Jan 20 2010

Alternative Home Energy Choices

Published by L.A. Remodeler at 6:24 pm under Energy Saving

With energy prices skyrocketing, and energy demands with nowhere to go but up, more and more people are concerned with how to decrease their energy consumption. Electricity has become an essential part of life, from keeping food fresh to powering lifesaving medical equipment. The world today runs on electricity.

However, all this electricity comes at a cost, and that cost is something homeowners are becoming increasingly reluctant to pay. In that spirit, creative homeowners are looking for alternatives to doling out their hard earned cash to a faceless power company. Alternative Energy may offer the solution.

Alternative energy is nothing new. Windmills have been around for thousands of years. Windmills were originally used to grind wheat and other grains. In fact, that is why they are called wind mills. Although this was a technology developed well before the advent of electricity, transforming it for use as a source of electrical power was a logical development. Perhaps it was even inevitable.

The technology of alternative energy sources has come a long way since the first windmills and water wheels of old. As technology developed, so did efficiency. New designs have brought alternative energy into the 21st century, and even made them affordable for the average home owner.

Waterwheels are another ancient technology. They were also used to power millstones in times past. Today we call our version of this technology “hydropower” or “hydro-electric power.” Hydropower harnesses the energy of water currents to turn turbines which generate electricity.

Solar Energy harnesses the power of the Sun. The Sun feeds all of life with it’s energy, so it’s logical that we have developed technologies that can directly tap into the Sun as an electricity producer. Although solar panels may be a new development, things as simple as hanging your clothes on a clothesline to dry is a basic use of solar energy.

There is also the greenhouse effect. Just simply putting plants inside a greenhouse traps the heat of the sun and makes it significantly warmer inside than it is outside, allowing plants to be grown in climates that would otherwise kill the crops. Solar energy is used for a variety of uses. Home heating is an obvious use. Some people use solar energy to heat their water, and others use solar cells to directly create electricity that powers appliances. In fact, solar energy can satisfy all the home energy needs of a homeowner.

Many still see these forms of alternative energy as impractical, but with the advancements being made in their technology, they are becoming increasingly viable and practical as home energy choices. Before simply discarding these green energy options as being impractical, be sure to consider some of the long term impacts of converting.

Alternative energy is not beholden to the supplies and demands of big corporations. There’s no OPEC controlling the price of the sun. It is more ecologically friendly. You don’t need to dig holes that are thousands of feet deep to harness the wind. These alternative energy sources don’t put out noxious gases because there are no substances being burned to produce energy.

Overall, while it may look like a big investment up front to make a few changes to your home and start using some of these alternative energy technologies, it will cost less in the long run. It will cost you less financially, and it will cost all of us less ecologically. In the end, we all would like to leave the world a better place than it was when we arrived, and we can do that by advancing the use of alternative energy.

My Heat Exchanger Cleaning Equipment Site explores some technological developments in tube cleaning equipment that are more ecologically friendly.

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