Energy Saving Refrigerators: San Diego Foreclosures and REO's
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Is Your Refrigerator Costing You Money?
If you just purchased a San Diego foreclosure home, it
probably has a refrigerator in it. Whether it's a top-freezer or side-by-side
model, in stainless steel, bisque, or black, that big box in the kitchen of
your San Diego foreclosure homes is on the job 24-7, rescuing us from hunger,
boredom, warm beer, and cravings for Chunky Monkey.
Refrigerators made pre-2000, alas, tend to be major energy hogs that waste
watts and money at your San Diego foreclosure homes. Add to that the unhealthy,
unsustainable stuff so many of us stock inside our refrigerators
and the big box starts looking like an eco-villain.
To start reforming your fridge -- and make it earth-friendlier, inside and out
-- just take a few of the steps that follow. (Check out our handy resources,
too.)
- Raise the bar.
Hey, we said we'd give you easy steps, right? So consider this: Green beer
isn't just for St. Patty's Day anymore. Stock your fridge year round with eco-conscious
cold ones like Fat Tire Ale, made by the Colorado-based New Belgium
Brewing Company, which runs on wind power, recycles everything from grain
to keg caps, and keeps a sustainability specialist on staff.
- Check out the chill factor.
Keep your fridge in the right place: away from the stove or sunny windows. And
remember to check its thermostat. Optimum temperatures for victual safety and
energy efficiency are between 36 and 38 degrees Fahrenheit for the main
compartment and between 0 and 5 degrees Fahrenheit for the freezer. Freezer
temps even five degrees colder than that can increase energy consumption by
nearly 20 percent.
- Don't eat poison.
Buy organic whenever possible. If you do need to buy conventional produce, at
least steer clear of the dirty
dozen -- the fruits and veggies with the heaviest pesticide loads.
- Be unconventional.
Keep a list on your fridge of these eight additional troublemakers:
conventional versions of milk, peanut butter, baby food, ketchup, corn,
cottonseed oil, beef, and soy. Each month, pick one item off the list -- corn and its byproducts,
for example -- and find a way to feast without it. You'll be reducing your
household intake of toxins, pesticides, antibiotics, and hormones. The earth
will be happier, too.
- Pour yourself some H2 Whoa.
There's oil in them thar plastic water bottles -- about 47 million gallons
just to produce them for the U.S. market each year. The solution? Wean thyself!
Tap water is safer, cleaner, cheaper, and more strictly regulated than the
bottled varieties. So drink from the faucet or, for added tastiness and safety,
use a water filter,
fill up a pitcher, and voilà: you're good to glug. P.S. Refrigerators with
water dispensers use more energy (sigh), but if you've got one, make good use
of the great filtered H2O it gives.
- Shop until you drop ...
kilowatt-hours, that is. Today's energy-efficient fridges use
as little as 250 to 600 kilowatt-hours per year and rack up $50 or less in
annual energy bills. By comparison, a typical 1983 brand, according to the
nifty Energy Star online calculator, uses 1,500 kilowatt-hours and
costs $153 a year. Although they're worth it
over the long haul, new units can cost $500 to $4,500 or more upfront. For
that price, make sure to choose a model with theEnergy Star label. For added
energy savings, go with a top-freezer or bottom-freezer variety, sized 25 cubic
feet or less (avoid watt-wasting
side-by-side types). And remember to recycle your
old monolith: it's full of refrigerants that definitely aren't cool.
Related PostsHow Can I Fix Up My Foreclosure Homes Cheap?Countrywide Mortgages Foreclosures: San DiegoRemodeling Your San Diego Foreclosures and REO's With Green TechnologyTop 10 Energy Saving Tips: San Diego Foreclosures and REOSave Money, Save Energy, Save The Planet: San Diego Foreclosures and REO'shttp://www.sandiegoforeclosureconnection.com/002089
Posted on February 23, 2008 16:02:45 by Amy and Susan
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