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Are Electric Cars Worse for the Planet?

February 15, 2012 By Shane Ede 23 Comments

Not content to upset the recyclers in the community (See: Is Recycling Bullshit), I’m moving on to electric cars today.  Rob at Say Anything Blog had an interesting post the other day citing a report from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville that talks about how electric cars might be worse for the environment than their gas guzzling counterparts.

To summarize the report, electric cars seem to be more hazardous to the environment because a majority of the electricity that they consume is created in fossil fuel burning electric plants.  Rob points out that the study was done in China where a very large proportion of electricity is produced by coal powered plants, and that a smaller proportion is produced that way in the Unites States, but that the proportion still isn’t small enough to negate the negative effects of the increased pollution from production.

Wind farm and greenhouse gas farm, togetherI think this is another case where the technology just isn’t advanced enough to support the new initiatives.  Cleaner electricity production would, obviously, help the situation, but many of the clean energy production methods just aren’t mature enough to support themselves, let alone a growing fleet of electric cars.

Combine that information with the added expenses in maintenance of an electric car, and they begin to look downright unattractive.  Not to mention that they have yet to create an electric car that is capable of reproducing the power that is needed for them to become mainstream in smaller cities and rural areas.

What do you think?  Are electric cars an already dying breed?  Should we continue to support them in hopes that electricity production technology catches up eventually?

photo credit: kevin dooley

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Cars, Green Tagged With: electric cars, electricity, environment, Green, green technology

Save Money by Turning Off Appliances

January 11, 2012 By Shane Ede 7 Comments

Saving money isn’t the only thing out there if you want to become wealthy.  All it does is reduce the amount of money you spend.  You’ve still go to find ways to make more money through a better paying job, passive income, or a second job.  But, it’s still an important part of a well-rounded wealth plan.  One of the more popular, green, methods of saving a few dollars is to turn off your appliances.  Turning them off isn’t the end of it though.  Many of them still pull a small amount of energy from the electrical system even when they are, technically, off.  While it isn’t a whole bunch, it still can amount to enough to keep you from realizing your full savings.  In the UK, they have electrical sockets that have switches built into them that turns the socket completely off, and cuts it’s supply of electricity.  Unfortunately, here in the US, we don’t have such a thing.  But, we can buy power strips and adapters that have timers and switches to cut the supply to the sockets.

Power Strips

Power strips come in many different shapes and sizes, and almost all of them have a switch of some sort on them to cut the power.  Buying one isn’t a huge problem.  Your local Walmart likely has several to choose from.  Consider the things you’ll be plugging into the strip, however, when shopping for one.  If you’ll be plugging in sensitive electrical equipment, like computers, DVD players, laptops, and printers, you’ll want to have one with a surge suppressor, at the least.  You might even consider getting one with a battery backup system so that the equipment stays on when there’s a power outage.  If you want to get really fancy, take a look at this strip from Belkin.  It’s the Conserve Smart power strip.  It’s got a socket that can detect when the item plugged into it is turned on or not and shut off several of it’s other sockets based on that info.

Power Adapters

Adapters also come in several shapes and sizes.  If you want to get a close look at what you are using in electricity, you can use an adapter that will monitor usage and has a readout of the total usage. Something like this Kill-A-Watt energy usage monitor would do the trick.  A more simple, and elegant, solution is the Belkin Conserve Energy Switch.  It’s a simple adapter that goes between the socket in the wall and the device you’re plugging in.  It’s got a toggle switch built right in allowing you to simply flip the switch and cut the power to the device.  It should work great for devices like coffee makers, shredders, and anything else that doesn’t require multiple sockets or anything fancy.

Pull the Plug

Yes, there is an even simpler solution.  Simply pull the plug from the outlet.  No fancy adapters or power strips needed.

With any of these solutions, there’s a small amount of learning curve in play.  You’ve got to learn to remember to flip the switch or unplug the stuff when you’re not using it.  You’ve also got to learn to remember to flip the switch back on or plug the stuff back in when you do want to use it.  Not the biggest thing, and as you do it more and more, you’ll get used to it.  One small note, that I don’t think I really need to say, but I will anyways, is that this isn’t meant to be the be-all, end-all of conserving energy methods.  Making sure you’re using the most energy efficient appliances in the first place, for instance, is likely to save you a lot more on your energy costs than unplugging appliances.  Switching out your incandescent light bulbs for more energy efficient alternatives is also more likely to save you more money.  But, if you’re looking to squeeze a few more cents from your watts (terrible electricity pun, I know.), you’ll do everything you can to save some money, including unplugging or cutting the power to your appliances with a switch like those mentioned above.

Share with everyone!  What are your energy conservation tricks?  Do you turn the heat off all winter and wrap yourselves in wool blankets?  Do you turn off the fridge in the winter and simply store your goods outdoors in the snow?  Tell us!

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Frugality, Green, Home, Saving Tagged With: electricity, energy conservation, energy saving, save energy

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