Environment America helps citizens take charge of energy use for Energy Efficiency Day

Media Contacts
Allie Astor

Environment America

Environment America is releasing a new guide and interactive website to help Americans conserve energy and reduce wasted energy in their homes and businesses. Published on Energy Efficiency Day, with colder autumn and winter months looming, the energy-saving recommendations in Environment America’s guide can help us tackle our waste problem.

“The ways we communicate and shop and work and live have all changed dramatically in the last decade. But we still produce and consume energy the same ways we did almost a hundred years ago, putting our most basic needs at risk — our health, the environment, and even the climate,” said Allie Astor, clean energy fellow with Environment America. “We must start conserving energy right now. This guide will help people adopt energy-saving measures and tap into new technologies and appliances to increase their household’s energy efficiency.”

Experts estimate that the United States can reduce its overall energy consumption by 40 to 60 percent by mid-century simply by using better technologies and eliminating waste across our economy. Much of the energy waste is due to inadequate insulation, inefficient heating and cooling systems, and out-of-date appliances and technologies. But our individual everyday actions — forgetting to shut off the lights, overheating our water heaters, using washing  machines for half-full loads of clothing — also add up.

“We can have better health and a more sustainable environment while also paying lower utility bills,” continued Astor. “Efficiency improvements pay for themselves. This guide is designed to help families cut through the clutter of information and pick improvements that will help them minimize energy waste.”

“Americans across the country are shifting to cleaner, less risky energy sources such as solar and wind, but regardless of where our energy comes from, wastefulness is unacceptable,” said Rob Sargent, Environment America’s clean energy program director. “Creating a clean, healthy future for our kids and grandkids will require not just replacing fossil fuels with renewable sources, but also maximizing how much energy we get from those clean energy resources.”