Why Would Google Be Making A LED Light Bulb?

Google LED Lightbulb

A few years ago I fell in love with the Google Android platform when I switched from my Blackberry to a Google Droid phone. I loved all of the apps that were being written for the phone because of the fact that Google is such a champion of open source. So when I saw a post, this  morning, on Google teaming up with Lighting Science Group to come out with a LED light bulb with a built in chip allowing it to be controlled from my Android powered phone or my Android powered tablet or my Android Powered Google TV (did I mention that I am a fan of Android), I was totally intrigued.

What may seem like overkill at first, could open up some amazing possibilities. Out of the box you will be able to turn this light off and on, as well as dim it, from your Android powered device. It will screw right into your existing socket from which you just took out an incandescent light bulb and it will sip energy by comparison that that heat producing beast that was in there before.

So, you could turn off the light that you accidentally left on when you left for work, from your desk. You could flip on the light for security purposes if you are coming home late. And you could dim it when it comes time for some romantic ambiance. Those are all basics, and it might be hard to justify the price that these bulbs will demand ( at first) when they come out in December. Yep, they’ll be cool, but will they be worth it, goes the argument.

I would suggest, that these could open up a whole other realm of possibilities though. How long will it be before some enterprising person writes an app that allows me to create banks of lighting that are all controlled as one? So, I might be able to create a bank of can lighting in the living room that changes for entertaining, verses mood lighting, reading, or security. High end lighting systems exist for this already, but they are controlled by systems that cost thousands and are usually cost prohibitive in retrofit applications. Could Google lighting make those systems obsolete? Could I have random lights come on at random times all around the house to make it look like someone is home when I am in Hawaii? Could I turn off my kitchen light from my couch with my Google TV remote? Is there an app that some one will write that finally gets my kids to shut off the lights in their room when they are not in it (I’ve tried motion detector switches with limited success so far).  What else could they do that I haven’t even though of yet?

It is interesting to me that Google is getting into the energy business. What other appliances will I be able to control with my Droid phone. Like I said, I am an unabashed fan of the Android platform and technology in general. But, when you combine them with energy savings, I just get get giddie. Below are some more details on the announcement. What do you think about all this? Feel free to comment.

By Andrew Nusca | May 10, 2011, 11:39 AM PDT Internet giant Google and LED manufacturer Lighting Science Group on Tuesday revealed that they have partnered to develop an LED light bulb that can be controlled from an Android-powered smartphone. The Florida-based lighting firm calls it “intelligent LED lighting,” and announced it with Google during the company’s keynote presentation at its I/O developer conference in San Francisco. The first product, a 60-watt equivalent bulb, is a combination of Lighting Science’s knowledge of light geometry and Google’s connected software know-how. An Internet-connected LED bulb? Yes, and here’s why: with a little help from your home’s Wi-Fi network, you can dim or turn off lights remotely — or to program them to do so. Better still, the LED bulbs can leverage your smartphone’s GPS and proximity sensors, turning on lights when you walk into a room with the phone in your pocket. Google has always occupied the home area network space, but this is the first time it has addressed a specific appliance in the home. (If you’re an avid reader of SmartPlanet, you’ll know that the “Internet of Things” — from cars to water heaters to toasters to yes, light bulbs — is just around the corner.) It’s not just a consumer play, but a commercial one, too. Networked lighting companies such as Adura, Lumenergi, Redwood Systems and others — Google rival Microsoft’s focus on commercial building management comes to mind — deal primarily with office buildings and datacenters; this announcement hints at similar applications. The companies say the product will arrive in retail stores this fall.

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How to Choose a Company to Do a Home Energy Audit

Blower Door Used for Home Energy Audit

I stumbled upon this great post by Allison Bailes about how to choose a company to do a home energy audit. She lists out all of the tasks a home audit must include and also some options. Our energy audits include not only all of the requisite tasks but most of the optional ones as well.

Posted by Allison Bailes on Mon, May 02, 2011

My two sisters-in-law have been in town the past few days, and one of them needs to get an energy audit for the home she and her husband recently bought in Seattle. I gave her a recommendation for a company to do the audit (from a couple of friends who used to live there), and now she’s asking the very reasonable question, “What should I be looking for? What should they do when they come to the house?”

Even though she’s a very technically-minded person (she works on nuclear non-proliferation and carbon sequestration issues), like most people, she doesn’t know what she should expect when it comes to an assessment of her home’s energy efficiency. A good home energy audit these days will cost from a few hundred dollars to over $1000, depending on the size and complexity of the house, so homeowners of course want to know what they’re going to get for that investment.

Well, let’s dive in and take a look.

Who’s Qualified?

Although it may be hard to find someone with one of these certifications in every part of the country, you should look for a home energy auditor who’s certified as either a BPI (the Building Performance Institute) Building Analyst or a RESNET certified HERS Rater. Last year I wrote an article about these being the main certifications to look for, and it’s still the case.

What Should They Do?

  1. Combustion Safety
  2. Building Envelope
  3. HVAC
  4. Moisture Problems
  5. Detailed Report
  6. Extras

The first thing to know is that there are different levels of assessment. For simplicity, I’ll focus mainly on the comprehensive energy audit, but a seasoned home energy auditor can tell a lot just by walking through the house. The key is that it’s got to be someone who’s already done plenty of comprehensive audits and knows what to look for.

1. Combustion Safety

The motto of BPI is, “First, do no harm…to life, limb or property.” If your house has any combustion appliances in it, assessing their safety and suitability should be the first thing the energy auditor does after the initial walkthrough. Often, a home energy auditor is the only person who looks at your house as a system and can tell you if there might be problems such as backdrafting that could put carbon monoxide in your home. A good combustion safety test will include checking for spillage of natural draft combustion appliances, the content of the exhaust gases in furnaces and water heaters, and worst case depressurization of the combustion appliance zone (CAZ).

2. Building Envelope

The building envelope is the boundary between conditioned and unconditioned spaces. It has two key components: the air barrier and the insulation, which need to go completely around the house and be touching each other. The home energy auditor you choose should check all three parts of the building envelope:

  • Integrity of the air barrier
  • Adequacy of insulation levels
  • Alignment of insulation with air barrier

When insulation is installed without an air barrier, it won’t do its job. Most types of insulation do not stop air leakage, so one thing the energy auditor will do is look for proper alignment of insulation and air barrier throughout the house.

The energy auditor will also look for proper levels of insulation (wherever visible) and check for the existence of insulation behind walls. They’ll check the integrity of the air barrier in two ways: a visual inspection and a Blower Door test. The former tells where the big air leaks are, and the latter quantifies the total amount of air leakage in the house. The auditor can use the Blower Door as a diagnostic tool to locate air leaks, too.

3. HVAC

Most homes use more energy for heating and cooling than for anything else, so assessing how well the heating and cooling systems are doing is vital. One thing that a home energy auditor will do that your HVAC contractor may not, though, is look at the quality of the distribution system. It’s one thing to heat or cool the air with high efficiency equipment, but if you put that high SEER air conditioner or high efficiency furnace on a crappy duct system, the money spent on the equipment is wasted.

The energy auditor should look at both the equipment and the distribution system. If it’s a forced air distribution system, they probably will also measure the amount of duct leakage in each system, especially is the ducts are outside the building envelope. Unless the auditor is also an HVAC technician, they probably won’t give you a full assessment of the equipment, but they can tell you, based on the age of the equipment, how soon you might need to replace it.

4. Moisture Problems

There are three things that cause buildings to fail more often than anything else:

  • rain
  • moisture
  • condensation

In other words, it’s water. Energy auditors often look for moisture problems in your home and will help find the source so you can eliminate the problem. Most of the moisture problems originate from drainage issues on the outside of the house and should be solved on the outside (e.g., by fixing gutters that dump water at the foundation). Vented crawl spaces are a category unto themselves, and the good news is that we know how to fix them now.

5. Detailed Report

Once the home energy auditor has finished with the onsite assessment of the house, which generally takes three to six hours, they’ll write up a report for the homeowners. Some companies have their templates set up and portable printers in their trucks and can deliver the report before they ever leave your house. Most, I believe, will do the report back at their office and then schedule an appointment to deliver it.

The report should cover all the items above (if applicable). It should give the results of the inspections and testing and put them in perspective by comparing what the auditor found in your house to what’s required by code (in the case of insulation mainly). In the case of infiltration and duct leakage, the comparison is usually to a scale showing what’s good and what’s bad. With the former, they may also tell you what size hole you have in your house.

Finally, with a good home energy audit report, you should get a scope of work that prioritizes the improvements you could make based on their cost effectiveness. Air sealing and duct sealing are usually at the top of the list of energy improvements, though combustion safety issues trump energy efficiency.

The report may also list any rebates and tax incentives that you can qualify for by improving the energy efficiency of your home. These vary by location, and not every home energy auditor can qualify you for every rebate. For example, Georgia Power has a generous rebate program, but you have to use one of the approved assessment contractors to qualify for them. To find out what’s available in your area, you can check the DSIRE or Tax Incentive Assistance Project websites.

6. Extras

Some other items that your home energy audit may include are a look at your home’s:

  • Thermal imaging with an infrared camera
  • Water efficiency
  • Lights and appliances
  • Dryer vent
  • Energy bills
  • Financing options

Some companies include thermal imaging with all or most of their audits, and some don’t. It gives a good auditor another way to look at a house and find some things that they might otherwise miss. It requires adequate training to get meaningful results and can be abused, but it’s another tool that can really help.

Some energy audit companies will check the flow rates of your faucets, toilets, and shower heads and make recommendations for improvement. Some check your lights and appliances and can even measure energy use of items like refrigerators with devices like the Kill-A-Watt or the WattsUp. I wrote about the dangers of underperforming dryer vents a while back and gave somerecommendations for improvement there. Some energy auditors will check that as well.

When I was doing energy audits (or home performance assessments, as I called them), I included an analysis of the homeowners’ energy bills. If they could give me 12 months of their bills, I could plug it into a spreadsheet I’d put together and calculate their energy intensity, the energy use per square foot of conditioned floor area per year.

If your intention is to use a home energy audit as a guide to improving your home, then hiring an auditor who can help you with financing options could be a big plus, too. Perhaps the best one available, in my opinion, is the Energy Efficient Mortgage, which you can use either for a purchase or a refinance.

Choosing a Home Energy Auditor

So there you have it. You can use the above information as a guide to choosing a home energy auditor and making sure you get the most bang for your buck. As with any other contractors you bring into your home, you should also ask for references and check them. I’m sure the comments below will have even more good advice.

Two things to be wary of are the ‘free energy audit’ (usually offered by companies who just want to get into your house to sell you their product or service) and the yahoo who bought an infrared camera and thinks it can find everything. Use the guidelines above to choose a home energy auditor, and you’ll get a much better audit.

 

Thanks Allison for he great post.

Contact us if you would like more information on an audit for your home or to schedule an audit.

 

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RIVERSIDE’S GREEN INITIATIVES, SUSTAINABILITY PLANS RECEIVE HONORS IN INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITAS AWARDS

Riverside Public Utilities Whole House Rebate Program

Riverside has some of the best rebates available for homeowners looking to make energy efficient upgrades to their homes. They have a point system that even allows you to double your rebate amount if you make significant rebates. If you live in the Riverside area and pay your bills to Riverside Public Utilities, contact us in order to help you maximize your rebates and make your house more comfortable.

Below is a press release about an ward that the city just won.

5/3/2011
DALLAS, TX – The City of Riverside’s environmental initiatives and sustainability plans were recognized for their outstanding achievements by the Association of Marketing and Communications Professionals (ACMP) in their international Communitas Awards competition last week.

The City of Riverside was one of only 30 to receive 2011 Communitas Awards, which recognize exceptional businesses, organizations, and individuals from around the globe for their specific programs involving volunteerism, philanthropy, or ethical, sustainable business practices.

Riverside received two Gold Communitas Awards for its “Sustainability Programs” and “Green Initiatives” entries, which highlighted the city’s ongoing efforts in creating and implementing environmental policies and programs such as their Green Action Plan – which outlines Riverside’s strategies for increased use of renewable energy resources, preservation of water resources, reduction of greenhouse gases, waste management, recycling, and transportation, that help to maintain and cultivate a more sustainable community.

Riverside was also one of a handful of participants chosen by the ACMP this year to receive the Platinum Leadership in Community Service and Corporate Social Responsibility Award for its “Green Riverside/Seizing our Destiny” entry. The Leadership award is given only to organizations which show excellence in multiple programs.

“These awards highlight the many efforts Riverside is committed to and have been promoting for the last ten years,” said Riverside City Councilmember Rusty Bailey, who also chairs the city’s Land Use/ Utility Services / Energy Development Committee. “We are very pleased to be honored for our accomplishments.”

“While creating award winning policies and programs helps to keep Riverside among the leading green cities in the nation and around the world, we are also proud to be able to share our blueprints of success with other communities, and foster the ‘people helping people’ spirit that the Communitas Awards represent,” Bailey said.

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Established in 1895, Riverside Public Utilities is a consumer-owned water and electric utility governed by a Board of nine community volunteers that provides high quality, reliable services to over 105,000 metered electric customers and 63,000 metered water customers throughout the City of Riverside. The Utility is committed to increased use of renewable energy resources and sustainable living practices that help reduce environmental impacts within the City of Riverside and the state of California

 

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Killing Vampires In Your House

Energy Vampire

Thanks to BRIAN SLOBODA, COOPERATIVE RESEARCH NETWORK for writing this excerpt from his blog post below. You can find the entire post at Phantom Load/ Vampire Electronics. At the bottom of this post are some great tips to help reduce your electricity bills.

Vampires have frightened people for generations. The fangs, the wings, the immortality: it’s scary stuff. Though that’s all legend—a subject for movies and Halloween costumes— a different breed of vampire could be lurking in your home right now. These vampires don’t drink blood; they consume electricity.

An energy vampire, also called a phantom or parasitic load, is any device that consumes electricity when turned “off.” These electronic devices provide the modern-day conveniences we love, but they also waste energy and cost us money. Vampire loads can be found in almost every room of a home, though a favorite spot is the entertainment center. When the television is turned off, it isn’t really off. It’s sitting there, waiting patiently for someone to press the ‘on’ button of the remote—and waiting uses energy. TVs also use energy to remember channel line-ups, language preferences, and the time. VCRs, DVD players, DVRs, and cable or satellite boxes also use energy when turned off. The problem is significant. According to a study conducted by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the average home loses 8 percent of its monthly energy consumption to these energy vampires. A full 75 percent of the power used to run home electronics is consumed when those appliances are turned off, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

Typical Power Consumption of Household Items – IN WATTS
Device On Standby Mode Off
40-inch LCD TV 200 1–3
42-inch plasma TV 240–320 1–30
DVD player 13 10 2.3
Stereo 123 23.4
Xbox 360 173 168 2.2
Nintendo Wii 17 10 1
Power tool battery charger 33.7 4.2
Coffee maker 1,100 70 0.8

Common energy vampires include:

  • TVs
  • Stereos
  • VCRs, DVD players, and DVRs
  • Cable/satellite boxes
  • Computers
  • Battery chargers

We, at Henry Bush Home Energy Solutions, frequently suggest that homeowners use power strips and timers to lower and limit their power sucking appliances. A few months back, I installed a Belkin Conserve Smart AV strip in the cabinet that houses my A/V equipment. It has two “always on” outlets. Into those, I plug in my DVR (because I am not willing to wait for my DVR to rebuild itself each time I turn it on) and my wireless router. In the other outlets I plug in my PS3, home theater system and DVD player. Into the master outlet I plug in my LED TV. When I hit the power button on my remote to shut off my TV, it shuts down all my appliances, thus killing the vampire. We aren’t necessarily promoting this specific product. Any product with similar functionality would work fine. It is just important that you, as the homeowner, don’t have to do too many extra steps in order to kill the vampire appliances. This increases the likelihood that you will do it consistently thus saving as much energy as possible.  We also grabbed some old plug in timers that we had in the garage and use them around the house. We have always used them on lamps in our house to turn on lighting for security purposes. Now, we plug in a power strip to them and plug in all of our phones and ipods and such to that strip. The timer is scheduled to come on from 12midnight to 5 am, leaving 19 hours per day that no power is being used.

A couple of easy steps like this can lower your base load usage and help to keep you out of the higher tiers of electricity rates. Please let me know if you have any tips of your own.

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Myth#1: My House Isn’t Cooling, So I Need A Bigger Air Conditioner

energy_star_logo

So here’s how the call goes: “Can you please send someone out to look at my air conditioner, please? It’s not cooling my house. I think I need a bigger one.”

I show up, knock on the door, take some measurements then quote them a system smaller than the one they currently have. Mr. and Mrs. Sweaty Homeowner give me that look that the dog gives when he hears a new noise.

“You’re telling me that my 4 ton, that is not cooling my house, is too big? and you want to sell me a 3 ton? What are you smoking?” Worse yet, the next guy they call when they get the 3 quotes that everyone thinks you should have ( who came up with that rule anyhow?) tells them that he’ll give them 5 ton system, often times for less than my 3 ton, properly installed and sized, system.

Finally, I have some documentation from the EPA’s Energy Star Program to back up what I know and have been trying to explain to homeowners over and over again. A “right-sized” system:

  • Provides improved comfort
  • Lower utility bills
  • Fewer maintenance problems
  • Better humidity control  ( remember a dry 78 degrees feels colder than a wet 78 in summer)
  • A quieter home

The EPA document explains why all if this is true.

This all comes with the supposition that the new equipment is installed correctly and has good air flow ( I have some great documentation backing up that coming in future posts.) Add to this, a properly designed and installed air conditioner will qualify for up to $2500 in rebates if installed under the Southern California Edison Energy Star AC-Quality Program ( if you pay your bill to Edison). Add that to other rebates out there right now and you could tally up to $4600 in rebates for a new, properly installed ( and sized ) system.

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