're the manager of an
office. Throughout the hot summer months, air conditioning pumps cold
air on your staff's shoulders to keep them productive. As this is
pretty expensive, you could ask a clever engineer to improve the
efficiency of the cooling pumps. But why not instead take a step back
and look at the whole system. If we first improve the building to keep
the sun from heating the office like an oven, then install more energy
efficient computers, copiers and lights (which save electricity and
generate less heat), and then install passive cooling systems like
ventilation at night - you may well find that the air conditioning
system is not even necessary anymore. Then, of course, if the
building had been properly planned and built, you wouldn't have bought
the air conditioner in the first place.
Moving forward
If
cutting energy use makes such great economic sense, why isn't everyone
doing it? Well, to start with, many people do take advantage of energy
efficiency. According to the American council for an Energy-Efficient
Economy, "Total primary energy use per capita in the United States in
2000 was almost identical to that in 1973. Over the same 27-year period
economic output (GDP) per capita increased 74 percent."
http://www.aceee.org/energy/effact.htmBut
this is only a start. To truly tap efficiency's massive potential,
which is unfortunately less tangible then an oil field, you first need
proper government policy. To that end, the single most important tool
is setting standards of minimal efficiency for houses, offices, cars,
electric appliances, etc. reflecting the least lifecycle cost.
Consumers have the right to expect that the products they buy meet
certain minimum standards. There are, for example, already minimum
safety standards. Yet, standards for energy efficiency are too often
neglected by governments, or are far too weak. Governments should also
seize additional policy opportunities to promote continued innovation
and improvement in efficiency technologies.
For more examples of
energy efficiency, see our Individual Action web page, which has 12
practical steps you can take to reduce your own electricity consumption
4-10 times.
US: Energy Star – US government backed efficiency program US: Rocky Mountains InstituteUS: American Council for and Energy-Efficient Economy Belgium: Greenpeace Belgium website Switzerland: Top Ten website (French/German)France: Efficiency website Netherlands: Energielabel